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Tag: Hollywood

  • How Celebrity Surgeon Scammer Paolo Macchiarini Fooled So Many for So Long

    How Celebrity Surgeon Scammer Paolo Macchiarini Fooled So Many for So Long

    Seven years ago, world-renowned surgeon Paolo Macchiarini was the subject of an ongoing Vanity Fair investigation. He had seduced award-winning NBC producer Benita Alexander while she was making a special about him, proposed, and promised her a wedding officiated by Pope Francis and attended by political A-listers. It was only after her designer wedding gown was made that Alexander learned Macchiarini was still married to his wife, and seemingly had no association with the famous names on their guest list.

    Vanity Fair contributor Adam Ciralsky was in the midst of reporting the story for this magazine in the fall of 2015 when he turned to Dr. Ronald Schouten, a Harvard psychiatry professor. Ciralsky sought expert insight into the kind of fabulist who would invent and engage in such an audacious lie.

    “I laid out the story to him, and he said, ‘Anybody who does this in their private life engages in the same conduct in their professional life,” recalls Ciralsky, in a phone call with Vanity Fair. “I think you ought to take a hard look at his CVs.”

    That was the turning point in the story for Ciralsky, a former CIA lawyer who soon learned that Macchiarini was more dangerous as a surgeon than a suitor. He found that Macchiarini had grossly embellished his résumé, claiming medical degrees and experience he didn’t have, and was performing what he claimed were groundbreaking (but were actually untested) thoracic surgeries on patients. 

    As Ciralsky puts it, “He was operating all over the world, spinning yarns about being part of a VIP surgical ring that operated on heads of state, claiming to have been the doctor for at least one, if not two, popes, and wrote papers about a technique that was not only unproven, but had been totally untested on animals.” Referring to his untested thoracic surgery, Ciralsky says, “This is a man who engaged in human experimentation.”

    After the Vanity Fair piece was published, Macchiarini was fired from Sweden’s Karolinska Institute, home of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, and, incredulously, the surgeon’s employer at the time. Two higher-ups at the institute, who were involved in keeping Macchiarini employed, resigned. Within a few years, Sweden reopened an investigation into Macchiarini’s surgeries, which led to a conviction for gross assault against three of his patients. Macchiarini currently awaits a prison sentence of more than two years.

    Nearly a decade later, the story of an apparent psychopath with a scalpel is inspiring multiple pop-culture adaptations. On Thursday, Peacock premieres two projects about Macchiarini: the second season of the scripted anthology series Dr. Death, starring Edgar Ramirez as the surgeon and Mandy Moore as Alexander; and the documentary Dr. Death: Cutthroat Conman. (Ciralsky is an executive producer on both.) Last month, Netflix gave the story its own go in Bad Surgeon: Love Under the Knife, a project in which Alexander participated. (Previously, Alexander executive produced the TV special He Lied About Everything.) Macchiarini’s crimes have even inspired a Swedish opera.

    Edgar Ramirez as Macchiarini and Mandy Moore as Alexander in Peacock’s second season of Dr. Death

    Courtesy of Peacock.

    Julie Miller

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  • These Coffee Table Books Make the Perfect Gift for the Pop-Culture Lover in Your Life

    These Coffee Table Books Make the Perfect Gift for the Pop-Culture Lover in Your Life

    If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission.

    Sofia Coppola fans can finally get a little closer to the inside of the famed director’s mind — or, more literally, a peek at the self-proclaimed mess she creates while in the process of filmmaking.

    One of the best art books released this year was “Sofia Coppola Archive: 1999-2023,” which offers a visual account of Coppola’s entire career, personal archives and ephemera. The book brims with photos of miscellaneous items that now boast nostalgic value — from a poster of the Sundance premiere of “Virgin Suicides” to a marked-up copy of the Vanity Fair article that inspired “The Bling Ring.” It also includes an extensive first look at her latest biopic on Priscilla Presley, “Priscilla.”

    Aside from the “Sofia Coppola Archive,” there are dozens of coffee table books for movies and TV lovers that make the perfect gift this holiday season.

    From the “Sofia Coppola Archive” to Spike Lee’s best-selling “Spike,” check out the best pop-culture coffee table books to gift this year. 

    ‘Sofia Coppola Archive: 1999-2023’

    Ahead of Coppola’s eighth feature film “Priscilla,” the famed director is publishing a book tracking her prolific, decades-long career. The art book will be filled with behind-the-scenes photos and ephemera from her most popular films — from shots of Kirsten Dunst on the set of “The Virgin Suicides” to an extensive first look at her upcoming biopic on Priscilla Presley.

    Sofia Coppola Archive $65 Buy Now

    ‘Spike’

    Lee’s  360-page photo book spans the prolific director’s life and career to date, packed with behind-the-scenes images from his most impactful films, never-before-seen photographs by Lee’s brother David Lee and insider images that immerse the reader into the director’s creative process and cultural impact. All of the inspiring imagery and visual storytelling is packed inside a gorgeous fuschia cover, overlaid with a unique typographic design inspired by the LOVE/HATE brass rings in”Do The Right Thing” that any Spike Lee fan will recognize and appreciate. 

    Best Wishes, Warmest Regards: The Story of Schitt’s Creek

    Already a #1 bestseller on Amazon, Dan and Eugene Levy’s forthcoming book “Best Wishes, Warmest Regards,” out Oct. 26, chronicles the the life of the beloved sitcom. At 350 pages, the collector’s item is broken into season-specific and themed sections, including personal essays from cast members, Q&A’s and behind-the-scenes set photos.

    The Art and Soul of Dune

    The “Dune” companion book, which releases the same day as the blockbuster film, is perfect for fans of Frank Herbert’s epic sci-fi novels. Written by “Dune” executive producer Tanya Lapointe, with a forward by Denis Villeneuve, the 240-page book offers unparalleled insight into the making of the film. The pages include exclusive interviews with stars such as Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson and Oscar Isaac, in addition to details about the film’s costume design, sets and editing process.

    Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

    Covering everything from the silent years to the rise of modern film in the 1960s, it includes rare and previously unpublished interviews with some of the biggest stars, including Mickey Rooney, Kirk Douglas, Jane Fonda, Julie Andrews and an excerpt from Richard Burton’s final interview. It examines the studio system, Hollywood stars plucked from obscurity and every side of old glamour. There are rare archival photographs from on set and behind the scenes, ranging from musicals to Westerns.

    Criterion Designs

    The peak coffee table book for any true cinephile, The Criterion Collection’s official design book is a showcase of some of the most influential films in history, from avante-garde experiments to big-budget blockbusters. In addition to a complete gallery of every Criterion cover since the collection’s first laserdisc in 1984, the 300-page book features supplemental art, never-before-seen sketches and concept art.

    Tachen/Amazon

    A celebration of the story of Stan Lee. This gorgeous and lengthy look chronicles the history of man who helped launch Marvel and so many treasured Marvel characters. A must have for serious comic book fans, and a lovely addition to the coffee table that add just the right of geek chic to your book collection.

    Read More: Best Gifts for Marvel Fans 

    The Road to Marvel’s Avengers: Infinity War

    The MCU has only grown bigger in the past year, making it the perfect time to give Marvel fans this comprehensive look into the inimitable franchise. The 2018 book, released in tandem with “Infinity War,” celebrates the characters and concepts that converged in the iconic film.

    This Was Hollywood: Forgotten Stars and Stories

    Amazon

    Authored by the woman behind the popular @ThisWasHollywood Instagram account, this in-depth look into the real world of classic Hollywood is backed by Turner Classic Movies. Come for the history lessons, fascinating backstories, historical ads and images stay for Puzzums, “the cat who conquered Hollywood.”

    Amazon

    A gorgeous exploration at the elaborate backdrops from your Hollywood favorites. Each painted backdrop a masterpiece onto its own, this is the definitive collection of the most astounding cinema landscapes. Including notes on “The Wizard of Oz” “The Sound of Music,” “Cleopatra” and more.

    Paul Thomas Anderson: Masterworks

    A master class of the masterworks of Paul Thomas Anderson. Page through the director’s entire film career starting at “Hard Eight,” into “Boogie Nights,” “Magnolia,” “Punch Drunk Love,” “There Will Be Blood,” “The Master,” “Inherent Vice” to “Phantom Thread.” And yes, there is a section dedicated to his music video work as well and earlier short films.

    Tachen/Amazon

    Minimal Film

    Amazon

    Your favorite films deconstructed into minimal representations of their cinematic impact. This art book, designed by Matteo Civaschi includes art house wonders to blockbusters. From “E.T.” to “Jurassic Park” to “Psycho” see how this artist translates the screen to the page.

    Amazon

    Authored and curated by the genius himself, explore the early development of Hayao Miyazaki’s masterpiece “My Neighbor Totoro.” View the origin of the beloved Miyazaki world with early concept art and cell renderings. Read lengthy interviews with Miyazaki and his collaborators and fall in love with Totoro all over again.

    The Art of the Venture Brothers

    Amazon

    ‘The Venture Bros.’ reign at Adult Swim might be over but the legacy will live on, perhaps on a streaming service but definitely in this art book. Authored by Ken Plume the book boasts an introduction by Patton Oswalt and long conversations with the series co-creators Jackson Publick and Doc Hammer.

    Steven Universe: End of an Era

    Amazon

    Celebrate the conclusion of “Steven Universe” a lovely cartoon about family, love and space gems who fight other space gems to protect the Earth. With art and interviews from the creator Rebecca Sugar, this book extends the life of this treasured animated series.

    The Art of Pixar: The Complete Color Scripts and Select Art from 25 Years of Animation

    Courtesy of Amazon

    A must for any fan of animation, this book explores the world of Pixar over the last 25 years, taking a deep dive into both shorts and feature films. From classics like “Toy Story” and “A Bug’s Life” to newer releases like “Up” and “Cars 2,” it delves into the directors, writers and team of artists behind the scenes. Sharing the complete scripts in color and development art, it offers a glimpse at rare artwork and insider info.

    The Art of Horror Movies: An Illustrated History

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Don’t read this one before bed! A must for horror movie lovers, this illustrated tome captures the thrill of suspense on every page, making it one of the best coffee table books on movies for horror fans. Chronologically spanning the entire history of horror films, from the silent to the present, it contains over 600 rare images from a range of sources, including posters, lobby cards, advertising, promotional items, tie-in books and magazines, and original artwork. Director and screenwriter John Landis, of “An American Werewolf in London,” wrote the foreword.

    Read More: Best Gifts for Horror Fans

    Moments That Made the Movies

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Every great movie has that scene that just sticks in your head forever. This book captures 72 of them from films over a period of 100 years. Each one will instantly bring you back to that scene, such as the romantic moment between Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in “Casablanca” and when Jack Nicholson bursts through the door with an ax in “The Shining,” as well as scenes from “Citizen Kane,” “Sunset Boulevard,” “The Red Shoes,” “The Piano Teacher” and “Burn After Reading.” Each is accompanied by a thoughtful essay, explaining its significance and role in film history, deftly written by David Thomson.

