Saturday, October 12, 2024
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Donald Trump Attacks Bill Maher Audience Laughter as “Fake, Loud, Obnoxious”– Sound Familiar? (Plus, Watch Jiminy Glick!)

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I guess Donald Trump watched Bill Maher’s show last night.

On his stock price collapsed Truth Social, the portly, convicted felon found Maher’s audience’s laughter “Fake, Loud and Obnoxious.” Trump must have seen his reflection in the TV and got confused.

But he also kinda liked the show, too. Even though he says “the show is dead!” Trump found it funny at times. So he is confused!

Is this what you do when you’re running for president and preparing for a sentencing in less than a month?

Also, Martin Short was on the show as Jiminy Glick and was hysterical. Trump didn’t mention that. See below.

Trump wrote:
“Bill Maher, the highly overrated “Star” of the ratings challenged show with the Fake, Loud and Obnoxious laughter pouring out of your set every few seconds, even when nothing was said that was funny (which is most of the time!), suffers from a terminal case of Trump Derangement Syndrome, sometimes referred to as TDS. Republicans should stop using him as a reference point, his show is dead!”

Box Office: “Inside Out 2” Hits $300 Mil Today, “Bikeriders” Revs Up $4 Mil Opening

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“Inside Out 2” is a phenom!

Total through last night is $285 mil after a $30 mil Friday. Wow. Today they way over $300 million.

Everyone loves this movie. Theaters are buzzing. Popcorn is popping. Oscar for Best Animated Feature is a certainty– maybe a Best Picture nomination because it’s a soft Oscar year.

“Bikeriders” came up with $4 million from Thursday and Friday. But the Cinemascore is a B, which means people leaving those theaters were not ecstatic. I don’t blame them. Word of mouth will not be so great. The movie is a let down. But it’s hot outside, it’s cold in the theater, and “Bikeriders” looks good on paper.

Disney had another release besides “Inside Out 2.” The nearly three hour “Kinds of Kindness” opened in five theaters and made $179,000 on Friday, An earlier release in Italy has already brought in $975,000. It’s in limited release here, so we won’t see it for some time. Watch “Poor Things” at home while you’re waiting.

Willie Nelson, 91, “Not Feeling Well,” Taking a Few Days Off from Outlaw Music Festival Tour

Read Donald Trump’s Wacky Idea About Driving Cross Country!

Willie Nelson is some slacker!

At 91, he’s taking a few days off the Outlaw Music Festival tour because he’s not “feeling well.” His son, Lukas, will take his place with his band, Promise of the Real. (Brother Micah is included unless he’s with Neil Young.)

Willie! Take all the time you need!

This man is relentless. He just released his 700th album. He works constantly. And yes, he’s 91!

Feel better, Willie! Speedy recovery! Hydrate!

PS Willie was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last November. The Rock Hall started inducting members in 1988. It’s good thing he lived this long!

Donald Trump Attacks Bill Maher Audience Laughter as “Fake, Loud, Obnoxious”– Sound Familiar? (Plus, Watch Jiminy Glick!)

Box Office: “Inside Out 2” Hits $300 Mil Today, “Bikeriders” Revs Up $4 Mil Opening

HBO’s “House of the Dragon” Looks for Big 2nd Week After Ratings Drop in Debut

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Sunday will be a pivotal night for “House of the Dragon,” season 2.

The first week saw a big ratings drop from the first season. Total viewers on HBO were 1.32 million.

Total viewers were down by 39%. The key age demo was down 20%.

HBO says a total of 7.9 million people watched over all their platforms including Max, and with multiple screenings.

Some say that the show didn’t have enough of a splashy launch before it returned. One problem is that these actors, as opposed to the ones from “Game of Thrones,” remain mostly unknown. With “GoT,” Peter Dinklage, Lena Headey, and many of the others already had some recognition.

We come into the second episode with a cliffhanger from Episode 1. Did they really kill a baby? (Probably.) Also, we’re one dragon down. Maybe there’s a funeral!

Jane Fonda on Donald Sutherland: “A brilliant actor and a complex man…I am heartbroken”

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Jane Fonda has posted a remembrance for Donald Sutherland on Instagram.

Sutherland and Fonda starred together in Alan Pakula’s classic film, “Klute,” in 1971. (Fonda won an Oscar.) They had a personal and political relationship. Of the latter, they were each anti Vietnam War activists. When Fonda says she’s “heartbroken,” she means it.

