Hereâs whatâs new and interesting in entertainment and the arts:
- Anthony Scaramucci is out and Twitter is having a field day
- Goodbye, MTV Moonman trophy. Hello, âMoon Personâ
- Sam Shepard: Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, actor and ... avant-garde drummer?
- Lady Gaga subpoenaed in producer Dr. Lukeâs lawsuit against pop singer Kesha
- âRide on, geniusâ: Celebrities mourn the loss of Sam Shepard
CBSâ âS.W.A.T.â reboot âwill take on the Trump years,â #BlackLivesMatter, says Shemar Moore
Donât let the funky theme song or the â70s origins fool you.
While technically a remake â of both the original series and the subsequent 2003 film based on it â CBSâ upcoming cop drama âS.W.A.T.â is very plugged into the current moment, according to its cast and creators.
In the series, former âCriminal Mindsâ star Shemar Moore plays a native Angeleno who runs a tactical unit for the LAPD and finds his loyalty torn between his fellow officers and the community in which he was raised.
As co-creator Aaron Rahsaan Thomas told reporters Tuesday at the Television Critics Assn. press tour, the series was inspired by his experiences growing up in Kansas City, which have helped him understand both sides of the raging debate over police violence.
âI grew up in a neighborhood that had a very complicated view towards police officers,â said Thomas, who created the series with veteran showrunner Shawn Ryan. âOn one hand, a 12-year-old kid who was a neighbor of mine was shot and killed by a police officer. On the other hand, another neighbor of mine was an actual police officer.â
Moore, best known for his long run on the CBS procedural âCriminal Minds,â noted the diversity of the cast and creative team and added that, while the show is primarily designed to entertain, it will also resonate politically.
âWeâre taking on the Trump years,â he said. âI donât care who you voted for. Itâs just whatâs happening today. Itâs Black Lives Matter. As much as some people donât want to hear it, itâs All Lives Matter. Itâs not just black versus blue or black versus white. Itâs every ethnicity. Itâs fear. Itâs racism. Itâs terrorism. Itâs subject matter of today.â
Ryan, who created the groundbreaking drama âThe Shield,â about corrupt Los Angeles police officers, said he was excited about the chance to examine the often charged relationship between law enforcement and the communities they serve.
âLos Angeles is such a diverse, amazing community, and seeing an officer who kind of lives in the city and sort of sees the people that are being policed as humans and as neighbors and as friends was really important to me.â
Netflix getting âA Little Helpâ from Carol Burnett
What do you get when you pair up a living legend with a bunch of little kids? Comedy gold, if Netflix has its way.
The online streaming service announced Monday that comedy icon Carol Burnett will be returning to television with âA Little Help With Carol Burnett,â an original unscripted series that pairs Burnett with children to tackle lifeâs dilemmas.
âSomeone once asked me how old I am inside,â Burnett said in a statement Monday. âI thought about it and came up with, âIâm about 8.â So itâs going to be a lot of fun playing with kids my age.â
Kids ages 4 to 8 will join Burnett as celebrities and everyday folks bring their real-life problems to the show to get advice in front of a live studio audience.
âWeâre thrilled Carol is bringing her unique sensibilities to Netflix,â Bela Bajaria, the serviceâs vice president of content acquisition, said in Mondayâs announcement. âCarol is truly a legend in the entertainment industry with unprecedented success and fandom across TV, film and the stage, and we are both honored and excited to work with her.â
âA Little Help With Carol Burnettâ will be produced by Dick Clark Productions and is the companyâs first Netflix project.
This is the second television project announced this year for Burnett, 84. In February, ABC ordered a pilot for the multi-camera comedy âHousehold Name,â starring Burnett, though the series has not been picked up in its current iteration.
Debuting in 2018, âA Little Help With Carol Burnettâ will feature 12 half-hour episodes.
Anthony Scaramucci is out and Twitter is having a field day
To lift a line from the pop song âNa Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye,â go ahead and kiss Anthony Scaramucci goodbye.
Itâs been a robust 10 days since the former Goldman Sachs investment banker, affectionately known as âthe Mooch,â started his new job as White House communications director. And what a whirlwind 10 days they were.
During that time, Scaramucciâs estranged wife, Deirdre Ball, gave birth to their second child. Scaramucci was not present for the birth, busy as he was at his new job in Washington, D.C.
On Wednesday, Scaramucci lashed out on Twitter at then White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, seemingly implying that Priebus had leaked a publicly available financial disclosure form to Politico, tagging both the FBI and Justice Department in the tweet.
On Thursday, Scaramucci took to the CNN morning show âNew Dayâ to continue his attack on Priebus. Later that day, New Yorker magazine writer Ryan Lizza confirmed that Scaramucci had spoken to him via phone Wednesday night and called Priebus a âparanoid schizophrenicâ and had, somehow, even worse (vulgar) things to say about White House strategist Stephen K. Bannon.
All of which led to Priebusâ unceremonious dismissal from his position on Friday, with the White House announcing that former general and current Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly would be replacing him.
Hopefully, Scaramucci enjoyed his weekend because it took only a few hours Monday before it was announced that he was the latest ouster in the revolving door that is the Trump administration.
In a statement released Monday, the White House said it âfelt it was best to give Chief of Staff Kelly a clean slate and the ability to build his own team.â
Twitter, unsurprisingly, is beside itself.
Here are a few choice takes from social media. Fare thee well, Mooch. We hardly knew ye.
For the Record
1:45 a.m.: In a previous version of this post, Deirdre Ballâs first name was misspelled as Diedre.
Ken Burns explains why his Vietnam War documentary is more relevant than ever
âHistory doesnât repeat itself,â Ken Burns told a room of journalists gathered Sunday at the Television Critics Assn. summer press tour in Beverly Hills
âWeâre not condemned to repeat what we donât remember,â Burns explained. âItâs that human nature never changes.â
Itâs a curious statement from the storied documentarian, particularly given his latest project, the 18-hour, 10-part documentary series âThe Vietnam War,â directed with Lynn Novick.
But just because humanity isnât trapped in a constantly repeating cycle doesnât mean that the echoes of modern strife arenât plentiful throughout the upcoming PBS series.
âThis is a story about mass demonstrations all across the country against the current administration,â Burns said in response to a question about what the youth of America will find relevant in âThe Vietnam War.â âAbout a White House obsessed with leaks and in disarray because of those leaks, about a president railing against you, the news media, for making up news.
âItâs about asymmetrical warfare, which even the mighty might of the United States Army canât figure out the correct strategy to take, and itâs about big document drops of classified material thatâs been hacked, that suddenly is dumped into the public sphere, destabilizing the conventional wisdom about really important topics and accusations that a political campaign reached out to a foreign power at the time of a national election to influence that election.
âThis is the film we started in 2006, and every single one of those points are points about the Vietnam War having nothing to do with today,â Burns concluded.
By creating a fully-formed picture of Vietnam, Burns hopes to shed light on the rancor and alienation defining this present moment, he explained.
For Novick, the thematic relevance only serves to help teachers who have long struggled in tackling the Vietnam War.
âWeâve had great response from teachers already that the Vietnam War is difficult to teach because itâs controversial and unsettled history and theyâre looking forward to using the film in the classroom,â Novick said. âThose resonances that Ken is talking about, those will be assignments for students. Weâre not going to have to work very hard with teachers to come up with those themes, and students are curious about whatâs happening now.â
âThe Vietnam Warâ premieres Sept. 17 at 8 p.m. PDT
Goodbye, MTV Moonman trophy. Hello, âMoon Personâ
MTVâs token space cadet just scored an identity revamp â and gender didnât make the cut.
In a recent interview with the New York Times, MTV President Chris McCarthy said the networkâs iconic Moonman trophy has been discontinued. From now on, the metallic figurine â whose impenetrably opaque helmet has become the unofficial âfaceâ of MTVâs Video Music Awards â will go by âMoon Personâ instead. Because who knows whatâs really going on beneath that lacquered astronaut getup, anyway.
âWhy should it be a man?â McCarthy told the Times. âIt could be a man, it could be a woman, it could be transgender, it could be nonconformist.â
This new development is just the latest installment in MTVâs string of efforts to do away with gender norms during its awards proceedings. The network eliminated gender-specific categories at its MTV Movie & TV Awards earlier this year, where all nominees were placed in neutral categories (i.e. best actor in a show, best actor in a movie).
And the network isnât going to stop there. McCarthy also announced a new MTV reality series â still in development âcalled âWe Are Theyâ about a group of gender-nonconforming young adults coming of age.
With Katy Perry hosting, the VMAs will broadcast from the Forum in Inglewood on Aug. 27. Hereâs the full list of nominees.
Sam Shepard: Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, actor and ... avant-garde drummer?
Sam Shepard, whose death at 73 was announced on Monday, will be remembered for his cross-discipline versatility. As a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, he penned classic off-Broadway plays including âTrue West,â âBuried Childâ and âFool for Love.â
An Oscar-nominated actor, he starred in films including âDays of Heaven,â âThe Right Stuff,â âCrimes of the Heartâ and âThe Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.â
To fans of underground music, however, Shepard served a lesser-known role as the drummer for seminal New York avant-garde folk band the Holy Modal Rounders, with whom he performed on the crucial late 1960s albums âIndian War Whoopâ and âThe Moray Eels Eat the Holy Modal Rounders.â
The band is best known for its song âIf You Want to Be a Bird,â which plays during the classic scene in âEasy Riderâ in which Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda and Jack Nicholson roar down the highway on their motorcycles. Thatâs Shepard playing drums as Rounders founders Peter Stampfel and Steve Weber whoop and yowl.
It was in his capacity as a percussionist, in fact, that he drew the attention of a young Patti Smith, who, in her 2010 memoir âJust Kids,â recounted their first early â70s meeting at seminal music club the Village Gate.
Escorted to the club by Todd Rundgren, who had just issued his album âRunt,â Smith described the Holy Modal Roundersâ set as âlike being at an Arabian hoedown with a band of psychedelic hillbillies. I was fixed on the drummer, who seemed as if he was on the lam and had slid behind the drums while cops looked elsewhere.â
Smith, who at the time was freelancing for Crawdaddy magazine, introduced herself to this drummer, who said his name was Slim Shadow.
The two started hanging out, wrote Smith, describing his tales as being âeven taller than mine. He had an infectious laugh and was rugged, smart, and intuitive. In my mind, he was the fellow with the cowboy mouth.â
Only later did she learn Slimâs real identity when a friend pulled her aside after seeing them at a restaurant together. As recounted in âJust Kids,â Smith wrote that her friend asked, âWhat are you doing with Sam Shepard?â
âSam Shepard?â I said. âOh, no, this guyâs name is Slim.â
âHoney, donât you know who he is?â
âHeâs the drummer for the Holy Modal Rounders.â
No, corrected her friend, âHeâs the biggest playwright off-Broadway. He had a play at Lincoln Center. He won five Obies!â
Once she learned of his reputation and acclaim, Smith and Shepard continued to see each other -- despite his being married at the time -- and eventually collaborated on a play called âCowboy Mouth.â
Smith described telling him of nervousness at writing for the stage, which she had never done. But Shepard urged her on, Smith wrote, telling her that âyou canât make a mistake when you improvise.â
Replied Smith: âWhat if I screw up the rhythm?â
âYou canât,â Shepard explained. âItâs like drumming. If you miss a beat, you create another.â
7:15 a.m. Updated to correct the title of Smithâs memoir, âJust Kids,â and to identify the Holy Modal Roundersâ co-founders, Stampfel and Weber.
Lady Gaga subpoenaed in producer Dr. Lukeâs lawsuit against pop singer Kesha
The ongoing offstage drama between the pop singer Kesha and her former producer Dr. Luke has entangled another platinum superstar: Lady Gaga.
On Saturday, attorneys for Dr. Luke, whose real name is Lukasz Gottwald, issued a statement regarding their attempt to depose Lady Gaga about relevant conversations she may have had with Kesha.
The artist, who was born Kesha Sebert, is the subject of a defamation suit filed in New York by Dr. Luke stemming from allegations of sexual misconduct, which the producer vigorously denies.
The statement reads:
âDr. Lukeâs counsel served a subpoena on Lady Gaga because she has relevant information regarding, among other things, false statements about Dr. Luke made to her by Kesha. This motion has become necessary because Dr. Lukeâs counsel has not been able to obtain, despite repeated request [sic], a deposition date from Lady Gaga.â
Representatives for Gaga, whose real name is Stefani Germanotta, said in a statement issued to The Times on Monday morning: âAs Lady Gagaâs legal team will present to the court, she has provided all of the relevant information in her possession and is at most an ancillary witness in this process. Dr. Lukeâs team is attempting to manipulate the truth and draw press attention to their case by exaggerating Lady Gagaâs role and falsely accusing her of dodging reasonable requests.â
Among the information Lady Gaga has provided are copies of text messages that were, according to a report on TMZ, heavily redacted.
Lady Gaga has been a vocal Kesha supporter. Last year, Gaga wrote about her peerâs plight in an Instagram post: âThe very reason women donât speak up for years is the fear that no one will believe them or their abuser has threatened their life or life of their loved ones/livelihood in order to keep their victim quiet and under control. What happened to Kesha has happened to many female artists, including myself, and it will affect her for the rest of her life.â
The news comes at a particularly crucial moment for Keshaâs career. On Aug. 11, she will release her highly anticipated new album, âRainbow.â The record, featuring songs such as âLearn to Let Go,â will arrive via Dr. Lukeâs imprint, Kemosabe, a situation Kesha sought to avoid in a 2014 lawsuit of her own, which she later dropped.
âRide on, geniusâ: Celebrities mourn the loss of Sam Shepard
Sam Shepard â Oscar-nominated actor and critically acclaimed playwright, author, screenwriter and director â died on July 27 after suffering complications from ALS (Lou Gehrigâs Disease). When news of his death broke Monday morning, Twitter erupted with posts to mourn, honor and remember one of show businessâ beloved renaissance men.
This story was updated with additional reactions.
Macaulay Culkin got his first tattoo with goddaughter Paris Jackson, and itâs a match
For Paris Jackson, getting inked is nothing out of the ordinary. With more than 50 tattoos already under her belt, the 19-year-old daughter of late pop king Michael Jackson collects body art like postage stamps.
According to E! News, the budding actress got her latest over the weekend: an understated sketch of a red spoon, just below the crook of her left arm.
A new tattoo might be old-hat for Jackson, but it wasnât for Macaulay Culkin, Jacksonâs 36-year-old godfather -- and first-time tattoo patron -- who emerged from West Hollywoodâs Tattoo Mania with a matching spoon on his own forearm.
Though neither Jackson nor Culkin spoke to the meaning of the double-inking, the design is supposedly meant to represent a kind of chronic struggle.
And thatâs not the only news that Culkin made recently. The Internet nearly lost its collective mind last week when a new photo emerged of the âHome Aloneâ actor looking healthy and happy. E! News even declared that Culkin âdefinitely just won 2017âs greatest makeover.â
Alex Jonesâ products are almost as bad as his conspiracy theories, says John Oliver
Over the last year, conspiracy theorist and influential radio host Alex Jones has come under intense scrutiny for his fringe beliefs, most notably his claim that the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School was a hoax perpetrated by the government.
On Sundayâs âLast Week Tonight,â John Oliver noted that Jonesâ status as a Sandy Hook âtrutherâ qualified him for an Easy Pass to âhellâs version of the champagne room.â But he spent most of his time on a relatively overlooked aspect of Jonesâ conspiracy empire -- the wide range of products that he sells in order to fund it.
According to Oliver, Jones spends nearly a quarter of his airtime plugging InfoWars-branded merchandise, including Wake Up America Patriot coffee to Combat One Tactical Bath Wipes and a powder called Caveman True Paleo (made from âchocolate and domesticated bird corpses,â Oliver joked).
As the comedian pointed out, it just so happens that many of the products Jones sells, often at a significant markup, purport to address the conspiracy theories with equally wild-eyed zeal. Think: water filters to remove chemicals that supposedly turn frogs gay or vitamins to boost your immunity and ward off germs from allegedly disease-ridden refugees.
Jones even has his own in-house âexpert,â Dr. Edward Group, with dubious qualifications (and equally questionable hair) to back up his various outlandish claims.
InfoWars is essentially a âQVC for conspiracy,â Oliver argued.
So in the spirit of InfoWars, Oliver decided to introduce his own personal care product, John Oliver Moisture-Armored Tactical Assault Wipes, available via Infowipes.com. The price? A mere $1 million. Worth every penny, weâre sure.
You can watch the complete segment here.
A Star Is Born: J.K. Rowling turns 52 today
One of my strengths, I think, is that I am able to know when I havenât done my best. I think Iâm generally able to see where I fall short.
— J.K. Rowling, 2000
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Upward and Onward Toward Book Seven -- Her Way
Vintage âCasablancaâ poster sells for $478,000
How much would someone pay for a vintage movie poster? Well, if that film is âCasablanca,â one personâs answer is $478,000.
Thatâs how much a bidder coughed up Saturday for the only known surviving Italian-issue poster for the 1942 film starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. The poster sold through Heritage Auctions of Dallas.
âThe buyer has just set a world record and acquired what we in the poster collecting world would equate to a masterpiece,â said Grey Smith, Heritageâs director of vintage posters. âThe stunning artistry put into this poster makes it stand head and shoulders above any paper produced for the film.â
The poster, measuring 55.5 inches by 78.25 inches, was produced in 1946. The film opened in Italy on Nov. 21 that year, almost four years after its U.S. premiere. Featuring artwork by Luigi Martinati, the poster is considered the best of the pictureâs numerous advertisements, Smith said.
Previous Italian-issue posters for the film have sold for as much as $203,000. A U.S.-issue of the poster has fetched $191,200.
The auction featured other rare posters for the film, with a half-sheet going for $65,725, and a postwar Spanish-release poster selling for $35,850.
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For the Record
An earlier version of this article misstated the purchase price of the âCasablancaâ poster sold Saturday as $487,000.
Why people are tweeting #NoConfederate during tonightâs âGame of Thronesâ
âConfederate,â HBOâs controversial alternate history series, which will include dramatizations of modern-day slavery and has come under fire since its announcement earlier this month, will be the target of a social media protest during Sundayâs episode of âGame of Thrones.â
April Reign, the activist behind #OscarsSoWhite is one of the organizers of the protest which is asking people to tweet to @hbo using the hashtag #NoConfederate during the 9 p.m. East Coast and West Coast broadcasts of âGame of Thrones.â The series is being developed by âGame of Thronesâ creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, who are white. The pair invited husband and wife writer-producers Malcolm Spellman (âEmpireâ) and Nichelle Tramble Spellman (âThe Good Wifeâ), who are black, to join the creative team for the show.
âWe want to show HBO the power of social media of those who are against this show, and demonstrate that there is a unified voice against âConfederate,â Reign said in a phone interview. âOur objective is for HBO to cancel this idea and spend no more money on it.â
Reign said she and others are tired of the pain of African Americans âbeing commodified for othersâ enjoyment.â Author Roxane Gay echoed this exhaustion in a recent opinion piece for the New York Times headlined âI Donât Want to Watch Slavery Fan Fiction.â
Reign stressed that the protest was not a boycott of HBO, which airs the critically-acclaimed comedy âInsecure,â co-created by and starring African American actress and writer Issa Rae, a half hour after âGame of Thrones.â
Said Reign, âWe feel that HBOâs money, time and energy can be better placed on a different idea.â
The sci-fi-tinged series revolves around events that lead to the âThird American Civil Warâ and examines an alternate reality in which the South seceded from the Union and thus, slavery is still legal in part of the country.
Last week Benioff, Weiss and the Spellmans responded to the criticisms in an article in Vulture, explaining the genesis of the idea and saying they expected initial reactions to be negative.
âItâs an ugly and a painful history,â said Weiss, who called slavery Americaâs âoriginal sin.â
âBut we all think this is a reason to talk about it, not a reason to run from it. And this feels like a potentially valuable way to talk about it.â
In discussing how they came aboard Malcolm Spellman said that he and his wife felt a sense of urgency in furthering a discussion about race in America. âAs people of color and minorities in general are starting to get a voice, I think thereâs a duty to force this discussion.â
Tramble Spellman said she understands peopleâs concerns about such volatile subject matter, but noted that she wished theyâd reserved judgment on âwhether or not we succeeded in what we set out to doâ until they had seen the show, which is still in development.
Earlier this week, Casey Bloys, spresident of HBO programming, echoed that sentiment during the premium networkâs session at the summer edition of the Television Critics Assn. gathering at the Beverly Hilton.
âMy hope is people will judge the actual material instead of what it could be or should be or might be.â
But Reign said Bloysâ defense of âConfederateâ fell short: âââWait and seeâ is what we were told about the Trump administration.â
She also repeated criticisms of âGame of Thrones,â saying that Benioff and Weiss had been negligent in including blacks and other people of color in key roles both in front of and behind the camera on that show.
âWeâre still living in a time where there are protests about Confederate monuments coming down,â Reign said. âHow much history are we talking about? These are living concerns today.â
âThere is no Plan Bâ for public broadcasting without federal funding, PBS president says
PBS President and Chief Executive Paula Kerger wasnât pulling any punches Sunday at the Television Critics Assn. summer press tour in Beverly Hills.
âWhen people say, âWhat is the Plan B for [loss of federal funding]?â There is no Plan B for that,â Kerger said of the potential budget crisis public broadcasting faces under the Trump administration.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has been under fire for months, with President Trumpâs proposed budget axing the institutionâs $450-million budget.
Though itâs easy to suggest that budget cuts would threaten Big Birdâs livelihood, the true victims of defunding would be far more human.
Kerger explained that of PBSâ $450-million budget, one-third goes to radio. Of the television budget, most goes to community service grants that local stations use for up to 50% of their operating budgets.
âPBS itself will not go away. But a number of our stations will. If you are a station for whom 30 or 40 or 50% of your funding is suddenly pulled away, thereâs no way you can make up that money,â Kerger said. âYou will find big parts of the country that will suddenly be without public broadcasting.â
The fate of public broadcasting is currently in flux, waiting for the end of Congressâ August recess for resolution. Currently, the House Appropriations Committee has approved the bulk of the PBS budget, while the House Budget Committee recommended doing away with funding altogether.
Budget concerns aside, Kerger also addressed other unresolved PBS matters.
The second seat of âPBS NewsHourâ has been vacant since the untimely death of co-host Gwen Ifill in November 2016, leaving Judy Woodruff as the showâs sole anchor.
âWe have encouraged [executive producer] Sara Just and Judy Woodruff and the team at âNewsHourâ to take their time and think very carefully about who that right person [to replace Ifill] is,â Kerger said. âIâm hopeful that they will be making an announcement sometime over the next few months of a new anchor.â
Kerger also announced an upcoming project aimed at inspiring the country to come together in celebration of literature.
âThe Great American Readâ is an eight-part series launching in spring 2018 that explores the nationâs 100 best-loved books, chosen by the American people and culminating in the first-ever national vote to choose âAmericaâs Best-Loved Book.â
âAMC Visionariesâ adds Eli Roth, Roots, Gibney for new docu-series
AMC announced several additions to its upcoming âVisionariesâ docu-series Saturday at the Television Critics Assn. summer press tour in Beverly Hills.
Writer-director-actor Eli Roth (âCabin Fever,â âHostelâ) will be offering a deeper look into his signature style of genre filmmaking with âEli Rothâs History of Horrorâ (working title) and Ahmir âQuestloveâ Thompson, Tariq âBlack Thoughtâ Trotter (founding members of The Roots) and Alex Gibney (âGoing Clear,â âHistory of the Eaglesâ) will executive produce a series called âRap Yearbookâ (another working title). The cable network also has three other installments in development: âHistory of Video Games,â âOutlaws of the Internet,â and âHistory of Martial Arts.â
The new âVisionariesâ members join the previously announced programs âRobert Kirkmanâs Secret History of Comicsâ and âJames Cameronâs Story of Science Fiction.â
Kirkman and Roth were present at the AMC panel with Cameron appearing via satellite to show sneak peeks from the comics and sci-fi iterations of the series.
A sizzle reel for the âSecret History of Comicsâ utilized plenty of classic panel pages and a sort of motion comic-like animation to illustrate the early days of Marvel Comics, going all the way back to the Stan Lee and Jack Kirby days. But the real treat was a collection of cameos, famous faces opining about their love of the form including Lee himself, J.K. Simmons, Kevin Smith, and Method Man, who earnestly revealed, âYou have to be born a comic book fan, I think.â And there are plenty more talking heads to come, the AMC press release promised Patty Jenkins, Lynda Carter, Famke Janssen, Michelle Rodriguez, and Todd McFarlane.
The second clip shared a look at Cameronâs love letter to science fiction. âToday, science fiction is mainstream but it didnât used to be that way,â the director explained. âWhen I was a kid science fiction wasnât cool, but I thought it was cool.â Cameron wants to focus on closing the gap between current fansâ knowledge of modern day sci-fi to the pioneering works of literature that inspired the blockbuster offerings of today. The âTerminatorâ and âAvatarâ director noted that without Jules Verne and H.G. Wells there would be no Avengers, âStar Warsâ or his own works. The series will be divided by theme -- space travel, time travel etc.-- and include appearances from Paul W. Anderson, Roland Emmerich, Paul Verhoeven, Bryan Singer, Keanu Reeves, Jonathan Nolan, David Gerrold and D.C. Fontana.
When asked how their respective series would showcase diversity -- the footage screened was very male-centric -- Kirkman responded that âHistory of Comicsâ would have two episodes devoted to diversity. One will focus on the women who helped Wonder Woman creator William Moulton Marston steer the course of the hugely famous female superhero, and another highlighting people of color titled âThe Color of Comics.â
The episode âexplores the history of black characters, and the lack of black characters in the comic book industry,â said Kirkman. âwhich touches on the creation of Black Panther â the Marvel character â and does a really cool focus on this company called Milestone Comics that was founded by a group of African American comic book creators to create characters that appealed to them and represented them, because there was a huge lack of representation in comics even in the â90s.â
âYou wouldnât have horror without Mary Shelley and âFrankenstein,ââ Roth added. He cited the late George Romero as an example of how he wants to break down the themes within the horror genre. âAt the height of the civil rights movement [Romero] puts an African American as the lead of âNight of the Living Deadâ and at the end of the movie heâs shot by a bunch of rednecks. Not because of the color of his skin, but because they think heâs a zombie. But you can read into the implications of that. What [Romero] was doing with using genre to explore racism was so ahead of its time. itâs just as potent today as it was 50 years ago. Itâs absolutely something weâre going to be discussing.â
Rothâs urgency to document the horror masters was apparent. It was the death of âScreamâ moviemaker Wes Craven that inspired Roth to get involved in âVisionaries.â
The panel then took a turn for the analytical when the creators were asked how their series would reflect the world today.
âThe fact that dystopian science fiction has come back, especially in television and in movies, is very important,â said Cameron. âIt means that in the age that we live in right now the challenges that face us are technological. Theyâre science challenges: climate change, genetics, artificial intelligence, things like that. These are really on our horizon as major, existential threats.â
âThe best horror reflects whatâs going on in our times,â said Roth. He used Jordan Peeleâs âGet Outâ â which addressed modern day racial tensionsâ as a reference. âItâs no accident that movie coming out right now is making over $200 million at the box office. You can tell itâs really resonating with people.â
Bouncing off Cameronâs dystopia revelation, Roth then turned his lens onto the current political climate, âI donât think weâve ever seen a cast of characters like this in our White House thatâs straight out of WWF wrestling in the â80s. When [Anthony Scaramucci] is coming out with things that would make âRowdyâ Roddy Piper in his heyday blush. This is a farce, is this actually happening?â
When will we start seeing this dystopian outlook on the current political climate in the movies? Possibly before Rothâs series, which will air sometime in 2018, after âHistory of Comicsâ and the âStory of Science Fictionâ in 2017.
A Star Is Born: Arnold Schwarzenegger turns 70 today
Imagine getting off the boat. Someone calls and says, âI hear youâre Mr. Universe. Do you want to be in a movie?â I say, âSure.â And all of a sudden I am running with the chariots through Central Park. Of course, no one can expect much of oneâs performance but it was on-the-job training.
— Arnold Schwarzenegger, 1991
FROM THE ARCHIVES: REAL HOLLYWOOD MUSCLE: No Star Makes More Money, Wields More Power or Has More Fun
President Trump got a fan letter from a young boy this week. Stephen Colbert introduced another young âfanâ Friday
White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders took time during a White House briefing this week to read a fan letter to President Trump from a 9-year-old boy named Dylan who has the nickname of âPickle.â
Sanders read part of the letter to reporters: âYouâre my favorite President ... I donât know why people donât like you.â Sanders interjected, âNeither do I, Dylan.â
The letter continued, âYou seem really nice. Can we be friends?â Sanders assured Pickle that she had spoken directly to Trump about him, and the president would âbe more than happy to be your friend.â
Stephen Colbert on Friday brought another young âfanâ of Trumpâs onstage Friday night to read her own letter during his CBS âLate Show.â
âDear President, my name is Norah, but everybody calls me âMustard,ââ the little girl recited. She continued, âYouâre my favorite current president.â
Norah then presented some probing questions to Trump: âI was wondering, does the attorney general enjoy your full support? And how do you plan to implement the ban on transgender people currently serving in the military? Will those on active duty be called home? Sounds like a logistical nightmare.â
She continued, âOne more thing: Are you a puppet of Vladimir Putin? I love puppets! I made one at camp! Love, Mustard.â
The âLate Showâ audience cheered.
Broadwayâs âGreat Cometâ producer apologizes for controversial Mandy Patinkin casting
The producer behind Broadwayâs struggling musical âNatasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812â has joined the apologetic refrain for the diversity uproar that followed the decision to bring in Mandy Patinkin to replace departing star Okieriete âOakâ Onaodowan, who is black.
The production came under fire this week following its move to replace Onaodowan, who was in the original cast of âHamilton,â with Tony Award winner Patinkin in a titular role.
âAs part of our sincere efforts to keep âCometâ running for the benefit of its cast, creative team, crew, investors and everyone else involved, we arranged for Mandy Patinkin to play Pierre,â co-producer Howard Kagan said in an official statement posted Friday on Twitter.
Kagan said they had the wrong impression of how Onaodowan felt about Patinkinâs casting and how it would be received by members of the theater community, âwhich we appreciate is deeply invested in the success of actors of color â as are we â and to whom we are grateful for bringing this to our attention.â
âWe regret our mistake deeply, and wish to express our apologies to everyone who felt hurt and betrayed by these actions,â he said.
The legendary Broadway star dropped out of the musical on Friday after the announcement that he would be replacing the African American star was met with disdain. Patinkin was to join the cast for a limited run from Aug. 15 through Sept. 3, but declined the part because he âwould never accept a role knowing it would harm another actor.â
âI hear what members of the community have said and I agree with them. I am a huge fan of Oak and I will, therefore, not be appearing in the show,â the âHomelandâ alum tweeted.
Another tweet on the showâs account included an apology to Patinkin âfor any misunderstandingâ and said they understood his decision to withdraw from the show.
Onaodowan, who had replaced recording artist Josh Groban in the role of Pierre earlier this month, is scheduled to continue to perform through Aug. 13, after which, he stated Friday on Twitter, he will not return to the show. It is unclear if his decision to leave the production was his own or prompted by other factors.
Show creator Dave Malloy, whose musical was inspired by a portion of Leo Tolstoyâs âWar and Peace,â also apologized Friday on Twitter for âhow everything went downâ and missing the âracial opticsâ of their casting decision.
They had previously asked actress Brittain Ashford to step aside for the casting of better-known singer-songwriter Ingrid Michaelson during the summer months and they didnât anticipate that Patinkinâs casting would be viewed differently, Malloy said.
Despite 12 Tony Award nominations, âCometâ only received two wins -- for set and lighting -- at the June ceremony and ticket sales ebbed when Groban departed.
Malloy said that sales for shows after Aug. 13, when Michaelsonâs run would also end, were âcatastrophically low.â So they decided to cast Patinkin, hoping that his star power would help boost sales, because the âweird showâ was in âdesperate shapeâ and on the brink of closing.
A Star Is Born: Ken Burns turns 64 today
Iâm asking, âWho are we? Who am I?â Itâs an obvious question for any artist. For me, itâs intensely personal and psychological.
— Ken Burns, 2000
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Documentary Maker Follows His Own Path in Celebrating History
Eagles, Doobie Brothers will play Classic Northwest show Sept. 30 in Seattle
The EaglesââClassicâ music festival series will continue with at least one more stop, this time in Seattle.
But unlike the inaugural Classic West bill July 15-16 at Dodger Stadium, which is having a Classic East encore this weekend in New York, the added Classic Northwest show on Sept. 30 will be just a single day and feature the Eagles and Doobie Brothers only.
The Classic West and East shows teamed the Eagles, Steely Dan and Doobie Brothers on one day, with Fleetwood Mac, Journey and Earth, Wind & Fire on the second day of each.
Tickets for the Classic Northwest bill go on sale Aug. 5 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.
At the outset of the Eaglesâ portion of Classic West on July 15, co-founder Don Henley indicated it was still uncertain how much of a future his long-running band might have absent co-founder Glenn Frey, who died last year at 67.
To make the Classic West and East shows possible, the group tapped Freyâs son, singer-guitarist Deacon Frey, and country music star Vince Gill to handle the lead vocals on the many Eagles songs that were originally sung by Glenn Frey.
âIn case this is our last dance,â Henley told the crowd at Dodger Stadium, where he was joined by longtime bandmates Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit, âwe want to thank all of you in Southern California for all your support.â
In her new Hulu series, Sarah Silverman wants to love America -- seriously
From her stand-up act to her Comedy Central series to her Twitter account, comic-actress Sarah Silverman has a long history of courting laughs and controversy. Her outspokenness and sometimes absurd, sometimes acerbic views on everything from celebrity to culture to politics, particularly President Trump and his administration, have raised eyebrows.
On her upcoming Hulu series, âI Love You, America,â Silverman is focused more on forming bonds than being provocative. In surveying the current political landscape and the comedy shows that skewer it, Silverman says she wants to reach out to all on the political spectrum.
âFor me, [those shows are] great, but they really connect with more like-minded people. Theyâre brilliant. Theyâre funny. But Iâm hoping to, with this show, connect with un-like-minded people,â Silverman said Thursday during a panel at the Television Critics Assn.âs summer press tour in Beverly Hills. âThe mission of the show is that weâre all the same. But whatâs important is that itâs funny.â
Although the exact format of the show is still being refined, Silverman did reveal some elements, including a monologue, a focus group in the studio and field pieces in which she travels around the country talking to people. For example, Silverman says she plans to go to Slidell, La., to meet a family that says they have never met a Jewish person.
âI canât help but have preconceived notions. They canât help but have preconceived notions,â said Silverman. âAll I can do is just try to be open and brave and go into the situation. And same for them.â
Although Silverman and executive producer Adam McKay didnât make any sharp criticisms about Trump at Thursdayâs session, they did take exception to his attacks against so-called entertainment liberals or âthe Hollywood elite.â
âWhat is he talking about?â said Silverman. âIâm from ... New Hampshire. Everybody out here is from somewhere else.â
The goal of the show will be to seek common ground and understanding, she said: âUltimately weâre all the same. The thesis of the show is that everybody just wants to be loved.â
Jerry Seinfeld is Forbesâ highest-paid comedian; Amy Schumer still only woman to crack the top 10
If Jerry Seinfeld is this yearâs king of comedy, then Amy Schumer is the queen.
The Comedy Central star once again landed on Forbesâ list of highest-paid comedians, the financial magazine announced Thursday. She was the first woman comic to crack the top 10 last year and remains the only woman on the list this year.
The âTrainwreckâ and âSnatchedâ star made an estimated $37.5 million between June 2016 and June 2017 thanks to her Netflix show âThe Leather Special,â her memoir âThe Girl With the Lower Back Tattooâ and endorsement deals with Bud Light and Old Navy. That ranked the raunchy comic No. 5 on the list filled with veteran comedy heavyweights.
Meanwhile, the âSeinfeldâ and âComedians in Cars Getting Coffeeâ star shot back to the top of the list this year, earning an estimated $69 million. Seinfeld was eclipsed last year by Kevin Hart, who this year dropped to the No. 6 spot with $32.5 million.
Chris Rock trailed Seinfeld for the second spot on Forbesâ list, earning $57 million. His record-breaking $20 million-per-special contract with Netflix paved the way for several comics, including Seinfeld, to cut lucrative deals with the streaming service, which is poised to become the go-to-destination for comedy specials. In addition to touring, those deals significantly padded the incomes of several stars on Forbesâ list.
In the third and fourth spots, funnymen Louis C.K. and Dave Chappelle, who earned $52 million and $47 million, respectively, also made expensive deals with the streaming service to make their millions.
To see Forbesâ complete list, click here.
For the record, 10:40 a.m.: A previous headline and version of this story said that Schumer was the first woman to make the top 10 list this year. Schumer was the first woman to make the top 10 last year.
âAmerican Horror Story: Cultâ gets sickeningly sweet in official poster
What exactly is beneath the surface in âAmerican Horror Story: Cultâ?
Bees, apparently.
The seventh season of FXâs hit horror anthology series is slowly revealing itself via its official Twitter account. On Thursday, the series shared the official poster for the series, and it is super messed up.
The poster features a deathly pale woman who happens to be missing the top of her head and, for that matter, her brain. Instead, the inside of her head is a honeycomb, replete with bees and, of course, honey.
This is creepy for so many reasons. Here are a few:
This poor woman has had the top of her skull removed, bringing to mind that particularly gruesome dinner scene featuring Anthony Hopkins and Ray Liotta in the 2001 film âHannibal.â
Even more horrifying is that this poor, sweet woman is definitely dressed like a clown.
The white makeup, lines through the eyes and exaggerated ruby red lips suggest that âAHS: Cultâ is drawing inspiration from traditional grotesque whiteface clown makeup. Think more Pennywise, less juggalo. (And if none of that is enough to scare you, please enjoy this clown dating site I stumbled across while researching all of this.)
FXâs âAmerican Horror Story: Cultâ premieres on Sept. 5.
A Star Is Born: Sally Struthers turns 70 today
Iâve never understood acting awards. Calling somebody âbest actorâ is a really crazy concept. If we wanted trophies, we should have joined a bowling team.
— Sally Struthers, 1998
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Road-Tested; Sally Struthers Sings the Praises of Touring With âGreaseâ and âAnnieâ
Stephen Colbert had some [bleeped] thoughts on Anthony Scaramucciâs NSFW rant
Stephen Colbert took a cue from incoming White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci -- or the Mooch, as heâs called -- by giving Thursdayâs episode of âThe Late Showââ a decidedly NSFW vibe.
âWe got an incredible taste of unfiltered Mooch today,â Colbert said during his monologue.
He was, of course, referring to Scaramucciâs disapproving -- and often vulgar -- comments about White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and chief strategist Steve Bannon in a New Yorker article that sent social media tongues wagging Thursday.
But to even discuss the matter, Colbert had to issue a warning to CBS censors: âYouâre going to want to break out the extra bleeps for this one,â he said before diving in. (If only we could get our ellipses to put in some overtime!)
In his colorful conversation with New Yorker correspondent Ryan Lizza, which took place Wednesday night,Scaramucci was trying to get to the bottom of who leaked that he had dinner at the White House with President Trump, the first lady, Sean Hannity and the former Fox News executive Bill Shine.
Scaramucci described Priebus as a â ... paranoid schizophrenicâ who had blocked him from the White House for six months -- prompting Colbert to break out an impression of Scaramucci.
âYes, the guyâs paranoid, OK? He thinks his own communications director is gonna stab him in the back again,â Colbert said with an exaggerated Italian accent.
âFront stab!â he added with a knifing gesture.
The New Yorker article also detailed how Scaramucci accused Bannon of seeking to âbuild [his] own brand off the ⌠strength of the presidentâ and made some other inflammatory remarks that we canât fully detail. So weâll let Colbert take it from here.
Longtime Disney imagineer Martin Sklar dies at 83
Martin âMartyâ Sklar, the pioneering Walt Disney Co. imagineer who played an instrumental role in the design of Disney theme parks, has died, the company announced Thursday night. He was 83.
During his 54 years at Disney, Sklar worked closely with Walt Disney and led the creative development of the Burbank companyâs theme parks, attractions and resorts around the world, including the companyâs ventures in the cruise business, housing development and the redesign of Times Square in New York.
âEverything about Marty was legendary â his achievements, his spirit, his career,â Disney Chief Executive Robert Iger said in a statement. âHe embodied the very best of Disney, from his bold originality to his joyful optimism and relentless drive for excellence. He was also a powerful connection to Walt himself. No one was more passionate about Disney than Marty and weâll miss his enthusiasm, his grace, and his indomitable spirit.â
Sklar was born in New Brunswick, N.J., and attended UCLA, where he was editor of the Daily Bruin newspaper when he was recruited to create the Disneyland News for Walt Disneyâs new Anaheim theme park in 1955.
After graduating in 1956, he joined Disney full-time and would become Disneyâs lieutenant. He wrote speeches, marketing materials and a film showcasing Waltâs vision for Walt Disney World and the Epcot theme park in Florida.
Is a happily ever after coming to âThe Mindy Projectâ?
Is there a happily ever after written in the stars for the final season of âThe Mindy Projectâ?
Series creator Mindy Kaling, who also plays the titular heroine at the center of the Hulu comedy, took the stage Thursday at the Television Critics Assn. press tour in Beverly Hills to discuss the showâs swan song season. And when asked if Kalingâs rom-com-obsessed character, Mindy Lahiri, would get her storybook ending, the 38-year-old actress suggested it wouldnât necessarily be in the way viewers expect.
âI think that all of us would agree that we do have âhappily ever after,â the connotations of it,â said Kaling, who was joined onstage by executive producer and showrunner, Matt Warburton, and producer and star Ike Barinholtz (sporting a neck brace from a recent stunt gone wrong). But âhappily ever afterâ isnât the same as no loose ends, she said. âThat everything is tied up neatly in a bow is something we arenât super interested in.â
âThat side of it I think weâre trying to avoid,â Kaling added, âwhile also leaving the audience with the sense of feeling that it was about something and that it really was a âprojectâ and that she had some growth in the end.â
And for fans wondering whether or how Danny Castellano (played by Chris Messina) would factor into all that, the season promises to shed some light on that.
For the unitiated, Messinaâs Danny is Mindyâs former fiance and the father of her child. Messina, who hasnât been a series regular since Season 4, is set to return for multiple episodes.
And while the Season 5 finale ended with Mindy marrying boyfriend Ben (Bryan Greenberg), hints were thrown that the new episodes would bring some clarity to the Mindy-Danny relationship.
âThe one thing we can promise the audience is a little bit of clarity about where they stand,â Warburton said. âItâs so great to see him back because weâve always known theyâre always going to be in each otherâs lives ⌠but itâs great to actually see what that means this season.â
âItâs complicated,â added Kaling. âTheyâre both married to other people, so we went into that season with all of that, which makes things sort of fun and delicious.â
Other familiar faces set to return for the final season are Mark and Jay Duplass, Adam Pally and Glenn Howerton.
Kaling, in discussing the decision to end the series, promised a good finale.
âThe decision to end the show was our decision, and I think thatâs always very hard,â Kaling said. âIt was like, God, should this be the end? ... I think right now the idea of doing a prequel or something like that just felt â we just have such a good finale. We have such a good finale that weâve known about for awhile.â
The final season of âThe Mindy Projectâ will start its rollout on Hulu in September.
