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Pop’s Upside Down Summer: Drake, Post Malone Strike Out, 1985 Kate Bush Song is Massive Hit

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No one could predicted pop sales for the summer of 2022.

New albums by Drake and Post Malone have been sales duds, totally. They streamed a lot but made little money and have made no dent on the actual charts.

Yet, Kate Bush’s 1985 song, “Running Up that Hill,” is the hit of the summer. It’s been number 1 for weeks and weeks on iTunes thanks to “Stranger Things.” It’s not only number 1 in sales but in streaming as well. Reports estimate that Bush has made at least $3 million from it this summer. On Spotify, “Hill” is near 400 million streams!

As for the young guys: Drake and Post Malone have each been huge disappointments for the mighty Republic Records. Drake’s “Honestly, Nevermind” has sold a total of 278,440 including streaming according to Luminate. Post Malone’s “12 Carat Toothache” has done a little better– 417,977. These numbers are well below– like 60% or more — from their last releases.

RIP Great Comedic Actor Larry Storch, 99 1/2, Star of “F Troop,” King of Cartoon Voices

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Larry Storch almost made it to 100. He died today at age 99 and a half, exactly six months before he made a century.

Larry was a brilliant stand up comedian. But he became an international star because of his role as Corporal Agarn in “F Troop,” the mid 60s TV comedy about a group of kooky US soldiers protecting themselves from the Indians out west in the 1800s. It was a benign show which, I’m sure, would now seem racist. But the guys from F Troop were just silly, and the show was a staple in the world of unsophisticated comedy.

Storch became cemented in the memories of every kid who was growing up at the time. He’d already been around since 1951, and had voiced dozens of cartoons including the great “Tennessee Tuxedo.” In serious matters, he starred in an episode of “Alfred Hitchock Presents.” But it was the 65 episodes of “F Troop” that made his career, and he never looked back. He worked and worked after that, a staple on TV in the 70s and 80s.

Larry was a fixture on the Upper West Side, and was best friends with Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara. Even after Anne died, and Jerry wasn’t well, Larry visited him almost every day. They just sat and told old jokes to each other. His own wife, Norma, passed away in 2003. He leaves two step-daughters. The amazing thing that even in his 90s he walked, erect, on his own. Mazel tov.

Larry, God bless. Condolences to your family.

Every kid from the 60s knows this music by heart:

“Thor” Swings His Hammer to a Mighty Marvel $29 Million Preview Thursday

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“Thor,” what it it good for?

Answer: $29 million opening in Thursday previews.

The mighty Marvel strikes again. This may be a $130 million weekend.

Yes, the audiences are back in theaters.

And even though “Love and Thunder,” the fourth installment, may not be ‘as good’ as previous chapters, the fans love it and that’s all that matters.

In other but not less important box office news, “Elvis” crossed the $80 million line last night and should comfortably cross $90 million by Sunday night. Suspicious minds thought this would never happen.

Review: Ken Auletta’s “Hollywood Ending” is More Like A Beginning, Finds No “Rosebud Clue” in the Case of Harvey Weinstein

Ken Auletta is a famous and legendary figure in New York literary circles. He’s a respected reporter and researcher and he’s married to one of the biggest literary agents. He writes for the New Yorker. Everyone respects him, especially, apparently, the New York Times’s Maureen Dowd, who wrote him a gushing, embarrassing Valentine in Thursday’s paper. (I felt like I needed to take a shower and smoke a cigarette after I read it.)

Auletta’s been waiting 20 years to write a book about Harvey Weinstein, every since he was stymied in his attempts in 2002. Now here it is. “Hollywood Ending,” with an extensive section of annotations, will be published next Tuesday by Penguin Press. And guess what? I’m mentioned in it, just once, on page 152. Auletta is correct. I never received a penny from Harvey Weinstein (although he says many other reporters did over the years).

“Hollywood Ending” is a surface account of Weinstein’s life, career, accomplishments and dreadful misdeeds. It relies too much on the word of Harvey’s ferret of a brother, Bob, and on existing materials. Auletta is a terrific writer, so he weaves together all this information in a compelling way. But he never lands a punch on Harvey. There’s no smoking gun, no big revelation, nothing new unless you’re interested, again, in what Bob Weinstein has to say. I knew Bob back in the day, he was a bad guy, so I am not buying his wares. (I am convinced he knew everything that was going on, in detail.) But even Bob tells Auletta toward the end of the book: “You’re looking for a Rosebud clue why Harvey did all he did. You’ll never get that.”

