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Tag: Matthew Modine

  • Millie Bobby Brown’s ‘Stranger Things’ co-star to officiate wedding – National | Globalnews.ca

    Millie Bobby Brown’s ‘Stranger Things’ co-star to officiate wedding – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Millie Bobby Brown‘s on-screen ‘Papa,’ actor Matthew Modine, said he will officiate the star’s wedding to her fiancé Jake Bongiovi.

    Modine, who plays antagonist Dr. Martin Brenner in the Netflix hit Stranger Things, told Access Daily he’s already written wedding vows for the ceremony.

    “I have one of those licenses to get people married, and Millie thought it’d be great, and then Jake said it would be a great idea,” the 65-year-old actor explained.

    Modine said the Brown, 20, and Bongiovi, 21, “loved” the vows he created.

    He told Access Daily hosts Kit Hoover and Mario Lopez that he’s officiated one other wedding before this.

    “It’s such a beautiful thing to be able to join two people in holy matrimony,” Modine gushed.

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    “I’ve been married 44 years. It’s amazing when it works.”

    Modine is married to Caridad Rivera, a makeup and wardrobe stylist. They have two children.

    Brown and Bongiovi, who is the son of Jon Bon Jovi, first teased news of their engagement in April 2023. Brown uploaded a photo of the two actors embracing on the beach while she wore a diamond ring on her fourth finger.


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    “I’ve loved you three summers now, honey, I want ’em all,” she captioned the post, a reference to the Taylor Swift song Lover. 

    The engaged couple first began dating in 2021.

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    The date of their pending nuptials has not been made public.

    In February, Brown recounted the proposal in an interview with Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show. 

    Brown said Bongiovi proposed while the pair were on vacation. Since the couple love diving, and obtained their diving licences together, Brown said her fiancé popped the question while underwater.

    On the special day, Bongiovi informed an unsuspecting Brown that they were scheduled for an 8 a.m. dive.

    While “many metres” underwater, Brown said Bongiovi handed her a shell that had a ring hidden underneath. Unable to speak in the water, the couple bubbled and signed at one another before Bongiovi put the ring on Brown’s finger.

    “He puts the ring on my hand, and as I go to show him, the ring falls off my finger,” Brown recalled. “It plummets so fast; it was like a cinematic movie.”

    Bongiovi dove for the ring, Brown said, and saved it.

    When they surfaced, Bongiovi formally asked Brown to marry him.

    Brown skyrocketed to international fame as a child after starring as Eleven in Stranger Things. The smash hit TV series will return one last time for its upcoming fifth season.

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    Bongiovi, also an actor, is set to star in Rockbottom, an upcoming comedy about a rock ‘n’ roll ’80s hair metal band called CougarSnake.


    Click to play video: 'Millie Bobby Brown on her new dark fantasy film ‘Damsel’'


    Millie Bobby Brown on her new dark fantasy film ‘Damsel’


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    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Read The Deal Here! As Fran Drescher Promised, SAG-AFTRA Releases Full Tentative Agreement With Studios As Ratification Voting Continues

    Read The Deal Here! As Fran Drescher Promised, SAG-AFTRA Releases Full Tentative Agreement With Studios As Ratification Voting Continues

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    Over two weeks after SAG-AFTRA reached a deal with the studios and ended their nearly four-month long strike, the actors guild has just released the full text of the tentative agreement.

    We’ll get into the fine print soon with analysis of this draft document (as Guild National Director Duncan Crabtree-Ireland notes: “The MOA  is not ‘final’ until signed by both parties), but for now read the full Memorandum of Agreement for yourself here.

    A Friday news dump by any other name, the publication of the long awaited 129-page 2023 TV/Theatrical Contracts Memorandum of Agreement was promised two days ago by Guild president Fran Drescher.

    “As you may know, traditionally SAG-AFTRA contract ratification votes rely on our detailed summaries of the new agreement, as the drafting of a formal memorandum of agreement (MOA) usually takes many weeks,” Crabtree-Ireland said in a note accompanying the “document in progress” MOA link sent to Guild members this afternoon. “However, for this historic deal some members have asked to review the full draft MOA during the ratification voting period,” the Guild leader added. For greater context, the Guild also included links to the past several previous contracts too.  See Crabtree-Ireland’s full note below.