Tiffany Haddish clarifies controversial Bill Cosby remarks: âIâm not afraid of the Big Bad Wolfâ
A joke that Tiffany Haddish recently told The Los Angeles Times has backfired on the breakout star of the new film âGirls Night.â
Talking to The Timesâ Treâvell Anderson, Haddish credited Bill Cosby as a comedy inspiration, seemingly unfazed by the multiple sexual-abuse allegations levied against the beleaguered, 80-year-old TV legend.
âI still want to work with Bill Cosby, I donât care,â she told The Times earlier this month. âIâll drink the juice. Iâll take a nap. I donât give a damn. But seriously, I would love for him to play my grandfather in something.â
Her remarks raised eyebrows and ire on social media, with some fans questioning her intentions and a New York magazine story noting that the actress âseems to have wandered into âproblematic faveâ territory.â
On Thursday, Haddish attempted to clarify those comments while speaking on a panel at the Television Critics Assn.âs summer press tour in Beverly Hills.
âWhat I said was a joke,â she said, noting that when youâre expected to be funny in promotional interviews, there are risks. âYouâre going to say some bad jokes.â
Haddish said her point had been that âIâm not afraid to do anything. Iâm not afraid of any kind of job. Iâm not afraid to play any kind of girl as long as it doesnât compromise my morals....
âIâve been through things. Iâve been victimized,â she added. âI donât agree with what he did or anything, but, at the end of the day, Iâm not afraid of the Big Bad Wolf. Thatâs what I was trying to say, and I was trying to do it in a humorous way.â
Times staff writer Sarah Rodman contributed to this report.
Tracy Morgan thanks God, and Tiffany Haddish reflects on her success at âLast O.G.â panel at TCA
âThank God.â
Thatâs what Tracy Morgan had to say about what it means for the â30 Rockâ and âSaturday Night Liveâ alum to be returning to TV three years after the devastating accident that put him in a coma and resulted in the death of his friend James âJimmy Mackâ McNair.
The stand-up comic and actor, whose new TBS comedy, âThe Last O.G.â premieres Oct. 24, was full of gratitude and thoughts on starting over during the presentation for the show at the Television Critics Assn. summer press tour Thursday in Beverly Hills.
Executive produced by Morgan, Jordan Peele and John Carcieri, âThe Last O.G.â chronicles the adventures of Tray (Morgan). Newly sprung from prison after serving 15 years, he has to acclimate to the changed times, his gentrified Brooklyn neighborhood and his former girlfriend (Tiffany Haddish of âGirls Tripâ) raising the children he didnât know existed with another man.
âThis is a show about humanity, this is a show about second chances, this is a show about redemption,â said Morgan, answering a question about whether it would explicitly explore African American issues. âI wanted to transcend that... I wanted to deal with humanity.â
Haddish, naturally, fielded several questions about âGirls Trip,â the new comedy film that has minted her as a star.
âI feel like a foster kid whoâs been in the system for a long time and then turned 16 and somebody adopted them and said, âYou can go to college and you ainât got to pay no school loans or nothing,â â she said of how sheâs been feeling in the wake of the filmâs superb box office. âIâm happy! Iâve been accepted finally after all these years of hard work, blood, sweat and tears.â
Haddish said she was looking forward to her role in âThe Last O.G.â since itâs a character who has gone through a transition in her life, just as she herself has.
Her fellow cast mates, including Cedric the Entertainer, good-naturedly ribbed her about becoming a diva since sheâs now a movie star. But Morgan noted seriously that Haddish has been nothing but a pro: âShe comes to work.â
Haddish joked: âMy bank account, it donât show movie star yet. Iâm waiting on it. They say nine months; itâs like a baby. Iâm waiting for the delivery.â
Morgan said it was important to surround himself with scene stealers such as Haddish and Cedric and was clearly earnest in his appreciation of his collaborators and their sensitivity to his physical needs.
âThey make sure I sit down... they donât ask me, they [say] sit down for a little while. So Iâm good. Iâm taken care of by my people, and I love them with my heart.â
It can be TGIF every day on Hulu: The service lands popular ABC programming block in SVOD deal
Every day can be Friday in the â90s with help from Hulu.
The streaming service announced Thursday it has signed a deal with Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution for the exclusive streaming rights to programs that were part of the popular ABC programming block known as TGIF.
The announcement was made during the streaming serviceâs day of panels at the Television Critics Assn. press tour in Beverly Hills.
The shows under the deal include âFull House,â âFamily Matters,â âPerfect Strangers,â âStep by Stepâ and âHanginâ With Mr. Cooper.â
Nabbing the rights to âFull Houseâ is particularly noteworthy considering Huluâs rival Netflixâs success with reviving the comedy, which is returning for a third season in September.
With the Hulu deal, more than 800 episodes of the five sitcoms from the bygone family friendly lineup will be available beginning Friday, Sept. 29.
âThese shows are more than just beloved hits, they were part of a cultural tradition to tune in every Friday night,â said Craig Erwich, Huluâs senior vice president of content in a statement.
TV Academy announces which awards will be handed out during Primetime, Creative Arts Emmys
Get your Emmys ballot ready â the Television Academy has announced which categories will be awarded during this yearâs 69th Primetime Emmy Awards and the separate Creative Arts Emmy Awards.
The main event will take place at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles on Sept. 17 and will be hosted by âThe Late Showâ star Stephen Colbert. Prizes will be awarded to comedy and drama series, limited series, reality competition, variety talk and sketch, television movie, acting, directing, and writing during the live telecast on CBS.
HBOâs âWestworldâ and NBCâs âSaturday Night Liveâ lead the nominees with 22 nods apiece, a total that includes several below-the-line categories to be doled out at the two Creative Arts Emmys ceremonies the week before.
Honoring artistic and technical achievements that could make or break your play-at-home ballot, the Creative Arts Emmys will be held in the same venue on two consecutive nights on Sept. 9 and 10. Theyâll be put together for one show, produced by Bob Bain, that will air on FXX on Sept. 16.
The first night will cover categories that include animation, choreography, cinematography, costuming, make-up, hairstyling, documentary and nonfiction awards, editing, lighting, sound-mixing, technical direction, variety special and some writing awards.
The second night will lean more heavily on front-of-the camera talent, awarding the likes of guest actors and actresses and stunt work, in addition to childrenâs programs, commercials, main title designs and theme music, music composition and supervision, prosthetic makeup and additional sound and editing categories.
For a complete list of this yearâs nominees, click here. Hereâs the complete list of the awards being handed out during the Primetime Emmys telecast:
- COMEDY SERIES
- DIRECTING FOR A COMEDY SERIES
- DIRECTING FOR A DRAMA SERIES
- DIRECTING FOR A LIMITED SERIES, MOVIE OR DRAMATIC SPECIAL
- DIRECTING FOR A VARIETY SERIES
- DRAMA SERIES
- LEAD ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
- LEAD ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
- LEAD ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
- LEAD ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
- LEAD ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
- LEAD ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
- LIMITED SERIES
- REALITY-COMPETITION PROGRAM
- SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
- SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
- SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
- SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
- SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
- SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
- TELEVISION MOVIE
- VARIETY SKETCH SERIES
- VARIETY TALK SERIES
- WRITING FOR A COMEDY SERIES
- WRITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES
- WRITING FOR A LIMITED SERIES, MOVIE OR DRAMATIC SPECIAL
- WRITING FOR A VARIETY SERIES
Kesha finds redemption in new song: âThe past canât haunt me if I donât let itâ
For Kesha, âLearn to Let Goâ is not just an aptly titled track off her upcoming âRainbowâ LP.
âItâs become one of my mantras over the last few years,â she said in a remarkably uplifting letter that the singer published Thursday to accompany a new video for the song. (This is her new M.O., it would seem.)
âLearn to Let Go,â which Kesha co-wrote alongside her mother, Pebe Sebert, is a heartrending chronicle of redemption.
âHad a boogeyman under my bed/ Putting crazy thoughts inside my head,â she sings, while real home-video footage of a whimsical young Kesha cuts between clips of a grown Kesha frolicking through the forest. The chorus rings like a self-empowered anthem: âThe past canât haunt me if I donât let it.â
âMy mom is always telling me how you have to learn to accept that you canât try to control everything,â she wrote in the letter. âWhen you realize that you are not the one in control and you stop holding onto regrets â itâs liberating.
âYour past only has as much effect on your future as you want it to,â Kesha continued. âItâs about embracing your past, but not letting it define you.â
Her new album, âRainbow,â will be released Aug. 11.
Stephen Colbert to bring animated Trump series to Showtime
Stephen Colbert has ridden anti-Trump sentiment to the top of the late-night ratings. Now heâs riding it all the way to premium cable.
On Thursday, Showtime announced it had ordered 10 episodes of an as-yet-untitled animated series featuring cartoon renderings of the president, his family and inner circle.
The satirical half-hour series, executive produced by Colbert and âThe Late Showâsâ show runner Chris Licht, will debut on Showtime this fall. According to the network, turnaround on the series will be quick in order to incorporate current events.
âStephen and Chris have an uncanny genius for deconstructing the world of President Trump, and this series opens a new realm for them,â Showtime President David Nevins said in a press statement.
Tim Luecke, who co-created the animated version of Trump who frequently appears in âLate Showâ bits â including a recent segment from the notorious presidential suite of the Moscow Ritz-Carlton â will serve as lead animator.
The announcement caps off a period of good news for Colbert, who racked up six Emmy nominations this month and will be hosting the awards in September. The recently concluded âRussia Week,â in which the comedian traveled to Moscow and St. Petersburg, brought âThe Late Showâ its biggest margin over âThe Tonight Showâ since its premiere in 2015.
While âThe Late Showâ airs on CBS, Colbert has also developed ties with his corporate cousins at Showtime. Many point to his riveting election night special âStephen Colbertâs Live Election Night Democracyâs Series Finale,â which aired on the premium network, as a turning point after an uneven transition from âThe Colbert Report.â
For its part, Showtime has invested heavily in political content over the last 18 months, most notably the documentary series âThe Circus,â from journalists Mark Halperin and John Heilemann.
Matt Damon gets punched right in the face in George Clooneyâs âSuburbiconâ trailer
Matt Damon, Oscar Isaac and Julianne Moore star in the trailer for George Clooneyâs âSuburbicon.â
In George Clooneyâs latest directorial effort, âSuburbicon,â the pleasantries of a 1950s town are undone when a home invasion exposes the communityâs criminal subculture and racial tensions.
And Matt Damonâs Gardner Lodge gets stuck in the thick of it -- defending his young son, making death threats, killing mobsters and getting popped square in his bespectacled face at the office -- as seen in the first trailer that Paramount unveiled Thursday.
Did we mention this is a comedy? The dark, screwball kind from the minds of screenwriters Clooney and frequent collaborators Ethan and Joel Coen and Grant Heslov? Well, it is, in case that wasnât clear from the previous description.
âThese animals took everything from us,â a blood-splattered Gardner tells his son Nicky (Noah Jupe) at the dinner table. âI have to make decisions like whatâs best for the family.â
After Gardnerâs wife is murdered, he invites âAuntie Margaretâ (Julianne Moore) to come live in the manicured suburban community to help with his son. Meanwhile, he gets mixed up with a loan shark that sets him on the warpath of a formidable, coffee-swilling collector named Roger (Oscar Isaac).
The film is based on a script that the Coen brothers wrote years ago that Clooney found, and they agreed to have him direct it, according to Moore.
Paramount acquired the U.S. rights to the film, billed as a comedy, crime and mystery, at the Berlin Film Festival last year. It will be shown at the Toronto International Film Festival in September and hits theaters on Oct. 27.
Woody Allenâs âWonder Wheelâ to complete Amazonâs turn to full-service distribution
Thursday it was announced that Woody Allenâs latest film, âWonder Wheel,â will have its world premiere as the closing-night film at this yearâs New York Film Festival. The film stars Kate Winslet, Justin Timberlake, Juno Temple and James Belushi in a story set around Coney Island in the 1950s.
But that wasnât the only Allen item of the day. Variety reported that âWonder Wheelâ will also be the first film fully distributed by Amazon when it opens in theaters on Dec. 1. The company has already made fast inroads to the movie business, winning Academy Awards this year for âManchester by the Seaâ and âThe Salesman,â but has up to now worked with established distribution partners such as Roadside Attractions or Bleecker Street to help get those movies into theaters.
Amazon released Allenâs 2016 film, âCafe Society,â starring Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart and Steve Carell, in partnership with Lionsgate. The online giant also released Allenâs six-part âCrisis in Six Scenes,â in which he starred alongside Elaine May and Miley Cyrus, late last year via the Amazon Prime Video streaming service.
The move by Amazon is yet another way the company is distinguishing itself in relation to streaming rival Netflix. Where Netflix has been seen as pulling back from theatrical distribution, opting for either extremely limited or no theatrical release at all of its titles to drive viewers to its own platform, this latest push by Amazon renews its commitment to traditional theatrical releases.
The New York Film Festival slot for âWonder Wheelâ gives Amazon the three marquee spots at the showcase. Previously announced, Richard Linklaterâs âLast Flag Flyingâ will open the festival, and Todd Haynesâ âWonderstruck,â which premiered at this yearâs Cannes Film Festival, will show in the centerpiece slot.
Other upcoming Amazon titles include Mike Whiteâs âBradâs Status,â starring Ben Stiller, and Luca Guadagninoâs remake of âSuspiria,â starring Dakota Johnson.
Katy Perry to host 2017 MTV Video Music Awards
The MTV Video Music Awards are returning to California and getting a certified âCalifornia Gurlâ to host.
Katy Perry took to her Twitter feed Thursday to announce her upcoming gig hosting -- and performing -- at the VMAs in August.
âIâve been training with MTV in zero gravity, eating astronaut ice cream, and Iâm on a group text with Buzz Aldrin and Neil deGrasse Tyson,â Perry said in a statement. âCome August 27th, Iâll be ready to be your MOONWOMAN! Brace for impact, kids.â
Perry will kick off the evening as the first announced performer for the ceremony. On Tuesday, Perry earned five VMA nominations for her video contributions over the last year, tying with the Weeknd, with only Kendrick Lamar earning more.
âWeâre thrilled to have global phenomenon Katy Perry as the host and a performer at the 2017 VMAs,â said Bruce Gillmer, head of music and music talent for Global Entertainment Group, Viacom, in a statement from MTV. âShe is at the forefront of music culture and the perfect person to anchor this yearâs show, which promises to be one of the most diverse and music-filled in VMA history.â
The 2017 MTV Video Music Awards will air from the Forum in Inglewood on Aug. 27.
Find a full list of nominees here.
Mick Jagger releases two new, politically charged singles
Mick Jagger has been looking to the past on recent albums and festival dates. But a pair of urgent new singles are firmly set in the present.
On Thursday, the Rolling Stones frontman released two tracks, âGotta Get A Gripâ and âEngland Lost,â that describe, as he put it in a statement, the âanxiety, unknowability of the changing political situationâ in a post-Brexit U.K.
The production is resolutely modern, built on programmed drums and clanging guitar noise. The London grime artist Skepta even joins him for a verse on âEngland Lost.â
âOstensibly, itâs about seeing an England football team lose, but when I wrote the title I knew it would be about more than just that. Itâs about a feeling that we are in a difficult moment in our history. Itâs about the unknowability about where you are and the feeling of insecurity,â Jagger said in a statement.
âItâs obviously got a fair amount of humour because I donât like anything too on the nose but itâs also got a sense of vulnerability of where we are as a country.â
The âGirlsâ actress Jemima Kirke also stars in a new clip for âGotta Get A Grip.â The songs are Jaggerâs first new solo material since 2001âs âGoddess In the Doorway.â
Trumpâs proposed transgender military ban turns late-night into hostile territory
If thereâs one upside to the Trump administrationâs early-morning Twitter proclamations, itâs that it gives late-night shows all day to craft their reactions.
Wednesday began with President Trump announcing a ban on transgender individuals serving in the United States military and ended with late-night hosts uniformly blasting the policy decision in hilarious fashion.
On âThe Late Show,â Stephen Colbert had plenty to say about Trumpâs tweets, which ended with an uncharacteristic âthank you.â
âThank you?â Colbert responded, shocked, before offering his own profane two-word response to the president.
Colbert went on to discuss what he saw as the greatest fallacy of the presidentâs reasons for banning transgender soldiers: increased medical costs.
Though a 2016 study funded by the Pentagon found that military medical spending on transgender soldiers would increase anywhere from $2.4 million to $8.4 million, Colbert wanted to reframe those figures.
âTo put that number in perspective, the military spends five times as much on Viagra,â Colbert explained, âAnd if your erection lasts for more than four hours, thatâs too bad, because youâre stuck on a submarine for the next six months.â
On âThe Daily Showâ Trevor Noah had similar concerns about the presidentâs cost-related excuse, pointing out that taxpayers are paying $60 million for Trump to travel to his various properties throughout his presidency.
Noah also pondered which of Trumpâs generals heâd consulted with, given that the Pentagon was unaware of his proclamation, suggesting that perhaps heâd spoken with The General Online.
âLate Night With Seth Meyersâ also invoked the cartoon general from the car insurance commercials, when Meyers opted to turn discussion of Trumpâs tweets over to four of his female writers.
âToday it might be trans people, but tomorrow itâs gay people, and then the next day itâs black people, and after that itâs women, and then itâs immigrants,â the writers pointed out, all of those groups represented between them.
On âThe Tonight Showâ Jimmy Fallon had the good sense to turn over a portion of his monologue to transgender comedian Patti Harrison, who had plenty to say about Trumpâs Wednesday announcement.
âWhen I saw the headline this morning, at first I just read, âDonald Trump bans transgender people,â and I was like, âYeah, that sounds like him,ââ Harrison deadpanned. âBut then I realized it was just in the military and I was shocked, because I assumed he already did that.â
But it was James Corden who took a completely different take on the transgender military ban, opting for a stylish and heartfelt song and dance, expressing his love and appreciation for the LGBT community.
Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr are âon the road againâ in new song collaboration
Any time the surviving Beatles reunite on record is a historic occasion. But a new single from Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr packs in even more classic-rock star power.
Starrâs new song âWeâre on the Road Againâ is one of several collaborations with his former bandmate on his new LP, âGive More Love.â The song also has guest appearances from Joe Walsh, Edgar Winter and Steve Lukather.
Itâs a slightly goofy ode to life on the road, as Starr boasts that, âWe play really tight; we play really loudâ and cheekily references his own song âPhotograph.â
The two Beatles last recorded together on Starrâs 2010 album, âY Not,â and performed McCartneyâs âQueenie Eyeâ at the 2014 Grammys. Starr announced the McCartney studio collaboration back in February, thanking the fellow Beatle in a Twitter post.
Set for release on Sept. 15, âGive More Loveâ will also feature cameos from Peter Frampton, Don Was, Richard Marx and Dave Stewart, among others.
You can hear Starrâs new track with Paul McCartney via Rolling Stone.
A Star Is Born: Norman Lear turns 95 today
People also laugh harder when they are interested and concerned and care. When youâve got people worried about whatâs going to happen [to a character], then you can present a laugh to them, and the laugh is far bigger.
— Norman Lear, 2012
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Patt Morrison Asks: Norman Lear, TVâs seriously funny icon
âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ returns this fall -- and you can expect a âPirates of the Caribbeanâ vibe?
Larry David revealed the real reason âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ is at last returning after a six-year hiatus: People wouldnât stop bugging him about it.
The âSeinfeldâ co-creator took the stage Wednesday at the Television Critics Assn. press tour in Beverly Hills -- joined by his âCurbâ cohorts Susie Essman, Jeff Garlin and J.B. Smoove and executive producer Jeff Schaffer -- to discuss the showâs coming ninth season. So, why bring back the show now after all these years?
âIâm not a misser,â David told reporters. âI donât really miss things, people that much, but I was missing it. I thought, yeah, what the hell. And I got tired of people asking me if the show was coming back. I couldnât get asked that question anymore and I wasnât ready to say, âNo, never.ââ
The often madcap and sometimes hilariously perplexing 30-minute panel -- led by Davidâs gruff wit and deadpans -- kicked off with a teaser for the season. There was David in a shower, David talking about constipation, David enduring the displeasure of middle-seat status on a flight.
âThe amount of uncomfortable situations [real Larry David] has been in these last six years,â Schaffer said, âyouâre going to see it all. Itâs like weâre sitting in the Ft. Knox of awkward.â
As for TV Larry David, Schaffer said viewers will learn very quickly what heâs been up to during the years that have passed.
âOnce the show starts to air, it will be self-evident,â he said. âIt goes to this really strange, fun, crazy place.... And you will never expect where it ends.â
The trip to that ending begins Oct. 1 when the comedy returns to HBO. The 10-episode season brings back âCurbâ favorites like Cheryl Hines, as well as frequent faces Richard Lewis, Bob Einstein, Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen.
And what would a long-awaited return be without some guest stars? Elizabeth Banks, Ed Begley Jr., Carrie Brownstein, Bryan Cranston, Lauren Graham, Jimmy Kimmel, Nick Offerman, Nasim Pedrad and Elizabeth Perkins will get in on the fun.
For those who still need something to pin their hopes on about what this season will entail, Garlin offered this absurdly brilliant comparison.
âIt really thematically follows âPirates of the Caribbean.â ... Itâs more like the last one than the first few.â
At TCA 2017, HBO defends âConfederate,â announces Jon Stewart special and says âDeadwoodâ movie is inching closer
HBO, which has the hottest show on television with âGame of Thrones,â recently came under fire with the announcement of a new series called âConfederateâ from a team that includes âGame of Thronesâ producers D.B. Weiss and David Benioff. The series revolves around events that lead to the âThird American Civil Warâ and examines an alternate reality in which the South seceded from the Union and thus, slavery is still legal.
Casey Bloys, president of HBO programming, defended the project Wednesday during the premium networkâs session at the summer edition of the Television Critics Assn. gathering at the Beverly Hilton.
Bloys said that, in hindsight, the announcement was mishandled because it lacked the context and the vision that he received from Benioff and Weiss in discussing the series.
He admitted it was âmisguidedâ to believe they could simply announce a series with such a sensitive and volatile subject matter. âWe could have done a better job with the press release,â he said. âThere was no benefit of context.â
âMy hope is people will judge the actual material instead of what it could be or should be or might be,â he said. âWeâll rise or fall based on that material.â
He added that he felt the series, rather than being divisive, would be able to advance âthe racial discussion.â Although the topic is controversial, he said he and the producers of the show âall feel this is a risk worth taking.â
Bloys also stressed that the depiction of slavery would not echo âGone With the Windâ and would not include whips and plantations.
In other major HBO news, former âDaily Showâ host Jon Stewart will perform a stand-up special at a date and time to be announced, and host the latest âNight of Too Many Stars,â an all-star benefit for autism.
Also, a movie reboot of HBOâs western âDeadwoodâ is closer to reality. Bloys said the showâs creator, David Milch, has completed a script that will please fans of the series while also being accessible to those less familiar with the show. But, he said, reuniting the large cast, which included Timothy Olyphant and Ian McShane, may prove challenging.
Two Jon Stewart comedy specials are coming to HBO
Jon Stewart will headline two stand-up specials for HBO.
The news was announced Wednesday at the Television Critics Assn. press tour in Beverly Hills.
The former âDaily Showâ host will get a stand-up special â his first since since 1996âs âJon Stewart: Unleavenedâ aired on the network. A date and location have not been confirmed.
âWeâre excited to bring Jon to the network with this pair of specials,â said HBO programming president Casey Bloys in a statement. âWeâve all missed his uniquely thoughtful brand of humor.â
âIâm really thrilled to be able to return to stand-up on HBO,â added Stewart in a statement. âTheyâve always set the standard for great stand-up specials. Plus, I can finally use up the last of the Saddam Hussein jokes left over from my first special.â
Stewart will also host the latest âNight of Too Many Stars,â the all-star benefit for Next for Autism, a nonprofit organization focused on people living with autism spectrum disorder. The special will air live this fall and will take place from the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York.
The specials are part of Stewartâs four-year deal with the premium cable network.
Angelina Jolie talks about âdifficultâ split from Brad Pitt
A-lister Angelina Jolie is adjusting to the domestic growing pains of life as a single mom â making a proper breakfast, keeping house and picking up dog poop.
âI never woke up and thought, I really want to live a bold life. I just canât do the other. Itâs the same as I canât make a casserole. I cannot sit still,â she said in a sprawling new interview with Vanity Fair, in which she discussed her high-profile split from actor Brad Pitt.
âIâve been trying for nine months to be really good at just being a homemaker and picking up dog poop and cleaning dishes and reading bedtime stories. And Iâm getting better at all three. But now I need to get my boots on and go hang, take a trip,â the humanitarian said of her plans to head to Africa for a mission with the preventing Sexual Violence Initiative.
The Oscar-winning actress explained how and when her marriage devolved, though she didnât go into great detail about the breakup for the sake of their six kids.
The marriage began suffering in the summer of 2016 while she was in post-production on her fifth directorial effort, âFirst They Killed My Father,â a film about Cambodiaâs Khmer Rouge genocide, which hits Netflix in September.
âThings got bad,â Jolie said. âI didnât want to use that word. ... Things became âdifficult.ââ
The director became slightly defensive at the mention of the familyâs globe-trotting lifestyle, which reportedly had been grating on Pitt.
â[Our lifestyle] was not in any way a negative,â she asserted. âThat was not the problem. That is and will remain one of the wonderful opportunities we are able to give our children. ... Theyâre six very strong-minded, thoughtful, worldly individuals. Iâm very proud of them.â
After 12 years together and a few years of marriage, Jolie filed for divorce from Pitt in September 2016. While her ex was couch-surfing, she and the kids spent nine months in a rental property before settling into a six-bedroom, 10-bathroom Los Feliz manse once owned by film legend Cecil B. DeMille.
âItâs just been the hardest time, and weâre just kind of coming up for air. [This house] is a big jump forward for us, and weâre all trying to do our best to heal our family.â
The divorce filing came suddenly âfor the health of the familyâ on the heels of a spat Pitt had with their 15-year-old son, Maddox. They reached a divorce settlement privately in January after battling publicly for months over custody of the kids. The Oscar-winning producer had been vilified with accusations of child abuse and having an affair with his âAlliedâ costar Marion Cotillard. But he arguably won over public opinion with his introspective GQ Style interview in May in which he admitted to sobering up after âboozing too much.â
Last year, Jolie was diagnosed with hypertension and developed Bellâs palsy when nerve damage caused one side of her face to droop. She took up acupuncture to treat it.
âSometimes women in families put themselves last,â she said, âuntil it manifests itself in their own health.â
Thatâs just the latest in her medical history. Following a preventative double mastectomy in 2013, she had her ovaries and fallopian tubes removed in 2015, which sent her into menopause.
âI canât tell if itâs menopause or if itâs just been the year Iâve had,â she said, quipping about her dry skin and the idea that she could still be considered a sex symbol.
âI actually feel more of a woman because I feel like Iâm being smart about my choices, and Iâm putting my family first, and Iâm in charge of my life and my health. I think thatâs what makes a woman complete.â
For the record, Aug. 4, 12:55 p.m.: A previous version of this story said that âFirst They Killed My Fatherâ would hit Netflix this month. It debuts in September.
Caitlyn Jenner questions why Trump isnât fighting for transgender service members
There are 15,000 patriotic transgender Americans in the US military fighting for all of us. What happened to your promise to fight for them?
— Caitlyn Jenner, tweeting in response to President Trumpâs transgender military ban announced Wednesday
Robert Pattinson confirms heâs âkind ofâ engaged to singer FKA Twigs
âTwilightâ heartthrob Robert Pattinson says heâs âkind of â engaged to singer FKA Twigs.
The actor addressed the engagement rumors Tuesday in a direct response to shock jock Howard Sternâs questioning on Sirius XMâs âThe Howard Stern Show.â
âYouâre engaged, right?â Stern said after calling the edgy English songstress his fiancĂŠe.
âYeah, kind of,â Pattinson, 31, responded uneasily.
The âGood Timeâ star, whose relationships have been intensely scrutinized since he dated âTwilightâ co-star Kristen Stewart at the height of the teen vampire frenzy, agreed that heâs been a bit protective of his romances. Heâs been dating the âWater Meâ singer, real name Tahlia Barnett, since 2014 and theyâve been rumored to be engaged since April 2015. Save for public appearances together, Pattinson has kept pretty mum about the relationship.
âItâs one of the most frustrating things in the world because you want to be able toâ show off a relationship, he told Stern. âYou kind of get stuck in this position where you have to make decisions whether you want to let the kind of crazy people in.â
Pattinson was referring to the âTwi-hardsâ or, as he called them, a âcrack troupe of craziesâ who believe every decision he makes is part of some big conspiracy.
âTo protect [the relationship] you kind of think, I want to create a big boundary between it. But then it makes it difficult for your actual relationship,â he said.
Additionally, Pattinson also discussed the racial disparagement his fiancĂŠe faces on social media for dating him. He tries to tune out the hate when he can, but he isnât always successful.
âI think itâs like professional trolls,â he said of rude commenters. âThey get so addicted to kind of just wanting to cause hurt and pain on someone and itâs just one of the most difficult things to know how to confront. Itâs a faceless enemy. ... It might seem fake to them, but itâs definitely real in your life.â
Pattinson said responding to hate can just be feeding into it.
âIt makes me feel less powerful if youâre trying to attackâ and make it go away. âItâs like trying to attack a reflection in the water or something. You just look crazy,â he said.
David Letterman cringes when late-night TV hosts refer to viewers as âfansâ
A profoundly bearded David Letterman made a rare talk-show appearance Monday -- one of just a handful of public ventures since the end of his run on âThe Late Showâ in 2015. Only this time, Letterman arrived as a guest.
In an unusual turn of events, the former late-night host played interviewee on the season premiere of stand-up comedian Norm Macdonaldâs podcast, âNorm Macdonald Live.â
The longtime pals discussed a number of matters, from Lettermanâs first-ever hosting gig (a game show called âWordbustersâ) to the time he found himself face to face with Richard Nixon.
The two also discussed late-night TVâs changing landscape and how Letterman never felt comfortable thinking of himself as the star of his own show.
âI could not possibly, and still donât, consider myself a star, because I couldnât refer to myself as a star,â Letterman said. âJohnny Carson was a star, thereâs no question of that. So for me to adopt that -- âStarring Dave Lettermanâ -- that was just ridiculous.
âIn the same way, I always cringe a little when people refer to the folks who watch their show as their âfans,ââ Letterman added. âI just think thatâs a little too ⌠you know, you kind of just stepped over the line of basic humility there.â
Macdonald commented on late-nightâs packed roster of big-name hosts -- none of whom he finds particularly unique, except Conan OâBrien, who he thinks has âchanged it up a little.â
On any plans for a late-night return to the host seat, Letterman told fans not to expect too much.
âIâve done it for 30 years,â he said. âI donât want to do it anymore.â
Watch the full episode above (warning: some profanity).
Olivia de Havilland, 101, files motion to expedite her âFeudâ lawsuit
Citing her advanced age, legendary actress Olivia de Havilland has filed a motion in her âFeudâ lawsuit for a preferential trial date this fall.
De Havillandâs attorneys filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Tuesday, requesting that the jury trial be set in November or no later than 120 days of her motion being granted. The 101-year-old is hoping that a judge will fast track the trial during her Sept. 13 hearing date, which is just days before âFeudâ is expected to be a big winner at the Primetime Emmy Awards. (The miniseries is nominated for 18 awards.)
The âGone With the Windâ star sued FX and âFeudâ showrunner Ryan Murphy last month over her depiction in the miniseries about rival actresses Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. The two-time Oscar winner, who was played by actress Catherine Zeta-Jones on the show, makes legal claims about violations of her common law and statutory rights of publicity, her right to privacy and unjust enrichment.
âBased on her unusually advanced age, resulting particular susceptibility to disease, and recurring health issues, there is a substantial likelihood that she, as with anyone at this advanced age, may not survive for any extended period of time,â the motion said. âIt is likely that if a trial preference motion is not granted, Olivia de Havilland will be prejudiced, because on the normal schedule, trial would not be set within the next 120 days.â
Her team also argued that because she is the sole plaintiff, De Havilland is crucial to the trial.
âOlivia de Havilland has a substantial interest in the litigation as a whole here as her personal statutory right of publicity cause of action does not survive her death. ... Further, should Olivia de Havilland die before her trial date, she will not be able to enjoy the benefits which she would receive in damages,â the motion said.
De Havillandâs June 30 lawsuit said the show damaged her âprofessional reputation for integrity, honesty, generosity, self-sacrifice and dignity.â She claimed that FX, Murphy and Fox producers never sought or obtained her permission to be depicted in the series and that Zeta-Jonesâ portrayal of her in an episode about the 1963 Oscars cast her in a âfalse, hurtful and damaging light.â
The defendants have not yet responded to de Havillandâs initial filing.
According to Deadline, the Paris-based actress will not be attending the September hearing but may return to Hollywood if the trial is expedited to November.
âSounds like cowardiceâ: Trumpâs transgender military policy sparks celebrity scorn
President Trump announced Wednesday via Twitter that he had decided to reverse the Obama administrationâs decision to allow transgender people to serve openly in the armed forces.
âOur military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail,â the president tweeted.
A 2016 study commissioned by the Pentagon found that Obamaâs decision could increase military medical spending anywhere from $2.4 million to $8.4 million annually, a 0.13% increase over current medical spending.
Some celebs were incensed by Trumpâs decision, taking to their own social media accounts to voice both their fury and support for the trans community.
Trump bars transgender people from serving âin any capacityâ in the U.S. military >>
A Star Is Born: Mick Jagger turns 74 today
You donât go around all the time thinking about it, but every once in a while on stage, when youâre having a great night, you think, âJesus, this has been an amazing band.â
— Mick Jagger, 1989
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Two Stones Reminisce, but Not in Tempo
âWonder Womanâ sequel nabs 2019 release date
Rest easy, citizens. Diana Prince will soon return to save us all.
Warner Bros. announced Tuesday night that the planned âWonder Womanâ sequel starring Comic-Con darling Gal Gadot and potentially helmed by Patty Jenkins will be landing in theaters Dec. 13, 2019.
âWonder Womanâ stormed theaters in June with glowing critical reviews, earning $103 million in its opening weekend and going on to gross more than $780 million worldwide (and counting).
The film is the highest-grossing live-action film directed by a woman (ousting Phyllida Lloydâs âMamma Mia!â for the honor) and the most successful DC Extended Universe film to date.
If you canât wait two years for more Wonder Woman, Gadotâs character will appear in âJustice Leagueâ alongside her DC cohorts when the film opens Nov. 19.
Check out the new footage of âJustice Leagueâ released at San Diego Comic-Con, below.
Nine years in the making: Chrissy Teigen blocked by Trump on Twitter
Snarky model Chrissy Teigen has joined the list of Twitter users barred from seeing President Trumpâs tweets.
Because when âyouâre firedâ no longer applies, âyouâre blockedâ does.
The âLip Sync Battleâ co-host and outspoken critic of the president shared her new achievement -- and a screen grab notifying her that she can no longer view tweets on Trumpâs personal account -- with a post on Monday night.
âAfter 9 years of hating Donald J Trump, telling him âlol no one likes youâ was the straw,â she wrote.
The snarky model was referring to her July 23 response to Trumpâs tweet about some Republicans doing âvery little to protect their president.â
Teigen, who along with husband John Legend has been openly critical of Trump, has called Trump âa racist pig,â a ânational embarrassmentâ and a âproud type of insaneâ on the micro-blogging site. She has also said that his entire campaign was âbuilt on liesâ that his supporters are âtoo lazy to fact check.â She has outright said she hates him and tweeted at him a how-to guide to deactivating his account on his birthday.
MORE: Everything President Trump has tweeted (and what it was about)
The 31-year-old TV personality appears to be in good and growing company. Other celebrities blocked by Trump include novelist Stephen King and âStar Trek: The Next Generationâ actress Marina Sirtis.
The frequency with which the president has been blocking users prompted the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University to file a federal lawsuit this month on behalf of seven Twitter users who say their 1st Amendment rights were violated after they were blocked from reading tweets on Trumpâs personal account @realDonaldTrump, not the official @POTUS account, after criticizing him or his policies.
The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in the Southern District of New York in Manhattan, names Trump, former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer and White House director of social media Dan Scavino as defendants. The Knight Institute sent a letter to the White House last month threatening legal action if it didnât heed its call to unblock followers.
âDespacitoâsâ Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee call out Venezuelan president for using song to push agenda
âDespacitoâ singers Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee and co-writer Erika Ender have condemned Venezuelaâs President Nicolas Maduro for appropriating their international hit song for political gain.
The chart-topping Puerto Rican recording artists and Panamanian songwriter on Monday called out Maduro, currently the subject of violent and sometimes fatal nationwide protests over his policies, for reworking their lyrics to appeal to voters during his weekly television show on Sunday.
The revision promoted the leaderâs plans for a controversial citizenâs assembly to be elected on July 30 and tasked with rewriting Venezuelaâs 1999 constitution and bypassing the opposition-led legislature.
âOur call to the Constituent Assembly only seeks to unite the country ... despacito,â Maduroâs version said. The term âdespacitoâ means slowly in Spanish and in the original version of the song refers to the singerâs wooing techniques.
Maduroâs supporters swayed to the remix dressed in matching T-shirts and baseball caps that brandished campaign slogans. the Associated Press said. The president was seen clapping along to the remix while the audience danced, according to the BBC.
âI DO NOT AGREE WITH THIS,â Ender wrote in Spanish on Instagram, citing a news story about Maduroâs use of the song. âI cannot see so much pain in people I love so much. Warrior people, people with iron will. Good people, who are fighting for freedom of rights and expression. ... I love Venezuela, a land that has given me true brothers and sisters. Brothers who suffer because of the situation that exists.â
Ender also lamented seeing the song she co-wrote be used without permission âto advertise campaigns linked to a regime that has sowed so much discontent and suffering.â
âOn repeated occasions, I have said how much I enjoy the versions of âDespacitoâ that have been released on a global level. However there has to be a limit,â Fonsi also wrote in Spanish on Instagram. âI have never been consulted, nor have I authorized the use of or the change of lyrics of âDespacitoâ for political means, much less in the middle of the deplorable situation in a country I love so much, Venezuela.â
He added that his music is âfor everyone who wants to listen to it and enjoy it, not to use as propaganda that tries to manipulate the will of the people who are crying out loud for their liberty and a better future.â
Daddy Yankee took a much more blunt approach in his post, sharing an image of a news article about Maduro with a large red X superimposed on it.
âWhat can you expect of a person who has stolen lives from young dreamers and people who are looking for a better future for their children?â the reggaeton rapper wrote in Spanish.
âThat you illegally appropriated âDespacitoâ does not compare to the crimes you commit and have committed in Venezuela. Your dictatorial regime is a mockery not only for my Venezuelan brothers, but for the whole world. With that nefarious marketing plan, you will only continue to highlight your fascist ideology, which has killed hundreds of heroes and injured more than 2,000.â
Millions of Venezuelans joined a general strike last week amid economic turmoil and a shortage of food and medicine in the country. Government opponents dealt a symbolic blow on Sunday to Maduro, casting votes in an unofficial referendum that rejected his plan for the constitutional overhaul.
The government denounced the opposition balloting as illegal and seditious, according to The Times, but turnout appeared high at thousands of makeshift voting places set up throughout the country and abroad.
Netflix invests in Matt Groeningâs âDisenchantmentâ
Matt Groening is ready to take another crack at this television thing.
The creator of âThe Simpsons,â which debuts its 29th season on Fox this fall, has a new show courtesy of Netflix.
The streaming service provider announced Tuesday that it had ordered 20 episodes of âDisenchantment,â an adult animated comedy series set in a deteriorating fantasy kingdom.
The show centers around a hard-living young princess named Bean, voiced by Abbi Jacobson (âBroad Cityâ), her elf companion, Elfo (Nat Faxon), and personal demon Luci (Eric Andre).
âUltimately, âDisenchantmentâ will be about life and death, love and sex, and how to keep laughing in a world full of suffering and idiots, despite what the elders and wizards and other jerks tell you,â Groening said in a statement Tuesday.
âMatt Groeningâs brilliant work has resonated with generations around the world and we couldnât be happier to work with him on âDisenchantment,â â Cindy Holland, vice president of original content for Netflix, said in a statement. âThe series will bear his trademark animation style and biting wit, and we think itâs a perfect fit for our many Netflix animation fans.â
The series joins Netflixâs âBojack Horsemanâ in aiming for an audience unafraid of exploring the less-savory aspects of adulthood.
âDisenchantmentâ will premiere on Netflix 10 episodes at a time, beginning in 2018.
âBroad Cityâ stars talk about the decision to bleep President Trumpâs name on the show
âBroad Cityâ creators and stars Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson consider the bleeping out of President Trumpâs name from the comedyâs upcoming fourth season a different kind of joke.
The two appeared onstage Tuesday at the Television Critics Assn. press tour in Beverly Hills to discuss the new season and how they reworked the show in the wake of Trumpâs election.
âWe just got to a point where in real life weâre talking about the current administration, weâre talking about Trump â and it sounds so gross every day saying it so many times,â Glazer said. âWe just didnât want to share airtime. Heâs got enough of that.⌠Itâs just a different kind of joke. Itâs like an audio joke.â
The sitcom, which follows Glazer and Jacobson as heightened versions of themselves, has never been shy about getting political. But the fourth season presented its challenges. It was written under the assumption that Hillary Clinton would become president.
âWe did more rewriting than ever before because this election had happened and the world changed or solidified, in a way,â Glazer said.
And with that came the decision to bleep out Trumpâs name as if it were an expletive throughout the season. Because not talking about him wasnât an option.
âFor us to not be talking about it as friends in the show would have been insane and would have felt wrong,â Jacobson said.
âBroad Cityâ returns for its fourth season Sept. 13.
Kendrick Lamar, Katy Perry and the Weeknd lead MTV Video Music Awards nominations
The 2017 MTV Video Music Awards just made it a lot harder for Kendrick Lamar to stay humble.
Announced Tuesday morning on Instagram Live, Lamar and the video for âHumbleâ scored the most nominations with eight, followed by Katy Perry and the Weeknd, both nabbing five apiece.
The VMAs also announced plans to follow in the footsteps of this yearâs MTV Movie & TV Awards by doing away with gendered categories. Best female video and best male video have now been collapsed into artist of the year, and the network has also introduced a âfight against the systemâ award for videos that actively fight injustice.
MTV, which announced the nominees with the help of Instagram influencers, has plenty of social media integration planned for the 2017 awards.
Fans can vote online for nominees in eight VMA categories, and voting for best new artist will remain live through the VMA pre-show. During the pre-show, the two finalists will be announced and Twitter hashtag voting will commence, with the winner crowned during the telecast.
Nominees for song of the summer, to be similarly voted on socially, will be announced at a later date.
The 2017 MTV Video Music Awards will air from the Forum in Inglewood on Aug. 27 at 8 p.m. PDT.
