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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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Blair Underwood says, "What's unique about 'In Treatment' is that you have a chance to be as raw and transparent and as intimate as possible on-screen."
courtesy of HBO
On TV
"In Treatment" airs at 10:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays on HBO.
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'In Treatment' is fun for Underwood

HBO's nightly drama offers new challenges
By Kinney Littlefield
For The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 02.26.2008
LOS ANGELES — Playing cocky charmers is a breeze for Blair Underwood.
But playing alpha male Alex, the ultra-aggressive patient on HBO's taut saga of psychotherapy, "In Treatment," is a welcome challenge for the 43-year-old actor.
"What's unique about 'In Treatment' is that you have a chance to be as raw and transparent and as intimate as possible on-screen," Underwood said recently during a chat at a favorite coffeehouse in suburban Studio City.
What's also unique about "In Treatment" is its nightly format, airing Monday through Friday at 10:30 p.m. Each night, psychotherapist Paul Weston, played by Gabriel Byrne, sees one of five regular patients, who return on the same night each week.
Appearing on Tuesday installments of the series, Underwood's Alex is a grounded Navy fighter pilot who has sought counseling after he bombed and killed innocent civilians in Iraq, then suffered a heart attack.
The clever Alex has played persistent head games with his long-suffering therapist, and their egos finally collide in their explosive fifth session airing tonight.
"It's the juiciest stuff with Alex," Underwood said of his character's intensifying story arc over the coming weeks.
"When you first see Alex, you see all his posturing and confidence," Underwood said.
It's an attitude viewers may recall from Underwood's early days as brash young lawyer Jonathan Rollins on the acclaimed NBC series "L.A. Law."
"But 'In Treatment' is all about therapy," Underwood said. "Alex will be exposed. He'll be stripped to the core. … And Gabriel is such a terrific actor that there's always a lot for me to play off of."
As Paul, Byrne typically sits and listens impassively to his patients, betraying his interest with subtle shifts of face or body.
"There are no fancy camera moves, just two people sitting there looking at each other," said executive producer Rodrigo Garcia of the show's stripped-down style.
"We wanted to shoot 'In Treatment' even more simply than the average TV drama," Garcia said.
Garcia cast Underwood as Alex after seeing him in the feature film "Madea's Family Reunion."
"I'd watched Blair for a long time on television — on everything from 'L.A. Law' to 'Sex and the City' — and he'd largely played likable characters," Garcia said. "But in 'Madea's Family Reunion,' Blair played an angry, dangerous, abusive character. He really was very frightening."
Sitting on a shady patio of the coffeehouse, chatting quietly, Underwood seems anything but scary.
As it happens, he wears the sort of leather jacket that Alex favors. And, like Alex, Underwood loves coffee. There's another connection: Underwood's military background. His father was an Army colonel.
"The mind-set of a soldier and of duty and loyalty to the corps, to your country — I get it," Underwood said. "I grew up all over the place, primarily on military bases. You do have to assimilate. In many ways you play a role, even if the role is playing yourself."
Also like Alex — who demands excellence in everything — Underwood is driven.
He has a substantial list of TV credits, including a recent recurring role as Julia Louis-Dreyfus' boyfriend on CBS' "The New Adventures of Old Christine," plus stage plays and feature films.
He has directed music videos, recorded the voice of Jesus for an audio Bible and produced a TV documentary on lottery winners for The Learning Channel. His novel "Casanegra: A Tennyson Hardwick Novel," written with Tananarive Due and Steven Barnes, was published last summer.
Underwood also directed the upcoming movie "The Bridge to Nowhere," starring Ving Rhames, now in post-production.
"My drive is about creating opportunities to tell stories," he said.
"Often the stories fall into the realm of African-American history, or characters that aren't usually explored on the big screen or on television."
Those characters include inscrutable billionaire Simon Elder, Underwood's recurring character on ABC's "Dirty Sexy Money."
"What I love most about Simon Elder is his ambiguity," Underwood said.
On the steamy adult soap opera, Simon has a murky agenda involving manipulation of the powerful Darling family, headed by enigmatic patriarch Tripp Darling, played by Donald Sutherland.
Simon's family once worked for the Darlings. And Simon was born in Russia.
"He's a character that viewers aren't used to seeing, but he's rooted in reality," Underwood said. "To play a character who's very worldly, who looks like me, that's what I'm drawn to."

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