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Reply #90 posted 11/04/15 11:25am

JoeBala

NBC releases first teaser for ‘The Wiz Live!’

November 4, 2015 4:00 AM MST
The Wiz Live! - Let's Hit the Yellow Brick Road! (Preview)
Play
The Wiz Live! - Let's Hit the Yellow Brick Road! (Preview)
NBC
Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #91 posted 11/04/15 11:53am

JoeBala

Review: Frederick Wiseman's Lovely, Immersive, And Intelligent 'In Jackson Heights'

By Jessica Kiang | The Playlist November 3, 2015 at 6:09PM

In Jackson Heights

This is a reprint of our review from the 2015 Venice Film Festival.

There was a bat in the theater at the first screening of "In Jackson Heights" in Venice. It's probably very bad form to include mention of such an extraneous detail in a review of any film, let alone one from revered documentary Godhead Frederick Wiseman. But this is a film about community as a general concept, and also about communities: the titular New York neighborhood — which proudly claims to be the most diverse place on earth with 167 languages spoken within its just-under-half-a-square-mile — and the smaller tribes and groups and coalitions that it comprises. Many of these are based around nationality or ethnicity or religious heritage as one might expect with its admixture of so many different races and cultures.

But more still are based around shared experience: people who have crossed borders illegally; small business owners threatened by encroaching corporations; gay seniors who were at the forefront of the area's embrace of Pride; older ladies who meet in coffee shops to knit and talk about graveyards and Tyrone Power. More than geographical location, it is shared experience that creates a communal bond between disparate individuals, and there's nothing like a bat flying about in your movie theater, every now and then dipping into the projector beam and casting a tiny flapping batsignal onto the screen, to remind you, in the murmurs and reactions of the people around you, that in being part of this audience watching this film right now, you too are part of a community of sorts, be it ever so temporary. "In Jackson Heights" is the sort of lovely, immersive, intelligent documentary that gives rise to such thoughts even without the benefit of a flying rodent, but the bat sure helped.

"In Jackson Heights"
"In Jackson Heights"

One of the reasons, of course, that you get to luxuriate in an occasional daydream during the film is that it is long: it's the most recent of three consecutive Wiseman films to crack the 3-hour mark, after the terrific "At Berkeley" and the lovely, meditative "National Gallery," and the twelfth to sail past that marker in his career overall. But it's also because of how it is designed; both considered and considerate, a rhythm is soon established whereby each interlude of deeply engrossing dialogue or speechifying is followed by a palate cleanser series of shots of neighborhood life. So after diving deep into one woman's long story, told to a community support group for illegal residents of the area, of her daughter's fortnight lost in the desert en route to the United States, we get a quick shuffle of street vendors, trains rattling overhead, dildo displays in sex shops, women pushing prams, diseased fish staring out from murky pet store aquaria. Or we get a musical interlude from a busking mariachi girl band, or a couple playing a weird set of homemade percussion instruments for the benefit of the customers at a laundromat. In these brief, restful but lively intermissions, we get the chance to do something most films never allow us to do. We get to think.

Wiseman's skill behind the camera is such that our thinking is directed, of course, just as much as the film. Using careful, looping sound design that brackets the more disjointed images together gracefully, and eschewing any voiceover or obvious insertion of himself into the narrative (he is the anti-Michael Moore, the un-Nick Broomfield in this regard), you could almost think he's not there. But then how to account for the profound level of fascination that you suddenly find yourself having in stories and episodes that of themselves you would never imagine to be interesting? That is Wiseman's genius, as much in evidence here as anywhere -- this quality of paying steadfast, riveted attention to the banal and making it meaningful and illuminating as a result. The film reminds us that a movie camera, similar in this way to a gun, is more than just a machine: it carries in it the intent of the person wielding it. And Wiseman's intent, with "In Jackson Heights," is to communicate his own interest in the invisible mechanics of community living in such a way that it becomes our own.

In Jackson Heights

But even Wiseman's biggest fan can probably admit that "In Jackson Heights" could, if it's not too sacrilegious to say, be a little shorter. He returns to a couple of the strands maybe one time more often than he needs to — it could be tighter without being any the less instructive and rewarding. And it will not be for everyone: such is the nature of a 190-minute film in which good ten minute chunks can be spent on a single shot of a man standing in a hairdresser's back room delivering an impassioned explanation of the mechanics of gentrification and why an upcoming commercial proposal will spell doom for the area and its homegrown businesses. Or when entire segments are dedicated to conference calls or meetings in gray offices as local hero and City Councilman Daniel Dromm discusses school zoning issues. Or when we watch a young woman in Dromm's office field irate phone calls, with her side of the conversation playing out in its entirety, and every careful response, eloquent eyeroll or interrupted answer speaking volumes as to the kind of complaints and complainants she deals with every single day. This is a thrumming hymn to the Brownian motion of everyday life.

As a portrait of a vibrant, inclusive, embattled community and the pride it has in itself and its Babel Tower of chattering cultures, politics, races, ages and sexualities, "In Jackson Heights" will be catnip to Wiseman's many fans, even if it does feel less urgent than some of the films that made his name, from "Domestic Violence" all the way back to "Titicut Follies." It is thoughtful and absurd and so full of activity that the more fanciful among us might wonder if the wildlife in their theater is some sort of manifestation. It's unlikely, despite Wiseman's reach and clout, that he will be able to guarantee a bat in every screening, but even without that interactive element, "In Jackson Heights" serves to remind us that our worlds are full of living things, and that, being the social creatures we are, we need each other. [B+]

15 Films To See In November

By Erik McClanahan | The Playlist November 2, 2015 at 9:41AM

Films To See In November

Quelle horreur! Please forgive me for forgetting to include "Love 3D," the latest opus from the one-and-only Gaspar Noé (whom we recently talked with), in last month's column. Even though our review was mixed, the film would have easily made the final list in October, but unfortunately we overlooked it. I'd also add it's well worth seeing at a cinema projected in 3D, if the option is available. But act fast, it won't survive long in U.S. theaters, not with the oncoming deluge of blockbusters (of the would-be and surefire variety), awards hopefuls, and smaller prestige pictures in the arthouse/indie/foreign realm.

It's easy to get confused, what with the mad game of Russian roulette that is choosing just the right release date for a film. This time of year especially, dates get shifted late in the game, based on purported buzz (or lack thereof) around a title that may have recently debuted at a festival to great (or anti-) acclaim. Some distributors play it more nervously than others. Take Sony Pictures Classics title “I Saw The Light," which just got moved from a solid awards baiting November date to a much more safe March release. Then there's Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson's critically beloved festival darling "Anomalisa" as well as Michael Moore's latest, "Where To Invade Next," both recently squeezed into end of year December slots to qualify for the Oscars (more to come on those films next month). It's hard out there, and the recent dearth in U.S. box offices the last few weeks has other players crossing their fingers they won't pull a "Steve Jobs" and sink like a damn stone after going wide (a shame, really, since it's very good).

So, with two months left to go with 2015, we have 15 good choices for you this month at the theater (or VOD, which many of these will be on as well) and even more in the honorable mention section. Happy movie hunting. Choose wisely.

Spectre

"Spectre"
Synopsis:
A cryptic message from Bond's past sends him on a trail to uncover a sinister organization. While M battles political forces to keep the secret service alive, Bond peels back the layers of deceit to reveal the terrible truth behind SPECTRE.
What You Need To Know: Our very own Oli Lyttelton saw 007's latest outing early and was fairly mixed in his review, citing overwhelmingly glaring plot hole issues he just couldn't forgive, writing, "The new film, the 24th in the long-running series, feels more like a successor to 'Quantum Of Solace' or to one of the ropier Roger Moore films, than to its Oscar-winning predecessor." But still, this being a Bond film, there's a lot that Oli admired from "Spectre." He reports an impressive long take action sequence in the opening ("Bond goes 'Birdman'! " are his exact words); a more loose and fun Daniel Craig performance; and strong turns from newcomers Dave Bautista and Léa Seydoux, "taking her place alongside Eva Green as the best of the modern-era female leads in the franchise." After record breaking grosses in only six territories so far, we know you're most likely already lined up to see this.
Release Date: November 6 (with some early shows November 5, check your local listings)

Brooklyn, Saoirse Ronan

"Brooklyn"
Synopsis: In 1950s Ireland and New York, young Eilis Lacey has to choose between two men and two countries.
What You Need To Know: Based on the novel by Irish author Colm Tóibín, and adapted by Nick Hornby, this John Crawley ("Boy A")-directed swooner, is described in Rodrigo Perez' A grade review from Sundance as "impeccably crafted [as] every single element of the movie, camera, craft, performance, music, and more, crescendos in symphonic harmony to portray these particular emotions with a poignant and aching truthfulness. There are no forced or false emotions, and the terrifically hewed intimacy of it all is deeply impressive." Word is also quite strong for Sairose Ronan's performance. Could this be the one true breakout hit from Sundance this year to go the distance to the Oscars? Fox Searchlight certainly thinks so.
Release Date: November 4 (limited)

In Jackson Heights

"In Jackson Heights"
Synopsis: Jackson Heights, Queens is one of the most culturally diverse communities in the U.S. where 167 languages are spoken. This film explores the conflict between maintaining ties to old traditions and adapting to American values.
What You Need To Know: The latest from documentary master Frederick Wiseman follows epic-length deep dives into institutions like "National Gallery" and "At Berkeley," and it continues a winning run of films. Jessica Kiang wrote in her review from Venice that "as a portrait of a vibrant, inclusive, embattled community and the pride it has in itself and its Babel Tower of chattering cultures, politics, races, ages and sexualities, [it] will be catnip to Wiseman's many fans... 'In Jackson Heights' serves to remind us that our worlds are full of living things, and that, being the social creatures we are, we need each other."
Release Date: November 4 (limited)

Spotlight
"Spotlight"

"Spotlight"
Synopsis: The true story of how the Boston Globe uncovered the massive scandal of child molestation and its cover-up within the local Catholic Archdiocese, shaking the entire Catholic Church to its core.
What You Need To Know: A truly thrilling film about the process and work involved in long form investigative journalism, the entire cast — Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Mark Ruffalo, Liev Schreiber & Stanley Tucci — is superb, with even the smallest roles given depth and nuance from the script and the actors involved. This is also something of a quick comeback picture for director Tom McCarthy, who struck out hard last year with the Adam Sandler debacle "The Cobbler" (though he doesn't exactly see it that way). The story packs a punch and takes the viewer on a helluva ride via its punchy editing and efficient storytelling. Not a minute is wasted all the way through a happy, but pragmatic, ending that feels the truest possible summation of all that came before. Jessica Kiang's glowing Venice review agrees: "McCarthy's sensitive handling really does summon the lightning-in-a-bottle nature of this investigation, persuasively suggesting that only for the perfect alignment of all these exact people in exactly the right positions at exactly the right time, we might still be in the dark."
Release Date: November 6 (limited)

By The Sea

"By The Sea"
Synopsis: With their marriage in trouble, an American writer and his wife make new connections at a French resort during their vacation.
What You Need To Know: Though this 1970s set domestic melodrama stars probably the most famous Hollywood couple alive in Angelina Jolie Pitt and Brad Pitt, it nonetheless screams personal passion project (read: way more arty than "Unbroken"). Jolie, here also serving as writer, producer and director for her third feature film, scales way back for something that looks more European in style and form. We only have the trailers to go on so far, which certainly sells its two leads and is also reminiscent of the work of filmmakers like Eric Rohmer, Michelangelo Antonioni and especially Roberto Rossellini (see “Journey To Italy”) It may just nab a curious public looking for a peak behind this famous couple's curtain (made during their honeymoon apparently), but either way, consider The Playlist intrigued by the curious departure.
Release Date: November 13

James White

"James White"
Synopsis: A coming-of-age story about a young New Yorker struggling to take control of his reckless, self-destructive behavior in the face of momentous family challenges.
What You Need To Know: The filmmaker collective Borberline Films, created by Sean Durkin ("Martha Marcy May Marlene"), Antonio Campos ("Simon Killer") and Josh Mond, has allowed for these three talented filmmakers to carve out a place in the industry just for their particular brand of deeply felt, subtly stylized and artistic modern character studies. Their success has been impressive, and they continue with another winner, directed with real skill by Mond in his feature debut. Though its lead character, who the film relentlessly follows, is challenging to sit with at times, he's undeniably fascinating and honest. A very intimate and particular perspective — the camera rarely ever strays from the titular character's vantage point, often locked in on a closeup of actor Christopher Abbot's face — guides the viewer through an incredibly difficult and demoralizing six months in this young man's life. He's self-destructive, narcissistic, entitled and selfish. But he's real, and actually a fairly original creation in the annals of modern American independent cinema. This one may fray your emotions, leaving the audience as spent as a long-lit candle's burnt out wick. Rodrigo Perez also had much to praise when he saw it at Sundance this year: "Featuring a solid soundtrack, the brassy howl of Billie Holiday figures prominently, providing the film’s other form of catharsis, with the jazz legend crooning about loving life, accepting pain and keepin’ on... But without ever feeling the need to show you hope or redemption, a recognizably real humanity still bleeds through."
Release Date: November 13 (limited)

Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words

"Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words"
Synopsis: Home movies, letters, diaries and archival interviews highlight the personal life of Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman.
What You Need To Know: Nick Schager found much to appreciate when we caught this doc at the New York Film Festival in September: "An act of celebratory remembrance that’s buoyed by a desire to understand the messy contradictions, motivations and emotions of its subject, [the film] proves a stirring and insightful biography of assemblage. Stig Björkman’s film recounts the life story of the famed international actress through the usual non-fiction devices – talking-head interviews with relatives, film and news clips – as well as a wealth of photos, home movies and diary writings made by Bergman herself, who was committed to documenting her experiences through journal entries, letters to friends, and celluloid... Be it in these clips or in private recordings of vacations and down-time with her husbands and kids, Bergman’s radiant smile, effervescent manner, and lively eyes radiate an almost hypnotic charm that’s difficult to resist. To watch Björkman’s expertly constructed, montage-heavy film is to recognize her as not only one of the medium’s most magnetic stars, but a talent and beauty whose expressive face and irresistible charisma made her a figure born to live for (and permanently live on through) the camera."
Release Date: November 13 (limited)

Entertainment

"Entertainment"
Synopsis: An abrasive stand-up comic hits the road to perform a series of shows at seedy venues.
What You Need To Know: Our very own Rodrigo Perez liked this film a lot when he reviewed it at Sundance this year, calling it a "twisted, existential comedic masterwork." He devotes the entire opening paragraph in his review to filmmaker Rick Alverson and his absorbing and intimate indie works: " 'The Builder' is a terrifically underrated gem, and 'New Jerusalem' coaxes another strong lead performance by musician Will Oldham. But it's Alverson’s provocative and pointed collaborations with comedian Tim Heidecker that have proven to be layered and rich next-level works. The deeply misunderstood 'The Comedy' — a hilariously confrontational, but also alarming examination of the age of ironic distance — is an incendiary piece de resistance. But Alverson may have outdone himself with 'Entertainment', an even more abrasive, alienating, and nightmarish masterwork about the cruel futility of connection, performance, and existence." He is indeed a talented no budget director, and those of you in the know should be well past excited to catch up with his latest.
Release Date: November 13 (limited)

Carol

"Carol"
Synopsis: Set in 1950s New York, a department-store clerk who dreams of a better life falls for an older, married woman.
What You Need To Know: "Made of crystal and suppressed tears, shot eternally through windows and mirrors and half-closed doors, Todd Haynes' 'Carol' is a love story that starts at a trickle, swells gradually to a torrent, and finally bursts the banks of your heart." So says our very own Jessica Kiang from her review, loaded with the kind of high praise that was not uncommon after it premiered at Cannes in May. Kiang and just about everyone else's excitement seems rightly justified. Haynes, even though he's respected in the industry, is long overdue a true breakout hit. He's always been a critical darling, but here he may just have the kind of all-consuming hit that any filmmaker would die to make. "A beautiful film in every way, immaculately made, and featuring two pristine actresses glowing across rooms and tousled bedclothes at each other like beacons of tentative, unspoken hope, the film is based on a novel by 'The Talented Mr Ripley' and 'Strangers on a Train's Patricia Highsmith. But 'Carol' is not those stories, nor their filmic adaptations. It is not dark and it is not cutting, instead it is an aching, pining film that layers the simplicity of this love affair with such strata of feeling that the story eventually becomes the essence of every affair ever, gay or straight, in which true, luminous love has been denied by circumstance." Expect this to be a major Oscar player this year, especially for the film's leads, Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara.
Release Date: November 20 (limited)

The Night Before

"The Night Before"
Synopsis: As their annual reunion tradition comes to an end, three childhood friends search for the Holy Grail of Christmas parties in New York.
What You Need To Know: Tis a curious thing, opening a Christmas set and themed movie a full month early. It's not entirely unheard of (just like horror films playing outside of October, it happens), but the reason seems fairly obvious. December being stacked to the nines with cinematic competition too tough and large for this small-ish comedy featuring Seth Rogen, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Anthony Mackie as three friends ending their annual holiday get together with a bang. The former two actors re-team here with their "50/50" director Jonathan Levine, and here's hoping they can re-capture much of what made that underrated comedy work so well. The trailer is solid (as per usual go with the red band instead) if not entirely inspiring. It shows pretty much exactly what we'd expect from this crew i.e. lots of slo-mo party montages, lots of drugs, a few relationship squabbles, and plenty of pop culture references. If it's a hit (and, fingers crossed, funny) then Christmas will have come early for moviegoers in need of a good chuckle.
Release Date:
November 20

Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2

"The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2"
Synopsis: Katniss Everdeen and District 13 engage in an all-out revolution against the autocratic Capitol.
What You Need To Know: While it seems there's no foreseeable end in sight for many of the biggest franchises in play these days, it's good to know "The Hunger Games" series has an actual, well-established (via the books) conclusion in this second half of the final chapter. After 'Mockingjay: Part 1' and the 'Catching Fire' (also directed by Francis Lawrence, a good fit for this series), the machine is in place and the parts are all in motion to wrap the story up in suitably epic fashion. The trailer is stellar, it looks action-heavy and large in scale, moving well beyond the limits of the first film (which just wasn't very good). Star Jennifer Lawrence will cap the year off strongly with this surefire monster hit and then the more awards-friendly "Joy" in December. She's been the most important aspect of this series, so here's hoping Katniss gets the ending she deserves. But it will be a struggle to get there, no doubt. And of course, Philip Seymour Hoffman's final role ever will be this film, so we hope it's also a fitting tribute for his already legendary legacy.
Release Date: November 20

The Secret In Their Eyes

"The Secret In Their Eyes"
Synopsis: A tight-knit team of investigators, along with their supervisor, is suddenly torn apart when they discover that one of their own teenage daughters has been brutally murdered.
What You Need To Know: A remake of the Oscar-winning 2009 Argentine film by Juan José Campanella (it won Best Foreign Language Film, beating out stiff competition from "A Prophet" and "The White Ribbon"), the combo of Chiwetel Ejiofor, Nicole Kidman and Julia Roberts, along with "Shattered Glass" writer/director Billy Ray, is a compelling one. But the question still lingers of why this story needed to be retold, and what could be improved. “I felt that as great as that movie is, and I literally mean great, I felt that it needed to be made into a slightly more muscular version of itself, and that just meant it needed a little bit more story and a couple of things I thought were sort of uniquely American touches to justify retelling the story,” Ray told EW. “I’m pretty confident we found all that.” The trailer reminds of the original (giving a glimpse at an analogous action sequence to its most famous moment, a thrilling one-take chase sequence set at a rowdy soccer match), but we're sold on this crew. Hopefully they've made a worthwhile remake.
Release Date:
November 20

Creed

"Creed"
Synopsis: The former World Heavyweight Champion Rocky Balboa serves as a trainer and mentor to Adonis Johnson, the son of his late friend and former rival Apollo Creed.
What You Need To Know: If you've seen director Ryan Coogler's feature debut, the Sundance winning "Fruitvale Station," then you already know: the kid's got the goods. He took the inherently upsetting true story of Oscar Grant and stayed away from the average biopic flourishes, instead following the character in the last 24 hours of his life before he was murdered by a BART police officer. It was the right tactic to employ for that film, favoring a Dardenne brothers-esque visual approach that worked wonders. Thankfully, Hollywood was paying attention and came knocking and Coogler was ready for the challenge of a much larger budgeted quasi-sequel to a beloved franchise. Teaming again with 'Fruitvale' star Michael B. Jordan, his "Creed" looks modern and fresh, and even with Sylvester Stallone showing up for "Rocky" franchise connectivity, we sure hope that Coogler and Jordan can go down their own path in the future, if this latest film warrants further stories (and if it's a hit, of course). The latest trailer fleshes it out more, but lacks the punch and surprise of that initial teaser, which dropped this summer to a widely enthusiastic reception online. Let's hope it can live up to all that hype and baggage.
Release Date:
November 25

The Good Dinosaur

"The Good Dinosaur"
Synopsis: An epic journey into the world of dinosaurs where an Apatosaurus named Arlo makes an unlikely human friend.
What You Need To Know: This summer we saw what happened when humanity and prehistoric creatures clashed in "Jurassic World," but what the upcoming "The Good Dinosaur" ponders is, how would humans have evolved had dinosaurs not been wiped out? Well, it turns out, we would've gone on really cute and breathtaking paleolithic adventures. The trailer sells the picture well, and no doubt its familiar elements (the plot sounds a lot like "Finding Nemo") added with more dinosaur action should equal big money for the Disney and Pixar co-production. Like anything from Pixar, it's a big concept, and as they showed earlier this year with "Inside Out" (one of the best films of the year), if they are on their A-game, it will be something special. The voice cast is an eclectic bunch: Raymond Ochoa, Jeffrey Wright, Steve Zahn, AJ Buckley, Anna Paquin, Sam Elliott, Frances McDormand, Marcus Scribner, and Jack Bright. Then there's director Peter Sohn, taking the reins on his first feature (he directed the short "Partly Cloudly" and has worked with Pixar for more than a decade). This one should also have devotees of the Pixar theory teeming with nerd joy.
Release Date: November 25

The Danish Girl

"The Danish Girl"
Synopsis: The remarkable love story inspired by the lives of artists Lili Elbe and Gerda Wegener, whose marriage and work evolve as they navigate Lili's groundbreaking journey as a transgender pioneer.
What You Need To Know: Tom Hooper's latest bid at awards glory has at its center a very timely issue. The zeitgeist seems to be ready for a movie on the subject of transgenderism, given Caitlyn Jenner’s success story this year, and celebrated transgendered narratives like “Orange Is The New Black” and “Tangerine” (one of the best films this year). Hooper and Focus Features couldn’t have picked a better year to release “The Danish Girl.” But the film hasn't had a slam dunk reception. Jessica Kiang's Venice review had its reservations, but she still acknowledged the film's many qualities (including the sure-to-be Oscar nominated turns from stars Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander). But it was Jessica's beautifully articulated and spot-on assessment of Hollywood's recent crop of message movies that really got at the troubling fact for most these glitzy titles: they play it safe and dull far too often. "The Danish Girl" remains a must-see this year, as it's definitely part of the awards conversation that will be unfolding in the months ahead.
Release Date: November 27 (limited)

Legend

Honorable Mention:
As per usual in any given month (especially this time of year) there's a whole swath of worthy films that just can't make the final list. And so, there's a pair of biopics coming this month with gifted thespians in the lead role. Or, I should say, role(s), at least when referring to Tom Hardy's dual performance in "Legend" as twin brothers Ronnie and Reggie Kray, the legendary British gangsters who get the bio-film treatment from Oscar-winning writer/director Brian Helgeland. “Trumbo” gives a rare flashy lead role in a film to Bryan Cranston, in a film version of the famous screenwriting legend by Jay Roach.

There's always at least a few docs every month to perk some interest in moviegoers. November is no different, with Amy Berg's "Janis: Little Girl Blue," about Janis Joplin, of course. Berg has had one of the strongest years on record for a single documentarian. This is her third feature-length nonfiction film this year alone, and they've all been very strong works. Hats off to her. "Censored Voices" uses long censored recordings by renowned author Amos Oz, concerning the 1967 'Six Day War' won decidedly by Israel. Oscilloscope is releasing "What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy," another picture in a long interest with this era and history for the indie distributor. “The Notorious Mr. Bout” tells the real story of the merchant of death, who inspired the Nicolas Cage film "Lord of War."

We caught "Mustang" at the Cannes this year (it played in Director's Fortnight where it took home an award). It's a "Virgin Suicides" like tale of five sisters form Turkish director Deniz Gamze Ergüven. "Theeb," a period piece shot in Jordan, took home a prize from the Venice Film Festival for its director, Naji Abu Nowar.

An under the radar Sundance horror movie, “The Hallow (aka The Woods)” looks like it could be a spooky good time. "Victor Frankenstein" comes from "Lucky Number Slevin" (remember that one?) helmer Paul McGuigan and gives stars James McAvoy and Daniel Radcliffe the chance to don some period clothing in a new adaptation that pulls from several sources on top of Mary Shelly's 1818 novel, including other movies, to create a new pastiche. The film is told through the eyes of Igor (Radcliffe), Dr. Frankenstein’s (McAvoy) assistant, and a human guinea pig who has to suffer through various experiments.

Lake Bell and Simon Pegg better “Man Up” if this new rom-com, about a mistaken identity case that turns into a great blind date, is going to break through to any audience. "The Peanuts Movie" brings the whole gang back, but this time drawn on computers (yay!?). Catherine Hardwicke directs Drew Barrymore and Toni Collette as best friends dealing with the former's character's breast cancer in "Miss You Already." "The 33" stars Antonio Banderas in a re-telling of the August 5, 2010 cave-in at a San José copper mine in Chile that trapped 33 workers 2,300 feet below the Earth.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #92 posted 11/04/15 12:20pm

JoeBala

Meek Mill Wants Nicki Minaj And Lil Kim To Collaborate: "They'd Own Rap"

by Ethan First Nov 4, 2015 09:07 AM EST

Nicki Minaj attends 2015 MTV VMAs (Photo : Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Hollywood Life reports that Meek Mill is extremely enthusiastic about the idea of a collaboration between his 32-year-old girlfriend and current "Queen of Hip Hop" Nicki Minaj and her rival and former rap royalty, Lil Kim, saying their work together would "own rap."

Mill, 28, and Minaj have been in the news frequently as of late, after Meek Mill initiated a long-running feud with rapper Drake. Minaj is understandably conflicted, as the former is her boyfriend, and the latter a mentor and label-mate. Regarding the conflict between the two, Minaj has said, "They're men, grown-ass men. It's between them ... I hate it. It doesn't make me feel good. You don't ever want to choose sides between people you love. It's ridiculous. I just want it to be over," according to the New York Times.

In addition, Meek is actively attempting to squash the beef between Lil Kim and Minaj. A source told Hollywoodlife.com, "...if she got together with Kim in the studio and came up with a collab, they'd own rap! He reminded Nicki that they're in business for money, not for feuds! Nicki loves her dollars more than her A-1 steak sauce," the source added, "and she's thinking really hard as to whether she can stomach working with Kim."

Meek Mill is not the only one who feels this way. Many hip-hop fans all over the world have been calling for such a collaboration, and have favorably compared the two in the past. Lil Kim even said she would be open to performing a song with the fellow New York rapper for the right amount of money.

However, according to Bossip, Kim is not optimistic about the two patching things up. She said, "The Nicki situation cannot be fixed unless it's finances involved because it's deeper than that. People don't know the situation. Like, I was over there working with them. The song 'No Worries' [by Lil Wayne]...that was my producer who produced that song. I introduced him..I brought him over there to that camp."

Eminem and Shady Records to Invest in Genius Lyrics Site Ahead of New Music Plans

by Lindsay Haddox Nov 4, 2015 14:00 PM EST

Eminem at 2014 Lollapalooza (Photo : Theo Wargo/Getty Images)

After annotating his own lyrics on the site Genius, Eminem along with Shady Records, will be investing in their site.

According to Billboard, Eminem will be joining Genius' star-studded roster of investors that include Pharrell and Nas. Not only will Eminem be investing in Genius, but the site will also be the official lyrics engine for Eminem.com and Shady Records' online properties.

Genius allows fans to connect with their favorite artists on a whole new level. Not only can fans look up the lyrics to songs they love, but with annotated lyrics they are able to get the backstory and meaning for the songs as well. With Eminem on the verge of releasing new music, he is not only investing in Genius, he will be annotating all of his new music on the site as well.

"Coming up we would always obsess over the lyrics from our favorite MCs. Picking everything apart, trying to get into their heads," Eminem said in a statement. "I still do that today and Genius helps to make it a worldwide conversation. Pretty amazing to me."

This is not the first time that Eminem has worked with Genius, back in April the rap mogul annotated some of his songs which included, "Rap God," "Stan" and "Lose Yourself."

The Brooklyn-based company Genius was founded in 2009 by Tom Lehman and Ilan Zechory. Genius prides itself on being the world's largest e-hub of lyrics and knowledge about music that is crowd sourced. Genius is dedicated to giving its audience and want them to be able to enjoy the stories behind the music.

