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  • Sofia Coppola and Bill Murray Hit the Dance Floor to Celebrate Her New Chanel Book

    “I’ve seen museum exhibits and catalogs, but I thought it would be fun to look at how couture is made and not be academic about it,” she says.

    In a toast, Coppola recounted being an awkward 15-year-old with braces when she arrived in Paris for her internship with Chanel. What began as an intimidating but thrilling experience for Coppola has blossomed into a now decades-long collaborative relationship. From being photographed as a teenager by Lagerfeld—a striking portrait of the young artist featured in the book—to working with Chanel to design Priscilla Presley’s iconic wedding dress in her most recent film, Priscilla, the brand has played an instrumental role in her career.

    “My mom’s friend Jeanette in San Francisco used to let me come into her closet, and she would give me her Chanel ballet flats when they were worn out,” Coppola says. “I would get hand-me-downs and I was so thrilled.”

    Now, experiencing a full-circle moment at Wednesday’s dinner, she completed her remarks by calling their latest collaboration “a dream come true.”

    Sunday Rose and Romy MarsPhotograph by Myles Hendrik. Courtesy of Chanel.

    Coppola was also joined by her husband, Phoenix frontman Thomas Mars and their teenage daughters, singer-songwriter (and budding TikTok auteur) Romy Mars, and Cosima Mars, who spotted Thomas from across the room in a sea of models and actors (“Hi, Dad! Miss you!”), making the star-studded affair feel more like a quaint family dinner. Both daughters, Coppola says, often borrow her collection of Chanel shoes and bags, which she subsequently has to track down. “Sometimes [my Chanel] migrates into my daughter’s room,” Coppola says with a laugh.

    Fellow mother-daughter duo, Karen Elson and Scarlett White, were also in attendance, chatting with Kirsten Dunst by the bar as Jon Hamm and his wife, Anna Osceola, sipped cocktails and chatted with Lynn Hirschberg nearby. Eventually, all of the young It girls, like Gracie Abrams, Sunday Rose Urban, Chase Sui Wonders, and Havana Rose Liu were joined by Coppola’s daughters, holding hands and catching up, in a scene that could have been an outtake from one of Coppola’s films.

    Daniela Tijerina

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  • Houston Concert Watch 9/3: Chris Brown, Parker McCollum and More

    From the beginning – and here I mean the beginning of the show, not time, as “Saturday Night Live” hasn’t been on the air that long – SNL has earned a reputation for being a real pressure cooker. Long hours. Sleepless nights. Unreasonable demands. Backstage fights.*

    Add to that a tradition of management treating the careers of performers and writers in a rather cavalier fashion, with loyal team members being dismissed on a whim, often times in a cruel (or at the very least, insensitive) fashion.

    Over the past several days, as SNL ramps up to the debut of its 51st season, a number of personnel have received their walking papers. Cast members Michael Longfellow, Devon Walker and Emil Wakim, along with writer Celeste Yim, are all out. Heidi Gardner announced that she will not return next season, but speculation is that she moved on of her own accord. Walker has stated publicly that the atmosphere at SNL could be “toxic as hell.” Wakim called his firing “a gut punch.”

    According to numerous books and articles (Live from New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live as Told by Its Stars, Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live, Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live), much of SNL’s dysfunction can be laid at the feet of the show’s producer, Lorne Michaels.

    A man who has long cultivated an image of inscrutability, Michaels is someone who, it would seem, likes to play with his employee’s heads in a variety of ways, so as to keep them off-balance. Making people wait in his reception room for hours. Sometimes not telling future cast members that they had been hired. Playing favorites. Putting tremendous pressure on his staff and mandating unreasonable deadlines “because that’s the way we’ve always done it.”

    Michaels is an old dog, so it is highly unlikely that he is going to learn any new tricks. Maybe it’s time for a new dog, er, producer?

    *When Chevy Chase returned to SNL to host an episode after leaving the show at the end of its first season, he managed to get into a fist fight with Bill Murray prior to the broadcast. Chase had been taunting Murray for several days, but it was Murray who got the last word, hollering “Medium talent! Medium talent!” as he and Chase were pulled apart.

    Ticket Alert
    If you like your rock and roll lewd and lascivious, you just might dig a double bill featuring Buckcherry and Nashville Pussy on Sunday, September 28, at Warehouse Live Midtown. Tickets are on sale now for a show that will have something to offend just about everyone.

    Austin’s Uncle Lucius returned to the Heights Theater on Friday, October 10, with its signature blend of rock and roll, country and blues. Tickets are currently on sale, and they are going fast.

    Lorrie Morgan is the real deal, first appearing onstage at the Grand Ole Opry to sing “Paper Roses” when she was only 13. During the ‘90s, she racked up an armload of platinum and gold albums by bringing a touch of pop into a more traditional country sound. Morgan will perform at the Dosey Doe on Saturday, February 21, as part of the venue’s popular “dinner and a show” format.

