Monday, November 18, 2024
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Can Norman Lear, Jimmy Kimmel Get George Clooney to Appear in Their “Facts of Life,” “Diff’rent Strokes” Revival?

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We were hoping that Norman Lear’s 100th birthday year would bring about a live staged revival of “Maude” for his Jimmy Kimmel-produced renaissance.

Instead, we’re getting live versions of two lesser shows, “Facts of Life” and “Diff’rent Strokes.” Each of these NBC series from the 80s was pretty awful. Lear’s company, Tandem, produced them but his name never appeared on them. They were never nearly as important as “All in the Family,” “The Jeffersons,” and “Good Times,” all of which have had live revivals and won awards.

I asked Lear a couple of years ago who he wanted to play Bea Arthur’s “Maude.” He told me Meryl Streep was his number 1 choice. But Streep doesn’t do TV, and it appears even Lear had no luck in this case. I think Christine Baranski would have been perfect.

But “Maude” is not coming next. Instead we’re getting the very fine actress Ann Dowd to play Charlotte Rae’s Mrs. Garrett in these connected series. A major star, John Lithgow, will play Mr. Drummond, who adopts a pair of young Black kids and brings them to his Park Avenue apartment. In the original show, Gary Coleman — who was small for his age (four foot eight) and eventually died young from kidney disease — played Arnold. Todd Bridges, who had many legal issues after the show ended, played Willis.

Now Kevin Hart will play an adult Arnold and Damon Wayans will be Willis in what will be a much different “Diff’rent Strokes.” I guess adults will look more palatable than children. But they’ll still have Mrs. Garrett. No mention has been made of who would play Dana Plato’s role. Plato was Mr. Drummond’s daughter, Kimberly. In real life Plato, like Coleman, died young after a very troubled life.

Then Dowd will also appear as Mrs. Garrett when she was spun off of “Diffrent Strokes” to watch a bunch of girls in a boarding school in “Facts of Life.” No info yet on who will play the girls, but it would be amusing if George Clooney popped in. He played a handyman on 17 episodes of the sitcom. I’ll bet Lear and Kimmel are trying to get him. Clooney should play an ER doctor. Now that would be very ‘meta’.

The shows will air on ABC on December 7th.

Taylor Swift’s Revenge Complete, Sells Stunning 596K Copies of Re-recorded “Red” Album in One Week

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Taylor Swift’s revenge on Scooter Braun, Scott Borchetta, and Shamrock Holdings is complete. She sold 596,000 copies of her re-recorded “Red” album called “Red (Taylor’s Version)” this week.

“Red” 2.0 is the second highest debut album of the year, behind Drake. It was propelled by a lot of things including Swift’s appearance on “Saturday Night Live.”

When the original “Red” debuted in 2012, it sold 1.2 million copies in its first week. But that was before streaming and Spotify and electric powered cars existed. Selling half as many copies nearly a decade later of the same album is pretty extraordinary.

All of Swift’s other albums were lifted onto the charts this week as well. Those totaled up to around 75,000 more copies of the catalog, and most of those were sales from Taylor’s post-Borchetta break up. So the new owners of Swift’s masters reaped little. I can’t imagine those Shamrock people are too thrilled with Braun and Borchetta. For $300 million, they got bupkis.

In other news, hitsdailydouble reports that Adele earned $119,914 in streaming revenue from “Easy On Me” last week. That will pay for two pairs of haute couture pants suits plus a therapy session in Beverly Hills.

Western Stars: Kevin Costner’s “Yellowstone” Swaps Home Viewership, All Seasons in Top 10 Chart

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Thirty one years after “Dances with Wolves,” Kevin Costner is all over the place and on top again!

Costner’s TV series from the mind of Taylor Sheridan has swamped the home viewing chart — among movies!

On the Digital Entertainment Group chart for home viewing this week, the current season of “Yellowstone” is number 1 and ahead of “Free Guy,” a big summer movie.

That’s season 4 of “Yellowstone.” The other three seasons of the series are also lodged in top 10 scattered among other movies among “Fast and Furious 9” and “Dr. Seuss’s The Grinch.”

The DEG chart measures DVD sales. So far “Yellowstone,” apart from its Paramount Network showings, has earned $22 million in sales. They should up the prices!

“Yellowstone”‘s success, as I’ve said before, is pointed directly at the bread basket of this country. It”s comfort food even for liberals, but it’s aimed exactly at conservative America. I hope the Democrats are taking notice of this. If Costner wants that road, he’s got it. But he could also invite Beto O’Rourke to make an appearance as a cowhand!