"Any discussion of the greatest rapper of all time has to include Eminem, so working with him and Shady Records is just incredible as a fan," said Zechory, Genius co-founder and president. "With Genius we're trying to create something like a museum of songs -- we want to give all the great 'behind the music' stories from Eminem a permanent home for fans to enjoy."

First Look: Eddie Redmayne And The Cast Of Harry Potter Spin-Off ‘Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them’

The Playlist By Edward Davis | The Playlist November 4, 2015 at 12:11PM

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

J.K. Rowling just can’t give up on “Harry Potter” even though she surely never needs to pen another word for the rest of her life. The franchise yielded eight films, but she evidently couldn’t get enough and decided to adapt her 2001 creature encyclopedia “Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them” (which came after the fourth ‘Potter’ novel) as a film spin-off, marking her first screenplay (she also wrote another ‘Potter’ https://www.yahoo.com/mov...ml?src=rss" href="https://www.yahoo.com/movies/jk-rowling-reunites-harry-potter-and-the-hogwarts-gang-91149707852.html?src=rss">short story recently). She doesn’t need the money, so you can bet the impetus for it was Warner Bros. —looking to extend the franchise which grossed a combined $7.7 billion worldwide— asking Rowling if she’d care to turn that encyclopedia into a narrative feature.

“Like many people, I read those books, I watched those films, and became completely intoxicated by J.K. Rowling’s world,” Eddie Redmayne, the star of ‘Fantastic Beasts’ told http://www.ew.com/article...-find-them" href="http://www.ew.com/article/2015/09/02/eddie-redmayne-fantastic-beasts-and-where-find-them">EW a few weeks back. “The idea of getting to tiptoe into it felt truly exciting. I hope it’s going to be quite a ride.” Redmayne stars as “magizoologist” Newt Scamander in the movie, which is set in New York in 1926. A new logo was unveiled yesterday (see below) and today, http://www.ew.com/article...-find-them" href="http://www.ew.com/article/2015/09/02/eddie-redmayne-fantastic-beasts-and-where-find-them">EWhttp://www.apple.com" href="http://www.apple.com"> has unveiled a brace of new images.

Directed by David Yates, who helmed the last four 'Harry Potter' feature films, "Fantastic Beasts" centers on the aforementioned magizoologist (creature expert?) and his voyage to New York to find and document magical creatures. The movie also stars Katherine Waterston (“Inherent Vice”) as Tina; Alison Sudol (“Dig,” “Transparent”) as Tina’s sister, Queenie; Tony Award winner Dan Fogler (“The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee”) as Jacob; Ezra Miller (“Trainwreck”) as Credence; two-time Oscar nominee Samantha Morton (“In America,” “Sweet and Lowdown”) as Mary Lou; Jenn Murray (“Brooklyn”) as Chastity; young newcomer Faith Wood-Blagrove as Modesty; and Colin Farrell (“True Detective”) as Graves.

Warner Bros. has slated “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” for worldwide release in 3D and IMAX on November 18, 2016.

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them

Erykah Badu: Nothing Neo About Her Soul [INTERVIEW]

Launching a one-woman show, dropping a new mixtape and hosting the Soul Train Awards, Badu makes a grand return

Alexandra Phanor-Faury

by Alexandra Phanor-Faury, November 02, 2015

Erykah Badu: Nothing Neo About Her Soul [INTERVIEW]

Erykah Badu returned to her performing roots last Thursday (October 29). The Dallas-born songstress graced the stage at the Black Academy of Arts and Letters—the school where she honed her singing, acting and all around innate badassness before the world caught wind of her undeniable talent. During her teenage years of training, Badu stood on the BAAL stage countless times starring in productions. Her homecoming marked another special occasion: It was also the night Badu unveiled her first one-woman show.

Live Nudity is an intimate two-act piece chockfull of poetry, acting and, of course, singing that explores spirituality, love and Blackness through a series of voyeuristic vignettes. Over a three-night run, Badu inhabits a number of eclectic characters, from the self-help guru to the narcissist. She’s been yearning to put on this show for the last couple of years, but surprisingly even Badu can get nervous about sharing her work. In fact, two years ago she booked two venues to put on her one-woman show but as the dates approached the singer “chickened out” and cancelled the event.

“I’m just happy I finally got up there and did it! I can’t stress that enough,” she shares over the phone from Dallas the day after the debut, adding that she still had a case of the nerves. “I thought I would be less petrified, but I worked through it. I close my eyes and the audience and I become one breathing organism exchanging energy. It feels good.”

Badu approached the hour-and-forty-five-minute Live Nudity with the same personal, unpredictable, improvised flair (not to mention humor) that she lends to her songwriting and live shows. “My biggest song, which is really ironic, is ‘Tyrone,’ ” she begins. “I’ve penned songs that I’ve taken three years, three months or three days to finish. ‘Tyrone’ was one of those songs I improvised on stage. It must have been some joke God played on me.”

Badu’s indelible imprint and idiosyncrasies are all over Live Nudity, and she wouldn’t have it any other way. When it comes to her art, she wants to share it all, not just a snapshot.

“It’s not unreasonable to want to share the full vision,” she says. “From writing albums, the artwork, the liner notes, the sequence of the album, the visuals, the videos and the press photos, I’m involved in all of that. I do them tirelessly because I want to make sure the audience sees the full vision that I’m imagining.”

I don’t think I’ve shown all of me and what I can create.

On November 29 Badu will be hosting the Soul Train Awards, and as might be expected, she has her hands on more than just mere hosting duties. This year Badu is associate producer on the show, in charge of hiring a team of writers who’ll undoubtedly shine a spotlight on Badu’s comedic skills. She’s also involved in structuring the format of the award show.

The last time she hosted the Soul Train Awards was back in 1998. The then fresh-faced 27-year-old shared the honors with Patti LaBelle and Heavy D. “At that the time, I was a young artist and I had just come out,” Badu recalls. “Everything was moving so fast for me. It was almost all a blur that night.” She won Favorite Female Soul/R&B Album for the classic Baduizm that night. “I’m really looking forward to hosting this year. I can’t tell you what we have planned, but believe we will be taking you through every emotion, just like music does. It’s exciting to be able to reach my mom’s generation, mine and my children’s generation at the same time.”

This month, the Soul Train Awards will honor two of Badu’s favorite artists: Jill Scott and Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds. Will we be blessed with a Badu performance? Perhaps a “Hotline Bling” duet with Drake? “I can’t say, but wouldn’t that be so cute?” Fans have been waiting for new music from Badu since 2010’s New Amerykah Part Two (Return of the Ankh), and this week their pleas will be answered with a new mixtape: But You Cain’t Use My Phone—in reference to her biggest song, “Tyrone.”

“I don’t think I’ve shown all of me and what I can create,” says Badu. “I want to express myself in many genres of art as I can, from painting, cooking, singing, writing, dancing and poetry.” But she isn’t impatient to reveal her glorious layers. “I like to consider myself as a nice slow burn.”

The Soul Train Awards 2015 will air on Centric and BET Networks on November 29 at 8 PM EST.

Alexandra Phanor-Faury is a Haitian-American writer living in Brooklyn, New York with a slight (OK, major) addiction to fashion and pop culture. When she’s not up in the middle of the night filling her online shopping carts and catching up on style blogs, she's writing about fashion and entertainment for a number of websites and magazines. Check out her work and blog at AlexandraPhanor.com.

'The Girl In The Spider's Web' Officially In The Works, But David Fincher, Rooney Mara And Daniel Craig Will Not Be Returning

By Kevin Jagernauth | The Playlist November 4, 2015 at 2:33PM

Dragon Tattoo Rooney Mara

Sony has forever been considering whether or not to make the sequel to David Fincher's gritty and electric "The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo." The decidedly hard-R thriller was expensive and for all the marketing push, didn't quite do the numbers the studio was hoping for. But it has recently become evident that Sony were contemplating bringing back Lisbeth Salander, but not David Fincher. Earlier this year it was reported that the studio was considering combining "The Girl Who Played With Fire" and "The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest" into one movie, but leaving their director behind. But it seems they have a different plan, and essentially, we're looking at a reboot.

THR reports that Sony is moving ahead with a big screen adaptation of the officially sanctioned, non-Stieg Larsson penned "The Girl in the Spider's Web." Steven Knight ("Locke," "Burnt," "Eastern Promises") has been tapped to write the screenplay, but here's the kicker: neither Rooney Mara nor Daniel Craig are expected to reprise their roles, nor Fincher to direct.

Sony famously fought with Fincher over the casting of Mara, and over 'Dragon Tattoo' in general, as the director put his foot down on almost every aspect of the release, including the marketing. So perhaps it's not a surprise they want to kickstart the franchise again, but leave him and everything else he brought to the table behind. However, it is interesting to see that Scott Rudin and Amy Pascal are both back to produce. I suppose they've put aside their differences that blew between during "Steve Jobs" fiasco at Sony, when the project fell apart after Fincher and the studio couldn't come to terms to his demands, including a $10 million dollar salary, to helm the picture.

Watch Sara Bareilles, Jason Mraz Record Theatrical New Duets

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Pair team up for Bareilles' album of songs from 'Waitress' musical

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By Brittany Spanos November 4, 2015

Sara Bareilles' Web series "Making the Record" is a fun look into the singer-songwriter's recording process for her upcoming fourth album, What's Inside: Songs From Waitress, which contains music she wrote for the 2016 Broadway musical Waitress, based on the 2007 film of the same name. In Episode 4, Bareilles is joined by Jason Mraz, who records as character Dr. Jim Pomatter for the album.

Sara Bareilles Oprah Higher and Higher
Watch Sara Bareilles' 'H...igher' »

In the clip, the pair show off their musical chemistry and friendship as they record the pair of songs that will appear on What's Inside. "For those who know Sara, she is sharp, quick witted, hilarious, and intelligent," Mraz tells Rolling Stone. "While this is a concept album of sorts, it still manages to showcase who she is and what she is capable of. [The album] is the work of a true artist and is sure to become a classic."

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In late October, the pair debuted their collaboration, "Bad Idea." In the playful duet, the characters of Jenna and Dr. Pomatter list all the reasons why they can't fall for one another.

"I have been inspired by the work of Jason Mraz on and off the stage for years now," Bareilles tells Rolling Stone of her duet partner. I have only ever seen him make his art from a place of deepest sincerity and that is a beautiful thing to behold. He was a welcomed and gracious guest on my record and I am so thankful that I got a chance to make music with this inspired and wildly talented soul."

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What's Inside: Songs From Waitress will be released on November 6th and the musical is set to debut on Broadway in April of next year.

Watch: Trailer For Horror 'Visions' Starring Isla Fisher, Jim Parsons And Gillian Jacobs

By Kevin Jagernauth | The Playlist August 5, 2015 at 1:44PM

Visions

What happens when a bunch of actors better known for their comedy chops make a horror movie? You get "Visions," another movie from the Blumhouse horror production house that just keeps cranking 'em out (including this week's "The Gift" — http://blogs.indiewire.co...l-20150805" href="http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/review-the-gift-starring-joel-edgerton-jason-bateman-and-rebecca-hall-20150805">read our review). The first international trailer has landed for the flick.

READ MORE: Review: Saw 3D...te Torture

Isla Fisher, Gillian Jacobs and Jim Parsons are some of the unlikely leads for the movie that also features Eva Longoria and Anson Mount. It's directed by Kevin Gruetert ("Saw VI," "Saw 3D," "Jessabelle") and mixes pregnancy horror and a spooky vineyard… or something. Here's the official synopsis:

Leaving her hectic city lifestyle behind, young mother-to-be Eveleigh joins her husband David at their beautiful new vineyard home only to be plagued by terrifying noises and visions of a sinister hooded figure. No one else hears or sees these hallucinations, not even David, who grows increasingly worried about his wife's well-being.

Desperate to prove her sanity, Eveleigh hunts down locals who reveal the haunted history of the vineyard in which she now resides. But when the pieces come together, the answer is far different – and more dangerous to her and her baby – than she ever imagined.

There's no word if this film will get a proper theatrical release stateside or whether it head down the VOD route, but looking at this trailer, I'd assume the latter. "Visions" opens in Singapore on September 17th.

Visions
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Visions (skip crop)
Visions Poster

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Reply #93 posted 11/05/15 7:21am

JoeBala

Melissa Mathison dies at 65; screenwriter of 'E.T.,' 'Black Stallion,' 'Kundun'

Melissa Mathison

Screenwriter Melissa Mathison, whose enormously successful “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” became a landmark in film history, specialized in stories revolving around children. But, as she often said, she made a point of not condescending to them.

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“I go to movies with my children and see fat kids burping, parents portrayed as total morons, and kids being mean and materialistic, and I feel it’s really slim pickin’s out there,” she told The Times in 1995. “There’s a little dribble of a moral tacked on, but the story is not about that.

“We’d get back in the car after seeing a movie and I’d say, ‘Now what did you think about this?,’ and they’d have nothing to say.”

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Mathison, 65, who portrayed children as sensitively heroic, died Wednesday at UCLA Medical Center. The cause was neuroendocrine cancer, her brother Dirk Mathison said.

Mathison’s film credits also include “The Black Stallion” (1979), “The Escape Artist” (1982) and “The Indian in the Cupboard” (1995).

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“Kundun” (1997), a movie about the Dalai Lama’s childhood and growth into a young man, reflected her decades-long interest in Tibet.

She received an Oscar nomination for her work on Steven Spielberg’s “E.T.,” which was released in 1982.

“Melissa had a heart that shined with generosity and love and burned as bright as the heart she gave E.T.,” the director said in a statement Wednesday.

“E.T.” was the story of a young boy in the suburbs and the alien he befriended. While Spielberg had wrestled with the idea of a film about a stranded alien for some time, he asked Mathison to develop the plot.

She described it years later as a “boy-meets-dog story.”

“It is a story of resurrection and redemption.”

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When it opened, Times critic Sheila Benson said it was “so full of love and wonder, of pure invention, and the best kind of screen magic, that it’s not only the film of the summer, it may be the film of the decade and possible the double decade.”

Mathison, she said, “seems to know the newly separated young family, that sad American statistic, from its cracked heart out.”

Mathison spent eight weeks writing “E.T.” It made $793 million at the box office worldwide.

Melissa Mathison

She had two children, Georgia and Malcolm, from her marriage to actor Harrison Ford. They divorced in 2004 after a 21-year marriage.

From 1983 to 1985, Mathison, Ford and their children lived on a 700-acre ranch outside Jackson Hole, Wyo., where the screenwriter put her career on hold.

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“I have two little children,” she told Newsweek. “I didn’t want to be missing their childhood while I was away, busy writing about children.”

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Born in Los Angeles on June 3, 1950, Mathison grew up in the Hollywood Hills, one of five children born to Richard Mathison, who was The Los Angeles Times' religion editor in the 1950s before becoming Newsweek’s Los Angeles bureau chief, and his wife, Pegeen.

“We weren’t your mainstream ’50s family,” she said in a Times interview. “Both my parents had wonderful, eccentric, artistic friends who treated us as friends as well. How your mind worked was considered important.”

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Even though Hollywood was essentially Mathison’s hometown, she still felt a certain thrill at being around show business.

“I remember not really caring that much about the Hollywood premieres because they were always so crowded,” she told the Toronto Globe and Mail in 1982. “But if something like a stagecoach drove by followed by a camera crew, I got really excited.”

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She went to UC Berkeley, where she interrupted her studies in political science for a job in the movies with a family friend. The friend was Francis Ford Coppola, whose children she used to baby sit. Mathison became his assistant on the set of “The Godfather, Part II.”

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She was soon hooked on film. After Coppola urged her to write, she came up with her script for “The Black Stallion.”

Over the years, Mathison became fascinated by Buddhism and Tibet. In college, she later said, she thought the story of the exiled Dalai Lama would make a great movie. She turned that story into “Kundun.”

“I am sort of famous for little-boy stories, and this was a fantastic little-boy story, a story of destiny and nurturing and tragedy, the idea of finding a 2-year-old child and then investing in him everything that is good about human beings, your people and your beliefs,” she told the New York Times in 1996.

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With the help of actor Richard Gere, a supporter of Tibetan causes, she and Ford met with the Dalai Lama in Santa Barbara in 1990. At that meeting and subsequent visits in Santa Cruz and in India, she pitched the notion of a film based on his early years.

The Tibetan spiritual leader wanted “everything to be as correct as possible,” she said in a 1998 interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer. “Each time we met I would bring him new scenes.”

Mathison’s last film is due for release in 2016.

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“The BFG,” which stands for “big friendly giant,” reunited her with Spielberg, who directed it. Based on a 1982 children’s story by Roald Dahl, the film stars Mark Rylance as the title character, with Bill Hader and Rebecca Hall.

In addition to her children and brother Dirk, Mathison’s survivors include her sisters Melinda Johnson and Stephanie Mathison; and brother Mark Mathison.

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Reply #94 posted 11/05/15 8:17am

JoeBala

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Wins 'Best of the Best' Honor

The stunning novelist and outspoken advocate of women creatives everywhere, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie,...he Best’ honor from the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction — as if readers didn’t already have reason enough to love her. Adichie’s breathtaking novel Half of a Yellow Sun won the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2007, and has now been singled out for particular recognition as the best novel recognized by the Baileys Prize in the last decade, coming in ahead of other celebrated titles like Zadie Smith’s On Beauty, Eimear McBride’s A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing, and Téa Obreht's The Tiger's Wife. If you’ve read any of Adichie’s work, you’ll know it’s an honor well-deserved.

Half of a Yellow Sun, which hit shelves back in 2006, tells the story of the Nigerian Civil War of the late 1960s, as experienced through the lives of five complexly intertwined characters. Like all of Adichie’s writing, Half of a Yellow Sun grapples with the complicated themes of war and violence, post-colonial Africa, and of course women’s rights and female empowerment. The novel was adapted into a film by the same name in 2013.

Here's what Muriel Gray, Chair of Baileys Women’s Prize Judges in 2007, had to say about Adichie's book:

While it’s sometimes pompous to call a book "important" it’s appropriate to say it of Half of a Yellow Sun. For an author, so young at the time of writing, to have been able to tell a tale of such enormous scale in terms of human suffering and the consequences of hatred and division, whilst also gripping the reader with wholly convincing characters and spell binding plot, is an astonishing feat.

Adichie, who grew up in Nigeria, is also the author of novels Purple Hibiscus, and most recently Americanah, both of which touch on themes similar to those explored in Half of a Yellow Sun. Her work has been translated into 30 languages, and in addition to her latest ‘Best of the Best’ recognition, she has won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, and the Orange Prize for Fiction.

To check out Adichie’s ‘Best of th...nce speech, or to enter for a chance to win a copy of Half of a Yellow Sun, visit the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction website.

Steven Soderbergh's 'The Girlfriend Experience' Trailer Gives Off Serious Horror Movie Vibes — VIDEO

Television as a whole is getting sexier: all it takes is a quick glance at the sex scenes on network series like How To Get Away With Murder to see that boundaries are being pushed even outside of cable. That's why it's slightly surprising that a new television series about sex workers features so little actual sex. Independent film pioneer Steven Soderbergh's new television series The Girlfriend Experience just released a trailer that is more reminiscent of a horror film than Fifty Shades of Grey. There's a dark, haunting quality in the trailer that somehow stands out more than the salacious subject matter of the actual series, and it may be what draws audiences in.

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The new anthology series, which will air its first 13-episode-season on Starz in 2016, is based on the 2009 Soderbergh-directed film of the same name. That film starred real-life adult film star Sasha Grey as Chelsea (real name Christine), a high-end escort who offers her clients the "girlfriend experience" in addition to other, not exactly legal activities. In the television series, Riley Keough will also play "Chelsea," but according to Soderbergh's interview with Variety, http://variety.com/2014/t...201242161/" href="http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/starz-orders-girlfriend-experience-series-from-steven-soderbergh-philip-fleishman-1201242161/">she will be a "new character on a new trajectory" and therefore not the same character as the one Grey portrayed in the film.

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Based off the trailer, tonally, there seems to be a shift from the film to the television series. There is a level of suspense in the trailer for the television version of The Girlfriend Experience that almost feels ominous, which differs from the film's almost blase attitude towards sex work. In the first scene in the TV trailer, Chelsea and "Ashley," another escort, are seen ordering expensive bottles of champagne to a hotel room, but the scene doesn't read as fun: there's a sense of building anxiety, even in that simple action.

There's little sexiness in this trailer, but a great deal of emotional turmoil: we can see it on Chelsea's face as her part-time job leads to trouble with her "real" life as a law student. There's something very frightening about the descent: the trailer seems to hint that something truly awful will happen to Chelsea in the series. The last line of the trailer doesn't bode well for her: when asked by someone if doing the work she does scares her, she says "no." Somehow, though, the trailer suggests that it should scare us.

Check out the trailer below:

Chris Stapleton becomes the star of the 49th annual CMA Awards

November 5, 2015 7:20 AM MST
Male Vocalist of the Year winner Chris Stapleton poses in the press room during the 49th annual CMA Awards at the Bridgestone Arena on November 4, 2015 in Nashville, Tennessee.
Photo by Jason Davis/Getty Images
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Reply #95 posted 11/05/15 8:40am

JoeBala

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Reply #96 posted 11/05/15 9:50am

JoeBala

Thanks for the recent posts ID.

Angelina Jolie reveals her inspiration for By the Sea: 'I wanted to explore grief'

Angelina Jolie Pitt’s new drama, By the Sea, promises to be a deeply personal film, but not because its portrayal of a marriage on the rocks is somehow reflective of her own relationship with costar and husband Brad Pitt.

Rather, as Jolie explains in a new video exclusive to EW and People, the 1970s-set film was largely inspired by her sorrow over losing her mother, the actress Marcheline Bertrand, who died of ovarian cancer in 2007.

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“I wrote By the Sea because I wanted to explore grief,” Jolie Pitt says. “Much of the film and my character is very much about my mother, and my feelings about my mother. When the bartender speaks, and speaks about loss, that’s how I reflect on her. That’s how I feel about her, her death.”

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The film centers on an American writer (Pitt) and his wife (Jolie Pitt) who arive in a picturesque seaside resort in France, spend time with fellow travelers and locals, and begin to confront unresolved issues in their lives. (Niels Arestrup portrays the bartender.)

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“Everybody in the film represents a different way of addressing grief,” Jolie Pitt explains. “Some have yet to experience it, some are able to come to terms with it, and some are overwhelmed by it.”

Jolie says she hopes the movie will leave audiences with something to chew on. “I love films that make you walk away thinking and still trying to put the pieces together.”

By the Sea will have its world premiere at AFI FEST on Nov. 5 before opening in theaters Nov. 13. Watch the behind-the-scenes video above.

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 reviews round-up: Critics applaud Jennifer Lawrence's Katniss

However, reviewers were frustrated filmmakers split Suzanne Collins’ trilogy into two separate features












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Liam Hemsworth, Jennifer Lawrence, and Josh Hutcherson at the Berlin premiere on Wednesday night AP

And so, The Hunger Games ‘trilogy’ has come to an end, with Mockingjay Part 2 premiering last night.

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Critics have been relatively positive about the film, many reviewers praising the bombastic set pieces while others wrote negatively about the pacing.

Both The Independent and the Telegraph awarded it four stars, Geoffrey McNab writing how Jennifer Lawrence “brings real depth to the character” while Robbie Collin noted how “the final confrontation between Katniss and Snow is worth the admission fee alone.”

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At the other end of the spectrum, The Guardian criticised the film's pace as well as the decision to split the last Hunger Games novel into two parts, as did The Hollywood Reporter, both of whom awarded the flick three stars.

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Geoffrey McNab, The Independent - 4/5

Mockingjay – Part 1 was anticlimactic. It was frustrating that the filmmakers felt compelled to split the third book in Suzanne Collins’ trilogy into two separate features. With Mockingjay – Part 2, Hunger Games gets the finale it deserves. This, though, is a film whose bleakness may take some younger fans of the series by surprise.

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Benjamin Lee, The Guardian - 3/5

The decision to turn a 390-page book into over four hours worth of screen time (and a bonus payday) has resulted in a patchy end to a franchise that started so promisingly. While the people might feel like rebelling, the game has been won – by Lionsgate.

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Robbie Collin, Telegraph - 4/5

It’s sad to see this deservedly successful franchise reach the end of its run: but here’s hoping its dissident spirit will survive in young-adult blockbusters to come.

Todd McCarthy, The Hollyw...rter - 3/5

"It gets a little tedious after all these years," admits Katniss Everdeen about her life's obligations in her final line of dialogue after 547 accumulated minutes of The Hunger Games films. It's hard not to agree with her, nor to imagine that there are too many people — Jennifer Lawrence included — who will be sorry to see this overdrawn series end.

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Brian Viner, Daily Mail - 3/5

It’s a relentlessly dark tale, with nothing to laugh about except for the studio money men, who will be rubbing their hands with glee.

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Jennifer Lawrence, right, reprises the role of Katniss Everdeen for the last time

Peter Debruge, Variety

Though the script adheres to Collins’ novel, everything that follows feels extraneous, with a succession of endings straining the patience somewhat. While the series remarkably managed to sustain its cast and credibility across four increasingly ambitious features, Francis Lawrence doesn’t quite recognize when it’s game over.

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Tom Huddleston, TimeOut London - 4/5

Some will find the wrongfooting nature of the final scenes off-putting, and the pace can be ponderous. But it's genuinely powerful, thanks in large part to a peerless cast: Lawrence has rarely been better, and she’s matched – unexpectedly – by Hutcherson, delivering a peculiarly soulful turn.

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Simon Reynolds, Digital Spy - 4/5

Mockingjay - Part 2 may not have the relentless pace or quip-heavy approach of, say, a Marvel blockbuster, but what it does offer is an emotional gut-punch of a film that's a fitting send-off for one of modern-day cinema's great heroines.

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Allison Williams Poses Topless for Harper by Harper's Bazaar, Talks About Her "Rustic Preppy" Style

Allison Williams, Harper by Harper's BazaarMark Abrahams

Allison Williams has shown some skin on her hit series Girls, and now she's taking her top off for Harper by Harper's Bazaar.

Brian Williams' gorgeous daughter poses in Coach leather pants, but don't mistake this extreme look for her everyday style. Allison, who recently tied the knot, would prefer to describe her looks as "timeless" and has fashion icons like all of us. "When it comes to my style icons, I've always had a thing for the K's: Keaton. Kelly. Kruger. Kate. Katharine," she explains.

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"They all represent sophisticated fashion that's also full of life. After all, clothes are fun— it's dress-up for adults. I'd like to call my style easy, timeless, and rustic preppy (if that's a thing), which most often translates as endless button-downs, a chic pair of boots, a good variety of sweaters, and my staple—jeans."

Allison Williams Harpers Bazaar Magazine November 2015

She might be spotted most often in jeans and a button down, but when it's time to exercise the Peter Pan actress has a secret: Spanx. Surprise!

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"This is my gift to you: Spanx makes the most incredible exercise spandex," she reveals. "I wear them almost every day. They have a little control top, so they're flattering. I'll often stay in exercise clothes all day, which I know is a faux pas."

PHOTOS: Allison Williams' best looks

Allison Williams, Harper by Harper's BazaarMark Abrahams

Given her abs that are out of control in the spread, it's probably OK to say that this actress does not need control top. With her healthy diet and exercise habits, Williams is in tip-top shape. Much of that, however, has a lot to do when she orders in food because it turns out she cannot cook for the life of her!

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"I am the world's worst cook. Not only am I bad at it, but I also have some kind of inability to learn," she confesses. "When I cook, the salad is done first and is soggy by the time you eat, the pasta is al dente, but not in a good way.

And I'm perpetually worried that the meat is going to poison everyone, so it ends up being black.

"It's a nightmare, so I just order in."

PHOTO: See Allison Willia...honeymoon!

Allison Williams, Harper by Harper's BazaarMark Abrahams

Allison and her husband, Ricky Van Veen, were married in September in a ceremony that was officiated by Tom Hanks. Although the couple spent their honeymoon in Italy, it appears that Allison didn't pick up any tricks when it comes to cooking pasta. No worries, Allison. Having a great time is all that matters, which it sounds like she did.

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"It's the most magical country. I love to nerd out on a trip historically, so I get a guide go around do all the things," she told E! News. "I studied archeology and anthropology a bit in college, so to stand in Pompeii, it's like 'Ugh!'"

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Reply #97 posted 11/05/15 10:27am

JoeBala

Who Is Chris Stapleton: 5 Things You Need to Know About the CMA King

The darkhorse musician who dominated Wednesday’s CMA Awards has actually been a Nashville treasure for years

By Rolling Stone November 5, 2015
Chris Stapleton Chris Stapleton won three awards of three nominations at the 2015 CMA Awards. John Shearer/WireImage

Chris Stapleton swept the CMA Awards last night, winning more trophies than any other act while stealing the show with a pair of country-soul du...Timberlake. Already a household name in Nashville's songwriting community, where he's been penning tunes for A-listers like George Strait, Luke Bryan and Adele since 2001, the newly-turned solo artist is still something of a mystery to the general public, leading to plenty of "Who is Chris Stapleton?" queries on social media today. The answer is long, but goes goes something like this: Stapleton is a 37-year-old Kentucky native who's written a string of Number One hits for other artists, was once in the popular bluegrass group the SteelDrivers, is married to fellow country singer (and chart-topping songwriter) Morgane Hayes, briefly toured the Bible Belt as frontman of southern cock-rock group the Jompson Brothers, landed a well-deserved record contract as a solo artist, recorded Traveller with producer Dave Cobb and, in the half-year since the album's release, has been making a rapid (and well-deserved) transition from under-the-radar musician to CMA-winning headliner. Below, we break down Chris Stapleton's history in more detail.

