Monday, September 30, 2024
Home Blog Page 229

Musical Chairs: Tim McGraw Coming to New York for Charity Concert & Gala, Record Industry’s TJ Martell Foundation Raises $1.3 Mil for Cancer Research

0

We don’t see country superstar Tim McGraw in New York that often.

But he’ll be here September 28th for concert and gala benefiting the City Parks Foundation. The evening is also honoring I Heart Media’s Tom Poleman and Devon Eisenberg, of the Young Women’s Leadership School of the Bronx.

Even if you don’t pay — and you should — you’ll be able to hear Tim all over the park if you stand in the right spot (but it won’t be as good as hearing him up close). He’s playing at SummerStage in Central Park. McGraw will perform an exclusive set following the dinner and awards ceremony, which will be held at the flagship Central Park venue.

Tables and tickets for the evening, including the dinner and concert, are now available for purchase. For more information, visit https://cityparksfoundation.org/city-parks-foundation-gala/.

Music is in the air in New York, especially for charity.

Recently, my old friend Tom Corson, head of Warner Bros, Records, was honored by the TJ Martell Foundation here in New York. The late great Tony Martell started this cancer research foundation after his son died many years ago. Tony is gone now, too, but I can heap praise on his memory. He turned a terrible loss into something very positive and productive.

The evening featured special performances by three very hot Warner Music acts: Omar Apollo, Coco Jones and Brandy Clark, which got the audience’s juices going. Presenters included “Sweeney Todd” star Josh Groban, iconic Tony and Emmy Award-winning actress and singer Kristin Chenoweth, Oscar and Golden Globe nominee and NAACP Image Award-winning filmmaker Ryan Coogler.

Total take for the night was a stunning $1.3 million!

Tom received the Lifetime Music Industry Award, Chief Creative Officer and EVP at Def Jam Recordings Archie Davis, whoreceived the Rising Music Superstar Award, and Grammy Award-winning and Tony-nominated songwriter/producer Shane McAnally, whoreceived the Spirit of Music Award.  The event was hosted by Gala Co-Chairs and Board Chairman John Esposito, Tunji Balogun, Aaron Bay-Schuck, Robert Carlton, Steve Gawley, Laura Swanson and Julie Swidler.

Report: Warner Bros. Selling Off Parts, Zaslav Hopes to Get $500 Mil for 50% of Film Music Assets and Publishing

0

David Zaslav is selling off parts of Warner Bros. while fighting battles on every other front.

Hitsdailydouble.com says Zaslav has hired top music lawyer Allen Grubman to find a buyer for the music publishing assets of the Warner films.

This isn’t Warner Chappell publishing. It has nothing to do with Warner Music, a separate company.

No, these are the soundtracks to popular Warner movies including Purple Rain,” “Evita,” “Sweeney Todd,” “Rent” several “Batman” films and many more titles, as well as songs included in films such as “As Time Goes By” from “Casablanca.”

It’s actually unclear what the assets are — these are just a guess. Do they include the Clint Eastwood films, with all of the music written for them? And how will the Prince estate figure into a sale of “Purple Rain” or “Batman”?

Zaslav is said to figure the whole catalog is worth over $1 billion. So this would just be a half ownership. Currently Universal Music Publishing administers the rights to all this music. And that’s weird. Not Warner Chappell? I guess he hopes UMG, the most successful music company, will help bail out his overall debt.

What’s next? I guess we’ll see if Bugs Bunny has a price.

Box Office: “The Flash” Falls to Number 3 Behind “SpiderVerse” and the Not So Popular “Elemental”

0

Mid week was not good for “The Flash.” Already suffering the slings and arrows of mad fanboys and Twitter stompers, Barry Allen and pals finished at number 3 on Wednesday.

Not good: “The Flash” fell behind “Spider Man: Across the Spider Verse,” which had already racked up $300 million in 3 weeks, and PIxar’s dud cartoon, “Elemental.”

Losing to these two releases is so insulting for “The Flash.” He doesn’t deserve it. But if this repeats tonight– Thursday — “The Flash” won’t have a second week at number 1. It’s a real mess for Warner’s and DC comics. But what could it lose to this weekend? “No Hard Feelings”? “Asteroid City”? Or more “Spider Man”?