Stella McCartney, Julian Lennon & Sean Lennon Sit Together for Sensational L.A. Premiere of Beatles’ “Get Back” Movie

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Great notices came in late tonight from LA for the premiere of Peter Jackson’s “Get Back” documentary about the Beatles.

Disney Plus screened 100 minutes at El Capitan Theater in Hollywood for a wildly enthusiastic crowd. Stella McCartney represented Paul, Julian and Sean Lennon repped for John Lennon and Yoko Ono. Ringo Starr stayed away reportedly because of fears of COVID (no one blames him).

Disney chief Bob Iger introduced the film. Peter Jackson, via Zoom, explained the process of how he put it together.

Sources say Stella, Julian and Sean all sat together and loved the film, as did everyone else, including Peter Asher, who once ran the Beatles’ Apple Records and whose sister, Jane Asher, was Paul’s girlfriend in the 60s. As part of Peter and Gordon, Asher had a massive hit with Paul’s song, “A World Without Love.”

All six hours of “Get Back” begins running on Thanksgiving Day. Jackson took all the footage Michael Lindsay-Hogg didn’t use to make the “Let it Be” movie in 1970 and fashioned a film that shows all four Beatles getting along famously (with some short glitches) as they create this landmark recording.

I’m also told that Billy Preston shines as the “Fifth Beatle,” especially at the famous rooftop concert.

More to come, but by all accounts “Get Back” is a monumental achievement. (I wish they’d show us the 100 minutes in New York.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CWcSd0NMs9e/?utm_medium=copy_link

UPDATE FROM LEAH SYDNEY

Also at the El Capitan: JJ Abrams, Richard Curtis, Nathan East, Alan Parsons, Cary Elwes, Loree Rodkin, Chuck Lorre, Richard Lovett, Joyce Moore.

Julian Lennon told me it was “great, all consuming, I loved.  It wouldn’t have happened but for  Peter Jacksons amazing technology.”

Scott Mantz Entertainment Journalist KTLA and self-described ‘Beatle-maniac’ gave us insight.  “Countless wow moments, so intimate, such a joyous experience.  Exhilarating and  rousing, which was the exact opposite of the “Let It Be” movie which was so depressing. This is the movie that diehard and casual fans have been waiting for 51 years.  All the Beatles fans who watched “Let it Be” over these years, and said how depressing it was, this is proof that the sessions were very productive, and joyous.  The Beatles loved each other, were joking around,  making music  for the three weeks they were recording this album “Get Back”  they spent more time in the studio than they did when they recorded “The White Album” back in 1968, where they were in different studios recording it and not working together as a band.  In this they are working together as a band and here’s the proof! This is the reward that we’ve all been waiting for!”

Adele’s Rolling in the Weep with New “30” Album, Full of Self Indulgent Whining And Lacking in Any Fun

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It shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that the best song on Adele’s fourth album, :30,” is by Swedish songmaster Max Martin and producers Shellback. It’s the only track that seems like it was made for a professional pop album by a mature singer. “Can I Get It” is the one time on “30” where you feel like Adele might be on the right track.

Martin didn’t drink the Kool Aid. Everyone else did. Reviewers won’t admit it, and fans won’t for the time being. But “30” is a perplexing strike out where a home run was necessary after six years.’

There are strange lyrics on this album, odd production choices, and a severe lack of songwriting. The worst number comes on the third track, generally the place for a big radio single. But on the truly atrocious “My Little Love,” Adele engages in a conversation with her toddler son, Angelo. I really thought my music player was picking up a voice message bleeding through the album. And this soap opera clocks in at six and a half minutes.

Another pair of Greg Kurstin songs follow, “Cry Your Heart Out,” and “Oh My God.” Where Kurstin went awry on “My Little Love,” he’s got one winners herewith Oh My God,” that at least feels original. “Cry My Heart Out” really sounds like Ed Townsend’s mid 70s R&B hit, “Smoke from a Distant Fire.”

That’s not a bad thing except Adele would have been better off just covering that classic.  These two lead into “Can I Get It,” an uptempo number reminiscent of “Rolling in the Deep,” and at least make for a nice triptych. But they don’t help what’s to come.

Kurstin returns with another six minute epic gab fest, “I Drink Wine,” a song I didn’t like on the CBS special but actually plays better in the officially recorded version. I think if it it were the only endless number about self-actualization, “I Drink Wine,” would stand out as something special. A gospel choir helps a lot. But what’s to come is not pretty.