    Born in Serbia, guitarist Ana Popovic knew her way around a guitar by the time she was a teenager, steeped in American rock and blues. She’s known for her guitar chops, but Popovic is an equally expert vocalist. You can catch her act on Friday, February 22, at the Dosey Doe Big Barn. Again, it’s a dinner / show thing, so go there hungry and ready for some chicken-fried steak.

    Concerts This Week
    The Fixx was among the best of the early MTV bands, with a sleek rock sound and a commanding visual style. But what really distinguished the band was a run of well-crafted songs like “One Thing Leads to Another,” “Red Skies at Night,” “Stand or Fall” and “Saved by Zero.” Significantly, most of the musicians from the Fixx’s golden era are still around, including Cy Curnin (vocals), Jamie West-Oram (guitar), Rupert Greenall (keyboards) and Adam Woods. Return to those thrilling days of yesteryear tonight at the House of Blues.
    Nelly is at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Thursday, on a bill that also includes Chingy and Ja Rule. Early in his career, Nelly set himself apart from the pack by emphasizing his Midwest roots in St. Louis during an era that was dominated by rap from the east coast, the west coast and the south. In addition to his activities as a recording artist, Nelly has appeared in films (The Longest Yard) and television (“CSI: NY”). And if that weren’t enough, Nelly can also boast a third-place finish on “Dancing with the Stars” in 2020.
    The Pixies have long been considered one of the most influential alt-rock bands, inspiring acts like Nirvana and Smashing Pumpkins. Almost 40 years on, the band is still touring with a lineup that includes three of the band’s original members (Black Francis, vocals and guitar; Joey Santiago, guitar; and David Lovering, drums). Catch the Pixies on Saturday at the White Oak Music Hall and learn more by consulting this week’s interview with Santiago in the Houston Press.
    Conroe-born Parker McCollum will be at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Saturday as part of his “What Kind of Man” tour, on a bill that includes Kameron Marlowe and Vincent Mason. The country juggernaut has been on a roll this year, headlining a Rodeo Houston performance at NRG Stadium in March and releasing the album Parker McCollum in June. Traditionalists will be cheered to hear that the new record has a lean production style, harkening back to his debut, The Limestone Kid.
    Several significant rap shows are coming up this week, including performances from Nelly (see above) and Chris Brown (see below), along with NBA YoungBoy at Toyota Center on Saturday. To clarify, “NBA” has nothing to do with the National Basketball Association. It stands for “never broke again.”

    It’s been quite a year so far for YoungBoy. In April, he completed over three years of house arrest stemming from convictions for the distribution and manufacture of drugs, possession of stolen firearms and a federal firearm charge. Well, I supposed it gave him plenty of time to write new material and prep for his current tour. And by the way, don’t despair if you couldn’t get tickets for YoungBoy’s concert this week. He will return to Toyota Center for another show on Tuesday, October 28.
    R&B singer, songwriter, rapper, dancer and actor Chris Brown has been a lightning rod for controversy over the years, but things seem to have calmed down somewhat in his sphere as of late. Brown will bring his “Breezy Bowl XX” event to Daikin Park on Monday, with a lineup that also includes Summer Walker and Bryson Tiller. Brown is pulling out all the stops for this tour, promising a show that features multiple LED screens, pyro, lasers, inflatables and AI-generated video material.

    Tom Richards

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  • 19 Unbelievable But True Stories People Shared That, TBH, I’m Still Having Trouble Believing

    19 Unbelievable But True Stories People Shared That, TBH, I’m Still Having Trouble Believing

    Back in January, we shared a bunch of people’s stories that sound like a lie but are completely true. Well, the comments on that post were filled with even more unbelievable but true stories, so we rounded up some of the best ones. Enjoy!

    Warning: A few of the stories may be disturbing to some readers.

    “When I was around 8, my dog followed my dad to wait with me for my school bus. While they were waiting, my dad saw Fluffy get hit by a truck, so he took him and buried him. We then went out of town for the weekend. But on Sunday evening when we got home, Fluffy was standing on our porch! Dad couldn’t believe it and told us, ‘I buried him on Friday!’ Turns out, Fluffy had just been knocked out cold, so he rose from the dead and waited on us to come home.”

    —Tamara Baker, Facebook

    “My parents were newlyweds in New Jersey and then moved to Illinois after I was born. They lived there my entire childhood and then divorced the year I graduated. My dad moved to Las Vegas, my mom to Texas. When I turned 30, I took a job in South Florida — the first and only member of my family to ever travel there. While at a local Goodwill in search of home furnishings, I found an old book of poetry on a kitchenwares shelf, and I liked the look of the cover, so I bought it for a quarter and took it home with the rest of my stuff. Later that night, I opened the front cover and was shocked to see an inscription in my dad’s unmistakable handwriting. It was his gift to my mom on their third wedding anniversary. My mom had sold it at a yard sale 10 or so years earlier. Both of them have since confirmed this.”