1. He's been to band camp. From 2008-2010, Stapleton was the lead singer of the SteelDrivers, a blistering gut-bucket-bluegrass quintet founded by some of Nashville’s most gifted behind-the-scenes players. Stapleton’s supernoval voice and timeless lyrics helped make the band a favorite of traditionalists and critics alike, not to mention any fan who stumbled across them. Two albums were released (a self-titled debut and its follow up, Reckless) and the band earned three Grammy nominations. Stapleton left the band in 2010 to focus on family and songwriting, and was replaced by another outstanding singer, Gary Nichols, but was soon coaxed back into the spotlight. In 2010 he founded the Jompson Brothers, a Southern rock outfit built on barely-veiled sex and drugs references like "Ride My Rocket" and "Secret Weapon." The group released one album and toured briefly as an opening act for Zac Brown Band.

Chris Stapleton Chris Stapleton and wife Morgane attend the 2015 CMA Awards. Taylor Hill/Getty Images

2. He should've been nominated for CMA Duo of the Year, too. During his first week as a Nashville resident, Stapleton signed a published deal with Sea Gayle Music. It was in the Sea Gayle office that he first bumped into Morgane Hayes, a fellow singer and top-shelf songwriter who scored a big hit with Carrie Underwood's "Don't Forget to Remember Me." Married since 2007, the two have become perhaps the greatest unsung duo in modern country, with Morgane serving as Stapleton's harmony partner, onstage foil, touring partner and all-around muse. He's a humble guy during his live performances, rarely making a big show of his own ability to skyrocket a melody into the stratosphere. It's Morgane's physical reactions — her poise during the ballads and wide-eyed, full-bodied applause whenever her husband hits a high note — that remind you just how amazing Stapleton really is. And he's better with her.

3. His debut solo album was an instant classic. Stapleton's Album of the Year-winning Traveller is also his debut as a solo artist, and it encapsulates everything that makes him one of the most powerful and unique voices in country music today: gravely, soulful and full of songs that ring like instant classics without ever resting too deeply in the past. With a voice like his, that can hit steeple-high notes in one breath and rumble like a twangy Ray Charles the next, he could make most anything sound good – but, paired with his stellar songwriting and ingenious knack for bending modern melody around Nashville tradition, Traveller is the complete package. And, thanks to smart production from Dave Cobb, it never sounds too perfect, either. Just listen to "Sometimes I Cry," the last track of the LP that was recorded in one take in front of a live audience at RCA Studio A: It rips your heart apart while simultaneously mending it, Patsy Cline's "I Fall to Pieces" dipped in Sam Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come." And the change is Traveller.

Chris Stapleton Justin Timberlake and Chris Stapleton perform on the 2015 CMA Awards. Rick Diamond/Getty Images

4. He and Justin Timberlake are musical (and parental) kindred spirits. "We talk on occasion — 'Hey man, how's your kid?', and all that stuff," Stapleton, a father of two, tells Rolling Stone Country of his friendship with new dad Timberlake. On one of those phone calls, the country crooner brought up the idea of singing together on the CMA Awards. . . that is, if he was offered a performance slot. It was an easy yes, as he and Timberlake had bee...or a while. So the two had Wednesday night's CMA plan in place before the nominations even rolled in. "He's one of the greatest musical talents in this world," Stapleton says of Timberlake. The feeling is mutual: "REAL music fans already know. So mainstream: @ChrisStapleton Remember that name," the pop star tweeted last year.

5. Songwriting has more than kept the lights on. After scoring 50 album cuts, Stapleton got his first single – and first Number One – with Josh Turner's "Your Man." Other chart-topping hits include "Never Wanted Nothing More," for Kenny Chesney, Darius Rucker's "Come Back Song," "Drink a Beer," by Luke Bryan and Thomas Rhett's "Crash and Burn." Tim McGraw, George Strait, Lee Ann Womack and Alan Jackson have also cut his songs. "If It Hadn't Been for Love," which Stapleton wrote for his former band, the SteelDrivers, was also recorded by global superstar Adele for a deluxe edition of her 21 LP.

Chris Stapleton on Why Stunning New Album 'Traveller' Isn't for Kids

"I wanted to make a record for grown-ups to sit around and listen to," says the singer, whose outlaw image belies a good guy's heart

By Joseph Hudak May 7, 2015
Chris Stapleton For his new album 'Traveller,' Chris Stapleton set out to make a country record for grown-ups. Becky Fluke

"I like songs that make me feel tough. Like 'Back in Black.' You want to hear it again and get in a fight," says Chris Stapleton, seated in his management company's office next to his wife and onstage partner Morgane, who breaks up laughing at her husband's bravado in describing his song "Outlaw State of Mind."

"But not literally!" he quickly adds.

The almost sheepish addendum exposes the inherent dichotomy that is Stapleton, who this week released his debut solo LP Traveller, the most buzzed-about and fawned-over album since Sturgill Simpson's Metamodern Sounds in Country Music. On the surface, with his Jamey Johnson beard, Johnny Paycheck hatband and snakeskin guitar strap (a buddy killed a rattler and made it for him special), he cuts an imposing figure, while his window-shaking voice, with all its volume and growls, could scare off burglars. But sit with him a while and the soft-spoken Stapleton reveals himself to be the nicest guy in the room.

Such polarity extends all the way into the Kentucky native's career too. While Traveller is full of the kind of traditional, organic country that purists long for, he's also written some of pop country's most radio-friendly hits: Thomas Rhett's "Crash and Burn," Darius Rucker's "Come Back Song," Kenny Chesney's "Never Wanted Nothing More" and Luke Bryan's "Drink a Beer," among them.

"I'm always trying to do as many different things as I can, just so when one is not doing so hot, maybe the other is still there," he says of juggling his roles as ace Nashville songwriter, in-demand backing vocalist (he most recently sang with Rhett on "Crash and Burn") and, now, solo artist.

With Traveller, however, the "debut artist" — at 37, he admits he's having a hard time with those words — finally has his own body of work on which to focus his many talents. He wrote or co-wrote all but two of the album's 14 tracks, like the stunning title song, the on-the-nose "Might As Well Get Stoned" and the rough and tough "Outlaw State of Mind." The two outside songs he did cut are bona fide classics: the oft-recorded "Tennessee Whiskey" and Charlie Daniels' "Was It 26," written by Don Sampson.

"I'm playing electric guitar, mandolin, acoustic guitar. I'm singing on it, singing harmony with myself in some places on it. It could not be more me," he says of making an album his own way, with only his touring band and producer Dave Cobb. "It's really easy to go out there — and I'm not knocking anyone — and hire guys to do all these things for you. But for me, this is a great representation of what you can come and see live, and possibly connect with."

Going against the Music Row standard and using his own band, including wife and backing vocalist Morgane, made the experience more comfortable for Stapleton, says Cobb, the producer behind Simpson's Metamodern Sounds and Jason Isbell's Southeastern.

"It felt more like a great hangout with your buddies," he says. "We booked a studio for noon and would start piling in at 1, 2, 3 o'clock, just hanging out and talking a bunch of shit. We'd order dinner, have a few drinks and it'd be about 8 at night. We'd record for an hour and it would be two or three master takes. It was really Chris's idea and it worked flawlessly. It was the right time to make those songs. He had a great sense of finding the moment. We probably wasted a lot of money we didn't need to waste, but the tracks came out amazing."

Courtesy of Mercury Nashville

Indeed, Traveller is excellent and, gliding along on Cobb's breezy production, is an effortless listen. The album feels like a familiar classic, one that draws heavily on the late-Seventies sound Stapleton adores.

"If somebody tells me it sounds dated, I'd say that's great, as long as the date is 1978. My favorite things are from then, and why wouldn't you want to try to be like those things? Inevitably, it's just going to sound like me anyway," he says.

But for all its relaxed vibe, Traveller contains some heavy shit. "The Devil Named Music" calls out the hell that can be living on the road, "Might As Well Get Stoned" rings with resignation and "Sometimes I Cry" is tortured blues. But the album's true weeper and emotional core is "Daddy Doesn't Pray Anymore," which Stapleton wrote after taking note of his normally devout father skipping grace before a meal late in his life. (He died in October 2013.)

"It is in fact a weeper," agrees Stapleton, with a long pause. "If you've lost a parent or somebody that was instrumental in trying to lead you down the right path or raise you up in the world, that one will get you."

"Oh my god, that melted my face," says Cobb of the song's recording session, one of a few tracks Stapleton cut outdoors on the front lawn of a Nashville-area facility known as the Castle. The bulk of Traveller was recorded at historic RCA Studio A. "He had lost his father a year prior and it was hard for him to make it through it. We only did a couple takes, and the take that's on the record, he started choking up. You can hear it in the track. He was feeling it and everybody had goose bumps just witnessing. He was more than loaded with emotion that day."

While Stapleton is aware of, appreciates and has even helped create the populist fare of country radio, he has his own distinct view of who country music should appeal to. It's an outlook that helps explain songs like "Daddy Doesn't Pray Anymore" and "Might As Well Get Stoned."

"When I first got to town, the second guy I ever wrote with was Jerry Salley, who I wrote 'Outlaw State of Mine' with. He said, 'Man, country music is not for kids.' And I don't think it is," says Stapleton. "I wanted to make a pretty grown-up record, meant for grown-ups to sit around and listen to."

And at the end of the day, he doesn't care if some folks don't love Traveller.

"I'm a fan of polarization. If you make something that is palatable to everybody, it's like making vanilla ice cream, and I think we have enough of that," he says somewhat gruffly.

Until that good-guy side inevitably rears its head.

"But I'm not trying to insult anybody — music or ice cream."

Walking the Line: An Interview with Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton is one of those guys that has been around for long enough that, even if you don't think you know his music, you probably do. As a songwriter, he's had a bunch of cuts and a handful of hits, courtesy of artists like Kenny Chesney, Luke Bryan, and George Strait. As a band man, he spent some years in the SteelDrivers and some more years in the Jompson Brothers. Now, as a solo artist, Stapleton has debuted in the number two seat on the country album chart with Traveller, a set of “gritty narratives of grim determination and aching love, presented with courage and candor.” Stapleton's soulfully rocking take on country music sidles up alongside Tim McGraw as naturally as it does Sturgill Simpson and Willie Nelson, carving out a middle ground that may well suit the mainstreamers, the upstarts, and the outlaws, alike.

Congratulations on your first week sales numbers. Very well done, sir.

Thank you very much. Nobody's more surprised than I am! [Laughs]

[Laughs] And, congratulations, I guess, on being this year's savior of country music. I'm sure Sturgill [Simpson] and Brandy [Clark] are happy to share that burden with you.

Yeah, I suppose so. [Laughs]

What goes through your mind when people hurl those things your way?

Certainly it's nice when somebody says something like that, but it's not anything you can take too seriously because you just make records and it's not like you're trying to do anything ... I don't know. [Laughs] It's not anything that I try to think about too much because it's just things people say.

Well, as a songwriter who walks the contemporary/traditional line in country, what's the trick to that balancing act? Are you accessing different parts of your creativity depending on the job at hand?

Not necessarily. I don't try to approach things any differently, songwriting-wise, regardless of what I'm doing. I try to write whatever the best thing is that I'm doing that day. If I'm working on a pop song, I'm working on a pop song to the best of my ability. If I'm working on a bluegrass song, it's the same thing. They're not really different parts of the brain. They may have different elements involved, musically, but I don't think they're all that different. It's all blues-based art forms. It all stems from there and, if you keep that in mind, it doesn't really change a whole lot.

chris stapleton

You've had a lot of cuts. So, besides your own, whose voice do you think translates your songs the best? Is there someone out there you'd really love to sing one of your tunes?

Well, that's a song-specific question. I think there's always a marriage of singer and song that's an important marriage. I couldn't say that there's one person that I think sings a song I wrote that I like better than another person who sings a song I wrote because it would be very song-based. When those things happen the right way, that's what can elevate a song and make a song something special, if the right singer's with that song. And vice versa. So, I don't know that there's one person I could go with. I don't have a Jimmy Webb-Glen Campbell situation where I'm like, “Yeah, Glen Campbell sings my songs and that works every time.” [Laughs]

[Laughs] Yeah, yeah. With Traveller, you worked with your band and Dave Cobb. Some producers would've forced your hand toward using session players. How important is it to let go of the search for technical perfection in favor of the soulfulness and authenticity that comes with using your guys?

I think there's a thing that happens when you play with guys for a certain amount of time that you can't replicate even with the “greatest players in the world.” If you don't know each other and you don't have a sense of each other, that takes time to develop. So I think, if you can get a band that is your band and at least the core of it are guys that you're on the road playing shows with and you know on a personal level, it always becomes a better thing. That's just me, personally. Other guys have other opinions of things, but that's the way I prefer to do it. It's more comfortable for me that way.

Do you road-test the songs before you go in the studio?

Not necessarily. Certainly, I've played them … some of them ... [Laughs] in a rehearsal. But, no, I try not to think about it too much. We got down to a list of songs that we had to record, but all those songs didn't make it and some songs that weren't on the list wound up being recorded in the room because we didn't approach an evening in the studio with anything other than, “Hey, we're going to wait until the spirit moves us, then we're going to play whatever song we feel like playing, at that point in time.” That was kind of the framework of how we recorded this record. We enjoyed it, being that kind of loose and casual. I think you can hear that, too.

It's the same thing as the familiarity with the guys. It's a different level of comfort in a recording space that you can get when you don't have, “Alright, we have three hours and these are the songs we're recording. You guys have never met each other or barely know each other. Let's play and try to make some magic happen.” [Laughs] That's a lot of pressure.

[Laughs] Cue the magic!

[Laughs] Yeah.

chris stapleton

I feel like this record sits just about halfway between the SteelDrivers and the Jompson Brothers. Almost like you swung from one end to the other, then leveled back out. Is that what you were going for or is it more your natural resting place?

I don't know that I'm ever going for one thing or another. I'm just going for trying to make whatever music feels like the right thing to do at the time. This is certainly where we are as a band and where I am, song-wise. It's the music I wanted to make. Certainly all those things -- the previous incarnations of music that I've made -- those things are always going to be present in any music that I make, I think. And I think it's easy, if you've heard those other things, to hear them in there, but maybe not necessarily if this was the first thing you heard.

I caught your first show at the Cannery Ballroom recently and several things occurred to me while watching you play. First was your relationship with your wife, Morgane. Your bond is so obvious because you don't just look at each other; you look to each other. What's it like having her own stage with you -- center stage, even?

It's always a fun thing. We lean on each other, not just on stage, but everywhere else. We're kind of partners in every sense of the word.

She was making you drink water.

[Laughs] Yeah, well, she wasn't making me drink water. She just knew I needed some water and was bringing it to me. She's good for that, for sure -- knowing what I need and helping me figure it out.

The second a-ha came during your whiskey trilogy. What's the difference, in country music, between beer songs and whiskey songs? And what's maybe the difference in their songwriters?

[Laughs] You know, I've never been asked that question. And I don't know that there's a difference, necessarily, in the songwriters other than one likes beer and one likes whiskey, maybe. I don't know. I've never really thought about it as being something that you would differentiate. But, I guess maybe there is. Maybe the whiskey songwriters are a little darker. The beer guys might have just a little more of the “Hey, let's have a party” vibe. And the whiskey guys are lost in some kind of self-deprecation, I think.

[Laughs] That's kind of what I came to. The beer guys are more from “bro country” and the whiskey guys are more traditionalists, it feels like.

I've never drawn that line, but I guess you could. [Laughs]

chris stapleton

The third thought actually came from a friend: If that hat of yours could talk, what kind of stories would it tell?

You know, I don't exactly know. I bought that hat off eBay. It's from the 1970s and somebody had it in their closet. It was brand new, in somebody's closet, never been worn. I had a hat something like it that Charlie 1 Horse made for me for the Grammys when I was in the SteelDrivers. I wound up giving that hat away to a soldier at a show one time, thinking I could have another one made. But they couldn't -- they lost the mold or something and couldn't make another one. So this hat I have now, like I said, is one I found on eBay because I went without a hat for a while.

I didn't even know I could wear a hat, for the longest time, until a friend of mine named Jimmy Stewart, who I wrote “Might As Well Get Stoned” with on the record … he always wore a cowboy hat. I was like, “Man, I just can't wear cowboy hats.” He said, “That's just because you haven't found the right hat.” So, I'll say to anybody ever looking to wear a hat, “Man, you just haven't found the right hat.” It's true. A hat's kind of like a guitar or anything else. Once you find one that's yours, it's yours and you should stick with it.

[Laughs] Good advice. So, who knows … it's going to tell a lot of tales of loneliness, just sitting in the closet for all those years.

Yeah, it probably spent 25 years in the closet. Somebody got it on a whim.

That's so sad because it's like a guitar not being played.

Absolutely ... a guitar under a bed somewhere that's a good one somebody got thinking they were gonna play it. They went on vacation to Arizona, bought a hat, came home with it, and were like, “Man, I can't wear this hat!” [Laughs] So they stuck it in the closet for 25 or 30 years until it made its way to eBay.

It was waiting for you. It was your hat all along.

It was my hat all along. Absolutely.



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Team Flash confronts the villainous Zoom in new Flash clip. thumbs up!

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Reply #99 posted 11/06/15 7:08am

JoeBala

Katy Perry, Sting Stun at David Lynch's Meditation Benefit Concert

Jerry Seinfeld, Angelique Kidjo, Jim James and others also perform and explain relaxation technique's importance to them at New York's Carnegie Hall

By Kory Grow November 5, 2015
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Katy Perry performs at the David Lynch's Meditation Benefit Concert in New York, NY on November 4th, 2015 Joe Papeo

Minutes after an uproarious Jerry Seinfeld performance at New York City's Carnegie Hall on Wednesday night, silence overtook the sold-out crowd. At the request of the evening's host, George Stephanopoulos, and his guest onstage, meditation teacher Bob Roth, the nearly 3,000 people who'd gathered for the David Lynch Foundation's benefit concert, Change Begins Within, managed to close their eyes and mostly shut up for three minutes. Only a few cell phones pinged and a handful of people coughed, as those gathered either meditated — the Blue Velvet director's organization advocates transcendental meditation for stress control — or simply respected the silence.

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That short period, however, was the only quiet moment of the evening. In addition to Seinfeld's comedy, Katy Perry, Sting, Angélique Kidjo, Jim James and classical guitarist Sharon Isbin each performed short, lively sets. And since each of the performers actively practices transcendental meditation, they also spoke to its power.

"I started TMing about five years ago, and it's changed my life," Perry, who taught transcendental meditation to her touring crew last year, told the crowd. "It's changed the way I've thought about things and it's changed my attitude. You know how you have a crappy day and something just doesn't want to go right? I always excuse myself for 20 minutes and then I'm back."

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The evening began with Seinfeld riffing on what a hassle it is to turn up to something like the concert, even as a performer. Its inherent Seinfeld-iness made it all the more unexpected when he got serious to talk about how he'd been meditating routinely for more than four decades.

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"It's been the greatest companion technique of living that I've ever come across, and I'm thrilled to be part of this movement that seems to have really been reinvigorated by Bob [Roth] and David Lynch," he said. "I would do anything that I could to promote it in the world, because I think it's the greatest thing as a life tool, as a work tool and just making things make sense."

Jerry Seinfeld Jerry Seinfeld performs at the David Lynch's Meditation Benefit Concert in New York, NY on November 4th, 2015 Joe Papeo

After a short, ponderous flamenco interlude by Isbin that followed the meditation break, Kidjo came out, dressed in pink, white and orange, with an orchestra for the evening's liveliest performance, a lengthy rendition of her stirring 2002 tune "Afrika," which she turned into a sing-along. "Just because we are talking about meditation doesn't mean you have to be quiet," she assured the crowd, which she roused into singing loudly. Midway into the tune, she left the stage and reappeared in front, slowly working her way up the aisles, wiggling her shoulders and high-fiving concertgoers in the expensive seats up front.

Lion-maned My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James, who has been meditating for six years, came out in his finest black Nick Cave-tailored three-piece (with a pink pocket square), bringing the mood back to more somber tones. At the request of music director Rob Mathes, who'd been impressed by his performance at the Lynch tribute concert in Los Angeles earlier this year, he sang his solo tune "State of the Art," which uses technology as a metaphor for complicated modern living. He played a searing guitar solo toward the end, but the low energy of the song itself slowed down the evening.

Luckily, the walking, singing independent energy source known as Sting was on hand to liven things up. The concertgoers up front in the pricier seats grabbed their cell phones to take photos of the 64-year-old former Police frontman, who ambled into his jazzy solo tune "Englishman in New York" with a swagger that went well with his barely buttoned shirt. The singer arched his body back and belted the 1988 hit as if he'd written it that day, and he sang two more solo numbers with similar aplomb: "Shape of My Heart," which featured Isbin on acoustic and "Fields of Gold."

For his final number, "Fragile," he decided to play guitar himself and recapitulated the evening's theme. "I'm in a very stressful situation right now," he said. "I'm about to sit in this chair that Sharon has just vacated and play the guitar. It's a high level of stress. Luckily, I've been meditating for a while."

Sting Sting performs at the David Lynch's Meditation Benefit Concert in New York, NY on November 4th, 2015 Joe Papeo

The evening's final performance, an unusual set of re-orchestrated Perry hits, showed the diverse appeal of Lynch's foundation. Throughout the pop singer's five-song set, the audience up front remained seated, clapped politely and took the occasional cellphone pic, while the crowd in the balconies cheered loudly.

The singer, who wore a pale pink gown, opened the set with a slightly down-tempo, emotional rendition of "Roar" that ended with her stretching out her arm with a finger raised. The orchestra then struck a haunting balance with a hip-hop drumbeat as they kicked into what became a space-y version of "Teenage Dream."

After telling the crowd about what a gift transcendental meditation had been to her, she sang "Wide Awake" and "Dark Horse," the latter of which found her striking poses with violinist Margot, who improvised on the tune's melody for a solo. Perry's set ended with four pale-pink ballerinas tiptoeing out to a lush,

harp-adorned take on "Firework." With each "oh-oh-oh," the dancers turned their bodies to the music. By the time Perry took her bows, the audience up front stood for an ovation.

The night ended with words from the foundation's namesake, David Lynch, who was not present for the concert, since he's currently filming a new season of Twin Peaks. Nevertheless, he sent in a video of himself on some dusty road, maybe in another dimension. "Transcendental meditation is life-transforming for the good," he said. "It works if you're a human being. Every human being has a treasury within, and transcendental meditation gets you there easily and effortlessly and it changes life for the good." The night's performers may have proved his point for him.

Sara Bareilles dishes on 'Songs From Waitress'

Elysa Gardner, USA TODAY 1:24 p.m. EST November 3, 2015

NEW YORK -- Pouring herself a cup of herbal tea at a downtown restaurant, Sara Bareilles is the picture of serene composure. You'd never guess that she's been working like a maniac for the better part of two years.

The singer/songwriter of empowering hits such as Brave and Love Song began unveiling the fruits of that labor last summer. The stage musical Waitress -- an adaptation of the 2007 Adrienne Shelly film, with music and lyrics by Bareilles -- opened at Cambridge's American Repertory Theater in August. In October, Simon & Schuster published Sounds Like Me: My Life (so far) in Song, a collection of "confessional" essays.

Now comes the release of What's Inside: Songs From Waitress, featuring tunes from the musical -- which is due on Broadway next spring, with previews scheduled to start March 25 for a April 26 opening.

"It was an act of self-indulgence," Bareilles, 35, says of the album, out Nov. 6. "I couldn't quite pass off the show without getting a chance to sing these songs myself."


Sara Bareilles's new album, out Nov. 6, features songs from her musical, 'Waitress.' (Photo: Shervin Lainez)

Bareilles was first approached about the book and musical during the same period -- ironically, while taking a "mini-hiatus" from recording and touring. "I was hanging out with my sister," she recalls, when she was contacted by her literary agent and by Diane Paulus, the Tony Award-winning director of recent Broadway revivals of Pippin and Hair, regarding Waitress.

Though a fan of musicals since childhood, with favorites ranging from Oklahoma! to Chess, Bareilles had never seen the film Waitress before. Watching it, she was immediately attracted to the heroine, Jenna (played by Keri Russell), an inventive pie maker trapped in an abusive marriage.

"I really loved how flawed and messy Jenna is," says Bareilles. "I liked that she was a soulful, creative person trying to find an authentic way to express herself." She also found "so much natural similarity between the character and myself that it wasn't a stretch to find my way in" to eventually record the songs herself. "She's someone who has a great capacity for love, but feels very broken sometimes."

Bareilles had first seen the actress who would play Jenna on stage, Jessie Mueller, in Mueller's Tony-winning performance in the title role of Beautiful: The Carole King Musical. "She was so grounded and graceful, and just had so much heart," Bareilles says of Mueller, who has become a good friend.

Jessie Mueller plays the lead role in the new musical

Jessie Mueller plays the lead role in the new musical 'Waitress,' with a score by Sara Bareilles, set to open on Broadway next spring. (Photo: Jeremy Daniel)

Both Waitress's leading lady and its composer/lyricist earned good notices in Cambridge, though Bareilles hasn't read them. "I don't really read reviews. My theory is that the good ones inflate your ego, and the bad ones can just ruin you. I've found it's more productive to stay in the room with what I've created, rather than worry about how it's being perceived."

That perspective did not come without a few hurdles. In Sounds Like Me, Bareilles recalls personal and professional challenges stemming back to her struggles with weight as a child. "I have two young nieces, and I can remember so vividly what I went through, with body image and peer pressure," says the singer, whose figure is now slim and chiseled. "I really want to be someone who can send positive messages, who can encourage them to love themselves as best they can."

Working on Waitress made Bareilles realize how much she herself has grown since her 20s. "I'm about to have my first Broadway musical. When I made my first album, I was so overwhelmed that I don't think I was able to enjoy it. It's nice to be in a place where I can create something new and realize how precious it is."

New music reviews, news & interviews

CD: James Morrison - Higher Than Here

Beige soul-folk star finds a little edge in an unlikely place

Morrison: smooth

James Morrison is undeniably one of pop’s more likeable and unassuming recent stars. Influential too: his laid-back sound has paved the way for recent megastars like George Ezra and Ed Sheeran. How much that constitutes a good or bad thing, though, divides opinion. Some find Morrison's blend of folk and soul relaxing yet intimate; others have said it's so bland it has its own zen. All, then, agree the amiable singer is short on grit. Maybe Higher Than Here can offer something a little more raw?

The album starts off promisingly enough. “Demons” – an anthem to positive thinking – breezes in with a funky hip hop, autotune motif that feels urban. The main vocals soon take over with a melody that exudes a credible sense of emotion. So far, so good. Unfortunately, it’s largely downhill from here. Over the next 14 tracks, faux-gospel verses alternate with overblown choruses to create a big sound that amounts to very little. Even when Morrison sings of real heartache – as on “Too Late for Lullabies” – he sounds about as deep-down untroubled as James Blunt or Tom Odell.

The irony, though, is that Morrison isn’t so middle-class and privileged. He's struggled to get where he is, which makes it all the more mysterious why he chooses to play things quite so safe. Higher Than Here may amplify Morrison's American soul credentials, but it never threatens to actually move you. Nor does it ever comes close to pulling off the trick Paolo Nutini did with Caustic Love of melding a full-on commercial sound with real gutsiness. Still, there is some light at the end of the tunnel. It comes in those few moments where Morrison starts to depart from his "easy" trademark sound. "Right Here" for instance is so R'n'B you can almost imagine Beyoncé singing it. Remarkably, that rather suits him.

New music reviews, news & interviews

CD: Björk - Vulnicura Strings

Darkly intense textures of voice and strings repay close listening

No reputational repair work required

For an album exploring the theme of heartbreak in wintry, coiling musical phrases, peppered with stark, fractured lyrics, the reception of Björk’s original Vulnicura was ever so slightly lukewarm. Her spacious and probing compositions were admired rather than adored, her analysis of breakup seeming to have a steely, cerebral edge. So it was a brave decision to adapt these songs for strings, an alteration that’s unlikely to make them any more accessible.

Losing the rhythmic texture offered by the percussion, which is only partially replaced by a chopping string pulse on pieces like “Notget”, has given the compositions a contemplative if rather meandering feel, and some of them sound as though they belong on a John Adams recording. “Mouth Mantra” has an especially operatic sound, with samples of Björk’s voice overlaid to sound like an operatic dialogue, over the strings’ rhythmic cycles.

Force of emotion is the only thing carrying the song forward

Recording an album with strings used to be a popular entertainer’s ploy to touch up a threadbare artistic reputation with a lush veneer. Yet Björk is no doubt above generic distinctions, nor does she require any reputational repair work. The original feature of this album, then, is its exploration of string and vocal texture, from the quasi-operatic to the delicate balladry of “Stonemilker” or folkloric strangeness of “Notget”. There’s little melody, and the narrative is convoluted and bleak: many tracks, especially “Black Lake” (played on viola organista, an electronic, belt-driven string instrument) have passages of minimalistic stillness, and the force of emotion is the only thing carrying the song forward.