Auletta told me when he talked to me two years ago that he was interested in Harvey’s childhood. His reporting there is excellent. He’s also very good assembling jigsaw puzzle pieces from Weinstein’s eventual trial and its aftermath. If you didn’t pay close attention to the trial (and that was me, because of the pandemic and family issues), here’s the blow by blow.

But it’s the stuff in the middle I felt lacking. The Harvey Weinstein story is not black and white. Auletta’s wife, Amanda “Binky” Urban, tells Dowd that the writer only looks for the gray areas. Yet in “Hollywood Ending,” the gray is kind of missing. A lot of people’s names from the Miramax/Weinstein Company era are absent. I mean, a lot. So are a lot of great stories I and others did report about what went on over 30 years. And some things are just wrong — like the great dust up with New York Observer writers took place the night before the 2000 election, not the night of. That kind of thing. I should know. I followed Weinstein into the middle of Church Street in Tribeca as he threatened to kill Observer writer Andrew Goldman.

Everyone who covered Miramax knew Weinstein cheated, cavorted with beautiful young things, that sex was in the air. We figured the women who participated in these exchanges understood the usual ground rules. No one — no one — had any idea violence and force were involved. It never crossed our minds, and none of the women ever said anything until 2015 when an Italian model made claims against Weinstein. (And even that seemed specious at the time given her history).

But reading the book, we still don’t quite know how we got here, why a man who was on the top of the world, with Oscars galore, fame, power, and money had a need to destroy it all, himself, his family. Harvey could be duplicitous, cunning, and underhanded. But he could also rise to heights and occasions like no one else, and achieve greatness. And then there was the hidden sexual violence. Unfortunately, “Hollywood Ending” is more like a beginning, and leaves a lot of questions unanswered.

“Jeopardy!” Host Competition Sharpens as Ratings Fall Again While “Family Feud” Rises

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The competition for “Jeopardy!” host continues to sharpen as the weeks go by.

For the week ending June 26th. “Jeopardy! ratings dipped again, by 2%, to 4.9. They’d been at 5.0 the previous week, and 5.2 before that. They’ve been down appreciably with Mayim Bialik as host.

All syndicated shows are down during the summer, but “Jeopardy!” is the only major game show to lose viewers in June. “Family Feud” is up and has taken the number 1 spot away from “Jeopardy!” Meanwhile, “Wheel of Fortune” has remained steady.

Soon Sony TV will have to decide if Bialik is the permanent host or if they will select Ken Jennings. Jennings’ ratings are always consistently in the upper 5’s or 6 million. A lot of that has to do with the contestants’ success, but the host drives the show.

Bialik is busy either way. She goes back to her Fox sitcom soon to tape a new season.

RIP James Caan, Great Star of “The Godfather,” “Brian’s Song,” “Misery,” “Gardens of Stone”

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James Caan, forever cemented in movie history as Sonny Corleone, has died at age 82.

His family posted a notice to social media but didn’t give the cause of death.

Caan rose to fame in the early 1970s in a seminal TV movie, “Brian’s Song” as Chicago Bears football player Brian Piccolo. You can’t imagine how big that movie was at the time. He received an Emmy nomination but also his career was established overnight.

From then, Caan’s star rose meteorically as Sonny Corleone in “The Godfather.” He got an Oscar nomination and never looked back. He immediately co-starred with Barbra Streisand in “Funny Lady,” two hits “The Gambler” and “Cinderella Liberty,” and on and on through the 70s. For a time in the 80s he was AWOL but then had a nice comeback with “Gardens of Stone.” I still remember the premiere, and how thrilled everyone that James Caan was back. He was a lovely guy.

And then came “Misery” with Kathy Bates, Rob Reiner’s mega hit. And Caan was really back. A second wave career commenced, with “Honeymoon in Las Vegas” leading the way. From 2003 to 2007 he starred in the TV series, “Las Vegas,” still in reruns, in which he excelled.

Among his children is Scott Caan, a successful actor who recently appeared on the long running “Hawaii Five O” revival on CBS.

Although he had current credits, Caan was thought to be in ill health for some time. He was really a great, great actor and a Hollywood favorite, Condolences to his family and friends.

New “Thor” Movie Starts Tonight With Meh Reviews Compared to Last One: Will it Matter?

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In 2017, critics fell in love with “Thor: Ragnarok.” The third “Thor” movie from Marvel got a 93% on Rotten Tomatoes and went on to become a blockbuster.

