Saturday, September 28, 2024
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Spotify Bold Move to Fight Apple Music: Brand New Free Version of App “Something for Nothing”

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Spotify is throwing its weight into the free part of its service. Access to all music “something for nothing” is their goal to massive growth and to ward off Apple Music’s burgeoning threat to their leadership.The new features for free listening is designed toward a huge amount of personalization. Spotify will offer 40 hours a day of easily accessed free music. The hope, said execs at a morning press conference in New York, is that this plan will spur new subscribers to their premium service.

Spotify is also helping customers who have caps on data plans.  They’re optimizing usage to lower mobile data by at least 75 percent. They’re also simplifying the mobile interface.

The Spotify execs who made the presentation this morning were upbeat and positive. But the news wasn’t exactly what was expected. All week there had been buzz about a possible piece of Spotify hardware for the car or some kind of dedicated player. This news about “Freemium”– as they call it– is good for listeners, certainly.

But it raised a lot of questions that no one is prepared to address yet– as in how this will affect artists’ royalties, and what it really means for Spotify’s premium service. The execs feel this will spur users to pony up for the premium service. Troy Carter, director of Creator Content, said to one reporter (not me): “Come on, you know if you’re on a date you don’t want to hear those ads.” It got a laugh– because it’s true.

“Avengers: Infinity War” Premieres in LA, Screens for Press in NYC, and Disney-Marvel Braces for Reaction

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It’s a tense night in the movie world.

Disney-Marvel screened “The Avengers: Infinity War” for press in New York City.

In Hollywood, the studio threw a lavish premiere. The red carpet was underway as the NY audience was letting out.

There’s an embargo on social media reactions until 1:30am Eastern. Reviews are prohibited before 6pm Eastern on Tuesday. The movie starts showing to the public on Thursday night.

A lot is riding on “Infinity War” especially since it comes on the heels of “Black Panther,” now the 3rd biggest movie of all time and still attracting crowds.

The whole Disney-Marvel universe hinges on “Infinity Wars,” which cost around $250 million and includes most of the characters from the Marvel world including Iron Man, Spider Man, Captain America, Thor and their assorted pals and extended family.

Two years ago, the last movie in the extended series- “Captain America: Civil War”– made $1.1 billion worldwide with $400 million of that in the US. The last “Avengers” movie in 2015 made $1.4 billion worldwide. The next “Avengers” movie is set for May 3, 2019, which may not be soon enough for die hard fans.

Stay tuned for social media reaction…shhhhhh!

Cannes Exclusives: Jane Fonda Doc Gets Rare Spotlight, Lars von Trier Serial Killer Movie Gets Late Slot, Second Tuesday Will Feature “Star Wars,” Gotti, Hot American Movie

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Some news for Cannes 2018 is drifting in:

— Jane Fonda will get a rare spotlight with Cannes Classics. HBO is showing Susan Lacy’s documentary, “Jane,” and there should be quite a lot of excitement. Fonda is coming– she often comes to Cannes for one or two days for L’Oreal but this time it’s all about the smashing two time Oscar winner. This is now a hot hot ticket. Lacy is also coming, and HBO will throw its weight behind this showcase.

— Lars von Trier’s serial killer movie has gotten a spot out of competition in the second week on Monday, May 13th at 10pm. This will mean no press conference until the next for “The House that Jack Built.” But it does mean Uma Thurman, Matt Dillon, and Riley Keough will hit the red carpet with a bang. Can’t wait!

— David Robert Mitchell’s hotly anticipated “Under the Silver Lake” is said to be getting the slot after “Solo: A Star Wars Story” at 10pm on Tuesday, May 15th. Star Andrew Garfield is unlikely to be there– he’s on Broadway doing the exhausting “Angels in America” and by then he’ll be a Tony nominee. But Riley Keough– Elvis Presley’s granddaughter and a fine young actress– will obviously be there for the von Trier. She may be Cannes’s new young star of the season!