The break-up in question was a protracted and intense affair. On the quieter tracks, the lyrics are clearly enunciated, which adds to the strenuous and highly wrought character of this work. It’s not music to sing in the bath, or anywhere else apart from the therapist’s couch, and there’s little light relief. For all that, and the arguably limited dynamic range of a collection focused so closely on upper strings and Björk’s vocal register, this collection has a rare depth and fascination that can be found almost nowhere else.

New music reviews, news & interviews

CD: Sara Bareilles - What's Inside: Songs from Waitress

New album is more soundtrack than standalone pop

Waiting tables: Sara Bareilles

A pop album drawn from a musical could be off-putting to some. Images of Glee spring to mind or a tweenypop version of Idina Menzel – both of which seem quite a departure from Sara Bareilles’ hugely popular hits "Love Song", "Gravity" or most recently, "Brave".

But for her fourth studio album – a follow up to 2013’s The Blessed Unrest – Bareilles has taken tracks from the upcoming musical, Waitress, set to hit Broadway in April 2016, for which she wrote both the music and lyrics. The result is a bit of a pick ‘n’ mix: I know I will play my favourite couple of songs on repeat until I know all the words, but others I will ignore completely.

It is soft, warm and enveloping, like the comfy red velvet seats of an auditorium

"She Used To Be Mine" is undoubtedly the most downloadable track of the album. Ballady and homespun, you don’t need any knowledge of the musical to appreciate Bareilles’ rich velvety sway lamenting an imperfect someone you used to be, musing on reflections of the past to a melodic piano and heart-twanging base. It is soft, warm and enveloping, like the comfy red velvet seats of an auditorium.

However, some of the other songs seem to be more specific to the characters and plot of the musical – "Everything Changes" is confusing without the conjoining story and the title track, "What’s Inside", stirs heartfelt domesticity and fragile emotions into kitchen-baking, but "Lulu’s Pie Song" is a bit too heavy on the icing sugar and butter. "When He Sees Me" is very much a musical theatre number – an overly punctuated inner monologue.

Overall, Songs from Waitress is very easy listening with a few big hitters. The music is intelligently written and the lyrics are intimate and witty, if perhaps too full of story to make sense without seeing the actual musical.

Music Review: Sara Bareilles – ‘What’s Inside: Songs from Waitress’

Amid the crowd of pop songstresses who’ve emerged in recent years, Sara Bareilles has stood out for her ability to craft songs with appeal for adults as well as teens and tweens. So it’s not entirely shocking that in this age of successful pop-Broadway crossovers – think Cyndi Lauper and Kinky Boots or Duncan Sheik and Spring Awakening – Bareilles would be tapped to write the score for a stage show. Waitress, based on the 2007 film by Adrienne Shelly starring Keri Russell, ran recently at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, MA and is scheduled to open on Broadway on April 24, 2016 starring Tony Award winner Jessie Mueller. Well in advance comes What’s Inside: Songs from Waitress, an album of songs from the show sung by Bareilles herself.

The atmospheric miniature “What’s Inside” opens the disc and announces right away with its snaky melody that we’re in for something rooted in pop music but thoughtful and theatrical too. It gives way to the dance-pop harmonies of the sunny boogie-woogie number “Opening Up,” followed by the appealing Sondheim-lite quirk of “Door Number Three,” theatrical in a smooth pop mode.

Bareilles is in wonderful voice, clear and solid, with an honest feeling and artistic integrity.

While the songs with their character-based lyrics do touch off imaginings of the corresponding stage numbers, I didn’t feel any need to imagine “Broadway” singers (e.g. Mueller) singing them. Bareilles does them beautifully. Case in point: “She Used To Be Mine,” a strong, soulful ballad, sung with a sweet combination of torchy heft and emotional delicacy.

“When He Sees Me” is pure theater and more of a narrative piece, again with a touch of Sondheimesque angularity. “Everything Changes” is a typical inspiring closing number, yet smile-inducing in spite of itself.

I’m impressed by Bareilles’s ability to filter theatrical-music tropes through a singer-songwriter sensibility to create songs that are imagistic both lyrically and in their abstract musicality, even when you don’t know the storyline (and I don’t, having not seen the ART production and with very little memory of the movie, a romance about a diner waitress, a pregnancy, and a pie contest). I don’t know what character is singing songs like the gentle “Soft Place to Land” or the tongue-twisting “Never Ever Getting Rid of Me” – and it doesn’t matter. The collection adds up to a collection a lot more satisfying than the typical pure pop album of today with its one or two catchy songs lost in masses of insistently noisy filler.

There are less-melodic numbers deeper into the album, and while the guest vocals from Jason Mraz are nice on duet passages they’re rather insipid alone (though they do help paint a multi-character picture). Still every song is strongly conceived, with a firm sense of story-motion. It helps too that the vocals are recorded without the roboticizing tricks of today’s dehumanized pop music, reminding us of the pleasures of the unadulterated human voice, especially a really good one like Bareilles’s.

I was surprised at how much I enjoyed What’s Inside: Songs from Waitress. While I’ve liked well enough the handful of Bareilles’s pop songs I’ve heard, I never have high hopes for the score of a new Broadway musical, especially one written by a stage newcomer. This Waitress, in addition to being a good album on its own, actually makes this adult want to see the show. And that’s saying something.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #100 posted 11/06/15 12:03pm

Identity








Coldplay Announces New Album

November 2015



Coldplay have released details about their upcoming album, their seventh, A Head Full of Dreams.

Out Dec. 4, the record features several guests including Beyoncé, Noel Gallagher, Tove Lo, and Merry Clayton.

In an interview last year, Chris Martin implied it was the band’s final album. “I have to think of it as the final thing we’re doing,” he said. “The last ‘Harry Potter’ book or something like that.”

Coldplay recorded the album in Malibu, Los Angeles, and London with producers Stargate and Rik Simpson.


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Reply #101 posted 11/06/15 3:43pm

JoeBala

Tevin Campbell This LAX Dude's Got Serious Pipes!! Busts Out 'Can We Talk?'

11/6/2015 9:16 AM PST BY TMZ STAFF

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Tevin Campbell could score a spot on "The Voice" with the amazing talent search he pulled off at LAX -- running into a guy who sings a Tevin classic better than he does.

That was Tevin's assessment, anyway ... when we bumped into him and a nearby Delta employee who's been waiting for his big break. As soon as he met the '90s R&B superstar, he belted out Campbell's "Can We Talk?"

Check it out -- Tevin was blown away, and it sounds like Delta might have to hire a replacement.

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Reply #102 posted 11/06/15 4:39pm

JoeBala

Why 'You're the Worst' Is Boldly Taking on Depression

Series creator Stephen Falk opens up to THR about Gretchen's journey, putting a spotlight on how depression impacts couples and what's next.Justin Kirk and Aya Cash on 'You're the Worst.' Courtesy of Byron Cohen/FX

Series creator Stephen Falk opens up to THR about Gretchen's journey, putting a spotlight on how depression impacts couples and what's next.

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from Wednesday's "LCD Soundsystem" episode of FXX's You're the Worst.]

FXX comedy You're the Worst is getting serious about clinical depression.

The sophomore series from creator Stephen Falk is exploring the mental illness via Aya Cash's Gretchen, who this season started sneaking off late at night and crying, alone, in her car. Subsequent episodes have seen boyfriend Jimmy (Chris Geere) attempt to "fix" her — with a spooky Sunday Funday — as she experimented with different coping mechanisms. The latter reached a new low for the character during Wednesday's episode, when Gretchen forced her way into her neighbors' (Justin Kirk and Tara Summers) lives by pretending to be them — by stealing their dog and walking away with their daughter. Her illusion was shattered when Rob (Kirk) confesses how truly unhappy he is in the life Gretchen thought was both perfect and, for her, possibly scary.

Here, Falk — who wrote and directed the episode — talks with THR about Gretchen's new low, why his show got serious and what he hopes to accomplish with the storyline the L.A. Times called the "best depiction of clinical depression. Ever."

Where did the decision to explore clinical depression come from?

We wanted to challenge ourselves and not just rest on goodwill and have the characters just have fun. We take every opportunity we can to get to know the characters more and deepen them. We set out last season to detail where Gretchen's personality flaws come from. It’s easy to write a very complex, f—ed up character and not get a hint into the origin or the issues that lead to someone burning down their apartment, constantly getting DUIs or never being able to get the UPS tags off their door. We started working and showing how bifurcated her personality had become in dealing with her family and their need for perfection, particularly her mother. It snowballed from there. When we started thinking about depression, it clicked and made a lot of sense. A lot of people in the creative community suffer from that, and we have a lot of experience with it. We decided to do something that immediately sounded like, “OK, that’s f—ing potentially boring and scary and something that would make the network immediately run screaming.” For all those reasons it became something that I couldn’t get out of my mind. We started running with it and trying to figure out how to make it visceral, interesting, at times funny and yet truly accurate for Gretchen’s journey because clinical depression takes a lot of different forms.

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It's bold for a show that was on the bubble last season to take on such a tonal change. What kind of feedback did FX have when you pitched the story?

We pitched it to FX and they were very nervous, understandably, but eventually just said, "Make sure it’s interesting." After a month of being in the writers' room, I pitched the new season to [FX president] John Landgraf and his team. I remember a fair number of blank and/or worried stares across the table. They said, “If this is something you want to do, it sounds really interesting, we just think it sounds potentially like a downer.” I don’t care about bumming people out as long as I’m listening to some other emotion than, “I’m never watching this show again”-anger and I am happy and I feel like I’ve done my job as a storyteller. They were nervous about the Justin Kirk episode because it doesn’t feature any of our actors for the first few minutes. They asked me to protect myself by shooting it in a way that I could edit it differently. I took that as a good note, but not something I could worry about. Landgraf called me after watching that episode to tell me how much he liked it.

How much of Gretchen's depression was inspired by the overwhelming response you received to Edgar's (Desmin Borges) P...season one?

It maybe emboldened us, but they were very separate decisions. It didn’t escape us, but our audience, while small, is sophisticated and willing to go into dark places with us. So it probably emboldened us.

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What kind of message do you hope to send with Gretchen's story this season?

My first concern is to tell the next chapter in the novel of our show in the most interesting, organic, surprising and inevitable way. Nothing I do is meant to send a message other than perhaps that TV can be more challenging than some people expect or want it or think it can be. In terms of depression, I realize when you take something like that on, there is a certain amount of responsibility. The goal is always to make sure we got it right and that it’s right for our character. If anything, I hope to shine more light onto it. We're interested in how depression is portrayed in relationships. The conversation is going to be heated — and it already is after Jimmy decided to walk away from a crying Gretchen in her car during episode six. There was a lot of talk about, “Should he have stayed, should he have gone?” I’ve heard both from people who have suffered from depression. Or in episode seven when Gretchen says, “Jimmy, you can’t fix me,” and he says, “Oh, can’t I?!” I’ve heard differing points of view from people who want someone there to cheer them up or help them, and those who just want someone to sit next to them and not judge them. Having that conversation is probably worthwhile and probably us at least partially doing our job.

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How much of this episode is Gretchen desperately trying to find a way to feel or feel normal? She kidnaps her neighbors' daughter and then pretends to take on their life.

She doesn’t stop what is clearly not only not right, but illegal and potentially dangerous. That is partially a symptom of what she’s going through, and partially Gretchen being Gretchen. This episode is her looking at these people, this life that she’s a little afraid of as well as a little disdainful of. They’re not “sweater people,” to use her words from episode one of the season. They are this hipstery family and people who she might make fun of normally. But in them she sees a way out and a mysterious thing that she’s both afraid of and certain that she will never be able to have or necessarily want. It’s that fascination and disdain that makes her try to slip their lives. Lexi saying, “Look, just because you buy into something that is kind of gross and dumb and whatever from the outside, it doesn’t end your life or make you immediately uncool."

There’s also a deeper point to that: people who continue to live their lives in opposition to becoming something they’re afraid of is someone who is not really living a full life. It’s both confusing to younger people, but hopefully comforting to older people. You can still rock, even though you have a mortgage. At the same time, it acknowledges that the desire to still try to rock while you have a mortgage and a kid is silly and sad as viewed from the outside. I'm someone who writes this show and at same time I literally am that guy now. I have Pixies posters, a daughter, a dog and I walk around Silverlake going to get coffee. I see the foolishness in that but I also see the foolishness in being afraid of it.

Gretchen is going through a lot and at the end when the illusion is pricked by Rob’s speech about how unhappy he is, it’s a devastating moment for her. Because she sees this slight possibility of a way out of her depression and the torment of growing older.

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And after they leave, Gretchen tearfully walks home with Jimmy — who is oblivious to her crying. How much worse will things get for Gretchen? Where does she go from here?

What we’re trying to portray are different coping mechanisms that Gretchen has employed in order to stave off or get through her episodes of depression. In episode seven, we saw her trying to out-drink it, out-party it and out-dance it. In episode eight, yes, she was fooled [during Sunday Funday], it was under false pretenses, but she was briefly distracted by this crazy horror house that they went to. We saw her emerge from that excited. It was only when Jimmy revealed that he did it on purpose to try to snap her out of her depression after she asked him not to, and that he thought he fixed her. When Gretchen comes to Jimmy at the bar at the end of eight and says, “You fixed me! You’re right! All good!” she hopes that he will want to drop it. This is a new tactic that doesn’t work. It's probably into another tactic or the absence of ability to stave it off anymore. We're not going to gloss over it.

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Lindsay (Kether Donohue) has encouraged Gretchen to let Jimmy in on things if they're going to have a real relationship. How will Gretchen struggle with that?

It’s too late; he’s in already. When the baggage is something so intense like clinical depression, it's unrealistic to assume that Jimmy is going to know how to deal with it because it’s really f—ing hard. That shows a couple at an impasse. It's not meant to just portray people with mental illness; it’s meant to portray any relationship. … We’re trying to portray the normal thing of, “OK, we’re together. F—, now what? Now what skeletons are going to be uncloseted?” This is an extreme example, but it’s not that unrealistic and not that uncommon.

Yes, Gretchen suffers from this thing, and everyone can get behind her on that, but it sucks for Jimmy, too. His attempt at giving her a fun day is, while clinically wrong, it’s not from a bad place. It’s from a common place of men wanting to fix. That’s one of the most common complaints from people suffering from clinical depression: that people want it to be over and that’s not how it works. Where do they go from here? What does Gretchen do? I don’t know. It’s a lot of work. It’s tough — and it never ends.

Jimmy has started flirting with someone else. What's her role in this?

Her function will become clear in that Jimmy and Gretchen’s situation is complicated. It’s not easy, and every time you get into a relationship, it immediately becomes less easy than a lot of other choices. It’s very easy to find someone attractive and flirt with someone. You're going to find someone less complicated and that's probably what he found in this bartender (played by Grey's Anatomy alum Tessa Ferrer). She's a pretty and easier alternative. What do you do when faced with that easier alternative? That is always going to pop up. That’s the real question and where the rubber hits the road. We’re going to see what changes and where they go from here.

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You've got four episodes left of the season. How does this set up the season finale? Will there be a cliffhanger?

The [depression] storyline will play itself out in a very satisfying way. I think a lot of people who watch feel pessimistic about Jimmy and Gretchen's chances, and I acknowledge that. There certainly are hints that can be seen in the opening theme song lyrics ["gonna leave you anyway"]. I can’t say what they ending will be, but I think we’ll generate a lot of buzz from this season and we’ll see it all played out in hopefully surprising but inevitable ways.

Lindsay has started to slowly find her independence. What's her trajectory for the remainder of the season?

We try to play through things that we introduce. For Lindsay, the turkey baster at the end of episode three will play itself out in terms of what was behind that decision. Her dance with Paul (Allan McLeod) is not completely done.

Edgar is coming into his own with Dorothy (Collette Wolfe), who truly accepts him for who he is. How will their relationship evolve now that he's told her about Iraq?

He has so many unresolved issues and she does as well. She has a level of urgency and has some loose ends. She feels her life has been jump-started and is maybe not ready for that. Complications will arise from that, but I also want Edgar to be happy. As a creator, it’s difficult: you want your characters to just coast and be happy, but you also need to poke them with hot sticks of fire in order for the story to happen. That’s something I’ve been wrestling with for Edgar. I love them together, so you certainly will see more of them in the season.

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Have you heard anything about a renewal for season three?

I don’t. Just like last season, I’m optimistic, but feel like we’ve told a satisfying story, but I’d love to have more chapters. But Landgraf stated that he considers a show renewal from three different people who get a vote [executives, critics and viewers]. Hopefully we’ll get that vote. I’ve done my job, and the network is happy with the job I’ve done.

You're the Worst airs Wednesdays at 10:30 p.m. on FXX.

Génesis Rodríguez 'Glam Belleza Latina' Cover: 'El Puma' Daughter Opens Up About Crossover Success

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Génesis Rodríguez is on the cover of "Glam Belleza Latina," where she opens up about her career and growing up with a famous dad. Courtesy: Glam Belleza Latina / Omar Cruz

She first got a taste of showbiz in 1994 as a dancer on "El Club de Los Tigritos," but it wasn't until ten years later that Génesis Rodríguez really discovered her passion for acting. For five years, the actress had leading roles in telenovelas, such as "Prisionera," "Dame Chocolate" and "Doña Bárbara." Suddenly, with a blink of an eye, Rodríguez becomes Hollywood's "it" girl, nabbing roles in television and film. So what does she owe her crossover success to?

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The 28-year-old Miami-based starlet, who is daughter of renowned crooner Jose Luis "El Puma" Rodríguez, said it was her father's advice that motivated her to reach for the stars. "He believed that if you wanted to prove yourself as an actress, you had to prove it to your people first," she said to "Glam Belleza Latina" magazine. "He advised me to start in the Spanish market, so landing a Telemundo contract was huge. I grew up watching telenovelas, and I couldn't believe I was now a protagonist in one. I also loved movies, but in my household it was 'Sábado Gigante' and soap operas. I mean, I can't tell you how many times I've watched 'María la del Barrio.'"

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With Dad Jose Luis "El Puma" Rodríguez

Rodríguez, who is of Venezuelan and Cuban descent, has formed part of popular productions including the HBO series "Entourage" and the 2013 film "Hours" starring the late Paul Walker. "It's been wonderful to have started my career in the Spanish market. This, combined with being El Puma's daughter ---such an important name to Latinos--- gives me a voice in this industry," she said.

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Aside opening up about her crossover career, the actress talked to "Glam Belleza Latina" about the beauty tips she receives from her mother Carolina Pérez ---a former Cuban model and also her new gig as a L'Oréal Paris brand ambassador. Check it out here.

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TBS Renews Rashida Jones Comedy 'Angie Tribeca,' Sets 25-Hour Season 1 Marathon

The comedy will debut Sunday, Jan. 17 with a 25-hour comercial-free marathon, with season two debuting a week later. TBS

The comedy will debut Sunday, Jan. 17 with a 25-hour comercial-free marathon, with season two debuting a week later.

TBS is looking to make a splash with comedy Angie Tribeca.

The network has preemptively renewed its long-gestating Rashida Jones-starrer for a second season and set an unprecedented 25-hour commercial-free series premiere for the police comedy's entire freshman order.

The single-camera comedy will debut Sunday, Jan. 17 at 9 p.m. and run through Monday, Jan. 18 at 10 p.m. The entire 10-episode run will also be available on TBS' VOD, digital and mobile platforms. Season two of the series, exec produced by Steve and Nancy Carell, will debut on Monday Jan. 25 with new episodes available weekly across all TBS platforms at 9:30 p.m. Turner's Latin American and German networks will also rollout season one with a 25-hour marathon Jan. 17, while Spanish, Nordic and Asian networks (truTV and Warner TV) will premiere all first-season episodes at one time.

Angie Tribeca follows a squad of LAPD detectives who investigate the most serious cases — from the murder of a ventriloquist to a rash of baker suicides. Jones stars as Angie, a lone-wolf detective who is unhappy when she's partnered with J Geils (Hayes MacArthur). Jere Burns (Justified) plays the captain in a cast that also includes Deon Cole and Andree Vermeulen.

The premiere date comes two years after Jones first signed on to reunite with The Office alum Carell and a year and a half after the comedy was ordered to series. Angie was developed by Turner boss Kevin Reilly's predecessor, Michael Wright, and the decision to marathon the entire freshman order comes as the former is looking to make noise with edgier fare in an increasingly crowded scripted landscape. (Worth noting is that Angie was picked up with fellow comedies Your Family or Mine and Clipped, both of which have already been canceled after airing their entire orders.)

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The marathon model comes as broadcasters continue to experiment with multiplatform viewing in a delayed viewing era. NBC this summer launched drama Aquarius and released the entirety of season one on NBC.com, the NBC app and VOD in a bid to compete with Netflix's all-at-once binge viewing model. Angie's marathon — which will see the entire first season run five times in a row — and subsequent second season debut a week later is an unprecedented move. Season two episodes will also be paired with a repeat from season one airing immediately after at 10 p.m.

Angie arrives as Turner-owned TBS has hit reset on its comedy brand. The cabler's 2016 lineup has zero returning live-action comedies (and only animated import American Dad on its schedule). The net's lineup also consists of fellow freshman Wrecked, Search Party and its Jason Jones and Samantha Bee scripted series.

News/

Rashida Jones Reveals She Almost Went to Prom With Robin Thicke, but Then Dumped Him for...

Rashida Jones, Robin Thicke
Rashida Jones, Robin ThickeGetty Images

Time to take a trip down memory lane!

Rashida Jones chatted with Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig as part of the 31-year-old musician's new Apple Beats 1 radio show, where she revealed that she almost went to prom with none other than Robin Thicke.

"I was 12, 13. His dad was on Growing Pains and my mom was on Twin Peaks at the same time, so we met at an ABC party and we flirted and exchanged numbers—landlines obviously," the 39-year-old actress recalled.

But turns out, the Parks and Recreation stunner was quite the heartbreaker as a teen and later rebuffed the "Blurred Lines" singer's invitation so she could attend the dance with another recording artist: Al B. Sure!

Al B. SureEthan Miller/Getty Images

"I called him and asked him to come to junior high prom with me and he was like, 'Yeah, sure cool,'" Jones said. "And then for whatever reason, I don't remember this, he reminded me of this a few years ago, I called him back and said, 'I'm so sorry. You can't come with me because Al B. Sure! is actually coming with me.'"

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She explained that the now 47-year-old record producer was a family friend who was probably just trying to be nice; but regardless, their date night never occurred.

"So you didn't get to go to the dance with Thicke or Al B. Sure!" Koenig said.

"I didn't. I actually worked the door!" Jones admitted. "So sad."

Surprise! Melanie Fiona Is Pregnant

November 6, 2015 ‐ By Jazmine Denise Rogers
Surprise! Melanie Fiona Is Pregnant

Instagram

Eddie Murphy isn’t the only one who dropped a major baby bomb this week. Melanie Fiona, 32, recently announced that she’s expecting her first child with boyfriend, singer and songwriter Jared Cotter, 34.

The Canadian singer made the shocking reveal on Instagram Thursday by sharing a clip from her music video, “I Want It All,” which features her baby bump. Judging by the size of her bump, she’s pretty far along.

“The greatest power a person possesses is the power to choose.
The only thing greater is being chosen.
Thank you for choosing us. Jared and I are thrilled to become Parents. #IWantItAll #Motherhood #Love#ChooseHigher #Awake xo,” she captioned the clip.

Jared also took to the social sharing site with the news.

“We are so excited for this next chapter of our lives! There is no greater blessing, and I’m so happy to go on this journey with my best friend and love of my life. I’m gonna be a Dad!!! Thank you for choosing us. I promise we won’t let you down. I love you.”

Sweet! Congrats to the parents-to-be!

'Empire's' Adam Rodriguez on Cookie's "Attraction" to Laz, Hakeem's Jealousy and Challenges Ahead

"Laz is somebody who is willing to protect Cookie," the actor tells THR about the on-screen romance. Courtesy of Chuck Hodes/FOX
"Laz is somebody who is willing to protect Cookie," the actor tells THR about the on-screen romance.

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from Wednesday's episode of Empire, "A High Hope for a Low Heaven."]

Step aside, Lucious.

On Wednesday's episode of Empire, Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) seemed to put her on-and-off (and on-and-off) relationship with her ex-husband (Terrence Howard) in the rearview mirror when she knocked on the door of her company's new concert promoter, Laz (Adam Rodriguez). No spoiler alert needed here: Cookie didn't stop by to talk business. After a sultry kiss earlier in the hour, the two consummated their relationship in the hour's steamy final moments.

Although playing the love interest of one of TV's most beloved characters might be his biggest role this year, it's far from his only gig. The Magic Mike star will also appear on Jane the Virgin in a multi-episode arc and will step behind the camera to direct an upcoming episode of Scorpion. "There's a whole lot going on but it's all good stuff," he tells The Hollywood Reporter with a laugh.

Rodriguez spoke to THR about, the hurdles ahead for Cookie and Laz's relationship, Jane the Virgin and his leading man ambitions.

You're playing a love interest to the show's breakout character. Did you feel any pressure knowing you would play opposite the biggest scene-stealer?

I wasn’t intimidated. We did a movie together some years back [2009's I Can Do Bad All by Myself] and we developed such a great friendship that we've maintained since then. We don’t talk everyday or anything like that, but we just got along so well and genuinely cared for each other as people. I was just super excited to do it. The fact that she's having the kind of success that she's having on that show made me even more excited to do it as opposed to nervous.

Empire as a whole has just created a world and a very clearly defined world that's heightened and rich with drama and deception. All of the things, I think personally, that made Shakespeare timeless, are the things that are working so well for Empire. It's all the best and worst of people, and you really just never know exactly what's coming. You think you do and then you don't and the characters are so rich, and yet clearly defined. You're really clear about who you're rooting for and why you're rooting for them, and who you hate and why you hate them. It was so much fun to get to play in that world.

How was it reuniting? Was there a shorthand there after having worked together before?

It was like seeing an old friend. I was just really happy to see her and it was like we didn’t skip a beat. We jumped right in with jokes and teasing each other, and just having some laughs and hopefully making some entertaining television.

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In your experience does it make less awkward or more awkward to have history with someone who is playing your love interest?

It makes it more fun to know the person. You're more willing to play. You're more willing to try things. You're more willing to be silly. And I think that actually adds to the chemistry.

What is your understanding of Laz? What brings him to such an up-and-coming company like Lyon Dynasty?

The concert promotions world – it's a dirty game. It's a ruthless business so you need to be somebody that's not afraid to tangle with other people whether they're dangerous or not. He's basically not afraid to be a pit bull. You can be a friendly, loving dog but when you have to get nasty, you're going to get nasty and you're not afraid. Laz is very familiar with the streets. He's very comfortable operating in that world and yet, has a business mind, which is why he's been able to build a company that's successful enough that he's on Cookie's list of people she's looking to partner up with. I think he comes in her office and, he's supremely confident, knows what he's capable of and isn't afraid to display that. He's looking to get to that next level. He's been operating at a certain level and Cookie is an opportunity for him to partner with somebody that can actually help his career take a step up to the next level.

Their romance really heated up in this episode. What do you think draws them to each other romantically and prompts that ending?

It began in the last episode. When people meet, you know instantaneously if there's a vibe when you meet somebody. However long it takes for that to manifest into something, or whether or not it ever does is another story, but I think you know right away. When you look at them in that first scene, you felt that chemistry – that was palpable. Laz helping Cookie out when there were people breaking into her office trying to steal stuff from her, he comes to her defense and the two have these guns and look at each other, and realize, "Oh, you're that type of person too? OK. Alright." Laz is somebody who is willing to protect Cookie. Cookie does all of the protecting for her sons, she's even protected Lucious by going to jail for him for all those years. She's a protector and I think that sometimes the people that play that role in life, when they find someone that makes them feel safe, as safe as they want to make other people feel, they're instantly drawn to that, and I think Cookie sees that in Laz.

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What do you think he sees in her?

The same thing that the entire audience that watches the show sees in her: Here is this badass woman who is unafraid to go after what she wants and anybody else that's standing in the way of getting that. He's, of course, attracted by her success and by this character that she portrays on the outside, but Laz sees through it and sees that there really is this little girl on the inside that just wants somebody to take care of her.

What does their relationship look like after they take things to the next level?

At some point, you have to decide what's most important to you. Some people are about love. Some people are about ambition. And some people realize they're about one thing more than the other and sometimes they realize that in time and sometimes they realize that too late.

How will the rest of Cookie's family react to her relationship with Laz?

Hakeem is really the one trying to build Lyon Dynasty with Cookie so he ends up being the one that probably has the most say-so in terms of how he feels about the choices Cookie is making. He's struggling so hard to prove that he's a man because everybody sees him as this kid and this artist that hasn't stepped into manhood yet. He's the baby of the family. He's really trying his hardest to assert himself as a man so all of a sudden, this new man coming into his mom's life that his mom actually listens to and values his opinion makes Hakeem a bit jealous and maybe even a bit concerned. His natural protective instincts kick in as a son. I don’t think he's sold on the relationship very easily, but as time goes on, maybe that changes.