    Cinemaps: An Atlas of 35 Great Movies

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Who knew that cartography and cinema made such a fascinating combination? This creative book applies mapmaking to 35 of the best movies of all time, so you can follow your favorite characters along on their iconic journeys. Join Indiana Jones in his adventures in “Raiders of the Lost Ark” from Nepal to Cairo, Marty McFly through the Hill Valley of 1955 and 1985 in “Back to the Future” and Jack Torrance through the hallways of the Overlook Hotel in “The Shining.” You can also navigate through “King Kong,” “The Princess Bride,” “North by Northwest,” “Fargo,” “Pulp Fiction” and “The Breakfast Club.” Each film has a hand-painted 9-inch-by-12-inch map in great detail accompanied by essays and trivia from each movie.

    The Wes Anderson Collection

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Wes Anderson doesn’t just make movies — he creates entire universes on the sets of his films. From the super saturated colors to the incredible costumes to the whimsical set decorations, every single detail is unique and intricately planned. The essence of a few of his beloved films — “Bottle Rocket,” “Rushmore,” “The Royal Tenenbaums,” “The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou,” “The Darjeeling Limited,” “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and “Moonrise Kingdom” — is captured in this New York Times bestselling overview. The book is written by film and television critic Matt Zoller Seitz with an introduction by Michael Chabon. And if you want more, check out this charming photo collection of real life landscapes that are “Accidentally Wes Andrerson.” and more Wes Anderson-themed gifts here. 

    ‘Star Wars’ Art: Ralph McQuarrie

    Courtesy of Amazon

    The galaxy far, far away will seem a lot closer once you have this collection on your coffee table. “Star Wars” forever changed the way moves are made and that goes beyond just science fiction films. George Lucas brought incredible innovation to the entire film industry. These books showcase the complete artwork of Ralph McQuarrie, the artist who turned the ideas of Lucas into tangible imagery, ranging from C-3PO and R2-D2 to the Millennium Falcon to Darth Vader’s helmet. McQuarrie is undoubtedly the most influential artist in the history of “Star Wars” and these volumes showcase his conceptual paintings, costume designs, storyboards, matte paintings, posters, book covers, album covers and even Lucasfilm’s annual holiday cards. There are also rare unpublished interviews and tidbits from McQuarrie’s colleagues on the art.

    Read More: The Best Intergalactic Gifts for ‘Star Wars’ Fans 

    Courtesy of Amazon

    Any film geek worth their salt knows about Mondo. If you’ve ever treasured a stylized movie poster or clever arty nod to current and classic film, you’ve probably played homage to a Mondo print. And now you can view them all in one massive collection of Monday classics.

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  • Hollywood Is Hiding Its Musicals

    Hollywood Is Hiding Its Musicals

    In 2023, one never knew when and where a musical might appear. The Marvels mixed in a musical sequence when Carol Danvers and Co. visit the planet Aladna, whose inhabitants converse solely in song and dance. Yellowjackets made a mini-musical inside the mind of Misty, who imagines the scene while suspended in a sensory deprivation tank. Doctor Who gave us goblins singing about eating a baby. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds committed to the bit best by airing a full musical episode.

    When musical interludes pop up in unexpected places, such as non-musical movies and shows, it makes sense that we’re surprised. But this year, even full-on movie musicals were liable to sneak up on us. There’s a reason musicals suddenly seemed so stealthy: Movie studios didn’t want us to see them coming. There’s a musical cover-up happening here.

    Wonka comes out Friday, and by now, you probably know it’s a musical. (Though director Paul King calls it “more like a movie with songs.”) When the first trailer came out in July, though, there was little to no indication that the movie featured music at all.

    In May, the first trailer for The Color Purple promised “a bold new take on the beloved classic,” but barely gave any indication of what that take is. (A grand total of two words were sung on screen.) The trailer notes that the movie is based on the 1982 novel by Alice Walker, but it doesn’t disclose—let alone boast—that it’s also adapted from the Tony-winning Broadway play (and stars some of the same actors).

    Then, in November, the trailer for Mean Girls made millennials feel old by declaring, “This isn’t your mother’s Mean Girls.” In what way is it different from your mother’s Mean Girls? Well, most prominently, it’s a musical—except that this genre switch isn’t prominent at all. The trailer doesn’t let the secret slip.

    The phenomenon also extends to animated movies, like Netflix’s Leo and Miraculous: Ladybug & Cat Noir, the Movie—both musicals, though one wouldn’t know it from the footage chosen to entice streaming audiences. Hollywood is still making musicals, but the industry doesn’t seem to want anyone to know. Why are so many musicals nowadays deep undercover, wearing drama disguises or comedy camouflage? Why must they be smuggled onto our screens?

    “It’s a simple answer, studios believe people won’t go see a musical,” says Jeff Gritton, who edited trailers at Trailer Park, Inc. for 13 years. “I don’t know all their focus group and testing numbers, but at some point they decided people won’t see a musical.”

    You don’t have to go back to 2016’s La La Land or 2017’s The Greatest Showman to find movies that put their musical feet forward in their teasers or trailers. But outside of Disney remakes, you do have to go back about that far to find many movies that did so and succeeded.

    “A lot of musicals recently have underperformed, and pretty significantly,” says Josh Lynn, president of box office forecasting company Piedmont Media Research. “There were a slew of live-action musicals that came out after Hamilton, and for the most part they really disappointed relative to insider hopes.” Lynn mentions 2021’s Dear Evan Hansen, In the Heights, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, and West Side Story (in addition, of course, to Cats, the 2019 moviemusical bomb). CBR dubbed 2021 “the year of the movie musical,” but most of those musicals flopped.

    The pandemic didn’t help the musicals that came out in theaters, but post-Hamilton musicals—even those that were well-received by critics—didn’t draw eyeballs on streaming services, either. “Over and over, musicals, whether big or not, just failed to resonate with customers,” streaming analyst Entertainment Strategy Guy wrote for The Ankler in early 2022. In addition to the aforementioned duds, he listed several others that failed to crack the streaming charts: Netflix’s Tick, Tick… Boom!, A Week Away, and Diana: The Musical, Prime Video’s Annette, and Come From Away and High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, on Apple TV+ and Disney+, respectively. “The biggest hit of 2020 inspired some of the biggest misses of 2021,” ESG concluded about the movies that floundered in Hamilton’s wake.

    What did all of the movies mentioned in the preceding paragraphs have in common, aside from being musicals? Every single one of them admitted they were musicals up front. Their trailers made the mistake of telling viewers what to expect.

    Isn’t telling viewers what to expect the point of trailers? Maybe for the viewers, but from the studio’s perspective, accuracy and transparency are important only if they serve the larger objective. “Trailers are only made to get people to go see the movie—that’s it,” says one industry figure who has worked as a trailer production company’s editor, creative director, and senior executive and who requested anonymity because studios disapprove of talkative vendors. “It’s not to say, ‘We made this great piece of art.’ … Every time you see a piece of motion picture marketing, it is simply to get as many people out to the theaters or to watch it on streaming as humanly possible. … The goal of everything on our end is to get asses in the seats, and it’s by any means necessary.”

    Studios and trailer houses go to great lengths to up their ass-in-seat counts. Kevin Goetz, the founder and CEO of entertainment research and content testing firm Screen Engine/ASI and the author of 2021 book Audience-ology: How Moviegoers Shape the Films We Love, says that trailers are the second-most-important driver of awareness of and interest in movies, after word of mouth. Thus, they’re subject to extensive testing designed to strip out any elements that might repel people and double down on qualities that could help set the hook—which has to happen quickly in a streaming setting, where the watcher isn’t a captive audience the way they would be in a theater.

    Typically, the studio’s head of marketing has a strategy that’s arisen from research and guides the potential tone of the trailer. That exec contracts with a trailer house (or multiple trailer houses) to create various versions that play up or deemphasize certain aspects of the film (such as its fondness for song-and-dance routines). The resulting trailers get polished, tested, tweaked, and tailored to certain markets. “Obviously, you want to persuade, but by making the trailer more accessible for as many people as you can, you can exponentially raise the currency of that piece of advertising,” Goetz says.

    That’s where non-musical trailers for musicals come in. “Musicals are embraced by many folks, but they’re also not embraced by many folks,” Goetz says. “And what are you trying to do in a trailer? It’s not the truth-in-advertising department, it’s the marketing department.” The trailer, he continues, is “a vehicle to give the essence without putting a stake in the ground and [categorizing] the movie too early for those who are turned off to musicals.”

    In most cases, Goetz says, “There’s enough talking in the movie to tell you what the movie’s about without going into a song and making the movie feel like … ‘This is for them, but it’s not for me.’” After a musical’s cover is blown by hype or its premiere, follow-up or post-release trailers and teasers can embrace the film’s true nature. (Subsequent trailers for Wonka and The Color Purple have been slightly more musical.) But Goetz’s recommended course early on falls in line with how the studios seem to see things: “Keep to the traditional as long as you can, and then reveal the musical nature. … If I can eke out another $10 million by holding that message—not really tricking them, but not telling them—then I think that I’m going to do that.” The anonymous trailer creator concurs. “I think it’s smart marketing,” he says. “That would be my instinct, especially with something like The Color Purple or Wonka. I would try to obscure any musical theater.”

    That may be painful for musical theater heads to hear, but provided the people who’d be less likely to see a movie if it were marketed as a musical outnumber the people who’d be more likely to see it, the math should favor keeping the musical quiet at first. After all, Goetz says, “There’ll be very few people who are actually going to walk out of the theater because, ‘God dammit, it was a musical and you didn’t tell me that.’” (In fact, he says, low-information moviegoers who make it to the theater without seeing through the ruse tend to be pleasantly surprised.)

    Goetz agrees that the undercover musical is on the rise, and he says the studios know what they’re doing. “They’re not doing this in a vacuum. They’ve got research to support it,” he says. “I would imagine they cut a musical trailer or two, which just didn’t test nearly as well in terms of conversion. There’s always a reason for the decisions they make. They do very little that is against what the audience wants, because the stakes are just so high.”

    You’re entitled to feel a little manipulated by the ears-only secrecy surrounding modern musicals, but you probably can’t take the marketers to court. Last year, two fans of Ana de Armas sued Universal over the actress’s absence from 2019 musical Yesterday, because she’d been cut out of the film after appearing in the trailer (which did feature musical performances, because, Beatles). A federal judge ruled that trailers are subject to false advertising laws, meaning studios must be careful about overpromising and underdelivering. But non-musical musical trailers are more like lies of omission. “If you had musical numbers that were not in the movie and you said, ‘I was going to see a musical and there was no music to be found,’ that’s a potential suit,” Goetz says. But in this case, “You could say, ‘Judge, we’re not trying to say it’s not a musical. It’s that the music is an added bonus. We didn’t want to give that away. We want people to be surprised.’”