Kanye West: (Listen) Black Talk Radio Turns Against Him After He Voices Support for Trump, Right Wing Personality

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Kanye West is turning black talk radio against him– just as the rapper and wanna be fashion designer is trying to make a comeback.

The talk this morning on New York’s Hot 97 wasn’t good after Kanye said he still supports Donald Trump. He also Tweeted his support this weekend of right wing black personality Candace Owens. Kanye has obviously spent too much time in rich, white, Republican suburb Calabasas, California with the hideous Kardashian family.

This Tweet was a step too far even if he is bi-polar.

Listen to what went on:

LA’s Race to Erase MS: Nancy Davis Brings on the HQ Trivia Guy, Elle King, Flo Rida, $1.6 Mil Raised

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Nancy Davis never stops.  She simply doesn’t.  This tireless MS advocate and Center Without Walls founder told me  at her 25th Anniversary of the “Race to Erase MS” event at the Beverly Hilton that, “twenty five years ago when we started there was no known cause, no cure or drugs on the market.  There was basically no hope. Today there are 15 drugs on the market and an enormous of amount of hope. We are determined to find a cure. The whole landscape of MS has changed.” 

I asked if she would ever give up her quest?  “I’ll give up when we find a cure. Not until then.”   Nancy was accompanied by her respected entrepreneur husband Ken Rickel and their twin daughters Mariella and Isabella who are accomplished dancers and were in the fashion show that took place later on.

HQ Trivia game host Scott Rogowsky got the night started.  This is personal for him he told the crowd because his Mom Tobi has MS.  A Milan style “Alice + Olivia fashion” show followed. Then came the music and wow, it was like a slice of Clive Davis’s iconic pre-Grammy party.  Elle King rocked her “Ex’s and Oh’s” and then did a stupendous version of Tom Petty’s  “American Girl.” The lovely Siedah Garret sang the song she co-wrote for Michael Jackson, “Man in the Mirror,” and noted, “this song paid for my house, my car, everything.”  Randy Jackson introduced the rap music superstar Flo Rida, who literally brought down the house with his seven-song set that included his mega hits, “Right Round,” “In The Ayer,” “My House,” and “Wild Ones.” 

 The live auction included dinner with Ozzy, Sharon, Kelly and Jack at Sharon’s LA home.  The caveat on that?  All guests must complete a background check prior to the big night.  A Ferrari Portofino went for $250,000.   The silent auction included a walk on for “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” which sold for $16,000. Celebs such as Dave Winfield, Johnathon Schaech, Steven McQueen, Anne Heche, Ruby Modine, Byron Allen, Frances Fisher, Natalie Zea, Avril Lavigne, Nile Rodgers, Jack and Kelly Osborne and more all were bidding along with the VIP guests.

Other goings on included Joan Collins who sat with Nikki Haskell and the grande dame of them all Barbara Davis, Nancy’s Mom and one of the most well regarded philanthropists in the world.  Literally everyone in the room wanted to greet the powerhouse that is Barbara.  Indefatigable Nikki told me she was soon off to NY to go the premiere of the film “Studio 54” at Tribeca Film Festival. (The party is at the Museum of Sex, a real place, but it could also have been the nickname of Studio 54 back in the day!)

Aaron Paul told me that although a revival of “Breaking Bad,” is definitely not going to happen, he said that, “we were together the other week for a 10th Year Anniversary shoot for the cover of Entertainment Weekly.”  He then noted maybe he wasn’t supposed to tell me that, but then again  Aaron is one of the nicest and most talented guys in Hollywood.

At midnight, this  25th Anniversary spectacular event raised 1.6 million and was a night to remember. Bravo to Nancy Davis and all those involved in this worthy cause.  She is a genuine warrior.  She and her esteemed family are beacons in Hollywood. 