Lyon Dynasty is still a relatively new company. How will Cookie and Laz juggle their romantic relationship and their working relationship?

That does become the challenge, and that's what I was hinting at earlier. You see it all the time. Some people choose personal lives. Some people choose professional lives as the thing that matters most to them. They are going to be in the process of juggling that and figuring out what matters most. But in the meantime, they do have a common goal and that is growing Lyon Dynasty and getting that job done. They might have different ideas of how to best do that, but they do have that common goal.

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In addition to Empire, you have an arc coming up on Jane the Virgin. How familiar were you with that show when you signed on?

I saw the show and loved the world that had been created by [showrunner] Jennie Snyder Urman. So I had gotten word to my manager and my agents and said, "Look, you guys have really got to try to find me something on this show." My manager had stayed on top of it and he actually ran into one of the executives at The CW and let them know. They were actually getting ready to start the process of casting the character that I'm playing. When they wrote it, Jennie had told me she had said she wanted to get an "Adam Rodriguez type," and I was like, "Wow, hopefully I can fit the mold." (Laughs.)

When she described the character, it just sounded like a lot of fun: This writing professor who is really passionate about writing and seemingly mean, but really just doesn't have time for anybody that's not coming to his class to truly get better as a writer. He doesn’t have time for the excuses, he's not interested in what's going on in your personal life. He's obsessed with writing. He's so engrossed in that that maybe his personal life is a bit shut down as a result of that. So here comes Jane, who is going through this incredible rollercoaster ride of a personal life and wants nothing more than to grow as a writer and this guy is like, "OK, well, grow as a writer but it's not going to be easy." She's trying to juggle this crazy personal life and life in graduate school, so they don't necessarily see eye to eye on things at first, but I have a feeling it's going somewhere very interesting.

What are you looking to do next? How do you go about picking roles and picking shows at this point in your career?

Ideally, there's a great show that I'd be able to lead myself going into this next pilot season. I'm definitely at the point in my career where that's what I'm ready to do. I'm really ready to lead a cast on a show and take a crack at hopefully bringing something great to TV. But I'm open. I guess my goal, very simply, is just to continue to work and do jobs that are fun and hopefully relevant and just give people a great feeling when they watch it. Whether that's a happy feeling or a sad feeling, or whatever it is, just to entertain. While I certainly could have a very clearly defined wish list if I sat down and thought about it, I try not to get bogged down by that. I really just wake up everyday and see what gets presented to me and then try to make the best choice based on whatever that is. So far, it's been working out great.

Speaking about being the lead of a show, is there one thing in particular you learned from Empire and Jane, and how Taraji and Gina lead their respective casts that you think will carry with you?

No matter what, you're setting a tone as the lead. You set the tone for the cast, you set the tone for the crew and you really create a culture on set. So you've got to come to work and be willing to work harder, work longer, work smarter and contribute everything you have to the job you're doing and I see both of those women doing that everyday. That's something I know I'm ready to do as well and I look forward to having the chance to do.

Empire airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on Fox.

Amanda Knox-Themed 'Guilt,' Tim Kring Drama Score ABC Family Series Orders (Exclusive)

The news comes as ABC Family is rebranding as Freeform and plans to double its original programming in the next four years.Daisy Head as Grace in "Guilt" Courtesy of ABC Family
The news comes as ABC Family is rebranding as Freeform and plans to double its original programming in the next four years.

ABC Family is making good on its bid to double its original programming.

The Disney-owned cable network has picked up Tim Kring's Beyond and its Amanda Knox-themed drama Guilt to series, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

Supernatural drama Beyond hails from Heroes creator Kring. The series revolves around a young man who wakes up from a coma after 12 years and discovers new supernatural abilities that propel him into the middle of a dangerous conspiracy.

From Imperative Entertainment and Automatik, the drama is created, written and executive produced by Adam Nussdorf (Once Upon a Time in Wonderland). Kring, Zak Kadison, Justin Levy and Brian Kavanaugh-Jones executive produce.

Beyond marks the latest TV foray for Kring, who has NBC's Heroes Reborn wrapping its limited run and recently saw miniseries Dig conclude on USA Network. The drama was picked up to pilot in April and stars Burkely Duffield with supporting role recastings a possibility.

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Meanwhile, Guilt — with a plot seemingly inspired by the Knox trial — is described as an edgy, soapy thriller that revolves around an American in London who becomes the prime suspect in the savage murder of her roommate. As the investigation unfolds, viewers will question whether she's a naive young girl whose poor decisions are being magnified under the ruthless glare of the British tabloids, or whether she's a sociopath who brutally murdered her friend. Even her own sister, who comes to London to defend her, will question how well she really knows her little sister as more and more ugly truths come out.

The drama was created by Kathryn Price, who penned the script and exec produces alongside The Game Plan cohort Nichole Millard. Former ABC Entertainment chief Steve McPherson also exec produces the series, which is a co-production of Sea to Sky Entertainment, the joint venture between Lionsgate Television and Thunderbird Films, and BV Family Productions in association with ABC Family. Daisy Head stars and, like Beyond, may see some of the supporting roles recast.

"These two shows are an exciting part of our evolution into Freeform,” ABC Family exec vp development Karey Burke said. “Guilt is a sexy, sophisticated event series whose European location feels bigger than anything we have ever done. Beyond introduces our audience to a new hero and takes them into a complex supernatural universe with great suspense and deep emotion.”

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ABC Family, which is undergoing a rebranding that will kick off in January when it is renamed Freeform, plans to double its original programming in the next four years under president Tom Ascheim as the network focuses on what it calls "becomers." The cabler recently handed out a straight-to-series pickup for a comedy based on the life of Nicki Minaj. Its scripted roster also includes Baby Daddy, The Fosters, Switched at Birth, Young & Hungry, Stitchers, Pretty Little Liars, Recovery Road, Kevin From Work and Shadowhunters.

Meanwhile, fellow pilots Stay and single-camera comedy Tough Cookie will not move forward. Multicam comedy Gorgeous Morons, however, is still in the mix. That leaves recently ordered Famous in Love, starring Bella Thorne and from Pretty Little Liars boss Marlene King, as its lone drama pilot in the works.

'Fargo' Breakout Allison Tolman to Star in ABC's 'Downward Dog'

The Emmy nominee will topline the comedy pilot based on the web series of the same name. Michael Buckner/Getty Images for ELLE
The Emmy nominee will topline the comedy pilot based on the web series of the same name.

Fargo breakout Allison Tolman has found her next project.

The Emmy nominee has been tapped to star in the ABC comedy Downward Dog, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

Picked up in September with a hefty pilot production order, the half-hour, single-camera comedy is based on the web series created and written by Animal Media Group's Samm Hodges and Michael Killen, who will executive produce alongside Mosaic Media Group's Jimmy Miller and Sam Hansen as well as Animal's Kathy Dziubek.

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The potential series, a co-production of Legendary Television and ABC Studios, centers on a woman and her dog. The twist is that it features a Modern Family-style confessional device — for the dog. The script has been drawing rave reviews around town, with ABC said to be high on the project after landing it in a multiple-network bidding war that resulted in personal outreach from network president Paul Lee.

Tolman will star as Nan, whose life is in a constant state of upheaval, but who always feels like she's about to turn the corner. Her ideal self lies just on the other side of this juice cleanse or new relationship, or maybe if she gets a standing desk ... Meanwhile, her dog, Martin, just wants her. And he'll do whatever it takes to get her attention.

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The role marks Tolman's first series regular gig since landing a supporting actress Emmy nomination for her scene-stealing part in the first season of FX anthology Fargo.

Since then, she's had guest roles on comedies including The Mindy Project, Archer, Review as well as Amazon drama Mad Dogs. She's repped by UTA and Odenkirk Provissiero.

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JoeBala

Alicia Keys, Chris Rock, Lenny Kravitz & More Fight AIDS at 12th Annual Black Ball Charity

By Lindsey Sullivan | November 06, 2015 2:10 PM EST

Alicia Keys and Lenny Kravitz perform onstage during Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball

Alicia Keys and Lenny Kravitz perform onstage during Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball at Hammerstein Ballroom on November 5, 2015 in New York City.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for KCA
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At last night’s 12th Annual Black Ball, Keep A Child Alive CEO Peter Twyman (or as the night’s Master of Ceremonies Chris Rock introduced him, “Peter Motherfucking Twyman”) quoted the words of Martin Luther King Jr. when he took the stage at the Hammerstein Ballroom.

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“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” Twyman said. “AIDS is the number one killer of African adolescents. This is why we do what we do.”

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Since 2003, KCA has raised global awareness about the urgent and unmet need for HIV treatment in sub-Saharan Africa. The organization provides financial and programmatic support to nine grassroots partners in Kenya, Rwanda, South Africa, Uganda, and India to fight the physical, social and economic impact of HIV on children, families and communities.

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Co-founded by R&B superstar Alicia Keys, KCA has provided services to over 56,000 people in the past year, and its work has directly impacted the lives of over 300,000 people. And last night, the stars studding the seats of the Hammerstein Ballroom on 34th Street continued Keys and Twyman’s ultimate goal: to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030.

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From Nigel Barker to Carmelo Anthony, 750 attendees came out to support Keys and the cause.

Creating a Record – Ali...ERS Moment

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“I am hoping people really recognize the power that we have to make a difference in people's lives,” Keys told Billboard. “We don't have to do big things. We can do a series of very small things that change people's world. Together we can really make big differences in the world.”

Alicia Keys and Lenny Kravitz perform onstage during Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball at Hammerstein Ballroom on November 5, 2015 in New York City.

This sentiment was echoed throughout the night. Since 2013, last night’s honorees Dr. Precious Moloi-Motsepe and Patrice Motsepe have been committing half of the proceeds of their family assets to charitable causes and sustainable development of the people of South Africa and the broader African continent.

Alicia Keys and Chris Rock attend Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball at Hammerstein Ballroom on November 5, 2015 in New York City.

“We believe in the world Alicia does,” Patrice Motsepe said. “We believe in giving people means of learning to fish for themselves instead of giving them fish.”

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Even Chris Rock got serious about the night’s focus (after taking full-advantage of the phrase “Black Ball,” of course).

Lenny Kravitz and Chris Rock attend Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball at Hammerstein Ballroom on November 5, 2015 in New York City.

Lenny Kravitz and Chris Rock

Alicia Keys and Lenny Kravitz attend Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball at Hammerstein Ballroom on November 5, 2015 in New York City.

“Almost 37 million people worldwide are living with HIV, and a lot of them have no access to treatment. None at all. So everyone needs to come together, and we've gotta end this once and for all,” he said.

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My First Piano – Alicia...ERS Moment

To be sure, those attending the Black Ball suited up for a great cause -- and a great time. After an epic on-site auction (a selfie with Rock went for $11,000 on the spot), the “Girl on Fire” lit up the night alongside incredible performers including Lion Babe, Wale, and even the legendary Lenny Kravitz.

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Lion Babe performs onstage during Keep A Child Alive's 12th

Lion Babe performs onstage during Keep A Child Alive's 12th Annual Black Ball at Hammerstein Ballroom on November 5, 2015 in New York City.

“Tonight is about letting go and feeling good. I need you to just like be free for tonight,” Keys said as she smoothly swayed alongside the delightfully boisterous band. “We don’t know how may days we have. We can’t count ‘em. We have to live ‘em. We have to make sure everyone has a chance at life.”

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Alicia Keys’ energetic collaborations with Lion Babe and Wale got the crowd on their feet, while Key’s solo rendition of her chart-topping “No One” got hands in the air.

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And, of course, Kravitz and Keys joined forces for “Let Love Rule.” Kravitz also treated the audience to "Are You Gonna Go My Way" and "American Woman." The night proceeded with an “Afterglow” party with Keys’ hubby Swizz Beatz spinning sounds.

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Raising $3.8 million, the 12th Annual Black Ball was a tremendous musical celebration, philanthropic success and a motivational reminder of the progress still to be made in the fight against AIDS.

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“We will fight for the hundreds of thousands more that need our support,” Twyman said. “We will fight until this epidemic is over. And that will be justice.”

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #105 posted 11/07/15 9:05am

JoeBala

Elvis Presley's 'If I Can Dream' Scores Chart Record With Number 1 Album

Priscilla Presley with U.K. award for top-selling album . Courtesy OfficialCharts.com

Priscilla Presley with U.K. award for top-selling album . Courtesy OfficialCharts.com

Elvis has got the record books, and sales figures, all shook up. Some four decades after his death, the new Elvis Presley alb...the charts – in the U.K., first off.

The King’s latest, a collection of classic vocals reworked with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra’s backing, is his 12th chart-topping album in Britain. As the man once said, Elvis Is Back.

More to the point, he is the biggest-selling solo artist of all time, according to Sony , with more than a billion records sold worldwide. If I Can Dream, which also includes “Fever, ” a newly created duet with Michael Bublé, is part of the continuing ELVIS 80th Birthday Celebration in 2015. It is available on CD, download and in a deluxe box featuring 3 additional tracks on CD and 2LP.

The record shows what can be done with a little orchestration. Many living stars have tried recording with strings – from Tori Amos to Elvis Costello and Sting. A fair few duet and orchestral albums have now been made by taking vocals of late artists and remixing – Viva Elvis tries the trick with a Cirque du Soleil show for example.

“This is an album that Elvis always really wanted to do and he would have been so pleased to know his fans are still there and they continue to love his music,” the star’s former wife and the record’s executive producer Priscilla Presley said of the new title. She accepted the Number One award from OfficialCharts.com and added: “The most talented team put this album together and helped us all realize an unfulfilled dream.”

Recommended by Forbes

The album, released by Sony Music Entertainment, sold 79,053 in its first week of release, one of the fastest selling of the year and just behind Chasing Yesterday by Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds.

The Presley album has Duane Eddy adding his signature guitar sound to “An American Trilogy” and “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” Italian operatic pop trio Il Volo lends vocals to “It’s Now or Never.” “Burning Love” gets an unusual makeover, while the usual suspect ballads “You’ve Lost That Loving Feeling” and “In The Ghetto” orchestrate well. There are some refreshing rarities too, such as “Steamroller Blues.”

Elvis Presley "If I Can Dream" artwork.  Courtesy – Sony Music Entertainment, Legacy Recordings, RCA Records.

Elvis Presley “If I Can Dream” artwork. Courtesy – Sony Music Entertainment, Legacy Recordings, RCA Records.

Presley came in second place in the Forbes list of top-earning dead celebrities in 2015 with earnings of $55 million. He is making more than most living stars thanks largely to Graceland ticket sales. In August he earned his 53rd Top 40 album with Elvis Presley Forever, a compilation released by the U.S. Postal Service along with a commemorative stamp. For those wondering, Michael Jackson was in the top slot with $115 million.

Presley is level with Madonna in second place for Britain’s most chart-topping LPs, trailing the Beatles – the group has 15. Elvis is also the longest chart-topper in U.K. history – with 59 years between this and his very first UK No.1 LP. He is also the only solo artist to have a top album in five different decades, according to Sony.

(Elsewhere in the U.K. charts this week, Rod Stewart gets his 34th Top 10 album with Another Country, new at 2. Elbow front man Guy Garvey is in at Number 3 with his first solo release Courting The Squall. Adele’s “Hello,” which is the fastest-selling single of 2015 and last week set a streaming record with more than 7.32 million listens, holds on to Number 1, keeping Justin Bieber’s “Sorry” at Number 2 for another week. Sorry, Justin, and sorry, Sam Smith, who is in third place.)

Elvis Presley is back at the top of the charts. This image shows the Elvis Presley forever stamp recently made available. (USPS via AP)

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #106 posted 11/08/15 7:14am

JoeBala

George Barris, California King of Customized Cars, Dies at 89

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George Barris at the Barrett-Jackson auto auction in Scottsdale, Ariz., in 2013, when the Batmobile he created for the 1960s television series “Batman” sold for $4.62 million. Credit Hagerty

George Barris, one of the pioneer car customizers immortalized in Tom Wolfe’s essay “The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby” and the designer of the Batmobile, the Munster Koach and other specialty cars for television and film, died on Thursday at his home in Encino, Calif. He was 89.

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Edward Lozzi, a spokesman for Barris Kustom Industries, confirmed his death.

Mr. Barris, a veteran of the body shops of Sacramento and Los Angeles, was a towering figure in the Southern California subculture of customizers and hot-rodders, known both for the sophistication of his design work and his flair for self-promotion.

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He and his older brother, Sam, treated standard-issue Mercurys, Buicks and Fords as mere starting points for reinterpretation. They stripped away trim, reshaped body parts, and pirated grilles, headlights and taillights from other car models. George created his own line of outré paints, called Kandy Colors, to impart luster and depth to vehicles that became, in effect, rolling works of street art.

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The family car of "The Munsters.” Credit CBS, via Everett Collection

In his baroque phase, Mr. Barris designed a slew of special-order cars for television, most famously transforming a 1955 Lincoln Futura concept car, in three weeks, into the finned Batmobile for the 1960s television series “Batman.”

In an entirely different vein he spliced a 1921 Oldsmobile and a flatbed pickup for the sitcom “The Beverly Hillbillies,” and he incorporated a coffin in creating the family car on “The Munsters,” calling it a Drag-u-La.

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“He made a look — the Southern California customized car look — that was very distinctive,” said John DeWitt, the author of “Cool Cars, High Art: The Rise of Kustom Kulture.” “But his great contribution was putting customizing on the map. He was a phenomenal publicist and showman. L.A. was the perfect place for him.”

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George Salapatas was born on Nov. 20, 1925, in Chicago. His mother died when he was 3, and his father sent his two sons to be raised by relatives in Roseville, Calif., a suburb of Sacramento. The Barris name was fashioned from Salapatas and another family name, Badacardes.

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Both George and Sam were car-crazy. When the brothers were in their early teens, they customized a 1925 Buick sedan that their father had given them, applying orange and blue stripes and fitting it with hubcaps and metal trim fashioned from Woolworth pots and pans.

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While in high school, George worked part time at local body shops, putting in time under Harry Westergard, a legendary car customizer, and completing his first full custom job, on his own 1936 Ford roadster.

In 1942, Sam enlisted in the merchant marine and George moved to Los Angeles, intending to follow suit, but a promised assignment never came. Instead, he found work with Jones’s Body, Fender and Paint Shop, where he became foreman. He opened his own shop, in Bell, a suburb of Los Angeles, in 1944.

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The Hirohata Merc, a 1951 Mercury Club Coupe customized to embody California cool. Credit Petersen Automotive Museum

“It was like Tiepolo emerging from the studios of Venice, where the rounded Grecian haunches of the murals on the Palladian domes hung in the atmosphere like clouds,” Mr. Wolfe wrote in a famous passage. “Except that Barris emerged from the auto-body shops of Los Angeles.”

The brothers reunited after the war and moved the shop, now called Barris Kustom, to Los Angeles. In 1948, George’s customized 1941 Buick took the top prize at the first Hot Rod Exposition at the Los Angeles Armory. It was the first in a long series of prizewinning custom jobs marked by a modernist feel for streamlining and understatement.

The Insane Genius Of George Barris

“Detroit cars are usually very well designed — so well, in fact, that we seldom change the basic lines,” Mr. Barris told Motor Trend magazine in 1953. “Instead, we accentuate them, develop them beyond the limits imposed by mass production, and try to refine them into a car which has design plus more lasting quality.”

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Mr. Barris’s creations reached a national audience through car shows, new magazines like Hot Rod, Car Craft and Rod and Custom, and model kits sold by companies like Revell, Aurora and AMT. One car in particular sealed the brothers’ reputation: the Hirohata Merc, a 1951 Mercury Club Coupe that Sam and George transformed into a sleek, elongated teardrop.

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The car, named after its owner, Bob Hirohata, expressed the Barris aesthetic in its classic period. The brothers extended the front and rear fenders, removed the chrome trim, lowered the roof, dropped the chassis to within a few inches of the ground and painted the car an arresting sea-foam green with dark green panels. Two 1953 Lincoln taillights were “Frenched,” or smoothed into the contours of the fender, and a new grille was fashioned from three 1951 Ford grilles.

The Hirohata Merc was the hit of the 1952 Motorama show in Los Angeles and a superstar after it appeared on the cover of Motor Trend. Rod and Custom documented Mr. Hirohata’s journey as he drove the car on Route 66 to the Indianapolis Custom Show, where it took first prize.

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“The Barris brothers didn’t merely improve the looks of the original or ‘individualize’ it with bolt-on accessories as is done today,” Mr. DeWitt wrote in an essay on the Hirohata Merc for The American Poetry Review in 2009. “They reimagined it, redesigned it and rebuilt it so that it embodied a culture, a California car culture’s idea of what it meant to be completely cool.”

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Mr. Barris in 1961 with a 500-horsepower hot rod he converted from a 1931 Model A coupe. Credit Ellis R. Bosworth/Associated Press

Ala Kart, a customized 1929 Ford pickup, won the America’s Most Beautiful Roadster trophy at the Oakland Roadster Show (now the Grand National Roadster Show) two years running, in 1958 and 1959. “It gives you a feeling that you’ve done something to make a better world,” Mr. Barris told Rod and Custom in 1962.

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Detroit took note. In the early 1960s, Ford hired Mr. Barris to customize production cars for two traveling exhibitions, Ford’s Custom Car Caravan and Lincoln/Mercury’s Caravan of Stars. Before long, the innovations of customizers like Mr. Barris began finding their way into the new breed of muscle cars, a development that spelled the end of the golden age of customizing.

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In 1958, a year after Sam moved back to Sacramento for a quieter life with his young family, Mr. Barris married Shirley Ann Nahas, who helped manage his business until she died in 2001. His survivors include a son, Brett, a daughter, Joji Barris-Paster, and a grandson.

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Mr. Barris’s cars gained cachet with film actors and other notables. He did his first celebrity job for Lionel Hampton, the jazz musician — a Jaguar — and a slew of commissions followed. He created a 1954 Cadillac Eldorado for Liberace with sterling-silver grand-piano hood ornaments that played “I’ll Be Seeing You” when opened.

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His celebrity projects also included Elvis Presley’s 1960 Cadillac Fleetwood (with a gold-plated record player, drinks cabinet and shoe buffer inside), a gold Rolls-Royce for Zsa Zsa Gabor, and a caricature golf cart, with ski-jump nose, for Bob Hope.

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Inevitably, the movies came calling. After the Hirohata Merc made an appearance in the 1955 film “Running Wild,” with Mamie Van Doren, Mr. Barris built two duplicate chopped and channeled 1948 Chevy stunt cars for the drag-racing scene in “High School Confidential” (one doomed to be crashed), and the chopped Mercury that James Dean drove in “Rebel Without a Cause.”

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Mr. Barris did some of his most memorable work for television. In addition to the Batmobile, the Munster Koach and the “Beverly Hillbillies” jalopy, he designed the fictional 1928 Porter driven by Jerry Van Dyke in “My Mother the Car.”

skyrocketed and the cars got smaller, but Mr. Barris managed to keep his hand in, producing custom versions of the Toyota Prius (at the request of The New York Times Magazine) and the 2010 Chevy Camaro. In 2013, the Batmobile, which he had owned through the years, sold for $4.62 million at the annual Barrett-Jackson auto auction in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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“Look, I’m just a crazy car guy, and I’m proud of it,” Mr. Barris told USA Today in 2005. “My love for this nutty stuff keeps me coming in the office every day, 8 o’clock sharp.”

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Reply #107 posted 11/08/15 7:39am

JoeBala

Miami Int'l Film Festival

March 12, 2015

‘Sweet Micky for President’ (unrated)

Despite some factual liberties, this documentary about the election of Haiti president Michael Martelly still fascinates.

Film Review: ‘Shelter’

'Shelter' Review: Jennifer Connelly, Anthony Mackie September 8, 2014 | 10:34AM PT

Actor Paul Bettany debuts as writer-director with this uneven, sometimes admirable tale of homelessness on the streets of New York.

Dennis Harvey

Film Critic

Jennifer Connelly and Anthony Mackie play very different unfortunates who find each other on the streets of New York in “Shelter,” the writing-directing debut of Connelly’s actor spouse, Paul Bettany. The latter fares better behind the camera than he does wielding the pen, as his sometimes over-stylized helming nonetheless renders mostly credible a somewhat overloaded screenplay. Homelessness, addiction, terrorism, immigration issues and more clutter the earnest thematic agenda in a sometimes accomplished but uneven pic that could have partaken more of the virtue of simplicity. Home-format prospects look stronger than iffy theatrical ones.

Tahir (Mackie) is a Nigerian immigrant who survives by busking on his plastic-bucket drums. His visa has expired, but he’s not considered a “deportation priority.” Upon release after a minor arrest, he finds all his belongings have been stolen, and he initially follows junkie Hannah (Connelly) because he realizes she’s wearing his purloined jacket. But his gentlemanly behavior persuades her into a wary trust that turns into a kind of mutually beneficial partnership, then romance. Chance lands them in a luxury townhouse whose vacationing owners carelessly left an entrance unlocked; in this relatively safe setting, Hannah decides she’s ready to go cold turkey.

Despite a major hiccup caused by the two discovering their painful pasts overlap in a rather too whoppingly ironic way, the film’s later sections find their lives beginning to stabilize together. But a medical crisis throws that progress into peril. Worse, it’s now winter, and going back onto the street is a much more serious matter when the temperatures are below freezing.

The hard-working lead actors and well-cast if mostly brief supporting roles (the largest being Kevin Geer’s as a doorman whose Good Samaritanism comes with a demeaning price tag) ballast a narrative that might easily have seemed overpacked with melodramatic travails. So does Bettany’s direction, which maintains a tight, empathetic focus despite occasional stumbles in soundtrack choice and other stylistic fillips.

While Bettany says he was inspired by gritty ’70s New York dramas, “Shelter” is quite different from the likes of “The Panic in Needle Park” and the like, which were less catch-all in terms of social issues and more straightforward in presentation. Instead, the tetherless uncertainties of homelessness are evoked to sometimes almost dreamlike effect in Paula Huidobro’s handheld lensing, John F. Lyons’ sometimes too-busy editing, and a highly worked sound design. (The extent to which these elements felt borderline excessive at moments might partly be attributed to the Toronto press screening attended, where the pic was shown less-than-ideally on an Imax screen.)

The results are admirable in intent and sporadic effect, but still a mixed bag overall. Further, given “Shelter’s” tough subject matter, critical support will be spotty and commercial sales an uphill struggle. Nevertheless, the pic’s virtues are enough to make one hope this isn’t a directorial one-shot for Bettany. It’s dedicated to a homeless man who long camped out in front of the creative couple’s Manhattan building, and hasn’t been seen since Hurricane Sandy evacuated their Hudson River-front neighborhood.

Film Review: 'Shelter'

Reviewed at TIFF (Special Presentations), Sept. 6, 2014. Running time: 105 MIN.

Production

A BiFrost Pictures presentation of a Recidivist production in association with Bridge Finance Co. (International sales: Repeat Offender Prods., New York.) Produced by Robert Ogden Barnum, Katie Mustard, Daniel Wagner, Paul Bettany. Executive producers, Clay Floren, Aimee Shieh, Melanie Greene, Dana Brown, Kevin Fraker, Cassian Elwes.

Crew

Directed, written by Paul Bettany. Camera (color, HD), Paula Huidobro; editor, John F. Lyons; music, James Lavelle; music supervisors, Jen Malone, Marc Ferrari; production designer, Tania Bijlani; costume designer, Emma Potter; art director, Raphael Sorcio; set decorator, Marina Parker; sound, Michael Sterkin; supervising sound editor, Louis Bertini; re-recording mixer, Daniel Brennan; assistant director, Eric Berkal; casting, Avy Kaufman.

With

Jennifer Connelly, Anthony Mackie, Amy Hargreaves, Scott Johnsen, Alok Tewari, Andrew Polk, Rob Morgan, Paul Urcioli, Kevin Geer.

May 14, 2015 @ 8:00 AM

Jennifer Connelly: A Beautiful Mind

She may not submit to Hollywood's sunny, mostly blond formula for stardom, but maybe that's because after her years at Saint Ann's and Yale, Jennifer Connelly knows better.

Aloft is a mixture of mystical allegory, handheld cinematography, and subzero temperatures. Connelly plays a woman on the periphery of the Arctic Circle, who, after tragedy strikes at the heart of her family, is drawn into the company of faith healers. Put it together with Noah and Shelter—her forthcoming drama about homelessness directed by Bettany—and you have a trio of films pitting Connelly against the elements, scratching out an existence beneath glowering skies. No question—she is in survival mode. She's 44, and her beauty has shed whatever air of sultriness it had in her twenties, acquiring an edge of something altogether more purified, fierce. In Aloft those green eyes seem to contain their own arctic storms.

"I didn't ask my agent to look for heavy weather," she says with a laugh over lunch at the Guggenheim's restaurant, where she orders a beet salad and speaks candidly of the changes in the types of scripts she was sent after the birth of her daughter. "All of a sudden I'm reading scripts where I'm the mother of the woman who's going on the adventure, and just sort of sitting on the sidelines. I was like, 'Wait a minute.' What was interesting was that it seemed to happen so quickly."

