By Jay Sekulow
The left's outrage over the IRS turns to a plea to 'move on'
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

Most people probably won't care for "Trance." It's easy to lose track of its time sequence. The plot teeters on the edge of incomprehensibility. The movie is sustained by an unlikely premise. "Trance" tries at every turn to throw off its audience, like a feral bull trying to buck a rider. But try to hang on, because "Trance" is a wild, kaleidoscopic cinematic experience. The ride is intense, while it lasts.
Much to his surprise, Al Pacino learned that once upon a time he met the legendary music producer Phil Spector, whom he now plays in a new HBO film.

It has happened again. Sam Tanenhaus, the editor of The New York Times Book Review, referred to by Paul Krugman the other day as "a longtime conservative," has essayed in the New Republic the modern conservative movement and traced us all back to John C. Calhoun.

The Al Pacino-led revival of "Glengarry Glen Ross" on Broadway has plenty to be happy about this Christmas.
The Al Pacino-led revival of "Glengarry Glen Ross" on Broadway has plenty to be happy about this Christmas.
David Mamet's return to Broadway has been upstaged _ by David Mamet.
David Mamet's return to Broadway has been upstaged _ by David Mamet.
David Mamet's new play "The Anarchist" and Katie Lee Gifford's "Scandalous" will both end their Broadway runs much earlier than their creators wanted.
David Mamet's new play "The Anarchist" contains _ shock! _ not a single swear word. But some are certain to be used by theatergoers walking out after the show.
Stage actors always seem to get the attention in New York. On Monday, it was the turn of the stages themselves to take a bow.
Stage actors always seem to get the attention in New York. On Monday, it was the turn of the stages themselves to take a bow.
John C. McGinley, who played a loveable but scary doctor in the TV show "Scrubs," is joining Broadway's "Glengarry Glen Ross" opposite Al Pacino.
Al Pacino is returning to the ugly world of real estate _ he's revisiting "Glengarry Glen Ross" on Broadway this fall.
Jake Johnson says the strangest thing about fame so far isn't seeing himself on TV in Fox's "New Girl," or getting recognized in the street. It's the number of men his own age who will ask for a photo with him alone.

Like all magicians, John Mulholland was a master in the art of deception, and the success of his shows depended on convincing lies, subtle misdirections and rapport with skeptics — basically, everything a spy needs to know.
Spector is gnomish, unstable and grandiose: "Extraordinary accomplishments," he says, meaning his own, "transform the grateful into an audience _ and the envious into a mob."
"I was just trying to get to third base," says Mamet.