Actor Hill Harper has been out and about in Detroit actively engaging with community members as he campaigns for the U.S. Senate seat held by Debbie Stabenow.
As a progressive Democrat, Harper is working hard to gain momentum against three-term U.S. Representative and Democratic frontrunner Elissa Slotkin ahead of the Aug. 6 primary election. Recent polls indicate that Slotkin is leading by wide margins and is significantly ahead of Harper in fundraising.
His upcoming benefit show, however, may help, as it could appeal to a more-conservative or moderate crowd. Famous comedian Dave Chappelle is headlining the fundraiser, set for July 11 at Saint Andrew’s Hall.
While Chappelle’s political stance is up in the air, he has come under fire in recent years for offensive jokes about transgender people and anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric. So, it’s sort of an interesting choice for Harper, but he told The Detroit News that Chappelle is “an old friend.”
Fuck it, humor is known to bring people together.
At the upcoming show, no phones are allowed and the event listing encourages people to “leave your phones in your cars or at home.” Anyone who brings a cell phone will be required to keep it in a locked pouch.
General admission tickets to the fundraiser are $500, with Gold Circle tickets being sold at $1,000. There was limited balcony seating for $250, but it’s sold out. If you want to attend a VIP reception with Harper following the show, you can get a VIP + Gold Circle ticket for $3,300.
“If you’re tired of working harder, vote Hill Harper,” he raps. “If we’re trying to move smarter, vote Hill Harper. See it in big bold letters, ‘Vote Hill Harper.’ Gotta believe in better. Vote Hill Harper.”
The song, dubbed “Vote Hill Harper,” was released over the weekend and has whipped up more than 16,000 views on YouTube already.
Harper is featured in the video, swaying to the beat and talking to Detroiters outside the Detroit Institute of the Arts.
The race pits the progressiver Harper against frontrunner U.S. Rep. Elissa Slotkin, a moderate Democrat. They are vying for the seat held by Sen. Debbie Stabenow, who is retiring.
The nearly 90-second track includes an interview with Harper, who points out that only 12 Black people have ever served in the U.S. Senate.
“What we’re trying to do is extremely rare,” Harper says.
The catchy song lists Harper’s credentials and suggests Harper is an unstoppable force.
“We’re talking actor, author, father, activist, union leader, and Harvard Law school graduate,” Cash raps. “Once he get in, trust me, it ain’t no stopping him. He going to bring the fight for us all to Washington.”
Cash has a history of churning out viral, infectious tracks that provide commentary about current events. In 2020, he released “Justice for Ahmaud,” an emotional song dedicated to Amaud Arbery, the unarmed Black man slain by two white men while jogging in his Georgia neighborhood. The video sparked national outrage, petitions, and pleas for justice before the killers were arrested.
“I actually cried writing that song,” Cash told Metro Times just after posting the song. “Before I do a song, I read about it. I read about seven articles, watched about 10 to 20 videos on the situation, and it brought out a lot of emotion, a lot of tears.”
Less than a week before releasing “Justice for Ahmaud,” Cash dropped “Big Gretch,” a hilarious tribute to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, her decisive response to the coronavirus, and her nickname, which had been bestowed upon her by Black Twitter.
In April, Cash released two songs — “Detroit Sign” and “Detroit Sign 2” — mocking Detroit’s new “Hollywood”-style sign that was relentlessly criticized by the public.
“One thing I’ma do, I’ma state the facts/ this ain’t the sign that we wanted, you can take it back,” he rapped in the 1-minute song that quickly went viral.
In “Detroit Sign 2,” Cash raps, “They done went and put the sign up in some lights, I ain’t gonna lie, it kinda look alright/ but that’s only when you ride past it at night, I’m sick y’all got me bout to rap about this sign twice.”
Also in 2022, he released a track, “Gretch Did,” about the gubernatorial election” and “Go Blue” about University of Michigan beating Ohio State University in the annual rivalry football game.
As the Detroit Lions went on a tear last season, Cash dropped, ”Lions Won Again.”
Everyone knows about the Pop-Tart, but do they know the circumstances around its invention?
It dates back to the early ’60s when Kellogg’s biggest competitor, Post, announced Country Squares — a toaster-prepared breakfast pastry.
But Post made one big error, making this public announcement before the product was actually ready for the marketplace.
Desperate to pip Post to the post, Kellogg’s hired Grand Rapids native Bill Post, plant manager for the Michigan-based Hekman Biscuit Company (later Keebler Co.) to create their own version of the breakfast pastry, which they did just four months later.
The race to invent the sweet treat is the focus of Jerry Seinfeld’s Netflix film Unfrosted — albeit a slightly fictitious version.
Jim Gaffigan joins the film’s A-list cast starring as Edsel Kellogg III — who hires “Bob Cabana” (played by Seinfeld) to invent the Pop-Tart.
Despite Unfrosted being Seinfeld’s directorial debut, the comedian has a wealth of experience in this field as showrunner of his iconic, eponymous sitcom from 1996 to 1998.
Therefore, Gaffigan had a strong idea of what to expect from Seinfeld as a director before arriving on set.
