Tuesday, November 19, 2024
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Susan Sarandon in Crisis Management Mode Posts Apology for Anti-Israel Hate Comments After Career Freefall

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Oscar winning actress Susan Sarandon has gone to DefCon 5. She’s in a spin control crisis management frenzy after making pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel comments that sounded awfully antisemitic.

At a rally in New York, Sarandon said American Jews would now feel what American Muslims had experienced — i.e. hate. She was immediately dropped by United Talent Agency. Her career may have imploded.

Now she’s posted an apologia to Instagram. It’s clearly composed by a crisis counselor. Will this be enough to save her? Sarandon has always been outspoken, no matter how misguided. She’s passionately ignorant of the consequences. But is this a walk back? Or a plea for a rope to get her out of this quicksand?

“Recently, I attended a rally alongside a diverse group of activists seeking to highlight the urgent humanitarian crisis in Gaza and call for a ceasefire. I had not planned to speak but was invited to take the stage and say a few words.

Intending to communicate my concern for an increase in hate crimes, I said that Jewish Americans, as the targets of rising antisemitic hate, ‘are getting a taste of what it is like to be Muslim in this country, so often subjected to violence’. This phrasing was a terrible mistake, as it implies that until recently Jews have been strangers to persecution, when the opposite is true. As we all know, from centuries of oppression and genocide in Europe to the Tree of Life shooting in Pittsburgh, Jews have long been familiar with discrimination and religious violence which continues to this day.

I deeply regret diminishing this reality and hurting people with this comment. It was my intent to show solidarity to the struggle against bigotry of all kinds, and I am sorry I failed to do so.”

Taylor Swift Sold More than 400K Albums This Week, More Than the Rest of the Top 50 Combined

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Taylor Swift Taylor Swift Taylor Swift.

It’s like a mantra.

The pop singer and entrepreneur sold more than 400,000 albums this week in the top 50.

She sold more than the rest of the top 50 combined.

You would think all her fans had all her music by now. But they persist in buying more, and definitely streaming more.

One problem is lack of other product. Nothing is hot beyond Swift. Many artists are just MIA or AWOL or both. Or if they’re putting out product they’re either not promoting it or not catching on.

Meantime, Rolling Stones shows up as a culprit in this apathy. They just issued their top 100 songs of the year. Most of them no one cares about or has heard of. The biggest hit of the year, Miley Cyrus’s “Flowers,” is number 12. Rolling Stone used to be the music bible, dictating taste. Now it just repels its audience.

PS About 12 of the top 50 are Christmas albums. And despite looking hot on the daily charts, Cher and Dolly Parton evidently didn’t sell that much this week in their second run. Bewildering.

Beyonce Renaissance Tour Movie Scores $5 Mil in Previems, Aims for $30 Mil Weekend

Beyonce saw the money Taylor Swift made from her Eras Tour movie and said, wisely, I want that.

Last night, Beyonce’s Renaissance Tour concert movie collected $5 million in previews. The expectation is for a $30-$35 million weekend.

This film do the same numbers as Swift, but it will do very well. The Eras tour movie was a phenom because it was first, a novelty. Renaissance Tour, also released straight to theaters by AMC Theaters, will likely do a third of the business.

But if Renaissance takes in $100 million, it’s a hit. And it fills a gap at theaters at the perfect moment. Imagine if Beyonce actually promoted it with an interview. But she’s press shy and likely won’t.

George Santos, Liar Extraordinaire, Expelled by Congress in Overwhelming Vote, So He Can Join the Rolling Stones on Tour

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George Santos, the most famous liar in the world, has been expelled Congress in an overwhelming vote.

By a margin of 311 to 114, Santos’s colleagues kicked him out after months of outrageous prevarication and disrespect for the law, for the country, and his so called constituency.

Santos immediately announced he was joining the Rolling Stones on tour next spring where he will understudy Mick Jagger. First, however, he’ll do some work for Warren Buffett now that Buffett’s pal, Charlie Munger, has died.

Santos was abhorrent, of course, and a disgrace. But didn’t we need him as a punchline and punching bag? He was a welcome diversion, easy to mock, and for that he deserves our thanks. George Santos was the only we could all agree on.

