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Exclusive: As Strike Continues, One TV Producer’s Deal Has Not Been Suspended — At Dick Wolf’s Office “We’re still working”

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You may have read about the TV producers whose deals with the studios have been suspended because of the WGA and SAG AFTRA strikes.

The names include heavy hitters like Lorne Michaels, JJ Abrams, Chuck Lorre, Greg Berlanti, Bill Lawrence, John Wells. Lions Gate has out a half dozen producers including Paul Feig on ice. CBS has done the same with most everyone. So has NBC Universal, except for one: Dick Wolf.

Someone who answered the phone yesterday at Wolf Entertainment said yesterday. “We’re still working. We’re here.”

Wolf Entertainment is currently the biggest TV producer anywhere. Wolf has nine hours of primetime TV every week: all of Tuesday night on CBS with his “FBI” shows, all of Wednesday and Thursday nights on NBC with his “Chicago” and “Law & Order” shows.

But in all the announcements of TV producers’ deals being placed on hold, Wolf’s is the one never mentioned. He’s the king of TV. In a way, you have to admire that. Neither NBC nor CBS has made a move against him.

“They never will,” says a source. “They’re afraid of him.”

That any network is afraid of any producer is amazing. But of course they’re afraid. Without those nine hours, primetime would be blank. There’s too much at stake to start a war with Wolf’s empire. And think of it: NBC cut off Lorne Michaels, their one other consistent money maker and flag waver for almost 50 years.

Hats off to Wolf. When the strikes are over, he’ll be ready to go. If anyone survives the strikes and is back on the air first, it will be Wolf.

Bruce Springsteen Could Have an Oscar Nomination for Song from Rebecca Miller’s Fanciful “She Came to Me”

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Rebecca Miller’s “She Came to Me” is an oddly endearing, quirky indie movie coming next week to a theater near you. It’s a fable with no special effects with an impressive cast including Peter Dinklage, Marisa Tomei, Anne Hathaway, Brian D’Arcy James, and Joanna Kulig (from the movie “Cold War”). You couldn’t do better.

So how to top the cast? End the movie with an original Bruce Springsteen song called “Addicted to Romance,” never heard before and I would guess written for the film. Patti Scialfa sings background on what turns out to be a Springsteen gem that feels just like “She Came to Me” — old school, melodic, memorable. The people behind the movie should convince Bruce to put it out as a single pronto cut to their clips. They would have a hit.

Miller knows how to come up with left field plots that that turn on unexpected moments. Her films like “Maggie’s Plan” and “Personal Velocity” have cemented her place in this quirky world. “She Came to Me” is a dramedy about dysfunctional people in Brooklyn. Dinklage is an opera composer with a current creative blockage married to Hathaway, a composed, fashionable (wealthy) shrink on the verge of a nervous breakdown. She’s looking for more and may find it in religion. They have a teenage son, a Romeo who falls in love with D’Arcy James and Kulig’s daughter, their Juliet.

It sounds like a nice, tidy set up but the curve ball is Marisa Tomei as — believe it or not — a self confessed sex and romance obsessed tugboat captain looking for a one night stand. When she docks in Brooklyn, she meets Dinklage and changes his life. He writes an opera about their mysterious encounter, decides she’s his muse while at home, Dinklage’s family is coming apart at the seams.

“She Came to Me” doesn’t sound like it would work and no studio would ever greenlight it. But the material is enchanting. Miller is full of surprises and nuances. Her cast is terrific, everyone of them a scene stealer although Hathaway is kind of remarkable. And that’s coming from a big Marisa Tomei fan. Also, if the tugboat part doesn’t get you, Miller throws D’Arcy James and Kulig into an inventive unpredictable little plot twist to get to her ending.

If all this isn’t enough, Miller stages two scenes from original mini operas that could easily be expanded and play in real life at BAM.

“She Came to Me” is an old fashioned New York style film, much in the vein of Woody Allen, Nora Ephron, and kind of a balm after all the noise of planned Hollywood hits. Plus it has a delicately memorable score from Bryce Dessner of the group, The National. Originally Steve Carell was supposed to play the opera composer along with a different cast that never came together. It’s Dinklage’s credit that he assumes the role with no mention of his height difference. He is just outstanding in everything he does, and totally believable as the cynical center of this cacophony.

Will Springsteen cap his year by performing at the Oscars? He should. The song is called “Addicted to Romance.” His fans will be addicted to it.

Donald Trump Delirious: Crows About High Meet the Press Ratings, But It’s the Same People Who Watched Him on CNN

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Donald Trump is crowing about the big ratings for Sunday’s disastrous “Meet the Press.” Three million people watched — the same amount that tuned in to his CNN Town Hall. I’ll bet it’s the same three million people mostly hate-watching.