$68 Million “Harry Potter” Dazzles Broadway Like it Or Not, Breaks Curse at Former “Spider Man” Theater

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Seven years ago when it was called the Foxwoods Theater (briefly) the musical “Spider Man: Turn off the Dark” put a curse on the Lyric Theater. Actors flew around and fell, or hit pieces of the stage, and wound up in the hospital. An actress flew around and got stuck dangling over the audience. The $75 million show became notorious for accidents.

Restored to The Lyric, the theater had better luck tonight with a $68 million show, not a musical and not really a play but a theatrical experience that includes flying and all kinds of magnificent illusions and stunts that came off without a hitch– at least to the layman’s eye. “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” is dazzling (if a little incoherent and way too long) but mostly no one got hurt.

Quite the opposite. Imported from the UK as part of the Harry Potter juggernaut, “Cursed Child” is a musical without songs. That is, in two parts totaling six hours, there are moments when the John Tiffany-Steven Hoggett directed enterprise feels like it’s coming to a song and then doesn’t. Instead, there’s music by Imogen Heap that begs for lyrics or someone to take the mic. But it’s a fake out and then we’re back to the action.

There is LOTS of action. If you love Harry Potter, know the books, movies, and ancillary materials, this is the show for you. If you don’t, you must do some homework and read the extensive notes in the Playbill before accepting this challenge. “Cursed Child” is basically the 9th and 10th movie from the 8th non existent book: it’s Rowling’s prequel and sequel to her series at the same time, recalling glorious moments from the past and simultaneously building a present and future for Potter-philes.

Set 22 years after the end of the last story, “Cursed Child” presents Harry, Ron and Hermione, and Draco Malfoy as adults with teenagers who are attending Hogwarts. Ron and Hermione are married. Ron’s sister Ginny is married to Harry. Draco’s wife has died, and he’s got a son who looks just like him. Who is the cursed child? It could be any of theirs, and maybe one another but I don’t want to give anything away.

Rowling has attempted to make “Cursed Child” an addition to the Potter canon of magic and wizardry and also be about family, fathers and sons, and fraught relations. She sets all that against time travel, and time warp travel, and a lot of other stuff that doesn’t come up around the usual dinner table including witches and monsters.

Some of it works, some of it doesn’t. A lot of it is repetitive and feels a little contrived to stretch this thing into two long Broadway tickets. The central drama is not really that compelling, and often you feel like you’re watching the theatrical version of a movie. If you want real drama, the kind that constitutes Best Play nominations, this year it’s all in revivals like “Angels in America” or “Three Tall Women” (which I found very depressing, but that’s another story).

The “Cursed Child” plays are resounding because of the exceptional production design. From top to bottom, “Cursed Child” is miraculous. This team, led by Christine Jones, Katrina Lindsay, Neil Austin, Gareth Fry, and Jamie Harrison deserves a special Tony. Their whole accomplishment is equal I would say to “War Horse.” It’s stunning. You won’t believe the rapid costume changes, the entrances and exits, and — to belabor a point– the sense of magic. It never stops.

Of course, the real credit goes to director John Tiffany, who keeps these “trains” running on time, and Steven Hoggett, who continues to be the genius of onstage group movement. There are 40 people in this cast, and there’s never a second that doesn’t seem as fluidly constructed as a ballet.

As far as the Tony Awards go, the only problem for this production is that it’s an ensemble piece. None of the actors can beat Andrew Garfield or Nathan Lane from “Angels in America” or Glenda Jackson from “Three Tall Women.” All of them are terrific, but I really loved Byron Jennings as Severus Snape. et al, and Geraldine Hughes as Professor McGonagall.

In the audience: lots of familiar faces including Emma Thompson, Liev Schreiber, James Monroe Inglehart, Bob Balaban with wife Lynn and daughter Hazel, Glenn Close, Cherry Jones, and “The Flash” himself, Ezra Miller, who so nice to kids in the theater and outside on the street who recognized him. Between shows we went over to famed Joe Allen to catch our respective breaths and brace ourselves for part two. Highly recommended! Plus, we ran into Colm Meaney (fresh from “The Iceman Cometh”), and Debra Monk (just finished a new Billy Crystal movie) among others. Talk about value added!

“A Quiet Place” Wins Another Weekend as Amy Schumer’s “I Feel Pretty” Collapses, Christian Film Rakes It In

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This week’s box office looks a lot like last week’s. “A Quiet Place” is number 1 with $22 million, beating “Rampage,” held over from last week. The only difference there is that “Rampage” is slowing down while “A Quiet Place” is doing better than ever.

The new movies this week didn’t fare so well. Amy Schumer’s “I Feel Pretty” really collapsed after Friday. The total for the weekend is $16 million. The comedy brought in $6 million on Friday and Saturday each but couldn’t do an equal multiple for Sunday. Not good. No one knows what this movie is. Schumer’s “Trainwreck” had a $30 mil opening, “Snatched” with Goldie Hawn was at $19 mil, so the trend is not up. Au revoir.

“Super Troopers 2,” lucky to be made at all, did $14 million. Who knows if the total interest in this has been exhausted? The original “Super Troopers” made just under $19 million total in 2002.

The biggest news on the chart is that “I Can Only Imagine,” a Christian based movie that only cost $7 million and you’ve never heard of it, is up to $80 million. It’s based on a Christian pop song and stars Dennis Quaid, with a cameo from the legendary Cloris Leachman. Go figure. There are only 23 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. Sixteen liked it, seven didn’t, the latter were all regular reviewers. Doesn’t matter.

Farewell to BB King’s in Times Square: Greedy Landlord Forces Out Yet Another Live Venue in NYC

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I am really sorry to see that BB King’s in Times Square will close at the end of the month. Isn’t this what the Times Square redevelopment was supposed to be about? Great places to see live music or theater? What will become of this space, which is below ground? Maybe the old Times Square will return, with sex dungeons. And, of course, Sephora.

The list of great shows I saw at BB Kings goes on and on: Sly Stone’s botched return (twice), Ronnie Spector’s Christmas show, Darlene Love’s Christmas show, Dionne Warwick, the Raspberries reunion,the Dave Clark 5 fundraiser for Mike Smith, Sam Moore, Isaac Hayes. Oh my god, Al Green, November 2006, let the audience sing, handed out roses, hit the high notes like they were clay pigeons. I even took a bunch of friends for a Chuck Berry New Year’s Eve (they still haven’t forgiven me).

Years ago– I don’t know when– some promoter convinced Aretha Franklin’s bookers to put her in there. It was much smaller than any place Aretha had played in eons, but the ticket price was high. The show sold out. I asked the publicist to put me at the lip of the stage so that when Aretha– who doesn’t do sound check or rehearsal– stepped out, she’d see a friendly face. Just as I thought, she was introduced, the band was playing, and Aretha came forward, looked down and saw me. She took in the size of the room and said, without missing a beat, “Well, well, we haven’t played a room this small in some time, have we?” The crowd went wild and she gave, of course, a historic show.

In the winter of 2002, Miramax took over BB Kings for the premiere a movie I worked on called “Only the Strong Survive.” It was some night, with performances by Sam Moore, Wilson Pickett, Mary Wilson, Ann Peebles, Carla Thomas, and so on. It was magic. Kurt Vonnegut was in the audience, which was surreal. So was May Pang.

The number of places in Manhattan where you can see classic soul or rock, jazz, or country, cool stuff, hip stuff, where you know musicians will show up to play or hang with their pals has fast dissipated. The Bottom Line is gone. Roseland, RIP. Tramps, too. (CBGB is also gone, but that was a different kind of place.) We still have relatively newer spots like City Winery or the High Line, but the golden era of nightclubs has faded to fuzzy memory.

Losing BB Kings on 42nd Street– that’s bad. The street is full of crap, all chain restaurants you could find in your mall in Omaha. BB Kings was the gem of the block (apart from the two or three Broadway theaters). This is where you went for the Harlem brunch, or Breakfast with the Beatles. Legendary acts that have no place in the world of crap Bieber pop– Dave Mason, Average White Band, Oleta Adams–could shine in this showcase.

But hey, this is DeBlasio’s New York– empty storefronts everywhere, streets choked with traffic from private car services and other impediments, homeless people beyond Ed Koch’s imagination, and a Times Square that looks like the setting for “Mad Max Thunderdome” part 2. You can always go to Brooklyn if you don’t like it!

 

Verne Troyer, aka Mini Me from “Austin Powers,” Dies at 49 After Long Fight with Depression, Alcoholism

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The actor Verne Troyer died today at age 49. He’d been battling depression and alcoholism. It’s unclear how he died, but the impression given by a post to Instagram is that suicide is involved.

The really terrible thing here is that’s how he’ll be remembered right now. I actually met Verne a few times, at Starkey Hearing events and other charity events. He was a lot of fun, a real pistol. Nothing– not his size, nothing– stopped him from having a good time. And let’s face it, his performances in the “Austin Powers” movies was iconic. He was beloved even if he didn’t know it all the time.

In the posting, his friends wrote:
“Verne was an extremely caring individual. He wanted to make everyone smile, be happy, and laugh. Anybody in need, he would help to any extent possible. Verne hoped he made a positive change with the platform he had and worked towards spreading that message everyday.”

It is with great sadness and incredibly heavy hearts to write that Verne passed away today. Verne was an extremely caring individual. He wanted to make everyone smile, be happy, and laugh. Anybody in need, he would help to any extent possible. Verne hoped he made a positive change with the platform he had and worked towards spreading that message everyday. He inspired people around the world with his drive, determination, and attitude. On film & television sets, commercial shoots, at comic-con’s & personal appearances, to his own YouTube videos, he was there to show everyone what he was capable of doing. Even though his stature was small and his parents often wondered if he’d be able to reach up and open doors on his own in his life, he went on to open more doors for himself and others than anyone could have imagined. He also touched more peoples hearts than he will ever know. Verne was also a fighter when it came to his own battles. Over the years he’s struggled and won, struggled and won, struggled and fought some more, but unfortunately this time was too much. During this recent time of adversity he was baptized while surrounded by his family. The family appreciates that they have this time to grieve privately. Depression and Suicide are very serious issues. You never know what kind of battle someone is going through inside. Be kind to one another. And always know, it’s never too late to reach out to someone for help. In lieu of flowers, please feel free to make a donation in Verne’s name to either of his two favorite charities; The Starkey Hearing Foundation and Best Buddies. Photo by @paulmobleystudio

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TV Throwback: “Bad Seed” Star Patty McCormack Filling in on “General Hospital” After Veteran Actress’s Accident

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When Patty McCormack was 11 years old, back in 1956, she was the sensation of the movie world. She played Rhoda Penmark, the “Bad Seed” and garnered an Oscar nomination for her work. McCormack’s Rhoda is iconic in film history. If you think all these little horror movies that come and go are scary, sit down and watch this whole movie.

McCormack never stopped working, although as time went by and she grew up her “Bad Seed” status faded. Now she’s 72 and next week she’s filling in for Leslie Charleson on “General Hospital” as Dr. Monica Quartermaine. It’s a good bit of stunt casting while Charleson, who’s been on the show since 1977, takes time off to heal from a fall that involved walking her dog. Monica was kind of a slut on “GH” in her younger days, but never a villain. If the soap can somehow bottle McCormack’s old persona and shift it to a soap character, General Hospital will be overrun in its ER!

By the way, Mervyn Leroy directed “The Bad Seed.” He was a prolific and successful director from the 1950s who steered 13 different actors to Oscar nominations. In New York his legacy came through his son, the late restaurant impresario Warner LeRoy who created Maxwell’s Plum and Tavern on the Green, and re-created the Russian Tea Room after its 1995 closing.

Watch Bebe Buell perform “By a Woman” Live on Nashville NBC TV