Friday, November 15, 2024
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Lana del Rey Drops New Version of “Arcadia” Single, Sets Delayed “Blue Bannisters” Album for October

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Do I know what’s going on here? I do not.

Lana del Rey has dropped a new version of her single, “Arcadia,” today in advance of her “Blue Banisters” album.The album was previously set for July 4th, but at the last minute Lana delayed it. She’d already had an award winning album out a few weeks earlier with “Chemtrails Over the Country Club.”

So “Blue Banisters” is coming out after all, on October 22nd. “Arcadia” already existed in a shorter form on YouTube as a duet, but this seems to be the official version now, Looking forward to the whole collection.

Arcadia Original version

(Watch) John Mulaney Announces He’s Having a Baby with Olivia Munn on “Seth Meyers” Late Night Show

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Capping off a bizarre and different year, comedian John Mulaney appeared on Seth Meyers’ late night talk show tonight and had an announcement. He’s having a baby with actress Olivia Munn.

As most people know, Mulaney is in the process of divorcing his wife of six years, Anna Marie Tendler. He famous went into rehab a year ago and then again in December 2020. He came out of it in February 2021, and launched a sold tour of shows in which he described his rapid descent into drugs and alcohol, his intervention, and recovery.

If Munn is announcing the pregnancy now, it means she became pregnant in mid May. She and Mulaney have his set social media aflame because they claim to have started dating in February. But there are numerous stories about Munn contacting Mulaney as far back as 2015.

What’s the difference? I guess you say, congratulations and we hope it all works out. But the Meyers interview — totally not advertised in advance — is meant to soften the blow of this latest development. Mulaney’s happy marriage was part of his act, and he seemed above things like serious drug addiction and its fallout.

The interview, like his current show, was depressing. He kept laughing, Meyers tried to put on a good face, but you feel it in the pit of your stomach. This is all some kind of disaster. Yes, people are paying to see Mulaney in theater and clubs because they want to see a car crash. They are rubber necking. He doesn’t get that. When I saw him at City Winery in NYC on May 10th he was was accompanied to the by his interventionist. That seems to be around the time he started a family.

So here we are. Everyone hopes for the best, but as a friend of mine used to say, this is going to end in tears.

 

WHAT??? Chrissie Hynde Turns 70! Remember When She Bemoaned Being 33 in “Middle of the Road”?

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Chrissie Hynde turns 70 years old today. I am gobsmacked. But god bless her, she’s still the most kick ass rocker and my favorite voice.

This means it was 37 years ago when she sang, “I got a kid/I’m 33” in “Middle of the Road.” Seems like yesterday.

The Pretenders were part of the New Wave, the people who were supposed to kick Fleetwood Mac and Rumours to the ground and take no prisoners. So they did, thanks to Seymour Stein at Sire Records.

I could listen to Chrissie sing the phone book. I hope she’s having a rocking, great birthday. Sting turns 70 in October. The end of the classic rock star era is beckoning with only Elvis Costello still a young un. R&B legend Sam Moore turns 86 on October 12th. We have to wrap everyone in Saran Wrap!

One of my faves:

Full Columns Flashback: 20 Years Ago, Michael Jackson’s 30th Anniversary Concerts Preceded 9/11: The

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Jacko Triumphs in Freak Show at Garden September 8, 2001

You have to hand it to Michael Jackson. When everything else is stripped away – the kitsch, the rabbi, the chimps, the lawsuits, the revolving door managers and disorganized concert promoter – his talent is still there. On Friday night at Madison Square Garden, when it looked like his 30th Anniversary Solo All-Star show was heading into the toilet, it was Michael who saved the day.

The Solo show, which had tickets up to $2,500, did not have a good start. In fact, the level of cheesiness was so high the audience looked like it was going to need a drycleaner to get out the Velveeta stains. Michael, dressed in a glittering silver sequined top, sat in kind of a royal viewing box at stage left, after entering with actress Elizabeth Taylor, former child star Macaulay Culkin, and Jackson’s parents. Taylor looked ominously like the Queen Mum throughout the proceedings, with Jackson, I suppose, as Princess Diana.

