Sunday, November 24, 2024
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Ratings: “The Simpsons” Drops Below 1 Million Viewers for the First Time in 33 Seasons

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Is it something Homer said?

On Sunday night, “The Simpsons” fell below the magic number of 1 million viewers for the first time ever in its 33 year history.

Last week’s show scored 1,095,000 and that was the second week in a row of low numbers. Ratings for “The Simpsons” are usually around 1.5 million although sometimes it’s double that amount. Six times this season the total number of viewers has been up to 4 million.

But Sunday night brought just 950,000 fans. It was a drop of over 100,000 and a significant fall from the season opener last September of 3.5 million viewers.

Don’t worry, “The Simpsons” won’t be cancelled any time soon. It’s a low budget show with so many other revenue streams– merchandise, etc — that Fox isn’t even close to saying goodbye. But the sudden drop is a little worrisome.

The episode on Sunday, The Sound of Bleeding Gums, was no different than the last several hundred. Little Lisa, who plays the sax, meets a jazz legend. Maybe it was too arcane. But aren’t all “Simpsons” episodes like that?

We’ll hope for a rebound this coming week.

See below.

Panned: Critics Rip “Father Stu,” Mel Gibson’s New Movie Written and Directed by His Baby Mama

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Top critics on Rotten Tomatoes are saying “no thanks” to “Father Stu.”

The newest Mel Gibson movie, written and directed by his baby mama, Rosalind Ross, has a lowly 46 % 42% on the review site.

Among Top Critics, so far only three of ten gave the movie a “fresh” rating. Seven in that category have panned it.

Sony will release the film starring Mark Wahlberg this Friday to try and cash in on Easter weekend.

But the reviews are scathing. Mark Kennedy of the Associated Press wrote: “Wahlberg is simply miscast, out of his depth, and the overly long, poorly edited Father Stu never finds its rhythm. Good at humor, sweet with regret but the film ironically ends up short when it comes to the most important part: handling faith itself.”

The Arizona Republic said: “Just because something is based on real life doesn’t mean it can’t be cliched.”

The Hollywood Reporter: “Despite some R-rated language, the whole enterprise seems bland and perfunctory.”

Uproxx: “A fascinatingly bizarre attempt to apply the Protestant framework of ‘Heaven Is For Real’ to a Catholic story. They should’ve called it ‘Purgatory Is For Real.’ ”

Yikes.

Among the executive producers (the money) listed for “Father Stu” is Miky Lee, heiress to the Samsung fortune and long ago an early investor in the now defunct Dreamworks.

“Father Stu” is Ross’s first feature. She’s been involved with Gibson since 2014 and gave birth to his umpteenth child in 2017. Gibson is infamously an anti-Semite and racist whose late father, like him, did not believe the Holocaust happened.

Wahlberg gained a lot of weight to play Father Stu and at the same time has diminished the career he built so carefully with movies like “Ted” and producing the hit series, “Entourage.”

 

RIP Donald Baechler, 65, Whimsical Much Hailed Artist Who Rose to Fame in the Heady 1980s

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I did not know Donald Baechler personally but I really admired him as an artist. He’s one of the few important, great artists of my actual generation, someone who made an impact and a difference. He died April 4th from a heart attack at age 66 and I am still waiting for the New York Times to give him a proper obituary.

Baechler came from Hartford, Connecticut but hit the New York art scene in the 1980s. He’s got pieces in most major museums, and has been exhibited everywhere. His gallery, Cheim & Read, said in a statement: “Donald is a great and unique artist, and we are deeply saddened by his sudden and unexpected passing,” the spokesperson said. Our thoughts are with his family and his partner who survive him.”

Baechler’s pictures seemed simplistic but they are incredibly evocative. He did a poster for the Hamptons Film Festival several years ago that I am proud to own. Likewise, I have one of his lithographs of a telephone. He loved to make objects like flowers especially, globes, ice cream cones whimsical at times, threatening at others.

Condolences to whoever out there is connected to him. Much too soon.

Thanks to Patrick McMullan for the photo.