A big loss.


Trump Social Media Stock Price Falls off Another Cliff as Bottom Approaches

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Trump Media is heading for an all time low this afternoon.

The stock price for Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform fell off a cliff this morning. It’s heading quickly to a new low.

Monday to Friday this week has been a disaster. The price started at around $40 on Monday and is now hovering around $25. When it gets to $22, that will be the all time low. Right now, the stock is less than the number of convictions Trump got from a jury this month1

Disney Saves Box Office as “Inside Out 2” Makes $500 Mil Worldwide in 8 Days

Disney’s “Inside Out 2” will hit the $500 million mark tonight cumulatively around the world.

In the US alone, “Inside Out 2” has earned a whopping $254 million in just 8 days.

“Inside Out 2” has literally saved the box office, and there’s no end in sight. On Thursday night in the US the Pixar film made $19 million. And that was a weekday night!

I will see “Inside Out” this weekend, but I’m telling you, adults are saying they tear up a few times. There’s nothing like schmaltz!

The box office is coming back. Next Friday, “A Quiet Place” part 3, the prequel, is also going to be huge. The trailer in the theater — which I saw with a real audience last night — gets a huge reaction. More films are coming as Hollywood ramps back up from the strikes of last summer. Plus, it’s really hot outside. You can’t get colder than in a movie theater. AMC could be storing raw meat, that’s how frigid it is!

Kevin Costner Now Says He’s Not Returning to “Yellowstone” — But The Show Had Moved On Without Him

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Kevin Costner’s been making the rounds publicizing his “Horizon” movie, saying he could go back to “Yellowstone.”

But now he’s put up an Instagram video saying he’s not going back. Why? Because the show has already filmed its final season without him. And Paramount just yesterday announced a return date for November. Costner always knew he wasn’t going back. John Dutton dies off screen.

Costner got caught in a timing problem. At the same time he was using “Yellowstone” for his own publicity, they had already moved on.

“Horizon” is tracking at an opening next Friday of $10 million. I think the “Yellowstone” fans will not support Costner. They’re angry the show is ending because of him, essentially.

(Watch) Baseball Great Reggie Jackson’s Powerful Recollection on Live TV of Racism in Alabama

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Yankee great Reggie Jackson has always come across as angry in the baseball world. Now we know why.

In a real, stunning, and powerful moment on live TV, Reggie revealed the level of racism he encountered in the 60s when he played in Alabama for the team that became the Oakland Athletics.

The occasion on Tuesday night was the first ever Major League Baseball game played at Rickwood Field, home of the Negro League’s Birmingham Black Barons decades ago. It’s also where the late Willie Mays got his start in baseball.

Jackson played there in 1967 when the Oakland A’s were the Birmingham A’s. He surprised Alex Rodriguez with his answer about what it felt like returning to the ballpark and the city.

Watch this and pay attention. He’s talking about 1967. The same year the Beatles released “Sgt Pepper,” for example. This is not in some mysterious past. This week in 2024, ABC’s “General Hospital” had to post a defense of one of its young Black actresses who’s been receiving hate mail. Social media has made it possible for this all to go public.

Reggie’s recollections are no different than the great Motown and R&B stars of the 60s. Smokey Robinson recently talked about similar stories on his Sirius XM Radio show. It was dangerous for our now beloved singers to perform in the South. This is why “Green Book” was such an important movie.

A stunning moment on television:

“Coming back here is not easy. The racism that I (faced) here when I played here, the difficulty of going through different places that we traveled … fortunately I had a manager and I had players on the team that helped me get through it. But I wouldn’t wish it on anybody.”

“People said to me today and I spoke on it ‘Do you think you’re a better person, do you think you won, when you played here…’ And I said, you know, I would never want to do it again. I walked into restaurants and they would point at me and say ‘The n*gger can’t eat here.’ I would go to a hotel and they would say ‘The n*gger can’t stay here.’ We want to Charlie Finley’s country club for a welcome home dinner, and they pointed me out with the N-word, ‘he can’t come in here.’ Finley marched the whole team out. Finally they let me in. He had said ‘We’re gonna go to a diner, and eat hamburgers, we’ll go where we’re wanted.’”

