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Caliente Contest
The undisputed king of electric
blues is scheduled to play to a
packed audience Friday night at
Centennial Hall.

BB King is one of the most well-
known living blues musicians in
the world, and certainly the most
famous person to ever come out
of the tiny town of Itta Bena,
Miss.

The 2000 census pegged Itta
Bena's population at about 4,000
residents living within a 1.5
square mile area.

Yet the town still managed to
make it into the 2000 Coen
brothers film, "O Brother, Where
Art Thou?"

In the movie, a notorious
gangster terrorizing the the
Deep South stops George
Clooney's character Everett and
his crew and asks them how to
get to Itta Bena.

Name the gangster and the
actor who played him for a
chance to win a set of three
cookbooks.

Click here to submit your
answer.

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Robert Carlyle is chased by the infected in "28 Weeks Later."
Photo provided by Fox Atomic
Review
28 Weeks Later
*/2
• Rated: R for strong violence and gore, language and some sexuality/nudity.
• Cast: Robert Carlyle, Catherine McCormack, Rose Bryne.
• Director: Juan Carlos Fresnadillo.
• Family call: Not for kids.
• Running time: 99 minutes.
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British horror sequel horrible

'28 Weeks Later' is eons from the smart European dystopia of '28 Days Later'
By Roger Moore
the orlando sentinel
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 05.10.2007
The horror sequel "28 Weeks Later" has the most arresting, gruesome and unnerving opening 11 minutes in moviegoing memory.
The follow-up to the "Britain Wiped Out by Rage-aholic Zombies" thriller "28 Days Later" briefly and economically introduces us to a small clutch of survivors, walled-up, "Night of the Living Dead"-style, in a remote farmhouse. Then bloody-eyed Brits pour in and slaughter everybody who isn't able to beat them off with a crowbar or outboard motor.
"Weeks" is a frenetic killing machine — telling in its grasp of human nature and utterly incapable of embracing the humanity it wants to show us. It's reduced the best horror franchise of the new millennium from a smart European dystopia to another Hollywood killing machine, efficient and heartless.
Director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo beautifully sets us up for a grim tale of survivor's guilt as Robert Carlyle plays a character who must live with the knowledge that when the chips were down, he cut and ran, leaving his wife (Catherine McCormack) to a grisly death. Since their kids were away from the UK when the Rage Virus broke out, Dad may even have to explain his cowardice to them when the "re-population" begins "28 Weeks Later."
The sequel takes the story even closer to the bleak heart of the film's obvious inspiration — "The Omega Man." But the plot is absurd in the extreme, as chemical weapons are survived by holding a shirtsleeve over one's face, characters take every opportunity to go into dark places and demented Dad is still clever enough to track his kids hither and yon with a notion of ripping their flesh and making them just like him.

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