The show almost ground to a halt quickly though after a painfully thin but energetic Whitney Houston – who was mysteriously not joined by husband Bobby Brown, scheduled to perform with her – concluded a rousing opening with “Wanna Be Starting Something.” The reason was the appearance, at stage right and sitting in a strange office waiting room set, of the extremely corpulent former important actor Marlon Brando.

Brando, at first wearing sunglasses, proceeded to expound, from his chair, for a ghastly ten minutes on subjects of little or no interest to the pumped-up audience. He said, “You may be thinking, who is that old fat fart sitting there?” At one point he actually removed his wristwatch and said, “In the last minute, 100,000 children have been hacked to death with a machete.” He concluded by instructing the audience to go to michaeljackson.com and donate money. The audience – many of whom came from Los Angeles in wheelchairs or on walkers – booed and booed, loudly, and with good cause.

Things did not get much better, as a series of acts shuffled on and off the stage with little purpose. Shaggy, the contemporary rap group, sang their two hits, and Shaggy himself did kind of a pelvic thrust for Jackson, which seemed to shake the guest of honor from his stupor. There was a duet by James Ingram and Gloria Estefan on “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You,” a medley from The Wiz, a little boy singer named Billy Gilman did “Ben,” and so on. There were interminable breaks between sets, which caused more booing, and it seemed as though no one had rehearsed or timed the show in advance.

The pièce de resistance came almost toward the end of this section, when Liza Minnelli appeared on stage. Minnelli has either had the worst facelift since Jocelyn Wildenstein or was wearing makeup for the show Cats. Or both. She was frightening, and, to drive home the point, sported a fright wig. The effect was a Judy Garland drag queen impersonator and sent a chill through the room. After performing “You Are Not Alone,” a Jackson song, Minnelli launched into an uninspired version of “Never Never Land.” As it ended, a million soap bubbles started pouring over the stage, and Minnelli, without prompting, broke into the last two lines of her mother’s most famous song, “Over the Rainbow.” She said, “I love you, Michael” and the bubbles swept her away. This was just about the time Elizabeth Taylor hobbled out of her seat and went to the bathroom.

But all was not lost. Dame Elizabeth went on stage and introduced the reunion of the Jackson 5, which saved the day. For then, promoter David Gest’s turn at channeling late producer Alan Carr was over, and Jackson was in charge. The audience roared with approval as Michael took the stage with his brothers. Their short set included a medley of hits from “ABC” to “I Want You Back.” Altogether their much-vaunted reunion lasted about 20 minutes, with a nearly full length version of “Shake Your Body.” Michael actually seemed happy and relaxed as he and the brothers went through their old Motown dance steps together. The person who’d been sitting on the sidelines like a zombie suddenly seemed rejuvenated.

There were more surprises to come, including Michael performing “The Way You Make Me Feel” with Britney Spears (she struts, doesn’t dance, and doesn’t seem to sing, but the effect is very Sami Jo from Dynasty). Finally settling into an onstage rhythm, Michael then gave the audience what they wanted: moonwalking and his silver lamé glove in “Billie Jean,”; the great Jerome Robbins-like choreography in “Beat It,” and guitarist Slash on both “Beat It” and “Black and White.”

In between, Jackson, who looked winded most of the time, but exhilarated, shouted “I love you” to the audience many times. He said little else. He concluded the show with his new single, “You Rock My World,” and gathered all of the guest stars on stage, with Quincy Jones conducting, for “We Are the World.” Not satisfied with leaving the stage at that, Jackson re-started “Rock My World,” getting people on stage to dance with each other. The absolute best pairing was Yoko Ono, who shimmied around with Petula Clark. Yoko, symbol of death in the movie Let it Be, grinned from ear to ear and boogied around the stage with, believe it or not, Kenny Rogers. It was an extraordinary ending to a strange, magical, but often schizophrenic night.

On Monday: more from the 30th Anniversary show.

Jacko’s Dad Says He’s Not Guilty of Molestation
September 10, 2001

Joe Jackson, patriarch of the singing Jackson family, told me today that he does not believe his superstar son was ever guilty of child molestation.

Jackson invited six reporters to a suite at New York’s St. Regis Hotel including yours truly and Dan Kadison of the New York Post to promote his new company, JacksonMusicStudios.com. But many of the question were about the Jackson family and their trials and tribulations.

