Monday, July 8, 2024
Home Blog Page 151

“Flora and Son” Director John Carney (“Once”) Recalls Hiring Bono’s Daughter Eve Hewson, Calls Her “A Rock Star”

0

“I’m glad you enjoyed my crazy Irish movie,” writer-director John Carney told a well wisher at a reception for his new feel-good film, “Flora and Son,” screened Thursday evening at the arty Whitby Hotel. The “Once” and “Sing Street” director was in a good mood following the enthusiastic audience reaction.


The Dublin saga stars Eve Hewson (Bono’s daughter), as Flora, a single mother trying to cope with a rebellious, loner 14 year-old son (Orén Kinlan), continually in trouble with the Garda (Irish police). There’s a surly ex-husband in the picture, (Jack Reynor, excellent in all Carney’s films) who has some music biz background and is shacked up with a hottie girlfriend, which doesn’t sit well with Flora.


After her day’s work as a babysitter in a posh neighborhood, Flora finds an acoustic guitar in the trash, has it restrung, and gives it to her son hoping he will take it up and reverse his delinquent ways. When he rejects it— he’s a rapper and tech wizard turns out— Flora decides to take lessons online and finds an instructor, Jeff (Joseph Gordon Levitt), a washed up but dreamy composer-guitarist based in LA. Their sessions blossom into a love affair of sorts, although they never meet in person.


As Showbiz411 mentioned in our favorable review, ‘Flora is an independent, wise Irish girl who curses, smokes, and drinks and has a healthy passion for men.” She also adores her son even though their verbal exchanges can be brutal.


Hewson is no nepo baby. She can act and has real screen presence. She also has a good voice and credibly plays guitar. I’ve been a fan since seeing her in “Bad Sisters,” before I learned about her famous father. 


But Hewson didn’t immediately come to mind as Flora when he started casting said Carney during the Q&A, which included producer Anthony Bregman, and musical co-writer Gary Clark.
“She was relentless,” said Carney. “I didn’t know her well. I met her once when she was 15 through her dad. Then I heard she was an actor. She said she wanted to be an actor and then she was, and a few years later we saw her on screen. Then this thing came up and her agent said, ‘Well just Zoom with her.’ I was like, ‘She’s too poised and beautiful. I’ve seen her in Victorian things.’”


When he clicked on Zoom she appeared with a “smiley face’… “She’s like, ‘How are you getting on?’ It was this real immediate connection. She was in LA at the time, and we found ourselves, two Dubliners, chatting away. She was so funny. She basically said to me, “You’ve written a comedy. I’m really funny… Trust me.”


“I mean that’s actually, maybe it is just the face, but her attitude is right. She does not try to follow in her father’s footsteps in any way, except that she’s a bit of a rockstar. I mean that in all the best ways.”


She also didn’t mince words about the script. “She’s like, ‘That lines bollocks… But if we could change it to this, just please John’ … it was like she had met this character, you know what I mean?”


A terrific moment in the film is when Flora watches Joni Mitchell singing “Both Sides, Now” on YouTube. A tear rolls down her cheek. She realizes she’s watching genius. Carney wisely lets the whole song play out. This wasn’t the original plan.

“Sure, our budget’s infinite. The rights should be simple. Let’s please do that,” joked Bergman. 
“We actually had something else that went on in that scene… There was a big visual effect that we had, which is basically she’s at the sink washing the dishes. If y’all remember, she’s upset, and then she turns around and there’s a shot of her listening to the song. Then as she’s listening to the song, she drops the dishes… before they hit the ground, they just stand in midair… But Eve’s performance is so strong that John decided she is the visual. That she’s the special effect.” 
Added Bergman, speaking as a true producer, “We dropped the dishes. We got rid of that, and maybe use some of the money from the visual effects, paid for the Joni Mitchell (rights).”

In all Carney’s films, there is a catchy tune: “High Life” is an ear worm of a number performed in a pub at the end of the film by all the characters, led by Flora. Even Jeff in LA is zoomed in,  laptop perched on a bar stool. 


(“High Life” could get recognition awards season, like Carney’s song, “Falling Slowly,” from “Once,” best Oscar winning song in 2007. The movie became a Tony Award-winning Broadway musical.)

About “High Life,” said the director, “I structured the verse of that a little bit on my garage band files, still thinking about the melodies, and the guitar, and stuff like that, and threw it over to Gary.” 