Hereâs the full list of nominees:
VIDEO OF THE YEAR
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
Bruno Mars â â24K Magicâ
Alessia Cara â âScars to Your Beautifulâ
DJ Khaled ft. Rihanna & Bryson Tiller â âWild Thoughtsâ
The Weeknd â âReminderâ
ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Bruno Mars
Kendrick Lamar
Ed Sheeran
Ariana Grande
The Weeknd
Lorde
BEST NEW ARTIST
Khalid
Kodak Black
SZA
Young M.A
Julia Michaels
Noah Cyrus
BEST COLLABORATION
Charlie Puth ft. Selena Gomez â âWe Donât Talk Anymoreâ
DJ Khaled ft. Rihanna & Bryson Tiller â âWild Thoughtsâ
D.R.A.M. ft. Lil Yachty â âBroccoliâ
The Chainsmokers ft. Halsey â âCloserâ
Calvin Harris ft. Pharrell Williams, Katy Perry & Big Sean â âFeelsâ
Zayn & Taylor Swift â âI Donât Wanna Live Forever (Fifty Shades Darker)â
BEST POP
Shawn Mendes â âTreat You Betterâ
Ed Sheeran â âShape of Youâ
Harry Styles â âSign Of The Timesâ
Fifth Harmony ft. Gucci Mane â âDownâ
Katy Perry ft. Skip Marley â âChained To The Rhythmâ
Miley Cyrus â âMalibuâ
BEST HIP HOP
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
Big Sean â âBounce Backâ
Chance the Rapper â âSame Drugsâ
D.R.A.M. ft. Lil Yachty â âBroccoliâ
Migos ft. Lil Uzi Vert â âBad & Boujeeâ
DJ Khaled ft. Justin Bieber, Quavo, Chance the Rapper & Lil Wayne â âIâm The Oneâ
BEST DANCE
Zedd and Alessia Cara â âStayâ
Kygo x Selena Gomez â âIt Ainât Meâ
Calvin Harris â âMy Wayâ
Major Lazer ft. Justin Bieber and MĂ â âCold Waterâ
Afrojack ft. Ty Dolla $ign â âGoneâ
BEST ROCK
Coldplay â âA Head Full of Dreamsâ
Fall Out Boy â âYoung and Menaceâ
Twenty One Pilots â âHeavydirtysoulâ
Green Day â âBang Bangâ
Foo Fighters â âRunâ
BEST FIGHT AGAINST THE SYSTEM
Logic ft. Damian Lemar Hudson â âBlack SpiderManâ
The Hamilton Mixtape â âImmigrants (We Get the Job Done)â
Big Sean â âLightâ
Alessia Cara â âScars To Your Beautifulâ
Taboo ft. Shailene Woodley â âStand Up / Stand N Rock #NoDAPLâ
John Legend â âSurefireâ
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
Imagine Dragons â âThunderâ
Ed Sheeran â âCastle on the Hillâ
DJ Shadow ft. Run The Jewels â âNobody Speakâ
Halsey â âNow or Neverâ
BEST DIRECTION
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
Katy Perry ft. Skip Marley â âChained to the Rhythmâ
Bruno Mars â â24K Magicâ
Alessia Cara â âScars to Your Beautifulâ
The Weeknd â âReminderâ
BEST ART DIRECTION
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
Bruno Mars â â24K Magicâ
Katy Perry ft. Migos â âBon Appetitâ
DJ Khaled ft. Rihanna & Bryson Tiller â âWild Thoughtsâ
The Weeknd â âReminderâ
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
A Tribe Called Quest â âDis Generationâ
KYLE ft. Lil Yachty â âiSpyâ
Katy Perry ft. Skip Marley â âChained to the Rhythmâ
Harry Styles â âSign of the Timesâ
BEST CHOREOGRAPHY
Kanye West â âFadeâ
Ariana Grande ft. Nicki Minaj â âSide to Sideâ
Kendrick Lamar â âHumbleâ
Sia â âThe Greatestâ
Fifth Harmony ft. Gucci Mane â âDownâ
BEST EDITING
Future â âMask Offâ
Young Thug â âWyclef Jeanâ
Lorde â âGreen Lightâ
The Chainsmokers ft. Halsey â âCloserâ
The Weeknd â âReminderâ
Anne Hathaway might fill Barbieâs pink plastic shoes in upcoming movie
Could Anne Hathaway be readying herself to become a Barbie girl in a Barbie world?
Deadline reported Monday that the Oscar-winning actress is in talks to play the doll with it all in a live-action film slated for release next summer from Sony and partner Mattel.
Amy Schumer previously had been attached to the picture before announcing in March that she would be unable to fill Barbieâs pink plastic shoes because of scheduling conflicts.
Hathaway would play a character who leaves Barbieland because she doesnât fit the mold and ends up going on an adventure in the real world.
Though itâs not the âOceanâs Eightâ cast member we would have preferred, Hathawayâs returning to the realm of outsider comedy (âThe Princess Diaries,â âThe Devil Wears Pradaâ) could be a welcome change of pace.
Dinner with Jack and Rose: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet auctioning off a date together for charity
The heart will go on a date!
âTitanicâ stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet are serving themselves up for charity, auctioning off a private dinner with the two of them at the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundationâs fourth annual gala on Thursday, according to E! News and People.
The dinner is among the many auction items available for bidders at the star-studded event taking place in Saint-Tropez, France. The nonprofit, which supports various environmentally conscious causes, raised $45 million during its charity auction last year.
The Jack and Rose rendezvous will take place sometime in October or November, given the Oscar winnersâ busy schedules, at a New York City restaurant of the winnerâs choosing, according to People.
The glitzy charity gala is expected to be an âelegant eveningâ with a cocktail reception, live auction and performances, according to Page Six. It will be held at the Domaine Bertaud Belieu vineyard in the French Riviera.
DiCaprio and Winslet have been openly supportive of each otherâs career since James Cameronâs blockbuster shipwreck film turned them into international superstars in 1997. The two famously reunited at the 2016 Golden Globes when DiCaprio earned the lead actor prize for his role in âThe Revenant.â
A Star Is Born: Illeana Douglas turns 52 today
Sometimes people will say to me, âWhy do you seem so happy?â But I canât believe Iâm getting to do this. Iâm so consciously appreciative of the fact that Iâve managed to make a living in this business. When I talk to young actors, I say itâs about stamina. If youâre the last person standing, you will be successful.
— Illeana Douglas, 1999
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Her Own Star Search
James Bond returns in 2019; still no official word on Bond 25 title or Daniel Craig
James Bond will officially make his sleek return to the big screen in 2019.
Bond 25, the as-yet untitled 25th film in the long-running 007 franchise, will debut in the U.S. on Nov. 8, 2019, EON Productions and MGM said in a joint statement on Monday.
The U.S. release follows the traditionally earlier release of the film in the U.K. and abroad.
Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, who penned scripts for âCasino Royale,â âQuantum of Solace,â âSkyfallâ and âSpectre,â return as writers for the upcoming project, which will be produced by EONâs Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli.
The studios remained mum about Daniel Craigâs involvement in the wake of reports that the âSpectreâ star would indeed reprise his role as the British secret agent. Craig infamously said that he would ârather slash [his] wristsâ than return to the part; however, the U.K.âs Mirror reported earlier this month that Craig decided to stay on for Bond 25 after hearing of the wealth of British talent eyed to replace him.
This would be the actorâs fifth Bond flick since the 2006 installment, âCasino Royale.â Heâs the sixth actor to play Ian Flemingâs spy since the first Bond film, âDr. No,â debuted in 1962.
The studios said that details on distribution and the filmâs cast and director will be announced at a later date.
Yes, Iggy Pop is 70. And yes, he obliterated his set at FYF Fest
In skintight pants that could have been painted on, Iggy Pop planted his feet on the lip of the stage Sunday afternoon, lunging forward as if he were about to surf over the sea of fist-pumping hands.
He cocked his hips, curled his lip, slung a head of lank blond hair, hurled a microphone stand, fell to his knees to pound the floor with a belt and dropped enough f-bombs to warrant a âparental advisoryâ label.
In other words, the Iggy Pop who riled up FYF Fest on Sunday was the same hell-raiser weâve seen and heard since the late 1960s. Perhaps no other American musician, save for departed Johnny Cash, has been so on brand as Pop has for nearly 50 years.
Itâs sort of freakish how intact and vital Pop remains at 70. Sure, time has taken its toll on the punk pioneer, from his bare torsoâs crinkled skin to the limp thatâs noticeable only when heâs not prowling the stage like the streetwalking cheetah with a heart full of napalm he saluted in âSearch and Destroy.â Otherwise, not much has changed.
Opening with the sludgy riff of âI Wanna Be Your Dog,â his FYF set rumbled out of the speakers and sent festival-goers racing toward the stage. Iggy scorched the earth with a handful of classics from his arsenal of songs with the Stooges and from his solo catalog: âGimme Danger,â âThe Passenger,â âLust for Life,â the latter of which remains rockâs ultimate life-affirming anthem.
âIâm Sick of You,â a rarity from his âRaw Powerâ era with the Stooges, was a nice surprise, allowing Pop to channel the laconic crooner he has become in his twilight years.
The only quibble? Itâs too bad he didnât showcase, aside from âGardenia,â more material from âPost Pop Depression,â his excellent album last year with Queens of the Stone Ageâs Josh Homme.
That was a minor point in a blistering performance that proved age hasnât blunted Popâs force. Who else on the FYF lineup â from any year â could possibly return as a septuagenarian?
Alice Cooper discovers forgotten Andy Warhol masterpiece rolled up in storage locker
Shock rocker Alice Cooper has unearthed a potential masterpiece by his late pal Andy Warhol, which had been tucked away with touring equipment for more than 40 years.
A red âLittle Electric Chairâ silkscreen from Warholâs menacing 1960s Death and Disaster series was ârolled up in a tubeâ and sat among 1970s stage props in a storage locker, Cooperâs longtime manager, Shep Gordon, told the Guardian. The piece had never been stretched onto a frame, the newspaper said.
Gordon, the subject of Mike Myersâ 2014 film âSupermensch,â said the piece was purchased by Cooperâs late girlfriend Cindy Lang for $2,500 back in the 1970s. The rocker, who was good friends with the tinsel-haired pop artist, famously feigned his own execution in an identical electric chair during his macabre, high-spectacle concerts. Warhol supposedly caught one of those shows, the Guardian said.
The theatrical rockerâs piece is unsigned and unauthenticated, but Gordon took the small canvas to a Warhol expert who said the silkscreen is the real deal. (A green version of âLittle Electric Chairâ dated to 1964 sold for $11.6 million in 2015.)
âTruthfully, at the time no one thought it had any real value,â Gordon said. âAndy Warhol was not âAndy Warholâ back then. And it was all a swirl of drugs and drinking. But you should have seen Aliceâs face when [Warhol expert] Richard Polskyâs estimate came in. His jaw dropped and he looked at me. âAre you serious? I own that!ââ
The image is believed to be based on a 1953 press photo of the Sing Sing prison death chamber where Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were executed for passing the secret of the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union. It is among a morbid series that also features car accidents, suicides and even tainted cans of tuna.
Gordon began seeking out the red piece four years ago after an art dealer told him how much a Warhol had fetched at auction. Cooperâs mother was the one who remembered that the piece had gone into storage after her son declined to hang it in his home. Apparently he didnât want something of such value to be in the house, the newspaper said.
However, Gordon said Cooper appears to have changed his mind.
BBC director hopes to close the broadcasterâs gender pay gap before 2020
The underpaid women of the BBC have spoken, and it seems the network is listening.
On Sunday, 45 exasperated female television presenters from the BBC wrote a letter to the public broadcaster demanding that it close its gender pay gap. Immediately. (Not three years from now, as BBC management had originally proposed.)
The memorandum followed last weekâs release of the BBCâs salary report, which revealed that male BBC television and radio personalities earn significantly more than their female counterparts â even those who perform essentially the same job function.
The BBC responded with a 2020 target date to implement an equal pay standard. But Claire Balding â one of the BBCâs high-profile sports presenters and a leading voice in Sundayâs directive â thought the network could step up its efforts.
In a letter penned in response to the female presenters, BBC director Tony Hall agreed, saying that the U.K. network must address the salary rift with haste.
âI have committed the BBC to closing the gap by 2020 and if we can get there earlier then we will,â he wrote. âWe are not, however, making a standing start. Work is already well underway across the organization to help achieve this. There will be wider consultation meetings over the next two months so we can accelerate further change in the autumn.â
Hall reiterated that he feels âconfidentâ the salary figures will âlook very differentâ when theyâre published again next year, adding that closing the gap has been âa personal priority over the last four years.â
But, evidently, thereâs still quite a bit of work ahead.
âWhen other organizations publish their gender pay data by next April,â Hallâs letter read, âI want the BBC to be one of the best performers when comparisons are made.â
âBut beyond that,â he continued, âover the next three years I want the BBC to be regarded as an exemplar on gender and diversity.â
Maxwell to play Hollywood Bowl on Oct. 8
Maxwell is headed to the Hollywood Bowl.
The elusive soul crooner announced heâs returning to the Bowl for the first time in eight years on Oct. 8. The gig will be part of a small string of engagements he has booked in support of last yearâs comeback record, âblackSUMMERSânight.â
Soul savant Raphael Saadiq and R&B songstress Jazmine Sullivan will join him for the show.
Tickets go on sale Friday at 11 a.m. through Ticketmaster.
Justin Bieber pulls the plug on final leg of his Purpose tour
A week after announcing the supporting acts on his upcoming stadium run, Justin Bieber has pulled the plug on his ongoing Purpose world tour âdue to unforeseen circumstances.â
âJustin loves his fans and hates to disappoint them. He thanks his fans for the incredible experience of the Purpose World Tour over the last 18 months. He is grateful and honored to have shared that experience with his cast and crew for over 150 successful shows across 6 continents during this run. However, after careful consideration he has decided he will not be performing any further dates,â read a statement from the singerâs representatives on Monday.
Bieber was set to launch the latest leg of his tour on Saturday in Arlington, Texas, and had booked a date at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena for Aug. 5.
Last week, he announced Migos, Kehlani, Martin Garrix and Vic Mensa would join him for the new dates.
Tickets will be refunded at point of purchase.
Solange brings healing to FYF Fest with jubilant celebration of black joy
Festivals, at their core, are about escapism â getting lost in the music, discovering new talents, forgetting about the often sluggish rigors of daily life.
Solange demanded more for her set at FYF Fest on Sunday night.
âI want yâall to sing it away,â she instructed during her cathartic self-care anthem âCranes in the Sky.â
Dressed in red from head to toe â the entirety of her eight-piece band were washed in matching hues â Solangeâs real focus was on healing, which anchored her arresting breakout album, âA Seat at the Table.â
Arriving as debates on race relations and law enforcement were a flashpoint in a divisive presidential election, Solangeâs confessional autobiography on being black in America provided a much-needed salve. It was one of 2016âs most ambitious works.
Choreographed and composed completely by the singer, Solangeâs set was an unbridled celebration of black joy that matched the albumâs urgency.
Amid a backdrop of imposing geometric figures that looked like a blood moon and a pyramid, Solange and her band fluidly moved through an hourlong show that was a breathtaking watch for anyone who has followed her bumpy journey from sassy, teen-pop-R&B to artful savant.
Much of the night was centered on her triumphant âA Seat at the Table.â
Delicate album opener âRiseâ was extended here with the singer and her two backing vocalists moving their bodies in unison as they reached for higher notes before the lush organs and guitars of âWearyâ kicked in.
For âMad,â a bouncy soul record exploring the frustration of being pegged as the âangry black woman,â she let out a releasing howl that was matched by a number of women in the crowd and she brought the audience to a standstill when she unpacked âDonât Touch My Hair.â
Solange was at her best when she and her band turned the stage into a jam session. She erupted into joy while unpacking her jazzy, jubilant number âF.U.B.U.â as a line of trumpet and saxophone players shimmed onstage. She entered the crowd to sing an entire verse with a black female fan, further speaking to the albumâs aim to connect directly to the black experience.
âA Seat at the Tableâ was the first time many heard her outside of the shadow of her mega-star sister BeyoncĂŠ. Itâs understandable, but a shame considering sheâs been putting out eclectic records since she was a teen. She touched on some of her early work during Sundayâs show.
She riffed on the âProud Familyâ theme she wrote at 15 (it featured her sisterâs group, Destinyâs Child) to the delight of her most ardent fans and offered a more stripped-down, almost sensuous take of âT.O.N.Y.â from her eclectic âSol-Angel and the Hadley Street Dreams.â
It was remarkable seeing the showwoman sheâs become, masterfully leading the band through a myriad of sonic breakdowns and improvising with her vocalists.
âI feel so much gratitude that Iâve been able to evolve and experiment,â she acknowledged before diving into âLosing You,â the sticky dance-R&B gem that served as her breakout single.
MORE from FYF:
How Frank Ocean â and Brad Pitt â made FYF Fest feel one of a kind
Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
After a long absence, Missy Elliott returns â and turns FYF Fest into a dance party
In impressive 3-D set, Flying Lotus breaks the fourth wall at FYF Fest
From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
âMy Friend Dahmerâ trailer chronicles the serial killerâs high school years
Serial killer Jeffrey Dahmerâs tumultuous high school years get a close-up in the first teaser for âMy Friend Dahmer,â which was released over the weekend.
âIâm just like anybody else,â says Dahmer, played by Disney Channel alum Ross Lynch, in the teaser.
The biopic, which played at the Tribeca and Los Angeles film festivals earlier this year, chronicles Dahmerâs early days leading-up to his killing rampage of 17 men and boys between 1978 and 1991.
âThis is the story before that story,â reads the trailerâs log line.
Lynch plays severely against type as the 17-year-old Dahmer during a time when the alienated teen dissolved roadkill in acid and talked of his fascination with bones. (Dahmer, whose later crimes included rape, necrophilia and dismemberment, was sentenced to 16 life terms in prison before he was beaten to death by a fellow inmate in 1995 at age 34.)
âMy Friend Dahmerâ writer-director Marc Meyers based the film on John Derf Backderfâs graphic novel, an account of Backderfâs own high school experiences with the future serial killer.
Dahmerâs quirky antics in high school gave rise to the Jeffrey Dahmer Fan Club headed up by Backderf. The film focuses on the various internal and external factors that bred the serial killer when he was a disengaged, alcoholic teen struggling with his parentsâ marital tension and understanding his sexual proclivities.
Dahmerâs odd behavior, including outbursts at school, creepy lab procedures and voyeurism, visits with his doctor, and his fatherâs plea for him to be more normal are emotional moments showcased in the trailer.
Dallas Roberts plays his father; Anne Heche plays Dahmerâs mother; and Vincent Kartheiser plays his doctor. Derf is played by âIn Treatmentâ actor Alex Wolff.
FilmRise acquired the crime drama in May and will release the film in the fall.
Kehlani, once on edge, proves at FYF that she is now a festival powerhouse
A few years ago, it wasnât certain when -- or if -- Kehlani would tour again. The singerâs mental health troubles (and scars from an extremely tough childhood) threatened her burgeoning career, and one of R&Bâs most promising young voices was clearly in deep, deep pain.
But in less than a year sheâs already played three knockout sets at three of SoCalâs most important festivals -- Flog Gnaw, Coachella and now a barn-burner at FYF Fest on Sunday night. That would take stamina for any act, but for one who has been through all that she has, it may be the most laudable comeback in recent pop music.
With fiery red hair extensions and a small, nimble band of drummers and dancers, Kehlani danced with physical grace and sang with outsized passion. Nine Inch Nails was just about her only competition at the end of the night, so the Trees stage was packed out to every inch of the lawn with fans who wanted something breezier to listen to.
Kehlani delivered, but there was always an edge of pain and hard-learned truths to her songs. Tunes like âDistractionâ and âGangstaâ werenât nearly as despondent as Trent Reznorâs over at the Main Stage. But her fans knew that Kehlaniâs been through just as much, and came out the other side at the absolute top of her game.
MORE from FYF:
How Frank Ocean â and Brad Pitt â made FYF Fest feel one of a kind
Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
After a long absence, Missy Elliott returns â and turns FYF Fest into a dance party
In impressive 3-D set, Flying Lotus breaks the fourth wall at FYF Fest
From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
We talked to Issa Rae about that scene from the âInsecureâ Season 2 premiere â you know which one
Itâs safe to say that the last couple of minutes of Sunday nightâs Season 2 premiere of âInsecureâ had viewers saying a variation of: âOMG ⌠what ⌠uh, did he just leave with his mail?â
(Warning: The rest of this post breaks down a major spoiler from the episode.)
The second season picks up a couple of months after Season 1 left off. Issa Dee (Issa Rae), in her effort to move on from Lawrence (Jay Ellis), has reluctantly plunged into the dating scene. Her real goal, though, is to find a way to connect with Lawrence â using his mail as bait. But he has been dodging her attempts. At least for a while.
In the last few minutes of the episode, titled âHella Great,â Lawrence knocks on Issaâs door under the guise that heâs there to pick up the mail. But the two end up having quickie sex on the couch.
With the return of âInsecure,â Issa Rae looks to loosen her characterâs inhibitions Âť
âThat was something we discussed early on in the writers room â we knew that Lawrence and Issa were going to have sex again,â Rae said. âWe were thinking about having it happen later in the season, just because we ended the last season in a place where there was no charge. We thought we needed space. But, given that we start the episode about 2½, three months later, it just felt like once you do that, you get it out of the way, you donât know where things are going to go after that.â
We spoke about the scene with Rae, as well as showrunner Prentice Penny and episode director Melina Matsoukas.
Michael Phelps raced that shark on TV Sunday night. Well, sort of
In an odd battle of man-versus-wild, Michael Phelps was going to swim a 100-meter race against a great white shark during Sunday nightâs âShark Weekâ kickoff. At least thatâs what fans were expecting.
Of course, the Olympian was never going to risk damaging his gold medal-winning physique for a Discovery Channel-sponsored race with a shark. But the eventâs lead-up, which the network billed as âPhelps vs. Shark: Great Gold vs. Great White,â had viewers convinced otherwise.
Last week, in an interview with âGood Morning America,â Phelps clarified some misconceptions about the event.
âWeâre not in the water at the same exact time,â he said. âI think thatâs the one thing we all â we want everyone to know â I was safe, which was No. 1.â
But as it turns out, Phelpsâ safety wasnât too high on anyone elseâs list of concerns.
Phelps hopped into a 100-meter stretch of water off the coast of Mossel Bay, South Africa, and took off down the makeshift lanes.
Much to viewersâ dismay, Phelps swam the âraceâ solo, time-trial style. His great white competitor was actually a CGI version of a shark, which supposedly imitated what would have been a real-life sharkâs speed.
Some viewers noted the programâs convenient use of simulated imaging, which suggested that humans and sharks swim at comparable speeds. In reality, even a seemingly herculean swimmer like Phelps canât swim more than 6 mph, compared with the great whiteâs 26 mph.
Letâs just say that many âShark Weekâ aficionados were less than enthused.
And the winner was? Phelps lost the race to his gilled, computer-generated opponent -- but only by two seconds. And, in typical Phelps fashion, the hyper-competitive Olympian proposed a rematch.
In âDear Chesterâ letter, Linkin Park says âdemonsâ that haunted Bennington âwere always part of the dealâ
Chester Benningtonâs Linkin Park bandmates wrote an open letter to their late vocalist on Monday that touched on his inner demons and their uncertain future.
Bennington, who also fronted Dead by Sunrise and later joined Stone Temple Pilots, died by hanging at his Palos Verdes Estates home last week, the Los Angeles County coroner confirmed Friday. He was 41.
âOur hearts are broken. The shockwaves of grief and denial are still sweeping through our family as we come to grips with what has happened,â said the letter, which was addressed to âDear Chesterâ and posted on Facebook on Monday morning along with a new suicide-prevention website.
The grunge rock group, which barreled out of Southern California in 2000 with its smash hit album âHybrid Theory,â reassured the late singer that he touched more lives than he realized, as shown by the âoutpouring of love and support, both public and private, from around the worldâ over the last few days. It also reminded Bennington and readers that he was the best husband to his wife, Talinda, and father to their son.
âThe family will never be whole without you,â the letter said.
The most poignant part of the note came when the band recalled Benningtonâs dynamic personality and how his inner struggles brought a humanity to his music.
Benningtonâs excitement about their years to come was infectious, the band said, and his absence âleaves a void that can never be filled â a boisterous, funny, ambitious, creative, kind, generous voice in the room is missing.â
Weâre trying to remind ourselves that the demons who took you away from us were always part of the deal. After all, it was the way you sang about those demons that made everyone fall in love with you in the first place. You fearlessly put them on display, and in doing so, brought us together and taught us to be more human.
— Linkin Park in an open letter to Chester Bennington
However, the Grammy-winning act seemed determined to carry on, noting that its love for making and performing music âis inextinguishable.â
âWhile we donât know what path our future may take, we know that each of our lives was made better by you. Thank you for that gift. We love you, and miss you so much,â they said.
The end of the letter urged readers to visit Chester.LinkinPark.com, which housed tribute tweets from fans and suicide-prevention resources.
Read Linkin Parkâs full letter below.
A Star Is Born: Lynda Carter turns 66 today
I have lived with [Wonder Woman] a long time. I always loved her. People are always surprised that I am not trying to get away from her. She is so cool.
— Lynda Carter, 2005
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Superhero redux: Lynda Carter soars in âSky High,â but she takes roles as normal people too
Techno takes the late shift at FYF
After two days of circling the FYF grounds at Exposition Park (and with, as oneâs hamstrings will surely remind you, one full day left to go), an after-party is probably the last thing on anyoneâs mind.
But as downtown L.A.âs underground club music scene has grown into a stable, choice-packed circuit every weekend, FYF has risen to the occasion.
This year, a range of excellent and challenging producers played long sets that took fans from a daytime idyll into nighttime ambience. For a few, that even meant sneaking off to a late-night warehouse for one more round.
As the sun went down over the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the producers Avalon Emerson and Daniel Avery brought mercurial, alien moods to the Woods stage. Each can fit neatly into a traditional techno environment, but theyâre album artists at heart, and think hard about how long sets can find a plot line.
Around the corner at the Outer Space, a triple-team of DJ Harvey, Horse Meat Disco and Young Marco had brighter, major-key vibes on their decks, and played off each otherâs sensibilities.
Coupled with Nicolas Jaarâs sous-vide approach to live club music (a very slow boil, perfect execution, a mighty payoff at the end) on the Trees stage outside, FYFâs growing adeptness with edgy dance music could be a promising direction going forward, maybe even part of a push to transform more of the cityâs nightlife.
Frank Ocean was the story of the night, to be sure. But as the dayâs margaritas turned into nightâs strobe-lit abandon, some fans werenât quite ready to go home.
At a Skid Row warehouse very early on Sunday morning, Emerson and Young Marco played another sort-of-sanctioned late-night gig. It was packed and smoky and maybe a little overwhelming after a long day, but watching their music transition from Goldenvoice-approved professionalism back into downtown grit was like going back in time to when FYF felt a little on edge.
It was a very fond memory.
MORE from FYF:
Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
After a long absence, Missy Elliott returns â and turns FYF Fest into a dance party
In impressive 3-D set, Flying Lotus breaks the fourth wall at FYF Fest
From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
A mighty Perfume Genius veers from delicate to visceral at FYF
Mike Hadreas knows how to make an entrance. A grand one. The artist, who performs as Perfume Genius, slinked onstage at FYF Fest Saturday night to the twinkling piano notes of âOtherside,â the opening track from his new album, âNo Shape.â
He sang each note with quiet precision until the song suddenly cracked wide open in a kaleidoscope of swirling rhythms. With stage lights pulsing blues and yellows, Hadreas struck pose after pose, head lifted to the heavens and microphone cord dangling as if he were Kylie Minogue on the album cover of âFever.â (Thatâs high praise.)
âIâm all revved up,â Hadreas said at one point, instructing his two-piece band to launch into the next song.
Long gone are the days of Hadreas shrinking onstage, shyly emoting with a quiver and awkward stage banter. At FYF, he was a monster, by turns delicate and visceral as he crouched and swiveled his hips in slow motion.
His voice, a tremulous tenor, pierced the songs with shrieks (a jarring reimagining of Mary Margaret OâHaraâs âBodyâs in Troubleâ), coos (the Sade-evoking âDie 4 Youâ) and crescendos that drifted into the stratosphere (âFoolâ from 2014âs âToo Brightâ).
Blake Mills, the ace guitarist and songwriter who produced âNo Shape,â joined in on a handful of songs, and Weyes Bloodâs Natalie Mering reprised her duet with Hadreas, âSides,â from his new album.
Ending the performance with âSlip Away,â Hadreas went out the way he came in: with arms outstretched in an ecstatic pose, a mirror reflection of his enraptured audience.
MORE from FYF:
Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
After a long absence, Missy Elliott returns â and turns FYF Fest into a dance party
In impressive 3-D set, Flying Lotus breaks the fourth wall at FYF Fest
From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
A Star Is Born: Daniel Radcliffe turns 28 today
I donât have a sense of which parts of my life are just for me and which parts are kind of owned by everybody.
— Daniel Radcliffe, 2014
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Daniel Radcliffe hopes the magic is gone and heâll be taken seriously
Frank Ocean resurfaces in the U.S. at FYF Fest
Frank Oceanâs long-awaited return to a local stage is over.
Anchoring the second night of FYF Fest, Ocean performed for the first time in the States since the summer of 2014. â¨â¨Opening with an extended take on his single âSolo,â Oceanâs set began with a lengthy overture and the singer asking for the audience to be patient with him as he caught his groove.
âIâm just finding my moment, yâall are gonna have to wait a minute,â he said after slowly emerging via a catwalk that extended to a secondary stage deep into the Exposition Park crowd a little over 10 minutes after his set was to start .â¨
â¨During his three-year absence, the anticipation for his comeback turned into frustration -- so much so fans wondered if Ocean would even show for Saturday nightâs engagement.
In 2015 he was booked for a headlining slot at FYF, inciting rumors that the follow-up to his Grammy-winning 2012 major label debut, âChannel Orange,â was imminent.
It was buzz he had created earlier that year when he took to his Tumblr to post a picture of himself looking down at a stack of magazines called Boys Donât Cry. His reps confirmed the arrival of a new album and an accompanying publication.â¨
â¨But days before the 2015 festival, he pulled out, leaving organizers to turn to Kanye West as an eleventh-hour replacement.
â¨â¨In summer 2016, after years of whispers, Ocean returned with not one but two projects: visual album âEndlessâ and his official album âBlonde,â but both records were almost overshadowed by label drama and his lack of conventional promotion.
Fans, understandably, were on edge leading into Saturdayâs performance.
Even recently, Ocean has proven to be unpredictable. The experimental R&B singer had earlier this year pulled out of Alabamaâs Hangout Music Festival and Washingtonâs Sasquatch! Music Festival.
As Ocean was running a few minutes behind, a male fan was heard wondering, âIs he even gonna show?â
But he did, and even early in his set he proved to be unconventional. Near the beginning of his performance, during a rendition of âGood Guy,â Ocean halted the show.
âThis is my disclaimer,â he said. âThis is my fourth show since coming back. We are gonna try things over if they get (messed) up and this is one of those instances.â
Princess Nokia, Capân Jazz showed FYF Festâs future and its past
FYF Festâs past and future had a quick changeover in the venueâs Club tent on Saturday afternoon at Exposition Park.
First, the future.
New York rapper Princess Nokia soaked up every ounce of her packed crowdâs adulation, noting how exceptional it is for a young woman rapping about being a ânormal teenagerâ to end up on a stage like this. Her talent, however, is far beyond normal.
On songs such as âBart Simpsonâ and âGreen Line,â she commanded the stage and rapped with a lucid, urgent vision. Sheâs at the vanguard of a young-millennial music world where intersectionality pairs well with bass-rattling bangers, and when coupled with her undeniable charisma and the imagination of her productions, it was easy to imagine her moving up the ranks at this fest very quickly.
Her set-closer, a tenderly-sung jungle tune called âDragons,â recalled âBombs Over Baghdadâ in its drum patterns, but the searching melody was all Nokiaâs. âMy Moon, my life / My stars, my sun / You are the sweetest song,â she sang. Itâll likely take her beyond what most normal teenagers would ever dream.
Capân Jazz, however, saw a turnover from young women in crop-tops and semi-ironic raver pants into gently-aging dudes in Converge and Hot Water Music T-shirts.
Capân Jazz too, was the product of teenage minds, albeit young punks in college-town Illinois in the early â90s. But the Kinsella brothersâ reunited emo act was one of the weekendâs few nods back to the old guard of FYF Fest, when ear gauges and lip rings were everywhere.
Singer Tim Kinsella crowd-surfed, haphazardly honked a French horn, took his shirt off for effect, and led the crowd in a reverie of punky adolescent noise.
The band knew this set was a throwback. âWe wrote this song in 1994, so itâs our newest one,â Kinsella riffed.
Were the actual kids today into it? Sure looked like it.
Built to Spill keeps the guitar alive at FYF Fest
Distorted electric guitars are in relatively short supply at FYF Fest, which this year is dominated by stylish hip-hop and R&B acts such as Solange and Frank Ocean rather than the indie-rock and punk bands that once defined the festival.
But that didnât stop Doug Martsch and the rest of Idahoâs long-running Built to Spill from laying down some serious Neil Young vibes during its set Saturday evening on the festivalâs bucolic Trees Stage.
Leading his bandmates through a fuzzed-out âTime Trapâ (from the groupâs beloved 1999 album, âKeep It Like a Secretâ), Martsch seemed happily oblivious to whatâs going on in pop right now â as did the guy in the crowd wearing the faded Meat Puppets shirt.
Vans, Frank Ocean lure fans with pop up shops at FYF Fest
The House of Vans store was one of a handful of pop-up shops that brought exclusive goodies â and, more importantly, amid Saturdayâs scorching temperatures, cool relief â to attendees to the FYF Fest at Exposition Park.
Tucked inside an air conditioned tent behind the Club stage on the far southern end of the festival grounds, the lounge was fostering both creativity and relaxation.
Guests curled up and napped on lush bean bag chairs and a large projector screen beamed skate films curated by Thrasher Magazine.
Nearby, a half dozen work stations staged DIY craft projects. People scrapbooked, made bracelets and painted fanny packs â one of three giveaway items fans lined up to score.
At the FYF outpost of Long Beachâs Fingerprints Music, fans awaited signing sessions with festival performers the Drums and Homeshake.
But the biggest draw was the Blonded tent, which boasted limited items from the nightâs headliner, Frank Ocean.
There were hundreds of fans queued in a line that stretched far beyond the white tent.
Fans tried bartering with people ahead of them as everyone tried getting their hands on the custom-made T-shirts featuring the singerâs likeness being pressed inside.
A veteran on the FYF Fest bill, Jonathan Richman displays eternally boyish charms
âWe have no sense of time,â Jonathan Richman said near the end of his set Saturday afternoon at FYF Fest. âCan we do another one?â
His audience was small in size but enormous in enthusiasm: Yes, fans made clear, he should do another one.
Anyone familiar with Richmanâs idiosyncratic music knows heâs never cared much about time. At 66 years old, the eternally boyish cult favorite (who reportedly lives these days in Chico) is still doing the same act heâs been doing for years, strumming and singing his sly, funny songs about women and music, accompanied only by his trusty drummer, Tommy Larkins.
At FYF, he encored with one of his signature numbers, âI Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar,â which the crowd sang along with so heartily that he offered to keep playing beyond his allotted 45 minutes.
But then a stagehand appeared and murmured in Richmanâs ear.
âWe gotta go,â said Richman, a man from before the age of tightly scheduled live streams. âSee you another time.â
Even a foggy sound mix couldnât dull Slowdiveâs dreamy set at FYF
Not even two songs into Slowdiveâs performance at FYF Fest on Friday, a distinctly âCalifornian scent,â shall we say, wafted over the crowd: smoke from both pot and palo santo.
âIt smells quite green, if you know what I mean,â singer-guitarist Rachel Goswell noted.
Sweet and heady, it was a lot like the music emanating from the stage as white strobe lights swirled overhead.
After a 20-year hiatus in which admiration for the English shoegaze band only grew, Slowdive is touring behind a terrific new self-titled album. And FYF, which the band first played in 2014, proved that the five-piece, even after all these years, has neither a speck of age nor an ounce of fat on it.
âMore reverb!â someone called out early on, perhaps a cheeky acknowledgment that the band was already drowning in gauzy effects.
âMore reverb? Is there ever enough?â Goswell shot back.
Well, in this case, yes. Her ghostly vocals, along with those of powerhouse guitarist Neil Halstead, often evaporated before they ever made an impression. Mystique has always been part of the bandâs allure, but at FYF, the sound mix should have been much sharper.
Otherwise, Slowdive was in peak form, interspersing new tracks (âSlomo,â âStar Rovingâ) with classics (âCatch the Breeze,â âWhen the Sun Hitsâ) that rippled over a swaying sea of fans with eyes shut and heads bobbing. They were on a different plane â pot and palo santo werenât even needed.
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Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
After a long absence, Missy Elliott returns â and turns FYF Fest into a dance party
In impressive 3-D set, Flying Lotus breaks the fourth wall at FYF Fest
From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
After a long absence, Missy Elliott returns â and turns FYF Fest into a dance party
Twenty-five minutes into her headlining set on Fridayâs opening night of FYF Fest, Missy Elliott had a request to the packed audience â a demand, actually.
âPut your phone down. Put it down for one record,â Elliott ordered.
Already by this point Elliott had literally danced herself out of one of her shoes, and her in-ear monitors had forsaken her, but she came with a mission for her first full-length performance in the U.S. in about a decade: âTo make sure everybody in the building jump[s].â
She was introducing âGet Ur Freak On,â one of the litany of era-defining entries in her lengthy catalog of wildly imaginative hits anchored in sticky hooks and exuberant beats. All of them always came paired with a quirky, left-of-center video (if you remember this particular clip, it was the one in which she dangled from a chandelier).
She wanted the crowd at Exposition Park completely lost in the music â the way we are in the car or the club or the gym. And she commanded her DJ to repeat the songâs famous opening line â âHead banga, hit meâ â to make her point.
And thatâs how she spent much of Fridayâs set, relentlessly hitting an audience over the head with song after song. It helped that she had attracted a massive crowd that came ready to dance early into Saturday morning.
Elliott tore through a dizzying selection of her slickest work â cocky anthem âSheâs A Bitch,â saucy romp âOne Minute Manâ and the frenetic âIâm Really Hotâ â while making time for deep cuts, rarely performed entries and fan favorites in her hourlong set.
Dressed in ripped, white jeans and a white jacket adorned with seemingly thousands of crystals, Elliott wasnât about festival frills â there were no special guests and no trippy production during her set.
Still, she did arrive and depart via a box outlined in pink neon â a magical time capsule, perhaps? Or maybe a teleportation device? Nevertheless, it only added to her mysterious and reclusive nature, especially when the show ended and an Elliott marionette was left in her absence.
Backed throughout by a cadre of dancers, Elliott tackled an impressive assortment of her 20-year deep catalog in the nightâs most attended set. BeyoncĂŠ, Solange, Katy Perry, Janet Jackson, Bjork and Tyler the Creator were some of Elliottâs famous fans spotted in the crowd.
Nearly a dozen years have passed since Elliott last released an album, but this wasnât a nostalgia play. Music this otherworldly and imaginative doesnât belong to any particular era.
âThe music we created was so ahead, it couldnât be dated,â she waxed in a video interlude that traced her achievements.
Indeed, âPass That Dutchâ is as potent a dance anthem in 2017 as it was 14 years ago, âHot Boyzâ and âAll in My Grillâ pairs nicely with the bass rattling, trap R&B being spun now and the futuristic bounce of her breakout single, âThe Rain (Supa Dupa Fly),â still sticks â all of which the crowd chanted in unison without missing a beat.
And despite Elliottâs orders, many tried to balance cellphone snaps with feverish dancing.
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Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
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From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
From serene to savage, Angel Olsen goes in for the kill at Fridayâs FYF Fest
Angel Olsenâs voice â with its bewitching sweep one minute and jagged edges the next â was tailor-made for a festival setting. Itâs the kind of instrument that fills the air and lures in even those who have no idea who she is.
At sundown Friday, FYF Festâs opening day, the North Carolina-based singer-songwriter was holding court with an intense set that answered the never-asked question, âWhat would happen if Dolly Parton and Emmylou Harris had brought PJ Harvey instead of Linda Ronstadt into that fabled trio?â
Since surfacing with 2012âs âHalf Way Home,â Olsen has evolved into an arresting live performer, slippery with her notes and occasionally aloof in her banter but blunt in how she relays the emotion of her songs.
At FYF, her five-piece band, sharp in their matching charcoal suits and Western ties, built a wall of clanging sounds behind her. In particular, Heather McEntire on harmonies and keys (and on loan from the band Mount Moriah) locked into a trance with Olsen, the wailing Phil to Olsenâs Don Everly.
And yet Olsen cut right through the cacophony, commanding her bandmates as they transitioned from the onslaught of âNot Gonna Kill Youâ (from last yearâs acclaimed âMy Womanâ) into the slow burn of âAcrobat.â They stripped that early fan favorite of its ⌠well, its vocal acrobatics, instead turning it into an incantation.
Olsen capped her hourlong performance with âWoman,â another new song, sending the audience into the night with a final challenge: âI dare you to understand / What makes me a woman.â
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In impressive 3-D set, Flying Lotus breaks the fourth wall at FYF Fest
It would be hard for Flying Lotus to make anything as terrifyingly visceral on a stage as he did in his movie âKuso.â That film almost defies description in its litany of body horrors. But he did his best to reach out and mangle audienceâs minds during his night-closing set at FYF Fest on Friday.
When FYF-goers opened their ticket packages, a pair of FlyLo-branded 3-D goggles suggested that the Los Angeles-based producer had something big in store. For an artist whose musical work is always inseparable from his visual identity, this was a natural next step.
But the show was a testament to his increasing ambitions as an all-around artist -- and the ambitions of FYF Fest to push its talent to create bigger, bolder sets.
With the glasses on, the audience saw laser fans sweeping out overhead like a false ceiling. Sleek digital objects popped out of nowhere to tower over his gear rig. Fields of stars blossomed behind him, making it look like Lotus was performing before infinite depths.
The music was dancier and clubbier than usual, as if he knew that the retina-bending setup required some kick-drum grounding. But L.A. is lucky to have an artist who never ceases to push his talents into strange new realms like this.
Meanwhile, a little earlier, Anderson .Paak gave FYF fans whiplash, as anyone who walked by his set had no choice but to watch, gape-jawed, as his played Sheila E.-worthy drums while rapping, singing, bandleading and utterly commanding his stage. His is a once-in-a-generation talent, and after years of struggle heâs finally playing the kinds of stages where he belongs.
Lotusâ pal Hannibal Buress played the nightâs lone big-stage comedy set, and it was just as giddily unnerving. He talked through a Bon Iver-style vocal harmonizer, lamented that he didnât have a trademark terminal disease of his own (âAlzheimerâs, Hodgkinsâ, Buressâ disease.â) and imagined the gory details of his own funeral. Maybe contemporary American politics has led our artists and comedians to go ahead and assume the worst is inevitable. At least theyâre trying to wring some life out of it all.
A Star Is Born: Selena Gomez turns 25 today
Iâm fully aware of where I started, and that is Disney Channel. Theyâre what gave me everything, in a way. And I love my fans. They mean the absolute world to me. So whenever I make my music or go with my clothing line or pick roles, itâs all about making sure that they can go see it.
— Selena Gomez, 2010
FROM THE ARCHIVES: The Performance: Selena Gomez
Bjork shows the humanity in machinery at FYF Fest
Nature met technology in Bjorkâs performance Friday night at FYF Fest, which had the Icelandic singer flexing her remarkable voice â a one-of-a-kind marvel no algorithm could devise â against a backing of live strings and clattering machine beats.
Wearing a lime-green face mask and a dress that made her look like a living party streamer, Bjork sang material from throughout her expansive catalog â including hits like âJogaâ and âBacheloretteâ as well as material from her 2015 album âVulnicuraâ â while behind her, a giant video screen showed images of birds dancing and a moth laying eggs.
Occasionally, Arca, the Venezuelan producer with whom Bjork made âVulnicura,â would unload a fusillade of harsh digital noise. But then the singer would reach for a high note and remind you of the flesh and blood onstage and in her songs.