I asked Mr. Jackson what was the wildest untrue thing he’d seen about his family in the supermarket tabloids. (At Friday night’s Michael Jackson show in New York there’d been a fan holding a placard emblazoned with “Burn All Tabloids.”)

Mr. Jackson replied: “I know what you’re referring to. That thing with Michael and the little boy. That’s the craziest thing I ever heard. It never happened.”

Then why did Michael pay the family with an out of court settlement, I wondered?

“He was tired of talking about it,” Michael’s father said. “He would have spent 100 years fighting him in court. It was all about money. All about money.”

Mr. Jackson proved a combative but humorous interview subject, fielding most of the questions about his kids — Michael especially — with the sly wit of a practiced politician. At one point, when I asked him about Michael’s children Paris and Prince, he didn’t seem to know to whom I was referring. Finally he did say “They’re good kids. I have 28 grandchildren!”

We did not ask Joe Jackson about allegations in the past from his children, specifically LaToya, about abuse in their household when they were growing up. I did ask him though about his parental philosophy. “You have to be strict with kids,” he said. “There’s nothing wrong with punishment as long as you know how to punish.”

What would be a typical punishment? “Beat his back,” Joe Jackson replied before I could even get the question out.

Jackson declined to answer questions posed by the Post’s intrepid Dan Kadison about Michael’s appearance or his financial situation. He did insist, however, that Michael has not had his skin color altered and referred to an aunt who presumably has the same illness, vitiligo, which Michael says plagues him.

Mr. Jackson did say that although he enjoyed Friday night’s reunion of his sons as the Jackson 5 — the group he practiced, rehearsed, and managed until Gladys Knight spotted them at the Apollo Theatre in 1968 and referred them to Motown Records — he did not shed any tears when they took the stage as adults. Did Mrs. Jackson cry, I wondered? “I don’t know what she was doing.”

Mr. Jackson said he had no particular favorites among the strange melange of stars who performed on Friday night. Of Liza Minnelli’s weird appearance and song choices he said, “She did what she could do.” Referring to Marlon Brando’s rambling speech about child welfare, he observed: “He’s a family friend.” As for Whitney Houston’s emaciated look, Mr. Jackson replied tactfully: “You know performers like to stay thin and look good.”

Mr. Jackson called the impromptu mini press conference to promote his new company, which will launch new musical talents and also make never before seen archival video footage of the Jackson 5 available over the Internet. Jackson’s first artist is an 18-year-old singer from Virginia named Crystal Marven, whom he discovered in a Las Vegas talent show.

Jagger Denounced by Dahl’s Famous Grandma

Patricia Neal, the Academy-Award winning actress (won for Hud, nominated for The Subject Was Roses), doesn’t mince words.

She told me on Friday night that she’s not thrilled that her granddaughter, model Sophie Dahl, has been dating Mick Jagger.

The moment came because the 75-year-old Neal was deposited by her yellow cab on the wrong side of Madison Square Garden for Michael Jackson’s show. She was one of the much-hyped 50 “Leading Ladies” whom Jackson producer David Gest trumpeted all over the place for their attendance. Apparently he didn’t think about how all these grande dames would get to the show.

Neal emerged from her cab with an assistant right at the corner of 32nd Street and Seventh Avenue — quite a distance from the miniscule red carpet entrance on Eighth Avenue near 33rd Street. When I informed her that she should get back in the cab and go around the corner, she bravely said: “Nonsense! I’ll walk. I love to walk.” OK.

Neal is a sturdy lady with a lot of courage. She also looked beautiful in a red silk ensemble. It wasn’t long before the subject of Sophie’s social life came up. How did she feel about her 20-something granddaughter globetrotting with the nearly 60-year-old Rolling Stone and man of much sexual history?

“I hope she stays away from that bastard!” the legendary actress declared. “I’ve never met him, of course, but that’s no good!”

Neal told me she was concerned about Sophie, but she was also more concerned that the entrance to Madison Square Garden was still not in sight. She’s had at least one well-known stroke, which she’s bounded back from nicely. And she was wearing high heels. In the end, we walked the entire length of the Garden Penn Station complex from Seventh to Eighth Avenue, and then broke through police sawhorses so we could stay on the sidewalk as we made it to the red carpet area.