    However wise (and legally aboveboard) these trailer tactics may be, though, there are a few potential problems with excising the music from a musical. On the one hand, you save yourself some potential trouble getting trailer clearances for original compositions in the film. On the other hand, though, you risk losing what makes the movie special, as you might if you removed the jokes from a comedy trailer or the car chases and firefights from an action trailer. Travis Weir, a theatrical editor who predominantly cuts behind-the-scenes footage in his work with studios, points out that with a musical, “the songs are a huge part of the soul and character of the film. You’re not just cutting up a movie, or setting it to music in a novel way to imply something about the movie. It is the movie. So that’s an added challenge.”

    Depending on the type of musical, doing away with the music may not leave a lot to work with. With a movie like 2012’s Les Misérables, the anonymous trailer producer says, it “would’ve been impossible to just do the dramatic parts, because it’s so singing intensive. … The films that are structured more like operas are incredibly difficult to cut around.” Granted, a movie like Les Mis is probably too famously a musical to fool anyone anyway. And most musicals include enough dialogue to give editors sufficient trailer material. “A trailer is two minutes and 20 seconds,” the longtime trailer maker says, “so getting two minutes and 20 seconds of drama out of a long [movie], it’s not as difficult as one would think.”

    However, when the music is removed, there may be something slightly off about the actors’ line deliveries—an uncanny quality that comes from divorcing the dialogue from the showy, whimsical, heightened habitat of a musical. “It’s like a tonal phantom limb,” Weir says. “You can feel the itch that something else is supposed to be there.” The first trailer for Wonka was divisive and led to some sniping at Timothée Chalamet, arguably because the context of his performance wasn’t clear. But the backlash doesn’t seem to have hurt the movie’s review scores or box office expectations.

    There’s still some room on the small screen for unabashed musicals, like Schmigadoon! and the forthcoming Hazbin Hotel. For the time being, though, don’t count on being tipped off by a trailer to a musical movie unless it features a famous musical figure, à la Bohemian Rhapsody, Rocketman, Respect, Elvis, or Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance With Somebody. Those movies make the music hard to hide—and anyone who wants to see them is probably into the tunes. Beyond biopics and Lady Gaga vehicles, recognizable names are a must. “It’s easier to sell a preexisting IP to a studio (‘Look how many tickets people have bought to Mean Girls the musical over the past five years!’), even if the marketing people have to try to hide the fact that it’s a musical,” Lynn says. (Though when they hide that Mean Girls is a musical, they also obscure the reason for remaking it.)

    As we’ve seen since 2021, the musical status quo can change quickly. Those studio execs must have thought they knew what they were doing when they gave green lights to so many musicals a few years ago, and look how well that worked out for them. (William Goldman’s maxim about the movie industry still applies.) Maybe Wonka, The Color Purple, and Mean Girls will make so much money that they’ll start another run on dancing and singing. All it takes is one Chicago, Mamma Mia!, or Pitch Perfect to create copycats.

    Max Khosla, cofounder and creative director of trailer music company Trailer Bros, says, “The trends change every year and the marketing team at the studio makes many changes every year to better sell the movie. Every decision is profit-based.” Maybe the potential for profit will grow. Goetz laments that the musical “doesn’t feel like a theatrical genre anymore” and expresses sadness that the few remaining major musicals are facing such an uphill battle at the box office that they’re forced to hide who they are. But he offers some optimism: When “one does really well—let’s say when Wicked comes out and it really is huge—then maybe people will say, ‘Musicals are back.’” Maybe then, like poor Prince Herbert in Monty Python and the Holy Grail, musically inclined characters in trailers will once again get a chance to sing.

    Ben Lindbergh

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  • Dean Cain Fights Back Against 'War On Christmas' With New Faith-Based Movie

    Dean Cain Fights Back Against 'War On Christmas' With New Faith-Based Movie

    Opinion

    Source: Screenshot YouTube Hybrid LLC

    The former “Superman” star Dean Cain is defying the liberal world of Hollywood to star in a new Christmas movie that celebrates faith.

    Cain Talks New Christmas Movie

    “Christmas, for me, is one of those things outside of any religious connotation, which … I think it’s very important: the birth of Jesus and celebrating his birth,” Cain, 57, told Fox News. “But if it’s outside of that, just for everyone to reach out to everyone, it’s a time for families to come together. It’s a time to reflect on the past year and things that’s been going on in life. And it makes it a wonderful, wonderful time.”

    “There’s been a lot of talk about a war on Christmas,” he continued. “I just want to celebrate Christmas, I want to love my family, I want to be with everybody.”

    That’s why Cain decided to star in “Bringing Back Christmas,” which is described as “a fun and inspiring holiday story of Faith, perseverance, and Angelic intervention.”

    Cain explained that in this film, he plays a “callous jerk” who lays off employees right before Christmas.

    “Then [the main character played by Mark Christopher Lawrence] meets an angel and has to go on this trip back … in time to Bethlehem,” Cain said.

    “I guess there’s a little bit of a Scrooge element to it, but it’s more about like seeing what was going on Christmastime back in the day when it was baby Jesus,” he continued. “But it’s done with a very humorous, humorous twist.”

    Check out a trailer for “Bringing Back Christmas” in the video below.

    Related: ‘Superman’ Dean Cain Reveals Why He Left California – Liberal State ‘Has Gone Crazy’

    Cain Hosting Family For Christmas

    Cain, who has long been one of the only openly conservative stars in Hollywood, fled the liberal world of California earlier this year to move to Las Vegas, Nevada, and he’s excited to host his family for Christmas at his new home.

    “I’ve got all [the] family coming this year,” he said. “So, I moved this year from California to Las Vegas, or just outside in Henderson. Big, beautiful house, it’s all decorated up. … Everybody’s coming out.”

    “I can’t wait to have everybody here and just spend time together as a family and just celebrate each other and celebrate being together and have that warmth and wonderful time together,” he added. “I just cannot wait for it.”

    Related: ‘Superman’ Dean Cain Demolishes California’s ‘Terrible’ Liberal Policies – ‘Land Of Ridiculousness’

    California’s ‘Ridiculous’ Tax Situation

    Cain went on to say that he isn’t surprised that many celebrities have fled California, given how liberals have been running the state.

    “I think there’s a number of people, big stars, that have moved out of Hollywood. And I understand why,” he said. “California’s tax situation is ridiculous. You know, 13.2 or 13.4% is the top tax bracket … that bracket is very, very high.”

    “There’s no state income tax, personal state income tax in the state of Nevada,” he continued. “That’s a huge saving right off the top. The energy tax … other taxes are less, property taxes, sales tax, I mean, you name it. There’s so many things that are less.”

    These days, Cain is loving his new life in Nevada, and he’s pushing for film studios to move to the state.

    “I’d love to be asleep in my bed here and go to work,” he concluded. “That’d be wonderful.”

    If you love Cain as much as we do, be sure to check out “Bringing Back Christmas,” which is now streaming on Amazon, Apple TV, Vudu, and more!

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    James Conrad

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  • The Year Hollywood’s Overdogs Became Underdogs

    The Year Hollywood’s Overdogs Became Underdogs

    It’s not a secret that 21st-century film has been dominated by sequels and superhero adaptations. Every year since 2004, other than Avatar in 2009, an IP blockbuster was no. 1 at the domestic box office. But something shifted by the end of 2022: The enthusiasm surrounding the superhero genre finally started to wane after a lukewarm response to big-ticket Marvel and DC installments like Black Adam and Thor: Love and Thunder.

    Then, in 2023, cinephiles got a little treat: a double billing of two big-budget, non-sequel, non-superhero features made by auteurs who, by all accounts, had ample creative freedom over their projects. Barbie, while still technically based on IP—though presented with a unique take on the subject matter—was the highest-grossing film of the year, with Oppenheimer joining it in the top five. What made it all the more satisfying for some viewers was the schadenfreude in watching Marvel Studios and the superhero genre at large have one of its worst years in recent memory, with disappointments both critically and commercially in titles like Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, The Marvels, and The Flash.

    Barbenheimer represented film success in ways both novel and old-fashioned: On the one hand, a billion-dollar women-led comedy about existentialism, and on the other, a $900 million dialogue-heavy historical biopic. Before the Barbenheimer meme became a viral phenomenon, these were films difficult to imagine being this successful—even for someone like Christopher Nolan, with his box office pedigree. The Guardian’s Benjamin Lee described Oppenheimer’s ticket sales as “a staggering amount for something of that ilk, a talky, three-hour awards movie treated by audiences like a superhero epic.” Maria Teresa Hart, author of the nonfiction fashion doll history book Doll, told Vox earlier this year that “Barbie is one of those things where the more feminine something is, the more discredited it can be. Barbie feels like the underdog.”

    It’s easy to look at the success of Barbenheimer and feel inclined to declare that “cinema is back” (coincidentally, just one year after Top Gun: Maverick “saved” cinema). After largely unrivaled IP dominance for a solid 15 years, films made by highly regarded, Academy Award–nominated directors somehow feel like long shots in today’s theatrical landscape. Now, make no mistake: Christopher Nolan has been a box office lock since at least 2008’s The Dark Knight, and Barbie was mining one of the most recognizable pieces of intellectual property yet to be adapted for the screen in live action. They were both made with at least $100 million budgets and star-studded ensemble casts and were released in the middle of summer. Their success was not completely an accident or a surprise. Yet, as Inverse’s Kayleigh Donaldson wrote, Barbie and Oppenheimer “fit into an increasingly rare niche” by telling a contained story separate from a sprawling cinematic universe. Because of this, it felt like a victory for a certain type of film fan to watch comparatively different types of blockbusters in Barbenheimer succeed while a behemoth like Marvel faltered, even if they were all coming from powerful places within the film industry.

    Widen the scope, and this same sentiment could be applied to other star filmmakers who saw varying degrees of success this year: David Fincher, Ridley Scott, and Martin Scorsese. In Fincher’s case, his kinetic hit man thriller The Killer received a limited theatrical run before getting unceremoniously dumped on Netflix, reaffirming the odd dark horse status of some of Hollywood’s best working directors. Still, The Killer racked up tens of millions of viewing hours according to Netflix and spent weeks at the helm of the platform’s Top 10 list, demonstrating a demand for cerebral filmmaking on even the most mainstream of streaming services. Scott’s big-budget Napoleon was similarly propped up with “Isn’t it great this movie was actually made?” hype despite centering on one of the most famous historical figures of all time. Like Fincher’s film, Scott’s Napoleon gives off an air of a rank outsider from a bygone era that was lucky to be produced in the year 2023. And as with Fincher, audiences have mostly rewarded Scott’s efforts—even if it’s still about $30 million short of breaking even on its substantial budget, it’s made a respectable $170 million globally, and the film should drive subscribers to Apple TV+ when it debuts there at a later date.

