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“Gotti” Will Be John Travolta’s Lowest Grossing Movie in General Release Since 1995

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“Gotti” made less than $100,000 on Monday night, just $219 per theater in 466 showcases. The total gross in theaters will be around $3.5 million. No one knows how much it cost, but at least $20 million was wasted on it. Probably a lot more.

For Travolta, this is an all time low. Not counting small movies with theatrical releases into less than 50 screens, “Gotti” is the “Saturday Night Fever” star’s lowest grossing film in general release since 1995.

You have to go all the way back to “White Man’s Burden,” released by Savoy in ’95, a year after Travolta was resurrected with “Pulp Fiction.” The great legend Harry Belafonte, then in his 70s, was Travolta’s co-star, along with Seth Green. Lawrence Bender, maybe jazzed up from “Pulp Fiction,” produced. For Japanese director Desmond Nakano “White Man’s Burden” was a first film. He disappeared after that, but did direct a Japanese-American production in 2007 called “American Pastime.”

Is Travolta done? He’s been on our screens since the 70s with “Welcome Back Kotter.” He’s had other disasters, career lulls, has been written off many times.  He had four huge flops in a row from 1981 to 1989 until the first “Look Who’s Talking” movie, which was garbage, caught fire and brought him back.

An actual run of hits in the 90s after “Pulp Fiction” saved him– “Get Shorty,” “Broken Arrow,” “Phenomenon,” “Face/Off,” and “Michael” are the best of his resume– and then he drifted into junk maintenance. In the last two decades he had odd one off hits with “The General’s Daughter” (which was famous for its bloated perk budget) and “Wild Hogs.”

Can he resuscitate? Why not? Even though his personal life is creepy, Travolta has the good will of “Saturday Night Fever,” “Grease,” and “Pulp Fiction” and he knows how to play that card. If he pulls off that wig, he has a whole new career waiting. Meantime, “Gotti” finds its place in Razzie history.

 

Exclusive: Judge Rules Sumner Redstone Girlfriend Manuela Herzer Doesn’t Get $3.75 mil Apartment in Hotel Carlyle

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National Amusements chairman Sumner Redstone, owner of Viacom, will get to keep his apartement in the Hotel Carlyle after all. A judge in New York ruled today against his ex galpal Manuela Herzer, who said she’d been promised the apartment as a gift.

Decided on June 26, 2018
Renwick, J.P., Gische, Kapnick, Gesmer, Kern, JJ.

159840/16 6988N 6987

[*1] Sumner M. Redstone, Plaintiff-Respondent,

v

Manuela Herzer, Defendant-Appellant, Hotel Carlyle Owners Corporation, Defendant.

Law Offices of Ronald Richards & Associates, A.P.C., Beverley Hills, CA (Ronald N. Richards of the bar of the State of California, admitted pro hac vice, of counsel), for appellant.

Matalon Shweky Elman PLLC, New York (Howard I. Elman of counsel), for respondent.

Order and judgment (one paper), Supreme Court, New York County (Erika M. Edwards, J.), entered October 26, 2017, which, inter alia, granting plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on his first cause of action for a declaration that defendant Manuela Herzer has no valid claim to an ownership interest in a certain apartment, directing defendant Hotel Carlyle Owners Corporation to cancel a proprietary lease and 2,110 shares for the apartment issued to plaintiff and Herzer and issue a new proprietary lease and shares to the apartment solely to plaintiff, and denying Herzer’s application for a mental competency examination of plaintiff on an expedited basis, unanimously affirmed, without costs. Order, same court and Justice, entered January 19, 2018, which, insofar as appealed from as limited by the briefs, denied Herzer’s motion to renew, unanimously affirmed, without costs.

Plaintiff and Herzer entered into an agreement which clearly stated that plaintiff was purchasing the subject apartment and that he intended to give the apartment as a gift to Herzer upon his death. In the agreement, Herzer acknowledged that notwithstanding the inclusion of her name on the contract of sale, proprietary lease and shares, the apartment belonged exclusively to plaintiff until his death, and that adding defendant’s name was a matter of convenience for plaintiff.