    Today’s MOA release also comes as eligible members of the 160,000-strong SAG-AFTRA have been voting on ratification of the proposed new three-year contract since November 14. The ratification vote runs until December 5, but a well placed source told me the online voting was “really heavy” in the opening days.

    On November 10, two days after SAG-AFTRA and the CEO Gang of Four-led studios settled the strike that had shut down production in Hollywood, the actors guild leadership gave a press conference on the agreement and put out a bullet points overview of the new deal – after 86% of the National Board voted to take the matter to members for ratification. SAG-AFTRA has proclaimed the agreement to be of “extraordinary scope,” and “valued at over one billion dollars in new wages and benefit plan funding.”

    As criticism of the potential deal rose, specifically around the AI provisions, SAG-AFTRA dropped an 18-page summary of the agreement late on November 12 – just before the first of many Guild information sessions with Drescher and chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland kicked off on November 13.

    “This deal has set the groundwork for our future and generations to come, it is major,” Drescher told members on that virtual info session on November 13. “We didn’t get that, but we got this, this, this and this, and we’ll get that next time,” she added taking a swipe at “low-level people” who pilloried the agreement, as far as they knew. “In negotiation, you have to weigh and measure and make your informed decision on behalf of the greater good.”

    In recent days, Justine Bateman, who served as an AI advisor to the negotiating committee, and Matthew Modine, who was one of nine National Board members who voted against sending the deal to members for ratification, have come out sharply against the agreement – undoubtedly in part why the document was released today.

    SAG-AFTRA’s Fran Drescher and Duncan Crabtree-Ireland

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    Read Duncan Crabtree-Ireland’s full note to SAG-AFTRA members today here:

    Dear Members,

    As you may know, traditionally SAG-AFTRA contract ratification votes rely on our detailed summaries of the new agreement, as the drafting of a formal memorandum of agreement (MOA) usually takes many weeks. However, for this historic deal some members have asked to review the full draft MOA during the ratification voting period.  

    I’m pleased to advise that the draft MOA containing detailed language on all of the changes in the 2023 TV/Theatrical Contracts tentative agreement has now been posted to sagaftra.org/contracts2023. Click here to view it.

    These contracts achieve more than $1 billion in NEW compensation and benefit plan funding (including an additional $317.2 million to the benefit plans). The contracts establish lengthy and detailed AI guardrails that didn’t exist before and do protect you as we meet the challenge of this new technology, hair and makeup equity, significantly increased background coverage, outsized streaming residuals, a new streaming success fund, and so much more. These gains are only possible because of your sacrifice, solidarity and tenacity over the 118 days of the strike and are assured if you vote to ratify the agreement.

    As you will see in the MOA, this is a draft document and is being provided to you for informational purposes only to assist your decision making during this ratification process. The MOA  is not “final” until signed by both parties. 

    As an additional reference to aid your review of this draft MOA, you may wish to refer to the contracts it modifies, builds upon and improves, specifically the 2014 Codified Basic Agreement and Television Agreement, both as amended by the 2017 and 2020 memorandum of agreements which followed. 

    Please review these details closely to understand all of the meaningful improvements. Your National Board and Negotiating Committee both voted to approve and recommend a YES vote. To lock in these gains, you must vote to approve by 5 p.m. PT on Dec. 5, 2023. To register your vote, please visit vote.ivsballot.com/tvtheatrical2023 and use the PIN on the postcard that was mailed to eligible SAG-AFTRA members on Tuesday, Nov. 14 or if needed, your PIN can be retrieved from the voting website. 

    And lastly, if you haven’t already, visit sagaftra.org/contracts2023, where you can watch videos of informational meetings, read FAQs and find many AI resources regarding the gains in this contract. 

    In strength together,

    Duncan Crabtree-Ireland

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    Dominic Patten

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  • Madonna Gambles on Rereleasing “Gambler”

    Madonna Gambles on Rereleasing “Gambler”

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    Apropos of nothing—not even some TikTok virality bullshit—Madonna has seen fit to reissue her 1985 single, “Gambler,” for all streaming platforms. Although Madonna has been rereleasing all kinds of remastered and remixed “goodies” lately (especially for Erotica’s thirtieth anniversary) in honor of going through her back catalogue with Warner Bros., “Gambler” is the most arbitrary pick to date. For it’s not as though the single has been reissued for the fortieth anniversary or some such. No, 2022 marks a rather unspecial thirty-seven years since the advent of Vision Quest and its soundtrack, for which Madonna offered up both “Gambler” and the more well-known “Crazy For You.” As for the former, Madonna, ever the ahead-of-her-time feminist, stated of the lyrical composition, “[It’s] really the girl’s point of view, because she’s, like, an unstoppable person… She doesn’t really need this guy.” Yes, it sounds exactly like herself she’s describing.