    Scorsese, always a lightning rod in exhausting film debates due to his comments on Marvel films, has weirdly gotten a reputation as an artsy, eat-your-vegetables type of filmmaker despite being one of the most recognizable directors in America. Killers of the Flower Moon is a three-and-a-half-hour chronicle of wretched Native American genocide, but it’s not an inaccessible film—it’s compellingly helmed by two bona fide movie stars on a $200 million budget. A recent viral snippet from a podcast compared Scorsese’s work to “going to the DMV” because his films are long and “tedious.” The suggestion that Scorsese, a well-established mainstream filmmaker, puts out movies that wouldn’t classify as a typical hit isn’t an isolated one; there’s an implication that if you’re not making an IP project, you’re making something subversive. Superhero movies have gotten so big that nearly every other production looks small in comparison. Films that would’ve been considered overdogs in most periods of movie history have gradually become underdogs—films we ostensibly feel the need to root for and make space for in the age of IP.

    Could indisputably successful films like Barbie and Oppenheimer make a dent in the Marvel machine, or even portend a sea change in a film industry that’s grown reliant on a shrinking range of movies? Boxoffice Pro chief analyst Shawn Robbins told CNN in July that “it’s going to be hard, if not impossible, to duplicate the Barbenheimer craze.” But that doesn’t mean studios won’t try—or even that they aren’t trying already.

    While Nolan pretty much has a blank check in perpetuity, especially after switching over from Warner Bros. to Universal, there’s already a doll hunt for the next Barbie. The New Yorker reported in July that Mattel has 45 films in various stages of development, including projects based on characters like He-Man and Polly Pocket. Even though a wave of toy adaptations already occurred in the late 2000s and early 2010s, which saw diminishing returns for movies like G.I. Joe, Transformers, and Battleship, the success of Barbie has execs deducing that it’s time to reopen the toy box. This doesn’t even include the next genre of IP that feels like it’s about to completely take over Hollywood: video game adaptations. The billion-dollar Super Mario Bros. Movie finished second to Barbie at the domestic box office this year and has already led Nintendo to announce a Legend of Zelda live action film. In film and television, 2023 also saw successful adaptations of Five Nights at Freddy’s, The Last of Us, Gran Turismo, and Twisted Metal, and a Borderlands film is slated for 2024 along with a second Sonic the Hedgehog sequel.

    If the lesson you were hoping studios would take away from Barbenheimer was that audiences are sick of superheroes, then maybe you’re satisfied. For the first time, it feels like there’s an end in sight for Marvel’s reign, with one of its major upcoming releases, Blade, stuck in development hell, on top of numerous other crises the studio dealt with this year, as reported by Variety. But if you were optimistic that Hollywood would shift its focus away from franchise filmmaking and adapting children’s IP altogether, you’d be wrong. “Lena Dunham’s Polly Pocket” doesn’t exactly conjure up the feeling that we’re about to enter another Golden Age of Hollywood, and it doesn’t inspire hope that it doesn’t seem to have dawned on studio execs that the success of Barbie can be simply explained by Greta Gerwig having the space and money to execute her vision rather than just by putting a famous doll on a movie screen. (Although maybe this is what Gerwig wanted—her next two films will be based on another children’s IP, The Chronicles of Narnia, and she is reportedly looking to become “a big studio director.”)

    The Barbenheimer phenomenon won’t significantly move the needle in terms of what kinds of films will get made in the future because, ultimately, those films just did what they were supposed to do. It was a fun respite from superhero films, and it was genuinely touching to see people so excited for an old-school double feature, but truthfully, they weren’t particularly risky films. When you put money and stars into a carefully crafted film and support it with a viral advertising campaign, you’ve got a hit on your hands. But perhaps the problem is that too many viewers continue to conform to the studios’ pursuit of box office profits. Barbie, Oppenheimer, Killers of the Flower Moon, The Killer, and even Napoleon to a degree were successful because they were captivating, meticulous, and original films. As filmgoers we should advocate for those artists to get their art financed and distributed on the basis of creating great art, without playing the box office game. Still, we don’t need to point to box office success as proof that there’s value in a diverse array of films—the artistic value is already there.

    Julianna Ress

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  • Footage Surfaces Of Michael B. Jordan Crashing His Ferrari In Hollywood

    Footage Surfaces Of Michael B. Jordan Crashing His Ferrari In Hollywood

    Michael B. Jordan – Source: Jemal Countess/GA / Getty

    Footage of Michael B. Jordan’s viral Ferrari crash randomly turns up on Instagram showing the actor losing control of the car in a freak accident.

    On December 2 footage floated around social media of a wrecked Ferrari that belonged to Michael B. Jordan after being involved in an accident. His baby blue Ferrari hit a parked Kia just before midnight in Hollywood leaving most puzzled about how it happened. Many instantly accused him of being drunk but that wasn’t the case and the actor didn’t face any charges.

    According to TMZ, LAPD didn’t perform any field test nor did the actor offer any explanation behind the accident.

    No matter what’s happening in any populated area someone is always filming. Almost two weeks after MBJ’s bizarre wreck a video surfaced on Instagram allegedly showing how he wrecked his Ferarri 812 Superfast. The video appears to reveal he was engaging in a small street race with another sports car when he lost control of the Ferrari.

    For what it’s worth most people will not know when a car starts sliding DO NOT press the brakes or you’ll lose control of the car. That’s why MBJ’s Ferarri has a special feature, launch control, which clearly wasn’t used.

    Additionally, it looks like that’s exactly what happened, allegedly. After all, we hope he wouldn’t intentionally run his sports-car into the Kia. One thing about fast cars is they will certainly give you more power than you need at any given moment. A simple flex gone wrong is now a major headache for Jordan who now has a massive insurance claim, embarrassment, and one less car in the garage.

    You can watch the alleged video of the street race and wreck below.

    Noah Williams

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  • Was This Strike-Struck Awards Season Hollywood’s Weirdest Ever?

    Was This Strike-Struck Awards Season Hollywood’s Weirdest Ever?

    When Poor Things received an eight-minute standing ovation at the Venice Film Festival in September, only Yorgos Lanthimos was there to bask in it. The director’s cast, of course, had joined the 160,000 SAG-AFTRA members on strike. Lanthimos later lamented that it was “a real shame” that his star Emma Stone couldn’t be by his side, and much of Hollywood likely felt his pain. But at least Lanthimos got to hear the applause. Bradley Cooper, whose Maestro premiered the next day, was unable to promote the film he cowrote, directed, and stars in. Instead, the film’s makeup artist, casting director, editor, and sound mixer, among others, stepped up to handle the press conference.

    That’s how it was for much of this awards season, after SAG-AFTRA imposed stringent rules on its members when the strike began in mid-July. No red carpets. No interviews. No promo, period. Even more than the writers strike, the 118-day actors walkout sent Hollywood’s awards machine into a tailspin, particularly as the Oscars gauntlet loomed. “It definitely threw a wrench in this season in terms of planning,” says a talent publicist. And awards movies, to put it mildly, are rarely big studio blockbusters: They’re often the kind of passion projects that need publicity most.

    Everyone in the industry is well aware of the chaos: The Governors Awards, usually held in November, were pushed into January and will take place six days before the strike-delayed Emmy Awards. The Academy Museum Gala, postponed following the beginning of the conflict in Gaza, was rescheduled for December. Until the strike was resolved on November 9, the phalanx of awards season marketing and publicity specialists were forced to embrace uncertainty. “We’re lighting the white sage,” one veteran awards strategist deadpanned about how he was handling the unusual start of the season.

    Cannes, contending with just the writers strike back in May, managed to be star-studded, with the casts of Killers of the Flower Moon and May December helping to launch both films. But the wattage was turned down considerably in Venice, Telluride, and Toronto, where festival organizers had to scramble after the actors went on strike and several movies pushed their premiere dates into next year. Another awards publicist calls the early days of the strike “uncertain and confusing,” adding, “We didn’t know if the fall festivals would march forward or fall apart.”

    The film festivals did soldier on—and a handful of stars were able to show up thanks to guild-issued interim agreements, but the celebrations were muted. In Venice, Jessica Chastain admitted to being “incredibly nervous” to be there. Adam Driver called his appearance for Ferrari’s premiere “a visual representation of a movie” made for a studio—Neon—willing to meet the union’s demands. Jury president Damien Chazelle showed up to his press conference in a “Writers Guild on Strike!” T-shirt. “To have three films in Venice and not be able to go broke my heart,” Poor Things star Willem Dafoe told Vanity Fair after he’d canceled nearly all plans to promote his upcoming work. The guild allowed him to attend Toronto in support of Patricia Arquette’s directorial feature debut, Gonzo Girl, but he was frank about the fact that he was pining for Venice: “I live in Italy and it’s exciting to see friends, it’s exciting to dress up.”

    Spotting a famous face at premieres became like a game of Where’s Waldo. Stone purchased her own pass to Telluride and rode the charter flight from Los Angeles to get to the festival, where Poor Things had its North American premiere. She later participated in a New York Film Festival panel for the Lanthimos short Bleat, which was granted an interim agreement. Cooper also popped up at the festival’s screening of Maestro, having been granted permission from his guild to simply sit in the audience.

    SAG-AFTRA’s interim agreements created vastly different experiences for movies in the race. A24 was able to move forward with promotion for contenders like Past Lives and Priscilla, and on the day the strike-ending deal was announced, stars Zac Efron and Jeremy Allen White were attending the Dallas premiere of A24’s Texas-set wrestling drama The Iron Claw. Meanwhile 20th Century Studios, owned by Disney, decided to postpone Jeff Nichols’s The Bikeriders once it became clear that Austin Butler, Jodie Comer, Tom Hardy, and other stars wouldn’t be able to properly promote the film ahead of its scheduled December 1 release. It joined Dune: Part Two and Challengers as awards hopefuls now waiting for next year.

    But amid all that confusion, some new awards season celebrities emerged. Sandra Hüller—the German star of two international contenders, The Zone of Interest and Anatomy of a Fall, which are exempt from SAG rules—rocketed into the best actress conversation after the latter film premiered at Telluride. “I’m very aware of the fact that it’s a special situation, and I’m not sure if I would’ve had that attention, if everybody would’ve been able to come,” she told VF after the fest. “And I hope very much that people really love the film for what it is, and not only because of our presence. That would be something that I wouldn’t enjoy so much.”

    Craftspeople invariably get less attention during Oscars season, but they also stepped into the spotlight, doing interviews and Q&As and walking red carpets. “The strike really challenged everyone to be more creative utilizing these artisans, as well as filmmakers, in new ways,” says Tom Piechura, who oversees entertainment marketing at 42West.