Trump is also bragging about the worst thing he did — helping to end Roe v. Wade. He doesn’t get it that most Americans do not want abortion banned.
It’s a long post but the gist of his lunacy:

“I was able to do something that nobody thought was possible, end Roe v. Wade. For 52 years, people talked, spent vast amounts of money, but couldn’t get the job done. I got the job done! Thanks to the three great Supreme Court Justices I appointed, this issue has been returned to the States, where all Legal Scholars, on both sides, felt it should be. Now the Pro Life Community has TREMENDOUS NEGOTIATING POWER…”

Trump thinks if he supports very limited exceptions he can get away with this. I don’t think so.
“Like Ronald Reagan before me, I believe in the three exceptions for Rape, Incest, and the Life of the Mother. Without the exceptions, it is very difficult to win Elections, we would probably lose the Majorities in 2024, and perhaps the Presidency itself, but you must follow your HEART! In order to win in 2024, Republicans must learn how to talk about Abortion. This issue cost us unnecessarily, but dearly, in the Midterms…”

He’s partly right– Republicans must learn to talk about  — and accept — abortion.

Ed Sheeran Will Release Second Album of 2023 After First One Tanked, Influenced By “A Composer Named Elgar”

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Ed Sheeran is releasing a second album of 2023 next Friday despite the fact that the first one flopped.

Minus, or Subtract, his sixth studio album didn’t sell very well even after he won his plagiarism case over the song “Thinking Out Loud.” The total was 361,000 copies with a little over half from streaming. Sheeran’s previous album sold around 2 million units.

Now he’s coming back with a new one called “Autumn Variations”. He told Billboard in August: “My dad and brother told me about a composer called Elgar, who composed “Enigma Variations,” where each of the 14 compositions were about a different one of his friends. This is what inspired me to make this album.”

Yes, he actually said that. This Elgar person he speaks of his Edward Elgar, famous British compose who wrote the Pomp and Circumstance marches that are heard around the world on a daily basis. Elgar is probably getting a good chuckle about all this wherever he is.

“Autumn Variations” is the first album of Sheeran’s on his own label, Gingerbread Man Records, distributed by Warner Music Group. Sheeran’s previous records were owned by Atlantic Records, which is also through WMG. But as he pointed out in an interview “Autumn Variations” will be the first album to which he owns the master recording.

So we’ll see how Sheeran does saluting Elgar, whose compositions are well out of copyright by now. How many of Sheeran’s songs will sound like Elgar’s? At least he can’t be sued this time around!

As to Elgar, Sheeran should have watched the movie, “Hillary and Jackie.”

Soap Star Billy Miller’s Tragic End Caused By Bipolar Disorder: “He did everything he could to control the disease”

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“General Hospital” and “Young and the Restless” star Billy Miller really suffered in the end. His mother said in a statement that the 43 year old three time Emmy winner didn’t die of anything but bipolar depression.

Patricia Miller said:

“He fought a long hard valiant battle with bipolar depression for years. He did everything he could to control the disease. He loved his family, his friends and his fans but in the end the disease won the fight he surrendered his life. The other causes of death being told are not true. I wish they were but they just aren’t.”

So we can eliminate PSP, a neurological condition that was announced early without confirmation, and stroke. Bipolar depression can be devastating and must be addressed by doctors. Even so, nothing is guaranteed. “General Hospital” star Maurice Benard talks about his condition all the time, and recently cited on his YouTube show that he was very ill during the pandemic, swinging from highs to lows.

Miller was very talented and will be very missed. Ironically, the Daytime Emmy Awards have not aired because of the strikes. Maybe when they finally are broadcast, the Academy can do a tribute to him.

This is Why Katy Perry Cashed In Her Chips and Sold Her Music Catalog for $225 Million at Such a Young Age

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Katy Perry made a great deal for her music this week. This is why she sold her publishing and master recordings at the youngish age of 38.

Believe it or not, Katy’s chart topping days are likely over unless she scores a surprise hit. She hasn’t released an album in over three years. She hasn’t had a real hit record since 2017.

Katy has only put out 5 albums, which isn’t a lot. All of her songs are collaborations with other writers like superstar Max Martin. So the $225 million sale Litmus, backed by the Carlyle Group, is just for the portion she was allocated for each song.

Perry’s biggest hits like “Firework” and “Roar” can be easily repurposed by Litmus. They’ll make their money back fast turning Katie’s hits into commercials. “Firework” has unlimited potential in public use for fireworks displays. That has to be paid for each time.

It is true that Perry has focused her last years on starting a family. She also has made a fortune from hosting “American Idol.” It’s turned into a permanent gig. The result is she hasn’t been on a big tour in years. Instead, she’s gone the route of having a Las Vegas residency similar to Adele. She can earn millions more just staying put in Las Vegas, making the fans come to her.

Most of the music stars who sold their catalogs are in their 70s or older. With the exception of Justin Bieber– still in his 20s and semi-retired– these people are legacy artists who wrote their own music exclusively and have fifty years’ worth of songs. Katy doesn’t have that depth or length to her catalog but she has just enough in there to strike while the iron is hot.