Taylor Swift’s Publicist Makes Rare Statement: “Enough is enough with these fabricated lies”

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Tree Paine is the unusually named publicist who speaks for Taylor Swift. But she doesn’t address rumors very often because they’re usually ridiculous.

Now she’s posted a message to Twitter because she’s had, it and I don’t blame her. This is in response to a gossip account on Instagram called Deux Moi that functions on blind items and innuendo and no facts. Sometimes they get it right, and when they don’t, who cares? But this time, you’ll see Paine’s response to this pain in her neck.

I’m in LA this weekend and already I’ve heard a nice story about Taylor Swift and the remixing of her concert audio for the “Eras Tour” soundtrack. Apparently, she was lovely (how do you like that?) and everyone enjoyed working with her. No dirt, however. She was professional and pleasant. When that happens, you have to make something up because no one will believe it!

NY Film Critics Circle Give Best Film to Scorsese’s Killers, Director to Oppenheimer’s Nolan

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The New York Film Critics Circle have chosen Killers of the Flower Moon as Best picture of 2023.

Christopher Nolan, Director of Oppenheimer, is Best Firector in a wise split with Martin Scorsese’s epic.

The group will welcome the two best movies and directors of the year. Both films are masterworks that will become classics.

Killers also got Best Actress with Lily Gladstone winning the title. Oppenheimer gets Best Cinematography. Other winners include Franz Rogowsky Best Actor in Passages, DaVine Joy Randolph Best Supporting Actress in The Holdovers, and Charles Melton Best Supporting Actor in May December. Past Lives is Best First Film. Anatomy of a Fall is Best International Film.

Surprisingly shut out: Bradley Cooper’s Maestro.

The awards will be presented in January in New York at a gala dinner.

Smart: Oscars Will Air One Hour Earlier Than Usual at 7pm Eastern

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Heres some good smart news from the motion picture academy: the Oscars will air one hour earlier than usual next year.

The show, set for March 10th, will begin on ABC at 7pm eastern and end at 10:30. A special episode of Abbott Elementary will follow.

This means the show will begin at 4pm in Hollywood, a little early in the afternoon! The red carpet will start after brunch!

But this is much better for the east coast snd for people getting up early the next day. Bravo!

Jimmy Kimmel is the host again. The show is shaping up nicely!

The New Leo? New Star Charles Melton Jumps from TV to 2 Film Awards This Week

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Welcome. Charles Melton. He may be the new Leonardo DiCaprio.

Melton, star of Todd Haynes’ May December, just won Best supporting Actor from the New York Film Critics Circle for his work in the film with two Oscars stars: Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman.

On Sunday Melton picked up Best Supporting Performance from the Gotham Awards.

The 32 year old from Alaska has sprung into moviedom from the TV series, Riverdale. Now he’s the It Guy of the season. I met him on Sunday and so far he’s nice and unaffected.

Half Korean, Melton could follow last year’s Supporting Actor winner, Ke Huy Quan, the first Asian American to win an Oscar. Imagine the thrill of Quan presenting to Melton.

The race has begun.

Henry Kissinger is Dead at 100: Reviled as War Monger, Often Portrayed in Movies, Appeared on “Dynasty”

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When I was growing up, Henry Kissinger was considered evil. We booed when we saw him on TV. He was a proud warmonger who bombed the heck out of Cambodia and killed lots of people during the Vietnam War.

He was Richard Nixon’s puppetmaster or flunky take your choice.

Post Watergate and Vietnam, Kissinger thrived in Reagan era New York. He lived the highlife, dining at top places like Le Cirque and the 21 Club. (In the 80s, Le Cirque was exclusive they welcomed everyone from Diana Ross to Roy Cohn. Dictators were certainly welcome if they were available.)

I met Kissinger a couple of times, via the great editor Harold Evans. I had to restrain myself, once, at the Four Seasons, another exclusive haunt, from saying anything beyond Hello. After everything he’d done, it was hard to believe he actually existed.