    Actors may have rushed back onto red carpets the minute the strike ended in November, but even a flurry of interviews won’t make up for the time lost over the summer. As the veteran awards publicist notes, the uncertainty about when the work stoppage would end caused many studios to pull back on their campaigns, and now there’s no going back: “It’s a mess.” But the second awards publicist isn’t convinced that six chaotic months of strikes will really impact the final vote: “Despite all the work and campaigning and the razzle-dazzle that comes with that, it really comes down to seeing the movie.”

    Natalie Jarvey

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  • ‘Manhunt’: First Look at the Long-Awaited Show About Hunting Lincoln’s Killer

    ‘Manhunt’: First Look at the Long-Awaited Show About Hunting Lincoln’s Killer

    In our own age of extreme division and distrust, Beletsky believes this story of an effort to violently unseat the president, and attack members of his war cabinet on the same night, still resonates because it speaks to “the shattering of norms in how we deal with disputes—and just our sense of safety.”

    “I think the show has a lot about it that’s very relevant,” she says. “This was a domestic attack that was so unusual. Lincoln used to have the door to the White House unlocked for the duration of the war. So murder of this kind was just not done.”

    Although Lincoln’s death is the starting point for the series, the 16th US president still features prominently throughout its episodes, mostly in flashback, as a means of underscoring the stakes, the motivations of the pursuers, and the depth of the loss. 

    Tobias Menzies, best known for Game of Thrones and Outlander as well as for playing middle-aged Prince Philip on The Crown, stars as Stanton, a leader who had a tendency to micromanage rather than delegate, taking on the full weight of problems that may have benefited from being shared. Beletsky says Menzies delivered that gravity. “He brings a high level of intelligence to a role,” she says. “[Stanton] was one of the top trial lawyers in the country, and Tobias does it so convincingly that you believe this man has been in the Supreme Court, that he has been sitting with Lincoln.”

    Lincoln himself is portrayed by Hamish Linklater, best known for The Newsroom and Legion and playing the mysteriously charismatic priest from Midnight Mass. “There are only so many actors who are as bright as Hamish and as tall as Hamish,” Beletsky says. “It takes a very brave actor to take on a role like this where everyone thinks they know who this person is. And Hamish was just so open and curious and just everything you want in an actor. I will say his performance is one of the things I’m most proud of.”

    Anthony Breznican

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  • 'Homicide' Actor Andre Braugher, Who Played Cops With Humility, Dead At 61

    'Homicide' Actor Andre Braugher, Who Played Cops With Humility, Dead At 61

    Opinion

    Source: Brooklyn Nine-Nine YouTube

    The Hollywood star Andre Braugher, who was best known for his work playing police officers on television shows like “Homicide: Life On The Street” and “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” died on Monday at the age of 61.

    Braugher’s Life And Career

    Braugher’s death was confirmed to Variety by his publicist, who said that he died after a “brief illness.”

    Born in Chicago in 1962, Braugher graduated from Stanford University before attending Juilliard School to study drama. He made his big screen debut in the 1989 Denzel Washington movie Glory, with Braugher portraying the Union soldier Thomas Searles, a free Black man who joins the first Black regiment. From there, he went on to play Kojak’s sidekick in the television movie revival of “Kojak.”

    Braugher’s big break, however, came when he was cast as Detective Frank Pembleton on NBC’s “Homicide: Life On The Street” in 1993. He starred on the series until 1998, when Braugher won the lead actor Emmy for his work on the gripping police drama series.

    “Homicide” showrunner Tom Fontana said in 2014 that the show had originally began “as an ensemble piece. And it became The Andre Braugher Show. All the writers wanted to write for him because he was great and because they wanted to see if they could screw him up, throw him off his game.”

    “He could say so much with his eyes,” Fontana added, according to The Hollywood Reporter. “We’d write these incredibly glorious speeches for him, and then you would see him just look at someone, and we’d sometimes go: ‘Drop the monologue. He’s already sold it.’”

    Related: Norman Lear Dead At 101

    Braugher’s Later Years

    Braugher continued acting consistently after leaving “Homicide” in 1998, taking home a second Emmy for his work in the 2006 FX miniseries “Heist.” It wasn’t until 2013, however, that he returned to mainstream television success with another hit police show, this time playing the uptight Captain Raymond Holt on the police procedural comedy series “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” from 2013 until 2021. 

    “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” introduced Braugher to a whole new generation of fans, and it showed that he was just as capable of being a comedic actor as he had always been in dramas. The show brought Braugher four more Emmy nominations, this time for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series, with the most recent nod coming in 2020.

    “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” ended the next year, but Braugher continued acting right up until his death, with IMDB saying he has two projects that are yet be released.

    Related: Former ‘CSI Miami’ Star Evan Ellingson Found Dead At 35

    Braugher Was A Family Man

    Braugher is survived by his wife Ami Brabson, who played his wife on “Homicide,” and their three sons. A few years before his death, Braugher told reporters that he’d always prioritized time with his family over pursuing bigger roles that could have made him an A-list Hollywood star.

    “I’ve got three boys, and I want them to know me as someone other than the guy who takes them to the circus every once in a while,” he said in 2020, according to US Weekly. “I wanted to be there through the course of their life because I know how important fathers are.”

    “It’s been an interesting career, but I think it could have been larger,” he added. “I think it could have spanned more disciplines: directing, producing, all these other different things. But it would have been at the expense of my own life.”

    Please join us in saying a prayer for Braugher’s family and friends during this tragic time.

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    James Conrad

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  • Joe Biden Tells Guests At Hollywood Fundraiser, “You’re The Reason That Donald Trump Is A Former President”;  Pro-Palestinian Protesters Demonstrate Loudly Outside Event — Update

    Joe Biden Tells Guests At Hollywood Fundraiser, “You’re The Reason That Donald Trump Is A Former President”; Pro-Palestinian Protesters Demonstrate Loudly Outside Event — Update

    President Joe Biden told the crowd at a fundraiser this evening, “You’re the reason that Donald Trump is a former president, or he hates when I say it, a defeated president.”

    At the Holmby Hills home of designer Michael Smith and former ambassador James Costos, Biden spent a substantial part of his 11 minutes of his remarks warning of his likely rival next year as a threat to democracy, a contrast that many of the president’s die-hard supporters believe will help boost turnout and donations as the 2024 campaign gets in full swing.

    “Literally, I believe, the future of democracy is at stake,” Biden said, according to a pool report. “The greatest threat Trump poses is to our democracy, because if we lost that, we lose everything.”

    A large group of pro-Palestinian protesters was outside the security perimeter near a Holmby Hills Park, and videos posted on social media showed demonstrators attempting to surround cars and chanting as police officers escorted attendees into the event. The demonstrators were heard chanting “ceasefire now” and “free Palestine” and accusing the president of supporting genocide. According to the pool report, the sound of sirens and helicopters could be heard as the program went on.

    The president talked of Trump’s behavior on January 6, 2021, when the then-president was watching TV coverage of the attack on the Capitol from a West Wing dining room, as a mob searched for his vice president.

    “It’s despicable. It’s simply despicable,” Biden said, then saying, a bit facetiously, “My guess is that he won’t show up at my next inauguration.”

    Biden also referred to Trump’s comments earlier this week, in which the former president told Sean Hannity that he would not abuse power in a second term except for the first day of his presidency, when he would close the border and expand drilling.

    “The other day [Trump] said, ‘He would be a dictator only one day. That God. Only one day,” Biden said sarcastically.

    “He embraces political violence instead of rejecting it,” Biden said.

    Earlier, First Lady Jill Biden said that she was “so glad that Joe is our president during these uncertain times,” and she also asked the crowd to recall their feeling after Trump won in 2016, according to Reuters. “We have to begin now,” she said.

    Co-hosts of the event included Steven Spielberg, Shonda Rhimes and Rob Reiner, as well as Peter Chernin and Jim Gianopulos. Lenny Kravitz was scheduled to perform.

    Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced Biden, following speakers including First Lady Jill Biden and Costos. Other politicos there included California Governor Gavin Newsom, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. Bass’s rival in last year’s election, Rick Caruso, was a co-host of the night’s event.

    The LAPD and Secret Service had beefed up security in the expectation of protests.

    Last month, pro-Palestinian demonstrators protested outside a Los Angeles fundraiser headlined by Vice President Kamala Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff.

    PREVIOUSLY: President Joe Biden arrived at LAX late on Friday afternoon to kickoff a weekend of fundraising, starting with a Hollywood-centric event hosted by designer Michael Smith and James Costos, the former U.S. ambassador to Spain.

    Biden and a number of White House staffers then rook Marine One to Santa Monica Airport, and he is motorcading to the event. Among those greeting Biden were California Governor Gavin Newsom, Rep. Ted Lieu (D-CA) and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass.

    The Los Angeles Police Department sent out an advisory warning motorists “in the West Los Angeles area, including Century City, Pico-Robertson, and Beverly Hills adjacent, can expect intermittent street closures today. Please plan for traffic delays and avoid the area if possible.”

    According to videos posted on social media, dozens of pro-Palestinian demonstrators, chanting “ceasefire now,” lined up near a Holmby Hills park, where Los Angeles police officers and the Secret Service had set up a security fence perimeter near the home where the event will take place.

    The LAPD had earlier warned of protest activity expected throughout the weekend.

    “The Department will continue to work with any protest organizers to facilitate lawful demonstrations while protecting the safety of all involved including surrounding communities.  Violence of any kind will not be tolerated,” the LAPD said.

    First Lady Jill Biden arrived earlier in Los Angeles, and toured the Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center and Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars Sinai.

    The California Republican Party, meanwhile, has weighed in with a blast at the presidential visit.

    Party chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson said in a statement, “If President Biden is expecting a warm welcome from the Golden State today, he hasn’t been paying attention to local polls that show his approval at record lows among Californians. It seems even deep-blue California can’t get behind his disastrous agenda of high inflation, open borders, weak foreign policy, failing schools, and rampant crime. No amount of time spent rubbing elbows with Hollywood elites while bragging about the imaginary merits of ‘Bidenomics’ will change the fact that Joe Biden’s presidency is an abject failure.”

    tedstew1

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  • Ryan O’Neal, Dead at 82, Struggled to Rebuild a Troubled Life

    Ryan O’Neal, Dead at 82, Struggled to Rebuild a Troubled Life

    Ryan O’Neal made his name as a clean-cut, swoon-worthy leading man in films such as the tragic Love Story, Stanley Kubrick’s historical drama Barry Lyndon, and the madcap What’s Up Doc, but earned perhaps his most enduring acclaim for the father-daughter act in 1973’s Paper Moon, in which he verbally sparred with his real-life, 8-year-old child, Tatum O’Neal. His heartthrob status dimmed over the years, eclipsed by a chaotic and destructive personal life, including a volatile, high-profile relationship with Farrah Fawcett; accusations of drug use and physical abuse; and ultimately estrangement from many of those he was closest to. He spent his latter years trying to fix the things that had gone awry. 