Carney said he wanted to end the Q&A with a “humble” anecdote. 
“I got a phone call at the end of the movie, the one time that Bono ever crossed Eve and rang me, because don’t mess with Eve, don’t get Daddy to call up John, or none of that… He had seen the movie, and I’m sitting there, with headphones on and the phone rings. Sometimes, if you get a call from him, it’s a no caller ID, and that’s either Bono or an annoying person to ask you how your subscription is going.”


“I’m like on my headphones listening to a song, and I look at the phone and it’s like, ‘Who the fuck is that? No, I’m not listening to that man. Rings again, and I’m going to say, ‘Look, I’m not interested in you.’… ‘Hey, how’re you Bono, big Bono?’ He is like, ‘I just listened to the songs, and that chorus of ‘High Life.’… That’s as good as it gets,” said Carney, laughing. “Bono knows our music it seems.”

Photo c 2023 Wilson Morales

Trump Claims His Intervention Got Texas AG Acquitted, Lies About Who (Republicans) Impeached Him

0

Last May, Texas’s Republican-led House of Representatives impeached state Attorney General Ken Paxton on Saturday on articles including bribery and abuse of public trust.

The vote in the Texas house was 121-23. It was almost all Republicans. After all the balance in the House is 85-64 in favor of Republicans.

But Donald Trump lied today (surprise) on his social media platform.

He wrote: “Yes, it is true that my intervention through TRUTH SOCIAL saved Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton from going down at the hands of Democrats and some Republicans, headed by PAUL RINO (Ryan), Karl Rove, and others, almost all of whom came back to reason when confronted with the facts. Ken has been a great A.G., and now he can go back to work for the wonderful people of Texas. It was my honor to have helped correct this injustice!”

Well, it wasn’t Democrats and “some” Republicans– it was ALL Republicans. And whether or not Trump’s “intervention” helped Paxton remained to be seen — unless it involved something illegal.

 

Bill Maher Decides to Pause HBO Show Until Strikes End After Facing Overwhelming Criticism

0

Bill Maher has backtracked on restarting his HBO show, Real Time. After tremendous criticism, Maher got the message and backed off.

He writes today:

“My decision to return to work was made when it seemed nothing was happening and there was no end in sight to this strike. Now that both sides have agreed to go back to the negotiating table I’m going to delay the return of Real Time, for now, and hope they can finally get this done.”

Previously Maher had said he hadn’t signed on for such a long strike and would go ahead as planned with a new season.

CBS’s “Yellowstone” Gambit Pays Off as Season 1 Reruns Score Like a Regular Network Hit

0

After “60 Minutes” last night, CBS began its Sunday “Yellowstone” marathon.

With all new shows on hold, CBS filled the space on Sundays with reruns of their Paramount Network show.

The gambit paid off. “Yellowstone” scored 7.87 million viewers in its first hour, then dropped to 5.82 million. That’s the size of a normal CBS Sunday night hit.

“Yellowstone” wasn’t going to do any better than that. Millions have seen it over and on Paramount and on DVD.

Last night’s episode was the first, from 2018. It played like a cable or streaming show, not a network show. The pacing was much more leisurely, the violence was far more pronounced, and there was sex scene that usually would not be seen in prime time.

I have actually never watched “Yellowstone” before last night, The highlights of the show are Kelly Reilly’s Beth and Luke Grimes’ Kayce Dutton. Wes Bentley’s character has potential. Kevin Costner’s John Dutton harumphed around a lot, I hope he improves in future episodes.

“Yellowstone” is no “Dallas.” There’s no sense of humor and the scenes are plodding. There’s also no thru-line yet except John Dutton being greedy for no reason. The Ewings battled but showed a lot of love, cracked wise, drank, and caroused with more enthusiasm. They also had the Bobby and Pam story, a Romeo and Juliet saga at the center. John Dutton really needs a boozing wife, but he’s a widower. God only knows what he did to his wife!

Golden Globes Announce Emmy Winning Producer-Director Combo But Still No Broadcast Partner or Host

0

The Golden Globes are coming back. Somewhere.

Today they announced that Glenn Weiss and Ricky Kirshner, the best producer-director combo in the biz, will helm the show on January 7th. The pair has 23 Emmy Awards between them.

But how will people see this show? Who will host it? No one knows. The contract between Dick Clark Productions and NBC ended last year with very poor ratings. If NBC doesn’t re-up, Fox would be the best candidate for the Globes.

If broadcast doesn’t work out, there’s always streaming. Netflix, Amazon, You Tube would all be candidates.

And who would host the show? This is interesting because past hosts made fun of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. But now, with the Globes taken over by Variety and the Hollywood Reporter, it’s hoped the really embarrassing people involved are gone. Luckily, the Globes have excellent new leaders in Executive Vice President Tim Gray and president Helen Hoehne

Lots of questions but the Weiss-Kirshner hiring is a good sign!

BTW If you don’t know it, Ricky Kirshner’s dad was the late great Don Kirshner, the song publisher and television producer who helped invent pop and rock and roll.

Trump Follows NBC Interview with Claim that “Liberal Jews Voted to Destroy America and Israel”

0

Donald Trump knows that liberal, educated Jews hate him and won’t vote for him. He panders to Orthodox Jews and the people who support the right wing government in Israel.

Playing on that theme, Trump followed his NBC interview today by posting a Rosh Hashanah message — an excoriation against those ‘liberal Jews, claiming their vote — for Joe Biden — was a vote “to destroy America and Israel.”
If this is Trump’s way of winning new friends it won’t work. I wonder if his “Jewish” grandchildren will ever discover his level of antisemitism while he’s still alive and stand up to it.

The greatest irony would for those Kushner kids to grow up and denounce him.
Trump remains a hate monger. I don’t care what any poll says. It’s hard to imagine any thinking person wanting him back in the White House.

Daytime Dark Like Nighttime As WGA Strike Silences Everything But Non-Signatory Shows and Scabs

0

The Writers Guild has now completely shut down Hollywood.

All the major daytime and nighttime talk show are in reruns continuing tomorrow, the beginning of the 2023-24 season.

Only Tamron Hall and Sherri Shepherd are not signed to the WGA so they will continue. Bill Maher will work with scabs, which is not a good look for HBO.

“The View” and “Live with Kelly and Mark” will continue without writers.

Everything else — since May — is in repeats.

Of course, the fear is, viewers won’t return when the strikes are over. But they will. It’s just time for the studios to settle the strikes and move forward.

All of Hollywood is now “dark.” No prime time, either. Who’s also suffering? The music and record biz. The artists have few outlets now for promotion. Sales are down because of it. Although tiktok and social media play a part in it now, there’s no better way to introduce a record than on one of these talk shows.

Strike: Jennifer Hudson, Kelly Clarkson Add Names to Talk Shows Not Returning This Week Along with Drew Barrymore, The Talk

0

The WGA strike is now working perfectly.

Jennifer Hudson and Kelly Clarkson’s respective talk shows will not be returning this week.

This is after CBS’s “The Talk” and “Drew Barrymore” also announced they are paused until the WGA and SAG AFTRA strikes are over.

Pressure on Barrymore was significant enough to stop all WGA signatory shows. The shows could have continued with scab writers and faced a future of anger.

Also, no SAG AFTRA actors would appear as guests. Hudson’s proposed show schedule this week had no celebrities.

Tickets weren’t available for any audiences either.

Hudson is an Oscar winner member of SAG AFTRA, making her situation esven more precarious.

The WGA can now really leverage these shut downs. Syndicated shows have had no ratings since last May when they all went into reruns. You’d think the syndicators would be pressuring the AMPTP to settle this thing so everyone can get back to work.

JHud, Kelly, and Drew would be smart to start a podcast a la Strike Force — the late night guys.

With these shows gone, only “The View” and “Live with Kelly and Mark” will soldier on. Also, shows with no WGA affiliation, like “Sherri Shepherd.”

Called Here: CBS’s “The Talk” Will Not Return Until Strikes Are Over (See My Past Columns)

0

“The Talk” is shutting up until the strikes are over.

I wrote this last week a couple of times. I even contacted CBS publicity. They lied by omission. Are we surprised?

“The Talk” films in front of a live audience. Even if they’d returned they couldn’t have an audience without somehow guaranteeing there would be no outbursts

As I told you on Friday, there was no way to get tickets for this coming week. “The Talk” was not included in a list of shows that give away tickets.

Remember When Jann Wenner Manipulated the Rock Hall Vote? Flashback to His Now Ended Reign of Terror

0

I wrote the column below on October 1, 2007. It was just one of many I published about Jann Wenner’s now ended reign of terror at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In the last two days, Wenner has admitted to being racist and misogynist with no interest in popular musicians other than his “idols,” most of whom are probably appalled to be acknowledged.

Wenner told the New York Times that artists like Joni Mitchell and Stevie Wonder were of no interest to him and had nothing to say of importance, as opposed to Lennon, Bono, Springsteen etc.

It’s interesting that in the world of white male rock stars, Wenner couldn’t get for interviews Paul Simon or Paul McCartney, Sting or Elvis Costello. They wouldn’t buy is sycophantic passes, I guess. I’ve seen Wenner treat some big rock stars like absolute shite. They must be having a chuckle this weekend!

PS Wenner was ousted by the board of the RRHOF yesterday but he’s been out for the last couple of years as the CEO. I Heart Media’s John Sykes took over and immediately made vast improvements.

Here it is, from Foxnews.com. October 1, 2007:

To anyone who’s still reading or buying Rolling Stone: It’s time to boycott Jann Wenner’s flagship magazine.

I’ve never participated in a boycott — not of lettuce or grapes or anything else. But enough is enough.

After the announcement late Friday of the nominees’ ballot for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, there’s only thing to do: Hit publisher Wenner, who controls the Rock Hall, where it hurts.

If you love rock ‘n’ roll, stop buying Rolling Stone until the tremendous insults of the Hall of Fame are corrected.

Wenner’s nominating committee consists largely of his current and former employees from Rolling Stone (Nathan Brackett, David Fricke, Jim Henke, Joe Levy, Brian Keizer, Toure, and Anthony DeCurtis). But they have little say over who really is inducted.

Last year, in a story reported by this column exclusively, Wenner threw out a vote in which the classic British invasion group Dave Clark Five was voted in and changed it for another round that favored rappers Grandmaster Flash.

As one insider from the Hall has maintained, “Once Ahmet Ertegun died, Jann felt like he could run wild.” The legendary co-founder of Atlantic Records was considered the only person who could control Wenner. He died in 2006.

The Dave Clark Five incident has repercussions, however. I’m told that Wenner was made to meet Clark after I broke that story last March. The group now is guaranteed entry, although it’s a bittersweet win. They are probably not, to paraphrase one of their hits, “Glad All Over.”

But this year’s choices are a complete affront to fans of the Rock and Roll Hall. And to show how much Wenner controls what’s happening, the exclusive announcement was made on Rolling Stone’s Web site.

If you’re still reading or buying Rolling Stone, it’s time to stop.

This year’s ballot shows that the Hall has skipped over the seminal 1970s for the worthless ’80s. The committee has chosen dance music over rock. They’ve all but ignored the pioneers who influenced the genre in favor of non sequiturs.

The choices: dance group Chic, hip-hop pioneer Afrika Bambaataa, mediocre Bruce Springsteen-wannabe John Mellencamp (a Wenner crony who’s lost out on many tries), white rappers the Beastie Boys, disco queen Donna Summer and, of course, Madonna.

Among “older” names: the aforementioned DC5, instrumentalists the Ventures and Leonard Cohen.

Here’s the idea: that these names should enter the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame before such historically important and influential acts as Iggy Pop and the Stooges, “fifth Beatle” Billy Preston or performer/producer Todd Rundgren.

They aren’t the only ones.

Major groups the Hall voters deem “not hip”: The Moody Blues (simply for “Days of Future Passed”) and Chicago (for its first two seminal albums). Hall & Oates, Yes, Genesis, J. Geils Band, Alice Cooper and KISS are also names often mentioned by critics.

Also left wanting: stars such as Carly Simon and Linda Ronstadt, who were mainstays of Rolling Stone in the 1970s, have been iced out. Carole King was inducted only as a writer with ex-husband Gerry Goffin. Her achievement as the creator of “Tapestry,” for years the best-selling album of all time, has been ignored.

placeholder

Neil Sedaka (“Calendar Girl,” “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do”) is not in the Hall of Fame. Neither is Neil Diamond (“I’m a Believer,” “Sweet Caroline”). That’s right. They only wrote half the hits that modern groups cover or sample. Go figure.

The late Laura Nyro, who also wrote a dozen or so hits, is absent, as is Leon Russell, whose songs “This Masquerade” and “A Song for You” are among the most covered by pop acts. He also was a member of Phil Spector’s legendary band, as were other nonmembers Glen Campbell and Sonny Bono.

Then there are the R&B performers who remain in the cold, such as Tina Turner, Dionne Warwick, Motown legends Mary Wells, the Marvelettes and the Spinners, not to mention Ben E. King (“Stand by Me” and dozens of hits on Atlantic), Stax Records legends Carla and Rufus Thomas, Spector star Darlene Love, Joe Tex, Al Green and, of course, Chubby Checker, whom the Hall denies over and over again despite his invention of rock’s greatest dance hit, “The Twist.”

Neither John Fogerty, Lou Reed, Peter Gabriel, Ringo Starr, Tom Waits, Steve Winwood, Diana Ross, Steve Miller nor Sonny Burgess — the man behind Elvis Presley — is in the Hall of Fame.

OK, just so we’re straight on why Rolling Stone must be boycotted. It wants the Beastie Boys before Randy Newman, The Hollies, Tom Jones or Mitch Ryder’s “Devil in the Blue Dress.”

Controversial Cat Stevens also stays in the cold despite his dozen or so hits and his influence on singer-songwriters of his era. And I haven’t even raised the idea of Poco, Aaron Neville, the Turtles, Gram Parsons and hitmakers Three Dog Night, whose members made hits for dozens of new songwriters including Harry Nilsson, John Hiatt, Jimmy Cliff, Hoyt Axton, Paul Williams and Randy Newman.

The lists go on and on. You can see more names at www.futurerockhall.com.

placeholder

The Hall has caused its own problems over the years. It no longer includes three categories that the Hall introduced, then eliminated: Non-Performers, Side Men and Early Influences. The nominating committee, with a couple of exceptions who are obviously ignored, is simply too young and uneducated in popular music history to select entries in those groupings.

It’s a pathetic, ridiculous situation and it must be stopped.

Of the new crop, I don’t have much to say that’s positive. Madonna is a steamroller because of the cult of personality. She’s not a rocker, she has a thin voice and she doesn’t write all of her own material. But she’s a force of nature.

There’s no stopping Madonna when she wants something. Chances are good she won’t bring Steve Bray, Patrick Leonard, William Orbit and all her writers and producers to the stage. They are Madonna.

Chic is a fun idea with great songs, but it was really producer-writer Nile Rodgers and his partner Bernard Summers who made it work as a dance group. Rodgers should be in as a hugely successful producer of music by David Bowie, Ross and others. Summers can be thanked. Chic, however, is not rock.

The rest are totally off base, given the above list. Summer was a disco act. For her to get in before Ronstadt is a joke. Mellencamp at least plays rock. But he’s a minor note in the genre’s history.

Afrika Bambaataa and the Beastie Boys: Are they kidding? Even the latter must be laughing. They had one big hit, “You’ve Got to Fight for Your Right to Party.” The former, while I’m sure quite lovely, is a record-scratcher with a great name. Each of these belongs in a Rap Hall of Fame.

placeholder

And it’s not that I am against hip-hop or rap artists in the Hall of Fame. But Run-DMC is the obvious choice for an act in that genre that crossed into rock. Apart from its own music, Run-DMC’s partnership with Aerosmith on “Walk This Way” brought hip-hop to a new level and standard. No one would argue with its inclusion.

Of the two senior acts aside from the DC5, the Ventures probably are a good idea. The Hall lacks instrumentalists. But Cohen should be in as a writer. His morose style never once crossed into rock, and he knows it.

Diamond, Sedaka and Simon have among them dozens more actual rock hits as writers and performers. Come on. And Cohen’s songs have not had nearly the same impact on rock as those by Jimmy Webb. He’s also been snubbed by Wenner’s crew.

By the way: The Hall of Fame Foundation, which Wenner runs with toadie Joel Peresman, has nothing to do with the Rock and Rock Hall of Fame Museum in Cleveland.

“Jann treats the museum like a toy and has no respect for Terry Stewart,” an insider says. Stewart runs the museum with no regard for Wenner’s exclusions.

Last year, the Hall claimed to have given away only $158,968 of its $12 million war chest to needy musicians. It gave $56,236 to the museum to maintain its own archives. The museum must raise its own money.

Peresman is thought to get between $300,000 — what the previous director was paid — and $500,000.

placeholder

New board members include wealthy businessmen Craig Hatkoff (co-founder of the Tribeca Film Festival) and Dirk Ziff (heir to a media fortune), nice guys who have no connection to the music business or rock ‘n’ roll at all. They’re Wenner’s friends. Famed rocker Jay-Z — ha ha — also has joined.

Former inductees to the Hall, by the way, must buy their own tickets to the annual Waldorf-Astoria dinner. Tickets cost $3,500. Few, if any, show up anymore for the big jam session at the end of the night.

These selections for 2008 are terrible, but they’re just the beginning of what’s going to be a weird ride, thanks to the new generation. To wit: Kanye West is scheduled to be honored soon by the Chicago branch of the Recording Academy.

This means that other artists will have to perform a tribute to him by performing his music. Only: He has no music. West samples existing records. So someone will have to sample a sample to praise him. It’s sad.

So: I don’t know anyone who buys or reads Rolling Stone, but someone must, since Wenner Media seems to make money. It can’t all be Us Weekly.

Until real rock is served by the Hall of Fame, please don’t buy Rolling Stone or click on any of the ads on its Web site. Then maybe Wenner will get the message that no one can take his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame seriously anymore.