    —Valerie Perreault, Facebook

    3. The haunted apartment:

    “I was having lunch with a new coworker once, and he was telling me about his apartment and how haunted it was. He didn’t tell me where it was, but the haunting sounded familiar — like an apartment I had once lived in. I told him the address, and he turned as white as a sheet. He was living in that same haunted apartment! When I told him a few details only he could know, he freaked out and moved out of the place that very week.”

    “My father had a heart attack many years ago, and I showed up to the hospital at 3 a.m. Given the time and the fact that he was in ICU, I initially wasn’t allowed in. However, I was finally let in by a nurse who calmed me down and allowed me to see my father. He was so kind to our family throughout my dad’s hospital stay. About six months later, my paternal grandmother was in the ICU for a medical issue, and again, we were cared for by this nurse. About a year later, I received a call from my dad telling me to turn on CNN. Turns out, the nurse was Charles Cullen, who famously confessed to murdering up to 40 patients.”

    —Chari Kupstas-Cribb, Facebook

    “A couple of years ago, I was flat broke and in a store spending my last couple of bucks on ramen to get me through pay day. The lottery happened to be high, so I decided to spend my literal last $2 on a ticket. Well, this little old lady walked up behind me, and since the store was packed, I let her go ahead of me in the line. She purchased one quick pick lottery ticket. I then purchased my lottery ticket and ramen and went home. A couple of days later, I saw her on the news: She was the only winner of a $90 million jackpot. If I hadn’t let her in front of me, I would’ve purchased that ticket, and I’d be millionaire right now.”

    “When I was a kid growing up in Texas, we had a cute little weenie dog named Golondrina. One day, the gate was accidentally left open, and she got out and ran away, leaving us heartbroken. A year later, the house next door to ours sold, and our new neighbors, from Kansas, had the cutest little dog — a weenie dog!

    A few months later, after our neighbors had settled in, we started noticing certain things about the dog. I swear it felt like the dog knew us. Every time she saw us, she would whimper uncontrollably. So, one day, my parents finally decided to ask the neighbors how they had gotten the dog. They said they’d found her wondering their neighborhood in Kansas. After taking her to the vet to see if she was chipped, they had posted signs, but no one ever claimed her, so they decided to keep her. My dad told them we had a dog just like theirs, and her name was Golondrina. Turns out she was actually our lost dog, and they still had her collar that confirmed it was her!”

    —Laura Leopard, Facebook

    7. The famous French fry thief:

    “I was eating lunch at Wendy’s when Bill Murray sat down at my table, stole a fry, dipped it into my Frosty, and ate it. He then looked at me and said, ‘Nobody’s gonna believe you,’ and walked away.”

    —Wes Helgeson, Facebook

    “When I was 19, my boyfriend was stabbed to death while breaking up a fight. Two years later, my boyfriend and I moved into a house that was split into two flats. I worked with the girl next door. Turns out, she was my boyfriend’s killer’s then-girlfriend.”

    “I accidentally set my best friend up on a blind date with her ex-husband. I was going out on a first date with a guy, and he asked if I had a friend for his friend, so I invited my best friend along…and then the guys showed up, their jaws dropped, and we had many margaritas.”

    —Alyssa Armand, Facebook

    10. The divine intervention:

    “My grandpa raised me growing up, and his favorite number was 44. Every day, he had me wait with him to watch the clock change to 4:44. His son (my uncle) had died in a car accident, and his football jersey number was 44. Then, my grandpa passed away in 2016. The next year was the worst year of my life. I wasn’t religious, and I didn’t usually pray, but in this instance my car had broken down, and I was registering my grandpa’s truck at the DMV. In the notes app on my phone, I asked for a sign that my life would change or for a guardian angel — it was the first and only prayer I had ever written down on my phone. When the lady called me up, she asked what I wanted the license plate to say — ‘State of Florida,’ ‘In God We Trust,’ or something else — and I said ‘In God We Trust.’ She brought me the license plate, and the number was 4444. I immediately started crying. And my life actually did turn around in every respect.”

    —Catrina Crawford, Facebook

    “When I was 9, I broke my arm and hit my head when I fell off my bike, and a boy in the street helped me up. Twenty years later, I was meeting up with one of my best friend’s friend, and I told the story of that bike accident. Turns out, my best friend’s friend was the boy who picked me up when I fell — and now we’re married.”

    —Karen Hathaway Ochu, Facebook

    12. The family apartment:

    “My boyfriend and I moved into the same apartment my grandparents had lived in after World War II. We didn’t know until my mum was going through their old stuff to make a Remembrance Day piece for her front hall and found an old letter addressed to them at my address.”