“[T]o make a valid inter vivos gift there must exist the intent on the part of the donor to make a present transfer; delivery of the gift, either actual or constructive to the donee; and acceptance by the donee” (Gruen v Gruen , 68 NY2d 48, 53 [1986]). The proponent of a gift has the burden of proving these elements by clear and convincing evidence (id. ). Here, Supreme Court properly concluded, based on the clear language of the agreement, that plaintiff did not make an inter vivos gift of the apartment to Herzer. The court properly refused to consider extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent based on the express terms of the agreement.

The court also correctly denied Herzer’s motion to renew as she presented no new evidence that would have changed the result (CPLR 2221[e]). Evidence of interfamilial squabbling had no bearing on the agreement, which was clear on its face.

An expedited mental examination of plaintiff was unwarranted because a person of unsound mind who was not judicially declared incompetent may sue in the same manner as anyone else (see Rau v Tannenbaum , 85 AD2d 522 [1st Dept 1981]). No evidence was presented that plaintiff was judicially declared incompetent. Furthermore, Herzer admitted that plaintiff [*2]was of sound mind when he signed the agreement which limited the gift. Thus, his present mental condition was not relevant.

We have considered Herzer’s remaining arguments and find them unavailing.

THIS CONSTITUTES THE DECISION AND ORDER

OF THE SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION, FIRST DEPARTMENT.

ENTERED: JUNE 26, 2018

CLERK

Robert De Niro Leads List of 2019 Hollywood Walk of Fame Honorees Including Linda Ronstadt, Alan Arkin, Daniel Craig, Jackie Wilson

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The Hollywood Walk of Fame is going to be a little crowded next year. The Chamber of Commerce announced today will be getting stars. Someone has to pay for the star. Sometimes it’s the studio or a producer touting a film, or a record company pitching in for an artist, or a benefactor.

Next year, for example, Daniel Craig will get a star–it may be part of his deal for the new James Bond movie. Robert De Niro is the biggest name on next year’s list. Alan Arkin– long overdue–maybe has a benefactor.

Here are the categories:
Movies— Alan Arkin, Kristen Bell, Daniel Craig, Robert De Niro, Guillermo del Toro, Anne Hathaway, Lupita Nyong’o, Tyler Perry, and Gena Rowlands. Dianne Wiest has an Oscar, but her star is coming from the TV side.
TV — Alvin and the Chipmunks, Candice Bergen, Guy Fieri, Terrence Howard, Stacy Keach, Sid and Marty Krofft, Lucy Liu, Mandy Moore, Dianne Wiest, and Julia Child (posthumously).
Music— Michael Buble, Cypress Hill, the Lettermen, Faith Hill, Tommy Mottola, P!nk, and Teddy Riley. Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt, and Emmylou Harris will also receive a star together for “Trio,” and Jackie Wilson will be honored posthumously.
Jackie Wilson should have been there years ago. I want Sam Moore from Sam & Dave to get his star next year.
Other— Idina Menzel, Cedric the Entertainer, Judith Light, and Paul Sorvino will be recognized in the live theater/live performance category. These are weird. Judy Light has a Daytime Emmy and was a huge TV star. Sorvino should be TV. Menzel– I’ll let it go. Guy Fieri? He must be paying for it himself. The Chipmunks? Someone owns their rights.
As for Dolly, Emmylou and Linda– they each deserve their own star!

Donald Trump Breaks with Wife’s Be Best Movement, Threatens Congresswoman, Mocks Senator, Name Calls Senate Candidate

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Donald Trump has broken with his wife’s Be Best Campaign. Melania Trump just a few weeks ago introduced Be Best with this mission: “By promoting values such as healthy living, encouragement, kindness, and respect, parents, teachers, and other adults can help prepare children for their futures. With those values as a solid foundation, children will be able to better deal with the evils of the opioid crisis and avoid negative social media interaction.”