“This might have been Jerry’s first time directing but having done Seinfeld and the fact that it was such a writer’s medium, meaning the writer-slash-showrunner has this heavy hand over the direction,” the comedian tells Metro Times. “He is somebody that appreciates keeping it light and playful but with a purpose. With some comedies you’re not sure how they are going to keep it together because there’s so much messy back-and-forth or improv — but there was an efficiency with the time [in] Unfrosted.”
Speaking with Netflix, Seinfeld remarked how he used the bare bones of the true story and then let his imagination run wild with milkmen cartels, an insurrection led by cereal mascots, and a living hybrid Pop-Tart creature.
“This really did happen in Battle Creek, Michigan, where Kellogg’s and Post were located, and they did compete to come up with this product… But the rest of it is complete lunacy,” said Seinfeld. “We’re going to tell you a story, but if we want to do something funny that doesn’t make any sense, we’re going to do that too.”
Seinfeld managed to assemble an incredible cast for the film with some staggering A-list cameo appearances, including the likes of Jon Hamm, Melissa McCarthy, Dan Levy, Christian Slater, Bill Burr, and Peter Dinklage.
Gaffigan says this experience was unique and exciting, often wondering, “Who do we get to play with today?”
Hugh Grant also stars in the movie as Thurl Ravenscroft — the real-life actor behind Tony the Tiger. The iconic British actor stars as the cereal mascot and for the first time in almost 30 years, he filmed an audition tape and sent it to Seinfeld before he was cast.
The casting of Grant especially excited Gaffigan, who describes him as “perfect” for the role.
Hugh Grant stars in Unfrosted as the actor behind Tony the Tiger.
“He is such an entertaining and charming movie star,” Gaffigan says. “I had dinner with him and there is a surface version of what you think Hugh Grant is and then you are impressed by his ability that goes beyond the king of the romantic-comedy. He is a really funny character. I describe him as the ‘most un-British yet very British guy I’ve met.’ He has this strange neurosis that is more American than British.”
One of Gaffigan’s most memorable scenes in the movie was when he attempts to seduce Amy Schumer’s Marjorie Post by dancing to Chubby Checker’s 1961 classic “Let’s Twist Again.”
The comedian describes the dance scene as “out of his wheelhouse” and admitted he was nervous in the build-up to filming.
“I’m not a big dancer so you won’t catch me doing any twists [in the future],” he says. “When it comes to dancing or in an episode of The Flight of the Conchords I had to sing, that is really foreign to me. I get nervous for stuff like that but usually any acting thing I’m usually so prepared that I feel fine about it.”
Over recent years, despite his comedic background, Gaffigan has opted for more dramatic roles with his acting.
“The serious roles often have a greater complexity or dimension to the character,” he says. “As opposed to a lighter comedy, there can be some layers but it’s not going to be as complex as someone processing grief or dealing with the complexity of a relationship that might be falling apart. Whereas, in comedy, the objective is usually to get to the next funny piece.”
Unfrosted is set to be released via Netflix on May 3.
Even Mayor Mike Duggan admitted he was confused over what to expect, answering a question about the sign during a Thursday press conference about the NFL Draft.
“I gotta go over and take a look at it myself and experience it driving on 94,” Duggan said with a chuckle.
Duggan said the project was dreamed up by Brad Dick, the city’s “tremendously ambitious general services director.”
“He said, ‘I want to do something besides the boring Welcome to Detroit signs. I want to do this,’” Duggan recalled. “I said, ‘Sure, Brad. I’m more interested in you getting the trash up off the freeway.’”
The mayor said he didn’t really pay attention to the project until about a month ago when he saw what appeared to be a rendering of the sign on social media.
“I saw a post on Instagram of a spectacular Hollywood sign and I called Brad and I said, ‘That’s terrific! I had no idea you were thinking that big,’” Duggan said. “He says, ‘That’s a fake post. Some guy on Instagram just made it up. That’s not our plan.’ I said, ‘Brad, you got a problem. People are gonna think the fake post is the real Detroit sign.’ He says, ‘No, no, you don’t really understand social media. People don’t confuse fake posts with real life.’”
Of course, people confuse fake posts on social media with reality all the time — a problem that is likely to only get worse with the rise of AI-generated images and “deepfake” technology.
Duggan said other officials were also fooled, adding that on Wednesday, he got an email from a procurement director in New Jersey who “[demanded] I fire the procurement staff because they didn’t get delivered the sign that we ordered.”
“They’re circulating the fake post under what we got and claiming that the city of Detroit didn’t deliver what we promised,” Duggan said.
“I guess Brad will learn something about being ambitious and trying to do something special, but I applaud the ambition of doing something a cut above the boring side,” Duggan added. “And I think if he hadn’t been judged against that extraordinary artist on Instagram, he’d have done fine.”
A number of unofficial renderings of a “Hollywood”-style sign began circulating on social media shortly after the project was reported in February, with one image showing big, blocky white letters towering over I-94. It’s unclear who is behind it, but it appears to have been created using generative artificial intelligence, which can create realistic images based on text prompts. Such images have flooded social media in recent months as the technology has developed and become more widely available.
While amusing, this whole ordeal is a warning that people will need to be ever vigilant in safeguarding against “fake news” and misinformation in the social media age. Stay woke!