Here's an interview with Peter from Access Hollywood!
Friday, May 15
The Deadbolt talks legends
The Deadbolt has an article on the Quileute legends and how they play a role in the Twilight saga and movies.
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Here's the article:
Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight Saga has introduced a deep historical layer of Native American history into her popular series of Twilight novels by delicately mixing fact and fiction. Native American lore has long been a source of interest for anthropologists and historians who have dedicated scores of books to the stories of different tribes that include everything from creation stories to the changes in weather and placement of the sun and moon. Twilight brought parts of the La Push legends of the Quileute tribe to a mass audience. La Push itself is a real location and the home of the Quileute tribe in northern Washington State. The characters of Jacob Black, played by Taylor Lautner, and his father Billy are members of the tribe as well as a much bigger secret that has been well hidden for years. In the Twilight sequel New Moon, Stephanie Meyer allows her characters to tell their own stories concerning the legends, especially Jacob since he is an integral focal point in Meyer’s layers of Native American history.
Although the story of vampire versus werewolf is nothing new, the conflict raises a compelling question. Why choose that particular duel? Meyer herself has stated that the Twilight Saga is a completely fictional story from the vampire clans to the werewolf pack. The only part that was borrowed from real Quileute legend was the lore that the tribe was descended from wolves able to convert themselves into humans. Like the allure of the vampire, the werewolf story is far from defined. There are basic guidelines, for example, that reveal how the Twilight werewolves can change on a full moon or that a silver bullet similar to their vampire counterparts can kill them. In weaving her own creative Twilight tapestry while using both convention and her own originality, Stephenie Meyer has given Twilight Saga readers and New Moon fans an ultimate battle, pitting one supernatural creature against another, both with their own strengths and weaknesses.
History and the Werewolf
Although the Quileute tribe is said to be descended from wolves, there are a variety of Native North American tribes that have similar folklore in their rich lineage. The Navajo tribe (also known as the Navajo nation), the largest tribe in the United States, has a legend that is almost akin to the werewolf clan in the Twilight Saga. The Navajo version of the werewolf originates from the “Skinwalker” who actually attains the power to shape-shift. But in order to acquire the “evil” abilities of these shape-shifters, tribe members, as the legend goes, must kill a family member. On the other hand, the Quileute legend is much less gruesome as a Skinwalker is said to have encountered a wolf and then transformed it into a human being, thus the legend’s origins.
In relation to Twilight and New Moon, Stephanie Meyer takes it one step further by explaining in great detail how Jacob and the rest of the werewolf clan actually transform from human to werewolf from the angle of inner turmoil and the experience of the transformation. In New Moon, the transformation of Jacob Black is filled with questions surrounding mental pain and how the change is also linked to self-control. What’s different about how the legend and lore play out in New Moon with regard to the actual transformation, as compared to other werewolf based stories and films, is that it goes well beyond the visual transformation to a intriguing human level of emotion.
The Vulnerable Warriors
Although werewolves have long been looked at as villainous monsters , Meyer’s Twilight Saga exposes the emotional vulnerability of the creatures. Since the Twilight novels are deeply romantic in nature, what works so effectively for the Saga and New Moon is that the fear and intimidation associated with its “monsters” gets stripped away to large degree by pitting vampire against a werewolf for the love of a girl. And making Bella Swan human is all the more appealing since it taps into the timeless classical elements of the “forbidden” love story.
Twilight actors Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner already bring their striking physical appeal and charismatic charm to the Twilight films. Although Pattinson joined New Moon in relatively the same shape as Twilight, Lautner had more to prove for New Moon since he worked tirelessly to add 30 pounds of muscle to his frame in order to meet the physical requirements that Jacob Black endures in New Moon. Interestingly, both Jacob and Edward are not the typical, bloodthirsty monsters that they could have been portrayed as in similar stories. Instead they both fight their true non-human natures, rebelling against them with Bella’s help. Edward is eternally beautiful and elegant but deadly. Jacob is strikingly handsome but vicious. Their conflict is much more internal than solely overtly physical, which adds involving and relatable layers to the Twilight Saga.
Facts, Fiction, Legends and the Twilight Future
There’s no doubt that the Twilight Saga has generated an incredible, even phenomenal, amount of interest among fans, but it has also cast a huge spotlight on Native American culture and the origins of the Quileute legends. Unlike so many characters that are as fictional as the storylines surrounding them, Native American lore, whether from the Quileute tribe or others, is still being passed down through new generations while still being recorded by anthropologists and historians eager to preserve the various versions of similar stories. After all, the United States and Canada didn’t exist first, but the legends were alive well before borders were drawn on a map.