No early headaches as a newly expanded FYF Fest begins
âThank you, FYF, for letting us play your open mic night,â Beach Fossils frontman Dustin Payseur joked late into his bandâs set at FYF Fest on Friday afternoon.
It was a lighthearted acknowledgment of the challenge that awaits acts facing the tough task of opening a multiday festival.
And in the case of the Brooklyn indie rockers, it meant playing to a crowded, but mostly idle, audience.
When gates for the Goldenvoice-produced event opened â this year marks the first time FYF Fest has expanded to three days â early birds had it relatively easy. Whether it was the heat or the rush-hour start time, this was the smoothest entry weâve ever had in getting into an FYF Fest, which is spread over six stages. Gone, for instance, were the multi-hour waits to reach the Exposition Park grounds.
Whatâs more, the sounds of a saxophone player sheepishly moving through a cover of Drakeâs âPassionfruitâ set the tone for a relatively chill first few hours at FYF.
Inside, many sought refuge as the sun stung most of the festivalâs acreage â for many that meant lounging under trees or taking selfies in front of art installations such as a giant replica of a boombox.
At the Lawn Stage, Beach Fossils delivered a peppy set, and elsewhere, the freewheeling hip-hop-inflected jazz of BadBadNotGood enraptured what was the largest crowd we noticed early into the day.
People danced under trees and stretched out on blankets as the tail end of magic hour brought a much-needed breeze.
Responding to backlash, producers of HBOâs âConfederateâ promise itâs not a typical slavery story
HBO is developing a modern-day slavery drama with a sci-fi spin -- and the Internet is not having it.
The new show, titled âConfederate,â will be helmed by David Benioff and D.B. Weiss -- the famed showrunner duo behind âGame of Thrones,â both of whom are white men.
Gearing up for what HBOâs Wednesday announcement called the Third American Civil War, âConfederateâ takes place in a grisly dystopia wherein Americaâs Southern states successfully seceded from the union, âgiving rise to a nation in which slavery remains legal and has evolved into a modern institution.â
The announcement received loads of immediate backlash from fans and critics alike, many of whom recognized the potentially pernicious irony of two white men creating a television series about slavery. (Benioff and Weiss are no strangers to this sort of pushback; the team has been criticized in the past for the lack of diversity on âGoT.â)
âGive me the confidence of white showrunners telling HBO they wanna write slavery fanfic,â tweeted journalist Pilot Viruet. Author Roxane Gay felt similarly exasperated, writing, âIt is exhausting to think of how many people at HBO said yes to letting two white men envision modern day slavery. And offensive.â
As for the inspiration behind âConfederate,â Benioff said he had always wondered what might have become of America had the South won the Civil War. âThat just always fascinated me,â he said.
Benioff and Weiss -- as well as their creative partners, the husband-and-wife team of writer-producers Malcolm Spellman and Nichelle Tramble Spellman -- spoke with Vulture to explain themselves. The negative reaction, they said, was exactly what they had expected.
âOh, yeah. We all knew it was coming in one form or another,â said Benioff. âI remember the very first time we talked about this, one of the first things that came up was ⌠Malcolm said, what was it?â
âYouâre dealing with weapons-grade material here,â Spellman chimed in.
And perhaps thatâs why the Spellmansâ involvement is so crucial. Though their presence on the showâs creative team might have been partially eclipsed by the arguably more famous Benioff and Weiss, their partnership is quite notable. The Spellmans, who are black, have firmly expressed their intentions to avoid the typical exploitative, damaging slave narrative.
Malcolm Spellman took to Twitter earlier this week, assuring concerned critics that âConfederateâ will not be about âwhips and plantations.â Instead, he told Vulture, theyâll focus on the fact that the show is rooted in science fiction.
âI think what was interesting to all of us was that we were going to handle this show, and handle the content of the show, without using typical antebellum imagery,â Tramble Spellman said. âThis is present day, or close to present day, and how the world would have evolved if the South had been successful seceding from the union.â
Malcolm Spellman echoed his wifeâs point:
â[W]hat people have to understand is, and what we are obligated to repeat in every interview is: Weâve got black aunties. Weâve got black nephews, uncles. Black parents and black grandparents. We deal with them every single day. We deal with the struggle every single day. And people donât have to get on board with what weâre doing based on a press release.
âBut when theyâre writing about us, and commenting about us, they should be mindful of the fact that there are no sellouts involved in this show,â he added. âMe and Nichelle are not props being used to protect someone else. We are people who feel a need to address issues the same way they do, and they should at least humanize the other end of those tweets and articles.â
Maria Menounos laughed in disbelief at brain-tumor diagnosis
When Maria Menounosâ doctor told her she had a brain tumor, the former E! News host just laughed.
Because, of course.
â[The doctor said,] âIâm so sorry I have to tell you this. Because I know youâre going through a lot with your mom. But you have a brain tumor. Itâs called a meningioma. And you need to schedule an appointment with a neurosurgeon right away,ââ Menounos says in a preview of an upcoming âSunday Night With Megyn Kellyâ interview. âAnd so I was like, âOK.â And I started kind of chuckling. ...
âBecause at that point,â she continues, âitâs like, âThis is a joke.â Like, how does this happen?â
âThisâ would be Menounos being diagnosed with a brain tumor at the same time her mother battles Stage 4 glioblastoma, the same brain cancer Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is facing. The TV personality has said she thought she was crazy for thinking a tumor was the cause of her symptoms.
The 39-year-oldâs meningioma was benign, and thereâs only a slight chance it will recur. Her momâs situation is stable, but much more serious.
In the interview, with long hair intact, Menounos doesnât look at all like a person who had brain surgery in June. But, as Kelly explained on the âTodayâ show Friday, thereâs a âsuper thinâ scar on the back of Menounosâ head, and the surgery put her facial nerves â and therefore her career â at risk.
Of course, after walking away from E!, Menounosâ career isnât a primary focus. Her momâs cancer is stable, but the idea of losing her mother brings her to tears.
âI think that this was a gift, because I needed to change my life,â she says. âI needed to change the way â I did everything.â
See the full interview at 7 p.m. PDT Sunday on NBC.
Stephen Colbert visits the Moscow hotel room where alleged Trump âpee pee tapeâ was recorded
With âThe Late Showâ nearing the end of its Russia Week, host Stephen Colbert finally got to the real reason for the trip: investigating the storied video that he has dubbed âthe pee pee tape.â
On Thursdayâs episode, viewers watched as Colbert visited the presidential suite of the Moscow Ritz-Carlton to find the recording that allegedly shows President Trump watching two prostitutes urinate on a bed. The recording by Russian spies had been detailed in the now-infamous dossier that was leaked in January, but it was never confirmed.
âBack in January, 10 days before Donald Trump was inaugurated, a document was leaked containing allegations that Trump has deep financial ties to Russia, that his campaign was being supported by the Russian government and that the Russians had compromising videos of Donald Trump watching prostitutes urinate on a bed in the Moscow Ritz-Carlton presidential suite,â Colbert said. âIt was a bombshell.â
Trump has denied the tape is real, but that didnât deter Colbert from looking into it.
After unsuccessfully trying to bait Moscow citizens, Colbert sat down with Andrei Soldatov, a Russian surveillance expert and Kremlin critic who admitted that he has heard the rumors of the recording but couldnât confirm its existence.
So the investigation continued, with Colbert revealing that he rented the suite where the alleged extracurricular activities occurred.
âThe room weâve heard so much about, yet no one has come to check it out. I donât know why,â Colbert said. âWhen youâre in this room, I donât know how to describe it; itâs soaked in history. It just washes over you. Itâs not even like itâs in the past; youâre in history. Youâre in it.â
In the end, no evidence of the tape was found.
Justin Bieber banned: In China, heâs performer non grata
Justin Bieber, your bad-boy reputation is not welcome in China.
Its culture bureau has banned the âLove Yourselfâ singer from performing in the country, citing his âcontroversialâ nature and âbad behavior,â both foreign and domestic, as inappropriate imports.
Guess Beijing didnât buy into the Biebsâ image-rehabilitation campaign?
The comments come from a translation of a memo posted this week on the culture bureauâs website in response to a fan who demanded an explanation for Bieberâs unwelcome status.
While not citing specific examples of unacceptable behavior, a person could safely assume that Beijing had in mind some headline-making incidents like the pee-in-a-bucket thing in London, the loud-fun-in-a-Ferrari thing in Miami and the $81,000-egging thing in Calabasas.
Or maybe the 2013 thing where he was photographed being toted up the Great Wall of China on the shoulders of a pair of bodyguards on its own was enough to brand him persona non grata.
Quick, someone send âem footage from the Comedy Central roast, and maybe a few of the better cuts from his âPurposeâ album. After all, he said he was âSorry,â and in America, thatâs what reputation rehab looks like.
Until then, Beijing hopes Bieber is, according to the Guardian, âable to improve his conduct as he grows up and will once again find public favor.â
Anyway, while Bieberâs current world tour wonât be available to fans in mainland China, he still has lots of Asia at his disposal in late September and early October. The show will go on â for now, at least â in Tokyo, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Singapore and Jakarta, Indonesia.
A Star Is Born: Charlotte Gainsbourg turns 46 today
After a while, just thinking about your health is so boring, being so self-conscious and scared. Thatâs the thing: I spent a whole year being scared about having been close to death, maybe dying, so I was just wanting to work, just to do something that would be stronger than my own preoccupations.
— Charlotte Gainsbourg, 2009
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Charlotte Gainsbourg takes on Lars von Trierâs âAntichristâ
First trailer for Charlie Sheenâs â9/11â movie is ... well, you decide
The curious story of the movie â9/11â has gotten a little more clarity. When a promotional poster first appeared earlier this month it raised more than a few eyebrows for more than a few reasons. A drama about the collapse of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, starring Charlie Sheen?
A Japanese trailer for the movie has now appeared online, providing the first glimpses of the movie. Directed and co-written by Martin Guigui, the movie is based on Patrick Carsonâs fact-based play âElevatorâ and also stars Whoopi Goldberg, Gina Gershon, Luiz Guzman, Wood Harris and Jacqueline Bisset.
In the trailer, Sheen and Gershon are a married couple on the brink of divorce. They are in an elevator at the WTC when the towers are attacked and find themselves stuck with three strangers. As they figure out what is really happening, they attempt to escape. At one point, after seeming to have already helped Gershon out of the elevator car, Sheen says, âThe building is coming down.â
Aside from the fact that seeing troubled star Sheen in any movie at all is notable at this point, his appearance in a movie specifically about 9/11 is of particular interest. Sheen has spoken often about the attacks and voiced doubts about the official version of those events.
Sheen, as a guest on the radio show of right-wing pundit Alex Jones in 2006, said, âIt seems to me like 19 amateurs with box cutters taking over four commercial airlines and hitting 75% of their targets -- that feels like a conspiracy theory.â
â9/11â is scheduled for a U.S. theatrical release on Sept. 8 via Atlas Distribution Co., best known for putting out the three-part screen adaptation of Ayn Randâs âAtlas Shrugged.â
On Friday, an English-language trailer for the movie arrived as well, with additional footage. The newest trailer opens with title cards asking âWhere were you... September 11, 2001.â
Update:
11:45 a.m., July 21: This post was updated with the English-language trailer for â9/11.â
Samantha Bee pokes holes in Trumpâs Voter Integrity Commission
Samantha Bee took aim at President Trumpâs Voter Integrity Commission on Wednesday nightâs iteration of âFull Frontal.â
Trump launched the commission to sniff out the 2 million to 5 million Americans he claims voted illegally during the November election. Bee scrutinized each of the commissionâs chief representatives and and what she said were their longtime efforts on voter suppression.
Bee pointed out that Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the commissionâs vice chairman, poured a decent chunk of his collegiate education into an anti-divestment thesis, for a thesis advisor who consulted for the white South African apartheid regime.
As secretary of state, Kobach introduced a Kansas law that requires all voters to provide proof of citizenship, which critics say is blocking many from registering. Kobach suggested a nationwide expansion of the state law immediately following the election.
âGuys like this have been playing the long game, methodically chipping away at the Voting Rights Act since LBJ signed it and left the room to expose himself to the steno pool,â Bee quipped. âAnd now this president has handed them the keys to the candy shop so they can run in and purge all the chocolates.â
Watch Beeâs full segment here.
Take a peek at the Pirelli Calendarâs all-black âAlice in Wonderlandâ fantasy photos
The 45th Pirelli Calendar has a bold look for 2018: Itâs an âAlice in Wonderlandâ theme cast entirely with black performers and models.
Famous names Djimon Hounsou, Lil Yachty, Lupita Nyongâo, RuPaul, Sasha Lane, Sean âDiddyâ Combs and Whoopi Goldberg posed for photographer Tim Walkerâs project, alongside models Adut Akech, Adwoa Aboah, Alpha Dia, Duckie Thot, King Owusu, Naomi Campbell, Slick Woods, Thando Hopa and Wilson Oryema, plus stylist-designer-singer Zoe Bedeaux.
âNow we have Alice looking different. Alice can be anyone,â Walker told stylist Chriselle Lim, who was present for the shoot. âItâs an essence. ... You donât have to be confined. Focus on what it represents. Itâs important for cultural development.â
Here are some behind-the-scenes photos from that shoot, where phones and use of social media were prohibited.
Lena Dunham will join election-themed season of âAmerican Horror Storyâ
Lena Dunham will join the cast of âAmerican Horror Story,â per an announcement by the seriesâ showrunner, Ryan Murphy.
Ahead of the spooky FX dramaâs upcoming seventh season, Murphy tweeted Wednesday:
Dunham will receive a one-episode story arc, her reps disclosed to the Hollywood Reporter.
Over the past several months, Murphy has periodically rolled out teasers for the next iteration of âAHS.â But heâs kept a lid on what is perhaps fansâ most persistent question: What is the title?
In February, Murphy divulged a tidbit to Andy Cohen -- though, in characteristic Murphy fashion, he played it pretty vague. The next season, he said, âis going to be about the election that we just went through, so I think that will be interesting for a lot of people.â
Murphy has yet to unveil the new seasonâs title (though âAmerican Horror Story: Electionâ seems chilling enough), but previously teased that it would be revealed Thursday.
Dunham will join the cast alongside series regulars Sarah Paulson and Evan Peters, as well as fellow âAHSâ newbies Colton Haynes (âTeen Wolfâ), Leslie Grossman (âPopularâ) and Billie Lourd (âScream Queensâ).
The âAHSâ Season 7 premiere date has not yet been announced. But the big title reveal comes in conjunction with the showâs pop-up activation at San Diego Comic-Con this week, which has promised to tease the season in a whole new way.
Music therapy program for children established in Chris Cornellâs name
On what would have been Chris Cornellâs 53rd birthday, the late Soundgarden singerâs family foundation announced Thursday a $100,000 donation to a music therapy program for children in Seattle that will bear Cornellâs name.
Childhaven, a Seattle-based nonprofit, will use the donation to establish the Chris Cornell Music Therapy Program at Childhaven, described as âa therapeutic early learning model for trauma-affected children.â
âThe Chris and Vicky Cornell Foundation is excited to join Childhaven to support its extraordinary work impacting the lives of those in need,â said Vicky Cornell, widow of the musician, who died May 17 of what was ruled to be a suicide.
âChris and I always shared a strong belief in the healing and inspiring power of music, and through Childhavenâs establishment of this program, we are able to keep the promise for Chris by continuing to protect the worldâs most vulnerable children,â Vicky Cornellâs statement said.
The program uses music to treat children from birth to age 5 who have been affected by abuse, neglect, domestic violence, substance abuse and other issues.
âBecause of what theyâve experienced, a lot of children come to Childhaven struggling with anger and other overwhelming emotions,â said Seattle musician Brian Vogan, who works in music therapy at Childhaven. âBeing able to beat on drums is really helpful for them. Other kids are very shy, and music helps to bring them out of their shell.â
Watch a live stream of O.J. Simpsonâs parole hearing
O.J. Simpson is up for parole for the second time since 2008, and because of high interest in all things O.J., whose murder trial launched a new era in court coverage, the hearing will be broadcast by numerous outlets starting at 10 a.m. PDT Thursday.
The Los Angeles Times will stream the parole hearing live online (below). A slew of news stations and even ESPN will broadcast coverage as well.
The 70-year-old former football star will testify via video conference for 30 to 45 minutes. Four members of the parole board will vote on his fate, with two other members joining in if there is 2-2 tie. A 3-3 tie would lead to another hearing in January. Typically the parole board has seven members, but Nevada Gov. Brian Sandovalâs seventh appointee is not available until after the hearing.
EDITORIAL: What O.J. Simpson can teach us about parole>>
The victim of the botched robbery Simpson was convicted for is expected to testify on Simpsonâs behalf, and a decision on parole is anticipated to come Thursday.
Simpson, who was acquitted in 1995 of the slayings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, was sentenced in 2008 to nine to 33 years in prison for a 2007 kidnapping and armed robbery in a Las Vegas hotel. Simpson was granted parole on five of the 12 charges in 2013; now he is seeking parole on the other seven. Because he was facing a minimum sentence of nine years, this is the first time he is eligible for release.
Simpson has reportedly been a model prisoner.
Times staff writer David Montero contributed to this report.
Jada Pinkett Smith was a drug dealer when she met Tupac Shakur, she says
âWhen I first met Pac, when we first met, I was a drug dealer.â
So said â Jada Pinkett Smith? Yep, she addressed her relationship with the late Tupac Shakur on Wednesday on Sirius XMâs Swayâs World, dropping in that little tidbit about her past, but not much more, âcause she says sheâs going to write a book.
Pinkett Smith, now 46, met Shakur on the first day of high school at Baltimore School of the Arts, and they became fast friends. With the Shakur biopic âAll Eyez on Meâ now in theaters, sheâs been on fire about the movieâs âreimaginingâ of their relationship, last month calling it âvery hurtful.â
The actress, who is married to Will Smith, told Sway it was âkind of hardâ to describe her relationship with the fallen rapper âbecause I havenât really told the whole story.â
The drug-dealer angle, being âin the life,â is something she hasnât shared before. Something âvery badâ happened to her around that time, and she got out, she said.
âIâve been having kind of an existential crisis around Pac because I was coming out, he was coming in, and there was a point at which we met. And then we kinda were going our separate ways. And I just felt like, âOK, God, one day youâre going to do for Pac what you did for me, which is, you saved me.â And that just never happened for him.â
Shakur was fatally shot in a 1996 drive-by in Las Vegas.
âPac and Iâs relationship was about survival,â Pinkett Smith said. âThatâs how it started. And I know most people want to always connect it in this romance thing, and thatâs just because they donât have the story.â
She said the drug-dealer detail was important to share, finally, because it gives insight to who they were together.
âIt wasnât just about, oh, you have this cute girl, and this cool guy, they must have been in this â nah, it wasnât that at all. It was about survival, and it had always been about survival between us.â
But thatâs it, for now, despite how upset sheâs been about âEyez.â
âItâs not for me to try to protect his legacy, and ... whatever Pacâs fate has been around his life, around his story, around his legacy, Godâs got it, and I just got to really lay down my feelings and trust that Godâs got it.â
Something God doesnât have, but that Pinkett Smith is seeing progress around, is diversity in Hollywood, which she took a notable stand on when she boycotted the Oscars in 2016. That was the year her husband, Will Smith, was not nominated for his work in âConcussionâ and the #OscarsSoWhite campaign took hold. Next time around, Pinkett Smith said, sheâd consider attending once again, because progress has been made.
The Will & Jada Smith Family Foundationâs Careers in Entertainment outreach program, which gets information about careers in Hollywood out to underserved communities, is merging with the motion picture academyâs efforts, she said.
âThereâs so much consciousnessâ now about diversity in Hollywood, she said. âWe have a long way to go, letâs be clear about that. But there is a lot more conversation about it.â
Itâs official: Ryan Seacrest to return as host of âAmerican Idolâ
The hardest-working man in Hollywood is returning to his roots. ABC announced Thursday morning that Ryan Seacrest will indeed return as host of the rebooted âAmerican Idol.â
âWe are thrilled to be ushering in this new era of âAmerican Idolâ with Ryan at the helm,â Channing Dungey, president of ABC Entertainment, said in a statement released by the network. âSo much of âAmerican Idolâsâ overwhelming success can be attributed to Ryan, whose larger-than-life personality and laudable dedication to creating quality entertainment has made him a true master of his craft.â
The original iteration of âAmerican Idolâ debuted in 2002 on Fox, with Seacrest serving as co-host with Brian Dunkleman, now best known for being the answer to the trivia question, âWho was Ryan Seacrestâs first-season âAmerican Idolâ co-host?â The show ran for 15 seasons and 555 episodes before being canceled in 2016.
ABCâs announcement that itâs rebooting the series in 2018 â with Katy Perry on the judgesâ panel â came just 13 months after the âAmerican Idolâ series finale aired.
âItâs genuinely hard to put into words what âAmerican Idolâ means to me,â Seacrest said in the same ABC statement. âIâm so grateful for the show and all the career and life opportunities itâs allowed me to experience. Itâs been an incredible journey from day one.
âTo be asked to return this year, at my new home at Disney|ABC, is an honor, if not a bit surreal,â he added.
Despite picking up his new (old) âAmerican Idolâ gig, Seacrest will continue as co-host and executive producer of âLive With Kelly and Ryanâ alongside Kelly Ripa, as well as host and executive producer of âOn Air With Ryan Seacrest,â his L.A.-based radio show.
Seacrest also will maintain his role as executive producer and host of ABCâs annual New Yearâs Eve bash, âDick Clarkâs New Yearâs Rockinâ Eve With Ryan Seacrest.â
Ripa excitedly confirmed the news on Thursdayâs episode of âLive With Kelly and Ryan.â
Open auditions for the first season of the new âAmerican Idolâ begin Aug. 17 in Orlando, Fla. and Portland, Ore. Expect more announcements of the âAmerican Idolâ judgesâ panel in coming weeks.
A Star Is Born: Carlos Santana turns 70 today
No borders, no flags. When people cry and laugh at the same time in our concerts, then I know weâve touched them. Iâve learned that the best music you can play is when youâre channeling. It has nothing to do with you, your mama or your ancestors. You become a host: Music is the water, people are flowers.
— Carlos Santana, 1992
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Santana: Blues, beliefs and beyond
CBS signs three performers to main âHawaii Five-0â cast, replacing Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park
CBS announced Wednesday that it would promote a recurring cast member and add two new performers to âHawaii Five-0â in the wake of the recent controversial departures of Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park from the successful reboot of the popular â60s cop show.
Ian Anthony Dale, Meaghan Rath and Beulah Koale have been signed to join stars Alex OâLoughlin and Scott Caan when the series returns for its eighth season on Sept. 29.
Dale has played a recurring role on the show as Adam Noshimuri, a trusted confidant and resource since Season 2. He is being promoted to series regular as his character is recruited by detective Steve McGarrett (OâLoughlin) to work for the police unit.
Rath (âBeing Humanâ) will play Tani Rey, whom McGarrett recruits from her job as a hotel pool lifeguard after being kicked out of the police academy, despite being a first-rate candidate.
Koale will play Junior Reigns, a former Navy SEAL who asks McGarrett, a fellow SEAL, for a job, hoping to utilize his skills as a member of Five-0.
Kim and Park, who had been with the show since its debut, were reportedly paid less than OâLoughlin and Caan. In a statement to fans, Kim said that he and CBS âwerenât able to agree to terms on a new contract.â Executives for the network and the series said Kim and Park, whom they considered to be supporting characters, had turned down substantial raises to remain with the show.
Monica Lewinsky lauds Jay-Z for owning up to his infidelity on â4:44â
Monica Lewinsky is no stranger to the woes of infidelity. Sheâs also privy to the ways in which powerful men manage to dodge accountability when theyâre caught fooling around.
So when a high-profile male celebrity such as Jay-Z opens up about his marital transgressions, Lewinsky is clearly the person to weigh in.
In a new op-ed piece titled âJay-Z, Prince Harry, Brad Pitt, and the New Frontiers of Male Vulnerability,â which the former White House intern penned for Vanity Fair, she lauded the rapper and mogul for his honesty when addressing his past infidelities on his new album, â4:44.â He didnât have to be quite so candid, she said.
âJay-Z had a choice,â Lewinsky wrote. âHaving been called out publicly by his wife in her fierce 2016 album and video, âLemonade,â Jay-Z knew that his fans wouldnât have blinked if his next album skimmed past the allegations. Thatâs not uncommon for men to do.
âAnd itâs not as if we hadnât seen BeyoncĂŠ and Jay-Z out in the world together since then â not to mention, welcoming their twins to planet Earth. Jay-Z could have ignored it all. But, instead, he chose a path of candor that will move the conversation forward and help others.â
Jay-Zâs â4:44â is probably best described as acutely personal. In âFootnotes for 4:44,â he exposed the intimate details of his once-tenuous marriage.
âThis is my real life,â he said in the video. âI just ran into this place and we built this big, beautiful mansion of a relationship that wasnât totally built on the 100% truth and it starts cracking. Things start happening that the public can see. Then we had to get to a point of âOK, tear this down and letâs start from the beginningâ ... Itâs the hardest thing Iâve ever done.â
Lewinsky feels that Jay-Zâs vulnerability marks a critical step away from the traditional idea of âmasculinityâ often prescribed to men, especially those in positions of influence.
âIt is a refreshing and bracing antidote to see male icons convey vulnerability in an age when Washingtonâs new power elite and our coarsening culture are busy projecting an outmoded caricature of manhood, 24/7,â she wrote.
Read Lewinskyâs full Vanity Fair essay here.
âThronesâ creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss land âConfederateâ on HBO
âGame of Thronesâ creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss have another HBO gig on tap, the premium channel announced Wednesday.
Never mind the King of the North â this drama series will center on whatâs going on in an alternate-reality American South.
âConfederate,â which will begin filming after the final season of âGoTâ wraps, is about civil wars, but not the Civil War. Set in a reality where the Confederacy seceded successfully and turned into a modern nation with legal, institutionalized slavery, the series will feature what looks to be a sprawling cast of characters who operate on either side of the âMason-Dixon Demilitarized Zone.â
The big bad looming in âConfederateâ? Not an army of White Walkers, but rather a Third American Civil War (and, we presume, an explanation of how the second one went down).
âWe are thrilled to be able to continue our relationship with Dan and David, knowing that any subject they take on will result in a unique and ambitious series,â HBO Programming President Casey Bloys said in a statement.
âTheir intelligent, wry and visually stunning approach to storytelling has a way of engaging an audience and taking them on an unforgettable journey. âConfederateâ promises to be no exception, and we are honored to be adding the talented [husband and wife] team of Nichelle and Malcolm Spellman.â
Benioff and Weiss said that for years they had considered the story as a feature film, but cut a deal with HBO in the wake of their âGoTâ experience.
âThere wonât be dragons or White Walkers in this series,â the duo said in a statement, âbut we are creating a world, and we couldnât imagine better partners in world-building than Nichelle and Malcolm, who have impressed us for a long time with their wit, their imagination and their Scrabble-playing skills.â
Creators Benioff and Weiss will write and serve as showrunners. The Spellmans â sheâs written for âThe Good Wifeâ and âJustified,â heâs done âEmpireâ and the upcoming series âFoxy Brownâ â will serve as executive producers and writers.
Julia Roberts continues to cozy up to TV after Amazon picks up âHomecomingâ
Star of the silver screen (and People magazineâs Worldâs Most Beautiful Woman) Julia Roberts is making herself at home on the small screen.
Roberts is set to headline âHomecoming,â a series based on the fictional podcast of the same name, which centers around a group of individuals working at a secret government facility.
Amazon confirmed to The Times the acquisition of the half-hour drama, directed and executive produced by âMr. Robotâ creator Sam Esmail, with a two-season, straight-to-series order. Eli Horowitz and Micah Bloomberg, writers of the podcast, will also serve as writers on the series.
Deadline first reported the series order
The âHomecomingâ podcast is no stranger to big-name stars, featuring the voice work of Catherine Keener, Oscar Isaac, Amy Sedaris and David Cross.
The first season of the podcast was a finalist for the 2016 Peabody Award, and Season 2 debuted today.
This marks the second television project Roberts has secured this summer. In June, HBO announced that it had picked up Robertsâ limited series based on Maria Sempleâs book âToday Will Be Different.â
FYF Fest will be livestreamed for first time
With a stacked lineup featuring Bjork, Frank Ocean, Missy Elliott, Solange and Nine Inch Nails, this yearâs FYF Fest looks to be a canât-miss entry in the summer festival season.
To soothe the widespread case of FOMO for those unable to get a ticket to the Goldenvoice-produced event, organizers will offer a livestream of the weekendâs action for the first time.
Two of the three days of this yearâs expanded festival will be streamed exclusively on Twitter, making it the first U.S. festival to be broadcast on the social platform, organizers announced Wednesday morning.
The stream will be active from 6 p.m. to midnight Saturday and Sunday, meaning folks can catch sets from acts like A Tribe Called Quest, MGMT, Iggy Pop and Run The Jewels.
Aside from performances, the stream will feature interviews and behind-the-scenes footage from the weekend.
Fans will be able to access the livestream at twitter.com/FYFFEST.
Fleetwood Mac becomes first band to be honored as MusiCares Person of the Year
Fleetwood Mac will be feted next year as the Recording Academyâs 2018 MusiCares Person of the Year, an honor that will be extended to the veteran group in conjunction with the 60th Grammy Awards ceremony.
Fleetwood Mac is the first group to be recognized at the annual event that singles out musicians both for their artistry and their philanthropic contributions. Previous honorees include Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Aretha Franklin, Paul Simon, Bonnie Raitt, Quincy Jones, Luciano Pavarotti and Stevie Wonder.
The Person of the Year dinner is a fundraiser that generates support for MusiCares programs assisting musicians in need of housing, transportation, instrument or equipment issues, medical treatment, food and other services.
âItâs a tremendous honor to be the first band to receive the MusiCares Person of the Year award,â founding member and drummer Mick Fleetwood said in a statement. âIndependently and together, we all set off on a journey to spend our lives as artists, songwriters, and musicians.
âNone of us did it alone and there were plenty of helping hands along the way,â Fleetwood said, âso we applaud and celebrate MusiCaresâ guiding principles of giving musicians a helping hand and a place to turn in times of need. We are very appreciative of this recognition.â
Recording Academy President and CEO Neil Portnow, in the same statement, said, âOur 2018 MusiCares Person of the Year tribute is a celebration of firsts â the first time our annual signature gala will be held in New York City in 15 years, and the first time in the benefitâs history that we will honor a band. This excitement is only matched by the genuine thrill and privilege of paying tribute to Fleetwood Mac.â
The tribute typically incorporates performance and testimonials from other musicians, although no participants for the Fleetwood Mac ceremony have been announced yet. In recent years, the annual event has raised in excess of $7 million for the MusiCares Foundation.
Jimmy Kimmel âapologizesâ for jokes about Caitlyn Jennerâs transition
Caitlyn Jenner is calling out late-night TV hosts for their âjokesâ about her gender identity.
Although the 67-year-old reality star made her first-ever âJimmy Kimmel Live!â appearance on Tuesday night, Kimmel has been cracking jokes at her expense for years.
Long before Jenner publicly announced her gender transition in 2015, the topic of Bruce Jennerâs decidedly âfeminineâ cosmetic preferences (i.e., plastic surgery, hairstyle, etc.) were punch lines to many a late-night one-liner.
âIt had been hammered all over the media for the longest time,â Jenner said during Tuesdayâs taping. âIn fact, guys like you, making some jokes.â
She raised an eyebrow to Kimmel.
âRight, but we didnât know what was happening! We thought you were just vain,â Kimmel quipped, adding as an aside, âSorry about that, by the way.â
âNo, itâs quite all right,â Jenner replied, before lobbing a zinger of her own.
âNow heâs gonna apologize!â she said to the audience. âBut I accept your apology. I donât know if you saw it, but when I was on Jimmy Fallon, I gave him a really hard time.â
âWell, he deserves it,â Kimmel cracked. âHe said some really terrible things about you.â
Jenner agreed but let Kimmel know where he stands with her: âYouâve always been my favorite.â
Who earns the most at the BBC? White men, a new salary report reveals
The BBC is funneling loads of taxpayer dollars into the pockets of its highest-paid stars -- its white male stars, to be exact.
Under the terms of its new charter, the U.K. public broadcast powerhouse was compelled to release the names and salaries of its top-line earners, unearthing an international controversy about its glaring wage gaps.
The salary report reveals that 96 of the BBCâs leading on-air personalities earn at least $195,000 every year. And radio host Chris Evans, the broadcast networkâs chief earner, takes home more than $2.9 million -- about 20 times the salary of the U.K. prime minister.
The BBCâs payroll docket is a sensitive issue, which is why the network has kept its contents under wraps until now. In the U.K., there is a $190 annual fee exacted on every television-owning household, as well as those who watch BBC programs online. That means that multimillionaire stars, like Evans, are essentially profiting from BBC-consuming taxpayer bills.
The salaries, which were published in ranked clusters rather than specific figures, reveal a stark wage gap along gender and race lines. Two-thirds of the BBCâs highest earners are men. Its top-earning woman -- âStrictly Come Dancingâ host Claudia Winkleman -- makes less than a quarter of Evansâ salary. This is an apparent pattern throughout the report, which revealed stark wage rifts between male and female personalities who basically fulfill the same job function.
The report also raised issues about race, as the BBCâs elite band of earners are overwhelmingly white in addition to overwhelmingly male. None of its nonwhite stars earn more than about $391,000 a year.
While BBC chief Tony Hall conceded that the report did expose âthe need to go further and faster on issues of gender and diversity,â he defended the astronomical salaries.
âThe BBC does not exist in a market on its own where it can set the market rates,â he said in a speech to his staff on Tuesday. âIf we are to give the public what they want, then we have to pay for those great presenters and stars.â
Blac Chyna says sheâs glad to be ârelievedâ of Rob Kardashian
Blac Chyna is happy to put Rob Kardashian in her rearview mirror after he posted naked pictures of her online in a profane, ill-conceived rant â but not before she does a sit-down interview about how sheâs putting him in said rearview.
âIâm glad Iâm relieved of [Rob], but damn, why did I have to get relief in this way?â she told People.
Moving forward, she said, sheâs all about being happy, so that King Cairo, her son with Tyga, and Dream, her daughter with Kardashian, can be happy as well.
The woman born Angela White also wants to speak up, she said, for other women who might find themselves in a similar ugly-split situation.
The 29-year-old was granted a restraining order against baby daddy No. 2 on July 10, five days after he went off at her on social media, posting nude pictures sheâd sent him and accusing her of cheating on him and using drugs.
The couple split in December but stayed in each otherâs lives until the rant, which it appears was prompted when Chyna, Kardashian claims, sent him a video of her cuddling up in bed with another man.
They have an unwritten 50-50 agreement regarding custody of Dream, according to TMZ, and she told People thereâs âno turning backâ when it comes to a romantic relationship. As in, no way is that ever happening again between them.
Chyna has been hard at work in recent days and appears to have taken career pages from fellow estranged Kardashian-clan member Scott Disick and onetime would-be in-laws Kylie Jenner and Kim Kardashian.
A la Disick, she hosted a party Saturday at a strip club in Atlanta and reportedly was paid $10,000 to host at the Ace of Diamonds club in West Hollywood on Monday night (and enjoyed a lap dance while she was there). She also is promoting a makeup collection, Lashed Cosmetics, which echoes the reality-TV ladiesâ beauty businesses.
Chyna told People she had found strength in the alleged revenge-porn drama.
âIf I was to go and do a very artsy, high-end photo shoot exposing my breasts, thatâs my choice,â she said. âThis is my body. Itâs my right.â
Watch the first trailer for Guillermo del Toroâs dark fairy tale âThe Shape of Waterâ
Fans of director Guillermo del Toro have learned to expect the unexpected. Over the course of his career, the filmmaker has put his unique stamp on everything from vampires (âCronosâ) to superheroes (âHellboyâ) to giant robots (âPacific Rimâ) to gothic horror (âCrimson Peakâ).
The just-released first trailer for del Toroâs latest film, âThe Shape of Water,â finds him back in the realm of dark, unsettling fairy tales, a la his 2006 film, âPanâs Labyrinthâ â this time with a suitably twisted romantic spin.
Set against the backdrop of the Cold War, the film centers on a mute janitor (Sally Hawkins) at a top-secret government laboratory who develops a relationship with an aquatic humanoid creature (Doug Jones) â the last of his species â who is being held in a tank and subjected to experiments.
âThe Shape of Water,â which co-stars Octavia Spencer, Michael Shannon and Richard Jenkins, hits theaters Dec. 8.
Watch the trailer here:
âHire a polygraph personâ: Aaron Carter swears he doesnât drink, despite recent DUI arrest
Aaron Carter does not drink alcohol. At all.
That was the 29-year-old singerâs story during a weepy interview Tuesday with âEntertainment Tonight.â Following his recent DUI arrest outside an AutoZone in rural Georgia, Carter wanted to set the record straight about his rumored substance abuse issues.
âI do not drink,â he insisted, explaining that a longstanding medical condition prevents him from doing so. âHire a polygraph person, a professional. Strap me up.â
On Saturday night, Habersham County authorities charged Carter with DUI and possession of marijuana and drug-related objects.
A tearful Carter told âETâ that car problems were to blame.
âSomebody said I was driving recklessly on the road. Thatâs what the police report said, but the alignment was off on my car, so I went to AutoZone to see if I could do anything about it,â Carter said.
Although a motorcyclist reported that Carter was âswerving all over the road,â the singer vowed that the issue was a problem with the tireâs alignment -- and nothing more. Because, he reiterated, âI do not drink alcohol at all.â Or, rather, he doesnât drink hard liquor at all?
âIâll occasionally have a sip of beer or something like that, but I canât even drink IPAs,â he clarified. âI canât drink anything like that. I have to drink the lightest beer possible thatâs not hoppy. I donât drink any hard liquor.â
As for the marijuana charges, Carter told âETâ that he obtains the drug legally and uses it only to treat his anxiety, chronic pain and suppressed appetite. He steadfastly contended that he does not use any other drugs -- except for Xanax, propranolol for his high blood pressure and Oxycodone for a recent jaw injury.
Carter responded to claims that he is actually in the throes of perhaps a much more dire drug addiction. He stamped out those rumors too, denying that he has ever smoked meth, crack cocaine or heroin (and he experimented with Ecstasy only âa couple of timesâ as a teenager).
âI donât need help,â he said. âWhat I need is for people to understand that Iâm human and I make mistakes just like every other human in this world.â
Keegan-Michael Key resurrects Luther, Obamaâs âanger translator,â for Stephen Colbert
The news from Washington was the death of the Republican healthcare bill, and it was duly noted around the late-night dial.
On NBCâs âLate Night,â host Seth Meyers said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had announced that the new Republican strategy was to repeal and not replace the Affordable Care Act, âthe same way we got rid of Obama without a good plan to replace him.â
Jimmy Fallon, on âThe Tonight Show,â had more or less the same joke from a different angle: âRepublicans said that theyâre just going to let Obamacare fail while they regroup and figure out a new plan and Democrats said, âHey, thatâs the same thing weâre doing with Trump.ââ
Passing a bill âwas always a long shot,â said âLate Showâ host Stephen Colbert, âbecause the Republicans control only all three branches of government.â He likened the proposal to repeal and not replace to âhow when your car gets a flat tire, you remove the tire, then cut the brake cables and push the car into a crowd of uninsured old people.â
Still, the biggest late-night news was the return of Luther, the âanger translatorâ for President Obama played by âLate Showâ guest Keegan-Michael Key.
âThereâs something probably brewing up in Luther,â said Key, when asked if we might get a another glimpse of him.
Colbert read a statement from Obama, published in June on Facebook, also regarding the Republican healthcare bill: âIf thereâs a chance you might get sick, get old, or start a family, this bill will do you harm.â
Keysâ eyes widened, as if he were possessed, and Luther broke it down.
He began with an incredulous squeak of a scream, as if six months of pent-up rage were finding its way into the world through a hairline crack.
âCome on, people! Trump Care? More Like Trump Donât Care. Iâm talking about Don T Care Donât Care.â He was on his feet by then, jumping in place.
âI fought for the ACA to help people! I also spent a full year in open bipartisan sessions and everybody had a say. All the Republicans! All the Democrats! So what yâall hidin? ⌠Why would you do that? ⌠Maybe because you donât want anyone to see that yâall just cooped up in a dungeon over a kettle just makinâ a potion!â
He flapped his hands, he made stirring motions.
âYâall goinâ to kill some people,â he continued, but âmost of the folks in America want this country to still have people living in it! I would say you people make me sick, but I canât afford that, âcause I wouldnât have no damn insurance!â
Momentarily himself again, Key returned for a sip of tea. Colbert, asking if Luther were still there, offered another Obama quote, from a May meeting with Angela Merkel: âIn this new world we live in, we canât isolate ourselves. We canât hide behind a wall.â
Luther was back in the blink of an eye. âI spent eight years tearinâ down walls. And this âŚ. want to put them all up!â
He paced, grabbed the railing of the setâs spiral staircase and did a kind of balletic kick.
âNow he want to make the wall see through ⌠so when people throw 60-pound bags of drugs over the wall, you can see it so you wonât get hit on the head ...,â Key, as Luther, said.
âI seen a lot of movies from the â80s, and I ainât never seen nobody die from no ⌠head injury,â he went on. âI mean, lelelelemme see now, lemme see. âScarfaceâ? No. âLess than Zeroâ? No. âCheech and Chongâ? Drugs, yes. But head injuries â no, no and no!â
He did a backward somersault into a standing position.
âIâma gonna tell you one last thing,â Key as Luther concluded. âI thought I was on a forced retirement, yâall. But it look like Obama still need me. So I am back!â
Madonna blocks auction of Tupac Shakur letter, âpersonally wornâ panties
A collectibles outfit in New York City has plenty of Madonna gear up for auction today â but you wonât find the singerâs âpersonally wornâ panties, her DNA or a letter to her from the late Tupac Shakur on the block.
The pop star succeeded in her effort Tuesday to keep Gotta Have Rock and Roll from selling 22 items, including those three, when a judge hit the pause button on her behalf. Apparently, Madonna had no idea the items werenât in her possession anymore.
âThe fact that I have attained celebrity status as a result of success in my career does not obviate my right to maintain my privacy, including with regard to highly personal items,â Madonna said in court papers obtained by the Associated Press. âI understand that my DNA could be extracted from a piece of my hair. It is outrageous and grossly offensive that my DNA could be auctioned for sale to the general public.â
According to the New York Daily News, which first reported the development, the items up for sale came from Darlene Lutz, a former friend who helped Madonna pack up her Miami home, and also included a letter in which the Material Girl snarked on Whitney Houston and Sharon Stone.
âMaybe this is what black people felt like when Elvis Presley got huge,â she wrote in the letter, according to the auction site, as reported by the Daily News. âItâs so unequivocally frustrating to read that Whitney Houston has the music career I wish I had and Sharon Stone has the film career Iâll never have. Not because I want to be these women because Iâd rather die but theyâre so horribly mediocre.â
Shakur and Madonna dated for a while starting in 1993, she confirmed in 2015. In his letter to her, which the collectibles auction house expected to sell for $400,000, he apologized for previous behavior. âPlease,â he wrote, âunderstand my previous position as that of a young man with limited experience with a extremely famous sex symbol.â
In the same letter, Shakur talked about how it wouldnât hurt her career â and would likely enhance it â if she were seen with a black man. But for him, because of his âimage,â he felt that being seen with her would be âletting down half of the people who made me what I thought I was.â
The âHit Em Upâ rapper started serving a prison sentence for sexual assault a month after writing the letter and was released in October 1995. He was fatally shot on Sept. 13, 1996, at age 25 in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. The âBorderlineâ singer was 38 at the time of his death.