Kennedy Center Honors Become Grammy Awards, Induct 4 Music Stars…and Billy Crystal — Snubs Denzel, Liza Again

0

The Kennedy Center Honors has turned into the Grammy Awards.

They’re inducting Queen Latifah, Dionne Warwick, Barry Gibb, Renee Fleming. And Billy Crystal, a former host of The Grammys.

The Center didn’t include any serious actors, skipping Hollywood and Broadway. Crystal, who everyone loves, is meant to cover both arenas.

But four singers? They’re all deserving but this shows a lack of thought and a craven yearning for ratings.

Fleming and Warwick make sense. The other two could have waited. I love Queen Latifah but she’s too young. But she’s a CBS star, so you get the idea.

No Denzel Washington?

No Francis Ford Coppola?

No Liza Minnelli?

Turner Classic Movies Turmoil: Spielberg, Scorsese, Paul Thomas Anderson Issue Joint Statement to Protect “Cultural Touchstone”

0

UPDATE The official statement from Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese and Paul Thomas Anderson:

“Turner Classic Movies has always been more than just a channel. It is truly a precious resource of cinema, open 24 hours a day seven days a week. And while it has never been a financial juggernaut, it has always been a profitable endeavor since its inception.
Earlier this week, David Zaslav, the CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, got in touch to talk about the restructuring of TCM. We understand the pressures and realities of a corporation as large as WBD, of which TCM is one moving part.
We have each spent time talking to David, separately and together, and it’s clear that TCM and classic cinema are very important to him.  Our primary aim is to ensure that TCM’s programming is untouched and protected.
We are heartened and encouraged by the conversations we’ve had thus far, and we are committed to working together to ensure the continuation of this cultural touchstone that we all treasure.”

EARLIER:

Imagine being the head of a studio and attracting the wrath of directors Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, and Paul Thomas Anderson. And this is after having a huge problem with director Christopher Nolan.

But that’s what’s happened with Warner Bros Discovery chairman David Zaslav. After making a mess at CNN and at HBO, Zaslav sacked the main people who run Turner Classic Movies.

Gone are TCM’s senior vice president of programming and content strategy Charles Tabesh, vice president of studio production Anne Wilson, vice president of marketing and creative Dexter Fedor and TCM Enterprises vice president Genevieve McGillicuddy will all exit the company.

The latest departures follow news on Tuesday that TCM general manager Pola Chagnon is leaving the company after more than 25 years.

Zaslav is replacing them with Michael Ouweleen, the president of Adult Swim, Cartoon Network, Discovery Family and Boomerang. Ouweleen previously ran TCM, which sounds good but isn’t really a solution to the problem caused by Zaslav.

Fears that TCM is going to be dismantled, downsized, or reinvented as something terrible immediately provoked the three superstar directors. According to IndieWire they immediately put in a call to Zaslav and asked for some kind of conference call.

The irony here is that Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” is coming from Universal, not Warner Bros where he’s made movies for 20 years. Zaslav wants to win Nolan back, but doesn’t seem to realize that if he tampers with TCM, no name directors will make movies at Warner’s.

This whole debacle follows Zaslav’s’ mucking up of CNN, and turning HBO Max into Max, costing the company subscribers. On top of that, today he sent word that he’s going to license HBO series to Netflix to see what extra pennies he can squeeze from the library.

Zaslav has unerring ability to make enemies and raise ire. The weird thing is, he doesn’t seem to care. He may burn down the whole Warners-HBO-CNN enterprise on purpose. It makes no sense, His previous successes with Discovery, et al indicated he was shrewd and savvy. But this is a puzzlement.

Oscars: Motion Picture Academy Outlines New Eligibility Rules for Best Picture

0

Oscar fans: the Motion Picture Academy has announced some more eligibility rules for Best Picture.

“As we do every year, we have been reviewing and assessing our theatrical eligibility requirements for the Oscars,” said Academy CEO Bill Kramer and Academy President Janet Yang. “In support of our mission to celebrate and honor the arts and sciences of moviemaking, it is our hope that this expanded theatrical footprint will increase the visibility of films worldwide and encourage audiences to experience our artform in a theatrical setting. Based on many conversations with industry partners, we feel that this evolution benefits film artists and movie lovers alike.”