    “When I was first married back in the early ’70s, one of the cups from my best dinner set got broken and I couldn’t get an exact replacement. I could get the same color, but in a different shape. Forty years later, after moving 2,800 miles across the country, I went for a meal at a friend’s house and noticed she had cups like the replacement one. After I told her the story about breaking a cup and only being able to get one like hers, she went to her cupboard and brought back a cup like the one I’d broken. She had had the same experience, but in reverse. So 40 years later, we swapped cups and both had a full set again!”

    Mariia Siurtukova via Getty Images

    “I found out that if my husband had been born a girl, his parents had planned to name him Megan Elizabeth. That is my name.”

    “One day, I saw a hummingbird trying to fly out of my garage. It was trapped and couldn’t find the opening. I held out my hand, and it freaking flew right into it! So I took him outside and let him go. A month later in a relative’s garage, another hummingbird was trapped, so I went over there and held out my hand again, and this one landed in my hand too! I of course let him go too. My only thought was that they were exhausted and for some reason felt comfortable with me.”

    —Shelby Zee Jackson, Facebook

    16. The same…everything:

    “My daughter met a little girl at the park last summer, and it turned out that they were both going into kindergarten at the same school. They ended up having the same teacher. This little girl also lives on our street. In fact, when we were house hunting, we toured their house. I also found out that when they were infants, they were both at the same center for a few months. I actually remember meeting her mom when we toured the room. And, very recently, we both discovered that we had gone to the same college and graduated the same year.”

    “My grandmother was traveling to the Philippines with her sister who was ill. When they got off the plane and went into JFK airport, Harry Connick Jr. helped pick her up after she collapsed onto the floor. My grandmother looked up and said, ‘You look a lot like Harry Connick Jr.’ He responded, ‘That’s because I am Harry Connick Jr.’”

    —Rachael Lynnae McGrath, Facebook

    “My wife is a childcare provider, and some years ago one of her clients was a couple with a little girl about 2 years old. They dressed her up as a prisoner in an orange jumpsuit with makeup eyebrows and scars on her face. She became the non-crying half of the ‘timeout changes a man’ meme. The crying boy in the picture is a neighbor.”

    19. And finally, the sophomore year setup:

    “During my sophomore year of high school, my sister and her friend tried to set me up on a blind date with the guy who mowed her parents’ lawn. It never worked out, and we never met. Two years later, during senior year, I met and started dating the guy who I’d eventually marry. A couple years later, we discovered that we were supposed to have been each other’s blind date sophomore year. We’ll have been together 17 years this March!”

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  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Title: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Describe This Movie In One Fake Watchmen Quote:

    DR. MANHATTAN: The year is 1989, I am watching Road House and the new Ghostbusters. The year is 2024, I am watching Road House and the new Ghostbusters.

    Brief Plot Synopsis: Ghooooooooost ice.

    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 2.5 Honk If You’re Horny marquees out of 5.

    Tagline: N/A

    Better Tagline: “There are *non-evil* Spin Doctors CDs?”

    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: When last we left the Grooberson/Spenglers (Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard — if that’s his real name —, McKenna Grace), they were in Oklahoma. So how they came to occupy Ghostbusters HQ in New York City is an exercise best left to those unconcerned with the appearance of an ancient freeze god. Or that same god’s connection to an antiquarian adventurers’ society. And if none of that interests you, just hang around and maybe Venkman will show up.“Critical” Analysis: Most film franchises operate on a principle of diminishing returns. The original entries are (usually rightfully) fondly remembered, and followed by the inevitable cash grab. Subsequent movies fail to capture that initial magic (though may be perfectly okay in their own regard), while the series limps along until the nostalgia is no longer profitable.

    Is Ghostbusters at this stage yet? Probably not, but you can see the end from here. Frozen Empire doesn’t wallow in nostalgia the way Afterlife did, and follows a (mostly) more coherent story, while many of the movie’s good feelings come from the return of the original Busters.

    The weight of the film is largely carried by Grace’s Phoebe, who chafes at being excluded from the specter battling shenanigans because of New York’s strict paranormal child labor laws, or something. Her relationship with a young ghost (Emily Alyn Lind) looking to reunite with her family grounds the story, but is that a good thing? Haven’t all the GB films aside from the original and 2016 been too emotionally heavy?

    And what the hell is Podcast (Logan Kim) doing here? Getting past the fact his name is “Podcast,” why is he in NYC at all? For that matter, why is Trevor’s erstwhile girlfriend Lucky (Celeste O’Connor)? It’s understandable that Callie and the kids would want to return to her father Egon’s haunted home, but these two feel like child endangerment.

    Which is also the angle used by the NYC Mayor (hint: you know him, you loathe him, from such ’80s classics as Die Hard and Real Genius) to threaten to shut the Ghostbusters down for good. It’s slightly less egregious an offense than making Phoebe your main character and relegating her to fourth banana on the movie poster.

    click to enlarge

    A perfect time to say they’re “getting too old for this.”