In Vancouver, British Columbia where New Moon is almost about to wrap up production, the Haida tribe off the B.C. coast in the Queen Charlotte Islands also have their own legends of shape-shifting, which center around bears instead of wolves. Interestingly, legends about shape-shifting humans are also similar to vampire lore throughout the ages and the ability of various bloodsuckers to change and transform. Still, Stephanie Meyer conceived two lead male characters, Edward Cullen and Jacob Black, as surreal heroes while tapping into similar stories and legends of the past to create a fresh new stage to showcase their supernatural abilities.
New Moon shifts the visible focus away from Edward and Robert Pattinson and directs it to Jacob and Taylor Lautner who undergoes an emotionally gripping, perhaps startling and compelling physical transformation. The challenge for director Chris Weitz and the production crew will be how they manage to create the transformations while maintaining the storyline from the New Moon novel.
Since Stephenie Meyer has created a new awareness concerning Native American culture, Twilight and New Moon have turned a bright spotlight on the many rich and deeply intriguing legends that have existed long before European vampires first settled on the shores of North America. In relation to New Moon and Native American legend, Jacob and his Quileute wolf pack have to prey on the facts in order to get the most out of the fiction. New Moon is a challenging responsibility for Taylor Lautner. If Lautner can execute the internal character evolution in concert with the physical challenge, Twilight and New Moon fans will get their money’s worth from the final edit of Jacob Black and his transformation.
-- Nadya Vlassoff
.jpg)
Here's the article:
Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight Saga has introduced a deep historical layer of Native American history into her popular series of Twilight novels by delicately mixing fact and fiction. Native American lore has long been a source of interest for anthropologists and historians who have dedicated scores of books to the stories of different tribes that include everything from creation stories to the changes in weather and placement of the sun and moon. Twilight brought parts of the La Push legends of the Quileute tribe to a mass audience. La Push itself is a real location and the home of the Quileute tribe in northern Washington State. The characters of Jacob Black, played by Taylor Lautner, and his father Billy are members of the tribe as well as a much bigger secret that has been well hidden for years. In the Twilight sequel New Moon, Stephanie Meyer allows her characters to tell their own stories concerning the legends, especially Jacob since he is an integral focal point in Meyer’s layers of Native American history.
Although the story of vampire versus werewolf is nothing new, the conflict raises a compelling question. Why choose that particular duel? Meyer herself has stated that the Twilight Saga is a completely fictional story from the vampire clans to the werewolf pack. The only part that was borrowed from real Quileute legend was the lore that the tribe was descended from wolves able to convert themselves into humans. Like the allure of the vampire, the werewolf story is far from defined. There are basic guidelines, for example, that reveal how the Twilight werewolves can change on a full moon or that a silver bullet similar to their vampire counterparts can kill them. In weaving her own creative Twilight tapestry while using both convention and her own originality, Stephenie Meyer has given Twilight Saga readers and New Moon fans an ultimate battle, pitting one supernatural creature against another, both with their own strengths and weaknesses.
History and the Werewolf
Although the Quileute tribe is said to be descended from wolves, there are a variety of Native North American tribes that have similar folklore in their rich lineage. The Navajo tribe (also known as the Navajo nation), the largest tribe in the United States, has a legend that is almost akin to the werewolf clan in the Twilight Saga. The Navajo version of the werewolf originates from the “Skinwalker” who actually attains the power to shape-shift. But in order to acquire the “evil” abilities of these shape-shifters, tribe members, as the legend goes, must kill a family member. On the other hand, the Quileute legend is much less gruesome as a Skinwalker is said to have encountered a wolf and then transformed it into a human being, thus the legend’s origins.
In relation to Twilight and New Moon, Stephanie Meyer takes it one step further by explaining in great detail how Jacob and the rest of the werewolf clan actually transform from human to werewolf from the angle of inner turmoil and the experience of the transformation. In New Moon, the transformation of Jacob Black is filled with questions surrounding mental pain and how the change is also linked to self-control. What’s different about how the legend and lore play out in New Moon with regard to the actual transformation, as compared to other werewolf based stories and films, is that it goes well beyond the visual transformation to a intriguing human level of emotion.
The Vulnerable Warriors
Although werewolves have long been looked at as villainous monsters , Meyer’s Twilight Saga exposes the emotional vulnerability of the creatures. Since the Twilight novels are deeply romantic in nature, what works so effectively for the Saga and New Moon is that the fear and intimidation associated with its “monsters” gets stripped away to large degree by pitting vampire against a werewolf for the love of a girl. And making Bella Swan human is all the more appealing since it taps into the timeless classical elements of the “forbidden” love story.
Twilight actors Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner already bring their striking physical appeal and charismatic charm to the Twilight films. Although Pattinson joined New Moon in relatively the same shape as Twilight, Lautner had more to prove for New Moon since he worked tirelessly to add 30 pounds of muscle to his frame in order to meet the physical requirements that Jacob Black endures in New Moon. Interestingly, both Jacob and Edward are not the typical, bloodthirsty monsters that they could have been portrayed as in similar stories. Instead they both fight their true non-human natures, rebelling against them with Bella’s help. Edward is eternally beautiful and elegant but deadly. Jacob is strikingly handsome but vicious. Their conflict is much more internal than solely overtly physical, which adds involving and relatable layers to the Twilight Saga.
Facts, Fiction, Legends and the Twilight Future
There’s no doubt that the Twilight Saga has generated an incredible, even phenomenal, amount of interest among fans, but it has also cast a huge spotlight on Native American culture and the origins of the Quileute legends. Unlike so many characters that are as fictional as the storylines surrounding them, Native American lore, whether from the Quileute tribe or others, is still being passed down through new generations while still being recorded by anthropologists and historians eager to preserve the various versions of similar stories. After all, the United States and Canada didn’t exist first, but the legends were alive well before borders were drawn on a map.
In Vancouver, British Columbia where New Moon is almost about to wrap up production, the Haida tribe off the B.C. coast in the Queen Charlotte Islands also have their own legends of shape-shifting, which center around bears instead of wolves. Interestingly, legends about shape-shifting humans are also similar to vampire lore throughout the ages and the ability of various bloodsuckers to change and transform. Still, Stephanie Meyer conceived two lead male characters, Edward Cullen and Jacob Black, as surreal heroes while tapping into similar stories and legends of the past to create a fresh new stage to showcase their supernatural abilities.
New Moon shifts the visible focus away from Edward and Robert Pattinson and directs it to Jacob and Taylor Lautner who undergoes an emotionally gripping, perhaps startling and compelling physical transformation. The challenge for director Chris Weitz and the production crew will be how they manage to create the transformations while maintaining the storyline from the New Moon novel.
Since Stephenie Meyer has created a new awareness concerning Native American culture, Twilight and New Moon have turned a bright spotlight on the many rich and deeply intriguing legends that have existed long before European vampires first settled on the shores of North America. In relation to New Moon and Native American legend, Jacob and his Quileute wolf pack have to prey on the facts in order to get the most out of the fiction. New Moon is a challenging responsibility for Taylor Lautner. If Lautner can execute the internal character evolution in concert with the physical challenge, Twilight and New Moon fans will get their money’s worth from the final edit of Jacob Black and his transformation.
-- Nadya Vlassoff
Sunday, May 10
Taylor feeling left out?
This Ted guy is doing a "so true" "so false" segment and he mentions the rumors of Taylor feeling left out!
Twilight brings mom and daughter together
Our beloved book brings every one together, including moms and their daughters!

The Daily Times from New Mexico has an article about how the Twilight Saga has brought together some mom's and their daughters.
Here's the article:
FARMINGTON — Words have power. They have an effect that can bring people with like minds together. That is what the words of Arizona author Stephenie Meyer have done since 2005 when her first novel, "Twilight" was published.
Women who read the book discovered a link that developed into a passion for Meyer and her characters.
"I fell into this world. I read the books, and I was out-of-my-mind obsessed with them," said Lisa Hansen, a 36-year-old mother of two children: Rebecca, 10, and Caleb, 6.
Hansen was a happily married woman who could not stop thinking about "Twilight" and Meyer's other novels in the series, "New Moon," "Eclipse" and "Breaking Dawn." Not sure what to do or who to talk to, Hansen posted a note on her MySpace page asking other fans to come forward.
"I was looking for 30-something moms and married people who were obsessed like I was," she said. It took a couple of days, and a MySpace group was created, bearing the name of Twilight Moms.
"I knew how lonely and out-of-place everyone felt," said Hansen, who lives outside of Salt Lake City. What she thought would be a group of
10 fans turned into a founding aspect of the "Twilight" fandom.
Twilightmoms.com has 29,000 members across the world. It is a Web site that often is visited by Meyer and the stars of the movie "Twilight" that was released in November 2008, to the pleasure of not just screaming high school girls.
Hansen believed that the not-too-much older women in love
with the Twilight series probably were just an obscure group of people not wanting to admit that they enjoyed reading and rereading a young adult fiction book about star-crossed lovers Bella and Edward.
As the site grew, however, Hansen "felt totally validated."
The plot
But what was it about "Twilight" that made all of these women and some men crazy?
Vicki Ulibarri, of Farmington, believes it is being able to experience young love all over again through the eyes of a normal teenage girl.
The girl, Bella, is the product of a failed marriage. She moves to a small Washington town to live with her father, the police chief. Soon after her arrival Bella notices the Cullens. They are different than everyone else. They don't really associate with other teens.
The Cullens are vampires, but they are vegetarians — they don't drink human blood. Not wanting to be monsters, they exist on animal blood. Bella falls in love with the youngest Cullen, Edward. Not only do sparks fly, but the human girl finds herself swept up in a supernatural world that is exciting and romantic.
If it sounds unusual, it is. The "Twilight" series is not the typical vampire saga. It is more romance than horror, and it most definitely is rated PG.
That's what led Ulibarri to recommend the novel to her 30-year-old daughter Summer King.
"It had been popping up on my Amazon account for years, but I kept shutting it down," King said.
One lonely day in Albuquerque, however, King picked up the book.
"I couldn't put it down," she said, admitting that her children wondered why she was spending so much time reading.
"They know we're obsessed," Ulibarri said Friday as her granddaughters Hannah, 6, and Victoria, 4, crawled in her lap.
Victoria flashed a big smile. Her teeth were pointed.
"I want to be a vampire," she said giggling as the plastic teeth fell out of her mouth.
Ulibarri shook her head and laughed at the sight, because she too became obsessed with "Twilight" not long after King read the books.
"I gave her my first copy of Twilight' with a note in the book that said, If there is a fire in the house, rescue this book,'" King said.
The words of Meyer worked their magic again, revitalizing and strengthening the relationship between this mother and daughter.
"It's made us so much closer," Ulibarri said. "We always had a great relationship, but now every night is a slumber party."
King recently moved in with her parents. They are helping her with the girls and new baby boy Madden, 2 months old. This is because her husband, Jared King, is working in Colorado Springs, Colo., and the family is waiting to sell a house before moving.
"It's been fun having them live with us," said Ulibarri, who works as a surgical assistant in a local dental office.
A family thing
King is the eldest of Ulibarri's four children, and she is the only daughter. Of the three boys — Shea, 27, Sean, 24, and Mackenzie, 21 — Sean is the only Twilighter.
"He secretly read the books," King said.
Sean even became an honorary Twilight Mom, when he visited the movie set of "Twilight" and snagged the first official photograph of Robert Pattinson, who stars as Edward in the films.
Since that time, Ulibarri was mentioned in a fan book about Pattinson. She also was invited to participate in a number of Twilight Mom events, including book and movie release parties and book-signing events.
Sean became a friend of Meyer's by sending her the photo and communicating with her by e-mail.
This entire family is swept up in the world that is "Twilight," yet there are other stories similar to theirs, according to Hansen. She said "Twilight" continues to bring people together.
"It's brought me and my sisters closer together. It's brought mothers and sons closer together," she said.
"Twilight" also is multi-generational, appealing to people of all ages.
"The older generation and the teenage generation, we're able to relate on a different level," Hansen said. "It's more than this awesome vampire book that we're all obsessed with. It opened up lines of communication between all different people."
Twilightmoms.com is about keeping that line of communication open. Free membership is available to women 25 years of age and older with children.
The site is monitored to keep it clean.
"We're totally normal people in the real world. This Web site has become a platform for regular wholesome human beings," Hansen said.

The Daily Times from New Mexico has an article about how the Twilight Saga has brought together some mom's and their daughters.
Here's the article:
FARMINGTON — Words have power. They have an effect that can bring people with like minds together. That is what the words of Arizona author Stephenie Meyer have done since 2005 when her first novel, "Twilight" was published.
Women who read the book discovered a link that developed into a passion for Meyer and her characters.
"I fell into this world. I read the books, and I was out-of-my-mind obsessed with them," said Lisa Hansen, a 36-year-old mother of two children: Rebecca, 10, and Caleb, 6.