    By the time the actor died Friday, at the age of 82, he had managed to repair some relationships. His son, Patrick O’Neal, announced his death in an Instagram post by writing: “My father Ryan O’Neal has always been my hero. I looked up to him and he was always bigger than life.”

    It was a particularly gracious sentiment on Patrick’s part because O’Neal’s relationships with his family had often been disastrous. The actor even noted that his litany of troubled screen dads may have been a reflection of his own shortcomings. “I’m a hopeless father. I don’t know why. I don’t think I was supposed to be a father,” he told Vanity Fair in 2009. 

    For years, O’Neal was a top box-office draw. 1970’s Love Story, about a relationship with a woman (played by Ali McGraw) who ultimately becomes terminally ill, was a massive hit that established him as a top leading man. He had previously been known mainly for a decade of TV appearances, including a starring role on the soap opera Peyton Place. His next major role was opposite Barbra Streisand in 1972’s What’s Up, Doc? And the pair reunited in the 1979 boxing romance The Main Event

    “So sad to hear the news of Ryan O’Neal’s passing,” Streisand wrote on Friday evening in an Instagram post featuring a photo of them together. “He was funny and charming, and he will be remembered.” (If that seems somewhat muted, it should be noted that O’Neal made unkind remarks about Streisand back in the day.)

    Ryan O’Neal and Ali MacGraw in a scene from the film, Love Story. Filed January 10, 1971.Bettmann

    O’Neal made Paper Moon with director Peter Bogdanovich, and Barry Lyndon in 1975 with Kubrick, whose meticulous approach was notoriously grueling for actors. “He shoots a lot of takes, and you don’t get a stand-in,” O’Neal said in a 2014 retrospective for the film. “We shot for something like 350 days, and afterward they had to carry me away.” His 1984 family dramedy Irreconcilable Differences costarred Shelley Long and focused on a child, played by Drew Barrymore, who tries to divorce her thoughtless parents.

    His status as a box office draw diminished after that, although he continued to be a major presence in the tabloids for his personal catastrophes and familial feuds.

    O’Neal and Fawcett never married but were first together from the late 1970s to the late 1990s. The relationship shattered when Fawcett discovered that O’Neal was having a secret romance with actress Leslie Stefanson, who was 30 years younger than him. Fawcett caught them together at his Malibu home on Valentine’s Day. “It was terrible,” O’Neal said. “I didn’t expect to see her down there. I tried to put my pants on, but I put both legs in one hole.”

    NEW YORK NY  CIRCA 1989 Farrah Fawcett and Ryan O'Neal attend the New York Premiere of Chances Are circa 1989 in New...

    NEW YORK, NY – CIRCA 1989: Farrah Fawcett and Ryan O’Neal attend the New York Premiere of “Chances Are” circa 1989 in New York City. (Photo by REP/IMAGES/Getty Images)Images Press/Getty Images

    He and Fawcett reconnected in 2001, when O’Neal was diagnosed with chronic myelogenous leukemia. “Leslie was gone, and Farrah came to me,” he said. “We started over again, and this time we built it in a way that had foundation and trust.” 

    His relationships with his children were harder to rebuild. He had four kids: Tatum and a son, Griffin, with his first wife, actress Joanna Moore, whom he divorced in 1967. He had Patrick with his second wife, actress Leigh Taylor-Young, whom he married immediately after splitting with Moore, then divorced in 1971. And finally, he had a third son, Redmond, with Fawcett in 1985.

    Onscreen in 1973’s Paper Moon, Ryan had a playful chemistry with Tatum, who won the Oscar for supporting actress, making her still the youngest-ever Academy Award winner. Behind the scenes, there were allegations of abuse, neglect and horrific lapses in judgment. The 2009 Vanity Fair article stated: “In her autobiography, A Paper Life, Tatum claimed that she had suffered physical and emotional abuse as a result of her father’s drug abuse.”

    Ryan’s on-the-record reaction to journalist Leslie Bennetts: “She wrote a book—bitch! How dare she throw our laundry in the street for money!”

    Tatum pushed back on his outrage. “He has every right to be angry about the book,” she said. “No parent wants to hear their kid saying shitty things about them. But what I wrote in the book was true. I’ve got a battle with drugs, but I’m a strong, independent person, and I fight for myself, and my father and I butt heads.”

    Griffin also accused his father of mistreatment that led to a lifetime marked by woe and tragedy. He was driving the speedboat in a 1986 accident that caused the massive head injuries that killed Francis Ford Coppola’s son Gian-Carlo. A jury acquitted Griffin of manslaughter but convicted him of negligent operation of a boat. He served time in jail only after neglecting to fulfill the community-service obligations from his sentencing.

    In 2007, Ryan was arrested for shooting a gun during an argument with Griffin at a birthday party for Fawcett. “When she turned 60, we had this celebratory birthday where I shot my son,” O’Neal said. “I could have hit him, but I missed.” The charges were dropped, and Griffin later lambasted him as a destructive force in his life.

    “My father gave me cocaine when I was 11 and insisted I take it,” Griffin told Vanity Fair in 2009. “He was violent all the way through my upbringing. He was a very abusive, narcissistic psychopath. He gets so mad he can’t control anything he’s doing.”

    In 2008, O’Neal was arrested on drug charges along with his youngest son, Redmond, after police found meth at their Malibu home. Redmond had longterm drug issues, and also blamed his parents for his difficulties.

    At Fawcett’s funeral, O’Neal admitted to a shockingly awkward encounter with Tatum when he failed to recognize her. Here’s how he recounted it to Bennetts: “I had just put the casket in the hearse and I was watching it drive away when a beautiful blonde woman comes up and embraces me,” Ryan said. “I said to her, ‘You have a drink on you? You have a car?’ She said, ‘Daddy, it’s me—Tatum!’ I was just trying to be funny with a strange Swedish woman, and it’s my daughter. It’s so sick.”

    Tatum recalled the encounter with a sigh: “That’s our relationship in a nutshell. You make of it what you will. It had been a few years since we’d seen each other, and he was always a ladies’ man, a bon vivant.”

    American actors Ryan O'Neal and his daughter Tatum O'Neal circa 1973.

    American actors Ryan O’Neal and his daughter, Tatum O’Neal, circa 1973.Silver Screen Collection

    The father-daughter duo reunited a few years later and chronicled their effort to restore their relationship in the reality TV series Ryan and Tatum: The O’Neals. Patrick and Griffin did not take part in the show, but Redmond did. Father and daughter both attended a court hearing for Redmond that year when he faced new gun and drug charges after being found with those items in a traffic stop, which violated his parole from the 2009 drug case. 

    “I feel great sorrow with my father’s passing,” Tatum told People magazine Friday evening after his death was announced. “He meant the world to me. I loved him very much and know he loved me too. I’ll miss him forever and I feel very lucky that we ended on such good terms.”

    Anthony Breznican

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  • Striking hotel workers reach a tentative deal with the Beverly Hilton

    Striking hotel workers reach a tentative deal with the Beverly Hilton

    Unite Here Local 11, the union representing hotel workers in Southern California who have been striking on and off for more than five months, said it has reached a tentative contract agreement with the Beverly Hilton that covers more than 500 unionized workers.

    The Beverly Hills hotel, longtime host of the annual Golden Globe Awards, is the sixth property to reach a deal with the union. It was among some 60 hotel sites in Los Angeles and Orange counties hit by a series of short rolling strikes after contracts covering more than 15,000 housekeepers, cooks, dishwashers, servers, and front desk workers expired June 30.

    The union has declined to give specifics on wages and other economic details of the agreements it has reached thus far, and the contracts have not yet been put to a vote by workers. Union spokesperson Maria Hernandez has said that the contracts — once ratified by workers at the various hotels — will raise wages, strengthen pensions and increase investments in healthcare.

    The Beverly Hilton announcement comes at the start of Hollywood’s awards season, with Golden Globe nominations expected to be announced Monday morning at the hotel.

    “The hotel and union are pleased to announce their deal just before what promises to be an especially celebratory awards season on the heels of the actors’ and writers’ own labor disputes,” the union said in an emailed statement Friday.

    Unite Here Local 11 co-President Kurt Petersen praised the hotel as “a leader in Beverly Hills” and urged the city’s other hotels targeted by the strike — the Fairmont Century Plaza and the Beverly Wilshire — to “quickly follow suit.”

    “Hotel workers at the Beverly Hilton are eager to kick off the awards season now that Hollywood is back in full swing because they have a contract with a living wage,” Petersen said in the statement.

    Peter Hillan, a spokesperson for the Hotel Assn. of Los Angeles, said the trade group couldn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Keith Grossman, an attorney representing a group of more than 40 Southern California hotel owners and operators in talks with the union, did not respond to a request for comment. The Beverly Hilton initially was part of that negotiating group but subsequently left the group, a union spokesperson said.

    The heated labor dispute has persisted for months. Noisy early morning picket lines, with hotel workers in red union shirts banging drums and blowing horns, have become a familiar scene at many L.A.-area hotels.

    Local trade associations representing hotels have criticized the strike as damaging to the regional tourism economy. Workers say they can’t afford to live near their jobs anymore in Southern California’s overheated housing market.

    This week marked an escalation in hotel worker protests. Housekeepers, cooks and other workers, as well as staff organizers with Unite Here Local 11, set up camp outside two hotels on Century Boulevard near Los Angeles International Airport early Wednesday morning.

    Dozens of tents line the sidewalk outside the Sheraton Gateway and Four Points Sheraton LAX; over the tents dangle string lights and clotheslines festooned with laundry, including lacy lingerie and baby onesies. In front of the Sheraton Gateway hangs a large yellow banner reading “Occupy.”

    Workers protest in shifts, with some sleeping there overnight. The union hauled in portable toilets for protesting workers, and at night when the temperature drops, union staffers help shivering and bundled-up workers light heat lamps.

    Housekeepers interviewed Thursday night said they are frustrated by months of tense negotiations and years of what they describe as heavier workloads for wages that are unlivable.

    Sheraton Gateway housekeepers said they make a $19.80 hourly wage. Unite Here Local 11 spokesperson Maria Teresa Kamel said that of the hotels in talks with the union, workers near LAX tend to have some of the most depressed wages.

    Suhauna Hussain

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  • Ryan O'Neal, Oscar-nominated actor who starred in 'Love Story' and 'Paper Moon,' dies at 82

    Ryan O'Neal, Oscar-nominated actor who starred in 'Love Story' and 'Paper Moon,' dies at 82

    Ryan O’Neal, the heartthrob actor who went from a TV soap opera to an Oscar-nominated role in “Love Story” and delivered a wry performance opposite his charismatic 9-year-old daughter Tatum in “Paper Moon,” died Friday, his son said.

    “My dad passed away peacefully today, with his loving team by his side supporting him and loving him as he would us,” Patrick O’Neal, a Los Angeles sportscaster, posted on Instagram.