    As a direct sequel to Afterlife, Frozen Empire’s an improvement. It doesn’t wallow in nostalgia as much, and when it does, it’s with a respectable amount of irreverence. Yes, the original (surviving) Ghostbusters all return, capably aided by Janine (Annie Potts), but with actual meat on the bones for the roles of Ray (Dan Aykroyd) and Winston (Ernie Hudson).

    Bill Murray returns, too. He’s introduced in one of the movie’s many callbacks (the ESP testing scene) but is otherwise used sparingly. It’s definitely the correct approach, as a little Venkman goes a long way.

    At least he’s having a good time. Frozen Empire suffers from the same problem of just about the rest of the GB sequels: it takes itself so seriously. It’s still a comedy, but there’s little of the anarchic whimsy that was a highlight of the 1984 original. In addition to Grace, Coon has the best arc, balancing her kids’ desire to follow in granddad’s footsteps with attempting to be a responsible mother.

    And yet it all feels weirdly abbreviated. The original Ghostbusters went out of its way to show the city-wide effects of a trans-dimensional cross-rip, but aside from one establishing shot, we don’t get any real feel for the effects of an extra-dimensional god releasing the spectral hounds. There’s no rallying the city behind the Ghostbusters (until the end), and no real connection between the rise of our unfriendly god with anyone beyond the movie’s inner circle.

    But writers Jason Reitman and Gil Kenan (who also directs) have their formula. The core of this group can stick around for multiple flicks, or until Wolfhard gets bored or Grace wises up.

    Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire is in theaters today.

    Pete Vonder Haar

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  • We’re Half-Awake in Our Fake (Ghostbusters: Frozen) Empire

    We’re Half-Awake in Our Fake (Ghostbusters: Frozen) Empire

    It would be impossible to look at the latest installment in the Ghostbusters “legacyquel” without ruminating on the franchise’s past. In fact, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire seems to immediately want its audience to reflect not only on the story’s history, but also New York’s itself. Hence, director and co-writer Gil Kenan (writing alongside “Ivan’s boy” Jason Reitman) commences the tale in New York, 1904. Specifically, at the Ghostbusters firehouse, long before it ever became that. Instead, it’s but an ordinary firehouse, where we see firefighters being dispatched to a members only club for the colonialist-type rich fucks who liked to show one another their stolen/pillaged spoils after returning from far-flung, overpriced adventures.

    Among the spoils during this session is a metal sphere (made, more to the point, of copper). One that, unbeknownst to the richies, imprisons the ancient warrior known as Garraka. A supernatural being who gained the power to freeze empires like the one he was proverbially “iced out” of even after fighting for it. In this regard, part of the movie’s message seems to be that you should reward people for the work they do rather than punish them for it, otherwise they end up stealing your sex tape and selling it on a still-germinal internet. Or, in this case, freezing all of New York. 

    Which Garraka came close to doing in 1904, but only managed to freeze the entire room, at which point a mysterious ancient soldier-looking guy (or gal) in the corner appears to have regained control of the orb, startling the investigating firefighters when he opens his eyes abruptly. The “authorities,” of course, are useless in matters such as these (and most others), and end up getting partially frozen as well. 

    That general uselessness is also conveyed in the next scene, when the Spengler family, now consisting of Gary Grooberson (Paul Rudd), Callie Spengler (Carrie Coon), Trevor Spengler (Finn Wolfhard) and Phoebe Spengler (Mckenna Grace), speeds down a busy NYC street wreaking havoc in pursuit of a ghostly dragon. The police watch them whiz by, eager to let them handle it without interfering, lest any blame or responsibility be put on them. Indeed, one of the main distinctions between present-day New York and 80s-era New York is how much more concerned the former is with property damage. If one thought that concern was bad in the 80s, it certainly seems tenfold now. This speaking to both a lack of punk rockness in local government (long gone are the days of Ed Koch) and a general vibe of empty coffers everywhere despite constantly collecting from the public.

    Things in New York have gotten so “by the book,” in fact, that Walter Peck (William Atherton), reprising his role from Ghostbusters, even prevents Phoebe from continuing to work as a Ghostbuster by citing her involvement as child labor. Considering how much ghostbusting has become a major aspect of her identity, this little shutdown enrages her to no end. Because in the time since 2021’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Phoebe has come even more into her own on the ghostbusting front, while Trevor is clearly meant to be the beleaguered do-nothing of the operation. And, despite being certain to tell his mother he’s eighteen now and can’t be told what to do, it would seem he doesn’t know how to function otherwise. 

    In the midst of this dynamic, Gary is trying to find his footing on the shaky ground between “Mother’s boyfriend” and full-on “dad.” This cast of main characters is rounded out by a quartet of OGs from the original films: Ray Stantz (Dan Aykroyd), Winston Zeddemore (Ernie Hudson), Peter Venkman (Bill Murray, whose abuse allegations couldn’t shake him from this gig) and Janine Melnitz (Annie Potts). The latter clearly subbing out for the spot where Egon Spengler (Harold Ramis) used to be (and since his ghost was already used as a gimmick in Afterlife, Melnitz was up to bat). 