Connelly may not be the first aging actress to turn to foreign directors for help in hewing a path through maturity—Nicole Kidman did it with Lars Von Trier and Alejandro Amenábar, Naomi Watts with Alejandro Iñárritu, Salma Hayek with Matteo Garrone—but if anyone thought that casting Connelly as a mother would result in her looking cute and concerned while her son straps himself into a rocket launcher, they miscalculated. Connelly's mothers are as dark and layered as Pacino's gangsters; her character in Aloft joins a throng of mama grizzlies exploring the varied currents running through the maternal bond. Three times in the past several years she has played a woman who loses a child, and twice a mother who, for various reasons, abandons them.

Connelly tells me of her oil painting, which she has pursued on and off since her student days. "I enjoy the observation," she says. "I enjoy noticing how different things appear from how I first imagined them, or when I first sat down to look at them." A similarly layered observation seems to be at play in her screen work. She takes active delight in pushing up errant, gnarled roots, or unearthing hidden currents beneath the well-defended carapaces of the women she portrays. Aloft's Nana is deep of feeling but self-occluded, difficult, damaged in some way. We never doubt that she cares for her children, but it costs her. "Nearly everything she's doing is an example of her love," Connelly says. "But she certainly isn't someone who's sentimental in any way or who displays typically maternal love. There's something steely about her, which is a result of having to protect herself."

Something similar, one suspects, is true of Connelly herself, who grew up primarily in Brooklyn Heights, where she attended the prestigious Saint Ann's School. Her own family history is not something she relishes delving into. Her father Gerard, who in his later years lived with Connelly and Bettany in their house in Brooklyn, died of cancer in 2008; her mother Ilene passed away more suddenly, of a heart attack in 2013. Divorced from Connelly's father since 2000, she had been working as a massage therapist in Big Sur. "He was very much part of our daily lives," she tells me. "And we'd been spending more time with my mother, who for the last year of her life moved back to New York. But before that I wasn't in daily or even weekly contact with her. Given those different rhythms, that feeling you have when they're both gone surprised me—how you feel tethered even when you don't see them physically. It's very strange."

After nine years in Brooklyn, Connelly and her family moved to Manhattan in 2012. Most of their friends lived there, and they were tired of being stuck in traffic. They may even have had too much space in Brooklyn, Bettany says. "We moved from a one-bedroom apartment in the West Village to a nine-bedroom house in Prospect Park where we spent most of our time hanging out in the kitchen. It went from 'Well, this is very grown-up. We've got five floors. We've all got our own space' to 'Don't forget to bring the yogurt up!' Shouting at each other just to be helpful."

Her next film project is an adaptation of Philip Roth's American Pastoral, to be directed by Ewan McGregor. Connelly plays McGregor's wife, a former Miss New Jersey ("although she's kind of at odds with it") whose daughter, to be played by Dakota Fanning, is radicalized, Patty Hearst–style. Connelly had never met McGregor before, "though Paul worked with him on Mortdecai," she says, mischievously rolling her eyes at the mention of her husband's recent box office bomb.

"McGregor's big on Instagram," I say.

"Oh yeah? Actually, I did know that. I think Paul showed me pictures of his dog."

"And motorbikes."

"Yes, he loves his motorbikes. Maybe one day I'll get on there... I'll probably at some point get involved in Instagram and things like that because I feel it's reality and it's the way people communicate." She pauses. "I don't know. Possibly."

As if on cue, her phone rings. It's Paul asking if she can pick up the kids from school today. She tells me her 17-year-old, Kai (her son with photographer David Dugan), and her 11-year-old son, Stellan, take African dance, and "tonight it's Kai's recital."

Humming with a mother's excitement, she makes her way to the street, hoisting an arm for a taxi, all thoughts of pain, parental loss, and longing shelved until she steps in front of the camera again.

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Reply #108 posted 11/08/15 7:53am

JoeBala

Gunnar Hansen, the man who terrified millions in Texas Chain Saw Massacre, has died

The actor was 68












4K

http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-JL196_NYHORR_J_20150717111729.jpg Gunnar Hansen as 'Leatherface' in The texas Chain Saw Massacre Rex

Actor Gunnar Hansen, best known for his playing the in-bred cannibal, Leatherface in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre has died at age 68.

The Icelandic born American actor died on Saturday after suffering from pancreatic cancer.

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According to his agent, Mike Eisenstadt, Hansen died at his home in Maine, where he lived for 40 years.

Hansen had moved to Maine from Reykjavik at the age of five with his family. They then re-located to Texas, where he attended high-school and university where he studied English and Scandinavian Studies.

He secured the part of Leatherface just after finishing graduate school, after he heard it was being filmed in Austin.

The cult horror film saw Hansen playing a murderous outcast, where he wore a gruesome mask made of human skin from his victim and weilded a chainsaw.

He once said in a TV interview that he is so unlike his Leatherface character, that when people who meet him and learn that he played the murderer, they often react it total shock.

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The 1973 film was his first success, and led him to go on to play a plethora of roles in other horror based films up to 2013, with the 3D remake of the original called Texas Chainsaw 3D. The remake also included Marilyn Burns, another original cast member, who first played Sally Hardesty one of the victims.

He appeared in 28 films, worked as a magazine editor and wrote several screenplays, books and documentaries.

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His other roles included Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers in 1988, a comedy horror, where he plays “The Master”. He played the role of bank-robbing Earl, in Mosquito, a science-fiction film that played homage to the 1950s horror with alien ships and giant mosquitos. He also played Daddy in Chainsaw Sally in 2004. Hansen again used a chainsaw in all of the above films.

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He even played the role of the captain in an Icelandic film, Reykjavik Whale Watching Massacre in 2009.

After starring in the The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, he later wrote a book, Chain Saw Confidential, detailing from behind the scenes how the film was made.

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At his time of death, Hansen was working on a film called Death House, which he was writing and producing. It was scheduled to come out next year.

Hansen leaves behind him, his partner of 13 years Betty Tower.

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Reply #109 posted 11/09/15 3:22pm

Identity

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/dW7ZmF9.jpg?1[/img:$uid]


Mariah to Play Commissioner Gordon in The Lego Batman Movie
Nov 2015


Mariah Carey is reportedly in talks to voice a character in The Lego Batman Movie.

According to Deadline, the singer is being sought for the role of Commissioner Gordon, a role traditionally played by a man.

If the reports prove true, Mariah will join a cast that includes Will Arnett as Batman, Michael Cera, Rosario Dawson, Ralph Fiennes and Zach Galifianakis. The Lego Batman Movie is a spinoff of 2014’s The Lego Movie, in which Arnett voiced Batman. It’s slated for a 2017 release.

Mariah’s next acting project, the Hallmark Channel film A Christmas Melody, comes out December 19. She co-stars in the film, which is also her directorial debut.


tinyurl.com/ngp3ns3

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Reply #110 posted 11/10/15 6:18am

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Devante Swing Sued For Breach Of Contract
November 2015
Link


Jodec's Donald 'Devante Swing' Degrate Is facing legal action from record label over allegations of breach of contract.

Suburban Noize Records officials claim the singer signed an exclusive recording contract in 2010 to release a new album, and as part of the deal, he was banned from featuring on any other musical project.

He reportedly received an advance of $80,000, but DeGrate failed to deliver on the album and then went on to work on the R&B group's reunion project, The Past, The Present, The Future.

Record executives confronted DeGrate about the issue and they reached a settlement, with the star allegedly agreeing to pay back the advance in installments, which were due to begin on 1 October. However, Suburban Noize officials allege DeGrate has yet to make good on his word and they filed legal papers in the Superior Court of California/County of Los Angeles on Friday.

In the documents, plaintiffs state the firm "simply seeks to recover the monies DeGrate has acknowledged he owes and agreed (but failed) to pay".

DeGrate has yet to comment on the lawsuit.

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Reply #111 posted 11/10/15 8:48am

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Marvel’s Jessica Jones new trailer.

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Reply #112 posted 11/11/15 5:30am

JoeBala

Music

Allen Toussaint, New Orleans R&B Mainstay, Dies at 77

Allen Toussaint at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in 2010. Credit Skip Bolen/European Pressphoto Agency

Allen Toussaint, the versatile producer, songwriter, pianist and singer who was a fixture of New Orleans R&B, died after appearing in concert in Madrid on Monday night. He was 77.

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The Flamingoes, with Allen Toussaint at the piano

Alison Toussaint-LeBeaux, his daughter, confirmed his death. Javier Ayuso, a spokesman for Madrid emergency services, told The Associated Press that rescue workers had been called to Mr. Toussaint’s hotel early Tuesday and were able to revive him after a heart attack, but that Mr. Toussaint later stopped breathing en route to a hospital.

In concert, in the studio or around his beloved New Orleans, Mr. Toussaint (pronounced too-SAHNT) was a soft-spoken embodiment of the city’s musical traditions, revered as one of the master craftsmen of 20th-century American pop.

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“In the pantheon of New Orleans music people, from Jelly Roll Morton to Mahalia Jackson to Fats — that’s the place where Allen Toussaint is in,” said Quint Davis, the longtime producer of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, where Mr. Toussaint played almost every year since the mid-1970s.

Mr. Toussaint’s career began when he was a teenager in the ’50s and his jaunty piano playing caught the ear of Dave Bartholomew, Fats Domino’s producer. It continued to the present, with a late-blooming love for performing live and collaborating with rock and pop musicians like Elvis Costello.

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Mr. Toussaint had his greatest impact in the ’60s and ’70s, when, as both songwriter and producer, he worked on records, like Ernie K-Doe’s “Mother-in-Law,” Lee Dorsey’s “Working in the Coal Mine” and Jessie Hill’s “Ooh Poo Pah Doo,” that described everyday pleasures and nuisances with empathy, wit and a loose, funky swing.

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During the ’70s Mr. Toussaint’s studio, Sea-Saint, which he founded with the producer Marshall Sehorn, became renowned for recordings by the Meters, Dr. John and Labelle, and attracted international pop stars like Paul McCartney and Robert Palmer. Mr. Toussaint, then still a largely behind-the-scenes figure in music, also found his way to No. 1 on the pop charts in 1977 when Glen Campbell recorded a cover of his song “Southern Nights.”

Mr. Toussaint’s inspiration, he often said, was New Orleans itself, and over the years he became an unofficial musical ambassador for the city, where for decades he maintained a modest home in a middle-class neighborhood.

At Jazz Fest, as the Jazz and Heritage Festival is known, he usually performed in a bright and elaborately decorated coat. Even offstage, Mr. Toussaint had an eccentric dandy style; he drove a Rolls-Royce with the license plate PIANO and favored pinstriped suits and purple silk shirts paired with Birkenstock sandals.

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“It’s who we are,” Mr. Toussaint said of New Orleans, in an interview last year published by the Red Bull Music Academy. “The food we eat, the history, Mardi Gras Indians who rehearse all year around, the second-line brass bands who strut that stuff, the syncopation, the humor, and the slightly slower pace than the rest of America — the way we mosey along rather than running the race.”

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chet atkins & allen toussaint

On Tuesday Paul Simon, with whom Mr. Toussaint was scheduled to give a benefit concert in New Orleans on Dec. 8, recalled their long history together, which goes back to recording sessions in the early ’70s, when Mr. Toussaint played piano for him and wrote chord charts for his musicians.

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“We were friends and colleagues for almost 40 years,” Mr. Simon wrote in an email. “We played together at the New Orleans jazz festival. We played the benefits for Katrina relief. We were about to perform together on Dec. 8. I was just beginning to think about it; now I’ll have to think about his memorial. I am so sad.”

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Allen Toussaint was born on Jan. 18, 1938, in Gert Town, a working-class neighborhood of New Orleans. His parents, Clarence and Naomi, were songwriters. By his early teens he was playing piano with the guitarist Snooks Eaglin, and he got his first break when he substituted for the New Orleans bandleader and pianist Huey Piano Smith on tour in 1957.

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The next year, Mr. Toussaint recorded “The Wild Sound of New Orleans,” an album of instrumentals released by RCA Victor under the name Tousan. It was no hit, but it later gave him a taste of success as a songwriter: One song on the album, “Java” — for which Mr. Toussaint shared credit with Alvin Tyler and Freddy Friday — was covered by the trumpeter Al Hirt in 1963 and reached No. 4 on the Billboard pop chart.

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In 1960, Mr. Toussaint became the house producer, arranger and songwriter for the Minit label, where he worked with Irma Thomas, Aaron Neville, Benny Spellman and others. After serving in the Army from 1963 to 1965, he returned to music, establishing Sansu Enterprises, a publishing company and group of record labels, with Mr. Sehorn.

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Allen Toussaint & Irma Thomas

The sound that Mr. Toussaint developed in the ’60s built on the rollicking piano style of earlier New Orleans figures like Professor Longhair, with arrangements that melded deep R&B grooves with touches of pop.

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“Allen was the crucible of New Orleans music,” said the producer Leo Sacks, who in the 1990s recorded a gospel singer, Raymond Myles, who was later signed to Mr. Toussaint’s NYNO label. “Allen’s call-and-response choruses were catchy and clever, his harmonics were rich and gospel-flavored. And no one had his handiness with a hook.”

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Many of Mr. Toussaint’s songs would eventually be covered widely, including “Fortune Teller,” which became a standard among British Invasion rock bands in the mid-’60s; it was recorded by the Who and the Rolling Stones, among others.

“I was so glad when the Stones recorded my song,” Mr. Toussaint once told an interviewer. “I knew they would know how to roll it all the way to the bank.”

During the ’70s Mr. Toussaint recorded three albums for labels under the Warner Bros. umbrella, but the popularity of his style of R&B waned with the rise of disco. He continued to write and record for independent labels, and in 1998 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

After Hurricane Katrina, Mr. Toussaint’s career took another turn when he relocated to New York. He began to make regular appearances at Joe’s Pub, the intimate East Village nightclub, and recorded “The River in Reverse,” a collaboration with Mr. Costello that was a response to the hurricane and the destruction of New Orleans. He also toured with Mr. Costello, an experience that inspired him to play concerts much more widely than he ever had before, according to Mr. Davis of Jazz Fest.

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“The River in Reverse” was nominated for a Grammy Award for best pop vocal album, but it did not win; Mr. Toussaint’s only Grammy was a Trustees Award, a career prize, in 2009. In 2013, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts in a ceremony at the White House.

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In addition to his daughter, Mr. Toussaint’s survivors include a son, Clarence Reginald; a brother, Vincent; and six grandchildren.

Mr. Toussaint eventually returned to New Orleans, where he preferred to keep a low public profile.

“I’m not accustomed to talking about myself,” he once said, according to his website. “I talk in the studio with musicians. Or through my songs.”

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Reply #113 posted 11/11/15 5:43am

JoeBala

Video: STONE TEMPLE PILOTS Perform With JOSS STONE On 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!'

The remaining members of STONE TEMPLE PILOTSRobert DeLeo (bass), Eric Kretz (drums) and Dean DeLeo (guitar) — performed with soul singer Joss Stone as JOSS STONE TEMPLE PILOTS on last night's episode of "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" You can now watch video footage of the "Interstate Love Song" performance below.

STONE TEMPLE PILOTS and singer Chester Bennington yesterday officially announced that they have parted ways, barely two days after former STP frontman Scott Weiland hinted in an interview that the split had happened. Bennington, who also sings in LINKIN PARK, said in a statement, "The last few years have been an amazing experience. I got to create and perform with one of the greatest rock bands of our generation, that had so much influence on me growing up. With the amount of time STP deserves, in addition to being in LINKIN PARK, and with the needs of my family, one of them always seems to fall short."

Bennington continued, "The four of us... Robert, Eric, Dean and myself knew what we were up against. We decided in due fairness to friends, fans and the legacy of STP that it needs more than time was allowing me. And in all fairness to my bandmates in LINKIN PARK, as well as to myself and to my family, I'm going to focus solely on LINKIN PARK so I can contribute 100 percent."

The DeLeos and Kretz said, "What an amazing and beautiful few years we've all had together... We have thoroughly enjoyed our time together with Chester not only professionally, but even more so on a personal level. Sadly, it was evident that scheduling and time was working against us. Within this, there is a new beginning. There is an abundance of new music written, some of which is already recorded."

The band members added, "We have had the fortune of playing with some very talented singers over the last few months and will continue to do so until each of us feels and knows when the right person arrives."

Speculation about Bennington's future with STP started over the weekend when Weiland told Alternative Nation, "He's not in the band anymore. Chester's got a band, LINKIN PARK, where he gets paid $700,000 a night with, and with STP, the brand is kind of falling apart, which is a shame."

Bennington joined STP in 2013, shortly after they fired Weiland. He recorded one EP with the band, "High Rise", and did a handful of tours.

Dean DeLeo told The Pulse Of Radio at the time that Bennington was their first and only choice to replace Weiland. "We simply did not have a list of guys we were thinking of, we didn't hold auditions, we thought of Chester and that was it," he said. "It's very interesting, honestly, because Chester told me a story that when he was dating his wife about nine years ago, he told her that one day he was gonna get a call from us to be the singer of this band."

There is no word yet on who STP might recruit next on lead vocals, although one candidate, Johnny Stevens of the band HIGHLY SUSPECT, claimed in a tweet that Dean DeLeo called him in August offering him Bennington's slot. Stevens said he wasn't interested.

News \

Alessia Cara and Katy B Covered ‘Hotline Bling’ Together in London

'Know It All' is out this Friday

Brennan Carley // November 9, 2015

The gifted young singer-songwriter Alessia Cara’s been known to flip Drake’s “Hotline Bling” into a heartbreaking acoustic rendition before, but last week, during a concert in London, the 17-year-old brought British house-pop singer Katy B up for a version of Drizzy’s 2015 hit. It boosts the track’s soul quota up a couple of notches, with B’s wondrous runs and riffs spellbinding the audience. Watch below.

Katy Perry turns sexy Santa for festive H&M campaign and even sings along after topping Forbes' 'highest-paid woman in music' list

Katy Perry has put a sexy spin on Christmas as she leads H&M's festive campaign.

As well as lending her good looks to the campaign, Katy has exclusively recorded her first-ever Christmas track for the advert, Every Day Is A Holiday, which was produced by Duke Dumont.

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Dressed in an array of sexy red dresses, gladiator sandals and cosy Christmas knits, Katy first appears as a fairy before bringing to life a cast of characters, from life-sized gingerbread men, to giant teddy bears.

Katy Perry has transformed into a sexy Santa for H&M's Christmas campaign and even sings along with a song she wrote especially for the advert

Katy Perry has transformed into a sexy Santa for H&M's Christmas campaign and even sings along with a song she wrote especially for the advert

'I had such a festive time shooting this larger-than-life holiday commercial with Jonas Åkerlund, and all of the fun clothes, especially my favourite, the Elfie Selfie sweater. H&M has been a part of the evolution of my personal style since I was 13, when I would start to incorporate fun, affordable pieces into my vintage wardrobe.

'I can’t wait for you to give your wardrobe some sparkle with this magical holiday collection,' said Katy of her latest coup.

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In both the commercial and accompanying print campaign, Katy appears in looks from the high street store's Christmas collection, mixing festive glamour, style and fun.

Katy models vibrant red dresses, tuxedos with open sleeves and a T-shirt embroidered with a large sequin red bow.

'I love the mix of style and updated traditions in this year’s Holiday collection. These are pieces for pure pleasure, whether it’s the perfect party dress for the best night out, or the cosiest fun sweater for relaxing with friends and family,' said a spokesperson for the brand.

Dressed in an array of sexy red dresses, tiny skirts, gladiator sandals and cosy Christmas knits, Katy brings her star appeal to the new campaign

Dressed in an array of sexy red dresses, tiny skirts, gladiator sandals and cosy Christmas knits, Katy brings her star appeal to the new campaign

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H&M and Katy Perry have one thing in common right now and that is that both seem to be all over our Twitter feeds. Katy's popularity seems to have never faltered and she's taken the title for the highest paid woman in music on Forbes' rich list just lately and H&M have been talk of the town due to their fantastically successful designer collaboration with Balmain, that launched and sold out on November 5.

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The unbeatable pair have joined up making them a force to be reckoned with as they promote H&M's holiday campaign. Katy looked fabulous sporting a variety of the festive pieces and although most aren't yet available, this cute fringed mini is up for grabs, so click right to bag it before it flies off the shelves.

Team yours with a sparkling tee like Katy for a more laid-back festive feel or up the sophistication with a green blouse and sparkling statement necklace for a more elegant look perfect for those work Christmas drinks.

In both the commercial and accompanying print campaign, Katy appears in looks from the high street store's Christmas collection, including cosy Christmas jumpers

In both the commercial and accompanying print campaign, Katy appears in looks from the high street store's Christmas collection, including cosy Christmas jumpers

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/fashion/NOV/Nov10/hm-katy-perry-lead-xlarge.jpg

As well as lending her good looks to the campaign, Katy has exclusively recorded her first-ever Christmas track for the advert, Every Day Is A Holiday, which was produced by Duke Dumont

This campaign is just the latest in a string of successes for Miss Perry, who has been working nonstop since Forbes made the announcement last week that the talented recording artist earned over $135 million in the past 12 months.

The 31-year-old Roar hitmaker trumped her contemporary Taylor Swift in the much vaunted list.

With her new boost in fame thanks to the Forbes article, Katy was a perfect choice to help bring attention to the David Lynch Foundation's Meditate New York Initiate, for which the foundation was raising funds at the Change Begins Within 2015 Benefit Concert on Wednesday.

During the festivities she sported no less than three different ensembles for her performance and subsequent appearances.

The Dark Horse singer joined stars such as comedian Jerry Seinfeld and performer Sting at the benefit's venue, Carnegie Hall.


The 31-year-old Roar hitmaker trumped her contemporary Taylor Swift in the much vaunted list

This campaign is just the latest in a string of successes for Miss Perry, who Forbes revealed earned over $135 million in the past 12 months



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Reply #114 posted 11/11/15 6:30am

JoeBala

Nov 10 2015


TELEMUNDO TO BROADCAST THE 2015 IHEARTRADIO FIESTA LATINA PRESENTED BY SPRINT NOVEMBER 15 AT 8PM/7C

Hosted by TELEMUNDO’s Jorge Bernal and Erika Csiszer the Star-studded Show Features Performances by Jennifer Lopez, Alvaro Soler, Don Omar, Marco Antonio Solis, Prince Royce, Natalia Jimenez, Wisin 11/10/2015 03:56:32 PM

Jennifer Lopez at the 2015 iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina

Miami, FL – November 10, 2015 – The 2015 iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina Presented by Sprint will be televised for the first time, broadcasting exclusively on TELEMUNDO, and simultaneously on NBC UNIVERSO, this coming Sunday, November 15 at 8pm/7c.

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The two-hour show, hosted by TELEMUNDO’s Jorge Bernal and Erika Csiszer, features electrifying performances by Jennifer Lopez, Alvaro Soler, Don Omar, Marco Antonio Solis, Prince Royce, Natalia Jimenez, Wisin, Camila, Becky G, Fonseca, Voz de Mando and Pitbull. The music special, which took place at the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida, features a star-studded line-up of renowned TV and music celebrities as presenters, including Akon, Ana Maria Canseco, Angelica Vale, Carmen Villalobos, Danna Paola, Diane Guerrero, Eiza Gonzalez, Elizabeth Rodriguez, Gabriel Coronel, Gonzalo Garcia Vivanco, Jackie Cruz, Jaime Camil, Joe Ferrero, Lincoln Palomeque, Maria Elisa Camargo, Rafael De La Fuente, Raul Gonzalez, Roselyn Sanchez and Selenis Leyva.

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Renowned entertainment anchor, Jorge Bernal, also known as “Mr. Check it Out,” is one of the most beloved and relevant Latin figures in the U.S. Hispanic television, which possesses a great charisma, passion and sense of humor. Currently the host of TELEMUNDO’s daytime entertainment show, “Suelta La Sopa,” he has also served as the co-host of “La Voz Kids.”

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He has been featured in renowned magazines such as Ocean Drive and Maxim, as well as People en Español, where he was named one of the “Most Beautiful” in 2014.

iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina Presented By Sprint - Show

Venezuelan born Erika Csiszer is a television host, reporter, model and actress. She currently serves as co-presenter of TELEMUNDO’S “Un Nuevo Dia” and “Titulares y más,” and as a digital reporter for “La Voz Kids,” Latin Billboard Awards, Premios Tu Mundo and the Latin American Music Awards for Telemundo.com.

iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina Presented By Sprint - Show

The iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina is part of iHeartMedia’s incredibly successful roster of major concert events, which includes the iHeartRadio Music Festival, the biggest live concert event in radio history, which features more than 20 A-list artists across every music genre on one stage;

the iHeartRadio Summer Pool Party; the nationwide iHeartRadio Jingle Ball Concert Tour; the iHeartRadio Country Festival; and the iHeartRadio Music Awards, which generated more than 14 billion social media impressions, almost triple that of the Academy Awards.

Pitbull iHeartRadio Fiesta Latina Presented By Sprint - Show

For more information visit Telemundo.com/iheart.

Best-selling author Mitch Albom talks about 'The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto' and how we are all in a band

Jennifer Matarese interviews author Mitch Albom about his latest book.
Tuesday, November 10, 2015 05:29PM

Frankie Presto. All of the biggest names in the music business and throughout Hollywood seem to know who he is, but you probably don't know him just yet. Why? Because he was invented by best-selling author Mitch Albom. His newest book, "The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto" explores the life and death of the musician and how his life has impacted everyone he knows. Think "Forest Gump" but on a musical level.

"He can change somebody's fate, and whenever he does that the string turns blue and it's kind of used up and it goes from six, to five, to four, to three, and you see all the people that he's influenced over the course of his life," Albom said.

Albom has put "Frankie Presto" into the real world of music. He got real world musicians to allow him to write in their voice about their experiences with his character. At times you forget that this is a character in a book. In fact, in a video to promote the book, musicians like Burt Bacharach, Ingrid Michaelson, Tony Bennet, and Darlene Love just to name a few to talk about their experiences with "Frankie Presto".


This novel is more than just a book. It is an immersive experience. There is even a musical companion that goes along with the book so that you can listen to the music and really know the world of "Frankie Presto".

"Some of them ended up recording songs that were the fictional songs that are in the book that they then wrote and became real songs. So we now have a soundtrack album that goes with it and then they recorded these videos that pretend, 'Oh, I remember Frankie, it's so sad that he's gone and he's so great.' And so you see all this stuff that's out there now on the internet and on iTunes and all that and it's as if Frankie Presto was really real, but it's also the point of the book that you can affect one another with your music or your talent in more ways than you realize," Albom said.

Another major theme of the book is that we are all in a band, in fact several bands of people and groups throughout our lifetime. That band can be your family, your coworkers, your groups of friends from various times in your life, the book gets you to examine what part you are playing in each of those "bands".

Albom prides himself on the fact that his book is fictional yet historically accurate to the time period. In fact, this is the first time he's ever had to hire a full-time researcher to fact check and find out details so that he could accurately write about the different musical studios and even things like how someone would get backstage at Woodstock.

"The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto" is online and in bookstores now along with the musical companion.

Jon Stewart, Seth Meyers and more raise money for veterans

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Military service members were the guests of honor at the 9th annual Stand Up for Heroes benefit concert. The jokes, told by Jon Stewart and Seth Meyers among others, covered marriage, Las Vegas, sports, and, inevitably, Donald Trump.

And Bruce Springsteen was in a silly mood.

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Held Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden, Stand Up for Heroes was co-presented by the Bob Woodruff Foundation and the New York Comedy Festival. It raises money for the Woodruff foundation, which funds programs for injured veterans and their families. The foundation is named for the ABC news anchor injured in Iraq in 2006.

With members of the Army, Navy and Marines occupying the front rows, the comedians seemed to go out of their way to cast themselves as incapable of winning at arm wrestling, much less fighting in a war.

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Stewart and Ray Romano each had grown beards. Each joked about getting old.

“Here’s what life has taught me, now that I’m in my 50s,” said the 57-year-old Romano. “I will make the time to be your friend — if you’re a doctor.”

“I can’t believe it: Jon Stewart’s grandfather is here!” said the grey-bearded Stewart.

The 9th Annual Stand Up For Heroes Event Presented By NYCF - Show

Meyers also was the butt of his own jokes. As a husband, he said, he was too clueless to help plan his own wedding or to realize his wife-to-be had food poisoning. He also remembered being foolish — and drunk enough — to pick a fight with a stronger man at a Las Vegas night club.

“I had reached an age in my life where I thought I was no longer going to be punched,” he said. “Because of that there was no contingency plan in my brain as to what we were going to do if we got punched.”

Tuesday’s Republican debate was a recurring topic. Stewart seemed amazed, and not in a good way, that three months had passed since he left “The Daily Show” and Trump was still a top contender. At the Heroes show, he showed off the luxury of having three months worth of insults ready.

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“Are we really doing this Trump thing?” he asked. “We liked to make jokes about him (on ‘The Daily Show”), because he’s hilarious. He’s mockable, extraordinarily mockable, hugely mockable.”