The judgeâs ruling Tuesday is not final. âMadonnaâs allegations will be vigorously challenged and refuted in a court of law in due course,â a spokesman for the auction house and Lutz told the New York Post. âWe are confident that the Madonna memorabilia will be back.â
The balance of the 120 items in the auction are currently up for bid.
Nothing slow about it: âDespacitoâ is now the most-streamed song ever
Just six months after its release, Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankeeâs summer hit âDespacitoâ has become the most-streamed song ever, logging 4.6 billion streams to date.
That figure includes streams of the Fonsi-Yankee track as well as a remix featuring Justin Bieber.
In taking over the top spot, the Spanish-language âDespacitoâ (which translates to âslowlyâ), surpasses the previous record holder, Bieberâs âSorry,â which has tallied 4.38 billion streams for the original song and associated remixes.
âLuis Fonsi already had the undisputed, biggest song of the year â and now heâs setting even bigger records,â Universal Music Group Chairman and Chief Executive Lucian Grainge said in a statement. âStreaming has opened up the possibility of a song with a different beat, from a different culture and in a different language to become a juggernaut of success around the world.â
Another Universal executive, Jesus Lopez, chairman and CEO of Universal Music Latin America & Iberian Peninsula, added, âStreaming has democratized music consumption, it has made Latin music increasingly relevant on the charts and it has amplified our songs and videos to a world stage.â
The official video for âDespacitoâ now shows 2.66 billion views on YouTube.
âTeen Wolfâ might be howling a different tune on MTV
As the final days of MTVâs âTeen Wolfâ loom, the cable network is looking ahead to what could fill the hunky, teenage wolf-boy-sized hole in its schedule.
The answer? More âTeen Wolf,â maybe.
MTV already has plans to continue the Season 6 narrative in podcast form, after airing the final episodes later this summer, The Times confirmed Tuesday.
First reported in the Hollywood Reporter, the cable programmer has also started kicking around the idea of transforming the show into an anthology and rebooting it in a different location with a largely new cast.
âThese characters and these stories have hit a peak,â Chris McCarthy, president of MTV, told THR. âWe are talking with Jeff [Davis, creator of âTeen Wolfâ] about how do we actually keep that franchise alive. And the beauty of the evolution of media is you can see the series going on through a series of podcasts and then see a resurrection of a new class in a couple years.â
âTeen Wolfâ was MTVâs first scripted drama when it debuted in 2011. The final 10 episodes will play out over the next few months, when the back half of Season 6 begins July 30.
A Star Is Born: Benedict Cumberbatch turns 41 today
I think [being surprised by whatâs in a film is] a rare thing in our day and age where you have a super-saturation of media over-publicizing every detail or spoilers in adverts or trailers. Thatâs what it should be about, going to the movies. It shouldnât be about ticking off a list of, âYeah, I heard that was going to happen.â
— Benedict Cumberbatch, 2013
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Benedict Cumberbatch, the thinking manâs alpha wolf
Los Angeles Timesâ Carolina A. Miranda wins Rabkin Prize for arts writers
Los Angeles Times staff writer Carolina A. Miranda is among eight winners of the Rabkin Prize for Visual Arts Journalism, which the Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation announced Monday.
This is the inaugural cycle of grants, which awards $50,000 to winners and aims to identify and celebrate the countryâs most vital visual-arts journalists.
Sixteen writers were nominated for consideration and narrowed down to eight by a jury of three, including Lisa Gabrielle Mark, publisher at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Paul Ha, director of the List Visual Arts Center at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Walter Robinson, the New York-based artist and art critic.
The eight winners are:
Phong Bui, co-founder and artistic director of the Brooklyn Rail (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
Charles Desmarais, art critic for the San Francisco Chronicle (San Francisco)
Bob Keyes, writer for the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram (Portland, Maine)
Jason Farago, art critic for the New York Times (New York)
Jeff Huebner, arts journalist and freelance writer (Chicago)
Carolina Miranda, Los Angeles Times staff writer (Los Angeles)
Christina Rees, Glasstire editor-in-chief (Dallas)
Chris Vitiello, writer, curator and organizer (Durham, N.C.)
âThese are the brave ones, the writers who live by their work and say what they think,â Mark said of the winners in Mondayâs announcement.
The creation of the Rabkin Prize comes at the behest of the late Leo Rabkin, who âwanted to create a program that would encourage writers to stay in the profession and be supported and appreciated,â Susan C. Larsen, executive director of the Rabkin Foundation, said in a statement.
During her tenure at The Times, Miranda has specialized in covering culture both high and low, including recent stories featuring a lowrider piĂąata, the controversy surrounding Sam Durantâs âScaffoldâ sculpture and the last porn theaters in Los Angeles.
âIâm thrilled and humbled and just a little bit dazed,â Miranda said, adding that sheâs not sure how sheâll spend the prize money. âThe award came as a big surprise. In fact, when they first reached out, my first thought was that someone was pulling my leg â and then I was worried they might change their mind!â
Miranda continued, âBut Iâm incredibly grateful that an organization like the Rabkin Foundation is supporting arts writers, especially the independent ones. And Iâm grateful that The Times is committed to coverage of fine arts â because without that, we wouldnât be talking about any of this.â
Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton announce their final duet performance as he closes out his career
Kenny Rogersâ longtime duet partner and friend Dolly Parton will be among those helping the Gambler close out his career with a star-packed October show in Nashville.
The two have worked together since 1983, when they collaborated on âIslands in the Stream,â which became a No. 1 hit.
âWeâve enjoyed a special friendship for decades, and Iâll forever look back fondly on the many collaborations, performances, and laughs weâve shared as some of the most extraordinary moments of my career,â 78-year-old Rogers said of Parton in a Tuesday statement. âI know it will be a moving experience for us standing on that stage together for one last time.â
Their final âIslands in the Streamâ duet will happen Oct. 25 in Nashville during the âAll in for the Gambler: Kenny Rogersâ Farewell Concert Celebration.â Other acts so far include Little Big Town, Alison Krauss, the Flaming Lips, Idina Menzel, Jamey Johnson and Elle King, with more names expected as the date approaches. The show will be taped for broadcast at a later date.
âThis is all Iâve done for 60 years, but my mobility has gotten kind of strange, and I donât like to go on stage and have to apologize,â Rogers told Rolling Stone. âItâs one of those things â you make decisions based on what life gives you. Iâve had a great life, I canât complain, but itâs time for me to hang it up, I think.â
Parton said in a statement that since 1983, âeveryone has had an expectation to see Kenny everywhere I go and me with him wherever he goes,â even though, according to Rolling Stone, theyâve performed together only three times in the last 27 years.
âWell, I guess for many of those fans that wanted to see us together, this will be that night,â she said.
Rogersâ farewell tour, which started last year, has him in California and Nevada between now and the end of the month, including a Temecula show Sunday and a Costa Mesa concert July 30.
Ed Sheeran, fresh from deleting his Twitter account, will make a âSimpsonsâ cameo
Fresh off his cameo role on âGame of Thronesâ -- after which he just quit Twitter, but more on that momentarily -- English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran will lend his voice and cartoon caricature to a new episode of âThe Simpsonsâ that will parody âLa La Land.â
Titled âHaw Haw Land,â the episode will be part of the showâs upcoming 29th season. It casts Sheeran as the Ryan Gosling-esque love interest to jazz-loving, saxophone-playing Lisa Simpson -- to the consternation of her long-suffering unrequited-love interest, Milhouse.
No air date for the episode has been announced. Sheeran is described as a longtime âSimpsonsâ fan who sports a tattoo of the showâs nuclear-irradiated, three-eyed fish, Blinky.
Meanwhile, Sheeran deleted his Twitter account following his performance as a singing soldier on the âGame of Thronesâ season opener Sunday after his performance was criticized by some viewers online.
Sheeran offered no explanation for shutting down his account, but fans were quick to speculate that it was the result of online barbs hurled his way after the âGoTâ appearance. And this isnât the first time Sheeran has voiced his frustrations with social media.
Is âThe Disaster Artistâ James Francoâs next shot at Oscar gold?
If youâre a James Franco fan who felt the actor was snubbed by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences when his performance as an eccentric drug dealer in âSpring Breakersâ failed to earn an Oscar nod -- rejoice. The actorâs next shot at a gold statuette may have just arrived.
On Tuesday, A24 debuted a teaser trailer (warning, adult language) for âThe Disaster Artist,â a dark comedy that sparked early awards talk for Franco when it premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March.
The movie, which the 39-year-old both directed and stars in, tells the story of âThe Roomâ -- a 2003 low-budget indie dubbed the âworst movie everâ by numerous critics. Created by Tommy Wiseau, âThe Roomâ was filled with such bad acting and dialogue that it became a surprise cult hit and even a popular local midnight screening selection.
At SXSW, Franco told the crowd -- who gave him multiple standing ovations -- that he related to Wiseau in âways that I donât want to admit.â
âWhat we talked about more than anything else while we were putting the movie together was, âWhy do we love this movie?ââ added Seth Rogen, who co-stars in the movie and produced it. âNot, âWhy do we make fun of this movie?â Or, âWhy do we laugh at this movie?â But, âWhat is great about that movie?â And at the end of the day, it was the earnestness of a guy who put himself out there.â
As for Franco, the actor said he devoted serious time to perfecting Wiseauâs affect, even continuing to speak in the filmmakerâs voice while directing âThe Disaster Artist.â
Even though Franco was Oscar-nominated for best actor for his turn in the 2010 survival drama â127 Hours,â many fans felt his more unconventional performance three years later in âSpring Breakersâ was overlooked.
A24, which also distributed that 2013 party flick, even mounted a tongue-in-cheek awards campaign for Francoâs role in âSpring Breakers.â
Disney says Kermit the Frog puppeteer fired over âunacceptable business conductâ
The war of words rages on, but none of them are coming from the little green frog.
The Muppets Studio released a statement Monday revealing a bit more about its decision to part ways with longtime Kermit the Frog puppeteer Steve Whitmire.
âThe role of Kermit the Frog is an iconic one that is beloved by fans and we take our responsibility to protect the integrity of that character very seriously,â a spokesperson for Muppets Studio said in a statement. âWe raised concerns about Steveâs repeated unacceptable business conduct over a period of many years and he consistently failed to address the feedback.
âThe decision to part ways was a difficult one which was made in consultation with the Henson family and has their full support,â the statement concluded.
Whitmire had been performing with the Muppets since 1978 and took on the role of Kermit after the untimely death of Muppets creator Jim Henson in 1990.
In an interview with the Hollywood Reporter Monday, Whitmire acknowledged that his opinionated communication style was unacceptable for Disney.
âThey felt I had been âdisrespectfulâ in being outspoken on character issues with the small group of top creative people during the ABC series [âThe Muppetsâ],â Whitmire told THR.
âI have been outspoken about whatâs best for the Muppets since the Muppets came to Disney [in 2004], but the fact is I have respect for everyone who was involved in the creation of that series for their own particular contributions. At the same time, I also have insight into their limitations with respect to how well they know the Muppets,â Whitmire said.
The Henson family chose Whitmire to replace Jim Henson as Kermit in 1990, but it has no current involvement with the Muppets. Disney purchased Kermit and the gang from the Jim Henson Co. in 2004 in a deal valued at $90 million.
In an interview with the New York Times on Monday, Lisa Henson, president of Jim Henson Co. and Jim Hensonâs daughter, had her own take on Whitmireâs behavior.
âHe played brinkmanship very aggressively in contract negotiations,â Henson said, going on to explain that Whitmire also refused to have an understudy.
âHe blackballed young performers,â Henson said of Whitmireâs relationships with new talent.
Jim Henson Co. Chairman Brian Henson, Jim Hensonâs son, said that Whitmireâs Kermit was âsometimes excellent, and always pretty good,â but it was what happened once the cameras were off that became a problem.
âHeâd send emails and letters attacking everyone, attacking the writing and attacking the director,â Brian Henson said.
What happened in the past with Whitmire and Disney remains muddy, but the future looks clear for Kermit.
Matt Vogel, veteran Muppet puppeteer, will make his debut as the new Kermit the Frog on this weekâs installment of âMuppet Thought of the Week.â
Jessica Alba is pregnant again, about to be âoutnumberedâ
Jessica Alba and husband Cash Warren are expecting a third child, the actress announced with a little help from her two daughters and social media.
â@cash_warren and I are officially going to be outnumbered #babyonboard #herewegoagain #blessed,â she wrote Monday night, captioning a video of herself with eldest child, Honor, and second daughter, Haven, 5, all flashing big number balloons.
The âDark Angelâ actress, 36, and producer Warren, 38, met on the set of âFantastic Fourâ in 2005 and have been married since May 2008.
The Honest Co. co-founder â letâs not talk about that now â announced her second pregnancy via Facebook in 2011, and Warren marked Honorâs ninth birthday last month with a sweet Instagram post that hinted at the kind of dad he is.
âMy baby girl - You turn 9 today. How do I have a 9 year old??! The time is flying by but you know what ... I wouldnât have it any other way. Having you has taught me how to appreciate the here and now. I canât afford to wish for tomorrow because I know Iâll miss today,â he wrote.
âYou are kind, thoughtful and fair. You are smart, creative and driven. Youâre not afraid to lead but more importantly youâre not afraid to listen. Keep it up my champ! Youâre doing great.
âI love you. Iâm so proud of you. Happy Birthday!! ... Now letâs go make some slime.â
Make that slime for three, please.
A Star Is Born: Wendy Williams turns 53 today
When I think of myself doing well in radio, I donât think of myself as the most celebrated black woman. No, Iâm the most celebrated woman in radio. And my achievements rival all the boys.
— Wendy Williams, 2008
FROM THE ARCHIVES: A lot to say, naturally
R. Kelly denies new sexual misconduct allegations
R. Kelly on Monday denied allegations that he is holding several women over the age of consent as sex slaves.
âMr. Robert Kelly is both alarmed and disturbed at the recent revelations attributed to him,â his attorney, Linda S. Mensch, said in a statement obtained by The Times. âMr. Kelly unequivocally denies such allegations and will work diligently and forcibly to pursue his accusers and clear his name.â
The allegations, published Monday by BuzzFeed, come from the parents of several women alleged to be under Kellyâs sway. Writer Jim DeRogatis â the former Chicago Sun-Times pop music critic who has extensively reported on allegations that Kelly was involved sexually with numerous underage girls â also interviewed three people identified as former members of the singerâs inner circle.
According to the story, a half-dozen women live in properties the singer rents and do what he tells them to do, including engaging âin sexual encounters that he records.â
DeRogatis notes in the BuzzFeed story that âthe law says that consenting adults may take part in any relationship they want, no matter how nontraditional. Welfare checks by police in both Illinois and Georgia in the past year didnât lead to any charges; in January, the aspiring singer from Georgia told Cook County police she was âfine and did not want to be bothered.ââ
In 2008, the âI Believe I Can Flyâ crooner was acquitted on child-pornography charges stemming from a leaked videotape. Now 50, he has settled multiple lawsuits involving sexual misconduct allegations.
Times staff writer Randy Lewis contributed to this report.
Mindy Kaling reportedly expecting first child
Forget Mrs. Who. Mindy Kaling already has her next role lined up: Mommy.
Kaling has her hands full, starring in Ava DuVernayâs $100-million adaptation of Madeleine LâEngleâs fantasy novel âA Wrinkle in Time,â but E! News reported Monday that motherhood is imminent for the star.
Sources told the entertainment outlet that the pregnancy comes as an âunexpected surpriseâ to the star of âThe Officeâ and âThe Mindy Project,â but Kaling has never shied away from the idea of having children.
âI think Iâve decided that unlike everything else in my life, Iâm going to be fast and loose about kids. Iâm going to not actively plan, but if it happens, it would happen,â Kaling told Yahoo Style in October 2015, tacking on a âmaybe imminentlyâ at the end of her thought.
Nothing is yet known about who Kalingâs partner in pregnancy may be, so let the rampant speculation begin!
Here, weâll start: In March, Kaling and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker had a very flirty exchange on Twitter that seemed to end in the pair agreeing to go on a date, though Booker later tried to strip the romantic overtones from the arrangement later.
âI want to sort of take the romantic aspect out of it and talk more about how sheâs amazing,â Booker told Vanity Fair in April. Itâs still unclear whether Kaling and Booker ever had their enchanted evening, but wouldnât it be delightful (if completely baseless) if todayâs announcement were proof?
Alternate theory: Kaling and former beau and bestie BJ Novak (âThe Officeâ) are working on a book together that was originally announced in May 2015. Two years is a long time, and while thereâs absolutely nothing to suggest this is the case, wouldnât it be lovely if the two got distracted by another side project that was actually a baby?
Representatives for Kaling did not immediately respond to The Timesâ request for comment Monday afternoon.
Ryan Phillippe was âvictim of a freak accident,â with a broken leg to show for it
Ryan Phillippe has broken his leg badly, he says, but the âfreak accidentâ didnât happen while he was on the job.
Late Sunday, the âShooterâ star posted a photo of himself laid up in a hospital bed with obvious damage to his right leg. On Monday morning, he provided more details.
â[H]ey, guys. i didnât injure myself doing a stunt or anywhere near the set of shooter. i was the victim of a freak accident during a family outing on sunday,â he said in a series of tweets. â[M]y leg is badly broken & required surgical attention, but i will make a full recovery, am in good hands, and will be back in action soon.â
Phillippe continued: â[T]hank you for all the well wishes, support, & concern. also a special thanks to the paramedics & first responders who helped me at the scene & to the medical staff caring for me now. i will keep you updated on my progress.â
To pass the time while heâs laid up, the 42-year-old actor said, heâll be live-tweeting the East Coast and West Coast feeds of âShooterâ on Tuesday night, when the showâs second season premieres on USA Network.
Fans, take note: Phillippe also plans to do a nice long Twitter Q&A ahead of show time.
â[C]ome up w good qâs for my a,â he urged.
Aaron Carter, arrested on suspicion of DUI, slams brother Nick Carter for supportive tweet
Singer Aaron Carter is blaming it all on fame â except for the part where heâs blaming it all on poor wheel alignment.
Heâs not too happy with his Backstreet Boys brother Nick Carter, either.
The younger Carter, who was arrested Saturday in Georgia on suspicion of DUI and drug possession, said in a statement Sunday on Twitter that he âfeels his âcelebrityâ was targetedâ and plans to get an attorney.
âHis automobile had a new tire put on it and it went out of alignment,â so Carter and girlfriend Madison Parker, who have been traveling together as he tours, drove to an Auto Zone, the statement said. âAfter being at the store and requesting help to get his alignment fixed, he was arrested inside by several officers with aggression. The police also revoked his rights to have an attorney.â
The statement said video from the store would show Carter was not in a moving vehicle when he was arrested and noted that âAaron holds a medical license for medical marijuana for his long standing anxiety.â
A sheriffâs deputy on Monday described the situation differently, saying officers had responded to a motoristâs 911 call.
âHe was driving all over the road and driving into the median,â Habersham County Sheriffâs Capt. Floyd Canup told the Associated Press. A deputy saw Carter behind the wheel before the 29-year-old pulled into the auto-parts store parking lot, Canup said.
While the âI Want Candyâ singer on Monday was retweeting comments about medical marijuana being legal in Georgia, Canup told the AP that the kind Carter had didnât fall into the stateâs legal category. âItâs not the green, leafy type, which he had,â the captain said.
Nick Carter, 37, reached out to his little bro Sunday on Twitter, saying, âTo my brother: I love u no matter what & if u feel the need to reach for help, I am here and willing to help you get better.â
Aaron Carter, who spent a month in rehab in 2011 for Xanax dependency, wasnât pleased with the offer.
âIf my own blood (Nick) truly cared about my well-being, why wouldnât he call me directly and have a conversation instead of making this about him through a very public forum,â he said in his Sunday statement. âThatâs not cool at all to use me for his PR and kick me while I am down. I love my family despite it through thick and thin.â
The 2009 âDancing With the Starsâ alum, whoâs been performing since he was 7, has had drama bubbling up in his life recently. A week ago he tempted fate â or so it seems, in hindsight â when a videographer asked him for his thoughts on Shia LaBeoufâs arrest in Georgia on a public drunkenness charge.
âYou wonât catch me getting any DUIs. I donât have any DUIs,â Carter bragged in footage published Sunday by TMZ.
In June, he was hospitalized for exhaustion shortly after he called out fans who criticized his thin frame.
âNo I donât do drugs, yes I feel pain, I havenât stopped working since I was 7 years old 22 years later and I still wonât give up,â Carter tweeted in April (via People) in a since-deleted series of posts talking about his hiatal hernia diagnosis, which he called a âterrible stress conditionâ and likened to an eating disorder.
âIâm sorry, sometimes I really wish I did look better, or I eat more like yâall say, this life doesnât come w much stability...,â he wrote.
Amazon Studios releases trailer for Sundance favorite âCrown Heightsâ
Amazon Studios on Monday released a trailer for âCrown Heights,â offering a sneek peek at the movie that won the Audience Award for U.S. Dramatic Film at the Sundance Film Festival.
âCrown Heightsâ is a biographical drama centered around the real-life plight of Colin Warner, who was 18 years old in 1980 when he was arrested and convicted of a killing he did not commit.
Warner was eventually exonerated, after spending 21 years in prison, through the work of Carl King, an acquaintance turned friend.
Breakout star Lakeith Stanfield (âAtlanta,â âGet Outâ) stars as Warner opposite former NFL cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha (perhaps best known as Kerry Washingtonâs husband) playing King.
After a positive showing at Sundance, Amazon Studios purchased world rights to the film for more than $2 million.
âCrown Heightsâ is scheduled for release Aug. 25.
R. Kelly is the subject of new round of sexual misconduct allegations
Singer R. Kelly is facing a new round of accusations of sexual misconduct by parents of several women over the age of consent who contend that he is holding their daughters as sex slaves, according to a BuzzFeed report by veteran Chicago journalist Jim DeRogatis.
The womenâs parents have enlisted the help of local police and the FBI in attempts to regain contact with their children, but have largely been unable to proceed because law enforcement officials say the women are legally free to engage in consensual relationships.
A representative for Kellyâs record label, RCA Records, did not immediately respond to The Timesâ request for comment on Monday.
UPDATE: R. Kelly denies new sexual misconduct allegations
The lengthy BuzzFeed report is written by DeRogatis, the former Chicago Sun-Times reporter who in 2000 co-bylined a story with Abdon Pallasch that outlined Kellyâs history of alleged sexual abuse, citing court records and interviews that contended the star had a history of preying on teenaged women, some believed to be as young as 15. Two years later the Sun-Times reported that Chicago police we investigating a videotape that allegedly showed Kelly having sex with an underage girl.
Kelly was subsequently acquitted on charges of child pornography. He has settled multiple lawsuits involving sexual misconduct allegations.
In the BuzzFeed story, Kelly is accused of holding several women against their will at homes he owns in Illinois, where the age of consent is 17, and in Georgia, where the age of consent is reached at age 16.
DeRogatis interviewed several of the parents as well as three women identified as former members of Kellyâs inner circle --Cheryl Mack, Kitti Jones and Asante McGee -- who accuse Kelly of exerting âmind controlâ over the women who are staying in those residences.
The story alleges that Kelly imposes strict rules of conduct on young women mostly in their late teens and early to mid-20s, limiting their ability to contact anyone but him and his entourage and punishing those who violate any of those rules.
According to Mack, Jones and McGee, Kelly âcontrols every aspect of their lives: dictating what they eat, how they dress, when they bathe, when they sleep, and how they engage in sexual encounters that he records,â DeRogatis writes.
He also notes that âthe law says that consenting adults may take part in any relationship they want, no matter how nontraditional. Welfare checks by police in both Illinois and Georgia in the past year didnât lead to any charges; in January, the aspiring singer from Georgia told Cook County police she was âfine and did not want to be bothered.ââ
ALSO
Aaron Carter, arrested on suspicion of DUI, slams brother Nick Carter for supportive tweet
Mel B ordered to pay $40,000 per month to ex Stephen Belafonte, despite abuse claims
Rapper DMX pleads not guilty to tax fraud, facing allegations he owes $1.7 million to the IRS
For the Record (July 17, 2017, 6 p.m.): An earlier version of this story misreported numerous details regarding the past allegations against R. Kelly. The post stated that Kelly was acquitted on charges of having sex with a minor. He was acquitted on charges of child pornography. Additionally, the post wrongly characterized a 2000 Chicago Sun-Times story, which outlined years of alleged sexual abuse by Kelly. The subjects of that story were not connected to a videotape later sent to the Sun-Times that allegedly showed Kelly having sex with an underage girl.
Dark world of âBlade Runner 2049â gets even darker in trailer No. 2
A second âBlade Runner 2049â trailer is out, and the forecast for California in the future remains â no surprise â dark.
Harrison Fordâs long-missing Rick Deckard has more presence in this clip, which Ryan Gosling teased on social media Sunday and âGood Morning Americaâ debuted Monday.
âYouâre a cop. I did your job once,â Deckard tells Goslingâs Officer K, who replies, âThings were simpler then.â
Deckard gives some hints about his disappearance 30 years prior: âI covered my tracks. Scrambled the records. We were being hunted.â
Whoeverâs hunting whom in director Denis Villeneuveâs 2049, itâs all still terribly, terribly intense.
One more ominous note in a sea of ominous notes: Since the first trailer, Jared Letoâs line, âEvery civilization was built off the back of a disposable work force,â has morphed into the more direct, âEvery leap of civilization was built off the back of slaves.â
Alas, Letoâs creepy Neander Wallace âcan only make so many.â
âBlade Runner 2049â hits theaters worldwide Oct. 6.
Ann Coulter wages a Twitter war on Delta -- and the airline dishes it right back to her
Ann Coulter exercised her freedom of speech all weekend, putting Delta Air Lines on blast after a mix-up over a pre-selected seat.
The conservative commentator took to her Twitter feed Saturday afternoon to lambaste the airline: âJust when you think itâs safe to fly them again, the worst airline in America is STILL: @Delta.â
Those are harsh words for Delta, especially given that its competitors are literally dragging customers from their seats.
So what, exactly, set Coulter off?
She didnât get the seat she picked.
Granted, thatâs pretty annoying. Airline travel is full of little indignities, not the least of which is having to sit next to boorish strangers with no sense of basic civility. But enough about what the rest of the passengers suffered. If you pay for a seat, you should get the seat!
According to a statement released by Delta, Coulter had originally selected an exit-row window seat, 15F, before switching it to 15D, an aisle seat. During boarding, Coulter was inadvertently moved to seat 15A, a window seat.
Thatâs it.
Thatâs the whole thing.
But Coulter was just getting started with being mad online, going on to post photos, not just of Delta employees, but of strangers whom she accused of taking her seat. (Emphasis ours.)
Instead of focusing solely on Delta, Coulter also let loose on the woman who had the misfortune of sitting in Coulterâs original seat, as if part of a nefarious plot to ruin her day.
âSo glad I took time [to] investigate the aircraft & PRE-BOOK a specific seat on @Delta, so some woman could waltz at the last min & take my seat,â Coulter fumed Saturday.
Most egregious to Coulter seems to be that the âother womanâ in this case was short, as compared to her own 6-foot frame.
âHey @Delta, if it was so important for the dachshund-legged woman to take my seat, she should have BOOKED THE SEAT IN ADVANCE. Like I did,â she continued Sunday morning.
Delta finally responded to Coulterâs extensive complaints with a statement Sunday night.
âWe are sorry that the customer did not receive the seat she reserved and paid for. More importantly, we are disappointed that the customer has chosen to publicly attack our employees and other customers by posting derogatory and slanderous comments and photos in social media. Her actions are unnecessary and unacceptable.
âEach of our employees is charged with treating each other as well as our customers with dignity and respect. And we hold each other accountable when that does not happen.
âDelta expects mutual civility throughout the entire travel experience.
âWe will refund Ms. Coulterâs $30 for the preferred seat on the exit row that she purchased,â the statement read.
Oh, dang, thatâs cold.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Coulter had little interest in being shamed by the airline, at which point she dropped the F-bomb.
Not that one; the political one.
âBut I love @Delta declaring my tweets unacceptable. @Delta now dictating acceptable conduct off the plane. NOT fascist at all. #Resist,â Coulter fumed in response to Deltaâs response.
However, itâs important to keep in mind what truly matters in all this: Coulter claims that it cost $10,000 of her time to choose the perfect seat for this flight.
Ann. Come on. Just check SeatGuru like the rest of us and call it a day. Or hire an assistant. Or book first class.
Otherwise, welcome to the little indignities of economy-class air travel.
As of Monday morning, Coulter was still tweeting about the incident.
ALSO
United Airlines considers reselling seats to travelers who will pay more
Ann Coulter, free speech and UC Berkeley: How a talk became a political bombshell
An airplane video, an unhappy family: How confusing rules put Delta in the hot seat
A new look at another bad landing: How Harrison Ford missed a runway
A Star Is Born: Donald Sutherland turns 82 today
Before, I was so emotionally involved and crippled by my relationship with [directors]. It is a curious word, crippled. But itâs true. You open every single thing out to this man or woman who is directing you. You divest yourself of basically any self-control and you give it to them.
— Donald Sutherland, 1992
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Sutherlandâs âStationâ
For the record: A previous version of this post incorrectly listed Sutherlandâs age as 85. He is 82 today.
âGame of Thronesâ cast reveals who theyâre rooting for... and itâs anyone but Arya Stark
Game of Thrones: Who do you cheer for while watching?
âGame of Thronesâ may have dragons, white walkers and smog-baby assassins (or whatever that thing was that Melisandre sent to kill Renly Baratheon), but itâs short on heroes, at least in the classic Will-Get-Things-Done-While-Never-Killing-in-Cold-Blood sense.
With the possible exception of Sam Tarly, no character in this HBO series is truly good or truly bad (and though Sam may be heroic in his own way, he is far from a classic hero).
Instead, the activities of the citizens of Westeros (and the surrounding lands) fall more on a sliding scale of morality â we may be rooting for Arya Stark as she moves her way down her list, but morally, she is not so far from Cersei, who also has a to-kill list.
On the plus side, the absence of a one-note champion makes it a bit more fun to pick a person (or house) to cheer on toward victory atop the Iron Throne. Who should reign supreme over the seven kingdoms? The Stark kids? Daenerys Targaryen?
We asked the actors playing the fictional inhabitants of George R.R. Martinâs world to reveal whom theyâve been rooting for this whole time. And Liam Cunningham has some serious thoughts on Arya Stark.
A Star Is Born: Will Ferrell turns 50 today
Iâm in that category of, âOh, heâs funny.â
— Will Ferrell, 2002
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Willâs âStrategeryâ
âDoctor Whoâsâ future is Jodie Whittaker, the first woman in the lead role
History has been made: BBC and BBC America announced Sunday that the new Doctor Who will be Jodie Whittaker, the first woman in the role.
âIâm beyond excited to begin this epic journey â with [producer] Chris [Chibnall] and with every Whovian on this planet,â Whitaker said in the announcement, which made her the 13th person to lead the series. âItâs more than an honor to play the Doctor. It means remembering everyone I used to be, while stepping forward to embrace everything the Doctor stands for: hope. I canât wait.â
Whittaker will replace Peter Capaldi as the Time Lord when he leaves the global hit at Christmas. New head writer and executive producer Chibnall, who takes over from Steven Moffat, made the decision to cast Whitaker.
âI always knew I wanted the 13th Doctor to be a woman, and weâre thrilled to have secured our No. 1 choice,â Chibnall said. âHer audition for the Doctor simply blew us all away. Jodie is an in-demand, funny, inspiring, super-smart force of nature and will bring loads of wit, strength and warmth to the role.â
Fans have been demanding a female Doctor for years. Reaction so far? The Internets are celebrating:
Behind-the-scenes footage of âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ shows new aliens, lightsaber battles and lots of Carrie Fisher
Director Rian Johnson joined the cast of the next episodic âStar Warsâ flick on stage at D23 in Anaheim to drop some major intel from a galaxy far, far away. But first take a look at this lovely behind-the-scenes glimpse at the film (and help us parse what all the new scenes could possibly mean for the new heroes).
A whopping collection of castmates from âEpisode VIIIâ made an appearance, as well, including Daisy Ridley (Rey), John Boyega (Finn), Gwendoline Christie (Captain Phasma), Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker) and new faces Kelly Marie Tran (Rose Tico ... technically Tranâs character was introduced at Star Wars Celebration earlier this year, but sheâs still new), Benicio Del Toro (DJ) and Laura Dern (Vice Adm. Amilyn Holdo).
Noticeably absent but very present in the reel screened for fans was Carrie Fisher (Gen. Leia), who was quoted in the tease saying, â [âStar Warsâ is] about family, and thatâs whatâs so powerful about it.â
âThe Last Jediâ hits theaters Dec. 15.
Ava DuVernay unveils the first trailer for âA Wrinkle in Timeâ at D23 Expo
A movie trailer was one of the star attractions at D23, the Disney fan expo in Anaheim, as attendees got their first look at Disneyâs âA Wrinkle in Time,â the science-fiction tale of a girlâs adventures in a parallel universe.
The filmâs director, Ava DuVernay, presented the nearly two-minute clip at the event. And for the legions of diehard fans of the book on which the film is based â the Newbery Medal-winning novel of the same name by Madeleine LâEngle â it likely will not disappoint.
The trailer shows Storm Reid as the smart and fierce young Meg, the girl who must venture into otherworldly realms to save her father. Oprah Winfrey plays Mrs. Which, her supernatural guide, who tells the young Meg: âBe a warrior.â Scenes of fantasy, time travel and unsettling suburban settings were featured.
DuVernay told the crowd at D23 she was drawn to LâEngleâs beloved 1963 novel for a variety of reasons.
âThe thing that attracted me to the project is that I saw myself in it, and I saw so many different kinds of people in it,â she said. âItâs a family story wrapped in an epic adventure, where you see worlds youâve never seen before.â
Winfrey, who also was in attendance at the event, said she hadnât read the book when DuVernay first approached her about the role.
âWhen Ava mentioned it to me and told me it was a character who is one of the wisest women in the universe,â she said, âand is an angelic, celestial being who is going to get to wear amazing costumes and get to work with Reese [Witherspoon] and Mindy [Kaling] as part of the Mrs. team â who wouldnât say yes to that?â
Expect it to be a trending topic on social media in three, two ...
The film debuts March 9.
Times staff writer Josh Rottenberg contributed to this report.
A Star Is Born: Linda Ronstadt turns 71 today
Iâve never made records with any consideration for what the market was. I have a track record, and I think it speaks for itself pretty loudly.
— Linda Ronstadt, 1987
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Ronstadt Sings Her Mexican Heritage in âCancionesâ
Best of the week: French military band plays Daft Punk hits to a delighted President Macron and unamused President Trump
If we canât have an actual Daft Punk stadium tour yet, the next best place to hear their songs might be a French military marching bandâs performance of the dance duoâs hits. All while under the amused eye of French President Emmanuel Macron, as well as a perplexed glare from President Trump.
On Friday, a French military marching band celebrated Bastille Day with arrangements of the groupâs hits, including the Grammy-winning 2013 single âGet Lucky.â
Macron, who at 39 was surely at least a little familiar with Daft Punkâs music, grinned in recognition at the rearranged club hits. To judge from the reactions in the video, itâs safe to say that his U.S. counterpart did not quite share in that feeling.
However, Macron may also have been smiling at the sheer improbability of one day finding himself the president of France, standing at a Bastille Day parade hearing dance club hits performed by an army band, next to a U.S. President Donald Trump.
Mel B ordered to pay $40,000 per month to ex Stephen Belafonte, despite abuse claims
In the latest installment of Melanie âMel Bâ Brown and Stephen Belafonteâs sordid divorce drama, the âAmericaâs Got Talentâ judge is now reportedly required to pay her estranged husband $40,000 a month.
Following Belafonteâs request for emergency spousal support (to which Brown staunchly replied that he should âget a jobâ), a judge in Los Angeles recently filed a court-ordered mandate that backs his appeal, TMZ said Friday.
Per the judgeâs order, Brown must temporarily subsidize a number of Belafonteâs living expenses â food, housing, phone, etc. â plus pay him an additional $140,000 to cover his legal fees. She must pay the temporary monthly stipend until the divorce settlement is finalized.
After nearly 10 years of marriage, Brown filed for divorce from Belafonte in March, launching an ugly, high-profile series of legal brawls between the former couple. When Brownâs allegations of physical and emotional abuse surfaced in early April, she filed for a temporary restraining order against Belafonte.
Rapper DMX pleads not guilty to tax fraud, facing allegations he owes $1.7 million to the IRS
Hip-hop icon DMXâs own lyrics may have caught up with him Thursday when he was arrested on suspicion of tax evasion.
The rapper, 46, pleaded not guilty Friday in federal court in New York to 14 charges related to tax fraud. He was to be released after posting $500,000 bond.
âItâs allowed me to not be scared of the situation and face it head-on, you know what Iâm saying?â the multi-platinum hip-hop artist, whose real name is Earl Simmons, told reporters outside the courthouse. âMy life is in Godâs hands.â
In 2003, DMX penned the second verse of his chart-topping single, âX Gonâ Give It to Ya,â with a gripe about those who tried to bum off his success.
âEvery time I turn around, cats got they hands out wanting something from me,â he rapped. âI ainât got it, so you canât get it.â
The trackâs abidingly catchy lyrics ostensibly referred to Xâs scrappy ascendance to rap stardom. Still, a pair of federal prosecutors from New York think they make for a pretty ironic double entendre: While DMX raked in millions from the songâs success, he neglected to give any of the money to the IRS, they said in a 14-count tax fraud indictment.
âX Gonâ Give It to Yaâ was specifically called out by Joon H. Kim, the acting U.S. attorney for New York who will preside over the case, in a statement about the indictment.
Per Kim, the rapper âwent out of his wayâ to evade his tax obligations and attempted to conceal hefty portions of his income through an elaborate (and enduring â heâs supposedly been at it for years) smoke-and-mirrors act that included avoiding personal bank accounts, opening accounts under false identities and paying for personal expenses exclusively in cash.
DMX managed to skirt some $1.7 million in federal tax obligations, the prosecution said.
In addition to tax evasion, he faces charges of failing to file a tax return and corruptly trying to obstruct and impede the due administration of IRS laws.
âCelebrity rapper or not, all Americans must pay their taxes,â Kim said in the statement. âTogether, with our partners at the IRS, we will pursue those who deliberately and criminally evade this basic obligation of citizenship.â
Though this isnât DMXâs first confrontation with the law, it is a potentially formidable one. If found guilty, he could face up to 44 years in federal prison.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Updated, 3:23 p.m.: This article was updated with a quote from DMX as well as plea and bond information.
This story was first published at 11:22 a.m.
Kid Rock for U.S. Senate? âItâs not a hoax,â he says. âItâs a strategy.â
Kid Rock dropped two new songs and their corresponding music videos overnight as Thursday turned into Friday â the clincher to a week of bold statements in which the Detroit singer appeared to declare heâs running for the Senate.
After teasing an imminent âmajor announcementâ on Wednesday, Rock tweeted a picture of a campaign yard sign reading âKid Rock for U.S. Senate,â accompanied by a link to a campaign-style website offering merchandise for sale and flashing slogans such as âPimp of the Nationâ and âParty to the People.â And while there was skepticism, the 46-year-old singer born Robert James Ritchie is insisting he means what he says.
âItâs not a hoax,â he wrote in a post on his personal website Thursday evening. âItâs a strategy.â
âLike politicians write books during their campaigns, Iâm planning on putting out music during mine and IT ALL STARTS TONIGHT AT MIDNIGHT,â he continued.
He also responded to incumbent Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow, whoâd tweeted, âI know we both share a love of music. I concede heâs better at playing guitar and Iâll keep doing what I do best: fighting for Michigan.â
His take? âI concede she is better at playing politics than I am, so Iâll keep doing what I do best, which is being a voice for tax paying, hardworking AMERICANS,â said Rock, who hasnât kept his Trump-supporting ideology under wraps.
He became politicized, according to Rolling Stone, after his hometown of Detroit filed for bankruptcy.
But until he files with the Federal Election Commission, the Internet is likely to keep wondering whether itâs all a Trump-style marketing campaign for songs âPo-Dunkâ and âGreatest Show on Earthâ
The âKid Rock for U.S. Senateâ website diverts from the typical parameters associated with campaign-affiliated sites in a number of ways. For example, campaign sites must confirm that potential donors are U.S. citizens before completing any transactions. The Kid Rock site redirects visitors to a third-party webpage, hosted by the Warner Bros. record label, to seal its sales.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, for one, is taking Kid Rock seriously. Sheâs already addressed her supporters with a fundraising email titled âSenator Kid Rock (R-MI.)â
âWell, maybe this is all a joke â but we all thought Donald Trump was joking when he rode down the escalator at Trump Tower and announced his campaign, too,â Warren said, as reported by the Boston Herald.
âAnd sure,â she added, âmaybe this is just a marketing gimmick for a new album or tour â but we all thought Donald Trump was just promoting his reality TV show, too.â
Having a Moment: Amelia Earhart may be dead, but her mystique lives on
âHaving a Momentâ is a new weekly feature that spotlights the people and trends we all seem to be talking about.
The year is 1937, and a plane equipped with all of the latest equipment â relying on both radio and celestial navigation and flown by one of the most famous aviators in the world â goes missing in the Pacific Ocean.
This is the story of Amelia Earhart, whose untimely death 80 years ago continues to spawn obsessive theories as to what really happened to her.
But despite all the theories, one fact remains: Amelia Earhart, born in 1897, is super dead.
First look at Disneyâs new âStar Wars landâ
The galaxy far, far away got a little bit closer Thursday night in Anaheim when the Walt Disney Co. provided the first-ever look at its upcoming âStar Warsâ-themed attraction, or âStar Wars land,â as itâs being referred to by fans.
The attraction is under construction at Disneyland in Anaheim and at Disneyâs Hollywood Studios in Orlando, Fla. Each will have two anchor attractions: one that will allow guests to pilot the Millennium Falcon, and another that puts visitors in the center of a battle between the First Order and the Resistance.
âThe Walking Deadâ stuntman Jon Bernecker dead after on-set accident
John Bernecker, a stuntman on AMCâs âThe Walking Dead,â has died from injuries suffered on the showâs set in Georgia. He was 33.
After the Wednesday afternoon fall, Bernecker was flown to the Atlanta Medical Center, where he died at 6:30 p.m., Coweta County Coroner Richard Hawk told The Times on Friday.
Variety reported that Bernecker fell more than 20 feet from a balcony onto a concrete floor, suffering a head injury, and immediately was transported by helicopter to the hospital. An assistant director told police the stuntman missed a safety cushion âjust by inchesâ and tried to stop his fall âby grabbing onto the railing with both handsâ right after he began falling, TMZ reported Friday.
The death, from blunt force trauma, was ruled accidental, said Hawk, who added that the coronerâs office and sheriffâs department both had closed their cases.
âWe are saddened to report that John Bernecker, a talented stuntman for âThe Walking Deadâ and numerous other television shows and films, suffered serious injuries from a tragic accident on set,â AMC said in a statement to several outlets Thursday, before news of Berneckerâs death was made public.
âHe was immediately transported to an Atlanta hospital, and we have temporarily shut down production. We are keeping John and his family in our thoughts and prayers.â
Bernecker had an extensive career as a stunt performer, appearing in recent films including âGet Out,â âLoganâ and âThe Fate of the Furious.â
His death is the latest tragedy to strike a film set mid-project.