“Fortunately, I had a manager, Johnny McNamara, that if I couldn’t eat in a place, nobody could eat. We’d get food to travel. If I couldn’t stay in a hotel, they’d drive to the next hotel and find a place where I can stay. If it had not been for Rollie Fingers, Johnny McNamara, Dave Duncan, Joe and Sharon Rudy, I slept on their couch three, four nights a week for about a month and a half. Finally, they were threatened that they would burn our apartment complex down unless I got out.”

“I wouldn’t wish it on anybody.’

“… In 1963, the Klan murdered four black girls, children … 11, 12, 14 years old at a church here and never got indicted. They were from the Klan. Life Magazine did a story on them like they were being honored. I wouldn’t wish it on anyone.”

“At the same time, had it not been for my white friends, had it not been for my white manager, and for Rudy, Fingers, and Duncan, and Lee Meyers, I wouldn’t have never made it. I was too physically violent. I was ready to physically fight someone. I would’ve gotten killed here, because I would have beat someone’s ass and (then) you would’ve saw me in an Oak tree somewhere.”

Review: Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, Jodie Comer Can’t Fire Up “The Bikeriders”

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Jeff Nichols’ “The Bikeriders” was supposed to come out last year. It was delayed, moved, and then shoved into an opening for this weekend. I went tonight to see finally what was going on since screenings were hard to secure and the premiere was last minute in Los Angeles.

Now, however, I know what’s been going on.

“The Bikeriders” is beautiful and stylish, with some jarring performances that could have been sizzling. But it’s nothing, it dies halfway into its premise. The movie feels like an uncooked omelet. It’s a first act, third act, and nothing in between.

These were real motorcycle gangs in Chicago from 1966 to 1973. We know the years because a TV show like “Bewitched” or “Marcus Welby MD” is playing in the background. Austin Butler and Tom Hardy play James Dean and Marlon Brando not so much as Hell’s Angels, but the last cowboys in the Wild West. Jodie Comer is the wise cracking good girl in their midst. But for some reason Comer looks and sounds like Tina Fey playing Sarah Palin.

Butler’s Benny: you think he’s going to be a hero, or Tony from “West Side Story.” Lanky and coiffed, brooding for no reason, Benny is described upfront as not being able to avoid crashes. He’s also not too bright, and is easily beaten up. Hardy plays Johnny, the gang leader, in what is easily the best performance in the film. He’s violent but has a heart. He’s no genius, but you sense that he knows more than hes letting on.

The rest of the gang includes Michael Shannon in a small role, although he has the best moment. I really liked Boyd Holbrook, who doesn’t look like he’s supposed to be there. It’s revealed that’s correct when Norman Reedus — looking very “Walking Dead” — shows up out of nowhere. Reedus is so electric that he gives his scenes a much needed jolt.

And then there’s Jodie Comer, recalling all these events to Mike Faist, playing a journalist with a big microphone attached to a reel-to-reel tape recorder. (It’s the kind Mr. Phelps has on “Mission Impossible.”) Comer is so engaging as Kathy, The Good Girl who gets mixed up in all the trouble. But again, I could not shake the idea that she was Tina Fey dropped in from another film.

But what is the purpose of all this? Will new generation bikers — criminals, more violent, not warm and fuzzy — supplant this dying gang? Probably. Nichols presents this as a foregone conclusion. Because there is little character development, and no secondary plotting, the movie has nowhere to go except into its finale. The old vs. new thugs’ face off is telegraphed so quickly, i was actually thinking, Hey wait, slow down, the end is coming and we barely know these people. Plus, the main characters — the ones we’re invested in — are dispatched very quickly. Benny, for example, disappears for quite a bit of time. Where does he go? We don’t know, no one tells us, including him when he returns.

“The Bikeriders” does get high marks for cinematography, lighting, and editing. It looks great. It often has a Tarantino-esque feel, but whenever the momentum builds in that direction, it fizzles quickly. I don’t know what Nichols was aiming for here– an homage? a send up? He gets frustratingly close to something that could be smart and clever, then backs away nervously.

Hey– I paid $12. I wanted to like “The Bikeriders” a lot. I was in fairly good sized audience, too, but I could feel them pull away, too, when they realized nothing satisfying was going to happen. “The Bikeriders” is a real disappointment because it’s a missed opportunity.