    Attempts to reach O’Neal representatives were not immediately successful.

    No cause of death was given. Ryan O’Neal was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2012, a decade after he was first diagnosed with chronic leukemia. He was 82.

    “My father, Ryan O’Neal, has always been my hero,” Patrick O’Neal wrote, adding, “He is a Hollywood legend. Full stop.”

    O’Neal was among the biggest movie stars in the world in the 1970s, working across genres with many of the era’s most celebrated directors including Peter Bogdanovich on “Paper Moon” and “What’s Up, Doc?” and Stanley Kubrick on “Barry Lyndon.” He often used his boyish, blond good looks to play men who hid shadowy or sinister backgrounds behind their clean-cut images.

    O’Neal maintained a steady television acting career into his 70s in the 2010s, appearing for stints on “Bones” and “Desperate Housewives,” but his longtime relationship with Farrah Fawcett and his tumultuous family life kept him in news.

    Twice divorced, O’Neal was romantically involved with Fawcett for nearly 30 years, and they had a son, Redmond, born in 1985. The couple split in 1997, but reunited a few years later. He remained by Fawcett’s side as she battled cancer, which killed her in 2009 at age 62.

    With his first wife, Joanna Moore, O’Neal fathered actors Griffin O’Neal and Tatum O’Neal, his co-star in the 1973 movie “Paper Moon,” for which she won an Oscar for best supporting actress. He had son Patrick with his second wife, Leigh Taylor-Young.

    Ryan O’Neal had his own best-actor Oscar nomination for the 1970 tear-jerker drama “Love Story,” co-starring Ali MacGraw, about a young couple who fall in love, marry and discover she is dying of cancer. The movie includes the memorable, but often satirized line: “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.”

    The actor had at times strained relationships with three of his children, including estrangement from his daughter, squabbles with son Griffin and a drug-related arrest sparked by a probation check of his son Redmond. The personal drama often over-shadowed his later career, although his attempts to reconcile with Tatum O’Neal were turned into a short-lived reality series.

    O’Neal played bit parts and performed some stunt work before claiming a lead role on the prime-time soap opera “Peyton Place” (1964-69), which also made a star of Mia Farrow.

    From there O’Neal jumped to the big screen with 1969’s “The Big Bounce,” which co-stared his then-wife, Leigh Taylor-Young. But it was “Love Story” that made him a movie star.

    The romantic melodrama was the highest-grossing film of 1970, became one of Paramount Pictures’ biggest hits and collected seven Oscar nominations, including one for best picture. It won for best music.

    After “Love Story” made him a major movie star, O’Neal was considered for seemingly every major leading role in Hollywood. Paramount even pushed for him to to star as Michael Corleone in “The Godfather” before Al Pacino got the part at the insistence of director Francis Ford Coppola.

    O’Neal then starred for Bogdanovich as a bumbling professor opposite Barbra Streisand in the 1972 screwball comedy “What’s Up, Doc?” The filmmaker cast him the following year in the Depression-era con artist comedy “Paper Moon.”

    In it, O’Neal played an unscrupulous Bible salesman preying on widows he located through obituary notices. His real-life daughter, Tatum, played a trash-talking, cigarette-smoking orphan who needs his help — and eventually helps redeem him.

    Although critics praised both actors, the little girl’s brash performance overshadowed her father’s and made her the youngest person in history to win a regular Academy Award. She was 10 when the award was presented in 1974. (Younger performers such as Shirley Temple have won special Oscars.)

    The elder O’Neal’s next major film was Kubrick’s 18th century epic “Barry Lyndon,” in which he played a poor Irish rogue who traveled Europe trying to pass himself off as an aristocrat.

    Filming the three-hour movie was tedious work, however, and Kubrick’s notorious perfectionism created a rift between him and the actor that never healed.

    O’Neal then reteamed with Tatum in Bogdanovich’s early Hollywood comedy “Nickelodeon” (1976). But the film was a flop and they never worked together again. An attempt to capitalize on his “Love Story” character, Oliver Barrett, with the sequel “Oliver’s Story” (1978) resulted in another flop.

    Father and daughter drifted apart as Tatum O’Neal grew older, with the elder actor learning about his daughter’s marriage to tennis great John McEnroe by a belated telegram, Ryan O’Neal wrote in a 2012 book about his relationship with Fawcett.

    “A door inside me locked the morning the telegram came, and I am still blindly searching for the key to open it,” O’Neal wrote in “Both of Us.”

    O’Neal’s career cooled further in the 1980s with the emerald heist drama “Green Ice” (1981) and the 1984 comedy “Irreconcilable Differences,” in which he played a busy father in an unhappy marriage whose daughter, played by 9-year-old Drew Barrymore, tries to divorce her parents.

    The decade was also a low-point in O’Neal’s personal life. His son Griffin faced numerous brushes with the law, including a 1986 boating accident that killed Gian-Carlo Coppola, 23, son of movie director Francis Ford Coppola in Maryland. Griffin O’Neal was convicted of negligently and recklessly operating a boat, received a community service sentence and later served a brief stint in jail as a result.

    With his Hollywood status diminishing, Ryan O’Neal began appearing in TV movies and eventually returned to series television opposite then-lover Fawcett with the 1991 sitcom “Good Sports,” but the show ran only one season.

    Both acknowledged the work put a strain on their relationship.

    “We get into fights,” O’Neal said in 1991. “She’s tough. She expects to be treated well. On a set that can get lost when you’re trying to create a moment and you’re fighting the clock.”

    O’Neal began accepting more supporting roles with the 1989 film “Chances Are.” He began a second career as a character actor, playing a husband who hires a hitman to kill his wife in “Faithful” (1996) and a mysterious tycoon in the blackmail comedy “Zero Effect” (1998).

    By then his relationship with Fawcett had ended, although they remained close and eventually rekindled their romance in the 2000s. The volatile O’Neal family dynamics that had taxed their relationship before, however, remained.

    In 2007 the elder O’Neal was arrested in 2007 for alleged assault and firing a weapon in an altercation with Griffin, but charges were never pursued. Their son Redmond was repeatedly arrested, jailed and spent several years in court-mandated rehab.

    A probation check on Redmond O’Neal in September 2008 at his father’s Malibu home led to the actor’s arrest for methamphetamine possession. Ryan O’Neal pleaded guilty to the charge and entered a drug diversion program, but he publicly denied the drugs were his. He said he confiscated them from his son and was trying to protect him.

    Charles Patrick Ryan O’Neal was born on April 20, 1941 and was the son of screenwriter Charles O’Neal and actor Patricia Callaghan O’Neal. O’Neal spent time as a lifeguard and an amateur boxer before finding his calling as a performer.

    Anthony McCartney, The Associated Press

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  • Ryan O’Neal, star of “Love Story” and “Paper Moon,” is dead at 82

    Ryan O’Neal, star of “Love Story” and “Paper Moon,” is dead at 82

    Ryan O’Neal, the Oscar-nominated star of films including “Love Story” and “Paper Moon,” has died. He was 82.

    O’Neal’s son Patrick confirmed his death Friday with a post on Instagram.  “This is just so hard for us. Ryan made such an impact and this will be difficult without him. This is and will be a huge void in our lives,” Patrick O’Neal wrote.

    Ryan O'Neal and Ali MacGraw in a promotional still for the movie "Love Story"
    Ryan O’Neal and Ali MacGraw in a promotional still for the movie “Love Story” in 1970.

    / Getty Images


    O’Neal was one the biggest actors of the late ’60s and early ’70s, on par with Clint Eastwood, Steve McQueen and Robert Redford. 

    Patrick Ryan O’Neal was born on April 20, 1941, in Los Angeles, according to his website. He trained as a professional boxer before landing his first job in television as a stuntman. Later, in the 1960s, he got his first major role on the prime-time soap opera “Peyton Place.” 

    But O’Neal’s breakout role came with the film adaptation of the best-selling novel “Love Story,” in which he starred opposite Ali MacGraw. The performance garnered him an Academy Award nomination.

    “Ryan was a very generous man who has always been there to help his loved ones for decade upon decade,” Patrick O’Neal wrote on Instagram. “I hope the first thing he brags about in Heaven is how he sparred 2 rounds with Joe Frazier in 1966, on national TV, with Muhammad Ali doing the commentary, and went toe to toe with Smokin’ Joe.”

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  • Roseanne Barr Eviscerates 'Corrupt' Joe Biden – Refuses To Vote For Him

    Roseanne Barr Eviscerates 'Corrupt' Joe Biden – Refuses To Vote For Him

    Opinion

    Source: Piers Morgan Uncensored YouTube

    Source: Bloomberg Television

    The legendary comedian Roseanne Barr, who has long been known as one of the only openly conservative stars in Hollywood, is speaking out this week against the “corrupt” President Joe Biden while defiantly refusing to vote for him.

    Barr Rips Biden As ‘Corrupt’

    After Time Magazine named the singer Taylor Swift as its “Person Of The Year,” Barr decided to have some fun by putting her own face on the cover of the magazine in a playfully doctored image, captioning it “there, that’s better.

    Newsweek reported that an internet troll unfortunately responded to this by calling Barr, 71, the “loser of the year.”

    “It’s sad because I used to actually respect you even when you went nuts…But now that you’re supporting a dishonest narcissistic criminal conman, it is just too much,” the social media user continued, seemingly referring to Barr’s longstanding support of the former President Donald Trump.

    Barr fired back in a big way, taking the opportunity to blast Biden.

    “I am not voting for Biden what are you talking about?” she stated. “I’ve been very clear on liking the non war causing, non corrupt one.”

    Haters And Fans Respond

    The troll responded by writing, “I said nothing about you voting for Biden, I know you’re not. That’s why I stated what I did. You’re voting for the most corrupt politician in history. FYI, Trump will go to prison. That’s what happens when you break the law. It’s sad you don’t understand how the law works.”

    Thankfully,” Barr’s fans were quick to rush to her defense.

     “Roseanne, He’s just scared. He knows Trump’s going to break all of their toys when he retakes the Presidency in 2024,” one fan wrote.

    “The funny thing is… Any true Roseanne fan will know that she doesn’t care what other people think,” another added.

    Related: Roseanne Barr Reveals Why Trump Is Like A ‘Mother Bear’ – ‘The Only One With Balls’

    Barr Gushes Over Trump – Attacks Biden

    Barr has always been open about her support of Trump. While talking to Donald Trump Jr. on his “Triggered” podcast back in October, she gushed over the former president while also revealing why she thinks liberals are so against him.

    “What I love about your dad is he is one funny guy!” Barr said of the former president. “He is so hilarious, and I think that is part of why they hate him. They hate humor. They don’t have any sense of humor about themselves — right there that is what a fascist is.”