Here the rules. One rule not mentioned is “The movie must make sense.” I’d like to see that one included, too.

“Upon completion of an initial qualifying run, currently defined as a one-week theatrical release in one of the six U.S. qualifying cities, a film must meet the following additional theatrical standards for Best Picture eligibility:

Expanded theatrical run of seven days, consecutive or non-consecutive, in 10 of the top 50 U.S. markets, no later than 45 days after the initial release in 2024.

For late-in-the-year films with expansions after January 10, 2025, distributors must submit release plans to the Academy for verification.

Release plans for late-in-the-year films must include a planned expanded theatrical run, as described above, to be completed no later than January 24, 2025.

Non-U.S. territory releases can count towards two of the 10 markets.

Qualifying non-U.S. markets include the top 15 international theatrical markets plus the home territory for the film.”

Cable Wars: Bret Baier’s Revealing Trump Interview Scores High, But Rachel Maddow-Lawrence O’Donnell Edge out Hannity-Ingraham

Monday night was volatile in the war between Fox News and MSNBC, and the war inside Fox News as well.

The big story was Bret Baier’s crazy interview with Donald Trump. At 6pm, Baier let Trump skewer himself in unimaginable ways. The result was 2.6 million people tuning in as Trump liked, contradicted himself, actually admitted to having classified documents at home, and conceded that everyone he’d hired — all the “best people” from his administration, now hate him. This startling experience had to have been sanctioned by Rupert Murdoch, who let Trump swing in the wind.

Baier’s ratings were actually down from the 5 pm show, “The Big Five,” which today announced they were dumping Geraldo Rivera, one of the few people at Fox who can sometimes seem reasonable.

But then the big two hour block from 9 to 11pm went to MSNBC as Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell swept the floor with Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham. When Maddow is in her chair, Hannity is crushed, and that leads to O’Donnell doing the same to Ingraham.

Nice work at MSNBC which must get Maddow back on a regular schedule when Trump goes on trial in August.

Review: Idris Elba Stars in Sizzling Seven Part Apple TV+ Series “Hijack,” That Mixes “24” with “Die Hard”

0

“Hijack,” Apple TV +’s is a sizzling seven-episode series, a lean and mean thrilling ride 30,000 ft in the air.  “Hijack” follows the bumpy twisty and turbulent journey of a flight from Dubai to London which gets hijacked in mid-air.  And at the center of it all is passenger Sam Nelson, played by the singular screen presence that is Idris Elba.  Taking place in real time, shades of the iconic series “24” with a dash of “Die Hard” thrown in, director Jim Field Smith, with a tight script by George Kay, wisely places Elba in the center of the claustrophobic plane tornado.  Much to the filmmaker’s credit, the action feels anything but small; it’s big, wild and unpredictable.

The story starts with Nelson is on his way to reunite with his son Kai (Jude Cudjoe) and to woo his beloved estranged wife (Chantelle Allen) back.   But the audience knows better, and the sense of dread is smartly built-up scene by nail-biting scene. 

Enter the hijackers, a complicated darkly bunch.  Sam as it turns out is a corporate negotiator, who mostly wins and hates to lose.  His skill set is his analytical intuition, which enables him to read people’s insecurities.  He puts it all to lifesaving use in handling the out-of-control hijackers and the terrified passengers.   Head honcho bad guy Stuart (Neil Maskell) is more than a worthy adversary.  The scenes between him and Sam are scarily electrifying.  The narrative of the story is equally on fire, unfolding in a savvy and unpredictable way.

Ann Nikitin’s pulse-racing score propels the action.

Idris Elba gives another you can’t take your eyes off him commanding performance. His sense of internal mystery, not knowing what he’s thinking or will do next, is fascinating to watch. Elba, who also is an Executive Producer, plays Sam Nelson with a confident steely exterior even when Sam’s inner life is shaky.   Sam knows his ultimate skill, that of being a manipulative master, is indeed his most valuable weapon that will save the periled plane.

The cast is filled to the brim with talented Brits, many whom are known to American audiences most notably Archie Panjabi (Emmy award winner for “The Good Wife.”) 

So, get to the couch and binge the entertaining, suspenseful, full of mystery and internal intrigue that is Hijack!