Tonight, the new “Thor” installment, “Love and Thunder,” also directed by Taika Waititi, has previews before opening officially tomorrow. Reviewers are lukewarm, giving it 69% on Rotten Tomatoes.

The reviewers are largely unimpressed. They’re saying it’s a redo of the last movie, and kind of a hot mess. But will it matter? Probably not. Disney publicity has been in hyper drive for weeks. They’ve planted stories of so many different kinds in so many places, you can’t escape “revelations” from Chris Hemsworth or Natalie Portman on every subject.

There’s an overall feeling that Thor, the former Norse God, has become a witless bumbling fool. Waititi has turned him into a wise cracking Deadpool. And where is Loki?

The Rolling Stone review: “A collision of competing tones, subplots, conceptual big swings and chaos masquerading as pathos, this new addition to the Asgardian-gods-and-monsters corner of Marvel Cinematic Universe is a holy mess.”

Check back tomorrow. My guess is fans will flock to it, anyway. It’s rare that a Marvel Universe film isn’t embraced enthusiastically and seen over and over on opening weekend.

Broadway: “Almost Famous” Musical Is Almost Here from “MJ” Team This October

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Penny Lane is coming to Broadway.

Cameron Crowe’s “Almost Famous,” the musical, has a theater, a start date, and an opening night.

“Almost Famous” will move into the Bernard Jacobs Theater on West 45th St, taking over from “Company.” Previews being on Monday, October 3rd ahead of an official opening on Thursday, November 3rd.

Lia Vollack, who’s made such a success of the Michael Jackson musical, “MJ,” is producing. Her Tony winning husband, Derek McLane, is doing the sets.
Almost Famous has music and lyrics by Tony, Grammy, Emmy and Pulitzer Prize Award winner Tom Kitt, direction by Tony and Olivier Award nominee Jeremy Herrin, and choreography by Sarah O’Gleby.

The production will star Chris Wood, Tony Award nominee Anika Larsen, Solea Pfeiffer, Drew Gehling, Rob Colletti, and introducing Casey Likes. The company will also include Matt Bittner, Chad Burris, Gerard Canonico, Julia Cassandra, Brandon Contreras, Jakeim Hart, Van Hughes, Jana Djenne Jackson, Katie Ladner, Danny Lindgren, Erica Mansfield, Alisa Melendez, Emily Schultheis, Daniel Sovich, Libby Winters, and Matthew C. Yee.

“Almost Famous” is one of my favorite movies of all time. I’m crossing my fingers for a big hit on stage!

Netflix Holding Reviews of $200 Million “Gray Man” Until Very Last Minute Next Week

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How bad is “The Gray Man”?

Netflix is obviously concerned. They’re holding reviews until 9am on Thursday, July 14th, the same day that performances begin in preview in limited release.

“The Gray Man” — directed by “Avengers” helmers Anthony and Joe Russo — cost $200 million, the most Netflix has spent on one of its own films. Starring Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans, the thriller has been a mystery itself from production through its upcoming release. We told you last year that reshoots and chaos put the ending budget up to at least $220 milllion or more.

Netflix will release “The Gray Man” in a few theaters officially on Friday, July 15th for one week, then turn it over to the streaming platform, where it will sink or swim without box office information. After laying off 450 people in the last few months, the company was hoping for a hit. But they’ll have to rely on “Stranger Things, Season 4,” which is an enormous success for them on the platform. If they put the last chapter of Season 4 in theaters for a week, it would sell out.

Meantime, the social media embargo for “Gray Man” lifts on July 10th at 8pm eastern after review press see the film on both coasts. We’ll get a good idea then why reviews are being curtailed until Thursday morning.

The Trailer is Here for David O. Russell’s All Star “Amsterdam” with Margot Robbie, Robert DeNiro, Taylor Swift, John David Washington

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David O. Russell’s “Amsterdam” is coming in November. It stars only Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, John David Washington, Alessandro Nivola, Andrea Riseborough, Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Rock, Matthias Schoenaerts, Michael Shannon, Mike Myers, Taylor Swift, Zoe Saldaña, Rami Malek, and Robert De Niro.

Russell kept the title and plot secret for a long time, and even the cast was a mystery. Will this be his big Oscar movie? It has the feel of a screwball comedy, it’s obviously a period piece. After “Silver Linings Playbook” and all his other hits, I’m psyched for this one!