    As if that weren’t already enough main characters to “service,” so to speak, another important character, Nadeem Razmaadi (Kumail Nanjiani), is introduced as the “Firemaster”—an obvious nod to the Keymaster role that Louis Tully (Rick Moranis) took on in 1984’s Ghostbusters. Then there is Phoebe’s new ghost friend, Melody (Emily Alyn Lind, who also appears in another New York-related reboot, Gossip Girl). She makes Phoebe’s acquaintance after trying to scare her during a game of ghost chess in Washington Square Park (miraculously deserted at night, even though it never is in real life). And it doesn’t take long for things between them to quickly start leaning toward a sexual tension vibe, just one of many “modern updates” to the franchise. 

    Somewhere in between all these cast members is stuffed yet another character: New York. Because Ghostbusters is to NYC as Sex and the City is—it would be difficult to reconcile one without the other (though that’s what audiences did for Afterlife). And yet, perhaps the only truly standout scenes involving the city from Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire are, as we already saw in the trailer, the moment when the lion of the NYPL (who, what do you know, additionally cameos in the Sex and the City movie) comes to life and attacks and the moment when the Wonder Wheel is stopped, just before those frolicking in the dubious waters of Coney Island are sent running for the sand again as the “death chill” invoked from Garraka proceeds to freeze everything. Unfortunately, Bananarama’s “Cruel Summer” is only playing in the trailer and not the actual movie when this all goes down. 

    As for the buildup to Garraka’s inevitable unleashing from the sphere, which is sold to Ray by Nadeem, who mentions it was part of his now-dead grandma’s collection, it’s filled with ominous forewarnings. Including the fact that the Containment Unit is starting to act a bit, let’s say, fickle when additional ghosts are deposited. Phoebe, realizing that the chamber hasn’t been “cleansed” since it was first installed, asks the valid question of whether or not anyone considered what that might result in without a backup plan. Melnitz is the first to quip, “It was the 80s, people weren’t thinkin’ too much about the future.” Except, apparently, Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale when they wrote Back to the Future. Faint allusions to the headier days of NYC life are also made by Melnitz when she says that a bunch of homeless people in the 90s ripped off any copper they might have had at the firehouse. Brass—another metal agent known for trapping demonic and supernatural forces—will have to do for outfitting the proton packs in a way that will have any kind of effect on Garraka. Specifically, the brass Phoebe siphons from the pole they usually slide down when there’s a specter-related emergency. 

    While there is some sense of “all hell breaking loose” (even though it’s ice we’re talking about), there’s also a generally blasé attitude about the bizarre goings-on. Even when the lion comes to life at the New York Public Library, there isn’t that much shock about it from any passersby. This portrayal being almost like a subconscious nod to how desensitized New Yorkers have become to all calamities. Half-awake in their increasingly fake empire, as it were (side note: never forget the on-the-nose absurdity of Barack Obama actually using an instrumental version of The National’s “Fake Empire” for an election campaign video—of which Aaron Dessner remarked, “When they first asked permission to use ‘Fake Empire’ we wondered, ‘Do they know it’s about how fucked up America is and wanting to leave?’”). 

    But perhaps the threat of The Day After Tomorrow-esque plot of Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire could be enough to shake them from their half-awake reverie (for, yes, one can’t help but feel a subliminal climate change message here). If not, perhaps there are worse fates than freezing to death. Like OD’ing on nostalgia because looking to the future seems to be a lost cause. To put it in The National lead vocalist Matt Berninger’s words, “…you can’t deal with the reality of what’s really going on, so let’s just pretend that the world’s full of bluebirds and ice skating.” Oh so much ice skating in this particular scenario.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire” unites original stars with new generation – CBS News


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    The iconic Ghostbusters team reunites in “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire,” blending the original cast with fresh talent. Paul Rudd and McKenna Grace join veterans like Bill Murray, Ernie Hudson, Annie Potts and Dan Aykroyd, with Grace playing the granddaughter of Harold Ramis’ character, Egon Spengler. They join “CBS Mornings” to talk about how the new film mixes nostalgia with new faces.

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  • Woodstock Willie does not see shadow on Groundhog Day, predicts early spring

    Woodstock Willie does not see shadow on Groundhog Day, predicts early spring


    ByABC7 Chicago Digital Team

    Friday, February 2, 2024 1:26PM

    Woodstock Willie predicts early spring

    Woodstock Willie did not see his shadow on Groundhog Day, predicting an early spring.

    WLS

    WOODSTOCK Ill. (WLS) — It’s Groundhog Day and that means Woodstock Willie gave his annual prediction on the weather.