During the filming of âResident Evil: The Final Chapterâ in September 2015, stuntwoman Olivia Jackson suffered extensive injuries after a motorcycle accident involving a metal camera arm. Jacksonâs injuries included a severed artery in her neck, a degloved face, several nerves torn from her spinal column and arm injuries so severe it led to eventual amputation. She spent two weeks in a medically induced coma.
In December, several months after Jacksonâs accident on set, another crew member on âResident Evilâ was killed during filming. Ricardo Cornelius died from injuries suffered when a U.S. Army Hummer slipped while a team was manually rotating it and pinned Cornelius beneath it.
A 2015 story from The Times examined the circumstances surrounding the increased number of fatalities during filming in recent years, with some industry experts blaming the need to get increasingly dramatic footage in order to stay competitive.
âItâs truly remarkable to me that production companies can use ultra-advanced technology to make spectacular films but too often they wonât spend the modest resources necessary to make sure their workers are not injured or killed on the job,â David Michaels, the Occupational Safety and Health Administrationâs assistant secretary of labor said in 2015.
Deadline reported Friday morning that both OSHA and SAG-AFTRA have opened investigations into the circumstances surrounding Berneckerâs death.
âThe Walking Deadâ has filmed in Georgia since the showâs inception in 2010. The stateâs generous tax incentives have sparked an influx of movie and television productions opting to film in Georgia.
There are over three dozen projects currently filming in Georgia, according to the state website, including television series âThe Gospel of Kevinâ and âHalt and Catch Fire,â as well as 2019 feature film âGodzilla: King of the Monsters.â
The Gregg Allman biopic âMidnight Riderâ also was filming in Georgia when a tragic 2014 train accident killed crew member Sarah Jones, resulting in involuntary manslaughter charges against the filmâs director, Randall Miller.
Jonesâ parents are embroiled in a civil trial with railroad company CSX over charges of negligence in her death. Proceedings are underway at the Chatham County Courthouse in Savanna, Ga.
SAG-AFTRA, OSHA and AMC did not immediately respond to The Timesâ requests for comment on Berneckerâs death Friday morning.
UPDATES
11:28 a.m.: This article was updated to include information regarding film industry deaths.
Jon Stewart confronts kid who threw a Jimmy Kimmel-themed bar mitzvah
Will Rubin decided to celebrate his journey into adolescence the way any 13-year-old would: by throwing an elaborate, Jimmy Kimmel-themed bar mitzvah. The party was complete with an ice sculpture of Guillermoâs head and a video monologue from Kimmel himself in which the host threatened to sue for damages.
On Thursday, the precocious teenager from Media, Penn., returned the favor by appearing on âJimmy Kimmel Live!â via satellite.
Will explained that Kimmelâs show has captivated his interest for the past six months or so. A funny thing for a middle-schooler to be obsessed with, maybe, but it almost certainly made for a better party than his previous interest in cleaning â yes, cleaning â would have.
It was all very charming, but at least one person was mystified by Willâs idolization of Kimmel: Jon Stewart.
As Will and Kimmel yukked it up, the former âDaily Showâ host appeared, wearing his off-duty ensemble of jeans, faded T-shirt and stubble, and confronted Will about throwing a bar mitzvah inspired by a gentile. (Kimmel is Catholic.)
âDonât be fooled by his learned-looking beard and his puffy, sad eyes,â Stewart warned. âHeâs not rabbinical, heâs just unhealthy.â
He ventured into riskier territory by asking Will, âWould you rather idolize a talk show host that is also circumcised? Heâs still wearing his hoodie. Do you see what Iâm saying?â
Will was a good sport and even told Kimmel he was donating some of his bar mitzvah loot to Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
Said Kimmel: âYouâre a real mensch.â
A Star Is Born: Harry Dean Stanton turns 91 today
Thereâs always a stigma attached to those terms --Â character actor, supporting player. Â It bothers every actor, whether they admit it or not. I guess Iâve always resented the fact that you have your humanity taken away by only playing a sidekick role. Look at Smiley Burnette -- he never got a girl in those Gene Autry movies. That would have never happened!
— Harry Dean Stanton, 1986
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Stanton: From Killer To Angel
Ford Theatres to debut $72.2 million renovation Friday; opening weekend to feature Savion Glover and Culture Clash
On Friday, the newly renovated Ford Theatres will swing open its doors after a multiyear, $72.2-million makeover. The 97-year-old outdoor amphitheater in the Hollywood Hills will hold a ribbon-cutting and civic dedication ceremony.
Artists featured in the Fordâs summer season are scheduled to be there, including members of the dance troupe Viver Brasil, along with Los Angeles County officials such as 3rd District Supervisor Sheila Kuehl.
Former county Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, for whom the Fordâs new dining terrace is named (âThe Zevâ), also is set to attend.
The Fordâs renovation broke ground in fall 2014, and the venue was out of operation for nearly two years. Its programming continued off-site, resuming in the amphitheater for a partial summer season in 2016. The renovation was the design project of Levin & Associates Architects; Mia Lehrer + Associates served as the landscape architect.
The Fordâs physical transformation â including new sound and lighting for the 1,200-seat amphitheater and a performance terrace thatâs part of a new, three-story building housing administrative offices â comes with expanded programming. The venue will still feature local artists through its Artists Partnership Series, but it also will partner with cultural institutions from Southern California and from New York through a new series, âIgnite @ the Ford!â It will present diverse and experimental programming in more intimate spaces.
âThe Ford has undergone its most significant transformation in more than 75 years,â Kuehl said in a statement.
âThis is the summer to visit the Ford â to listen, to enjoy a meal on the new Terrace, and to take advantage of this marvelous Amphitheatre under the stars.â
The opening weekend is to include dancer and choreographer Savion Glover and Chicano/Latino performance trio Culture Clash.
Kesha gives you something âto yell aboutâ on spirited new song, âWomanâ
If there was ever a shred of doubt about Keshaâs fierce autonomy, she stomps it out with âWoman,â the funky new single off her upcoming album, âRainbow.â
The track, which dropped Thursday morning, touts a markedly self-empowered Kesha, who dubbed it âan anthem to yell about being self-sufficient and strong.â
âI buy my own things/ I pay my own bills/ These diamond rings, my automobiles/ Everything I got I bought it/ Boys canât buy my love,â she sings on the chorus over a bouncy piano line and hand-clap beat.
Kesha also unveiled a glitzy, carefree music video, which she co-directed with her older brother, Lagan. And in a poignant essay for Rolling Stone, the tell-it-like-it-is singer offered a glimpse into the personal and artistic journey that led to âWoman.â
âIt was such a beautiful experience to write such a strong female empowerment song with two men ⌠because it reinforces how supportive men can be of women AND feminism,â she wrote, referencing her collaboration with the Dap-Kingsâ horn section, which grounds the track with brassy rhythm.
Read Keshaâs full essay here. Her new album, âRainbow,â will be released Aug. 11.
Steve Whitmire, fired Kermit puppeteer, says he is âdevastated to have failed in my dutyâ to Jim Henson
Steve Whitmire, the puppeteer entrusted with Kermit the Frog after the death of Muppets creator Jim Henson, says he was cut by Disney last October.
âI feel that I am at the top of my game, and I want all of you who love the Muppets to know that I would never consider abandoning Kermit or any of the others,â Whitmire wrote Tuesday in his inaugural blog post, âbecause to do so would be to forsake the assignment entrusted to me by Jim Henson, my friend and mentor, but even more, my hero.â
Whitmire joined the Muppets team in 1978, at age 19, and worked to realize Hensonâs vision with people such as Frank Oz, Jerry Nelson, Richard Hunt and Dave Goelz.
After Hensonâs death, the Muppets creators brother, Brian Henson, and widow, Jane Henson, gave Whitmire the opportunity to audition for the Kermit role, according to a spokesperson for the Henson Co.
Jim Henson had talked to Frank Oz about the possibility of Whitmire playing Kermit down the line, Whitmire told CNN in 2005.
âI have experienced every possible emotion since October 2016, when I received a phone call from the Muppets Studioâs executives to say they were recasting,â Whitmire said. âThrough a new business representative, I have offered multiple remedies to their two stated issues, which had never been mentioned to me prior to that phone call.â
Whitmire didnât elaborate on what those issues were, but said he had stayed mum for nine months hoping Disney would change its mind.
The confirmation Tuesday that Matt Vogel will take over from Whitmire as Kermit â which came after fan site Tough Pigs broke the news â was the first casting change for the little green guy since Henson died in 1990.
âI just want you all to know that I am sorry if I have disappointed any of you at any point throughout our journey,â Whitmore wrote, âand to let everyone know that I am devastated to have failed in my duty to my hero.â
For the Record, 4:50 p.m. July 14: This story originally said Jim Henson gave the role of Kermit the Frog to Steve Whitmire. Whitmire was given the opportunity to audition for the part by Hensonâs brother and his widow.
Paid Dues hip-hop festival to return, with Lil Wayne and Ab-Soul headlining
After a four-year hiatus, Paid Dues is back.
The independent hip-hop festival founded by South Central rapper Murs announced Wednesday it will return to Los Angeles in September.
Lil Wayne and Ab-Soul will headline the two-day festival that also will feature Raekwon & Ghostface, Freddie Gibbs, Prhyme, Nipsey Hussle, Rapsody and the Cool Kids.
Launched in 2006 at the Shrine Expo Center, the hip-hop festival moved to the Inland Empire and toured the country annually until 2013. The resurrected event will take place Sept. 16-17 at Pershing Square.
Tickets go on sale Saturday through Eventbrite, with a pre-sale set for Friday morning.
Donnie Wahlberg leaves $2,000 tip for Waffle House âqueensâ
Donnie Wahlberg proved how much he loves Waffle House on Wednesday night, leaving a $2,000 tip on an $82.60 meal in Charlotte, N.C.
âMy mom waited tables, and my dad tended bars -- for years!,â said the âBlue Bloodsâ actor and boy-band singer, who will perform Thursday night in Charlotte with New Kids on the Block.
âSo, when I walk into a #WaffleHouse, and the staff treats me like a king,â he continued, âyou better believe I treat them like queens! Thanks to the team at @wafflehouseofficial Charlotte, NC!â
Of course, in the spirit of Pics or It Didnât Happen, Wahlberg posed for a selfie with the Waffle House crew, showing off his signed receipt.
Is it still doing a cool thing if you brag about it later? This time around, letâs say, um, maybe.
2017 Emmy nominations: Did your favorite TV show make the list?
âWestworldâ and âSaturday Night Liveâ led the the 2017 Emmy nominations with 22 nods apiece. This is the most nominations that the long-running NBC late-night sketch show has received in a single season.
Among those getting nods were Alec Baldwin for his impression of President Donald Trump for supporting actor in a comedy series and Melissa McCarthyâs take on White House spokesman Sean Spicer for guest actress in a comedy series. âSNLâ increased its record for total nominations to 231.
FULL COVERAGE: Emmy nominations 2017 >>
Carrie Fisher received a posthumous nomination for guest actress in a comedy series for Amazonâs âCatastrophe.â
HERE ARE THE NOMINEES:
Drama series
âBetter Call Saulâ
âThe Crownâ
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ
âHouse of Cardsâ
âStranger Thingsâ
âThis Is Usâ
âWestworldâ
Comedy series
âAtlantaâ
âblack-ishâ
âMaster of Noneâ
âModern Familyâ
âSilicon Valleyâ
âUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidtâ
âVeepâ
MORE: This yearâs Emmy nominations finally reflect the changing nature of television
Limited series
âBig Little Liesâ (HBO)
âFargoâ (FX)
âFeud: Bette and Joanâ (FX)
âGeniusâ (National Geographic)
âThe Night Ofâ (HBO)
TV movie
âBlack Mirrorâ (Netflix)
âThe Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacksâ (HBO)
âDolly Partonâs Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Loveâ (NBC)
âSherlock: The Lying Detectiveâ (PBS)
âWizard of Liesâ (HBO)
From low blows to tender speeches, watch the 5 must-see moments from the ESPY Awards
The ESPY Awards celebrated their 25th anniversary on Wednesday night with a ceremony for the history books, hosted by everyoneâs favorite NFL goofball and quarterback, Peyton Manning.
The eveningâs headliners delivered a whole spectrumâs worth of emotions: They laughed, they cried, they shot one another dirty looks from across the interior of the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.
Here are five must-see recaps:
1. Manning cracked a joke about Kevin Durant (who was clearly not amused)
Manning kicked off this yearâs awards show with a series of thinly veiled digs masquerading as punchlines. But in his most contentious quip, he targeted newly designated NBA champion Kevin Durant. Despite uproarious cackles from the audience (including Durantâs mother), Durant remained staunchly unamused.
Referencing the success of the U.S. Womenâs Gymnastics team at the Rio Olympics, Manning said: âOur gymnastics team was so dominant that Kevin Durant told me he wants to play for them next year.â
(For context: In an unprecedented career move last summer, Durant dumped the Oklahoma City Thunder â his team of two years â for the Golden State Warriors. His decision was met with a whole lot of criticism because Durant was pretty clearly just angling for his first championship ring.)
True to form, the fast-acting people of Twitter swiftly recognized Durantâs solemn-faced reaction as prime meme material.
2. Julian Edelman fired back at Manningâs quips
Manning roasted several folks throughout the night, but in his acceptance speech for best game, New England Patriots wide receiver Julian Edelman served the multi-champion quarterback his due comeuppance.
âYou know, I never thought Iâd say this, but Peyton Manning is kind of killing it,â Edelman paused. âWe are indoors, though.â
It was a particularly egregious jab, playing off the semi-farcical remark that Manning plays better under a dome than he does outdoors.
3. Michelle Obama paid her respects to Eunice Kennedy Shriverâs memory
The former first lady was presenting the prestigious Arthur Ashe Courage Award, which was given posthumously to Eunice Kennedy Shriver, who founded the Special Olympics in 1968. The award reflected the tone of the entire evening, which, in large part, paid homage to individuals living with disabilities.
In lieu of Shriverâs physical presence, Obama delivered a speech in her memory â and it was a tearjerker.
â[She was] a woman who believed that everyone has something to contribute and everyone deserves a chance to push themselves, to find out what theyâre made of and to compete and win,â Obama said. âShe knew that when we give others the chance to fulfill their greatest potential, we all win.â
4. Jarrius âJJâ Robertson, 15, wowed the audience with his moving acceptance speech
Robertson, known to some as the official âhype manâ for the New Orleans Saints, was the eveningâs recipient of the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance â an acknowledgment of his strength amid a lifelong battle with a chronic liver disease.
He exuded a wise-beyond-his-years understanding of the world around him, and he certainly knows how to command a stage.
5. Manning showed his comedic chops
In a pre-recorded comedy sketch (think âSNLâ by way of ESPN), Manning ditched his title of âESPY hostâ for âSuper Bowl party hostâ â as well as 18-layer-dip aficionado. As on-screen Manning relived the Patriotsâ famed Super Bowl comeback, he delivered a flustered performance as a peeved football enthusiast.
Shia LaBeouf says behavior during Georgia arrest is âa new lowâ
Shia LaBeouf made a âsincere apologyâ to Savannah, Ga., police officers he railed against when he was arrested for public drunkenness over the weekend, saying that he is taking active steps to secure his sobriety.
The actor, whose racist, expletive-laden exchanges were caught on officersâ body cameras and published online by TMZ, posted his statement on Twitter on Wednesday following his latest brush with law enforcement. LaBeouf said he was âdeeply ashamedâ of his behavior.
âI donât know if these statements are too frequent, or not shared often enough, but I am certain that my actions warrant a very sincere apology to the arresting officers, and I am grateful for their restraint. The severity of my behavior is not lost on me,â he said.
The 31-year-old was was arrested at his hotel Saturday morning by Savannah police after the situation escalated when he tried to bum a cigarette from an officer. LaBeouf unleashed a verbal assault during the arrest and taunted the officers during the booking process, claiming he was an American who paid his taxes and called the officers âcowards,â âpirates,â âslimyâ and the type âwho put their own kind in the pen.â
He also told a black officer that he would be going to hell because of his skin color and taunted a white officer about his wifeâs sexual preferences. (And thatâs about all weâre allowed to say in this family-friendly newspaper.)
âMy outright disrespect for authority is problematic to say the least, and completely destructive to say the worst. It is a new low,â LaBeouf continued in his apology. âA low I hope is a bottom.â
The actor hoped to be forgiven for his mistakes and admitted to âstruggling with addiction publicly for far too long.â
âI am actively taking steps toward securing my sobriety,â he said, though he did not elaborate on what that would mean.
In addition to the public drunkenness allegation, LaBeouf was also arrested on suspicion of disorderly conduct and obstruction. He was released from jail after posting $7,000 bond on charges of public drunkenness and appeared back on the set of his film âThe Peanut Butter Falconâ on Monday, TMZ said.
A Star Is Born: Patrick Stewart turns 77 today
I spent the first season [of âStar Trek: The Next Generationâ] in a state of perpetual terror. I had never done anything where there were always so many lines to be learned and more lines to be learned. And I had never worked those hours before. People complain about life in the theater but you know, really we have it pretty good insofar as rehearsals and performance.Â
— Patrick Stewart, 2012
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Patrick Stewart: âNext Generation,â âX-Menâ and Hollywood history
Gendryâs back! The lost son of King Baratheon will return during the 7th season of âGame of Thronesâ
For âGame of Thronesâ fans scavenging the Internet for spoilers about Season 7, the return of one particular, potentially pivotal, character from the past has been an open secret for some time.
But with Joe Dempsieâs appearance at the world premiere of the first episode of the acclaimed HBO drama in Los Angeles on Wednesday, it is official: Gendry is coming back.
While Dempsie was mum on the details of what his blacksmithing-secret son of Robert Baratheon character has been up to since we last saw him rowing away from Dragonstone in the third season finale, he was excited about rejoining the acclaimed drama.
PHOTOS: âGame of Thronesâ Season 7 premiere >>
We wonât spoil at what point Gendry pops up in the season but in a chat with The Times a few hours before the premiere, Dempsie said he was relieved by the reaction from the diehard fans who sleuthed it out. âVery fortunately, from what Iâve seen itâs been nothing but interest and excitement and some quite witty memes.â
Loretta Lynn postpones album release after stroke: âIt deserves me at my bestâ
Country queen Loretta Lynn, who suffered a stroke in early May, is postponing the release of her new album, âWouldnât It Be Great,â until after she recovers fully.
âI now want to wait to release it next year because this record is so special for me,â Lynn said in a statement Wednesday. âIt deserves me at my best and I canât wait to share it.â
The 85-year-old performer was moved from a hospital to a rehab facility on May 15 and said Wednesday that sheâs now âgetting better by the dayâ at home with her family.
âWouldnât It Be Great,â which will include some new songs as well as reinterpretations of old ones, was to have come out Aug. 18. Lynn released âFull Circleâ â her first new studio effort in more than a decade â in 2016.
âIâm just letting everybody know that Willie ainât dead yet and neither am I, and I canât wait to see all of you on the road!â Lynn concluded, presumably cracking a joke about Nelsonâs new song, âStill Not Dead.â
âAmericaâs Got Talentâ pays tribute to late contestant with never-before-seen audition
Brandon Rogers didnât get a chance to show America the full scope of his musical potential. But âAmericaâs Got Talentâ is offering viewers a glimpse of what might have been.
In March, Rogers auditioned for the NBC reality competition with a staggering rendition of Stevie Wonderâs âRibbon in the Sky.â And while the 29-year-old Virginia native had previously suspended his musical aspirations to pursue a career in medicine, Rogersâ performance eclipsed his day job. A quadruple-nod from the judges panel and an ebullient standing ovation confirmed that this physician could sing.
Rogers earned a ticket through to the next round of âAGT,â but he never made it there. On June 11, Rogers died after a freak car accident the day before.
One month after his death, the show aired Rogersâ audition footage in a tribute segment during Tuesday nightâs episode. The video clip opened with a statement: âOn June 11th, one of our contestants, Brandon Rogers, tragically passed away in a car accident. At the request of his family, we would like to honor his memory by sharing his audition with you.â
Watch Rogersâ full audition above.
Woody Harrelson on Han Solo film: âI wouldnât worry. The Force is still very much with itâ
Woody Harrelson has faith in the âStar Warsâ franchiseâs upcoming Han Solo spinoff, which was recently dropped in the lap of director Ron Howard.
âI think I read some stuff where people were worried about the fate of this movie. I wouldnât worry. The Force is still very much with it,â Harrelson, who plays a young Han Soloâs mentor in the movie, recently told the Hollywood Reporter.
In his interview published online on Wednesday, the âCheersâ alum explained how he turned down the role twice, just as he did with the part of Katniss Everdeenâs mentor, Haymitch Abernathy, in the blockbuster âHunger Gamesâ franchise.
âI didnât have any idea it would be that big, but I didnât think it was a good part. I was wrong. It was a terrific part, and it was a terrific thing, but thank God [âHunger Gamesâ director] Gary Ross called me,â Harrelson said. âAnd [executive producer] Alli Shearmur too. I turned [the Han Solo movie] down twice too, and the same person, Alli, wouldnât take no for an answer.â
The genre-jumping star, who plays a villain in 20th Century Foxâs âWar for the Planet of the Apes,â teased some of the tight-lipped secrecy around the âStar Warsâ project â âYou get an e-reader; you donât get a script. They give it to you, and you give it back after you read itâ â and his experience with ousted directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, who were abruptly fired before being replaced by Howard.
âI met with [Lord and Miller] one night, and we hung out and we went over to Matthew Freudâs and played ping-pong and just had a great time. They were really good guys,â he said. âIâve been enjoying it [since then], especially because we just went to [shoot at] the Dolomites in Italy. [Co-star] Thandie Newton said, âItâs like being at camp âcause you got everybody together,â and we had a couple of epic parties.â
The actor said he was tipped off by Shearmur that Howard would take over for the co-directors. Harrelson said he had shot one day with him and called him âa wonderful guy.â
He also talked about how heâs still 14 months weed-free, and shed light on the infamous 2002 incident in which he was photographed by a British paparazzo who caught him in bed with three women â none of whom were his wife, Laura Louie.
âHow did I apologize? You know, just your standard Texan grovel. But she forgave me, and weâre still together,â he said.
The same week of the tabloid incident, Harrelson went to jail after a kerfuffle with a taxi driver. He said it was one of the worst nights of his life and that he worked hard to repress it. But he and Louie drafted it into a screenplay that was eventually streamed into theaters.
âI wouldâve paid a large sum to just excise that week from my life â the tabloid thing, the incident with the cops. It all happened around the same time. It does happen to me in spurts, trouble,â he said. âBut I started thinking, there is some merit to this story. Thematically, you have a guy who has it all, doesnât realize he has it all, gets reminded how lucky he is and then has a shot at redemption. Thereâs something about that theme that really resonates with me.â
Topless protesters disrupt Woody Allen jazz concert over abuse allegations
Two bare-breasted activists rushed the stage during a performance of Woody Allenâs New Orleans Jazz Band in Hamburg, Germany, on Tuesday night in an effort to bring fresh attention to allegations of past sexual abuse against the 81-year-old filmmaker.
The protesters â bearing quotes on their torsos from a 2014 open letter by Allenâs daughter Dylan Farrow, in which she alleged he had sexually abused her as a child â yelled, âStop the culture of silence!â before being pulled off the stage by security.
The two women were members of an international womenâs rights collective called Femen, according to its Facebook page. The group â which describes itself on its website as âa special force of feminism, its spearhead militant unit, modern incarnation of fearless and free Amazonsâ â has staged similar high-profile public protests over abortion rights and female genital mutilation, among other issues.
Allen did not respond to the disruption, and the concert soon resumed. Later, the director â who has stated that he will not comment any further about the child-abuse charges â issued a statement calling the protest âstupid,â according to a German news outlet, SHZ.
Allen has been the focus of controversy since 1992, when his relationship with actress Mia Farrow exploded in a conflagration of tabloid headlines after it was revealed that he had become romantically involved with her adoptive daughter, Soon Yi-Previn, whom he later married.
At the time, authorities investigated allegations that Allen had sexually abused the coupleâs adoptive daughter, Dylan, who was then 7, but no charges were brought.
Dylan Farrow revived those allegations three years ago in an open letter to Allen published by the New York Times, calling him âa living testament to the way our society fails the survivors of sexual assault and abuse.â
Allen vehemently denied the claims in his own New York Times op-ed, saying that Farrow had âbeen cheated out of having a loving father and exploited by a mother more interested in her own festering anger than her daughterâs well-being.â
Donald Trump Jr. gets his moment in the glare of late-night TV
Tuesday was Donald Trump Jr.âs day in the glare of comedy. In advance of the New York Timesâ plan to publish a series of emails he exchanged with Rob Goldstone detailing a Russian offer for dirt on Hillary Clinton and Trumpâs delighted willingness to receive it, the presidentâs son released them himself.
It was news late-night hosts were themselves visibly delighted to receive â the jokes didnât even need to write themselves. It was enough merely to recount the facts in detail. (But there were jokes, too.)
âDo you guys realize how bigly that is?â asked an obviously amused Trevor Noah on âThe Daily Show.â âThis is the best comedy show ever .⌠This two-legged brain foreclosure thought that the best way to get out of this mess would be to jump into it himself.
âI can sort of see his reasoning here,â said Noah. âTrump Jr. thought if he could be transparent, unlike âCrooked Hillary,â ... people would be like, âHuh, what an honest guy.â The only problem is, once you read the emails ... they prove the collusion that Juniorâs been denying all along.â
âToday was one of those days,â said Jimmy Kimmel on âJimmy Kimmel Live. âI woke up, I cracked my neck, I brushed my teeth, I looked in the mirror and I thought, âBoy, am I glad Iâm not Donald Trump Jr.â I have that thought about three times a week, but today I said it out loud.â
Kimmel compared the younger Donald to âthe guy at work who opens the obviously fake document and now everyone in the office has a virus on their computer.
âIf thereâs any lesson to be learned from this,â Kimmel concluded, âitâs that no one should use email for anything, ever, at all.â
Noting that a lawyer hired by Trump Jr. had âin the past represented members of the Mafia,â he compared the Trumps to âthe Corleone family, if all of them were Fredo.â Poor Fredo, fated to be forever mocked.
There was fun to be had, too, across the networks, with Goldstoneâs unappealing array of social media selfies showing him in various strange hats. (He appears comical enough without them.)
âLook at this person, heâs a real Snapchat filter,â Noah called him. âHe looks like one of those character actors with a bunch of different looks on his head shot â âIâm a beauty queen!â or âIâm a sea captain!ââ
It was an unusually big night for Stephen Colbert, who had not only this news to play with, but POTUS Twitter targets Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough as guests. (âWhat the what?â was Brzezinskiâs reaction to the dayâs big story).
Also on the show: âLord of the Ringsâ actor Andy Serkis â Colbert loves him some âLOTRâ â who read Trump tweets in the voice of Gollum.
In his opening monologue, Colbert brought out âThe Late Show Figure-It-Out-a-Tronâ (itâs a chalkboard) to graph the situation.
âAll we have to do is connect the dots to see where this is going,â he said, arriving at a cartoon of Trump Jr. behind bars. And he mocked the fatherâs brief defense of his son as a âhigh-quality person.â
âTop-shelf son,â he said in the presidentâs voice. âThinking of having him gold-leafed. Paid for the undercoating. Tremendous.â
Quentin Tarantino could bring the Manson family murders to the big screen
Quentin Tarantino is reportedly developing a film about the Manson family murders.
Because conspiracy theories and mass slayings sound like perfect fodder for a Tarantino film, no?
The unique take on L.A.âs grisly 1969 murders is said to be written by Tarantino, who is putting the finishing touches on the script and is talking to Brad Pitt and Jennifer Lawrence to fill out the cast, the Hollywood Reporter said.
Weinstein Co. producers Harvey and Bob Weinstein, who have produced several of the directorâs films, are also involved, THR reported. The schedule is expected to come together before Labor Day with plans to shoot in 2018.
Itâs not clear what part of the Manson saga the genre-blending filmmaker is focusing on, or whether itâs a historical account or an interpretation in the vein of his 2009 World War II drama âInglourious Basterds.â
If the project comes to fruition, it would be the âHateful Eightâ directorâs ninth feature film and his first movie to be based on true events. However, the two-time Oscar-winning screenwriter has a storied history of unfinished projects.
Cult leader Charles Manson and several of his followers were convicted of killing âValley of the Dollsâ actress Sharon Tate, who was married to filmmaker Roman Polanski and eight months pregnant at the time, and six other people during a brutal rampage over two nights in August 1969. Prosecutors said Manson was trying to incite a race war that he believed was prophesied in the Beatles song âHelter Skelter.â
Manson is serving a life sentence in California State Prison in Corcoran. He was initially sentenced to death, but a 1972 ruling by the California Supreme Court found the stateâs death penalty law at the time unconstitutional, and his sentence was changed to life in prison with the possibility of parole. As of January, he has been denied parole 12 times.
Want to buy an unreleased Michael Jackson album? Itâll cost you at least $50,000
An album of vaulted, mostly unheard Michael Jackson recordings will be auctioned off by New York auction house Gotta Have Rock and Roll later this month, along with a host of items from the personal collection of the late King of Pop.
Appearing as a blank, Sony CD-R with the word âBibleâ written in blue sharpie, the album features 12 mastered tracks, all with completed vocals from Jackson.
A handful of the songs â âMonster,â âBreaking Newsâ and âKeep Your Head Upâ â appeared on âMichael,â a collection of unreleased material cobbled from tracks the singer was crafting in his final years and released a year after his 2009 death by Sony Records and Jacksonâs estate.
âMichaelâ was marred by controversy as critics, fans and even family members questioned the project, some going as far as to suggest that some of the tracks had been completed by a Jackson impersonator.
âUnbeknownst to many fans around the world, [Jackson] was writing and recording songs continuously everywhere from a friendâs home in New Jersey to studios in Las Vegas and Los Angeles with a small group of handpicked collaborators,â the label said amid the backlash.
The album was in the possession of a âpersonal friend and personal assistant to Michael whose family was very close to Michael for many years, traveling all over the world with himâ who wishes to remain anonymous, according to the auction house.
Other tracks on the album are âBlack Widow,â âWater,â âSoldier Boy,â âEverythingâs Just Fine,â âLet Me Fall in Love,â âAll I Need,â âStayâ and âReady to Win.â
The starting bid on the unreleased album is $50,000. There is a catch, though. The winning bidder wonât have the rights to the music and therefore wonât be able to distribute it. But whatâs a better way to impress friends at a party than by playing an unreleased MJ album?
Gotta Have Rock and Rollâs online auction opens July 19 and includes clothing Jackson wore (a ball-cap from Trump Plaza, socks and surgical scrubs are among the oddities), drawings, his personal cassette player and a âBest Daddy in the Worldâ Oscar statuette given to him by his kids.
Joe Scarborough announces breakup... with the Republican Party
Joe Scarborough might be lucky in love, but it appears his relationship with the Republican Party is on the rocks.
After a very public fallout with President Trump, the âMorning Joeâ co-host and the GOP seem to be on the precipice of a very messy breakup.
Scarborough appeared on âThe Late Show With Stephen Colbertâ on Tuesday night, and with Mika Brzezinski, his fiancĂŠe and âMorning Joeâ co-host at his side, explained his disillusionment with the party he once represented in the House.
After ripping into Republicans for looking the other way on Trumpâs self-proclaimed Muslim ban and his claims not to know what the Ku Klux Klan did, Scarborough cut to the heart of the issue.
âItâs actually disgusting,â Scarborough said of the lack of GOP action against Trumpâs alleged racism. âYou have to ask yourself: What exactly is the Republican Party willing to do? How far are they willing to go? How much of this country and its values are they willing to sell out?â
At which juncture Colbert pointed out the obvious: âBut arenât you a Republican?â
Scarborough conceded the point, saying, âI am a Republican, but Iâm not going to be a Republican anymore. Iâve gotta become an Independent.â
Scarborough and Brzezinski have found themselves in Trumpâs crosshairs several times since he took office in January.
Last month, the pair were under fire in a series of tweets from the president in which he called Scarborough âpsychoâ and Brzezinski âlow I.Q. crazy.â Most shockingly, Trump claimed Brzezinski was âbleeding badly from a face-lift.â
The two had once considered Trump a friend, but the relationship has clearly soured throughout his candidacy and election.
Colbert wanted to know what had changed because, even before his political career, the businessman had always been something of a âprimo tool.â
âHe used to know he was a tool,â Brzezinski offered.
Scarborough then shared a story from âThe Apprenticeâ days when it seemed as if Trump was aware and amused by his own over-the-top image.
âHe at least had more of a concept of what he was doing, the game he was playing,â Scarborough said.
âHeâs in way over his head now,â concluded Brzezinski, who recently snagged a six-figure book deal.
ALSO
After new Russia revelations, Trump praises his son
Did Donald Trump Jr. break the law by meeting with Russians to gain dirt on Clinton?
Republicans in Congress still donât want to talk about possible collusion between Trump and Russia
A Star Is Born: Richard Simmons turns 69 today
Itâs nice to be liked, âcause growing up, I didnât particularly like myself. And if you donât like yourself, I donât think other people like you that much either.
— Richard Simmons, 1991
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Richard Simmons has made thousands of followers and millions of dollars with his cheerful spin on mainstream ideas of weight loss
Jay-Zâs marriage to BeyoncĂŠ âwasnât totally built on the 100 percent truth,â he says
Further proof that Jay-Z is a very savvy man? âWasnât totally built on the 100 percent truthâ sounds so much better than âlots of lies.â
The first phrase is part of what the â4:44â artist cops to in the just-out âFootnotes for â4:44,ââ a Tidal video accompaniment to the album he released last month.
âThis is my real life,â the man born Shawn Carter says in the video, which features him with other famous men talking about relationships (via People) .
âI just ran into this place and we built this big, beautiful mansion of a relationship that wasnât totally built on the 100% truth and it starts cracking,â he says. âThings start happening that the public can see.â
Yes. Yes, they can.
Two things that were very visible: The infamous elevator fight between Jay-Z and his wife BeyoncĂŠâs sister, Solange Knowles, which went down after the 2014 Met Gala. Sure, they all made nice shortly afterward, but it was a bell that couldnât be unrung.
Then, in shock-and-awe style, BeyoncĂŠ released âLemonadeâ a âvisual albumâ that now has elements of a companion piece to â4:44.â Queen Beyâs title track shredded Jay-Z for infidelity. (Remember âBecky with the good hairâ? Yeah, that.)
On the â4:44â title track, Jay-Z came clean and admitted he had strayed and hadnât handled it well when he was called on it, spitting lyrics like, âLook, I apologize, often womanize / Took for my child to be born / See through a womanâs eyes / Took for these natural twins to believe in miracles / Took me too long for this song / I donât deserve you.â (Music critic Mikael Woodâs â4:44â review includes more raw revelations from the recording.)
In âFootnotes,â Jay-Z compares fighting to keep his relationship alive to being shot at while growing up in the projects, according to Rolling Stone. Hanging on to Bey was scarier, he says.
âWe just got to a place where in order for this to work, this canât be fake,â he says. âNot one ounce.â
Other men chiming in during the âFootnotesâ conversation include Mahershala Ali, Aziz Ansari, Kendrick Lamar, Meek Mill, Chris Paul, Chris Rock, Will Smith and Jesse Williams.
Per Complex, Jay-Z talks about playing â4:44â for BeyoncĂŠ early in the creative process.
âIâm not saying it wasnât uncomfortable,â he tells his fellow men, âbecause obviously it was.â
Charlie Sheenâs 9/11 drama set for September release
For more than a decade, Charlie Sheen has publicly questioned that Islamic terrorists were behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center.
âIt seems to me like 19 amateurs with box cutters taking over four commercial airlines and hitting 75% of their targets -- that feels like a conspiracy theory,â he told Alex Jones on the right-wing punditâs radio show in 2006.
Now the actor -- who said he thought the towers may have gone down after a âcontrolled explosionâ -- is starring in a film about the tragedy that took thousands of lives. On Tuesday, Atlas Distribution Co. announced it will release â9/11â in theaters on Sept. 8.
The R-rated drama -- which also stars Whoopi Goldberg, Luis Guzman and Gina Gershon -- follows five individuals who are trapped in an elevator in the North Tower. The group immediately form a bond in an effort to escape before the building collapses.
Written and directed by Martin Guigui, â9/11â is based on a play called âElevator.â Patrick Carson, the playwright, has described his production as âfact-basedâ and said he used witness and survivor accounts to craft his story.
Meanwhile, Sheen -- whose FX show, âAnger Management,â wrapped in 2014 after a two-year run -- has not appeared in a film since Robert Rodriguezâs âMachete Killsâ in 2013. Most of the âTwo and a Half Menâ starâs acting work in recent years has been comedic, including numerous turns in the spoof franchise âScary Movie.â
Vic Mensa, Joey Bada$$ to headline new Spaceland Block Party festival downtown
Vic Mensa, Joey Bada$$, Highly Suspect, Betty Who and Big Wild are among the acts tapped for the first Spaceland Block Party, a two-day festival coming to L.A.âs Arts District this fall.
Promoted by Spaceland, the block party will be anchored at Row DTLA, the 30-acre, multi-use complex formerly known as Alameda Square that features more than 100 shops and restaurants. The festival is set for Sept. 16-17.
Spaceland Block Party will mix hip-hop, pop, punk, rock and dance music with street art and food. The event will take over rooftops and surrounding parking lots for what promoters promise will be âL.A.âs biggest end of summer blowout party.â
Amelia Airhorn, the Horrors, Snow tha Product, Black Kids, Wavves, Preoccupations, They, Jesse Boykins III, Oddisee & Good Compny and Tijuana Panthers also appear on the lineup. More artists are expected to be announced.
Tickets go on sale Friday through the festivalâs site. General admission weekend passes start at $50, with VIP weekend passes starting at $285.
Single-day passes will also be available, but wonât go on sale until Aug. 10. Single-day tickets start at $75.
Take a look at the festivalâs official poster, which made its debut with Tuesdayâs announcement:
Kim Kardashian does not have time for your cocaine foolishness
Say what you will about the Kardashian clan, but they know how to make headlines. On Tuesday morning Kim Kardashian was not about that âall publicity is good publicityâ life.
The non-troversy began with a Snapchat selfie video Kardashian posted Monday, featuring new items from the Kids Supply, her childrenâs clothing line with husband Kanye West.
After watching, one eagle-eyed viewer spied what appeared to be white powder on the table behind Kardashian and tweeted their theory about the substance Tuesday morning at 9:58 a.m.
âOhhhhhh @KimKardashian caught out with cocaine .. durtayyyyy,â the user posted, tagging Kardashian, a mogul with more than 54 million Twitter followers.
Just 18 minutes later, the mother of two shot back on Twitter and squashed the controversy before it could even get started.
âI do not play with rumors like this so Iâm gonna shut it down real quick,â Kardashian fired off in her tweet. âThatâs sugar from our candy mess from dylanâs candy shop,â referring to the sweets store with a location in L.A.
But has the shapeliest Kardashian ever even been to a candy store before?
Ah. Well then. Everything seems on the up and up here. Keep on living that candy-coated life, Kim K.
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Deadpool gives props to Wonder Woman in his own sweet (and sour) way
Deadpool â¤ď¸ Wonder Woman too!
Alas, that fan fiction wonât be making it to the big screen anytime soon. However, âDeadpoolâ star Ryan Reynolds and the minds behind Marvelâs foul-mouthed anti-hero did show some love to DCâs Amazonian princess by responding to news that âWonder Womanâ had surpassed their filmâs box-office standing.
The official Twitter account for âDeadpoolâ on Monday evening shared a photo featuring the titular starâs hands forming a heart around a necklace bearing Wonder Womanâs logo â a throwback to the irreverent mercenaryâs original movie poster.
âThe Merc may be filthier, but her B.O. is stronger. Congrats #WonderWoman,â the tweet said.
The image was retweeted by Reynolds himself, who starred in and produced the 2016 comic-book flick. (The actor is now shooting âDeadpool 2â slated for a summer 2018 release.)
Warner Bros.â âWonder Woman,â starring Gal Gadot as Diana Prince, has proved to be a summer blockbuster, earning more than $368 million at the domestic box office since its release on June 2, becoming the most successful domestic release in the DC Extended Universe.
Gadot thanked fans on Twitter on Monday âfor making #WonderWoman a success.â
Twentieth Century Foxâs âDeadpoolâ made $363 million at the domestic box office, but it still leads âWonder Womanâ with $783 million worldwide. The DC film has made $745 million worldwide, though itâs poised to keep earning over the summer.
Gadot will reprise her role as the indomitable goddess in DCâs âJustice Leagueâ team-up flick in November.
According to Screenrant, âWonder Woman 2â reportedly will remain a prequel and be set in the final days of the Cold War, with Diana taking on Soviet forces. The main plot of âWonder Womanâ focused on Dianaâs origin story and took place during World War I, decades before the main action in DCâs âMan of Steelâ and âBatman v Superman.â
Van Morrison will salute his blues heroes on new album, âRoll With the Punchesâ
Van Morrison will release his 37th studio album on Sept. 22 in conjunction with a handful of U.S. concert dates this fall, including two shows in Southern California.
The Irish singer-songwriter pays homage to the profound effect American blues music had on forming his own musical vision on âRoll With the Punches,â a 15-track collection blending Morrison originals with songs associated with several of his musical heroes.
Those include Sam Cooke, Lightninâ Hopkins, Bo Diddley, blues-jazz artist Mose Allison, Chicago blues harmonica master Little Walter, Texas guitarist-singer T-Bone Walker, gospel singer-guitarist Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Louisiana songwriter Rudy Toombs and jazz musicians Count Basie and Jimmy Rushing.
âFrom a very early age, I connected with the blues,â the 71-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member said in a statement. âThe thing about the blues is you donât dissect it -- you just do it. Iâve never over-analyzed what I do; I just do it. Music has to be about just doing it and thatâs the way the blues works -- itâs an attitude.
âI was lucky to have met people who were the real thing -- people like John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Witherspoon, Bo Diddley, Little Walter and Mose Allison,â he added. âI got to hang out with them and absorb what they did. They were people with no ego whatsoever and they helped me learn a lot.â
The connective thread between those songs and the new material Morrison has written, he said, is that âtheyâre performance oriented. Each song is like a story and Iâm performing that story. Thatâs been forgotten over years because people over-analyze things. I was a performer before I started writing songs and Iâve always felt like thatâs what I do.â
His latest round of U.S. shows opens Sept. 10 with his appearance with Willie Nelson at the Outlaw Music Festival in Hershey, Pa., and brings him back to the Southland for stops Oct. 13-14 at the Show theater at Agua Caliente Resort in Rancho Mirage, near Palm Springs.
After 27 years, Kermit the Frog is getting a new voice
Forgive Kermit if he has a frog in his throat.
The Associated Press reported Tuesday that the head of the Muppet brood will be getting a new puppeteer and voice actor, the first Kermit-related change since the death of creator Jim Henson in 1990.
Steve Whitmire, who began work on âThe Muppet Showâ in 1978 and inherited the role of Kermit when Henson died, no longer will be working with Muppets.
Replacing the veteran voice actor is Matt Vogel, only the third puppeteer to take on the full-time mantle of Kermit the Frog since the characterâs creation in 1955.
The changing of the frog guard starts immediately, with Vogelâs first performance as Kermit to be released next week on the official âMuppet Thought of the Weekâ video.
Thereâs no word on what will become of the other characters Whitmire portrayed within the Muppets, including Rizzo the Rat, which he created, and Beaker, which he inherited.
Representatives for Disney, which owns Muppets Studio, did not immediately respond Tuesday morning to The Timesâ request for comment about Whitmireâs departure.