 

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HBO Gives an Old Fashioned Premiere for Barry Levinson’s Extraordinary “The Survivor” Featuring a Knockout Ben Foster

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Last night HBO returned to pre-pandemic form with an old fashioned New York premiere of Barry Levinson’s extraordinary film, “The Survivor,” starring Ben Foster. Following the screening and Q&A at Temple Emanu-El, featuring Levinson and his cast — including Foster, John Leguizamo and Danny DeVito (they play boxing managers), Peter Sarsgaard who plays a newspaper reporter, and screenwriter Justine Juel Gillmer with Billy Magnussen (Zooming overhead from Europe) — guests were bused to The Pool/ Grill (the former Four Seasons).

Seems like old times.

Foster gives the performance of a lifetime as Harry Haft, based on the book by Haft’s son, Alan. Harry literally fought his way out of Auschwitz with boxing gloves.

Picture “Raging Bull” meets “The Pawnbroker.” Imagine the violence, the searing impression of the blood oozing out of the fighters—with Haft so gaunt, so spent, you cannot even think of his having body fluids in his vividly depicted post-war visions, triggered even on his honeymoon when he marries Miriam, Vicky Krieps in a tender role. They go on as survivors do, having three kids, managing the past as best they can—singing “God Bless America” in Yiddish.

As Auschwitz survivor stories go, Harry Haft’s exceeds the norm. Grasping his world in the camps and beyond in Brooklyn, Foster gets Haft –as boxer and as nightmare-ridden refugee. Told in two-time frames, “The Survivor” pares down Haft’s experience: the Holocaust period in black & white when he is made to entertain the Nazis using his skill as a boxer. Nazi officer Dietrich Schneider puts him in the ring fighting fellow prisoners to their death. If you thought Billy Magnussen was “bad” in the recent James Bond movie, here he brings his super-bad game, “owning Haft,” as it were. In color, survivor Haft fights in the rings of Coney Island, fighting even Rocky Marciano, with one goal shaping his American existence. That is, to find Leah (Dar Zuzovsky), his love from before the war.

At the former Four Seasons, Alan Haft milled through the crowd that included Foster’s actress wife, Laura Prepon, Maggie Gyllenhaal (there with husband Sarsgaard), Tova Feldshuh, among many others– showing covers of his dad in vintage boxing magazines. He let us know that Harry had actually survived six camps, and that some of the relatives refused to attend the premiere because of their own memories of his abuse as he struggled with his—what we now call PTSD. When asked why the screenwriter, Australian Justine Juel Gillmer, was chosen over a Jewish writer, producer Scott Pardo said that only she of all the men they interviewed got the love story at the film’s center. “We did not want only Raging Bull,” he said.

The hope is that this film will have the “Schindler” effect, that it will raise the consciousness of Jews and gentiles alike to deter acts of dehumanization, and to respect those who seek safer places. Then again, it’s a very cool boxing movie. Then again, it’s a romance.

Preparing, Barry Levinson took his cast to Auschwitz for a look at the infamous camp. Ben Foster vowed to take his children there. Eschewing the technology that could have changed his physicality, this fine actor wanted to be real; he lost and gained 60 lbs. “This film is so important to me.”

PS Emmys for Levinson and Foster, would have been Oscars if this film had gone to theaters. So glad HBO snatched it up.

RIP Gilbert Gottfried, Brilliant Comic Whether He Was Quacking or Telling Dirty Jokes

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I’m a little late posting about Gilbert Gottfried’s death from a long term heart condition.

He was 67, the same age as his close friend Bob Saget, which is not a great coincidence. Also, the two of them told the dirtiest joke ever, “The Aristrocrats.” They are probably telling it now in heaven to Don Rickles.

I didn’t know Gilbert well, but I admired him because he was so hilarious in public and soft spoken in real life. He was absolutely lovely even when he was quacking for Aflac.

Condolences to his family. He was too young to die, and will be sorely missed. He would have made a great old comic.

WARNING IF YOU CAN TAKE IT HERE IS THE ARISTOCRATS JOKE

Ratings: “SNL” Rises Again with Jake Gyllenhaal, Camila Cabello Combo

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Having big stars paid off for “Saturday Night Live” this weekend.