Springsteen played four songs, all acoustic, including three from his “Born in the U.S.A.” album: “Darlington County,” ”Working on the Highway” and the hit single “Dancing in the Dark,” which had the crowd clapping and singing along.

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He also brought in a windfall for the foundation. Continuing a tradition at the Stand Up for Heroes shows, he auctioned off some personal items. Tuesday night’s grab bag was a pair of autographed guitars, plus concert tickets and his mother’s lasagna. The two winning bids totaled $740,000, topping last year’s take of $300,000.

The supposedly serious guy in the bunch, Springsteen, got some of the biggest laughs. Before each of his songs, he told X-rated stories so sweetly and without embarrassment that he made sex jokes sound like “Goodnight Moon.”

The stories are unrepeatable, but here is one punchline: “Dick Van Dyke.”

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #115 posted 11/11/15 7:53am

JoeBala

Carla Morrison Discusses Her 'Conceptual' and 'Emotional' New Album

By Judy Cantor-Navas | September 28, 2015 6:16 AM EDT

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Singer Carla Morrison in 2015.

Courtesy Photo

The first single,” Un Beso,” entered the Latin Digital Songs chart at No. 6

It’s fitting that Carla Morrison’s new album will be released during Latin Grammy season. Morrison had her “star is born” moment at the 2012 awards, where her debut full length Déjenme Llorar won best alternative album, with the revelatory title track winning best alternative song as well as being nominated for song of the year. In a red gown that exposed her tattoos as as much as her breasts, Morrison became an indie hero that night on stage when she excitedly blurted out “Viva Mexico Chingao,” swearing on national television before catching herself and clapping her hand over her mouth.

Morrison is still doing things her way. She took her time recording Amor Supremo, which comes out Nov. 6 on the L.A.-based label Cosmica label, her first release since a 2013 EP, Jugando en Serio.

Carla Morrison Sings in E...2.0' Panel

“I knew that people were waiting for me to come back,” Morrison said during a phone interview. “But any pressure I had really came from myself, to outdo myself, to be better than I was before.”

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Morrison spent eight months recording in a white, three-story beach house in Playas de Tijuana. It was a sparsely furnished rental with a patio for her dogs, “where we could hear the ocean all day.”

Together with two musical collaborators and a repertoire of about 30 songs she had written while on tour over the past few years, she created what she calls a “very conceptual record,” with a more electronic sound than her past work. “I felt like remaking myself and doing something completely different,” she explains.

“It was very natural,” adds. “The intention wasn’t intellectual, it was emotional. The idea was to be free. It was an experience of being eight months in silence with our ideas.”

The first song from the album,” Un Beso,” makes clear that what hasn’t changed is Morisson’s voice, and its ability to make you sit very still and just listen.

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The track premiered on Zane Lowe’s Apple Music Beats 1 show on Sept. 15. In its first week, “Un Beso” entered Billboard’s Latin Digital Songs chart at No. 6 (2,000 downloads). It was streamed some 25,000 times, according to Nielsen Music.

“It shows a side of me that I almost never show, my sensuality,” says Morrison of the song.

With “Un Beso,” Morrison became the first female solo act in 22 weeks to crack the top 10 with a new song. While she’s already become something of a role model for independent women, she makes clear she’s not driven by any sort of feminist struggle.

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"I've never been a woman to seek recognition in a supposed man's world,” she says. “I do my job which is to hopefully change hearts and minds and I hope my fellow female artists look at it from a similar perspective. It's great to get recognition but it should not be what we do this for.”

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Morrison plans to tour after the album is released. And although that trek will likely end up on the Latin Grammy stage again a year from now, she’s quick to emphasize that she considers her music to be its own reward.

“I didn’t know my songs were going to be so popular,” Morrison says. “That wasn’t part of my priorities, [but] it did touch a personal side that made me focus on my privacy and what it is that I want. It moved some buttons that made me better, it made me wiser. Fame isn’t something that drives my life or enriches it. I value much more my art, and my moments alone. And making myself better.”

Maite Perroni Shows Her Love Of 'Star Wars' In Sexy Lingerie Shoot [PHOTOS]

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It's Maite Perroni like you've never seen her before! Instagram/@Maitepb
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If there's one (of the many) reason that we admire Maite Perroni is because she can be sexy AF and keep it classy at all times!

Don't believe us? Check out the recent cover of Soho magazine, where the actress nabs the cover for its Mexico publication.

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Maite Perroni- "Olga Laris Photoshoot (SoHo Magazine) November 2015"

Maite Perroni- "Olga Laris Photoshoot (SoHo Magazine) November 2015"

Not only does she look amazing in black lingerie, but she's also keeping it fierce with the "Star Wars" Stormtroopers.

Maite Perroni-

Maite Perroni-

Maite Perroni-

The "Antes Muerta Que Lichita" actress is on the cover of Soho Mexico, celebrating its two years anniversary.

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"We are celebrating the 2nd anniversary of the magazine @SohoMexico on the cover," she wrote on Instagram. "Thank you to everyone who made this possible, I LOVE IT, that's why we're having party," she added.

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Check out some of the photos. Isn't this the hottest mix ever?!

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Review: In Carla Morrison’s ‘Amor Supremo,’ Love and the Void

Photo

Carla Morrison

“Amor Supremo”

(Cosmica)

Prepare your head for the Mexican singer Carla Morrison’s new album, “Amor Supremo,” because it stays pretty close to one performed tempo (a bit below medium) and one portrayed state of consciousness (lucid dreaming). It’s an hour of reverbed-out ballads about intemperate love and the void.

Her music hasn’t always been this single-minded. Ms. Morrison’s last record, “Déjenme Llorar,” from 2012 — which won Latin Grammy Awards for both alternative album and alternative song — had some immediacy. Its sound and arrangements were more direct, varied and acoustic; it transmitted despair, but could do it in a sweet, genial, small-scale way. Here, with the producer Alejandro Jimenez, she’s gone oceanic.

The record is elegant and gauzy, done mostly with live drums and synthesizer, and dabs of guitar, piano and strings. An English-language point of comparison might be the last few records by Lana Del Rey, in the way both singers make words and phrases stretch and swoop, and how they perform romantic sadness as ritual. But Ms. Morrison’s voice is lighter and stronger, far more subtle, and she’s not playing with her public image nearly as much. These are reports from the inside of the head, love songs about the contents of one soul’s being decanted into another.

Her narrators absorb love in every way possible, through ears and mouth and skin and mind. There are rarely other people mentioned in these songs. “You are my secret,” she sings in “Mi Secreto.” “I tell nobody about you.” And in “Un Beso”: “I want to touch you and follow you everywhere.” Repeatedly, she uses metaphors to describe a kind of love in which there is no separation, no independent will. “You were living in me,” she sings at one point, “and I was so, so happy.”

There are songs of satisfaction and remorse, of love’s being born and dying, and they’re pretty much the same. The floating feeling pervading the music — the tolling chords, the long decays — suggests an absence of beginnings and ends. “It’s an addiction,” she sings about her love in “Mi Secreto,” in yet another metaphor. “It’s a process.”

Rolling Stones Announce 2016 Latin American Tour

By Ray Waddell | November 05, 2015 10:11 AM EST

Rolling Stones perform at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday, July 4, 2015

Ronnie Wood, Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones perform at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday, July 4, 2015 in Indianapolis.

Barry Brecheisen/Invision/AP

America Latina Olé Tour to roll through Santiago, Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Rio De Janeiro, São Paulo, Porto Alegre, Lima, Bogotá, Mexico City.

Who said anything about hanging it up?

After conquering the heartland with their massive North American Zip Code stadium tour, the Rolling Stones will head to Latin America for the first time in a decade. The America Latina Olé stadium tour begins in Santiago on Feb. 3 and will make stops in Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Rio De Janeiro, São Paulo, Porto Alegre, Lima, Bogotá, and wrapping March 14 in Mexico City.

Zip Code, which took the bands to stadiums in rarely-played markets across North America, was an unqualified blockbuster and one of the biggest tours of the year, grossing $109,714,026 at the box office from 628,733 tickets sold to 14 shows reported to Billboard Boxscore. Since reuniting for their 50th anniversary shows in late 2012, the Stones have been on a ferocious roll, with two runs through America (50 & Counting in 2013 and Zip Code), and trips across Europe, the Middle East and the Pacific Rim (’14 On Fire). In this period the Stones have churned out some $400 million in box office, selling 2.5 million tickets to 57 shows, according to Boxscore, primarily in arenas and stadiums interspersed with the odd festival appearance.

See Intimate, Never-Befor... Exclusive

The top of the Boxscore charts is a familiar place for the Rolling Stones; dating back to the late 1980s when Billboard began tracking tour data, the Stones were the highest-grossing act of the year six times, including 1989 (Steel Wheels), 1995 (Bridges To Babylon), 1998 and ’99 (Voodoo Lounge), 2003 (Licks), and 2006 (Bigger Bang), a feat equaled only by U2 (also currently on tour). Since Steel Wheels, the Rolling Stones have topped all touring artists, taking in well over $2 billion on the road, moving more than 20 million tickets to more than 600 shows, according to Boxscore.

Tickets for America Latina Olé will go on sale beginning Nov. 9, with info at rollingstones.com. According to the announcement, the stage will have a new look, customized especially for the Latin American fans. As has been the case since 2013, AEG Live’s Concerts West division, headed by co-presidents Paul Gongaware and John Meglen, is the promoter of the America Latina Olé tour. Following the tour, The Rolling Stones will launch their first ever exhibition, "Exhibitionism," at London's Saatchi Gallery.

The Rolling Stones America Latina Olé Tour Dates

Feb 3: Santiago, Chile (Estadio Nacional)
Feb 7: Buenos Aires, Argentina (Estadio Único Ciudad de La Plata)
Feb 10: Buenos Aires, Argentina (Estadio Único Ciudad de La Plata)
Feb 13: Buenos Aires, Argentina (Estadio Único Ciudad de La Plata)
Feb 16: Montevideo, Uruguay (Estadio Centenario)
Feb 20: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Estádio Maracanã)
Feb 24: São Paulo, Brazil (Estádio do Morumbi)
Feb 27: São Paulo, Brazil (Estádio do Morumbi)
March 2: Porto Alegre, Brazil (Estádio Beira-Rio)
March 6: Lima, Peru (Estadio Monumental)
March 10: Bogotá, Colombia (Estadio El Campín)
March 14: Mexico City, Mexico (Foro Sol)

Fifth Harmony, OMI, Ricky Martin, Maluma & More Added as Latin Grammys Performers

By Angie Romero | November 05, 2015 3:15 PM EST

Fifth Harmony

Fifth Harmony perform on opening night of "The Reflection Tour" at The Regency Ballroom on Feb. 27, 2015 in San Francisco, California.

Steve Jennings/WireImage

The Latin Grammys have added some more star power to the 2015 performance lineup. Fifth Harmony, OMI, Ricky Martin, Espinoza Paz, Maluma and Banda el Recodo will all be taking the stage at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas on Nov. 19 for Latin music’s biggest night.

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Six-time Grammy winners Banda El Recodo, Latin urban phenom Maluma and regional Mexican star Espinoza Paz each received one nomination this year -- best banda album for Mi Vicio Más Grande, best urban performance for "El Tiki," and best regional song for "Perdí La Pose," respectively.

Latin Grammys 2015: Julion Alvarez, Natalia Lafourcade, Nicky Jam & More to Perform

Pop idol Ricky Martin is also among this year’s nominees, having scored three nods: record of the year and song of the year for "Disparo Al Corazón" and best contemporary pop vocal album for A Quien Quiera Escuchar.

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Previously announced performers include Julión Álvarez, Bomba Estéreo with Will Smith, J Balvin, Choc Quib Town, Silvestre Dangond, Nicky Jam, Natalia Jiménez, Natalia Lafourcade, Juan Luis Guerra, Major Lazer and mØ, Matisse, and Raquel Sofía. Latin Recording Academy Person of the Year Roberto Carlos will also grace the stage for a special performance.

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What a difference a glam squad makes! Britney Spears covers up her curves in sporty hoodie after looking sexy for Jane The Virgin

Britney Spears has stepped out looking casual after her guest appearance on Jane The Virgin.

The pop star flashed her toned legs in short shorts and cozy boots while leaving Milk studios in Los Angeles on Tuesday.

The 33-year-old made a splash on The CW show, which she previously called her 'favorite show,' in when her episode aired on Monday evening.

Scroll down for video

Stepping out: Britney Spears wore short shorts and cozy boots while leaving Milk Studios in Los Angeles on Tuesday, the day after her guest spot on Jane The Virgin

Stepping out: Britney Spears wore short shorts and cozy boots while leaving Milk Studios in Los Angeles on Tuesday, the day after her guest spot on Jane The Virgin

Playing herself, Britney was revealed to be the nemesis of Jane's emotional father Rogelio, played by Jaime Camil, who was still angry after an unfortunate teleprompter incident from years past.

However, the entertainers managed to patch up their differences, while Britney also led star Gina Rodriguez in a dream sequence dance number to her hit Toxic.

On Tuesday, Britney looked upbeat and relaxed as she left Milk studios with a group of friends.


Casual: The pop star wore a baggy The North Face sweatshirt and carried some reading material

Britney Spears will always be the pop princess girl next door and her signature color is pink of course. There's some kind of synergy between blondes and pink, look at Barbie the original buxon blonde!

Here we spot Britney all California casual in a The North Face trivert pink hoodie, short shorts and furry mocs. She looks like a total surfer babe leaving the beach here but she's actually heading into the studio for her cameo.

This kind of look is ubiquitous over in Santa Barbara with the crashing waves. Whether you're heading to the beach for a bonfire or just running errands, this hoodie will keep you cozy and chic.

The bright colors will liven up any look so head over to The Sports Authority now to pick up this exact one. If you're not crazy about the larger than life logo in the front, we found other pink hoodies for you to try on.

Having a blast: Britney shared a photograph of herself with costars Jaime Camil  and Gina Rodriguez with fans  as she live-Tweeted the episode on Monday

Having a blast: Britney shared a photograph of herself with costars Jaime Camil and Gina Rodriguez with fans as she live-Tweeted the episode on Monday

The mother-of-two wore an over-sized pink The North Face sweatshirt and held two books and her iPhone charger.

Britney carried a small white Michael Kors backpack over one shoulder, and wore dark sunglasses.

The pop princess left her messy blonde hair down as she climbed into her car.

Relaxed: The singer was dressed down and appeared to leave her blonde hair unbrushed

Relaxed: The singer was dressed down and appeared to leave her blonde hair unbrushed

Guest star: Britney appeared on The CW's Jane The Virgin, which she previously has said is her favorite show

Guest star: Britney appeared on The CW's Jane The Virgin, which she previously has said is her favorite show

The busy superstar is currently headlining her Britney: Piece of Me show in Las Vegas and announced in September that she has signed on to continue her residency at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino for two more years.

The singer also live tweeted her guest episode as it aired on The CW on Monday, sharing a cast photo and writing to fans 'I hope you guys loved the episode as much as I loved being on it!'

She also shared a clip of her and star Gina dancing to her hit song Toxic.

'For the record @HereIsGina definitely has rhythm. Loved dancing with her!' she wrote.

Working it: Britney puts star Gina Rodriguez through her paces during a dream sequence

Working it: Britney puts star Gina Rodriguez through her paces during a dream sequence

Looking good: Jane's father Rogelio, played by Camil, revealed he lent Britney his orange jumpsuit for her music video, but she soon betrayed him

Looking good: Jane's father Rogelio, played by Camil, revealed he lent Britney his orange jumpsuit for her music video, but she soon betrayed him

Guest spot: The singer played herself and checked into the Marbella Hotel

Guest spot: The singer played herself and checked into the Marbella Hotel

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #116 posted 11/11/15 3:05pm

Identity

New Order Announces Only U.S. Date in 2015
November 11,2015



After selling out dates across Europe, in support of their new hit album Music Complete, New Order has announced their first U.S. date in Houston, TX at Free Press' new winter festival, Day For Night on December 19 and 20, 2015.

As the only live show in the U.S. that the band will play in 2015, the iconic electro group expresses excitement to play their first show in the Texas city since 1989; "New Order are looking forward to making their North American live debut in support of Music Complete at the launch of Day For Night Festival. The weekend promises to be a memorable one. See you in Houston!"



tinyurl.com/npv5ugn

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Reply #117 posted 11/12/15 6:42am

JoeBala

Soap star Nathaniel Marston dies tragically in mum's arms 12 days after car crash

The actor was involved in a car accident on October 30 that left him with a broken neck and collapsed lung

American soap star Nathaniel Marston, 40, has died following a car accident which left him in critical condition.

Nathaniel, who starred in As The World Turns and One Life To Live, passed away in his mother's arms in a hospital in Reno, Nevada, on Wednesday.

12 days ago the actor was involved in a horrific crash which left him with a broken and fractured neck, broken shoulder, broken ribs, and a collapsed lung.

His mother, Elizabeth Jackson, announced the sad news on Facebook on Wednesday evening, saying his body stopped responding to treatment.

Nathaniel Marston

Nathaniel starred in As the World Turns and One Life to Live

Read more: A look at Nathaniel Marst...and career

She wrote: "My beloved and cherished son, Nathaniel Marston, who was putting up the good fight until last night, was not able to continue due to the traumatic and devastating nature of his injuries.

"Nathaniel passed away peacefully as I held him in my arms. Father William, myself and his second Mommy Lisa, and our dear friend Charlotte were by his bedside, he was not alone. His injuries, which Drs did their best to heal were not responding to treatment and one after another his bodily functions failed to support his life."

She continued: "His injuries, which Dr.'s did their best to heal were not responding to treatment and one after another his bodily functions failed to support his life. Had Nathaniel lived he would have required a ventilator and would never have been able to utter one more word and would have been sentenced to life as a quadriplegic.

Getty Nathaniel Marston

His mother announced the sad news in a Facebook post on Wednesday

"A condition that Nate would have never have been able to tolerate. By God's love and mercy Nathaniel was spared this living hell..."

Nathaniel's mother also thanked everyone for their prayers and support over the last 12 days and said she will let people know when the memorial service will take place

As Nathaniel Marston dies aged 40 following horrific car crash, a look at his life and career

The actor has passed away after he was involved in a car accident on October 30 that left him with a broken neck and collapsed lung

Family and friends have spoken of their grief after soap star Nathaniel Marston tragica...Wednesday.

The American actor, 40, who starred in As The World Turns and One Life To Live, died in a hospital in Reno, Nevada, following a car accident which left him in a critical condition.

12 days ago the actor was involved in a horrific crash which left him with a broken and fractured neck, broken shoulder, broken ribs, and a collapsed lung.

His mother, Elizabeth Jackson, announced the sad news on Facebook on Wednesday evening, saying his body stopped responding to treatment, and he died in her arms.

Read more: Nathaniel Marston's mothe...to her son

Here we take a look back at his incredible rise to fame and life behind the cameras.

Soap star Nathaniel grew up in Connecticut, before moving around several states with his mum Elizabeth, an aspiring actress.

Getty

Actor Nathaniel Marston was known for his work in soap

Elizabeth Jackson/Facebook

Nathaniel remained close to his mum

The pair eventually settled in Hawaii when he was aged three, moving seven years later to San Diego - with the star remaining in between California and Los Angeles from then on to build his career.

His early start in TV came about by luck, as he was reportedly "discovered" while working in a bakery in Beverley Hills.

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According to reports, a William Morris agent had come in and liked him instantly, kick-starting his work on the screen.

Nathaniel was eventually cast as Rosario Cappamezza in the feature film Love Is All There Is alongside Angelina Jolie, as well as a role in the film The Craft in 1996.

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Nathaniel Marston passed away this week

He quickly moved in to a TV series from there, as a regular in Matt Waters that same year.

However his most well known roles included Eddie Silva in As The World Turns from 1998 to 2000, and later Al Holden in One Life To Live from 2001 to 2003.

He went on to play Dr Michael McBain on the same series from 2004 to 2007, and on November 25, 2008, he appeared on Law & Order: SVU playing Brent Latimer.

The star's personal life progressed alongside his career, as he married Rita Bias in 2006, but the pair aren't thought to have had children together.

He always remained close to his mother.

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Nathaniel Marston towards the start of his career

The star was also an amateur boxer alongside his TV schedule, and was involved in charity work with The Gabriel Project and Lower Eastside Service Center.

Nathaniel had a brush with the law when he was arrested in October 2007 following an altercation with three people in New York.

In March 2010 he pleaded guilty to one charge of misdemeanor, resisting arrest, and completed a three-month course in anger management as part of a no-jail-time sentencing deal.

WireImage

The star passed away following a car crash

‘Listen To Me Marlon’: Brando Unplugged, Showtime Doc Comes Nov. 14 VIDEO

2nd October 2015 by April Neale
An archival still from the Showtime documentary Listen To Me Marlon. - Photo: Getty Images/Courtesy of SHOWTIME - Photo ID: ListenToMeMarlon_22.R Captions: circa 1951: Marlon Brando, wearing a T-shirt, smokes and gestures with his right hand while seated.

An archival still from the Showtime documentary Listen To Me Marlon. – Photo: Getty Images/Courtesy of SHOWTIME – circa 1951: Marlon Brando, wearing a T-shirt, smokes and gestures with his right hand while seated.

“Agents, lawyers, publicity people, it’s all bullshit”
“Everybody feels like they’re a failure. Everybody feels that they could have been a contender.”

“If I hadn’t had the good luck of being an actor, I don’t know what I’ve would have been. I’d have probably been a good con man” – Marlon Brando

TV Picks: Marlon Brando is one of the elite actors of all times. Few thespians are his peers and his life is still fascinating to those who admire his talent on screen.

“Listen To Me Marlon” is an audio and visual psychoanalysis of Marlon Brando by Marlon Brando himself, who reveals his most private thoughts and leaves a mark with his honest commentary on his volatile career and personal life in tapes that were tucked away.

Brando was equal parts sophomoric and otherworldly and intellectual. Brando loved farts, his pet raccoon, and spoke five languages. Brando drifted away from Hollywood in the 60’s, buying a Polynesian atoll called Tetiaroa in 1967. He’d fallen in love with the region when he was making the film “Mutiny on the Bounty.”

marlonue

Brando’s eldest son Christian Brando, who died in 2008 at age 49 allegedly from AIDs related pneumonia, had murdered his half-sister Cheyenne’s boyfriend, Dag Drollet, at Brando’s Los Angeles mansion. Christian was jailed for ten years, and freed after half the term. A year before his release in 1996, Cheyenne, then 25, hanged herself at her mother’s home in Tahiti.

He was the eldest of Brando’s 11 acknowledged children – eight fathered with four different women and three adopted.

The doc comes November 14 at 9 PM ET/PT

Directed by Stevan Riley, “Listen To Me Marlon” unlocks two-time Oscar winner Marlon Brando’s extensive never-before-heard personal audio archive, a front row seat into the mind of this enigmatic legend. As the lines between Brando’s on screen persona and personal life blurred, his audio recordings uncover his intellectual introspection, humor and sensitivity; a man in perpetual search for moral clarity. The doc was released in over 150 theaters this summer and was one of this year’s most successful films at Film Forum in New York.

From Showtime:

Unbeknownst to the public, Marlon Brando amassed a vast archive of personal audio materials over the course of his lifetime. Now – for the first time – those audio recordings come to life in Listen To Me Marlon. Charting his exceptional career as an actor and his extraordinary life away from the stage and screen, the film reveals the complexities and contradictions that were Marlon Brando by telling the story in his own words.

The film was written, edited and directed by Stevan Riley and produced by Academy Award-winning producer John Battsek, Emmy winner R.J. Cutler and Emmy nominated George Chignell. Academy Award-winner Andrew Ruhemann serves as the executive producer.

Michael Ealy promises his ‘Secrets and Lies’ season is ‘more disturbing’

Michael Ealy attends the Think Like A Man Too premiere

If you thought Ryan Phillippe's season of "Secrets and Lies" was disturbing, just wait until you see what Michael Ealy is bringing in Season 2.

He's playing private equity firm heir Eric Warner, whose wife Kate is murdered, changing his life forever. That's when Juliette Lewis's Detective Cornell comes into the picture.

Speaking with Zap2it while promoting his new thriller "The Perfect Guy," Ealy teases that Season 2 will be "much more emotionally-charged" with "a lot more family drama." "It's going to be a little bit more disturbing for people than the first one," he says.

When asked how Season 2 will offer up a different sort of story than what the Phillippe-led Season 1 had, Ealy answers, "Everybody's going to bring a different energy. If someone else played Carter [in 'The Perfect Guy'], they'd bring a different energy. What I'll be able to bring to the piece, it's going to look and feel completely different than what Ryan did. That's kind of my goal. I kind of did that on 'The Following,' I think I was able to pull that off."

The show also will offer Ealy a new challenge: Playing a biracial character. "Terry O'Quinn is playing my father, so it's kind of interesting. I've never played biracial before, so it should be fun," Ealy says with a laugh. "He brings a whole different energy and mystery to the piece that I think will be exciting for the fans."

Fans of Ealy might notice he's been on a bit of a creepy track record -- he's gone from a killer in "The Following" to a psychotic stalker in "The Perfect Guy" to a maybe-murderer on "Secrets and Lies." Joking that the lesson is "don't judge a book by its cover," Ealy explains why he's chosen these projects recently.

"It's fun to play on the edge a little bit," he says. "It's nice to not be the moral compass of a piece. At the end of the day I want to try to create a wide body of work. This is just helping me get there."

"Secrets and Lies" Season 2 premieres on ABC in 2016, filling in for "Nashville" during the midseason Wednesdays at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

'Secrets And Lies' Season 2 Behind-The-Scenes Photos Reveal New Cast On Set [SEE PICS]

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'Secrets And Lies'
(Photo : Instagram/_charliebarnett) The cast of "Secrets and Lies" Season 2 appear in new behind-the-scenes pics on set! Check out more below.

New behind-the-scenes photos have been revealed from the set of "Secrets and Lies" Season 2! Juliette Lewis is joined by Eric Winter, Mekia Cox and Charlie Barnett in one pic. In other photos, AnnaLynne McCord is spotted as well as Terry O'Quinn and Michael Ealy. Check out the pics below!

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The new case in Season 2 revolves around Eric Warner (Ealy) the hard-working and well-educated heir to his family's private equity firm. He has just married "the one," his wife Kate.

While Eric is attending a party to honor his father passing over the reins to him, a horrible tragedy takes place — his wife Kate is murdered.

Deadline reported that Jordana Brewster ("Dallas") will be portraying Kate. She's an accomplished attorney who runs the compliance department for the family's equity firm.

Barnett ("Chicago Fire") is portraying Patrick, the youngest child of the Warner family. He's an analyst at the firm alongside older brother Eric.

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McCord ("90210") is playing Melanie, the outspoken, slightly inappropriate housewife of Patrick. Melanie thought that she'd finally "arrived" when she married Patrick but soon found that the Warner family would never fully accept her as one of their own.

The Hollywood Reporter revealed that O'Quinn ("Lost") is playing John, the patriarch of the Warner family. He is a charming, lovable and very successful finance magnate who built the family's private-equity firm in Charlotte, NC.

Cox ("Grey's Anatomy ") will play Eric and Patrick's sister Amanda Warner. She is a criminal attorney for the Public Defender's office and is married to a successful surgeon in Charlotte. Winter ("Witches of East End") is playing Neal Oliver, Eric's best friend. Lewis will be reprising her role as Detective Andrea Cornell.

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TVLine revealed that there's a key fact about the victim that makes her death considerably more tragic. Some are speculating that Kate may have been pregnant at the time of her death, but fans will have to wait until the show premieres to find out for sure.

"Secrets and Lies" Season 2 will return midseason on ABC.

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JoeBala

'Ash vs Evil Dead': TV Review

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Courtesy of Starz
'Ash vs Evil Dead'

The Bottom Line

Bruce Campbell as Ash remains a treat.

Airtime

Saturdays at 9 p.m. on Starz, beginning Oct. 31

Cast

Bruce Campbell, Lucy Lawless, Ray Santiago, Dana DeLorenzo

Developed By

Sam Raimi, Ivan Raimi, Tom Spezialy

The Sam Raimi-directed premiere works well, but without Raimi, Starz' horror-comedy suffers.

Sam Raimi is The Evil Dead.

Make no mistake — square-jawed leading man Bruce Campbell is its public face, its swagger-filled voice and Raimi's perpetual muse, but the sensibility behind the Evil Dead franchise is Raimi's and Raimi's alone.

Fede Alvarez's 2013 remake-type-thing may have had the frenetic pace, the blood-gushing excess and some of the free-wheeling camera moves, but without Raimi's zany humor, without his anarchic zeal, it ended up sharing a font and some props with the franchise, but not a lot more.

That's why it's both the best and worst thing possible that Starz was able to secure Raimi to co-write and direct the premiere of its new half-hour horror-comedy Ash vs Evil Dead.