    “Someone in power who has no ability to laugh at themselves, has no self-reflection; they look in the mirror and there is nothing there,” she continued. “If you can’t laugh at yourself, you don’t have a soul. Your dad laughs at himself and everyone else and he makes everyone laugh. He has the heart of the comedian, which is why we all love him because he’s so funny!”

    Full Story: Roseanne Barr Lays Out Theory For The Real Reason Democrats Hate Trump

    Barr has also frequently bashed Biden. Last month, she commented on a video that showed Biden walking on grass by writing, “Obama’s remote control needs a software update,” according to OK Magazine.

    We applaud Barr for continuing to have the guts to go against the liberal world of Hollywood by calling it exactly how she sees it when it comes to Biden, Trump, and politics. Please don’t ever change, Roseanne Barr!

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    James Conrad

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  • Tim Allen Hit With Damning Accusation Of Bad Behavior On Set By 'The Santa Clauses' Co-Star

    Tim Allen Hit With Damning Accusation Of Bad Behavior On Set By 'The Santa Clauses' Co-Star

    Opinion

    Source: Good Morning America YouTube

    The former “Home Improvement” star Tim Allen, who has long been known as one of the only openly Christian conservative stars in Hollywood, has been hit with a damning accusation of bad behavior on the set of “The Santa Clauses by one of his co-stars.

    Allen Accused Of Bad Behavior On Set

     Casey Wilson, who only appeared in the pilot episode of the Disney+ series “The Santa Clauses,” claimed on her B**** Sesh podcast this week that Allen was “f**king rude” to her when they filmed their scene.

    “Tim Allen was such a b—h,” said Wilson, who is best known for a short sting on “Saturday Night Live” from 2008-2009. “Worst, truly single worst experience I’ve ever had with a co star ever.”

    E! Online reported that Wilson, 43,  plays an older version of the lactose intolerant character Sara, who thinks Allen’s Santa is a burglar when she catches him entering her home.

    “So I’m in a scene. It’s just me and Tim Allen and I’m supposed to throw things at him,” Wilson explained. “He’s coming down the chimney, obviously as Santa. And I am woken up thinking there’s an intruder—basically like a home invasion scene.” 

    Wilson alleged that Allen, 70, didn’t like her performance, so he walked over to a producer who was standing near her.

    “I basically hear him—he goes, ‘You gotta tell her to stop stepping on my lines,’” Wilson continued. “The producer turns to me with horror on his face and has to walk one foot to me and he goes, ‘Tim would ask that you stopped stepping on his lines.’”

    “When he was done, he was so f–king rude,” she added. “Never made eye contact, never said anything. It was so uncomfortable.”

    Related: Tim Allen Reveals What It’s Really Like To Work With His Daughter On ‘The Santa Clauses’

    Wilson Doubles Down

    Wilson also claimed that Allen has everyone “walking on eggshells” whenever he is on set, according to Fox News. She alleged that as soon as their scene was over, Allen left the set.

    “It’s the end, and Tim Allen goes, ‘Leaving!,’ takes his Santa cape, picks it up and drops it on the floor and walks out,” Wilson explained. “And they hustle in his stand-in; lovely man, who was much nicer to act against. People are scurrying to pick up his velvet Santa coat. He’s a b—-.”

    “And this is the best,” she concluded. “I will not say who said this. This was someone that I do not know, perhaps in the crew. [He or she] breezes past me and just goes, ‘You’re seeing him on a good day.’”

    At the time of this writing, Allen has yet to respond publicly to Wilson’s claims.

    After starring in three Santa Clause movies, Allen brought back the character for the Disney+ series in 2022, and season 2 of the show premiered last month.

    “As I walked on set for the first time in the full regalia, everybody got very quiet, both adults and kids,” Allen said last year. “When I show up dressed in the full suit and everything else, there’s big smiles on people’s faces. Little kids are quiet. I had totally forgotten that. It does feel like Santa’s in the room.”

    Find out more about Wilson’s claims against Allen in the video below.

    Related: Tim Allen Reveals Why He Refuses To Watch Violent ‘Ugly Santa Movies’ – ‘I Don’t Like That’

    Allen’s Conservative Views

    Allen has long been one of the only openly conservative stars in Hollywood.

    “Well I’m what they call fiscal conservative, I like problem-solving, and problem-solving usually originates for my family — there was nine kids, and my single mom for a while, and a lot of it was about ‘How are we gonna pay for this?’” he previously said in 2015, according to The Sun.

    “I’ve worked different jobs and I’ve had a colorful past and I pay a lot in taxes,” he told Entertainment Weekly in 2018. “I wish we got more for our money. Whatever political party is for more responsible use of our money—that’s all I meant.”

    Given how liberal Hollywood is these days, this has only made Allen more of a target from attacks and unproven claims by leftists. Do you buy Wilson’s allegations about Allen, or could this just be another attempt to take a conservative star down? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section.

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    James Conrad

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  • Angelina Jolie Makes Surprising Claim About Her Divorce From Brad Pitt – 'We Had To Heal'

    Angelina Jolie Makes Surprising Claim About Her Divorce From Brad Pitt – 'We Had To Heal'

    Opinion

    Source: Screenshot Wall Street Journal YouTube

    Source: Screenshot CNN YouTube

    Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt had one of the most bitter celebrity divorces ever in a battle that went on for many years after she filed in September of 2016. Now, Jolie is opening up about this divorce, revealing that she had Bell’s palsy in the lead up to the split.

    Jolie Discusses Divorce

    “My body reacts very strongly to stress,” she explained, according to The Messenger. “My blood sugar goes up and down. I suddenly had Bell’s palsy six months before my divorce.”

    Bell’s palsy is described as “the sudden weakness in the muscles on one half of the face that appears as partial paralysis.”

    “We had to heal,” Jolie stated. “There are things we needed to heal from.”

    In the years since her divorce, Jolie has devoted much of her time to her six children, saying that she “doesn’t really have a social life.”

     “They are the closest people to me and my life, and they’re my close friends,” she said of her kids, according to Harper’s Bazaar. “We’re seven very different people, which is our strength.”

    Related: Jon Voight Slams Daughter Angelina Jolie For Anti-Israel Comments – ‘I Am Very Disappointed’

    Jolie’s ‘Closest Friends Are Refugees’

    Outside of her family, Jolie said,  “I realized my closest friends are refugees. Maybe four out of six of the women that I am close to are from war and conflict.”

    “There’s a reason people who have been through hardship are also much more honest and much more connected, and I am more relaxed with them,” Jolie added. “Why do I like spending time with people who’ve survived and are refugees? They’ve confronted so much in life that it brings forward not just strength, but humanity.”

    Jolie is also hoping to get out of the Hollywood bubble more often in the coming years. She was born and raised in Los Angeles as the daughter of the Oscar-winning actor Jon Voight.

    “It’s part of what happened after my divorce. I lost the ability to live and travel as freely. I will move when I can,” she said. “I grew up in quite a shallow place. Of all the places in the world, Hollywood is not a healthy place. So you seek authenticity.”

    Related: Angelina Jolie Demanded To Know Why The FBI Didn’t Arrest Brad Pitt

    Jolie And Pitt’s Divorce Battle

    Daily Mail reported that Jolie went on to say that because she “grew up around Hollywood,” she was “never very impressed” with it.

    “I never bought into it as significant or important,” Jolie explained.

    Jolie and Pitt’s divorce took an explosive turn back in 2016 after she claimed that he “choked” one of their children during an altercation on a private plane and then “struck” another.

    “Brad has accepted responsibility for what he did but will not for things he didn’t do,” Pitt’s rep said in response. “He has been on the receiving end of every type of personal attack and misrepresentation.”

    “Thankfully, the various public authorities she has tried to use against him over the past six years have made their own independent decisions,” the rep added. “Brad will continue to respond in court as he has consistently done.”

    This has clearly been an extremely messy divorce for everyone involved. What do you think about this? Let us know in the comments section.

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  • Highlights from the 2023 Kennedy Center Honors

    Highlights from the 2023 Kennedy Center Honors

    Highlights from the 2023 Kennedy Center Honors – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    The 2023 Kennedy Center Honors were held Sunday, recognizing Billy Crystal, Renee Fleming, Barry Gibb, Queen Latifah and Dionne Warwick. CBS will air the honors Wednesday night. “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell takes a look at this year’s highlights.

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  • Ferrari believed to be registered to actor Michael B. Jordan involved in collision in Hollywood

    Ferrari believed to be registered to actor Michael B. Jordan involved in collision in Hollywood

    Last summer, “Creed” and “Black Panther” star Michael B. Jordan posted a video on Instagram showing him testing out a Ferrari 296 GTB at a racetrack. Jordan can be seen enjoying the rush of taking the car through tight turns at high speeds.

    Now the actor and Los Angeles resident will probably be in the market for a new luxury sports car after a similar Italian vehicle linked to him was involved in a collision Saturday night in Hollywood.

    Los Angeles police declined to say who was part of the crash, confirming only that there was an incident about 11:30 p.m. at Sunset Boulevard and North Beachwood Drive. No one was arrested after the incident.

    Several news outlets showed video of a light blue Ferrari 812 Superfast with one of its wheels and side bumpers sheared off. The video also showed a nearby Kia Niro SUV that was badly damaged. Car & Driver reports the Ferrari goes for nearly $430,000.

    KABC7-TV, citing DMV records, reported that the vehicle was registered to Jordan— though it was not known if he was driving it. TMZ reported Jordan was at the crash scene.

    Representatives for the actor didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Benjamin Oreskes

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  • Michael B. Jordan Wrecks Ferrari In Collision With Parked Car! LOOK! – Perez Hilton

    Michael B. Jordan Wrecks Ferrari In Collision With Parked Car! LOOK! – Perez Hilton

    Michael B. Jordan’s Saturday night was one for the books — for better or worse.

    TMZ reported early on Sunday morning that the Black Panther star crashed his luxury blue Ferrari into a parked Kia at around 11:30 p.m. on Saturday night in Hollywood.

    How scary!!

    The Los Angeles Police Department arrived at the scene not long after, and according to the outlet, passed on issuing the 36-year-old a field sobriety test, as they apparently found no signs that pointed to him being under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

    Related: Nick Cannon Spends HOW MUCH Taking Kids To Disneyland Every Year?!

    Luckily, no injuries were reported, but the damage looks pretty bad. Take a look for yourself (below):

    That’s gnarly — and the Kia didn’t look much better, either.

    (c) MEGA/WENN

    Since substances reportedly weren’t involved, you may be wondering what exactly caused the crash… Well, according to the news org, the Creed star, who’s a well-known Ferrari enthusiast, declined to offer an explanation. Maybe he wants to speak with a lawyer first??

    The interaction apparently left off with the LAPD telling MBJ to fill out a police report online.

    What a wild ride! We’re sending support Michael’s way… Thank goodness he and everyone are okay! Thoughts, Perezcious readers? Let us know in the comments down below.

    [Images via MEGA/WENN]

    Perez Hilton

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