Once we arrived, there was little to no help getting her past the crush of police, publicists and paparazzi. Indeed, the photographers were clueless about who this distinguished actress was, and needed prodding to take her picture. “This is an Oscar winner,” I informed them, but ‘N Sync was ahead of us and siphoning off all attention. Had Ms. Neal heard of the five boys from Orlando?

“No, what are they?” she asked. It was certainly a generational face-off. In a normal world, she would have been more worried about her granddaughter dating Lance than Mick. But that’s another story.

Jacko’s Team Makes No Plans for Seniors

Eventually, I was able to persuade one of Gest’s minions to assist Ms. Neal into the Garden. Ironically, when I entered the stadium and found my seat, I found that she was sitting, uncomfortably, in a seat not too far from mine.

Star Jones, the vivacious co-host of The View, was also plunked down in this extremely odd area. (She loved the show, by the way, and looked great in a sexy black outfit.)

Later, when we were all standing at the foot of the driveway of Tavern on the Green for the post-concert party (a true kitsch fest of has-beens, losers and face-lifts), All My Children matriarch and octogenarian Ruth Warrick — also forgotten by Gest and company — was being pushed in her wheelchair through the crowd and past the velvet rope, and then presumably up the enormous driveway! And this was at 12:30 in the morning.

Indeed, by the looks of the waxy faces trying to sort themselves out at the Tavern driveway, the entire Jackson Gest-list looked like that musical number from The Producers called “Along Came Bialy.” That’s the one in which blue-haired ladies dance on their walkers as they sing about investing their nest eggs with the flighty Broadway show producer.

Nearly as funny was Star Trek star and Priceline.com pitchman William Shatner showing up with his latest wife, who really fits the term “trophy wife.” She is a great statue of a woman. His last wife drowned in his swimming pool less than two years ago.

What a party! And did I mention David Hasselhoff was in attendance?

Puffy, Jay-Z Kept Out of Jacko Party

Even as the old and infirm crept along in the darkness to celebrate Michael’s return from the outer limits, young hip stars were prohibited from entering the big gala.

Indeed, Sean “Puffy” Combs aka P. Diddy, plus rapper Jay-Z and model Naomi Campbell, were all ensconced by 12:30 in Eugene’s, the hot nightspot on West 24th Street. The story was that Jay-Z tried to enter the Jackson soiree without a printed invite and was instantly told to get lost. So he did.

I’m told the trio was nervous they were going to have to spike their Cristal over at Tavern with Ensure.

Alive or Dead: Sammy Davis Jr., Gene Kelly

One of the many bizarre moments in Friday night’s Jackson show was a video tribute by a compendium of megastars who cited Michael for being a great guy.

The video, which looked like it was taped about ten years ago, began with Sophia Loren. And then things got really strange. All of a sudden Sammy Davis Jr. popped up on the screen, talking as if he’d been interviewed last week. Then came Gene Kelly. Have they been living at Neverland all this time?

Also included in this weird situation was Gregory Peck, who went on and on about Michael in detail. Can you imagine that they are friends in any way? Imagine what life must be like in the hills around Los Angeles.

But even more wacky were the appearances then, in the same tape, of really old clips of Elizabeth Taylor and Liza Minnelli — both of whom were actually in Madison Square Garden and whose appearance has changed considerably since the interviews were made.

One wonders if these two ladies, Loren and Peck were happy to be grouped with two dead men.

On the other hand, you have it to give it to David Gest. His creepy A-list, which he flew in from the coast, includes the remaining four original members of the group the Fifth Dimension. If Marilyn McCoo had picked up a microphone and sung any number Friday night, she would have blown away the crowd.

Beatles Chronicler, Who’s Made a Fortune Writing About Group, Says He Has “Scant Time” to Answer Media Inquiries

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Mark Lewinsohn is a very busy man.

Lewinsohn is the unofficial chronicler of the Beatles. He’s written dozens of books about the Fab Four, noting every recording session, each minute from 1962 to 1970, and all the movements of John, Paul, George, and Ringo.

He’s even written books and given lectures about ancillary Beatles projects and themes, like the influence of Black Music on the group, and why the bowl haircut mattered.