Review: “Sex and the City: And Just Like That Returns” But Doesn’t Get Going Until Episode 5 Before the Fizz Kicks In

0

“Sex and the City” won’t go away. Tomorrow, a second season of its spin off, “And Just Like That,” returns to HBO and Max whether you like it or not.

The first season, of course, began with Big’s death on a Peloton and careened down hill from there. Kim Cattrall aka Samantha, was gone. So was the theme music. Many new characters were added to bulk up the new hour long episodes. The show was no longer a comedy but a diatribe.

Season 2 picks up where Season 1 left off, with more of the same woke nonsense. Everything seems very on the nose and obvious. There’s little fizz, just fizzle, as if every character has to deliver bullet points. The Black characters are all reminding us that they’re Supporting Their Community and Standing Up for Black Women. The white characters are bending over backwards to show how liberal they are, on the right side of every topic.. It’s very exhausting.

And then there’s the sex. Sarita Choudhury’s Seema has been given Samantha’s old sex life and costumes, and she wears it well. Sara Ramirez is back as Che, which rhymes with They, having lots of graphic sex with Cynthia Nixon’s Miranda. Like all of us in the audience, Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie just rolls her eyes and repeatedly says “TMI.” (She’s right.) Charlotte– Kristen Davis — is busy catering to her two teen daughters and shtupping amiable husband Harry (Evan Handler). Carrie has some dates, too, but nothing substantial. She’s busy trading barbs with Candice Bergen as her former Vogue editor, Enid (a Grace Mirabella stand in). Bergen is exceptional, as usual. Tony Danza also guest stars, and makes more sense than almost anyone else.

So there it is, a laundry list to be checked off. By the end of episode 4, I’d had had enough. But the press package contains 7 chapters, so I plowed on and through. To my surprise, the 5th episode is seminal. And also to my surprise, Cynthia Nixon was the director. (She also has Episode 6.) Suddenly there is light and air. The script is fun, and smart. No more of pounding home who’s this or that. It felt like the best of the old show. The next one did, too, and even number 7. Things are looking up.

“And Just Like That” is still annoying over all. Everyone is RICH, money is no OBJECT. It’s a whipped cream fantasy of New York. Carrie used to live in the West Village. But now she tells a new beau her address is 245 East 73rd St. Did I hear that right? The show has moved uptown between Park and Lex and that may be the problem. When you’re writing a check for $100,000 to Enid without thinking twice (Carrie becomes an investor in a website based on the failed wowowow.com of 15 years ago) there’s nowhere to go but down. How I wish Carrie would lose all her money and have to start over.

Anyway, the three main actors remain very engaging. SJP’s Carrie is much likeable this time around. The various cameos all work, and somewhere in here is John Corbett riding to her rescue as old boyfriend, Aiden. David Eigenberg as Steve finally gives into his negative feelings about Miranda’s changes– and I clapped for him. It’s about time. And the show finally uses former “Hamilton” star Christopher Jackson as uptight Herbert in a refreshing way. (Look for inside jokes about George Washington.)

I don’t know how the season ends, but I guarantee you they’ll all be back one last time for a final season. And then a reunion, followed by Sex and the Nursing Home. God speed.

PS One thing I never got about this show: none of the main trio has a single family member. Nothing. They exist in a time vacuum where there’s no past, and no one who needs them in the present other than each other. This year, even Nicole Air Parker gets a mother in law (Charlotte used to have one), who’s modeled on George Jefferson’s mother from a thousand years ago.

Ratings: “The Idol” Down Again by a Notch to Paltry 133k Viewers on HBO Cable Channel

0

The perfectly gross HBO series, “The Idol” hit a new low on Sunday. The soft core porn series fell from 135K to 133k in its third week. The previous average in this time slot was 650,000 for Succession.

The show featured pop star The Weeknd in several sexually implicit scenes that I won’t describe in detail here. But the overall effect on his career is instant and extremely negative. His record sales have plummeted in the last three weeks. His fans are fighting with him on Twitter, calling out his lack of taste and extremely wooden acting.

Lily Rose Depp can at least act. But why she would put herself through this degradation is a mystery.

It’s unlikely HBO will order an other round of “The Idol.” But the full extent of the damage isn’t completely known yet. And if the sex scenes are already this X rated, where does it go from here?