    Except that, in Vision Quest’s case, it applies to the female lead, Carla (Linda Fiorentino), passing through Spokane, Washington on her way to San Francisco. She ends up boarding at high schooler Louden Swain’s (Matthew Modine) house after his father (Ronny Cox) rents a room to her. Despite coming across as the older, more mature woman (in real life, she’s a year younger than Modine), the attraction between her and Louden develops incrementally, all with the help of “Crazy For You” to soundtrack it. But the flipside to the vulnerability of such a ballad is “Gambler,” filled with the chutzpah and bravado that Madonna herself rose to fame on. Her own backstory, characterized by clawing her way to the top as a New York street rat, easily fits in with lyrics like, “Gambler/Yeah, I know all the words to say/‘Cause I’m a gambler/I only play the game to win, yeah” and “Don’t wanna say this but I think that I should/I’m better off forgotten if you think that I’ll be good/One day you see me, the next day I’m gone/Don’t fight me, baby, I don’t wanna hold on.”

    Had Madonna been keeping a diary circa 1979-1982, these are lines that could surely have been ripped from its pages as she moved on from people like Dan Gilroy and Camille Barbone in her endless bid to break into the fame business. Indeed, “Gambler” couldn’t have been written with as much conviction as anyone except Madonna, complete with all her Leo arrogance as she goads, “You’re not happy with the way I act/You better turn around boy, don’t look back/You’re getting angry, you know I can see/You’re just jealous ’cause you can’t be me.” For a long time, of course, that was true, with every pop singer in the game yearning to have as much success and idol worship as Madonna. As time wore on, and she started to become viewed as more of a caricature of herself (particularly in her social media postings), jealousy has given way to something like “pity.” But of course, Madonna would never allow other people’s negative reactions to what she does stop her (hence, “you can’t stop me now”). Perhaps knowing more than ever that every behavior she engages in is a “gamble.” From rereleasing this little-appreciated single to rereleasing her Sex book in the climate of peak cancel culture.

    No matter, for the theme song of Madonna’s life has been “Gambler.” With every move she’s made being one giant leap of faith starting from the moment she opted to drop out of college and move to NYC on a wing and a prayer. Thus, one can hear the genuineness of her earnest defiance as she makes the final declaration, “Yeah, I’m a gambler/That’s right, baby!” Although the single sounds better than ever, Madonna evaded giving the somewhat lackluster accompanying video an “HD” upgrade, leaving the look of it decidedly “lo-fi.” Which suits the aesthetics of the era perfectly as we see interspersed Vision Quest scenes attached to Madonna’s nightclub performance in the movie. Indeed, she’s billed as “Singer at Club” in the credits, yet another nod to the grind of her early days spent performing in dives throughout the Eastern Seaboard. A grueling slog she was eager to transform into a national tour once she hit the bona fide big-time with her second album, Like A Virgin.

    So it was that “Gambler” managed to make the cut for the setlist of 1985’s The Virgin Tour. Yet, although the tour kicked off on April 10 in Seattle, “Gambler” wouldn’t get an official release as the second single from the Vision Quest Soundtrack until September of ’85. So clearly, Madonna believed in it enough to do some ample pre-promoting throughout the tour, wherein she appears for the only live rendition of the song dressed in simple skin-tight black leggings, a black crop top with a cross cutout at the chest and arm-length black fringe gloves. Relying solely on her raw stripper energy, Madonna dances about in the manner she became known for in early videos like “Everybody” and “Lucky Star” as she asks, “You understand what I’m talkin’ about, Detroit?” (with the sole official recording of the show having taken place in her hometown).

    Not only did she make Detroit understand all about the undiluted ambition emanating off her in “Gambler,” but the entire rest of the world. Produced by then-boyfriend John “Jellybean” Benitez (who Madonna would throw over in 1985 for Sean Penn), this single ultimately needs no “reason” to be rereleased. For it not only distills, but cuts to the core of Madonna’s entire identity—the very one that has landed her where she is today.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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