So now, with the approaching Peter Jackson documentary series “Get Back” approaching, and the “Let It Be” anniversary box sets coming, you’d think Lewinsohn would be geared up for a media onslaught.

But Lewinsohn declared this morning on Twitter that he had “scant time” for that sort of thing. He’s busy eight days a week!

He writes on Twitter: “With @thebeatles Get Back/Let It Be coming up, I’m being bombarded with media requests I’ve scant time to do. But here are quotes galore to be lifted, used and informed by.” He directs us to his website, of course. Listen he has scant time to talk to the people who made him rich and famous. I don’t blame him.

Don’t worry, Mr. L. There are so many great Beatles resources, and of course, we grew up with them. We’ll muddle on without you.

“Shang Chi,” The Movie that “Just Mercy” was Sacrificed For, Shatters Labor Day Weekend Box Office Records

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Civil rights or super hero?

It was back in the fall of 2019 that “Just Mercy,” a terrific film headed for the Oscars, opened at the Toronto Film Festival. Everyone was very high on it. Michael B. Jordan, Jamie Foxx, and Brie Larson starred in it. Dustin Detton Cretton was the director.

And then “Just Mercy” sank like a stone. Cretton was absent for its entire release. Where was he? Shooting something called “Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” in Australia. Zoom hadn’t been invented yet. So he was gone. “Just Mercy” vanished into thin air.

Now “Shang Chi” is here and over the weekend it broke the record for Labor Day box, three day and four day. The total of $90 million plus is like three times the previous record holder. “Shang Chi” is a Marvel movie with a lot of special effects. No one discusses race, there are no uncomfortable scenes.

Cretton started his career with “Short Term 12,” a movie that starred future Oscar winners Larson and Rami Malek, and nominee Lakeith Stanfield. Then he made the less successful “Glass Castle.” This was followed by “Just Mercy.” We couldn’t expect to stick around making good indie films. Also, he’s Asian American, so the lure of making the first Asian American Super hero movie no doubt outweighed all other considerations. I don’t blame him.

So go back and watch “Just Mercy” if you’re a “Shang Chi” fan, not to mention the other two films. Of course the worry is that this is what happens next to Chloe Zhao, celebrated Oscar winner for “Nomadland” and “The Rider.” Her next movie is Marvel’s “Eternals,” destined to be a blockbuster. It will be hard to get her back out onto the Great Plains with a video cam after that.

“Days of Our Lives” 5 Day Peacock Series Has Big Change: Deidre Hall Replaces Macdonald Carey Announcing the Title

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The “Days of Our Lives” logo of an hourglass, and the music behind it have been on the air since 1965. In 1972, MacDonald Carey, star of the show since its debut, took over announcing the title in his deep voice intonation. “This is MacDonald Carey…and these are the days of our lives!” When Carey diedin 1994, the show kept his voiceover and it’s remained that way ever since.

Viewers who tuned in today to Peacock, the NBC streaming service, for the “Days” 5 day special miniseries got a little shock, however. Gone was Carey’s voice. In its place was that of Deidre Hall. She’s played Dr. Marlena Evans since 1976 and is the star of the show. She’s top billed, as well, among the players in the big cast for “Beyond Salem.”

I guess this change to Hall — just for the Peacock series — is a way of differentiating the daily show– which is on the air on NBC — and this one.

I watched the first installment today, and was impressed. The production values were pretty high. NBC never spends any money on “Days,” but it looks like they ponied up for sets, costumes, and bumper shots that looked like they were from prime time. The mini series has a very “Lupin” like look to it as the various characters are trying to find famous stolen jewels all over Europe and in New Orleans and Miami.

Macdonald Carey, like most soap actors in the 50s and 60s, came from prime time and movies. Right before “Days” started in 1965, he starred in a very cool “Twilight Zone” episode called “The Special One.”  He also starred in an “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” episode in 1962. Before that he had his own series in the mid 1950s called “Dr. Christian.” If we’d been around then, we’d have seen Macdonald Carey on our three TV channels every single week!

Well his voice lives on every day on NBC. But not on Peacock. I hope it didn’t ruffle his feathers.