Today Donald broke with the campaign as he threatened US Congresswoman Maxine Waters on Twitter. He called her a “low IQ person” and suggested physical violence against her:

This weekend, Trump also called, for the umpteenth time, Senator Elizabeth Warren “Pocohantas” to mock her claim of Native American genealogy, and dubbed Nevada Senate candidate Jacky Rosen “Wacky Jacky.”

Essentially, Trump spat in the face of his wife’s new campaign. She’ll have to call it “Be Worst” now.

Happy Birthday, Carly Simon, Singer, Songwriter, Activist, Still Not in Rock Hall of Fame

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Can you believe Carly Simon still isn’t in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? Just for “You’re So Vain” she deserves it.

Anyway: a big Happy Birthday to Carly who turns 73 today. You wouldn’t know it from her Instagram. She looks great and very zen of course on Martha’s Vineyard. Can we entice her into New York for a show anytime soon? (Maybe when a recent rumored broken hip heals. Get well soon!)

Carly has an Oscar, she loads of gold records, other awards too many to count! She has a catalog of hits to die for. Plus, she’s a mom, a grandmother (!), she’s an activist who’s always on right side of cutting edge causes.

Her distinctively melodic, throaty voice gave top 40 a whole new sexiness when she first the airwaves in 1971 with “That’s The Way I’ve Always Heard it Should Be.” “You’re So Vain” gets all the attention– for its mystery subject and its incredible catchiness, production. But there are later Carly songs I hear in my head all the time, from “Let the River Run” to “Better Not Tell Her.” She also made two of greatest “cover songs” albums of all time with “Torch” and “Moonlight Serenade.” Plus let’s not forget one of the top 3 James Bond songs of all time– “Nobody Does it Better.”

Nobody does do it better. Happy Birthday, Carly!

 

PS I took that photo at Clive Davis’s pre Grammy dinner around 4 years ago. That’s Carly with her long time friend and producer Richard Perry, and Jane Fonda.

 

RIP Dan Ingram, One of the Great Top 40 DeeJays of All Time, of WABC and CBS FM Fame

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Dan Ingram is gone today, at age 83. He was my radio hero, mostly from 77 WABC AM, the greatest top 40 radio station ever, and WCBS FM from its heyday when it didn’t play crap from the 1980s.

Dan was irreverent but never a shock jock. He warmly undermined the status and cracked you up when you didn’t expect it. When “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” played, he inserted Joe Tex screaming “I Gotcha!” when Robert Flack arrived ponderously at “The first time ever I lay with you.” He was juvenile appropriate for a teen audience.

I got to know Dan in the 80s, after WABC was converted into right wing jabbering. He went to CBS FM with many of his great colleagues, now missed so much: Harry Harrison, Ron Lundy, Chuck Leonard, and so on. Cousin Brucie is still kickin’ it on Sirius. They were the championship team.

Dan ended every show with “Bye now, Kemosabe!” So it’s back at him, today, Bye, now Kemosabe! Thanks for everything!

Listening to these sound checks on YouTube from an era gone by, you can hear how much deejays shaped the popularity of what we call classic pop and rock. They hyped it. They loved it. They made it into something dramatic. There was a sense of occasion.

Film Academy Invites A Whopping 928 New Members from 59 Countries, 17 Oscar Winners, 92 Nominees

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The Motion Picture Academy has found 928 new members to invite, from 59 different countries.

They’ve cast their web so wide that, really, only Stormy Daniels is left for next year. (Just kidding.)

A lot of people are in now who you might associate mostly with television. Maybe they made one or two movies of no significance, but if they’re anything other than white, or men, they’re in.

The Academy is really touting inclusion of women– many of whom should long ago have been made members, like Christine Baranski or Eileen Atkins. Julie Kavner is finally in, even though we think of her mostly from “Rhoda” or “The Simpsons.” Six time Tony winner Audra McDonald is in, as is Indian actress Tabu (I wondered what happened to her), and Scientologist Yeardley Smith of “The Simpsons” (also TV).