Kissinger was depicted in many movies and appeared in several documentaries, of course. But his one acting credit was on TV’s “Dynasty,” the 80s nighttime soap opera that celebrated greed and wealth and the trampling of the common man. He appeared as himself in a 1983 episode about a charity ball. Gerald Ford, who inherited Kissinger from Nixon, also appeared with his wife, First Lady Betty Ford.

Oscars: Colman Domingo Could Be the First Black Double Oscar Nominee Starting with His Stunning Turn in “Rustin”

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“Rustin” now streaming on Netflix, is garnering rave reviews, especially for its sublime star, Colman Domingo who plays openly gay civil rights activist Bayard Rustin. At the recent junket in DC, where journalists went to the Library of Congress to see its recent ‘Bayard Rustin Papers’ exhibition.

The next day journalists saw the Lockkeeper’s House, built in 1837, on the National Mall where Rustin was the architect of 1963’s momentous March on Washington. Directed beautifully by George C. Wolfe, the film co-stars Glynn Turman, Chris Rick, Audra McDonald, Jeffrey Wright and CCH Pounder. Coleman Domingo is simply glorious in this film. He and the film are worthy of the all the awards it will most certainly garner.

Colman Domingo may actually be the first Black actor to get two Oscar nominations in one season. Not only does he headline as Bayard Rustin, he’s a likely Best Supporting Actor in “The Color Purple” as Mister.

I spoke to both star Colman Domingo and legendary director George C. Wolfe in Washington, DC.

What drew you to the role of Bayard Rusin? What made you want to play him?

CD-The first thing is the fact that he was hidden in the shadows of history. He made such a profound impact on history. He was one of the greatest organizers that ever walked this planet. He not only believed for not only civil rights and rights for LGBTQIA+, he dedicated his life to it, yet history had a way of pushing him aside because he was openly gay. That drew me in. The people who are marginalized in the world, who deserve their rightful place in history, who are complex and interesting and intelligent and warm and witty and have love. The more we tell these stories, the more understanding we have of who we are in the world.

How do you think he survived?

CD-I think I would like to say that he would say, that it came from the way he was raised, his grandmother, his Quaker upbringing. There are certain things that helped build him into the man that he was where he felt that he had a true sense of self. Because at his center he knew who he was. He knew he was smarter than anyone in the room. He knew he had love, joy, wit, charm along with his sexuality. He also knew that his homosexuality was something he should not be ashamed of. When he came out to his grandmother, she was fine. That’s what gave him his standing in the world. That’s how he could survive. I think that’s how any of us survive. How do you survive? That’s a great question. And that’s what is great about this film. You see someone is knocked down constantly, but they get back up. That’s the human spirit that’s actually at our best, that’s who we are.

Do you think he knew he was ahead of his time?

CD-He knew he had to be who he was, which was groundbreaking at that time. He knew he was a critical and a bigger thinker than a lot of people. He didn’t think in small ways. Think about putting together a march, a peaceful protest over 200 thousand people, it’s kind of insane, and to get it done in 7 weeks. But he believed in the impossible. He believed in what he could not see. I think there’s something about that is very spiritual. He believed he could create something out of nothing. He created himself out of nothing.

George C. Wolfe chimed in at this point. He has a stunning 19 Tony nominations, plus 5 wins.

GCW- This human being who changed history and who history forgot. He was passionate activist about all kinds of causes. It wasn’t exclusively black civil rights. He protested against the Japanese internment. He went to prison because he was a conscientious objector to WW2 and while he was in prison demanded prison reform. Because of the ferocity of this convictions, he didn’t have time to think of the future. He was so committed to the moment and the cause of the moment. He found himself responding to his sense of responsibility as a human and as an American to make this country better.

George, your background is in theater. How did that influence you?

GCW- These were incredibly smart and eloquent people, they used the language differently. It was important cultivate this sense that the language and that it be sophisticated, real, raw funny, incisive and intense all at the exact same time. That was important to me because it felt culturally true and correct. It’s also fun for the actors to play so they feel that sense of exhilaration in the dialogue. As a result, we will be caught up in that exhilaration.

What was the main thing you took away?

GCW-I continue to be in awe of the specificity of his organizational skill set. That kind of organizational brain I found dazzling.