Oh dear God, THIS! His voice and demeanor are just so so wrong for a podcast. He's a slow talker, often repetitive and yes, comes off very sycophantic. "So this is where U end, and U and I begin ..."
Thanks for being my mystical unicorn. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
OldFriends4Sale said:
I thought it was actually the 'date' that he was going to back out on'
Wasn't it Prince's idea to actually have a contest?
http://prince.org/msg/7/4...?&pg=2 But at 2 a.m. the night before the premiere, Prince’s co-manager Steve Fargnoli called up with a flip of the script that would effectively nullify her efforts. “‘Little change of plans for tomorrow,’” Riggs recalled Fargnoli saying (he died in 2001). “‘Prince is going to send the girl with the band in the van and he’s going to drive the Buick by himself.’ I said, ‘No Steven, he can’t do that!’ Then he hung up on me.”
The publicist was no stranger to Prince’s capricious nature as well as dealing with his crisis PR (such as when the singer’s bodyguard punched a photographer around the recording of the charity single “We Are the World”). She knew the star was publicity shy. Prince hadn’t yet met Barber so neither ill will or bad vibes could have factored into his decision. So Riggs surmised that Prince was simply following his bliss—and hadn’t thought through backing out of his prescribed part in a marketing campaign that had already sunk a reported $750,000 into Sheridan’s troubled local economy. At the same time, Riggs knew cancelling the fantasy date would almost certainly sour public opinion against His Royal Badness at a moment when Cherry Moon needed all the help it could get. “The media would have destroyed him for that,” she says.
After a moment of stunned silence, she picked up one of the three phone lines she’d had installed in her hotel room and called Rob Friedman, the vice president of Warner Bros. movie marketing, who was also staying in the hotel. Roused from a deep slumber, he came up to her room “with bed head, scratching his chest hair going, ‘What the fuck!’” then, informed of the situation, picked up the phone to Prince’s manager.
“‘Steven, here’s what’s going to happen. You’re going to get with your client, you’re going to tell him that he’s going to take this girl AS HIS DATE. If he does not do that, then I’m going to haul Warner Bros. out of here. And all of our promotional dollars are going home. Fuck you. Tell the kid he’s got to take her as his date or I’m leaving in the morning,’” Riggs remembers Friedman saying. (Friedman, who stepped down as co-chair of Lionsgate Motion Picture Group in September, declined an interview request for this story). “Robbie sat there for a minute. Then he goes, ‘That’s what I thought. I’m going back to bed now.’ Hangs up. ‘Prince is gonna take her to the movie. G’night Robyn!’”
end of discussion | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
morningsong said: OldFriends4Sale said:
I thought it was actually the 'date' that he was going to back out on'
Wasn't it Prince's idea to actually have a contest?
http://prince.org/msg/7/4...?&pg=2 But at 2 a.m. the night before the premiere, Prince’s co-manager Steve Fargnoli called up with a flip of the script that would effectively nullify her efforts. “‘Little change of plans for tomorrow,’” Riggs recalled Fargnoli saying (he died in 2001). “‘Prince is going to send the girl with the band in the van and he’s going to drive the Buick by himself.’ I said, ‘No Steven, he can’t do that!’ Then he hung up on me.”
The publicist was no stranger to Prince’s capricious nature as well as dealing with his crisis PR (such as when the singer’s bodyguard punched a photographer around the recording of the charity single “We Are the World”). She knew the star was publicity shy. Prince hadn’t yet met Barber so neither ill will or bad vibes could have factored into his decision. So Riggs surmised that Prince was simply following his bliss—and hadn’t thought through backing out of his prescribed part in a marketing campaign that had already sunk a reported $750,000 into Sheridan’s troubled local economy. At the same time, Riggs knew cancelling the fantasy date would almost certainly sour public opinion against His Royal Badness at a moment when Cherry Moon needed all the help it could get. “The media would have destroyed him for that,” she says.
After a moment of stunned silence, she picked up one of the three phone lines she’d had installed in her hotel room and called Rob Friedman, the vice president of Warner Bros. movie marketing, who was also staying in the hotel. Roused from a deep slumber, he came up to her room “with bed head, scratching his chest hair going, ‘What the fuck!’” then, informed of the situation, picked up the phone to Prince’s manager.
“‘Steven, here’s what’s going to happen. You’re going to get with your client, you’re going to tell him that he’s going to take this girl AS HIS DATE. If he does not do that, then I’m going to haul Warner Bros. out of here. And all of our promotional dollars are going home. Fuck you. Tell the kid he’s got to take her as his date or I’m leaving in the morning,’” Riggs remembers Friedman saying. (Friedman, who stepped down as co-chair of Lionsgate Motion Picture Group in September, declined an interview request for this story). “Robbie sat there for a minute. Then he goes, ‘That’s what I thought. I’m going back to bed now.’ Hangs up. ‘Prince is gonna take her to the movie. G’night Robyn!’”
end of discussion --There was another story out before this article that the contest was not Prince's idea. I think Dr.Funkenberry questions might have come from questions he may have asked Prince. I definitely remembered reading it was not his idea. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
cbarnes3121 said: laurarichardson said: --He actually knew Prince. I do not think they were best buds but he did have the inside scoop when Prince was alive. He didn't know him the way he try to portray. Yeah prince used him to promote stuff but being all in dept and opening up his soul ohh hell to the naw that's just what funk hole want people to believe I never heard him say Prince opened up his soul to him. In fact he said they had more than a few disagreements. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
OldFriends4Sale said:
Fink or Funk? Funkberry is Mat Fink isn't he? Chuck Norris can kill two stones with one bird. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Nope. This is a totally different guy.
You're thinking of Matt Fink, the guy dressed as a doctor in the Revolution.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |