Wednesday, October 2, 2024
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Exclusive: “Taxi” Sitcom Cast Has Monthly Zoom Reunion, Will Appear on “The View” Together This Week

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The A list opening night of Barry Manilow’s (and Bruce Sussman’s) musical, “Harmony,” was filled with celebs.

I was lucky enough to sit right in front of a bunch of them: Judd Hirsch and Marilu Henner from the classic sitcom, “Taxi,” as well as the great musical entertainer, Michael Feinstein.

During the intermission of the emotional show, I chatted with Hirsch and Henner, who told me that the entire cast of “Taxi” does a Zoom call every month. Marilu said, “It started during the pandemic and we’ve kept it up. It’s us, Christopher Lloyd, Danny DeVito, Carol Kane. Six of us. Plus Jim Brooks [who created the show]. We have a ball. We’re a family.”

The two who are missing, sadly, are Andy Kaufman and Jeff Conaway.

The pair told me there will be a “Taxi” reunion on “The View” sometime this week because Hirsch and Kane each live in New York, DeVito and Henner are in theater productions here right now, and they just like seeing each other. Is it an anniversary, I asked? “No,” said Hirsch. “Marilu put it together and we’re just doing it.”

Actually it is 40 years since the show went off the air. But it’s never stopped running in syndication.

I love these casts that still get together decades after the shows ended. The “Knots Landing” and “Dallas” casts remain close, too, and I’m sure there are other. For Jim Brooks, it must be rewarding that the “Taxi” is still around. Almost everyone connected to “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” one of his other triumphs, is sadly gone.

Some other stars in the “Harmony” audience included Broadway greats Tovah Feldshuh, Sutton Foster, Brian Stokes Mitchell, and Patrick Page. Lorna Luft flew in from Los Angeles. And people left the theater singing, which is always a good sign. (Review coming later Tuesday morning.)

Country Star Morgan Wallen, Shunned by Grammys, to Perform on Billboard Music Awards: All Is Forgiven for “N” Word

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Morgan Wallen was shunned by the Grammy Awards this week yet again. In 2021, he was caught on tape yelling the “n” word.

But the Billboard Music Awards is okay with it. They’re welcoming him on Sunday to their show. The BMAs are owned by Todd Boehly, owner of the Hollywood Reporter and Billboard, who also owns Dick Clark Productions. I guess all is forgiven.

The Billboard Music Awards have taken the place of the American Music Awards, which DCP and Boehly, et al retired to rebrand for Billboard Magazine. The awards show will be streamed. The firm’s next big awards show, the Golden Globes, will likely be streamed as well in January.

CBS Announces Rollout of 2024 Season Beginning on February 11th After Super Bowl (Watch)

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CBS will rollout the 2024 season beginning February 11th after the Super Bowl. They missed the fall 2023 season because of the WGA and SAG strikes, but they’re back. Always good to see Marcia Gay Harden, I’m so glad “So Help Me Todd” is a hit. Do its fans know she won an Oscar?

Donald Trump’s Sister Died at 4am Today, At 11:30 He Went After Jack Smith on Social Media with No Mention of Maryanne Trump

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Donald Trump’s older sister, Judge Maryann Trump Barry, died this morning. According to reports, she was found dead in her apartment at 4:30 this morning.

At around 11:30am, this is what Donald Trump posted on social media. Not a word about his dead sister. He never fails to fall lower and lower.

Here’s the link to the death of Maryanne Trump. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/maryanne-trump-barry-donald-trumps-sister-dies-86-rcna124906

Adidas Has a New Antisemitism Problem Post-Kanye: Event Producer Posts Violent Rant on Social Media

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Adidas has a new antisemitism problem following Kanye West’s massive scandal from last year.

A Twitter account called @Stopantisemitism has uncovered a violent from an Adidas event producer named

Amaury Letort. With his firm SuperBien, Letort worked for Adidas in 2021. He’s currently working for Punchbot.com, a design firm.

He wrote in a post: “I hope your ancestors died in ovens and it will be the same for you and your family soon during a 2nd Shoah (fingers crossed). When that happens, I’m going to sh*t on Israeli flags while dancing.”