Wiz Khalifaâs âSee You Againâ ends âGangnam Styleâsâ streak as most-viewed YouTube video
YouTube viewers have been seeing Wiz Khalifaâs âSee You Againâ again and again. The music video has ousted Psyâs âGangnam Styleâ as the most-watched video on YouTube.
Featuring Charlie Puth, âSee You Againâ edged out the viral 2012 hit by more than 2 million views, ending the K-pop sensationâs five-year streak as the most viewed, the video-sharing site told the Associated Press in a statement.
âSee You Againâ broke the record on the Google-owned service Monday and has been viewed nearly 2.9 billion times (yes, billion) as of Tuesday morning.
The video was first uploaded in April 2015 and pegged to the much-anticipated release of âFurious 7â following the death of the muscle-car franchiseâs star Paul Walker.
Meanwhile, the dance-move spawning, Auto-tuned âGangnam Styleâ has notched 2.894 billion views since it was uploaded in July 2012. Trailing more than 250 million views behind it is the video for Justin Bieberâs âSorry.â
Wiz Khalifa, the Pittsburgh rapper known for the hits âBlack and Yellowâ and âWork Hard Play Hard,â was pleased that the song has been able to âinspire and impact so many lives,â AP said.
Puth was also pleasantly surprised by the news, tweeting that he joined YouTube in 2007 hoping to make a video that could hit 10,000 views: âJust heard about See You Again...wow.â
A Star Is Born: Tab Hunter turns 86 today
When youâve been a product of Hollywood and been subjected to as much crap as I have, itâs not conducive to your own development ... itâs see-through plastic of the worst kind.
— Tab Hunter, 1976
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Hollywood Name but Country Life for Tab Hunter
Nelsan Ellis died from complications of alcohol withdrawal, his family says
âTrue Bloodâ actor Nelsan Ellis died from complications of alcohol withdrawal following years of drug and alcohol abuse, his family revealed Monday.
âAfter many stints in rehab, Nelsan attempted to withdraw from alcohol on his own,â manager Emily Gerson Saines said, with the familyâs permission, in an exclusive statement to the Hollywood Reporter.
âAccording to his father, during his withdrawal from alcohol he had a blood infection, his kidneys shut down, his liver was swollen, his blood pressure plummeted, and his dear sweet heart raced out of control.â
The âElementaryâ and âGet on Upâ actor was in the hospital for four days before being pronounced dead, the statement said. The family reportedly explained his death in an effort to help others who might be struggling with addiction.
Ellis, who was 39 when he died Saturday, played gay short-order cook Lafayette Reynolds through the seven-season run of HBOâs sexy vampires-and-werewolves show. His cause of death was first given only as heart failure.
His fellow cast members from âThe Helpâ were among those on social media who remembered him fondly, with Octavia Spencer â who also worked with him on âThe Soloistâ â saying that her heart broke for his family.
âNeedless to say he was gorgeous, sexy,â she continued. âBut his talent had me speechless. We became instant friends after that. He was sooooo funny. I miss him.â
âWe didnât even scratch the surface of seeing what this artist was capable of,â Jessica Chastain said. âMy love to the family of this spectacular man.â
Said Viola Davis: âHe was like my son. Heartbroken. You took a piece of my heart with you.â
âThe instant I met @OfficialNelsan, I was awestruck. A true artistic genius. This man was one of the greats. We have lost a hero,â Bryce Dallas Howard wrote.
And in a tribute on Instagram, âTrue Bloodâ star Stephen Moyer remembered Ellis with a ribald example of his work that prevents embedding the post here. Hereâs the gist of it, however.
âNelsan Ellis was the only actor in the 7 years of True Blood whom Alan [Ball, showrunner] allowed to improvise. Actually, Iâm going to take that back. It wasnât that Alan allowed him to do it, it was more that when Nelsan inhabited the world of Lafayette, he quite literally COULDNâT STOP himself. It was like he was possessed,â Moyer wrote.
âIn actuality Nelsan was quiet, smart, thoughtful, warm and kind. A published playwright himself.
âI think it would be fair to say that he taught all of us that intent and courage and fearlessness and freedom are the aspects of playing make-believe that spark the corners of the room where the dark is most impenetrable; to shine a light on those corners within ourselves is the very reason we go back time and again to Movies, TV shows and Theatre. To see that spark ignited.
âNelsan had that electricity in an abundance I have rarely seen.â
âMarvelâs New Warriorsâ casts Milana Vayntrub as Squirrel Girl
Marvel has found its live-action Squirrel Girl. Milana Vayntrub has been cast to play Doreen Green in âMarvelâs New Warriors.â
Joining Vayntrub in the Freeform TV comedy series is Derek Theler as Mister Immortal (who cannot die), Jeremy Tardy as Night Thrasher (a local celebrity), Calum Worthy as Speedball (who can throw balls of kinetic energy), Matthew Moy as Microbe (a hypochondriac who can talk to germs) and Kate Comer as Debrii (an out, proud, low-level telekinetic).
The show will follow these six super-powered young adults as they learn to cope with their abilities while navigating adulthood.
âI am thrilled beyond belief to be working with this incredible group of actors,â said âNew Warriorsâ executive producer and showrunner Kevin Biegel in a press release. âThey are funny, sincere, eager, charming and perfectly embody these characters. Itâll be a blast and an honor to create this show with each of them.â
Vayntrub, who has portrayed Sloane Sandburg on NBCâs âThis Is Us,â is perhaps best known for portraying the cheery and helpful AT&T employee Lily Adams in the carrierâs commercials.
A fan-favorite comic book character, Squirrel Girl (a.k.a. Doreen) eats nuts, kicks butts and possesses all the powers of a squirrel. She has saved the world from villains including Doctor Doom and Galactus, and actresses including Anna Kendrick, Mae Whitman and Shannon Purser have all previously expressed interest in playing the character.
No word on who will portray Doreenâs best friend (and actual squirrel) Tippy Toe.
âMarvelâs New Warriorsâ is slated for a 2018 debut.
Kendall Jenner and Kylie Jenner sued by man who took Tupac photos they used on âvintageâ shirts
Kendall and Kylie Jennerâs ill-fated foray into cross-breeding their brand with classic images of rock and rap icons is now more than an adventure in questionable taste.
The photographer behind the Tupac Shakur pictures used on a couple of shirts sold in the sistersâ online store has sued them.
The complaint by Michael Miller was filed Friday in U.S. District Court and alleges copyright infringement by the Jenner sisters and their company for using his images without properly licensing them.
A Jenner family representative said in a statement to Rolling Stone that the lawsuit was akin to âsuing an actor for being in a movie,â because Kendall and Kylie had nothing to do with the creation of the shirts.
Millerâs suit alleges that the Jenners and their company âhad the right and ability to supervise the infringing conduct and ... had a direct financial interest in the infringing conduct.â
Itâs in the interest of the person who created an image âto have it associated with an artist and not a third party,â Scott Burroughs, an attorney representing Miller, told The Times on Monday. âThat may impact further opportunities to license the work or the value of the work that can be licensed.â
Burroughs gave Kendall Jennerâs recent associations with a controversial Pepsi commercial and the ill-fated Fyre Festival as the type of third-party connections his client would want to avoid.
A statement that Sky News got from the sistersâ clothing company called the allegations âcompletely falseâ and the lawsuit âbaseless.â
The company said Canada Inc., the authorized licensee for the sistersâ images, bought old shirts previously produced by another company that was authorized to use the rock and rap images, the company said. Apparently the K+K logo and images of the Jenners were later superimposed on the âvintageâ shirts.
Talk about doing the laundry!
The $125 shirts, which featured social media shots of the Jenners superimposed on pics of Tupac, the Notorious B.I.G., Pink Floydâs âDark Side of the Moonâ logo and more, lasted for less than a day in the Kendall + Kylie online store at the end of June before they were yanked under a small avalanche of criticism.
Voletta Wallace, Biggieâs mom, slammed the effort solidly as disrespectful and threatened to sue.
âI am not sure who told @kyliejenner and @kendalljenner that they had the right to do this ...,â Wallace said on Instagram. âI have no idea why they feel they can exploit the deaths of 2pac and my Son Christopher to sell a t-shirt. This is disrespectful, disgusting, and exploitation at its worst!!!â
Sharon Osbourne, whose husband Ozzyâs image was used on a shirt, told the Jenners to âstick to what you know ... lip gloss.â
âThe superimposing of a selfie of Kendall Jenner over the iconic âLionâ portrait of the late Jim Morrison is offensive and remarkable for its failure to recognize the rights of the estate of Mr. Morrison to control the use of his likeness,â read a cease-and-desist letter (obtained by Rolling Stone) sent to the sistersâ company on behalf of the late singerâs estate.
Jeff Jampol, who manages the estate and the surviving members of the Doors, slammed the Jenner sisters as an example of âpeople who fashion themselves as celebrities who are famous for being well-known but donât actually do anything.â
Kylie Jenner, 19, told WWD in an interview published Friday, âWe have learned what the customer wants and what she gravitates towards through trial and error.
âWe love to push the envelope with adding statement and novelty styles that in the past we would have shied away from and seeing how our customer has loved those items has been amazing.â
Or not?
The vintage T-shirt experiment has shaken out as an error, as Kendall Jenner, 21, acknowledged in June. Whether they anticipated the possibility of a trial? Whole ânother thing.
âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ finally has a return date
âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ fans can mark their calendars now: The HBO show will reappear Oct. 1.
Or they can do nothing, as a new promo announcing the seriesâ return date says star Larry David did exactly that during a nearly six-year break from new episodes.
The news comes more than a year after HBO announced the show would be back and echoes the networkâs detail-free June 2016 statement in which David said, âIn the immortal words of Julius Caesar, âI left, I did nothing, I returned.ââ
Of course, his version of ânothingâ included writing, acting and a Broadway debut.
The fate of the half-hour comedy has been in limbo since its Season 8 finale â blame it on an âindecisiveâ creator? â which premiered on Sept. 11, 2011, and featured Michael J. Fox.
âI donât think itâs out of his system,â said Michael Lombardo, HBOâs former programming chief, speaking about David and âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ in June 2015. âI think he wants to have something to say.â
âMoonlightâ director Barry Jenkins will take on James Baldwin novel for his next film
After an awards season filled with kudos and the most dramatic Oscars night victory in history, just about any project âMoonlightâ director Barry Jenkins would choose to direct next would be the subject of high anticipation.
Now, hot off the triumph of his best picture Oscar win, Jenkins has set his follow-up project: âIf Beale Street Could Talk,â adapted from the 1974 novel of the same name by influential writer and social critic James Baldwin.
The original story follows Tish, a young Harlem woman pregnant with her first child, on a mission to prove her wrongfully accused loverâs innocence in 1950s New York City.
âIt is so vividly human and so obviously based upon reality, that it strikes us as timeless,â Joyce Carol Oates wrote in the New York Times in 1974.
âIt is a celebration of love told through the story of a young couple, their families and their lives, trying to bring about justice through love, for love and the promise of the American dream,â described a joint announcement from Annapurna, PASTEL, and Plan B.
Jenkins took home the Academy Award for best adapted screenplay in February with co-writer Tarell Alvin McCraney for âMoonlight,â their sublime and sensitively wrought coming-of-age tale of a black gay teenager growing up in Miami.
The film was nominated for eight Oscars and took home three, including best picture and best supporting actor for Mahershala Ali.
Jenkinsâ film and Baldwinâs legacy both had an effect the cinematic landscape last year when Raoul Peckâs searing Oscar-nominated documentary. âI Am Not Your Negroâ propelled Baldwinâs writings on African American life back into the spotlight.
The âMoonlightâ and âMedicine for Melancholyâ helmer won the blessing of Baldwinâs estate to bring âIf Beale Street Could Talkâ to the big screen after adapting it to script in 2013. Filming is set to begin in October.
âJames Baldwin is a man of and ahead of his time; his interrogations of the American consciousness have remained relevant to this day,â Jenkins said in a statement. âTo translate the power of Tish and Fonnyâs love to the screen in Baldwinâs image is a dream Iâve long held dear. Working alongside the Baldwin estate, Iâm excited to finally make that dream come true.â
The Beatlesâ âYellow Submarineâ film to be adapted as a comic book
The Beatles are reuniting with Captain Fred and heading back to Pepperland.
To mark the 50th anniversary of the bandâs beloved 1968 animated movie âYellow Submarine,â Apple Corps Ltd. has authorized a comic book adaptation of the film, according to the Hollywood Reporterâs website
âWeâre thrilled to be publishing âThe Beatles: Yellow Submarineâ for the 50th anniversary of this fantastic movie,â Chris Teather, publishing director at Titan Comics, told the publication. âWe canât wait for Beatles fans to experience this official adaptation.â
The Fab Fourâs inter-dimensional battle against the music-loathing Blue Meanies are to unfold in pages written and illustrated by Bongo Comics founder and incoming Mad magazine editor Bill Morrison, who the Hollywood Reporter said is fulfilling a long-held dream of adapting the animated film. The comic is slated for 2018 release.
Incidentally, the Beatles themselves had little to do with the animated film. Aside from performing the musical numbers and appearing briefly at the end, the Liverpool lads were simply fulfilling a contractual obligation to United Artists for another film in the wake of their 1964 Oscar-nominated comedy âA Hard Dayâs Night,â 1965âs âHelp!â and 1967âs TV movie âMagical Mystery Tour.â Their charactersâ speaking voices in âYellow Submarineâ were actually provided by actors John Clive, Geoffrey Hughes, Peter Batten and Paul Angelis.
The well-received animated film, which revolved around Beatles songs, earned a Grammy Award nomination in 1970 for best original score and won the National Board of Reviewâs Top 10 Films honor in 1969. Director George Dunning also won a special award from the National Society of Film Critics.
The film was restored in 1999, shown in theaters and released on DVD with a stereo remix. The âHey, Bulldog!â scene that was deleted in the original American version was also reinstated.
In 2011, Disney canceled plans for a big-budget CGI remake helmed by Robert Zemeckis, but the following year, the animated original was released again on DVD and Blu-ray, transferred from a more thorough restoration and enhanced for widescreen televisions.
With âDespacito,â Daddy Yankee becomes first Latino artist to top Spotify
Despacito means âslowlyâ in Spanish, but the indisputable song of the summer has been anything but in its race up the charts.
âDespacitoâ co-writer and rapper Daddy Yankee has unseated Ed Sheeran as the top artist on Spotify, making him the first Latino artist to lead the platform.
The song, which he co-wrote with fellow Puerto Rican artist Luis Fonsi and features additional vocals by Justin Bieber on the remix, has surpassed 44,735,586 monthly listeners, according to Spotify, which made the announcement Sunday via the Associated Press. The remix is also No. 1 on Spotifyâs global charts.
âBeing the first Latin artist to reach No. 1 on Spotify marks a precedent not only for my career but for the industry in general,â Daddy Yankee said in an email to the AP. âThe musical digital revolution has unified the world and this is the proof. We are all in the same boat with no labels or stereotypes.â
The reggaetĂłn superstar, 40, whose real name is RamĂłn Luis Ayala RodrĂguez, got his start in the 1990s and said he ânever stoppedâ working despite naysayers maligning the reggaetĂłn genre and saying he wouldnât last in the industry. He exploded on the global music scene with his 2004 single âGasolinaâ and bestselling album âBarrio Fino.â
âI had to keep fighting. I had to make big sacrifices, to miss important moments with my family, to feel the prejudice of many people that didnât open the doors for me,â he said.
The artist marked the moment with a video posted on Twitter, addressing has fans in English and Spanish.
âAlso thank you to all our brothers around the world who have embraced our culture,â he said in the video. âYou guys [are] definitely a part of it. Weâve been on this wave for a long time. Now it feels good that the whole world gets to surf with us.â
His âDespacitoâ collaborator Fonsi also gave him props via Instagram: âSaid it once, Iâll say it again.. They donât call you The Big Boss for nothing!!â
The smash hit, which made headlines last month when Bieber admitted to not knowing the lyrics, has been breaking other records too.
The Latin dance track also hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and is the first primarily Spanish-language track to reach that spot since 1996âs âMacarena.â As of July 8, the song has been charting for 24 weeks and is in its eighth week at No. 1.
âHe doesnât respect meâ: Blac Chyna defends herself against Rob Kardashian
After a forewarning on Friday, Blac Chyna has officially taken Rob Kardashian to court.
On Monday morning, Chyna, backed by her lawyer â high-profile attorney Lisa Bloom â arrived in Los Angeles Court Superior Court for the first leg of civil proceedings in a revenge-porn suit against her ex-fiance.
A feud between the couple â whose relationship grew out of âKeeping Up with the Kardashiansâ and then landed them their own E! reality show â made headlines last week when Kardashian posted graphic photos of Chyna on social media. The photos were accompanied by a series of defamatory, profane statements about his ex â punishment, he claimed, for Chynaâs alleged unfaithfulness.
âHe doesnât respect me,â Chyna said during an interview with ABCâs âGood Morning Americaâ on Monday. âSo, if you canât respect me, you have to respect the law.â
In a statement she tweeted Friday, Bloom laid out Chynaâs legal game plan: a temporary restraining order that will ârequire Mr. Kardashian to behave like a grownup toward the mother of his baby.â (Chyna and Kardashian have an 8-month-old daughter, Dream.)
âCyberbullying your ex is harassment,â the statement read. âIt stops now. Your attempts to shame and control her are hereby rejected. Her body, her choice. Her life, her choice. Back off.â
Chyna used her âGood Morning Americaâ appearance to try to clear her name.
âI was devastated, of course,â she said of Kardashianâs social media rampage. âLike, this is a person I trusted. I just felt ... betrayed.â
In response to Kardashianâs claims last week that she used him as a means to fame, wealth and recognition, Chyna said: âI was already Blac Chyna before the Kardashians.â
According to TMZ, Kardashian does not intend to challenge Chynaâs request in court. His lawyer, Robert Shapiro, described Kardashianâs behavior last week as âa spontaneous reaction that he regrets.â
Shapiro added, âRobâs only concern is for the well-being of baby Dream.â
Jon Hamm riffs on karaoke jams and why âBaby Driverâ is such a musical film
Music was everywhere during the making of the new film âBaby Driver,â both on set and off. Star Ansel Elgort makes EDM dance tunes in his second career under the DJ moniker Ansølo. Oscar winner Jamie Foxx, who menaces Elgort mercilessly as the unhinged Bats, also has two Grammys and four R&B albums under his belt.
Eiza Gonzalez, who steals scenes in her biggest American film to date as the tough-as-nails Darling, has released two albums in her native Mexico. Lily James even sings in the movie, warbling Carla Thomasâs 1966 pop single âB-A-B-Yâ in her first scene.
Not everyone on the Atlanta set, however, self-identified as a musician. Just ask Jon Hamm. (Warning: Mild spoilers follow.)
âIâm not musical in any way,â the âMad Menâ star demurred to The Times, despite recorded evidence to the contrary. âBut,â he said with a grin, reclining on a Four Seasons couch on a recent summer day, âIâll karaoke!â
Karaoke, says Hamm, was a favorite pastime for the cast and crew during filming on âBaby Driver,â where every car chase and action sequence â and many of the dialogue scenes â were meticulously scripted by celebrity choreographer Ryan Heffington, to the beats of Wrightâs playlist.
âEiza always wanted to do karaoke,â said Hamm, who revealed that his co-starâs go-to song is âPonyâ by Ginuwine. His own jam: âUnder Pressure,â by Queen and David Bowie.
âIâve seen Jamie Foxx, who is an amazing musician, just walk up to a piano and start playing it,â he sighed. âI am not musical in any way, although I like music. But I stopped playing violin in 4th grade. Iâm like, âWell⌠Iâm good at baseball!ââ
His favorite moments to watch in âBaby Driverâ? That angsty junkyard scene set to âEasyâ by the Commodores â Elgortâs own No. 1 karaoke song -- and âNever Gonna Give You Up,â by Barry White.
âI like that scene. Itâs normally a baby-making song, but in this itâs really, really sinister,â Hamm said.
Hamm wasnât the only non-musical star on set in an action-musical filled with cameos by musicians including Killer Mike, Big Boi (in the restaurant scene), Paul Williams (as âthe Butcherâ) and Sky Ferreira.
I asked Wright about the surprising appearance in the film by Atlanta personalities Sidney and Thurman Sewell, better known collectively as the ATL Twins.
The siblings, who made their film debut as James Francoâs sidekicks in Harmony Korineâs âSpring Breakers,â show up in a surprise encounter with Baby that leaves them carjacked, their phone still plugged in blasting Young MCâs âKnow How.â
Wrightâs face lit up at the mention of their name. âI have to give Sidney and Thurman credit,â he said, laughing. âThereâs not that much improv in the movie, but the line, âMore like Bonnie and Bonnieâ was their line, and when they said it, I thought, âThatâs great â thatâs going in the movie.ââ
Iâve had one question ever since I first saw âBaby Driverâ in March at SXSW, where it received the same enthusiasm itâs been receiving from audiences and critics alike: Would the ATL Twins really be driving around modern-day Atlanta listening to a 1988 track by Young MC?
âLet me put it this way,â said Wright. âI think they should.â
READ MORE: The musical, millennial life of âBaby Driverâsâ Ansel Elgort
Daniel Craig reported to sign on for âBond 25â despite disdain for 007 franchise
Apparently playing James Bond is still better than slashing oneâs wrists.
Itâs still Craig. Daniel Craig.
The British actor has reportedly signed on for the 25th Bond film despite his notorious disdain for playing the super spy. Craig said in 2015 that he would ârather slash [his] wristsâ than return to the role â and if he did play 007 again, âit would be for the money.â
The U.K.âs Mirror reported that Craig decided to stay on for Bond 25 after hearing of the wealth of British talent eyed to replace him. Idris Elba, Tom Hardy, James Norton and Aidan Turner were among the rumored contenders.
This would be Craigâs fifth Bond flick since embodying Ian Flemingâs secret service agent in the 2006 installment, âCasino Royale.â Heâs the sixth actor to play the master spy since the first Bond film, âDr. No,â debuted in 1962.
Other big names swirling around Bond 25 are singer Adele and director Christopher Nolan.
The Mirror reported that producer Barbara Broccoli is âdeterminedâ to bring the English songbird back after her performance of âSkyfall,â the theme song to the 2012 Bond film of the same name, earned her Oscar, Grammy, Golden Globe and Brit awards. Broccoli is said to be âtalking the singer roundâ and insiders believe Craig and Adele are the franchiseâs âwinning team.â
According to the Telegraph, Nolan is also being eyed to direct the next film. The Academy Award-winning director, who also helmed Warner Bros.â âDark Knightâ trilogy, has been in talks with producers but sounded reluctant to step in for Sam Mendes, who directed âSkyfallâ and âSpectre.â
âIâve spoken to the producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson over the years,â Nolan recently told Playboy. âI deeply love the character, and Iâm always excited to see what they do with it. Maybe one day that would work out. Youâd have to be needed, if you know what I mean. It has to need reinvention; it has to need you. And theyâre getting along very well.â
âSkyfallâ and âSpectreâ screenwriter John Logan is also said to be involved in the upcoming project, and reports suggest that Bond 25 will start filming next year.
Jay-Z to take â4:44â on the road this fall
Itâs official: Jay-Z is going on the road.
After months of speculation, the rap mogul announced his first solo tour in four years on Monday in support of his comeback album, â4:44.â
The 4:44 Tour will take Jay to North American arenas this fall. Kicking off Oct. 27 in Anaheim, the hit 31-city, Live Nation-produced trek wraps in L.A. with a show at the Forum on Dec. 21.
Earlier this year, Jay signed a new 10-year touring deal with Live Nation for a reported $200 million.
Before the tour launches, the rap star will hit the festival circuit. Jay is set to headline his own Made in America Festival this Labor Day, as well as top-lining the Meadows Music and Arts Festival and Austin City Limits â his first major shows since he co-headlined 2014âs On the Run stadium trek with wife BeyoncĂŠ.
Tickets go on sale to the general public on Friday at 10 a.m. through Live Nation. A special presale for Tidal subscribers and Citi cardholders begins today.
A Star Is Born: Sofia Vergara turns 45 today
When they told me to lose weight, I was like, are they playing a joke on me? Iâve always been known for my body! . . . . The thing is I did lose a little weight because I understand that standing next to the stick figures, I donât look as good in pictures. My friend says that the other actresses look better than me on TV because theyâre skinny. And Iâm like, âYeah, but I look better naked!â
— Sofia Vergara, 2009
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Sofia Vergaraâs American âModern Familyâ
A Star Is Born: Courtney Love turns 53 today
People are offering a million dollars to these scruffy little dirty stoner bands. And I can just see itâs going to be like new wave: âGet that kid into an old sweater!â Whatâs going to happen is that these underripe bands are going to put out these underripe records that nobody is going to buy, and it will ruin it for the rest of us.
— Courtney Love, 1992
FROM THE ARCHIVES: In Love With Courtney
Donal Logueâs missing daughter is home again
Donal Logueâs daughter Jade is alive, well and back home in Brooklyn.
Itâs been a frantic two weeks for the âGothamâ star after the 16-year-old went missing from Barclayâs Center in Brooklyn.
In addition to working with police, the FBI and missing children groups, Logue and his ex-wife, Kasey Smith, blanketed social media with requests for help and calls for Jade to return home.
So it was only fitting that news of a happy ending was made public via Twitter.
Jade, who is transgender, went missing one week after her 16th birthday. TMZ reports that an NYPD-FBI task force found her at a friendâs house in North Carolina on Saturday morning; According to Logueâs representatives, Jade is now reunited with her family.
Nelsan Ellis, who played Lafayette Reynolds on âTrue Blood,â is dead at 39
Nelsan Ellis, the actor best known for his portrayal of Lafayette Reynolds on HBOâs âTrue Blood,â has died. He was 39. The reported cause was from complications due to heart failure.
Ellis burst into popular consciousness in 2008 when he was cast in âTrue Bloodâ as Reynolds, a flamboyant and outspoken gay short order cook at Merlotteâs in the fictional town of Bon Temps, Louisiana. Lafayette brought pointed humor to Alan Ballâs acclaimed vampire drama that many considered an analogy for the gay rights struggle.
As news of Ellisâ passing quickly spread, a scene where he marches out from behind the griddle to confront a trio of homophobic diners was widely circulated on Twitter.
In a statement, Ball called Ellis âa singular talent whose creativity never ceased to amaze me. Working with him was a privilege.â
HBO echoed Ballâs sentiments in its own statement, âWe were extremely saddened to hear of the passing of Nelsan Ellis. Nelsan was a long-time member of the HBO family whose groundbreaking portrayal of Lafayette will be remembered fondly within the overall legacy of True Blood. Nelsan will be dearly missed by his fans and all of us at HBO.â
Most recently, Ellis joined the season five cast of âElementary,â playing Shinwell Johnson, a former drug dealer (and former patient of Lucy Liuâs Watson) trying to make up for his life of crime. Shinwell, who was named for a character that appeared in the original Sherlock Holmes story âThe Illustrious Client,â died this season after infiltrating a gang known as the South Bronx Killas.
Aerial dancer falls to his death before Green Day performance in Madrid
An aerial dancer performing before a Green Day concert Friday night in Spain fell an estimated 100 feet to his death, the BBC has reported.
Pedro AuniĂłn Monroy died at the Mad Cool festival in Madrid, his fall from a lighted cage over the stage captured in video posted on YouTube.
Festival organizers told neither the audience nor the nightâs bands that Monroy had died, the BBC said. Green Day tweeted that it did not know of the death until after the band had performed.
Shia LaBeouf arrested in Georgia on public drunkenness charge
Actor Shia LaBeouf has been released from a Georgia jail after posting $7,000 bond on charges of public drunkenness.
The Chatham County Sheriffâs Office says the 31-year-old was arrested at 4 a.m. Saturday by the Savannah Police Department and released.
In addition to the public drunkenness allegation, he was also arrested on suspicion of disorderly conduct and obstruction. Further details surrounding the arrest were not immediately available.
LaBeouf has faced similar charges in the past. He is in the Savannah area filming his new movie, âThe Peanut Butter Falcon,â which also stars Dakota Johnson.
A Star Is Born: Beck turns 47 today
I like chaos . . . taking yourself and the audience into the unknown, so no one is quite sure of whatâs going on. I love the kind of abandon that you feel onstage when your own will has been removed and you are completely vulnerable and no longer in control. You may look vulnerable. You may even look idiotic, but thereâs something honest and revealing going on.
— Beck, 1999
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Beckâs Got a Brand New Bag
Having a Moment: From Trump vs. CNN to Netflixâs âGLOW,â we canât get enough pro wrestling
âHaving a Momentâ is a new weekly feature that spotlights the people and trends we all seem to be talking about.
Stop me if youâve heard this one before: Two guys wearing flamboyant costumes and makeup attempt to tear each other to shreds in an attempt to win a fancy accessory.
No, itâs not âRuPaulâs Drag Race.â Itâs that other high melodrama thatâs all the rage these days: professional wrestling.
Whatâs that, you say? Professional wrestling isnât real? Well, neither is the news if you believe certain people, so why not give the pop culture pariah its moment in the sun?
President Trumpâs recent tweet featuring an appearance at Wrestlemania 23 remade into a brutal attack on CNN has pro wrestling back in the headlines, but thatâs only the most recent example of the sportâs comeback.
Blac Chyna seeking restraining order after Rob Kardashian posted sexually explicit photos
An attorney for Blac Chyna said Friday she will seek a restraining order against reality star Rob Kardashian after he posted sexually explicit images of the model on Instagram and Twitter.
Lisa Bloom, a well-known celebrity attorney, said on Twitter: âI represent Blac Chyna. I just gave Rob Kardashian notice that weâll be in court Monday seeking restraining orders against him.â
Kardashian, 30, posted the images Wednesday while accusing Chyna, the mother of his child, of cheating on him.
Some legal experts have said the posts could be problematic because in 2013, California lawmakers passed a law penalizing what is known as ânonconsensual pornography.â
A violation of the law is a misdemeanor resulting in up to six months in jail.
Minus Bette Midler, âHello, Dolly!â breaks down at Broadway box office
Itâs more like âHell no, Dolly!,â am I right?
Thatâs the message Broadway audiences are sending at the prospect of seeing the most recent revival of âHello, Dolly!â sans Bette Midler in the title role.
In the midst of a two-week vacation from the role that recently won her a Tony Award, Midler is set to return to the stage July 9 and has left Dolly in the capable hands of her understudy, two-time Tony winner Donna Murphy.
In the absence of the Divine Miss M, the âHello, Dolly!â box-office receipts for last week totaled $936,603, after two consecutive weeks of earning more than $2 million, thanks to post-Tony ticket demand.
The deflation of the showâs box office is a real concern for later this year, when Midler is expected to relinquish the role for good. Midler, 71, has not yet announced her departure from the show.
At 5, Blue Ivy Carter makes her rap debut on Jay Zâs new album. And yes, itâs adorable
Within weeks of her birth in 2012, Blue Ivy Carter was already starting to be expertly groomed for musical greatness. (Or perhaps when your parents are BeyoncĂŠ and Jay Z, itâs already in your DNA.)
Weâve heard her wail on Jay Zâs âGloryâ -- a 2012 tribute anthem to infant Blue Ivy herself -- and babble in the background of BeyoncĂŠâs 2013 track âBlueâ (another homage to you-know-who).
But now, at the ripe old age of 5, Blue Ivy is making her official rap debut -- and the Internet is calling her a sensation.
The pint-sized prodigy raps for 45 seconds, sandwiched between her fatherâs verses, on âBlueâs Freestyle/We Familyâ -- one of three bonus tracks featured on the physical edition of â4:44,â which was released Friday after nearly a week-long exclusive on the streaming service Tidal.
Her remarkably arresting (even if a bit obscure) verse kicks off: âEverything, everything is my only single thing/ Everything I hear is my answer...I never hear that/ I be in the posse/ Never seen a ceiling in my whole life.â
And while it is periodically difficult to decipher Blue Ivyâs words (again, sheâs 5), the freestyle refrain is crystal-clear: âBoom shakalaka/ Boom shakalaka/ Everything in shaka/ Everything in faka.â
Jay Zâs acclaimed 13th studio album had its initial release last week on Tidal and has already earned platinum certification. But despite its wide success, the rapper was recently criticized by the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish organization dedicated to identifying and combating anti-Semitism. The group has taken issue with certain lyrics on Jay Zâs new song âThe Story of O.J.â:
âYou wanna know whatâs more important than throwinâ away money at a strip club? Credit / You ever wonder why the Jewish people own all the property in America? This how they did it.â
In an interview with Rolling Stone, a representative for the ADL said that while the organization believes Jay Z meant no harm, those lyrics are problematic.
âWe know that Jay Z is someone who has used his celebrity in the past to speak out responsibly and forcefully against the evils of racism and anti-Semitism,â the rep said.
âThe lyric does seem to play into deep-seated anti-Semitic stereotypes about Jews and money,â the rep added. âThe idea that Jews âown all the propertyâ in this country and have used credit to financially get ahead are odious and false. Yet, such notions have lingered in society for decades, and we are concerned that this lyric could feed into preconceived notions about Jews and alleged Jewish âcontrolâ of the banks and finance.â
â4:44â is now available to stream on Apple Music, iTunes and Amazon -- most everywhere, that is, except for Spotify.
Ben Affleck reportedly dating âSaturday Night Liveâ producer Lindsay Shookus
Ben Affleck might have a new leading lady in his life.
The âJustice Leagueâ star is rumored to be dating âSaturday Night Liveâ producer Lindsay Shookus, according to several reports out Friday.
Per E! News, which was first with a report of the romance, the Oscar winner and Shookus are âin the early stagesâ of their relationship. They met up in London for work and reportedly attended Sam Mendesâ play âFerrymanâ last week.
âItâs more than a summer fling,â according to a person E! called an insider. âThey are having fun and care for each other. Itâs early and they are taking it slow.â
Though Affleck and Shookus have not publicly addressed the relationship, People also reported the nascent coupling following a sighting of the two having dinner in Los Angeles on Thursday.
âThey are spending time together in L.A. Lindsay is staying at Benâs new house,â a source told the magazine. âThey had dinner at Giorgio Baldi last night. They arrived in a limo. They looked happy. They had a quick dinner and then returned to Benâs house.â
Following the actorâs rehab stint for alcohol abuse in March, he and actress Jennifer Garner officially filed for divorce in April after nearly 10 years of marriage. They cited irreconcilable differences and are seeking joint physical and legal custody of their three young children, daughters Violet and Seraphina and son Samuel.
Days after the filing, a report surfaced saying that Affleck was moving out of the family guesthouse and into a new home and that he was dating someone, though not seriously.
The parents have remained pretty amicable (save for Garnerâs incendiary 2016 Vanity Fair interview) and committed to co-parenting their kids since first announcing their separation in 2015. On the heels of a recent family trip to the Bahamas, Affleck and Garner were spotted together on Tuesday celebrating the Fourth of July with their brood at the Pacific Palisades parade, TMZ reported.
With new album on the way, all Ringo Starr wants for his birthday today is peace and love
Without the beat, there was no Beatles, and since Pete Best was born in the fall, today fans are celebrating the birthday of the expert drummer who replaced him, Ringo Starr.
The child born in Liverpool as Richard Starkey in 1940 is celebrating his 77th birthday today by announcing the release date and title of his forthcoming album.
âGive More Loveâ will be his first record since 2015âs âPostcards From Paradiseâ and will arrive Sept. 15 via Universal Music Enterprises.
Joining him in the studio on various songs are fellow Beatle Paul McCartney, singer-guitarists Joe Walsh and Peter Frampton and keyboard ace Benmont Tench, among others.
As previously reported by the Los Angeles Timesâ Randy Lewis in May, Starr will celebrate today as he has for the last three years: by swinging by the Capitol Records Tower in Hollywood to greet fans and flash the peace sign.
At noon heâll ask his tribe around the world to do the same while reciting a mantra of âpeace and love.â
At the Capitol event, heâll be getting, ahem, a touch of aid from director David Lynch, legendary Texas blues rocker Edgar Winter, the Animalsâ Eric Burdon, E Street Band guitarist Nils Lofgren, L.A. singer-songwriter Jenny Lewis and drummers Jim Keltner and Matt Sorum, among others.
The day will also include renditions of Starr songs by musicians, including Lewis, Van Dyke Parks and Don Was.
âI canât think of a better way to celebrate my birthday, or a better gift I could ask for, than peace and love,â Starr said in May in a statement. âHow great that this idea keeps growing and spreading. Thanks to everyone supporting it.â
The drummer isnât slowing down on the road, either. In October, heâll set up shop in Las Vegas for an extended stay at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino, followed by concerts across Texas and in Oklahoma, Florida, Georgia and up the East Coast.
Heâll cap the tour in mid-November with gigs at the Beacon Theatre in New York City and the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark.
Hereâs the track list for âGive More Loveâ:
1. âWeâre on the Road Againâ
2. âLaughableâ
3. âShow Me the Wayâ
4. âSpeed of Soundâ
5. âStanding Stillâ
6. âKing of the Kingdomâ
7. âElectricityâ
8. âSo Wrong for So Longâ
9. âShake It Upâ
10. âGive More Loveâ
11. âBack Off Boogaloo (Re-do)â
12. âDonât Pass Me Buy (Re-do)â
13. âYou Canât Fight Lighting (Re-do)â
14. âPhotograph (Re-do)â
Angela Lansbury and Emily Watson to star in BBC/PBS production of âLittle Womenâ
An upcoming production of âLittle Womenâ has found its titular women -- and a couple Hollywood living legends to boot.
BBC One and âMasterpieceâ on PBS announced Thursday the cast for their co-production of Louisa May Alcottâs classic novel, introducing a new generation to the wonderful world of the March family.
Two-time Academy Award nominee Emily Watson (âHilary and Jackie,â âBreaking the Wavesâ) will play Marmee, beloved family matriarch, while honorary Academy Award winner Dame Angela Lansbury will star as irascible Aunt March.
The production is looking to a new crop of fresh-faced actresses to fill the ranks of the March girls, including Willa Fitzgerald (âScream: The TV Seriesâ) as eldest sister Meg; Maya Hawke (daughter of Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke) as headstrong Jo; Annes Elwy (âPhilip K. Dickâs Electric Dreamsâ) as sweet sister Beth; and Kathryn Newton (âBig Little Lies,â âHalt and Catch Fireâ) as troublesome youngest sister Amy.
Michael Gambon will be posted next door to the March family playing gracious neighbor Mr. Laurence, with newcomer Jonah Hauer-King playing his nephew and March girls love interest Laurie.
Originally published in 1868, Alcottâs story tells of a family ravaged by the Civil War, struggling to survive and thrive as its four daughters seek to become strong women.
The BBC/PBS adaptation will be a three-part series from âCall the Midwifeâ creator Heidi Thomas and directed by Vanessa Caswill (âMy Mad Fat Diaryâ).
Principal photography begins this month in Ireland. A release date for the series has yet to be announced.
A Star Is Born: Shelley Duvall turns 68 today
When I turned 18, I felt I was grown up. Then when I was 21, I reflected, âBoy, I was just a kid then; now Iâm grown up.â The same thing happened when I was 27. It wasnât until I was in my early 30s that I realized it was a futile goal to have. Youâre never grown up. Weâre all still dealing with the same hopes, same fears, same dreams that we had as children.
— Shelley Duvall, 1991
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Shelley Duvall grows up
Patton Oswalt engaged to new love Meredith Salenger
This is shaping up to be quite the year for comedian Patton Oswalt. The funnyman took home the Grammy for comedy album in February, and on Thursday he confirmed he was newly engaged to actress Meredith Salenger.
âI put the ring in a marzipan Slave I replica and said, âWill you be my Padawan of Love?â She maced me but said yes later,â Oswald joked on Twitter of his proposal, a jest rooted both in his own embrace of nerd culture and in Salengerâs extensive voicework in the âStar Warsâ universe.
Salenger, who broke into Hollywood with her starring role in the 1985 Disney film âThe Journey of Natty Gann,â shared her own joyous reaction to the engagement on social media.
âItâs official,â Salenger wrote. âIâm the luckiest girl in the universe!!!!â
The caption accompanied a photo collage of the happy couple, a shot of the big question and Salengerâs dazzling ring, and a photo of the actress with Oswaltâs 8-year-old daughter, Alice.
The announcement is a lovely turn of events for Oswalt, whose first wife, writer Michelle McNamara, died suddenly in her sleep in April 2016 due to a previously undiagnosed heart condition, coupled with prescribed medication.
McNamara and Oswalt had been married 10 years and had one daughter, Alice.
Oswalt, whose stand-up comedy never shied away from his struggles with depression, was equally transparent with his battles with bereavement.
âThanks, grief,â Oswalt wrote in a Facebook post in August. âThanks for making depression look like the buzzing little bully it always was,â before going on to compare depression to a fourth-grade bully and grief to Jason Statham.
Salenger, 47, and Oswalt, 48, made their love connection common knowledge when they appeared on the red carpet for Edgar Wrightâs âBaby Driverâ in June.
People reports that the pair were introduced through mutual friend Martha Plimpton.
Grant Gershon renews contract with L.A. Opera
The Los Angeles Opera announced Thursday that Grant Gershon, who has held the title resident conductor for the last five years, has renewed his contract through the 2019-20 season.
Gershon made his conducting debut with the company in 2009 with Verdiâs âLa Traviata.â He previously served as chorus master and then chorus director.
Gershon is also artistic director of the Los Angeles Master Chorale, which he has steered for 17 seasons. Last year he became the first conductor to lead performances of the Music Centerâs three classical music resident companies: the L.A. Opera, the Master Chorale and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, all within a two-week period.
âGrant has made a profound impact on L.A. Operaâs artistic profile over the past decade, and I could not be happier that he will continue his extraordinary work here in the seasons to come,â General Director PlĂĄcido Domingo said in the announcement. âWhether heâs conducting a production or preparing our chorus, we have been fortunate to have Grant take part in virtually every mainstage production since 2007.â
FYF Fest publishes set times
Missy Elliott or John Talabot? Motor City Drum Ensemble, Perfume Genius or King Krule? Frank Ocean or [insert would-be replacement headliner here]?
The annual FYF Fest has announced the set times for its upcoming event, which takes place at Exposition Park on the weekend of July 21-23, and fans will have to start wrestling with such first-world concerns as whether to check out Solange or Blonde Redhead.
The 14th annual event, which got its start as a DIY punk festival in Echo Park, continues to expand its range. This yearâs roster will include performances across six stages by artists including Missy Elliott, Bjork, Solange, Frank Ocean, Nine Inch Nails, Erykah Badu and dozens more.
Promoted by FYF and Goldenvoice, the festival is known for its prescience. Over the years itâs helped bring to prominence artists including Mac DeMarco, the Head and the Heart, Joyce Manor and Future Islands, among others.
The biggest question mark? Frank Oceanâs confirmed set. The singer and songwriter has been booked at other festivals this year, but has so far canceled both Sasquatch in Washington and Hangout in Gulf Shores, Ala. Hangout is also co-produced by Goldenvoice.
Whether Ocean will indeed land on FYFâs main stage remains an open question. Although there are no indications that the soul singer is wavering, his track record is spotty. In 2015, Ocean canceled his FYF headlining appearance on less than a weekâs notice; Kanye West jumped in to fill the slot.
The good news is that regardless of Oceanâs ways -- to repeat, heâs given no indication that heâll be a no-show -- the influential rap goddess Missy Elliott hasnât been known to flake on short notice. Her highly anticipated set will be her first U.S. concert since 2008 (not including her social-media-busting Super Bowl cameo with Katy Perry in 2015), and her only scheduled concert of 2017.