After a jazz number adapted from Erroll Garner, Adele heads into the weeds. Three songs written by “Inflo” aka David Cover sound like they were found in Burt Bacharach’s waste basket. One number by Tobias Jesso Jr. and Shawn Everett, “To Be Loved,” starts with a piano intro a la Leon Russell’s “A Song for You” but lacks the gravitas and beauty of that song. The Inflo songs aim for momentum and even choruses, but the lyrics are so ponderous and artless you can’t imagine anyone singing them, let alone Adele.

What’s missing from “30” is fun. This woman has a lot of money, many homes, a kid she likes. So what if she’s divorced. Half the world is. “30” sounds like something with no focus and little enjoyment of music itself. I don’t get it. Maybe this is what comes from not having a milkshake or a burger occasionally. Or moving from London to Los Angeles.

And yes, “30” will set sales records this week, I’ve no doubt. Nothing I can say will affect that. But unlike with “25,” the previous album, it feels like a duty to see it into the millions, and not a happy discovery.

 

 

Eric Clapton Is Lost to Us For Good, Throws in with Anti-Vaxxer Robert Kennedy Jr., Family Objects

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The Eric Clapton we loved, whose new album is as good as anything he’s ever done, is dead to us, basically.

Clapton has doubled down on his anti-vaccine madness and thrown in with Robert K. Kennedy, Jr. Kennedy, a misery to his family– they’ve all criticized him– maintains a loud anti-vaccine campaign himself.

Despite suffering from Parkinson’s Disease, Kennedy is anti-public health. His dead uncle, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, who fought for decades for universal health insurance, must be throwing up in heaven.

Clapton has now allowed himself to be interviewed by Kennedy and featured on his website.  Clapton tells Kennedy that criticism of what he’s doing is falling on deaf ears:

“In fact, I felt more support as a result of this than I ever did before about anything — and I was always quite private about my beliefs and concerns, but the minute I got public with this and just told the truth — my truth, I suppose you could say — I could see really clearly what was real, genuine enthusiasm and relief and comfort from people that were feeling the same way.”

Luckily, Clapton’s family does not agree with his position, which has included recording anti-vax, anti-lockdown music with Van Morrison, declaring that he won’t play venues with vaccine mandates, and receiving a very negative report from Rolling Stone, which used to idolize him.

He tells Kennedy, who I’m convinced has an undiagnosed brain tumor: “I’ve got teenage girls and an older girl who’s in her thirties, and they’ve all had to kind of give me leeway because I haven’t been able to convince any of them. I think my wife is now seeing it the same way as me, but most of them, they’ve always thought I’m a crackpot anyway, because I do things that are extremely unusual on any kind of level.”

So, it’s over. I loved Clapton’s music. “Layla” is very special to me. But people crack as they get older. Eric Clapton had a hideous drug problem. Who knows how this has affected him? But what he’s doing now is beyond the pale. As for Kennedy, please, don’t get me started.

 

Review: Sting, Author of Spiritual Pop, Brings Vivid Characters to Life in Beautiful New Album, “The Bridge”

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We first met Sting, all of us, circa late 1978 with “Roxanne,” the story of a call girl the narrator was trying to rescue from her vocation. Roxanne, who could walk the street for money, she didn’t care if it was wrong or right. “Roxanne” was the first captivating fictional character in a long line of them now extending over 40 years in songs by Gordon Matthew Sumner.

Along the way, Sting wrote a poignant memoir, “Broken Music,” and a Broadway musical about his life growing up in Newcastle called “The Last Ship.”

What sustains all those songs though is that they are not just love songs, or musings on fame. Unlike the songwriters of today, Sting constructed plots and stories, characters with names and emotions and aspirations. It’s why we go back to them over and over. From Roxanne to the King of Pain to the romantics in those fields of gold, Sting paints an aural picture in every song and draws us in.

So, too, in his beautiful new layered album, “The Bridge.” He’s smart: the first three or four tracks are the singles, all very catchy, especially “If It’s Love,” which is deceptive the way “Every Breath You Take” was, but hidden depths. Listen to it a couple of times. It’s top 40 with a bite.