This is unacceptable, of course, and disgusting. It’s also alarming because the more Americans — and especially New Yorkers — call what’s happening in Gaza “genocide,” and demanding a ceasefire, they are creating a fervent level of antisemitism that will take decades to undo — if that’s even possible. This is the result, as well as hundreds of antisemitic attacks around the country, such as swasikas spray painted in places like Montauk on Long Island.

Stop the rhetoric now.

Michael J. Fox, Jon Batiste Score Big Wins at Critics Choice Documentary Awards, Hiking Oscars Chances

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“Still,” a documentary about Michael J. Fox’s battle with Parkinson’s Disease, and “American Symphony,” about musician Jon Batiste and his wife’s leukemia, were the big winners at the Critics Choice Documentary Awards last night in New York.

The evening, which was streamed from the Edison Hotel Ballroom, marked the return of Hollywood promotional activities following the end of the actors’ strike. Several SAG members showed up and expressed their relief about including Natasha Lyonne and Erich Bergen, among others. Director-actor Benny Safdie — wearing a dazzling chartreuse suit — turned up as a guest to support his friends who made HBO’s, “Telemarketers,” which tied for True Crime Documentary with “John Lennon: Murder without a Trial.”

“Still” and “American Symphony,” as well as “20 Days in Mariupol,” broke out of the crowd of documentaries that the CCA list and could be headed to the Oscars.

Jon Batiste is Golden right now: he won Best Score for his work on American Symphony and the film also took home the award for Best Music Documentary. This is on top of the Grammy nominations he picked up a few days ago for his latest album.

Among the winners was top young composer Kris Bowers, who was discovered at Julliard Music School by Aretha Franklin. Bowers won Best Short Documentary for “The Last Repair Shop,” a film he produced and scored and is also headed to the Oscars.

At the ceremony, the Pennebaker Award was presented to acclaimed documentary film maker Ross McElwee, whose many credits include the classic film, “Sherman’s March.” The award, formerly known as the Critics Choice Lifetime Achievement Award, is named in memory of legendary filmmaker D A Pennebaker, who had previously won the award.

National Geographic Documentary Films sponsored the evening. Congrats to CCA president Joey Berlin and the show’s producers. The entire production was top notch, as was the after party at Bond 45. This is the classy way to put on an awards show!

Winners of the Eighth Annual Critics Choice Documentary Awards


BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie


BEST DIRECTOR

Davis Guggenheim – Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie


BEST FIRST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

Mstyslav Chernov – 20 Days in Mariupol


BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Tim Cragg – The Deepest Breath


BEST EDITING

Michael Harte – Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie


BEST SCORE

Jon Batiste – American Symphony


BEST NARRATION

Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie – Written and Performed by Michael J. Fox


BEST ARCHIVAL DOCUMENTARY

Being Mary Tyler Moore


BEST HISTORICAL DOCUMENTARY

JFK: One Day in America


BEST BIOGRAPHICAL DOCUMENTARY

Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie


BEST MUSIC DOCUMENTARY

American Symphony


BEST POLITICAL DOCUMENTARY

20 Days in Mariupol


BEST SCIENCE/NATURE DOCUMENTARY

Secrets of the Elephants


BEST SPORTS DOCUMENTARY

The Deepest Breath


BEST TRUE CRIME DOCUMENTARY – TIE

Lennon: Murder Without a Trial

Telemarketers


BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY

The Last Repair Shop


The Critics Choice Awards ceremony will be held on January 14, 2024 at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Century City, CA, and will be broadcast live on The CW.

UPDATE: “The Marvels” Not So Marvel-ous with $47 Million All Time Lowest Company Opening Weekend

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Movie superhero fatigue?

Bad marketing? The strike? Lack of publicity> Or just a bad movie?

“The Marvels” is now the lowest opening weekend for Marvel Pictures, including Universal’s “The Incredible Hulk,” with $47 million.

With a cost of at least $275 million, “The Marvels” will remain a stain on the company’s previous record of mega hit after hit.

“The Marvels” made $100 million less than its predecessor, “Captain Marvel.” That is a record for a sequel.

Is “The Marvels” so terrible that no one should see it? No. But it’s not an Event film. It doesn’t break new ground or have a plot twist or surprise for the Marvel audience that alters their fan world. It’s just…a nice film with good special effects. It hasn’t shaken up the world to get people into theaters in any massive way.

That may be the problem.