In music, they’ve added Melissa Etheridge, Questlove from the Roots, and Kendrick Lamar.

Plus some of our favorite publicists got in, including Janice Roland, Michael Kupferberg, Nicolette Aizenberg, Scott Feinstein, Lina Plath, Shannon Treusch, Pete Dangerfield, Vicky Eguia, and the just married Bebe Lerner!

Congrats to all!

 

Ratings: George Clooney AFI Tribute Beaten by Bobby Flay, Survival Show on History, Apes, House Hunters, Ryan Phillippe

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The American Film Institute tribute to George Clooney was fun to watch, if you were watching.

The show aired last Thursday at 10pm on TNT and scored 483,000. It was sixth or seventh in its time slot. Shows that beat it– scoring a million or more viewers on cable at the same hour– included Bobby Flay on the Food Network, “Alone,” a survival show on the History Channel, Primates on Discovery Channel, “House Hunters,” and Ryan Phillippe’s USA Netowrk series “Shooter.”

Julia Roberts had been advertised for the AFI Tribute but didn’t show up for the taping. No explanation was given. Many Clooney co-stars, especially Sandra Bullock and Matt Damon, and Brad Pitt, weren’t included at all. Odd miscellaneous types appeared for no reason.

In between the taping and the airing of the show, the AFI laid off a popular black female executive who ran the AFI Film Fest. The institute is top heavy with salaries, and, as I reported earlier this month. is in overall financial trouble.

In addition to a low overall total viewer number, the AFI tribute had a .15 in the key demo, about half of what Flay, the survivalists, or the primates got in their time period.

Kathy Griffin Tour: Carnegie Hall Sold Out But Radio City Has Hundreds of Seats Available

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Kathy Griffin’s concert bookers may have over reacted to her new found popularity.

She is mostly sold out for tomorrow night at Carnegie Hall. But tonight’s date at Radio City Music Hall is wide open. There are hundreds of unsold seats.

The Carnegie Hall date was announced first and sold out quickly. We announced it here, a great success. But like someone who was doing well in a casino, Griffin got greedy.

Radio City is vastly bigger and much harder to sell for a single act. Also, with Carnegie Hall already saturating the ticket buying populace, Radio City would be much more difficult to fill– and a less exclusive seat.

On Ticketmaster, almost all sections are showing 100+ seats available. Maybe they’ll let the people in the cheap seats move down to hear Griffin, who is sharply funny and a refreshing rebuke to the current crazy political climate.

Kanye Sales Collapse: In Third Week, “Ye” Album Sells Total Only 39K, Mostly from Streaming

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Kanye West? You remember the “Ye” album release? It was, what, two weeks ago? Kanye and DefJam flew 150 people to the wilds of Wyoming for the album release. Then they had another album release party in Brooklyn. Kanye was everywhere.

Right around that time, when Kanye was supporting Donald Trump very vocally, and announcing his diagnosis of bipolar illness, a friend of mine who’s back said, “That album? No black person wants that album.”

And so, two weeks later, the “Ye” album, priced to sell at $7.99, is over. This week “Ye” sold just under 39,000 “copies.” Most of that was from streaming. There were only around 6,400 paid downloads.

Kanye’s other album, “Kids See Ghosts,” with Kid Cudi, in its second week, sold around 33,373 copies– again mostly from streaming. Paid downloads came in around 7,800.

The money Kanye is seeing from streaming isn’t much for a celebrity with his overhead. On hitsdailydouble’s Song Streaming Revenue Chart, Kanye and Kid Cudi’s songs together earned around $700,000. The licensing and expense fees are high for all those tracks. The biggest Kids See Ghosts tracks is actually listed “with Louis Prima,” the late jazz star. The Prima estate is getting prima money for that sample.