I’ve already expressed my love for “Rushing Water,” which kicks off the album. Also a “hit” in the old sense that has a haunting undercurrent:

This is the sound of atmospheres
Three metric tonnes of pressure
This is the sum of all my fears
Something I just can’t measure

“Rushing Water” ties directly to the title track, “The Bridge,” the sneaky elegy for the songs that come in between. There are plenty of Roxanne like characters, from “Captain Bateman” (which has disarming harmonics) and the people who long to leave the violence on “Harmony Road.” “The Bridge” album is a collection of short stories.

There’s actually a whole movie in “The Bells of St. Thomas” with the main character waking up in Antwerp in the bed of a rich woman who thinks he’s dead. (This song deserves a Grammy and an Oscar.)

Don’t know how I got here
Or if I was led
But I know it’s a Sunday
For the bells in my head
And when you get to the actual “Bridge,” it’s a spiritual crossing:
We are but bags of blood and bone, yet we carry the weight of our sons and our daughters
And now the fields are all but drowned, and we climb up to the ridge
Some will seek the higher ground
Some of us the bridge

A friend of mine in music publishing who has nothing to do with Sting said to me today, “He’s done something very unusual with this album, very different and important.” We take our rock superstars for granted a lot because we’ve already had the hits, the legacy.

But my friend is right. “The Bridge” is a moment, and after 15 solo albums (plus all of the Police) it’s a remarkable achievement. It hearkens back to “The Soul Cages.” And still is very accessible. The compositions are so rich and textured, put on real headphones if you can and listen to Branford Marsalis and Dominic Miller and all the other players. “The Bridge” is a treat.

Yet Another Bruce Willis Straight to Video, He’s Second Lead to Jesse Metcalfe, Shannon Doherty Gets No Billing Upfront

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The Bruce Willis story just gets sadder and sadder. Here’s yet another straight to video schlock fest called “Fortress.” In this one Bruce is second billed to Jesse Metcalfe, a nice D list TV soap guy. Chad Michael Murray is in it, too. So is Shannen Doherty, who couldn’t even get upfront billing (yet she’s featured in the trailer).

Poor Bruce: he worked two days at most, sits in most scenes, never says more than three or four words, and his voice sounds like it dropped, or it’s deeper, or he’s ADR’d. Does he know where he is? Or who these people are? He’s done about a dozen of these things, they are all the same, and frighteningly bad.

Rumer, Scott, Tallullah– put a stop to this, already.

Counterbalance: “Downton Abbey’s” Cousin Rose Stars as Pam Anderson in Satire About Tommy Lee Sex Tape with Sebastian Stan

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So: Lily James got her career break playing Cousin Rose on “Downton Abbey.” She was meant to fill in for Sybil, who died in childbirth after the actress left the show and Julian Fellows killed the character. Remember?

Cousin Rose was married off to a nice Jewish guy and they went to America, where Lily James has never stopped working. Now she’s playing Pamela Anderson in a satire about the making of Pam and Tommy Lee’s sex tape. It’s a white trash fest, quite the opposite of “Downton Abbey.”

The aptly named “Pam & Tommy” will be on Hulu February 2nd. Sebastian Stan plays Tommy. Seth Rogen and Nick Offerman are the videographers. No scones will be served. And this is why Lily James can’t be in “Downton Abbey” sequels. (She’s very good in “The Pursuit of Love” on Amazon Prime.)

Downton Abbey Shockers: Branson Marries, Everyone Goes to the South of France, Mary Can’t Keep a Husband

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“Downton Abbey: A New Era” is the second installment of the movie version of our beloved TV series. The trailer has dropped in New Zealand and we have it below.

What happens? A lot! Branson marries that girl who was the illegit daughter of the Granthams’ cousin, and inherits the whole estate. We knew that was coming.

Violet, the Dowager Countess, informs the family that instead of dying of cancer she’s inherited a villa in the South of France. As you do! So off the goes the whole gang on an adventure.

In the trailer there’s no sign of Matthew Goode, who plays Mary’s race car driver husband. Is he dead? Has she lost a second husband, and to a car crash? Poor Mary. Do all her husbands have contractual issues?

Meantime, all the kids have suddenly grown up. Little Sybil looks like she’s 12. Will someone tell her that Jessica Brown-Findlay, who played her mother, made the worst career decision of all time by leaving the show after 3 seasons? Ditto for Mary’s son, George, regarding Matthew (Dan Stevens).

Hugh Bonneville looks a little different in the video. Maybe he went on the Keto diet.

The Crawley family comes crawlin’ back next March. Julian Fellows, as usual, looks like he’s done a fine job. And there’s even a Black jazz singer featured in the clip. (The only Black people the Crawleys have ever met are jazz singers, you know.)