Now Marvel faces bigger problems as the whole next series of “Avengers” movies is imperiled by the upcoming trial of actor Jonathan Majors. Majors was supposed to anchor the next three films as the villainous Kang. But his trial for domestic abuse next month has sidelined the whole enterprise.

It’s unclear if Majors being found not guilty of the charges will make a difference. The damage may already be done. If he is innocent, and the Kang project is totally cancelled, it would be a shame for him. But it would also demonstrate that studios, having learned the lesson of Ezra Miller and “The Flash,” are going to protect themselves first.

Rob Reiner’s “Albert Brooks: Defending My Life” Is the Film We Need Right now

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Things are so grim in the world right now, we need a laugh, and some heart.

That’s what we get from Rob Reiner’s “Albert Brooks: Defending My Life,” an absolute tonic of a non fiction film playing HBO and MAX.

Reiner and Brooks have been friends, as they say, for almost 60 years. They met in high school, along with Richard Dreyfus and the kids of other stars. Their warmth and love for each other is palpable, with Reiner may unwittingly recreating the famous friendship his father, Carl Reiner, had with Mel Brooks.

The shared history of these two gifted filmmakers and comic actors makes it easy for them to take a walk down memory lane examining Brooks’s career. He was indeed born Albert Einstein by his father, a TV comedian in the 1950s, and changed his name (although for some reason. Reiner doesn’t say Albert was inspired by Mel Brooks and took his name). There’s a lot of examination of Albert’s family. One of his brothers speaks on camera, but again, a little oddly, there is no mention of their now deceased brother, Bob, aka Super Dave, and Funkhauser from “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”

Otherwise, “Defending My Life” is what they should play one day before Brooks gets an AFI or Academy Governors Award. He has no scandals, just lots of creativity as builds his career — coincidentally thanks to Carl Reiner, who gives him a shout out on TV age 16. Brooks takes off as a smart, edgy comedian on his own, and develops such a following that in 1974 Lorne Michaels asks him to host a weekly comedy show on Saturday nights. Brooks declines, recommends Michaels use revolving hosts, but Brooks will make videos for the show. Thus, “Saturday Night Live” is born.

There are many friends and fans who discuss Brooks’s career in the Reiner film including Steven Spielberg, Larry David, Sarah Silverman, James L. Brooks (no relation), Ben Stiller, and — I couldn’t figure this out — Brian Williams. Spielberg calls following Albert around with a camera, talking to people on the street a la Borat. Brooks discusses Albert’s famous turn in his “Broadcast News.”

All the other movies are checked off including my favorite, “Lost in America” (where is Julie Hagerty?), “Real Life,” “Modern Romance,” “Defending Your Life,” “Mother,” and the ill advised “Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World.” We meet Albert’s wife and kids, a late in life experience, and get the passing information that he dated a young Linda Ronstadt. I kind of yearned for a Carrie Fisher-type pointer lesson of how all these cool people knew each other, but that’s not what Reiner wants. This is “My Dinner with Andre,” with punchlines.

In the end, the movie is just about these two Sunshine Boys giving the flavor of their lives in Hollywood being honorable, sane, well-intentioned mensches and observers of the human condition — next generation Woody Allens — or to use a Yiddish expression, Haimishe. I only wish HBO had put this in theaters for a week so it could be considered for an Oscar. But it’s good enough for a Critics Choice TV award and maybe an Emmy next fall.

Enjoy!

Watch Donald Trump Refer to “President Obama” and Praise Hungarian Dictator Orban

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Donald Trump thinks Barack Obama is president. He’s said it before and he said it today.

This week in court he had to be reminded that he, Trump, was not president in 2021.

In the speech below, Trump also praises Hungarian dictator Viktor Orban. Trump has never met a dictator he didn’t love.

Thank God he’s not in charge of anything anymore. How stupid are the people in those bleachers anyway?

“Superman” is Coming: Director James Gunn Says His Take on the Comic Book Hero is On Track for July 2025

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A new “Superman” is coming, like it or not.

New DC comics movies head James Gunn says on Twitter X that his version of the well worn tale is coming in July 2025.

The new take stars David Corenswet as Clark Kent/Superman and Rachel “Maisel” Brosnahan as Lois Lane. No word yet on Jimmy Olsen, but it worries me that Pete Davidson could get that role. Richard Kind should play Perry White. But no one asked me.

PS Why is Superman one word while Spider Man is two?