So congrats to Katy Perry. Her estimated worth before this, according to reports, was already $330 million. Now it’s closer to $600 million, and she’s not done yet. There could easily be a syndicated talk show in her future if she wants it, and that would bring in even more moolah.

Here’s my favorite Katy Perry song, “Chained to the Rhythm,” written by Skip Marley, Max Martin and Ali Payami, with additional writing from Sia — and of course Katy. That’s a big pie to carve up. so now Katy’s portion has been secured. Could she have more hit records? That depends. Miley Cyrus has made a stunning comeback this year on the charts with the right songwriters. It can be done.

Jose Iturbi Was the First Classical Music Star to Sell 1 Million Copies of a Record, Now He’s Getting His Due with a Luxe Box Set, Party

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You’re too young to know who Jose Iturbi was but look him up. He was the first living classical music artist to sell 1 million copies of a single record. And he did twice.

Iturbi was wildly popular in from the 1930s to 1960s. He was the key pianist and conductor of movie scores. Iturbi was so in demand that he appeared in 7 classic film musicals, including one in which he starred.

Tomorrow night in Hollywood — September 19th — no less than Michael Feinstein and a who’s who of musicians are celebrating Iturbi with the publication of a massive commemorative 16-CD, 188-page box set/coffee table book called “From Hollywood To The World: The Rediscovered Recordings by Pianist and Conductor José Iturbi.”

The party is also a celebration of Hispanic Heritage month.

Feinstein will be there along with famed songwriter Charles Fox (“Killing Me Softly,” “I Got a Name,” theme from “The Love Boat”) and film historian Leonard Maltin showing off José Iturbi’s personal 9 foot long Baldwin Concert Grand Piano & the Hollywood Museum’s new Iturbi exhibit.

Other expected guests include Oscar honored songwriter Diane Warren, famed rock and roll founding writer Mike Stoller, who wrote all those hits with Jerry Leiber, plus famed TV and Broasdway star Michele Lee (Broadway’s “See Saw” and TV’s “Knots Landing”) plus the great music director now of every major Hollywood event, Rickey Minor.

Now that Sean Hayes has won a Tony for playing Oscar Levant on Broadway, it’s time for a film about Iturbi. He was friends with every major Hollywood star and always the toast of the town. It’s kind of amazing because he escaped a famous plane crash in 1936 and lived to tell about it!

In 1945 (he died in 1980 at age 84) he told an interviewer: “I entered pictures because, first of all, I thought I’d enjoy it – which I did! And, second, I felt that classical music should be a more recognizable part of everyman’s entertainment, and it has been my great hope that through motion pictures a larger group of people would learn to like classical music and attend live concert performances.”

His close pals included everyone from Frank Sinatra to President Harry S. Truman. And those million sellers included gold records for his “Polonaise in A Flat”(Military Polonaise) by Chopin in 1950, and“Clair de Lune” by Debussy in 1953.

Get ready for an Iturbi Renaissance!

PS Grammy voters take note: this deluxe package is up for consideration for three categories: Best Historial Album, Best Album Notes, and Best Packaging–Boxed or Limited Edition.

“Sound of Freedom” Made $200 Million, But Ant-Trafficker It Was Based on Has Been Accused of Sexual Harassment, Ousted from Organizaton

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Not a shock: VICE Media has revealed that the man upon whose adventures “Sound of Freedom” was based on has been accused of sexual harassment and ousted from the anti-trafficking organization he started.

In the movie, which made $200 million this summer thanks to church groups buy blocks of tickets and giving them away for free, Jim Caviezel played Tim Ballard. Ballard’s anti-trafficking group is called OUR aka Operation Underground Railroad. Many people don’t know he was ousted from the group earlier this year following an investigation into claims of sexual misconduct involving seven women.

So much for an Oscar campaign.

Everything about “Sound of Freedom” has been questionable starting with the way it was marketed and sold. That the central hero in the film turns out to be not what he seemed is no shock.

Read the VICE story here. And below is a video expose from investigative journalist Lynn K. Packer.

Rolling Stone Disowns Founder, Buries Apology for Jann Wenner’s Statements About Female, Black Artists on Twitter X

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Rolling Stone has disowned founder Jann Wenner.

They buried a statement around 1pm today on Twitter X. It’s barely there, it’s not on other social media or on the website.

It’s a sad end to Wenner’s 50 years in publishing. The new RS says:

“Jann Wenner’s recent statements to the New York Times do not represent the values and practices of today’s Rolling Stone. Jann Wenner has not been directly involved in our operations since 2019. Our purpose, especially since his departure, has been to tell stories that reflect the diversity of voices and experiences that shape our world. At Rolling Stone’s core is the understanding that music above all can bring us together, not divide us.”

Wenner’s comments in the New York Times that Black and female artists weren’t worthy of inclusion in his book, “The Masters,” set off a fire storm. Five decades of racism and misogyny just burst out of his mouth. He tried to apologize but no one bought it. Now the magazine he founded– edited by his son — has to distance it self from him.

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

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“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