Hansen was a happily married woman who could not stop thinking about "Twilight" and Meyer's other novels in the series, "New Moon," "Eclipse" and "Breaking Dawn." Not sure what to do or who to talk to, Hansen posted a note on her MySpace page asking other fans to come forward.
"I was looking for 30-something moms and married people who were obsessed like I was," she said. It took a couple of days, and a MySpace group was created, bearing the name of Twilight Moms.
"I knew how lonely and out-of-place everyone felt," said Hansen, who lives outside of Salt Lake City. What she thought would be a group of
10 fans turned into a founding aspect of the "Twilight" fandom.
Twilightmoms.com has 29,000 members across the world. It is a Web site that often is visited by Meyer and the stars of the movie "Twilight" that was released in November 2008, to the pleasure of not just screaming high school girls.
Hansen believed that the not-too-much older women in love
with the Twilight series probably were just an obscure group of people not wanting to admit that they enjoyed reading and rereading a young adult fiction book about star-crossed lovers Bella and Edward.
As the site grew, however, Hansen "felt totally validated."
The plot
But what was it about "Twilight" that made all of these women and some men crazy?
Vicki Ulibarri, of Farmington, believes it is being able to experience young love all over again through the eyes of a normal teenage girl.
The girl, Bella, is the product of a failed marriage. She moves to a small Washington town to live with her father, the police chief. Soon after her arrival Bella notices the Cullens. They are different than everyone else. They don't really associate with other teens.
The Cullens are vampires, but they are vegetarians — they don't drink human blood. Not wanting to be monsters, they exist on animal blood. Bella falls in love with the youngest Cullen, Edward. Not only do sparks fly, but the human girl finds herself swept up in a supernatural world that is exciting and romantic.
If it sounds unusual, it is. The "Twilight" series is not the typical vampire saga. It is more romance than horror, and it most definitely is rated PG.
That's what led Ulibarri to recommend the novel to her 30-year-old daughter Summer King.
"It had been popping up on my Amazon account for years, but I kept shutting it down," King said.
One lonely day in Albuquerque, however, King picked up the book.
"I couldn't put it down," she said, admitting that her children wondered why she was spending so much time reading.
"They know we're obsessed," Ulibarri said Friday as her granddaughters Hannah, 6, and Victoria, 4, crawled in her lap.
Victoria flashed a big smile. Her teeth were pointed.
"I want to be a vampire," she said giggling as the plastic teeth fell out of her mouth.
Ulibarri shook her head and laughed at the sight, because she too became obsessed with "Twilight" not long after King read the books.
"I gave her my first copy of Twilight' with a note in the book that said, If there is a fire in the house, rescue this book,'" King said.
The words of Meyer worked their magic again, revitalizing and strengthening the relationship between this mother and daughter.
"It's made us so much closer," Ulibarri said. "We always had a great relationship, but now every night is a slumber party."
King recently moved in with her parents. They are helping her with the girls and new baby boy Madden, 2 months old. This is because her husband, Jared King, is working in Colorado Springs, Colo., and the family is waiting to sell a house before moving.
"It's been fun having them live with us," said Ulibarri, who works as a surgical assistant in a local dental office.
A family thing
King is the eldest of Ulibarri's four children, and she is the only daughter. Of the three boys — Shea, 27, Sean, 24, and Mackenzie, 21 — Sean is the only Twilighter.
"He secretly read the books," King said.
Sean even became an honorary Twilight Mom, when he visited the movie set of "Twilight" and snagged the first official photograph of Robert Pattinson, who stars as Edward in the films.
Since that time, Ulibarri was mentioned in a fan book about Pattinson. She also was invited to participate in a number of Twilight Mom events, including book and movie release parties and book-signing events.
Sean became a friend of Meyer's by sending her the photo and communicating with her by e-mail.
This entire family is swept up in the world that is "Twilight," yet there are other stories similar to theirs, according to Hansen. She said "Twilight" continues to bring people together.
"It's brought me and my sisters closer together. It's brought mothers and sons closer together," she said.
"Twilight" also is multi-generational, appealing to people of all ages.
"The older generation and the teenage generation, we're able to relate on a different level," Hansen said. "It's more than this awesome vampire book that we're all obsessed with. It opened up lines of communication between all different people."
Twilightmoms.com is about keeping that line of communication open. Free membership is available to women 25 years of age and older with children.
The site is monitored to keep it clean.
"We're totally normal people in the real world. This Web site has become a platform for regular wholesome human beings," Hansen said.
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