Ratings rose again, this time up to 4.847 million, up from 4.6 million the prior week. It’s not great, but it’s better, and a continuing improvement.

You see? “SNL” gave us a legit movie star and music star in guest host Jake Gyllenhaal and Camila Cabello, not fringe people who you never heard of.

Jake was promoting “Ambulance,” a movie that more or less flopped. But Camila Cabello had two terrific performances that sent her new album and two singles to the top 10 on respective charts. Her song, “Bam Bam” really went over, but the second one, “Psychofreak,” was even a bigger success. In a weird turn of events, Willow Smith — daughter of Will and Jada — joined her on stage. This was directly after “Weekend Update” made fun of Will’s Oscar slap and Oscar suspension.

So now “SNL” moves on to Lizzo this week as host and performer. There’s a lot of her to go around.

 

Surprise Hit: Engelbert Humperdinck’s “A Man Without Love” Is Back After 54 Years

If you wait long enough, everything comes back from the past.

Now it’s Engelbert Humperdinck’s turn. The 60s crooner has seen his 1968 hit “A Man Without Love” suddenly rising on the charts 54 years after it first appeared.

The song is featured on Marvel’s Disney Plus show “Moon Knight” in such a prominent way that it’s sent fans to Spotify in droves. The song is number 5 this morning on the Viral Top 50 in the US.

Not only that. “A Man Without Love” suddenly has 15.9 million streams on Spotify. Most of the other tracks on the Live album from which it was taken average around 50,000 streams.

Engelbert’s real name is Arnold George Dorsey and he turns 86 years young on May 2nd. The real Engelbert was the German composer of “Hansel and Gretel,” among other operas. Dorsey, like Gilbert O’Sullivan and Tom Jones, was renamed by his famous manager, Gordon Mills, who obviously had a sense of humor.

 

Britney Spears Says She’s Pregnant With Third Child, She Had Perinatal Depression Previously

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Britney Spears, not a rocket scientist, says she’s discovered she’s pregnant. It would be her third child. The first two, with Kevin Federline, are now teens raised by the ex husband.

Spears says on Instagram she won’t be going out too much because paparazzi will be following her for pictures. She also says she had perinatal depression in the previous pregnancies.

The boyfriend is Sam Ashgari, who’s really hung in there to get to this point. Britney just recently posted nude pictures of herself. I expect she’ll do the same of herself pregnant. Yes, her conservatorship is over. But the trouble is not. Here’s to a new year of tabloid stories.

David Lynch’s “Secret” Cannes Movie Is Probably “Wisteria,” with Naomi Watts and Laura Dern Included

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Big news today about a possible “secret” David Lynch movie heading to Cannes. It was mentioned in a Variety preview of the French fest.

But last week, on April 7th, Jordan Ruimy’s World of Reel told us all about “Wisteria,” the David Lynch movie with Naomi Watts and Laura Dern.

Ruimy pointed back to a Reddit post from two years ago. It’s possible “Wisteria” is the 13 part “Unrecorded Night” that was going to be a series from Netflix but may be a film stitched together of 13 small chapters.

That would make sense, if anything makes sense because the last time we saw Lynch it was the “Twin Peaks” reboot which was largely incoherent. (Except for episode 8, which was something beyond.)

So we’ll see when Cannes makes its announcement what Lynch has in mind. Not to be a buzz kill, but I’ll bet this is more like “Inland Empire” than “Blue Velvet.”

 

Playwright David Mamet: “Teachers are inclined — particularly men because they’re predators– to pedophilia”

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“American Buffalo” playwright David Mamet has made a strange claim on Fox News. Maybe being on Fox News did this to him. See the video below. He says, “Teachers are inclined — particularly men because they’re predators– to pedophilia.”

Maybe he’s had a stroke.

Seriously, apparently Mamet has been making the rounds spouting all kinds of garbage for the last week. His new book, published this past week, is from Broadside, the conservative imprint at Simon & Schuster. The author of “Speed the Plow” and “Glengarry Glen Ross” has in one moment revealed himself to have the opposite views of his fans.