Below: The clickable set times for the three-day event.
Andrew Garfield joked that heâs a gay man and some people are upset â or are they?
Andrew Garfield Reveals! Andrew Garfield Admits! Andrew Garfield Confesses! Andrew Garfield Wonât Rule Out!
Yep, thatâs how the headlines are reading in reaction to what appears to be a bit of light-heartedness that the âAngels in Americaâ actor delivered during a recent panel discussion at the National Theatre in London, where heâs portraying Prior Walter in Tony Kushnerâs AIDS-themed play.
The actorâs revelatory confession/admission was that he âwouldnât rule outâ a same-sex relationship. Well, that and he watched a lot of âRuPaulâs Drag Raceâ while researching the role of a gay man.
âAs far as I know, I am not a gay man,â Garfield told an audience member at the chat, according to Gay Times, which attended. âMaybe Iâll have an awakening later in my life, which Iâm sure will be wonderful and Iâll get to explore that part of the garden, but right now Iâm secluded to my area, which is wonderful as well. I adore it, but a big concern was what right do I have to play this wonderful gay role.â
The 33-year-old, who has been known to get very geeky when promoting his projects, shared his commitment to the grueling gig â and his secret weapon.
âMy only time off during rehearsals â every Sunday I would have eight friends over and we would just watch Ru,â he said of âRuPaulâs Drag Race.â âThis is my life outside of this play. I am a gay man right now just without the physical act â thatâs all.â
Of course, the inevitable followed: Andrew Garfield Faces Backlash! Because watching reality TV doesnât help a person understand oppression.
Or maybe it was more of a discussion than a backlash?
At any rate, we now present this awesome video clip of Garfield lip-syncing to âIâm Every Woman,â because â well, like we said, awesome. (Hat tip to People for unearthing it.)
Oh, yeah, thereâs also a tweet or two below the video, offering up an alternate reality in which headlines about What Andrew Garfield Said donât scream quite so loud.
âKevin Hart Dayâ in Philadelphia honors hometown comic on his birthday
Move over, Fresh Prince: Philadelphia is the city of Brotherly Love, cheesesteaks and, now, Kevin Hart.
The Philadelphia-bred comic was regaled in his hometown on Thursday with âKevin Hart Day,â a newly minted honor coinciding with the comedianâs 38th birthday.
The city made an official resolution that July 6 would be dedicated to the comic as âa simple way to show [Hart] gratitudeâ for being a âfantastic ambassador for the City of Philadelphia,â Councilman David Oh, who introduced the measure earlier this year, told Philly.com.
Oh welcomed Hart back to his hometown during the free public celebration, which featured musical performances and the unveiling of a mural on the wall of Maxâs Steaks in north Philly, just a block away from the actorâs childhood home.
Hart was joined onstage by his extended family and thanked the crowds gathered in the rain for allowing them to see âthis amazing day.â
The prolific comic got his start as a stand-up comedian in Philadelphiaâs Laff House in the late 1990s. His career took off in the early 2000s, and he has since headlined five stand-up specials and starred in scores of films and TV shows. The always-working entertainer is next slated to appear in the âJumanjiâ reboot alongside his âCentral Intelligenceâ co-star Dwayne Johnson, Jack Black and Karen Gillan.
The âI Canât Make This Upâ author was recently named 2016âs highest-paid comedian by Forbes magazine, dethroning sitcom star Jerry Seinfeld by earning nearly $90 million from June 2015 to June 2016.
Kesha bounces back on triumphant new song, âPraying,â and announces next album
The pop star Kesha, who since 2014 has been embroiled in a nasty legal battle with her former producer and current label head, Dr. Luke, has issued her first new song in nearly five years. Called âPraying,â itâs a defiant ballad about overcoming adversity that opens with a haunting spoken-word intro.
âAm I dead,â she wonders, âor is this one of those dreams, those horrible dreams that seem like they last forever?â
She continues: âIf there is a God or whatever, something, somewhere, why have I been abandoned by everyone and everything Iâve ever known, Iâve ever loved?â
Itâs the first track from her just-announced new album, âRainbow,â which is to arrive on Aug. 11.
The album is being released on Kemosabe Records, the Dr. Luke-owned imprint that was at the center of lawsuits for the last three years. Kemosabe is distributed by Sony Music Entertainment.
Among those who collaborate with Kesha (born Kesha Sebert) for âRainbowâ are Dolly Parton, who duets with her on the 1980 Pepe Sebert song âOld Flames Canât Hold a Candle to You.â Sebert, who, not coincidentally, is Keshaâs mom, also helped write the Ben Folds-produced title track.
The chart-topping producer-songwriter Ricky Reed (Wallpaper) also contributed. Kesha drafted members of Palm Desert rock band Eagles of Death Metal for a few songs, as well.
Dr. Luke (Lukasz Gottwald), who helped propel Kesha to stardom through his co-production on songs including âTik Tok,â âYour Love Is My Drugâ and âDie Young,â is notably absent from the credits.
That stands to reason. In October 2014, Kesha sued Gottwald in Los Angeles County Superior Court, alleging that he âsexually, physically, verbally and emotionallyâ abused her starting when she was 18. Gottwald denied the charges and counter-sued her in New York, alleging defamation and breach of contract.
In 2016, Kesha dropped her suit, stating in an Instagram post, âI need to get my music out. I have so much to say. This lawsuit is so heavy on my once free spirit, and I can only pray to one day feel that happiness again.â
âPrayingâ is her first musical endeavor in support of that goal.
The video for the song alludes to past turmoil but embeds it within lyrics that address a spurned lover. âWell, you almost had me fooled / Told me that I was nothing without you,â she sings to open.
âYou brought the flames and you put me through hell,â she adds later, and itâs hard not to think that Dr. Luke is in her cross hairs: âI had to learn how to fight for myself / And we both know all the truth I could tell / Iâll just say this is I wish you farewell.â
In a note to fans published on Lena Dunhamâs Lenny Letter, Kesha explained the genesis of âPrayingâ:
âI have channeled my feelings of severe hopelessness and depression, Iâve overcome obstacles, and I have found strength in myself even when it felt out of reach. Iâve found what I had thought was an unobtainable place of peace.
âThis song is about coming to feel empathy for someone else even if they hurt you or scare you. Itâs a song about learning to be proud of the person you are even during low moments when you feel alone. Itâs also about hoping everyone, even someone who hurt you, can heal.â
Viceland drops trailer for James Van Der Beekâs âWhat Would Diplo Do?â
Viceland released a trailer for its first scripted series on Wednesday, and it seems the EDM world may be getting its very own âThis Is Spinal Tapâ this summer.
Written and produced by James Van Der Beek, who also stars as the titlular character, âWhat Would Diplo Do?â offers a mockumentary-style look at the life of Diplo, the superstar producer and member of EDM (electronic dance music) groups Jack Ă and Major Lazer.
Diplo, born Thomas Wesley Pence, also executive produces the series, which rose out of Van Der Beekâs role in a particularly tongue-in-cheek promo for the 2016 Mad Decent Block Party.
The trailer also teases appearances by fellow DJ Dillon Francis and Dora Madison from âFriday Night Lightsâ as well as some comedy veterans in one-time âMADtvâ star Bobby Lee and Groundlings fixture H Michael Croner.
The series debuts on Viceland on Aug. 3. Watch the new trailer here.
âAnd then there were 5â: Lauren Conrad and William Tell welcome baby Liam
Fashion designer and former reality television star Lauren Conrad and husband William Tell welcomed a baby boy on Wednesday, the new mom shared on her website.
Liam James Tell weighed 6 pounds, 14 ounces and was 20 inches long upon his entrance into the world.
âHeâs here!â Conrad wrote in an Instagram post, sharing a precious cross-stitch representing her newly expanded family.
Conrad, 31, and Tell, 37, have been an item since a Valentineâs Day blind date organized by mutual friends in 2012 and married Sept. 13, 2014, at a vineyard in Santa Ynez.
Since making her name on MTVâs âLaguna Beach: The Real Orange County,â and later âThe Hills,â Conrad has built her own fashion and lifestyle brand, in addition to publishing several books.
The addition of a son is exactly what Conrad was hoping for, according to the July cover story of Fit Pregnancy and Baby.
âI really wanted a boy. My husband kept saying, âWe just want a healthy baby.â And Iâd say, âBut a boy would be nice!â âConrad said, explaining that growing up as a tomboy made her feel as though she understood boys.
Though Liam is the first child for both Conrad and Tell, he is not the first addition to their family. Conrad noted in her birth announcement (and cross-stitch) that her family had now grown to five, including rescue pups Chloe and Fitz.
Sorry, puppers. Expect lots of competition for cuddles and cuteness in the future.
A Star Is Born: Sylvester Stallone turns 71 today
Think about what it means to be a destitute actor who refuses to sell a script and molds his own inadequacies into the figure of a boxer. Then look what happened. Rocky entered the fabric of the American subconscious. When you cheer Rocky, you cheer someone fighting an uphill struggle. He had no money, but he had ethics. He had no skill, but he had courage. He touched a nerve that translated into an international myth.
— Sylvester Stallone, 1990
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Can Sly Get Serious?
Reading a new poem, Chance the Rapper chokes up on NPR
NPRâs Tiny Desk concert series is beloved for giving superstar musicians an intimate setting to translate their songs into rather bare-bones live performances.
But when Chance the Rapper showed up to perform, he took âstripped downâ one step further.
In the latest Tiny Desk iteration, which NPR released Wednesday morning, the Chicago-bred rapper delivered a particularly heartrending set amid the Technicolor bookshelves of the NPR music office.
âI didnât know this was actually actually in an office,â he said with the same easygoing candor that has typified much of his charm. âSo, this is ... very uncouth.â
Surrounded by a seven-piece crew â including his Social Experiment collaborators Nico Segal and Greg Landfair Jr. â he moseyed through a soft, stark rendition of âJuke Jamâ from his âColoring Bookâ mixtape. He also debuted a brand-new poem, which he called âThe Other Side.â
âForgive me, I havenât written a poem in a long time,â Chance said, adjusting his T-shirt as he glanced down at his notes scrawled in black marker across several sheets of paper. He had just written the poem on the car ride over from his Washington, D.C., hotel, he said.
âI still have all the keys that are of no use to me,â the poem began. âThey used to, though. On the other side was a mansion on a hill, complete with L.A. pools and fireplaces and a rim made specifically for people that lie about being 6 feet to dunk on.â
The poem, though unrehearsed, was gripping â so much so that, halfway through, Chance himself choked up.
He closed out the set with a cover of Stevie Wonderâs âThey Wonât Go When I Go,â a poignant song from 1974.
Watch Chance the Rapperâs Tiny Desk concert above.
Daniel Dae Kim explains âHawaii Five-0â exit over CBS contract dispute
Daniel Dae Kim has shed light on his abrupt departure from CBSâ âHawaii Five-0â reboot.
âIâm sad to say it is true. I will not be returning to Hawaii Five-0 when production starts next week. Though I made myself available to come back, CBS and I werenât able to agree to terms on a new contract, so I made the difficult choice not to continue,â the actor wrote in a Facebook post early Wednesday morning.
Executive producer Peter Lenkov confirmed last week that Kim and co-star Grace Park, who play supporting roles as cousins Chin Ho Kelly and Kono Kalakaua, respectively, will not be returning for the eighth season of the CBS procedural. At the time, neither Lenkov nor the network revealed what led to the exits.
In addition to the contract dispute, Kim indicated that âequalityâ also was a factor following a report that he was not paid as much as the showâs leads, Alex OâLoughlin and Scott Caan.
âDaniel and Grace have been important and valued members of âHawaii Five-0â for seven seasons,â CBS said in a statement Wednesday regarding Kimâs post. âWe did not want to lose them and tried very hard to keep them with offers for large and significant salary increases. While we could not reach an agreement, we part ways with tremendous respect for their talents on screen, as well as their roles as ambassadors for the show off screen, and with hopes to work with them again in the near future.â
Kim, 48, said that his fellow cast members have âbeen nothing but supportive through this entire processâ and regarded them and the crew as his second family. He also was gracious to Lenkov, CBS and the execs behind the series.
âI will always be grateful for their faith in me to bring Chin Ho Kelly to life. As an Asian American actor, I know first-hand how difficult it is to find opportunities at all, let alone play a well developed, three dimensional character like Chin Ho. I will miss him sincerely,â he said.
âWhat made him even more special is that he was a representative of a place my family and I so dearly love. It has been nothing short of an honor to be able to showcase the beauty and people of Hawaii every week, and I couldnât be prouder to call these islands home. To my local community, mahalo nui loa.â
The âLostâ and â24â alum concluded his message by encouraging fans âto look beyond the disappointment of this moment to the bigger picture.â
âThe path to equality is rarely easy. But I hope you can be excited for the future. I am,â he said.
Kim wonât be taking an acting hiatus for long. He said he has new projects on the horizon and is serving as a producer on ABCâs rookie drama âThe Good Doctor,â which premieres in the fall.
Viewers will be updated on Kim and Parkâs charactersâ fates during the Sept. 29 season premiere, according to previous reports.
Update 6:02 p.m.: This story has been updated with a statement from CBS.
John Blackwell Jr., Princeâs former drummer with the New Power Generation, has died at 43
John Blackwell Jr., who was best known for his work with Prince starting in the early 2000s, has died at age 43, according to an Instagram post from his wife, Yaritza.
She wrote: âMy husband incredible drummer John Blackwell Jr. passed [away] peacefully in my company today. Thanks God for his life and thanks everyone for their support.â
Blackwell had battled brain cancer for more than a year, according to his wife, who regularly updated his fans via social media. In a June 30 post on Instagram and Twitter, she wrote that her husband had been diagnosed with brain cancer while touring in Japan.
Blackwell was the drummer for Princeâs post-Revolution band, the New Power Generation, and played on the artistâs albums going back to âThe Rainbow Childrenâ in 2001. He also toured as Patti Labelleâs drummer, and recorded with former Prince sax player Candy Dulfer.
Meet Zeerak, a new muppet on Afghanistanâs âSesame Streetâ who promotes gender equality
Afghan television executives are taking innovative strides to prompt a change of heart about gender equality, particularly among the nationâs youngsters.
Say hello to Zeerak, a goofy-grinned, bespectacled marionette donning a traditional shalwar kameez and a waistcoat embroidered with Afghanistanâs national colors.
Zeerak is the most recent addition to the cast of âBaghch-e-Simsimâ â Afghanistanâs hugely successful, localized version of âSesame Streetâ â and only the second Afghan muppet to join the ranks of internationally beloved favorites such as Big Bird and Elmo.
The masterminds behind âSesame Streetâ crafted Zeerakâs character for a joint purpose: to teach viewers the value of an education, as well as the value of an educated woman.
The showâs official Twitter account introduced the âSesame Streetâ newbie with a tweet that read: âZeerak is a friendly 4-year-old who admires his big sister, Zari!â (Zari made her âSesame Streetâ debut last year as the showâs first-ever Afghan character.)
The TV showâs producers hope that Zeerakâs reverence for Zari â a sharp, sweet young girl who is largely characterized by her enthusiasm for learning and career-focused ambition â will instill in young boys the idea that womenâs place in society extends beyond the home.
Massood Sanjer, who heads the television network that broadcasts âBaghch-e-Simsim,â believes that introducing a boy character who not only respects his school-going older sister, but actually wants to be like her, will âindirectly teach the kids to love their sisters.â
Thatâll be a lofty feat in Afghanistan, where 85% of the female population receives no formal education and the literacy rate among women is one of the lowest in the world.
But as the only Afghan television program dedicated to children, âBaghch-e-Simsimâ wields the potential for enormous influence. And the show intends to use it.
âPeople ... who have access to TV are watching and know the brand of the character,â Sanjer said in an interview with AFP. âSo it is a very good sign that people love to learn and it is great to use media as an education tool for kids.â
Music streaming shatters records, according to Nielsen Music report
The music industry continues to move headlong into a streaming future, according to Nielsen Musicâs annual midyear report of listening habits.
The report, which was published Wednesday, shows that music streaming platforms such as Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal and others delivered a total of 184.3 billion on-demand audio streams, up from 113.5 billion during the same period a year ago, for an increase of 62%.
Buoyed by the success of superstars such as Drake, Future, Ed Sheeran and the return of Taylor Swiftâs back catalog to major streaming platforms, the services surpassed a milestone in March, when more than 7 billion songs were accessed.
But music streamingâs success came at a cost: total album sales (purchased downloads and physical albums) declined by 18%, which was hastened by a 24% drop in digital track sales and a 20% drop in digital album sales. That number stands to reason: Why download a song when you can stream it for free on YouTube or as part of a platform subscription?
Among the winners in the first half of 2017 were the British pop sensation Sheeran, Compton-bred rapper Kendrick Lamar and Puerto Rican pop star Luis Fonsi. Lamarâs recent album, âDamn,â was at the top of the total album consumption chart, which calculates success based on a formula involving sales and streaming numbers.
Sheeranâs song âThe Shape of Youâ has earned the most on-demand audio streams, accumulating 354 million this year. Lamarâs song âHumbleâ followed with 345 million streams. Fonsiâs collaboration with Justin Bieber and Daddy Yankee, âDespacito,â and Migosâ âBad and Boujeeâ also tallied huge numbers.
Vinyl was another winner in the first half of the year. According to music tracking company BuzzAngle, which also just released its midyear report, sales of the resurgent format increased by 20% over 2016, and accounted for 4.9% of all physical album sales. CD sales dropped by nearly 4%.
Vinyl fans couldnât get enough of the Beatles, according to Nielsen Musicâs report. Their album âSgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Bandâ was the top seller on LP, racking up a relatively meager 39,000 hard copies.
The soundtrack to âLa La Landâ was second, with 33,000 copies sold. Also earning sales in the category were the indie pop band Tennisâ âYours Conditionally,â Princeâs âPurple Rainâ and Amy Winehouseâs âBack to Black.â
Other notable calculations from BuzzAngleâs report included a breakdown of which genres are most popular across streaming platforms.
Hip-hop tracks constitute nearly 25% of all on-demand audio consumption, followed by pop (12.8%), R&B (9.3%) and country (7.2%).
Drake is the most popular streaming artist in the U.S., with a tally of 3.7 billion spins (including audio and video). Coming in second is Future (2.65 billion), followed by Lamar (2.35 billion).
When fans listen to albums, though, they continue to look to the past for the majority of their music. According to BuzzAngleâs report, 51% of streams in 2017 have been for deep catalog titles, compared with 12% for brand new music.
UPDATES
11:44 a.m. This article was updated with new data from BuzzAngleâs midyear report.
This article was originally published at 10:51 a.m.
Disability organization condemns âBlindâ film for casting Alec Baldwin in lead role
The Ruderman Family Foundation, a leading organization advocating on behalf of disabled people, has come out against the forthcoming film âBlind.â The group accuses the movie of âcrip-faceâ â akin to blackface â in its casting of the able-bodied Alec Baldwin as the blind lead.
âAlec Baldwin in âBlindâ is just the latest example of treating disability as a costume,â Jay Ruderman, the foundationâs president, said in a statement. âWe no longer find it acceptable for white actors to portray black characters. Disability as a costume needs to also become universally unacceptable.â
âBlind,â which Vertical Entertainment will release July 14, stars Baldwin as a novelist who lost his wife and his sight in a car crash. Years later, he comes into contact with a married socialite, played by Demi Moore, who is forced to read to him as part of a plea bargain. The two begin a love affair forcing Mooreâs character to choose between the novelist and her husband.
The trailer for the film âBlind,â starring Alec Baldwin, Demi Moore and Dylan McDermott.
Last July, the foundation released its Ruderman White Paper on Employment of Actors With Disabilities in Television. The study found that despite those with disabilities representing nearly 20% of the countryâs population, about 95% of characters with disabilities on television are played by able-bodied actors.
Months later, in November, the organization hosted its first Studio-Wide Roundtable on Disability Inclusion. At that event, Marlee Matlin, perhaps the most visible and acclaimed disabled actress, spoke about the need for Hollywood to give disabled actors a chance.
âThere is something wrong with this picture,â said Matlin, who 30 years ago won an Oscar for her leading role in âChildren of a Lesser God.â âWe as an industry keep talking about diversity â we know we have a problem. But, sadly, when we start speaking about diversity, disability seems to be left out far too often.â
READ MORE:
Marlee Matlin remains a champion for disabled actors, 30 years after winning her Oscar
Disabled actors and advocates plead to Hollywood: âGive us a chance, please!â
Ed Sheeran says trolls drove him off Twitter; Lady Gaga sends her love
Sorry, Twitter, but you wonât have Ed Sheeran to kick around anymore.
At least thatâs what he told British tabloid the Sun on Monday, stating that he had abandoned the platform wholesale.
âI go on it, and thereâs nothing but people saying mean things. Twitterâs a platform for that,â Sheeran said. âOne comment ruins your day. But thatâs why Iâve come off it.â
The British pop star said some of that abuse came from the rabid fan base of Lady Gaga, whose so-called âlittle monstersâ targeted Sheeran after a January interview they perceived as disrespectful to the âBorn This Wayâ singer.
In response to news that Sheeran had abandoned Twitter, Lady Gaga herself took to Instagram to share a photo of the two and expressed her love for the soulful singer, imploring Internet denizens to be more positive and loving.
âNo reason to tear down an artist simply because they are on top,â Gaga wrote in her message posted Tuesday. âWork harder to be kinder everybody. That should be your first duty to humanity.â
Ironically, Sheeranâs widespread popularity has partly made him a target for online haters.
Upon release of his new album, âá,â in March, Sheeran had 16 songs on the UK Top 20 chart. Thatâs a feat so astounding that the Britainâs Official Charts Company had to change its structure, allowing only three songs per artist on the charts in a given week.
Sheeranâs âShape of Youâ also has garnered 184 million streams in the U.K. since its release in January, making it the most streamed song of all time in Britain.
All is not lost for Sheeranâs fans, however. The âGalway Girlâ singer still retains his Twitter account, and images from his Instagram account continue to be cross-posted there.
If nothing else, perhaps Sheeran will return to Twitter to continue to educate the masses on the functionality (and existence) of loopers.
Annette Bening named Venice Film Festivalâs jury president
Four-time Oscar nominee Annette Bening has been named the president of the jury for the 74th Venice Film Festival.
The âAmerican Beautyâ actress, whose other credits include âThe Kids Are All Right,â â20th Century Womenâ and âBugsy,â is among the few women to serve as chair for the Italian festival â and the first in more than a decade.
âIt was time to break with a long list of male presidents and invite a brilliant talented and inspiring woman to chair our international competition jury,â said festival director Alberto Barbera, who recommended Bening for the post to the board of directors.
Catherine Deneuve, Jane Campion and Gong Li were the other female presidents, serving in 2006, 2002 and 1997, respectively. Beningâs âAmerican Beautyâ director Sam Mendes was last yearâs chair.
Barbera praised Beningâs character, saying she will carry out the role âby virtue of her stature, her intellect and the talents she has manifested over the course of her career, in Hollywood, Europe and on the stage.â
âHers is a career marked by always interesting, often daring choices. A sophisticated and instinctive actress, able to portray complex shadings of character, Annette Bening brings to her roles an understating, a warmth and a natural elegance that makes watching her films a wonderful and ever enriching experience. I welcome her to Venice,â Barbera said.
Bening and eight other international celebrity jurors will hand out the awards at the festival, including the Golden Lion for best film and Silver Lion for best director and the grand jury prize.
âIâm honored to be asked to serve as the president of the jury for this yearâs Venice Film Festival,â Bening said in a statement. âI look forward to seeing the movies and working with my fellow jury members to celebrate the best of this yearâs cinema from all over the world.â
The festival runs from Aug. 30 to Sept. 9, and the official lineup of films will be announced in Rome on July 27.
A Star Is Born: RZA turns 48 today
Every time I make a new album, I get better and better. I make the sounds more audible. The weird sounds in the background -- before, they used to be foggy, but now theyâre much clearer. I may do all programmed beats for about a month straight. Then I might do purely sampled tracks for a while. Then youâll catch me in the studio with nothing but live instruments.
— RZA, 2000
FROM THE ARCHIVES: The Head and Heart of a Hip-Hop Clan
From the Archives: Five American movies to watch on Independence Day
What to watch this Fourth of July? There are, of course, those obvious holiday-title perennials, âBorn on the Fourth of Julyâ and âIndependence Dayâ (the misbegotten âIndependence Day: Resurgence,â not so much).
The five films Iâm recommending here offer tougher, more conflicted visions, and some are patriotic precisely because they subject the very notion of patriotism to critical scrutiny.
â25th Hour.â A hilariously profane diatribe attacking every class and color in Americaâs melting pot is the scalding, ultimately bracing centerpiece of this wrenching New York elegy. Itâs the most cathartic of post-9/11 movies, and an âHourâ that may well be Spike Leeâs finest.
A Star Is Born: Eva Marie Saint turns 93 today
Now my yardstick is: âWould I be proud for my grandchildren to see this?â Iâm serious. I guess I want to go down with respect. I donât have to make every dollar in the world. I donât have to live like a very rich person. I have all the things I need, starting with my beautiful family and my grandchildren.
— Eva Marie Saint, 1995
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Eva Marie Saint: Her Independence Is Blessed
âTedious.â âStale.â âUgly croaksâ: All the times L.A. Times got Jim Morrison and the Doors all wrong
Even if hindsight is 20/20, itâs fair to say the Los Angeles Times was never too keen on the Doors, at least not during the bandâs explosive rise out of L.A. in the mid-1960s.
In honor of todayâs anniversary of frontman Jim Morrisonâs death in 1971, we revisited our archives to see how we reviewed the hometown heroesâ local live performances in the â60s and â70s. It wasnât pretty.
âPerhaps Morrison should give up performing, which seems to be an effort for him, and concentrate on reciting and writing poetry,â Donna Chick wrote in The Times in 1968.
Ouch.
Here are all the times we got the Doors wrong (or right, depending on your perspective).
John Mendelson, reviewing a show at Aquarius Theatre, July 21, 1969:
- â âŚan hour and a half of music and/or theatrics that was best described as dull.â
- â[Morrisonâs] singing was quite timid. Each of the many times he confronted a vocal part above his ever-diminishing range he crept cautiously into a lower register, thus avoiding the ugly croaks that were once so much a part of his singing and rendering such screamers as âLight My Fireâ quite unmoving.â
- âRay Manzarek, resplendent in a sweaty undershirt, contributed his usual pedestrian organ attempting throughout the show to deafen where he couldnât excite.â
Linda Matthews, reviewing a show at Shrine Auditorium, Dec. 23, 1967:
- ââTediousâ is the only way to describe the four-hour marathon of hard rock and psychedelia at the Shrine Exposition hall Saturday night.â
- âWhat they were waiting for was the Doors, who finally showed up at midnight and plodded routinely through half an hour of album cuts.â
- âThe Doors, whose usually poetic improvisations are shaded with psycho-analytic overtone, were not at their best.â
Pete Johnson, reviewing a show at Hollywood Bowl, July 5, 1968:
- âThe Doorsâ concert at the Hollywood Bowl Friday night should have been an exciting event, the high point of the career of a local rock quartet whose struggle for success has taken more than two years. Instead it was a bore, the most disappointing pop concert at the Bowl since the Jefferson Airplane and an ill-mannered audience made a shambles of the place last summer.â
- âAgain, the audience was largely to blame, but much of the fault lies with the Doors, particularly lead singer Jim Morrison, for failing to gain a rapport with the crowd.â
(Note: The Doorsâ July 5 date at the Bowl was released on record as âLive at the Hollywood Bowlâ in 1987 and reissued in its entirety in 2012.)
Tom Paegel, reviewing a show at Anaheim Convention Center, July 15, 1967:
- âMorrisonâs voice did not come over as well as it has in past performances. There was a note of hoarseness during several numbers. Words sometimes were inaudible and he seemed to be off-key. Their busy concert schedule may account for this, but the Doors are capable of doing better work.â
Robert Hilburn, reviewing a show at Long Beach Arena, Feb. 7, 1970:
- âIt took a long time Saturday night at the Long Beach Arena to get the Doorsâ fire lighted. For the first hour they seemed far from the sensual, exciting, distinctive rock outfit they once were.â
- âBut the DoorsâŚseemed stale and unexciting.â
Donna Chick, reviewing a show at the Forum, Dec. 14, 1968:
- ââLight My Fire,â one of the songs everyone waited for, was a disappointment. The song dragged on so long that it failed to even vaguely resemble the original recording and instead sounded like a last-minute improvisation.â
- âMorrison seemed content to wallow in the pleasure of his own talent, the audience becoming hostile.â
- âThe audience got something different â the amphibian prince began to recite his own poetry. The effect would have been better in a small smokey room filled with intimate friends. But the majority of the audience who had paid to see the âFantastic Doorâ was obviously disappointed. Applause and cheers were replaced by endless obscenities and irritable silence.â
- âPerhaps Morrison should give up performing, which seems to be an effort for him, and concentrate on reciting and writing poetry. He doesnât need the bulky load of screaming girls to feed his ego â itâs already overweight.â
Report: Kanye West ditches Jay-Zâs Tidal service over money disputes
Kanye West has reportedly cut ties with Jay-Zâs Tidal over money matters and long-simmering unrest.
The âFamousâ rapper, who was among the first artists to join Jayâs streaming service when it launched in 2015, appears to be embroiled in a messy battle with Tidal, according to TMZ, which first reported the rift.
Mr. Kim Kardashian has reportedly been unhappy with the company for a while and says it owes him more than $3 million. He purports that Tidal breached his contract, and his legal team declared an end to their deal several times despite efforts to reconcile, TMZ said.
West, a Chicago-bred rapper, also contends that his 2016 album, âThe Life of Pablo,â attracted 1.5 million new subscribers to the streaming service and that should have earned him a bonus. But Tidal reportedly hasnât paid up, nor did it reimburse him for music videos he made -- ones that he appears to be holding hostage until he gets the money heâs owed.
Incidentally, Jay-Zâs new album, â4:44,â features a diss track trashing his âWatch the Throneâ collaborator. However, according to TMZ, Westâs decision to sever ties predates that song and West had no knowledge of the lyrics before that. (Jay-Zâs lyrics are said to be fueled by Westâs November 2016 concert rant in which he went after the Brooklyn rapper and his wife, BeyoncĂŠ.)
Tidal reportedly insists that West still has an exclusive contract with the company, and if he tried to shop his wares to another service, it would sue him. West will allegedly counter-sue.
Update, 1:15 p.m.: A previous version of this story included tweets from an unverified Twitter account. The tweets have been removed.
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Warner Bros., Tolkien estate end legal scuffle over âLord of the Ringsâ merchandising
A five-year battle between the estate of âLord of the Ringsâ author J.R.R. Tolkien and Warner Bros. over whether Frodo, Gandalf and their pals can be used to push online gambling, among other assorted digital products, has come to an end.
In 2012, the authorâs estate and publisher HarperCollins filed an $80 million lawsuit against Warner Bros., its New Line subsidiary and the Saul Zaentz Co., over merchandising rights granted in an initial 1969 agreement. Warner Bros. turned the âLord of the Ringsâ books into a $5.8-billion global box-office giant.
The deal struck nearly 50 years ago gave its licensees rights to use details from Tolkienâs âLord of the Ringsâ and âThe Hobbitâ novels to sell âarticles of tangible personal property,â excluding books and printed published material.
It did not, the estate and publisher argued in their initial filing, extend rights to market the world of Middle-earth beyond âtangibleâ goods.
Enter: The Internet, social media, downloadable goods, apps and a whole new world of digital moneymaking.
At the center of the 2012 beef were several intangible ways Warner Bros. was allegedly circumventing the restrictions of the agreement to milk the âLord of the Ringsâ franchise digitally and online, via downloadable video games and particularly in the arena of online gambling.
Lawyers for the estate identified an online slot game based on 2001âs âThe Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ringâ and argued that the studioâs additional licensing of the property for use in physical casino games harmed the legacy and reputation of Tolkien, who died in 1973.
They also called out Warner Bros. for registering trademarks or intent to use applications to extend licensing to âhotels, restaurants, travel agencies, ringtones, online/downloadable games and housing developments.â
Attorneys for both parties gave no details of their settlement agreement in a June 29 filing but issued a joint statement declaring an end to the long-running lawsuit.
âThe parties are pleased that they have amicably resolved this matter and look forward to working together in the future.â
John Oliver, four Oscar nominees and a wax Warren G. Harding revisit the presidentâs life and loves
John Oliver and the folks at HBOâs âLast Week Tonightâ have some âhorrifying new friends,â and in the spirit of Hollywood nepotism, theyâve promptly cast one of said pals in a movie.
Weâre talking about President Warren G. Harding, whose wax-figure approximation was one of five âdubiously lifelikeâ former presidents the show â like a few other late-night programs â purchased at auction last January from the now-shuttered Hall of Presidents and First Ladies in Gettysburg, Pa.
âWeâve talked a lot about Harding on this program before,â Oliver said Sunday. âHe was our nationâs 29th president, and his administration was nearly brought down by the Teapot Dome scandal. But heâs perhaps most famous for his sexual exploits.â
As for what we think of the movie, which ostensibly features Campbell Scott, Anna Kendrick, Michael McKean, James Cromwell and Laura Linney? Well ...
There are four Oscar nominees in it. Seriously.
Click below to see for yourself, but be forewarned: The video contains a substantial amount of profanity and innuendo. The short starts around the 4:30 mark.
Maria Menounos reveals brain tumor, steps down from E! News
Maria Menounos is recovering from surgery to remove a tumor the size of a golf ball from her brain. Sheâs also stepping down from E! News, her TV home since 2014, while her mom fights Stage 4 brain cancer.
With her seven-hour surgery nearly a month in the rearview mirror, Menounos went public about her benign meningioma in an interview with People.
âIâd been getting lightheaded on set and having headaches,â she told the magazine, which features her on its cover this week. âMy speech had gotten slurred and I was having difficulty reading the teleprompter.â
She thanked her doctor via Twitter, saying Monday to Dr. Ryan Aronin, âYou were so thorough&thank u for ... not making me feel like I was crazy to think I had a Brain tumor.â
News that she would step down from âE! Newsâ also came Monday, in a statement from E! Entertainment obtained by The Times.
âI had such an amazing time co-hosting with Jason Kennedy and working everyday with the wonderful roster of talent on the show including producers, staff and crew,â Menounos said. âIt was such a special, good-hearted group and one Iâll always consider family.â
But her real family is taking precedence. The 39-year-old said she actually laughed when she heard her diagnosis â because her mother, Litsa, has been battling Stage 4 brain cancer.
âItâs so surreal and crazy and unbelievable that my mom has a brain tumor â and now I have one too?â Menounos said. Surgery on June 8 removed 99.9% of the benign tumor, she said, but sheâs still recovering motor functions. Thereâs a 6% to 7% the tumor could recur, she said. Her momâs cancer is stable, she said.
Mary Tyler Moore, Sheryl Crow and Scott Baioâs wife, Renee, have also had surgery to remove a meningioma, 90% of which are benign. Benign or not, they can cause ancillary problems â like Menounos experienced â depending on their size and location.
âI donât have my balance fully yet. ... My face is still numb,â Menounos told People. âThis is something that takes at least a month of healing, but Iâm getting stronger and stronger every day and Iâll be back to normal very soon.â
E! Entertainment President Adam Stotsky wished her well on behalf of the company.
âOur thoughts and support go out to Maria and her family and we wish them all the best knowing that Maria will tackle this with the same fierce dedication she is known for,â Stotsky said in a statement.
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A Star Is Born: Tom Cruise turns 55 today
Film is about capturing moments that will never happen again. You canât say, âGive me that moment.â It has to happen by itself.
— Tom Cruise, 1999
FROM THE ARCHIVES: âEyesâ in focus
On her first visit to Israel, Britney Spears is mobbed by fans in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem
Tel Aviv wants a piece of Britney Spears.
Make that several pieces.
The pop star arrived in Israel on Sunday and is scheduled to perform at Tel Avivâs Yarkon Park on Monday night. But her first time in Israel led to a brouhaha as her pre-show tour of the city was met with overeager fans practically mobbing her.
While Spears visited holy sites, including the Western Wall, she and her dense security detail attracted throngs of fans who instantly recognized her as she walked the streets dressed in a white T-shirt and sarong.
âHundreds of people jumped on her, and she decided to cancel it all,â a Spears source told Israelâs Ynet. âIt was a huge mess, with hundreds of fans and photographers gathered around her. It was a real âIsraeli celebrationâ; she didnât stop an excursion during any other part of her latest tour. This could only happen here.â
The commotion reportedly prompted her team to also cancel a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu -- a meeting that was never confirmed, the prime ministerâs office later said. Spears was supposed to meet with pediatric cancer patients during her summit with Netanyahu, but the meet-and-greet was rescheduled and the children were invited to the concert, her sources told Ynet.
The prime ministerâs office also denied reports that it issued a statement saying Spears had canceled it, according to Haaretz.
The Tel Aviv performance is the singerâs final stop on her short global tour. Sheâll return to Las Vegas for the final shows in her âPiece of Meâ residency at Planet Hollywood.
Swedish music festival cancels 2018 event amid sexual assault allegations
Organizers of Bravalla, one of Swedenâs largest music festivals, have canceled their 2018 event following reports of sexual assault.
The festival, which hosted nearly 45,000 people over four days ending Saturday in the southern city of Norrkoping, made the decision after a young woman reported being raped Friday, the Associated Press reported. Eleven other reports of sexual abuse were made during the event.
Prime Minister Stefan Lofven told a news conference Sunday that he was upset that young women who wanted to listen to music should be âexposed to this.â He said âthese are disgusting acts. We must stop this.â
Lofven said Sweden needed better policing, more video surveillance and swifter justice for perpetrators.
Sexual assault at music festivals has grown as a concern worldwide. In a Times report, noting how activists are holding festival promoters accountable, one past visitor to the Bonnaroo festival in Tennessee said:
âOne time a guy even lifted up my shirt in the crowd. Thereâs a sense of community and âweâre all in this togetherâ that gets misconstrued at festivals. I remember being younger and not understanding that kind of thing as sexual assault. Society raises everyone to think âboys will be boysâ and it gets excused.â
A Star Is Born: Lindsay Lohan turns 31 today
Iâm not out to be liked by everyone. Iâm here to get my job done and do what I love to do.
— Lindsay Lohan, 2004
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Lohan comes of age in the limelight
Tom Cruiseâs âTop Gun: Maverickâ scheduled for takeoff with âOblivionâ director at the helm
Itâs been a month since Tom Cruise confirmed the news that a âTop Gunâ sequel was finally in the works, and Paramount released more details about the upcoming release Friday.
âTop Gun: Maverickâ has been cleared for landing on July 12, 2019, and a familiar face has signed on to helm the film with âThe Mummyâ star, Deadline reported.
Joseph Kosinski, who worked with Cruise on post-apocalyptic sci-fi film âOblivionâ in 2013, will direct the sequel featuring Cruise reprising the role of Maverick.
Deadline also reported that there are four credited screenwriters on the script for âTop Gun: Maverickâ: Peter Craig, Justin Marks, Ashley Miller and Zack Stentz.
Scheduled for release more than 33 years after the original filmâs debut, little is known about the plot of the sequel beyond Cruiseâs character serving as a flight instructor for hot-shot pilots.
Cruise did excitedly confirm in an interview last month that the film would include aircraft carriers and jets, so fans have those to look forward to.
Quentin Tarantino and Daniela Pick reportedly engaged
Move over, Uma Thurman -- thereâs about to be a new Bride in Quentin Tarantinoâs life.
According to English-language Israeli news site Ynetnews, the iconic director of âPulp Fictionâ and âInglorious Basterdsâ popped the question Friday night in Los Angeles.
âItâs true, weâre very happy and very excited,â Daniela Pick told Ynetnews.
It will be the first marriage for both Tarantino, 54, and Pick, 33.
Though Pick and Tarantino first met and dated in 2009, they reconnected sometime last year -- though its unclear when, as Tarantino was still dating âThe Hateful Eightâ costume designer Courtney Hoffman in December 2015 -- and were seen together in Tel Aviv in January.
News of the engagement first made the rounds on Israeli news sites, including The Times of Israel, whose tweet on the announcement was retweeted by New Beverly Cinema, the Los Angeles theater owned by Tarantino.
Representatives for Tarantino did not immediately respond to The Timesâ request for comment Saturday afternoon.
âWonder Womanâ is officially DCâs domestic box office goddess
âWonder Womanâ continued its impressive box office run this week and proved itself the most successful domestic release in the DC Extended Universe.
The filmâs Thursday night box office take of $2.68 million brought its domestic box office totals to $330.5 million, topping the $330.3 million earned domestically by âBatman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.â
The achievement comes after âWonder Womanâ opened with a significantly slower start than any of its DC Extended Universe brethren. Its $103 million opening weekend was less than the $116 million of âMan of Steelâ (2013), $166 million of âBatman v Supermanâ (2016) and $133 million of âSuicide Squadâ (2016). However the she-ro retained an impressive percentage of moviegoers between its debut and the following weekend. âWonder Womanâ had a 45% drop off in audience attendance, much lower than âBatman v Supermanâsâ whopping 69% decline.
Its significant box office total comes after just 28 days in theaters and heading into the Fourth of July holiday, which could prove extremely lucrative for the indomitable superhero.
Adele cancels final London shows due to vocal cord damage. Will she ever tour again?
A heartbroken Adele took to Twitter on Friday afternoon to inform fans of the cancellation of the final two shows of her current tour.
âTo not complete this milestone in my career is something Iâm struggling to get my head around and I wish that I wasnât having to write this,â the 15-time Grammy winner said in a statement posted on her Twitter feed. âI have changed my life drastically in every way to make sure I got through this tour that started at the beginning of last year. To not be able to finish it is something Iâm really struggling to come to terms with.â
The singer-songwriter was wrapping up her Adele Live 2016 (2017) tour with a final four shows at Wembley Stadium in London, when vocal strain forced her to seek medical advice.
âIâve struggled vocally both nights,â Adele said of her first two shows at Wembley. âI had to push a lot harder than I normally do.â
Upon the medical advice of her doctor, Adele said she is unable to complete the final two shows of her tour.
Though the news of the show cancellations is devastating to fans, there is an even bigger question lurking beneath the surface: Will Adele ever tour again?
As referenced in her Twitter note (which includes profanity), Adele made extensive changes in her life to make this tour work, likely a reference to the fact that the singer really, really does not enjoy touring.
âTouring isnât something Iâm good at,â the 29-year-old from London remarked during a New Zealand concert this year. âApplause makes me feel a bit vulnerable.â
âI donât know if I will ever tour again,â she continued. âThe only reason Iâve toured is you. Iâm not sure if touring is my bag.â
Those same sentiments were echoed in a handwritten letter from Adele included in the program for her final shows in London.
âTouring is a peculiar thing, it doesnât suit me particularly well. Iâm a real homebody and I get so much joy in the small things,â Adele wrote, going on to share that her fans were the only reason she toured in the first place.
âI wanted my final shows to be in London,â she wrote, âbecause I donât know if Iâll ever tour again and so I want my last time to be at home.â
A Star Is Born: Olivia de Havilland turns 101 today
When [Errol Flynnâs] autobiography came out I couldnât resist checking the index and going to the page where he mentioned me. He said he thought he loved me. âThought!â That meant he didnât! I didnât read another word! Then several years ago when I was returning for the release of the DVD version of âGone With the Wind,â I was determined to read more. I began with his second sentence about me in which he said that he decided that he did love me. To think of all those years I didnât believe he did.
— Olivia de Havilland, 2006
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Her return engagement