US – Sunday, March 14
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
Metro’s spring ’10 guide to television
Check us out all this month for our picks for the best series premieres, season returns and must-see episodes.
 
Run this town
No living man but Jay-Z could get a sold out Boston arena so excited about New York City. But for two hours last night, the sold out crowd at the Garden was in an Empire State of Mind, as “The Blueprint 3” tour rolled into town.
 
Is nothing in her life real anymore?
When we first read that Heidi Pratt was firing husband Spencer Pratt as her manager, we thought, “Yay! Heidi’s new face is finally doing something right!” But then we found out that although she did fire Spencer, it seems like she’s replacing him with psychic Aiden Chase to take the reigns on her “career” — and then we got scared.
 
Pattinson: A vampire in Brooklyn
Robert Pattinson has been playing Americans so often that he has forgotten how to talk like a Brit. In his latest, “Remember Me,” the “Twilight” heartthrob stars as a soulful young New Yorker attending NYU, but he insists he didn’t need any help sounding like a native. “I’ve never had a dialect coach or anything,” Pattinson says. “Ironically, I’ve only had a dialect coach for this film I’m doing now, which I’m doing in an English accent. I guess I’ve forgotten how to do an English accent.”
 
Published 18:57, November the 16th, 2009
 
Author Tom Matlack and his son, Seamus.Author Tom Matlack and his son, Seamus.
 

Looking for a few ‘Good Men’

Hard to find?

Contributors to the ‘Project’ come from varied backgrounds. The authors polled such consummate professionals as:Michael Kamber, embedded photo journalist;Julio Medina, former prison inmate;Robert Pinsky, U.S. poet laureate;Konstantin Selivanov, former illegal fight club participant; and Andre Tippett, former Patriots linebacker and NFL Hall of Famer.

 
Manhood in our culture is up for grabs. Just think Eliot Spitzer, Bernard Madoff, even David Letterman.

“Many of our public heroes have very public lives but privately are complete failures,” says Tom Matlack, co-editor of “The Good Men Project” (The Good Men Foundation, $15).

Matlack and two others created the project — a book, film and charity — to start a discussion on what manhood means today. In the book, 31 men from all walks of life share their stories, several of them from the Boston area.

“In the past, the roles of husband, father and worker were clearer,” says Matlack. “Where we are now in terms of the economy and foreign wars, many men under the surface are really grappling with what’s important and trying to sort out priorities.”

Articulating emotion is not easy for men, at least compared to women, says Matlack.
“The hope is that these stories will help men come to their own definition on what it means to be a good man,” Matlack says.

Though written for men by men, the book appeals to women, too.
“It’s a reading about the deeper truth of how men think,” says Matlack. “And frankly, to help men be better fathers and husbands, to show up more fully for the women in their lives.”

All proceeds from the book and film support at-risk men and boys; the project is 100 percent nonprofit.
 
 
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MMMpod
The March MMMpod features conversation and music from Surfer Blood and The Allman Brothers Band (There's a double-bill you're not too likely to see. However, Gregg Allman does mention Hannah Montana!). We also speak with Vampire Weekend and the Dropkick Murphys.
 
 
 
Metro Life Panel