    Willie did not see his shadow, which means it will be an early spring.

    Last year, Willie predicted six more weeks of winter but called an early spring the year before.

    Meanwhile in Punxatawney, Phil did not see his shadow, signaling an early spring.

    The movie “Groundhog Day” was filmed in Woodstock.

    Other Groundhog Day activities in Woodstock include a breakfast, walking tours, showings of the movie “Groundhog Day” and a “Cocktails with Willie” event.

    For more information, visit www.woodstockgroundhog.org.

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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  • Who Is Krylar? Bill Murray’s Krylar, Explained – The Mary Sue

    Who Is Krylar? Bill Murray’s Krylar, Explained – The Mary Sue

    Bill Murray as Krylar in Ant-Man: Quantumania.

    It’s okay, I hadn’t heard of him either.

    I meant Krylar. Wait … did you think I meant Bill Murray? Ground Hog Day‘s Bill Murray? Bill Murray from the seminal film Ghostbusters? If you don’t know who Billy Murray is I’m not sure if you should crawl out from under the rock you’ve been living under or stay there forever because I don’t want to make your acquaintance.

    If you meant Krylar, we’re cool. You may have heard the name “Krylar” kicking around the internet like a tin can in a back alley. He’s gonna be in the new movie Ant Man and The Wasp: Quantumania. Which is super weird because he isn’t even an Ant-Man character.

    So Who The %^&# Is Krylar Anyway?

    Kylar is a nobody. I’m not being mean (okay I’m being a little mean) but he seriously isn’t important. He has appeared in ONE comic, and that’s The Incredible Hulk #156 from 1972. And he’s only in like two panels. His impact on the Marvel Universe is smaller than the subatomic electrons and quarks that Ant-Man will no doubt be screwing around with in this upcoming film. I mean he’s literally killed off in the exact same scene that he’s introduced in. While that is comic gold, it’s unclear as to why one of the world’s most iconic funnymen would be cast in such a seemingly minuscule role.

    Or is it?

    Krylar is basically a blank slate. No one has heard of him. He’s a teensey tiny little scientist on the microscopic planet of K’ai. This means that audiences don’t have any preconceived notions about the character. There are no fanboys to get pissed off about Bill Murray’s casting because this character doesn’t have any fanboys. Bill Murray, improvisational god that he is, will be able to do whatever he wants with this character and no one can stop him. The MCU is handing Bill Murray a check for a gajillion dollars and saying “do whatever the hell you want” and honestly I’m here for it. We don’t know if Krylar will be absolutely essential to the plot. We don’t know if he’ll only appear in one scene. We don’t know if he’s going to be a gag character that’s in the film for all of ten seconds. The only thing that we do know is that whatever he does it’s gonna be funny. What more could you ask for? Nothing.

    (Featured Image: Focus Features)

    The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—

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  • Everyone Who Has Publicly Accused Bill Murray of Misconduct

    Everyone Who Has Publicly Accused Bill Murray of Misconduct

    Green was just nine years old when he appeared on Saturday Night Live, where he says he had an unpleasant encounter with Murray backstage. On the YouTube show Good Mythical Morning, Green alleged that Murray “made a big fuss” about him sitting on the arm of his chair. “I was like, ‘That is absurd. I am sitting on the arm of this couch. There are several lengths of this sofa. Kindly eff off.’ And he was like, ‘That’s my chair.’” Then, Green said, Murray picked him up by his ankles and dangled him over a trash can while saying, “The trash goes in the trash can.” 

    “I was screaming, and I swung my arms, flailed wildly—full contact with his balls,” Green recalled. “He dropped me in the trash can, the trash can falls over. I was horrified. I ran away, hid under the table in my dressing room, and just cried.” Murray hasn’t addressed Green’s allegations.

    Anjelica Huston

    Oscar winner Anjelica Huston described Murray as “a shit” after working with him on Wes Anderson’s 2004 film The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou. In 2019, Huston told Vulture that while filming, Murray invited everyone in the cast except her to dinner. “I was really hurt,” she continued. “And then I think we met again in Florence, because that movie was shot all over Italy, and we were doing a scene at Gore Vidal’s house in Ravello, and [Murray] said, ‘Hey, how’ve you been? I missed you.’ I said, ‘You’re full of shit. You didn’t miss me.’ He looked all confused for a moment.” However, Huston says that Murray showed up at the funeral of her late husband, Robert Graham, and that Murray “couldn’t have been nicer that day.” “He showed up,” she said. “A lot of people didn’t.”

    Solange Knowles

    Murray’s alleged misdeeds at SNL continued as recently as 2016, when he appeared as a special guest. At the taping, Murray allegedly grabbed Solange Knowles’s hair, repeatedly asking the singer if her hair was a wig just after she had performed her song “Don’t Touch My Hair” as the week’s musical guest. While Solange has never publicly accused Murray of doing this, she liked tweets describing the incident from TV writer and producer Judnick Mayard, who witnessed the interaction. “Your yearly reminder that I saw Bill Murray put both his hands into Solange’s scalp after asking her three times if her hair was a wig or not,” wrote Mayard, in a tweet liked by Solange. Murray has yet to comment on these allegations.