 

RIP Award Winning Beloved Actor Michael K. Williams, Star of “The Wire,” “Boardwalk Empire”

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As you probably have heard, Michael Kenneth Williams was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment today. He was 54.

Star of “The Wire” and “Boardwalk Empire,” Williams was a hugely successful, talented, and beloved New York actor. It’s thought he died of a drug overdose. Absolutely tragic. Whatever demons he had, we don’t know. That he didn’t know how celebrated he was, and how we in the entertainment press were always so thrilled to see him, that is the real tragedy.

Williams was expected to win an Emmy Award this month for his work on HBO’s “Lovecraft Country.” He’d had four other Emmy nominations since 2015.

Social media is overflowing with tributes. Rest in peace.

 

 

 

Review: Ryan Murphy’s “Impeachment” Is Addictive Entertainment If Not Exactly Relevatory

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Ryan Murphy’s latest offering, back on FX this time, is an addictive, entertaining  and cringey can’t-take-your-eyes-off car wreck.

After watching the first seven episodes that are available to critics, Murphy’s latest installment of “Crime Story”  I can tell you that “Impeachment” has a bit less bite than  its predecessors but definitely has its own kind of dirty quirky charms. It’s a debauched saga that is addictive to watch.

The actors are across the board terrific especially Beanie Feldstein who plays Monica Lewinsky in as  immature but endearing.  Real-life Monica is a producer and script consultant, so the result of that is that it leans heavy on  Lewinsky’s  story flaws and all.

Co-star Sarah Paulson, a Murphy stalwart and an executive producer, plays Linda Tripp. She’s always terrific and throws herself into the role.  This role is made heavier for the actress as she burdened by prosthetics, a much talked about fat suit and heavy make-up but she still manages to make Tripp both sympathetic and vile.

Some of the same challenges affect Clive Owen who plays President Clinton with a down home and smarmy charm. Cobie Smulders nails the mad meanness of Ann Coulter. Billy Eichner plays Matt Drudge as the digging, quippy press soothsayer he indeed was. Annaleigh Ashford expertly plays Paula Jones with depth.  She doesn’t go for the obvious mocking of small town Paula as she easily could have. Judith Light is perfection as the opportunistic Susan Carpenter McMillan, who wormed her way into the Paula Jones drama to garner whatever press she could get for herself.

The stellar cast also includes Mira Sorvino as Monica’s protective Mother, Blair Underwood as Clinton fixer Vernon Jordan, Elizabeth Reaser as Kathleen Willey who accused Clinton of sexual assault, Rae Dawn Chong as Clinton’s elegant and loyal secretary Betty and more recognizable faces.  Edie Falco plays tough as nails Hillary, although critics didn’t see much of her, as we only had up until episode 7 of the 10 episodes in full.Margo Martindale is sensational as book agent Lucianne Goldberg.

The series gets punchier with each episode.  Beanie does a beautiful job showing us this young woman in her early 20’s who is naïve, flawed, vulnerable in a ‘relationship’ which is one sided and sad. Your understanding of Monica does bring up empathy instead of the punchline she’s long been in popular culture. The series sometimes teeters on camp, but then it hits you with meaningful and unjust scenes that make you indeed cringe.  “Impeachment: American Crime Story” bottom line is again, addictively entertaining to watch.

Revealed: In New 9/11 Doc Martha Stewart Catered Food to the FBI During Crisis When They Swooped Into Her Office Building

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The one new 9/11 documentary I want to see airs this Thursday on Paramount Plus. It’s called “26th Street Garage: The FBI’s Untold Story of 9/11,” and it’s the story of how the FBI set up an instant headquarters in the garage of the Starrett-Leigh Building on West 26th St. and the West Side Highway.

No one knew about it or where it was, but the 26th Street Garage became the center of all activity.

No one knew except Martha Stewart, of course. Her offices were in the building, and when she realized what was happening she became their caterer. Martha’s OmniMedia has kitchens and resources that came in handy. I don’t think we’ve ever heard that story before.

Of course, it was a year and a half later that Martha was arrested by the Feds in her insider trading scandal. She wound up going to jail. You’d have thought she’d earned some good points for her 9/11 work. I think she’s owed an apology.

My old pal, Anne Beagan, is an executive producer. Another old friend, Elaine Kaufman, would be so proud!