    Lucy Liu

    Charlie’s Angels star Liu claims that Murray hurled “inexcusable and unacceptable” comments at her during a rehearsal on the set of the 2000 action-comedy, after a scene the pair was filming was reworked without his knowledge. Per The Times, Murray allegedly told Liu that she “couldn’t act” and Liu responded by allegedly throwing punches at the comedian. “I stood up for myself, and I don’t regret it,” she said. “Because no matter how low on the totem pole you may be or wherever you came from, there’s no need to condescend or to put other people down.” Liu told Deadline in 2021 that she has “nothing against Bill Murray” and the two saw each other at a Saturday Night Live reunion and he was “perfectly nice.” Murray shared his version of events with The Times in 2009, saying, “Look, I will dismiss you completely if you are unprofessional and working with me. When our relationship is professional, and you’re not getting that done, forget it.”

    McG

    Charlie’s Angels director McG (whose full name is Joseph McGinty Nichol) also apparently had his own issues with Murray on set, claiming Murray headbutted him while they were filming. “I’ve been headbutted by an A-list star. Square in the head,” Nichol told The Guardian in May 2009. “An inch later and my nose would have been obliterated.” Murray, however, claims this is completely false. “That’s bulls—! That’s complete crap!” he told The Times. “I don’t know why he made that story up. He has a very active imagination.”

    Jennifer Butler Murray

    During their divorce proceedings, Murray’s ex-wife Jennifer Butler Murray accused the actor of assault, alleging that the Lost in Translation star hit her in the face in November 2007 and told her she’s “lucky he didn’t kill her.” In the filing, Butler Murray also accused her ex-husband of “adultery, addiction to marijuana and alcohol, abusive behavior…sexual addictions and frequent abandonment.” At the time, Murray’s attorney, John McDougall, didn’t respond to the allegations made by Murray’s wife but released a statement regarding the divorce. “Bill Murray is deeply saddened by the breakup of his marriage with Jennifer,” said McDougall. “He and his wife made loving parents, and they are committed to the best interests of their children.” In 2008, their divorce was finalized and Butler Murray was granted primary custody of their four children.

    Harold Ramis 

    Murray collaborated with late actor Harold Ramis on Ghostbusters, Caddyshack, and Meatballs without any apparent issues, but the duo reportedly had a falling-out while Ramis was directing Murray in Groundhog Day. Ramis’s daughter Violet Ramis Stiel detailed her father and Murray’s thorny relationship in Ghostbuster’s Daughter: Life With My Dad, Harold Ramis, writing that the pair had multiple arguments on set, including one incident where Ramis grabbed Murray by the collar, and shoved him up against a wall. “Bill was going through a difficult time in his personal life, and he and my dad were not seeing eye to eye on the tone of the film,” Stiel said, and revealed that Murray “completely shut my dad out…for the next twenty-plus years.” According to Stiel’s book, Murray reportedly attempted to reconcile with Ramis just before his death in 2014.

    Rob Schneider

    Another entry in the Murray-misbehaving-at-SNL annals, Rob Schneider said that Murray “absolutely hated” the cast when he returned to host in 1993. “He wasn’t very nice to us,” said Schneider on SiriusXM’s Jim Norton & Sam Roberts Show. “He hated us on Saturday Night Live when he hosted. Absolutely hated us. I mean, seething…. It was just naked rage.” Schneider went on to say Murray seemed to have a particular distaste for cast members Adam Sandler and Chris Farley. “[He] really hated Sandler,” Schneider said, speculating that Sandler’s comedy just wasn’t his “groove.” Schneider rationalized a reason why Murray, “hated Chris Farley with a passion,” suggesting that it might have had to do with Farley’s similarities with Murray’s friend and SNL costar John Belushi, both of whom died of drug overdoses at the age of 33. “I want to believe that it’s because Chris thought it was cool to be Belushi, who [was] his friend who he saw die, that he thought it was cool to be that out of control. That’s my interpretation, but I don’t really know. I don’t believe it. I only believe it 50%.”

    Laura Ziskin

    A producer on Bill Murray’s What About Bob?, Laura Ziskin said that she butted heads (metaphorically) with Murray and that Murray once threw her in a lake while they were filming, albeit in jest. “Bill also threatened to throw me across the parking lot and then broke my sunglasses and threw them across the parking lot,” she said in a 2003 interview with The Baltimore Sun. “I was furious and outraged at the time, but having produced a dozen movies, I can safely say it is not common behavior.” Murray did not comment on the allegations at the time.

    Chris Murphy

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