Ash vs Evil Dead is set some 30 years after the original movie, taking both Evil Dead and Evil Dead II as canon, but perhaps ignoring the events of Army of Darkness, or at least excluding them from a cheeky catch-up clip package that takes place 25 minutes in. Ash Williams (Campbell) is living in a trailer park, working in a big-box store, drinking and screwing a lot to dull the pain from what he and his deceased friends experienced in the cabin in the woods back in the day. He's also keeping the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis in a locker in this trailer, which is a bad idea given the troubles this Book of the Dead unleashed in the past. It takes no time for a few ill-fated words to be uttered and for Deadites to rise and for Ash to remove his craftsman wooden hand and replace it with his old faithful chainsaw.

Read More "Ash vs Evil Dead' To Get...res Abroad

With demonic possessions running rampant, Ash has to team up with his ValueStop co-worker Pablo (Ray Santiago), a seemingly naive Honduran immigrant whose shaman uncle actually prepared him well for these circumstances, and Pablo's crush Kelly (Dana Delorenzo), who gets pulled unwillingly into these adventures. With undead infiltration into a big-box store backdrop, Ash vs Evil Dead feels a bit like a mash-up with The CW's short-lived Reaper, which makes sense with Reaper veteran Tom Spezialy co-writing the pilot with Ivan and Sam Raimi and with Reaper veteran Craig DiGregorio as showrunner.

Off on the side, Michigan state trooper Amanda Fisher (Jill Marie Jones) is investigating some Necronomicon-related deaths and she meets a strange woman named Ruby, who has served no instant purpose and done nothing of interest through the first two episodes, but is introduced in the pilot because she's played by Lucy Lawless and if you want to get your fans jazzed about your pilot and Sam Raimi isn't enough, 30 seconds of Xena will sometimes suffice.

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Premiering on Halloween night, the pilot is everything that fans will want in an Evil Dead TV show. It's drenched in spouting, dripping, viscous bodily fluids and loaded with Bruce Campbell attitude. Since Raimi is no stranger to operating within spartan financial limitations, the director's trademark mix of knowingly primitive and innovative practical effects work is on full display. The one-liners frequently hit and the scenes of heightened carnage also have the cartoonish audacity that keeps you giggling and watching through your fingers at even the most harrowing of moments. In a TV landscape that's past Peak Zombie, it's enjoyable to get reaccustomed to Raimi's ghouls and the rules that do and don't apply to them.

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It's no surprise that the pilot as already played well to Raimi-friendly audiences and critics, and I'd expect audiences to respond well on Halloween.

Read More "Ash vs Evil Dead" Debuts... Comic-Con

The Ash vs Evil Dead pilot is great and it is also, to put it simply, a bait-and-switch.

It's common for networks to recruit big-name directors for high-priced pilots to lure viewers in for shows which will subsequently be helmed by directors who won't have the money, won't have the shooting days and won't have the freedom to recreate the pilot aesthetic subsequently. Sam Raimi doesn't direct the second episode of Ash vs Evil Dead and, according to press notes, he doesn't return behind the camera for the remainder of the 10-episode first season.

It shows.

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Solomon Kane director Michael J. Bassett, who took over from Raimi for the second and third episodes, is not without horror-action bona fides, but when Evil Dead ceases to have the soaring, probing demon-cam, when it ceases to have the Looney Tunes-flavored gory dementia, when its cinematic restlessness is replaced by a conventional TV aesthetic, it's just not Evil Dead anymore.

The second episode isn't just flat and uninspired, it also pushes Ash vs Evil Dead into a half-hour box that didn't apply to executive producer Raimi, who got 40+ minutes for the pilot, mostly proving that it's hard to establish both comedic and horror rhythms in under 30 minutes and make either tone pay off satisfactorily. In the premiere, the tones blend nicely, but in the second episode any scene in which a creature isn't scurrying up walls, spinning their heads or grasping at our heroes with grimy claws and mindless desperation feels like a pointless imposition. And stranding Jones' in-the-dark trooper in a strictly dramatic procedural investigation disconnected from Ash and his new partners is the fastest way to make viewers resent a character who feels like she's in a different show.

With Jones a distraction and Lawless an early non-factor, Ash vs Evil Dead struggles to introduce its new characters in these opening installments. DeLorenzo has a little backbone, but makes only a limited impression, while Santiago does well as the wide-eyed proxy for the audience, alternating between shell-shocked and shameless Ash-worship. And who wouldn't worship Ash? Even in the less engaging second episode, Campbell is having a hoot playing this gone-to-seed version of the perpetually unreconstructed Ash. Cinching himself into a corset every morning so that he can still preen like a one-handed peacock, Ash is defined by the events he survived in the movies, events that both haunt him, but still give him a confidence he hasn't justified for decades. Campbell certainly hasn't lost a step.

The struggle with Ash vs Evil Dead is reconciling the giddy, maniacal pleasure that Raimi brings to the pilot with the by-the-numbers disappointment that the second episode delivers and knowing that that is more likely to be the series going forward. The second episode has properly gross effects and it has Ash making boorish comments and generally not giving a darn, and maybe with readjusted standards that'll be enough going forward. It's just less than the pilot promises and less than the Evil Dead name perhaps deserves.

'Fargo' Guest Bruce Campbell on the "Terror" of Playing Ronald Reagan, Shared B-Movie Background

The actor also talks with THR about why he wanted to avoid Johnny Carson's "over-the-top" version of Reagan and 'Ash vs. Evil Dead's' early renewal.Bruce Campbell of 'Fargo' Chris Large/FX
The actor also talks with THR about why he wanted to avoid Johnny Carson's "over-the-top" version of Reagan and 'Ash vs. Evil Dead's' early renewal.

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from Monday's episode of Fargo, "The Gift of the Magi."]

Ronald Reagan has been all over FX's Fargo this season.

With the 1980 election on the horizon, posters of the actor-turned-politician have been in the background of many shots, while a couple fictionalized Reagan films have served as the backdrop for both the season's black-and-white cold open and for the movie theater shootout that brought Michael Hogan's Otto Gerhardt to power.

The former California governor and upstart presidential candidate made his first in-person appearance on Fargo in Monday's episode, as a campaign jaunt took him through Minnesota and earned him an escort courtesy of State Trooper Lou Solverson (Patrick Wilson). The episode captured Reagan's almost hypnotic power over the disenchanted electorate, but a men's room conversation with Lou also proved Reagan's limitations.

Fans have been eagerly anticipating Reagan's presence since it was announced that Evil Dead and Burn Notice star Bruce Campbell would be playing the role, reuniting him with Fargo executive producer John Cameron, a friend dating back to their high school days in Michigan.

The Hollywood Reporter spoke with Campbell, a busy man after Starz's early renewal of Ash vs. Evil Dead, about tapping into his inner Reagan and the challenges of making this a performance rather than an impersonation.

I know that you and producer John Cameron go way, way, way back. Was that how this opportunity made its way to you?

My buddy John and I go back to high school and had always imitated Reagan shamelessly, like a lot of my contemporaries. My kids grew up in a Reagan Era, they were young during that decade, so we mocked him good! So that must've been how that came in, that John was like, "OK. I've seen Bruce do Reagan for years" and I'm sure Noah Hawley was at least intrigued.

But then this opportunity comes to you. What is your reaction to being asked to actually play Reagan on-screen?

Terror. And fear. Mostly because this is a show that has won some Emmys. I don't usually do the Emmy. That's not really my bag. I do B-television and B-movies. I got nervous. I shot it in advance and sent it to them to see what they thought. Like, "If you want to fire me, do it now, because this what I'm going to do."

From your point-of-view, what is the key to playing Ronald Reagan as a character, rather than just doing a Ronald Reagan impression?

For sure! You have to think about what he was up to at that particular time, which was campaigning. He changed his philosophy. He was much more liberal. He solidified some of his opinions and beliefs when he worked for GE for five years as a spokesman. That got him really good at speaking and he became good at extemporaneous speaking and that got him into the whole corporate thing. I think mostly with Reagan, you've got to believe what you say. He believed what he said. He was a true believer in himself. I don't think he was a bullshit artist.

How important is it for you to remember that this was 1979 Reagan and not the 1980s Reagan who comes to mind first for many of us now?

Yeah, he wasn't the jelly bean Reagan. This guy was on the move. He hadn't been shot yet and he was still a very vital guy. … We wanted to make sure that the hair was right. I've got enough hair left so we just beefed up what I had. But Reagan, boy that guy had hair. And the other thing is that he told jokes a lot before his speech. It was really crazy. There's a lot of footage. He's a modern president, so a lot of his stuff is available to watch and he'd start with a Russian joke. He was always taking cheap shots at the Russians. He wanted to impress upon the American people that Russians were really just a bunch of backwater schmos run by an idiot and that we shouldn't worry about them like, "This is what these people are up against over there. They need to revolt."

I don't know how he did it, but boy he sure made life simple. "Things can be good again. Things can be great again." And it was amazing how the '80s became the '50s again in a weird way. But the one thing I noticed about his cabinet, even at that time, is they were all old men, they were all doddering old men. That's fine. They had a lot of experience. But I just felt, even then, that they were completely out of touch.

You were a young man at this point. What are your memories of the 1979 that Reagan was rising in?

I'll tell you what, 1979 sucked, aside from us making Evil Dead. The investment climate was gnarly. Interest rates were bad. I remember the lines at the gas pumps very specifically. … It wasn't a very happy time. People weren't happy with Carter. They thought he was weak. And Reagan, it's pretty telling that literally like the day after he was inaugurated they freed the hostages and that was something Carter had really been working on and I think basically he was sending a message of, "You'd better f---ing release those hostages now that I'm running the show or it's over." It was reminiscent of the George W. [Bush] approach: "We are still the superpower. You will listen to us. And if you f--- with us, you're really going to regret it." It's just different approaches.

Carter, aside from the fact that he's a very caring man who obviously cares about humans, but I don't think the impression of him was that good at that time. So '79 was kind of crappy. I can see why a guy could come in and rally everybody out of their stupor and who better than an actor? And I have to say this: I also have stuff in common with him. I've done plenty of B-movies, so I kind of get that. We're both from the Midwest. He's from Illinois. I'm from Michigan. So it wasn't a big stretch like coming up with a "Hahvahd accent." I didn't have to do anything silly like that.

Reagan does, however, have that very distinctive voice and cadence and you're doing the quieter version, as opposed to like the Phil Hartman SNL version. How did you decide when you had enough Reagan that people would recognize it, but not too much Reagan?

I just think he has a cadence whether it's loud or small. He was a good speaker! Some people don't remember, but he did radio forever. All these old-timers did radio. So I think that was mostly just how he spoke. And I also wanted to avoid the Johnny Carson version of Ronald Reagan, too. (Shifts to Carson-Reagan) "Mmm-hmm." That was just completely over-the-top. But you still pick out mannerisms in each of those. Whether it's Phil Hartman or me or Johnny Carson, there's still aspects that are always going to be there about him. The way he shook his head, a little bit. Everybody, when they speak, they have a certain thing they do with their body language, so it was really that. It wasn't anything over-the-top. And my suits had to fit. I had to make sure they fit, because that's important.

I love the scene with Reagan and Lou at the urinal, because that scene seems to capture both Reagan's believable empathy, but also how superficial and empty he could come across. How did you approach that scene?

(Laughs.) He doesn't have an answer! He doesn't have all the answers. We can say that we have all the answers. We can get up there and give speeches and tell people, "You know if you want a great country again, here's what we have to do," but it doesn't stop people from getting cancer. It doesn't stop their lives from being discarded. Speeches aren't going to stop anything. So yes, the theory is great. "Let's pick ourselves up by our bootstraps" and he honestly believes that as an American you can overcome anything, even your wife who's dying. He couldn't abandon his approach, but it does show a little bit of the fallibility of it, that it is a pie in the sky theory. Instead of being the president goes, "I feel your pain, all you poor people, we're going to help you right now," that was not the approach. If you were poor, that was your fault. Americans can do anything. Why are you poor? "You just have to work a little harder." He's still stuck with the attitude at the time, "Well, if you just roll up your sleeves and sweat a bit..."

What was it like rolling into a show like this as the special guest star of the week? And not just the special guest star, but playing freaking Ronald Reagan?

It's all about the material when you get on shows like that. It's not about blowing up cars. It's about acting and directing and storytelling. It was great. Look, I've done the TV shuffle for years, so I get it. When you're on somebody else's conveyor belt, just be ready. It's the same thing with television, you've just got to be ready. If they're moving quick, you've got to be moving quick, too. If they're moving a little slower, "Fine, I'll slow down." But that's TV. That's the beauty of TV. No one dicks around in television.

And before you go, congrats on the early renewal for Ash vs. Evil Dead.

Yeah!

I assume y'all had to see that renewal coming, that it wasn't a surprise?

Honestly, as you prep for season two of anything, we had to get a writers' room going again right away, we had warehouse spaces locked down, the same crap you have to do for any TV show. I think they saw the enthusiasm for the show. Every show will have to prove itself over time if they can sustain it, but I think they saw how big the fan base was. They saw it at San Diego Comic-Con and they got a taste of it when they showed the first episode at New York Comic-Con. These are people who light their hair on fire when they like something. These are great fans and I think they got it.

What didn't hurt is the fact that Evil Dead started overseas. It couldn't get released in the States until we made money overseas in England, with Palace Pictures. I think they went, "Oh, we can sell this foreign, too." Not every show can translate across The Big Ditch. So we had a couple distinct advantages. Starz wants to do shows that people don't like a little bit. They want to do shows that people like a lot. That's their current current mantra and I think we fit into that.

Fargo airs Mondays at 10 p.m. on FX. Ash vs. Evil Dead airs Saturdays at 9 p.m. on Starz.

Ash vs. Evil Dead Premiere Review (Spoiler-Free)

Review David Crow 10/31/2015 at 10:12PM

We caught the groovy world premiere of Ash vs. Evil Dead, and we're happy to say the violence and comedy is back. Grab an axe.

This Ash vs. Evil Dead review is spoiler-free.

It's been 23 years since Sam Raimi, Bruce Campbell, and Rob Tapert depicted horror's greatest loudmouth, Ash Williams, mugging before cameras in between bouts of gore and groan-inducing one-liners. And for the last 22 years, fans have been asking the filmmakers about when there was going to be another adventure featuring the braggart and his trusty chainsaw.

That wait came to an end at New York Comic Con when Starz's Ash vs. Evil Dead premiered before a ballroom full of primitive screwheads. The sea of chainsaw-shaped foam fingers was greeted by Bruce Campbell who ostensibly came onstage to introduce a clip while telling a story about his parents. But before he could finish the second sentence, out walked Sam Raimi who gladly belittled and bullied his grade school chum: shut up and play the whole pilot for the fans.

Obviously this was rehearsed. But much like the actual series premiere episode of Ash vs. Evil Dead, that playfully mean-spirited cruelty is what fuels your enjoyment in its best moments and helps buoy an exposition-heavy introduction into something eminently gory and entertaining. In short, this is definitely Evil Dead, baby. Grab an axe.

The pilot seems structured like the first act of Sam Raimi and Ivan Raimi’s long bandied about Evil Dead 4 treatment. The opening scene of the episode is also what has appeared in all the trailers: Ash Williams still prepares for battle in the morning with severe intensity and the rapid-fire editing of extreme close-ups. Except instead of donning boomsticks, plates of armor, and that elusive chainsaw, he is popping on a man-girdle and dentures with a smile: the war is now with middle age and he is losing it. Badly.

Raimi, who also directed the pilot, uses his famously efficient style of storytelling to develop a world that has not changed much for Ash since the end of Army of Darkness, which is perhaps the most pathetic thing about the character. He is still a boozing womanizer who uses his missing hand to pick up chicks at the bar, and he still works at a massive retail store—now “Value Stop” instead of “S-Mart”—where depending on who you ask of his colleagues, he is either the coolest or lamest thing about the place.

It is also those co-workers who represent the pilot’s first of two major transitions for television. Unlike any of the previous Evil Dead films, there is a true supporting cast here dominated by Pablo (Ray Santiago) and Kelly (Dana DeLorenzo). Pablo idolizes Ash as a wise man, and Kelly sees him for the sad sack piece of trailer trash he has become (or perhaps always has been?). But both find renewed purpose for him when the Deadites come calling.

How the Deadites actually return is one of the best jokes of the premiere that is too good to give away. Simply rest assured that the strained logic for the evil spirits in the woods to once again rise all but guarantees that Ash is already television’s greatest fool, and he isn't even on episode two.

But perhaps at first glance, the episode would seem to spend too much time underlining that point. In setting the tone of the series, the 30-minute pilot spends time aplenty with Ash behaving as ever the scoundrel while holding back on some of the visual flourishes fans tend to expect. There is the definite sense that Raimi is restraining himself behind-the-camera from the kind of elaborate forced, cant angles and inventive filmmaking that elevated the Evil Dead trilogy from mere schlock and into the realm of something deviously special.

... That is until the last 10 minutes or so of the 30-minute pilot. Ash vs. Evil Dead might appear stilted by relying on that familiar B-horror shorthand of archetypal characters and traditional horror set-ups, and the sudden inclusion of CGI, as opposed to stop-motion animation and the gallons of blood, for the pilot's most elaborate effects can at times feel like a concession. Still... just wait for those last 10 minutes.

To quibble about storytelling tropes or the hue of blood in an Evil Dead project is missing the forest for the demonically possessed raping trees. And to be certain, the Ash vs. Evil Dead pilot is holding back almost all of its best stuff for a kidney punch of fun for the diehards (and just a kidney punch for Campbell).

While much of the first half of the episode seems poised to set-up how the storyline can work weekly with Ash interacting with other characters in far less elaborate situations—wherein the best stuff is some classic sight gags that would not be out of place in an Abbott and Costello or Three Stooges routine—the second half is delayed wish fulfillment and fan satisfaction. Raimi lets loose when the Deadites come after Ash in force, and every single beloved weapon, one-liner, and aggressive “Force” shot with Dutch angles is delivered in a bountiful gush of crimson red.

By the premiere's end, most of one's doubts are put to bed and Bruce Campbell is allowed to strike a pose that you might have forgotten you missed. And unlike other resuscitated TV series stars who aired a sleepy pilot premiere at NYCC this weekend, Campbell both on stage and on the screen in Ash vs. Evil Dead looks ecstatic to be here. After 30 years, he knows this character and he fits into the role as comfortably as a steel-iron glove. His comedic timing might have even improved since we last saw that Chin cracking wise to soul-sucking hellions of the pit.

As a bit of narrative storytelling, fans will have to wait to see how this works as a week-to-week series. Raimi only filmed the first episode, and a character as hammy as Ash Williams interacting with people who aren’t dead five minutes later might remain a challenge. However, there are some interesting story threads sown away from the boomstick.

The most promising of which is Amanda Fisher (Jill Marie Jones), who participates in the other great set-piece of the episode. The best Deadite attack of the night occurs when showrunner Craig DiGregorio and Raimi pay tribute to Linda Blair in The Exorcist and do her one better by showcasing an entire demonic attack with a head screwed on backwards (there is also even a horror-junkie-delight homage to one of the better scares in The Exorcist III).

It is also in this story thread where Lucy Lawless’ Ruby Knowby is introduced in a blink-and-you-miss-it cameo—a down payment on presumably good things to come. These two women represent the living humans Ash’s idiocy leaves behind in its narcissistic wake. That might be the very best reason to rationalize a weekly serial with this guy.

Well, that plus the groovy blood-letting and one-liners. The pilot offers all of that by the end in a delayed satisfaction of violence that is a rush to behold. Whatever else can be said about the episode, there is no denying that when it is over, Evil Dead fans will be chomping at the bit to slice through another one.

Welcome back, Ash Williams, you magnificent bastard.

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JoeBala

Tracy Morgan in Talks to Play Redd Foxx in Richard Pryor Biopic

Tracy Morgan Comedy Tour

Michael Buckner/Variety/REX Shutterstock

November 12, 2015 | 04:56PM PT

Tracy Morgan is in talks to play Redd Foxx opposite Mike Epps in the Richard Pryor biopic for the Weinstein Co. with Lee Daniels directing.

“Mr. Foxx, I hope I do you justice!” said Morgan in a statement. “It will be an honor to portray an icon.”

Foxx was best known for raunchy comedy “party albums” in the 1950s and 1960s, and starred for six seasons in the sitcom “Sanford and Son” from 1972 to 1977. Pryor broke into the business in the early 1960s and had become the top stand-up comedian in the business by the early 1970s.

Foxx and Pryor both appeared in Eddie Murphy’s 1989 movie “Harlem Nights.”

Other cast in the untitled Pryor project include Kate Hudson as Pryor’s wife, Taraji P. Henson and Murphy as Pryor’s parents and Oprah Winfrey as Pryor’s grandmother who raised him.

Morgan returned to “Saturday Night Live” as host on Oct. 17, more than a year after being seriously injured in a car accident on the New Jersey Turnpike. He’s also in New Line comedy “Fist Fight” with Ice Cube and Charlie Day.

Morgan is repped by CAA and Hansen Jacobson.

'Lego Batman Movie' Cast: Mariah Carey, Gotham City's Mayor, Joins Rosario Dawson/Batgirl!

By Jorge Solis (j.solis@mstarsnews.com) | Nov 12, 2015 07:00 PM EST
Mariah Carey
(Photo : Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images) Mariah Carey

Warner Bros. has cast a new member to the spinoff of their successful, The Lego Movie. In the Lego Batman Movie, with Will Arnett returning as The Dark Knight, Mariah Carey will play Gotham City's Mayor, alongside Rosario Dawson (Batgirl).

According to The Hollywood Reporter, it was originally announced that the Vision of Love would be playing Commissioner Jim Gordon. Because of false assumptions, the record had to set straight. The singer/songwriter is indeed heading over to Gotham City, but not as the commish.

Returning to the movies, many years after there acting debut in Glitter, the 47 year old songstress will voice The Mayor of the crime-ridden city. The Mayor may call upon the Dark Knight when the his rogues gallery of villains strike at the heart of the city. We're still waiting to hear who will be voicing Commissioner Jim Gordon.

Chris McKay, the animation supervisor on Lego Movie, will be directing the project. The script has been written by author-screenwriter Seth Grahame-Smith (Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter). Dan Lin and Roy Lee are producing, along with Lego Movie director-screenwriters Phil Lord and Christopher Miller.

The cast include butler Alfred Pennyworth (Ralph Fiennes), Barbara Gordon aka Batgirl (Rosario Dawson), possibly Dick Grayson, Tim Drake, or Jason Todd (take your pick) as Robin (Michael Cera), Batman's sidekick, and the clown prince of crime, Joker (Zach Galifianakis).

In the Batman Universe, across television and comics, Jim Gordon is currently played by Ben McKenzie. Currently in the comics, Jim has taken on the mantle of the Batman and an amnesiac Bruce Wayne has proposed to his girlfriend. Julie Madison. No word yet if the Lego movie will follow continuity in some way; or possibly a standalone.

According to IGN, The Lego Batman Movie will hit theaters on February 10, 2017, just in time for Valentine's Day.

'American Crime' Season 2: Regina King, Felicity Huffman, Timothy Hutton First Look Premiere!

By Jorge Solis (j.solis@mstarsnews.com) | Nov 12, 2015 05:00 PM EST
Regina King
(Photo : Jason Merritt/Getty)

ABC has provided first look at Season 2 of American Crime. Ahead of its January premiere date, check out what creator John Ridley (12 Years A Slave) has in store for his stellar cast, which includes Regina King, Felicity Huffman, and Timothy Hutton.

Introduction

As we previously mentioned, the second season's central crime, which will take place again in Austin, Texas, will revolve around a high school boy, Taylor Blaine (Connor Jessup). After being sexually assaulted, the high school boy will then accuse several players , including (Trevor Jackson and Joey Pollari), on a championship basketball team at their private school. During the horrible crime, the private school's team players took photos of their atrocities and posted them online.

Andre Benjamin and Regina King

Andre Benjamin will play architect Michael Lacroix. As a power couple, Lacrioux and his wife, Terri (King), are prominent members of their community. With their financial means, as well as the acumen needed, Michael and Terri intend to fiercely defend their son when he becomes entangled in a scandal at the elite private school.

Felicity Huffman

According to TV Guide, Timothy Hutton and Felicity Huffman will return for the sophomore season playing different character. Hutton will pay the head coach of the basketball team, Huffman has landed the role of the school's headmistress.
Timothy Hutton

Variety has an exclusive first look gallery of the show's season season. Because the ABC drama tackled issues of race and social justice, the cast and crew earned 10 Emmy nominations, including a win for supporting actress Regina King.

Connor Jessup

Executive producer Michael McDonald states, "It will be fun for the audience to see the transformations. It's like a theater group, and we're putting on a new show."

MCDonald then describes the Michael and Terri, "They're an educated, wealthy family -- I don't think we've seen that portrayed on television in the way we're going to do it. We're not going to ignore that they're black, either."

American Crime Season 2 premieres on Wednesday, January 6 at 10/9c on ABC.

Tennessee Williams Movie in the Works at Broad Green

Tennessee Williams movie

ITV/REX Shutterstock

November 12, 2015 | 09:13AM PT

Broad Green Pictures is developing a movie about iconic playwright Tennessee Williams, based on John Lahr’s book “Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh.”

Williams authored “A Streetcar Named Desire,” “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,” “The Glass Menagerie,” “Sweet Bird of Youth” and “The Night of the Iguana.”

The untitled project has not yet been set up with a writer or director. Lauren McCarthy and Shary Shirazi will be overseeing the project for the company.

Williams was born in Mississippi and had an unhappy childhood, dominated by an alcoholic father. He attended the University of Missouri’s Columbia Journalism School before dropping out to work at a shoe factory.

Williams suffered a nervous breakdown at the age of 24. He scored his first success in 1944 with “The Glass Menagerie,” the story of a young man, his disabled sister and their controlling mother, and saw his biggest success in 1947 with “A Streetcar Named Desire.”

Williams became an alcoholic later in life, tormented by the inability to replicate his earlier successes. He died at the age of 71.

The news was first reported by Deadline Hollywood.

Lou Diamond Phillips on Chilean Miners’ Saga, ‘Night Stalker’ and ‘Longmire’

Lou Diamond Phillips

Julian Berman for Variety

November 12, 2015 | 10:00AM PT

Jenelle Riley

Deputy Awards and Features Editor @JenelleRiley

Lou Diamond Phillips is so busy, he admits “sometimes I have to look around, because I don’t know where I am.” The actor can be caught on the big screen in “The 33,” which tells the true story of the Chilean miners who were trapped underground for 69 days. Phillips plays Luis “Don Lucho” Urzúa, the shift foreman who knew the mine was in poor condition. The film also stars Antonio Banderas and Juliette Binoche.

He can currently be seen on small screens in the series “Longmire,” which moved from A&E to Netflix for its fourth season, and has recently been reupped for a fifth.

Did you follow the story of the Chilean miners when it first happened?

Most definitely. It took place over several days, so I remember watching it on CNN and following the story and the rescue. When my agent called me and said, “There’s interest in you from this director for a story on the Chilean miners,” I said, “I’m in. No matter what.”

Were you always going to play the role you ended up with?

Well, the funny thing is, when I went to meet the director, Patricia Riggen, there wasn’t a script yet. She was in Los Angeles for two hours before returning to Colombia and so I raced over to meet her. They had some temporary sides and I read with her. It was one of those rare, wonderful instances where before she left she said, “I want to work with you, I just don’t know what part yet.”

When did you learn it would be Don Lucho?

I got a script about two weeks later, and she had decided I would play Don Lucho. Not only was I thrilled, I was immediately at a loss, because he’s such a complex character. He has integrity and dignity and such a complicated journey in the film. He’s management, yes, but he’s middle-management. And he isn’t able to be as forthcoming with his men and he would like, so he’s very torn.

Were you able to meet the real Don Lucho?

A few times. And much to my embarrassment, I’m not bilingual. So there was a bit of a barrier between me and him. But I was able to glean so much from his presence. He’s a man of few words, he’s not demonstrative. He doesn’t yearn for the spotlight.

You just finished filming “The Night Stalker” for filmmaker Megan Griffiths, in which you play serial killer Richard Ramirez. Was that difficult?

It truly is one of the most challenging, interesting, complex roles I’ve ever played. It’s maybe the biggest transformation I’ve ever undertaken. And it’s not a biopic, it’s a fictional look at the story. Bellamy Young plays a lawyer whose client is on Death Row and she believes a young Richard Ramirez may have committed the crime. So it becomes a very “Silence of the Lambs” chess game type of situation with page after page of these verbal gymnastics. The script was absolutely brilliant.

It’s interesting to note that both “The 33” and “The Night Stalker” are directed by women.

I have been incredibly fortunate. And I sincerely hope it is a bellwether to a change in Hollywood. I’ve been incredibly fortunate to work with a number of female directors. What I love about it is not only do they have the technical expertise and the leadership skills to marshal a film crew, they bring a sensitivity and an understanding to material that I don’t believe every male has. It’s somewhat ironic that in this testosterone-driven film about 33 men in a mine, Patricia Riggen was able to find the heart of it. And in this psychological, horrific thriller, Megan Griffiths, this beautiful lady of light and warmth, is investigating the dark side of humanity.

Season Four of “Longmire” moved to Netflix, which seems like a good home for it.

Absolutely. We were previously constrained to 42 minutes and as a result, a lot of my work hit the floor. With an additional 20 minutes, we can let those moments breathe and round out those characters and it’s a much more cinematic experience episode to episode.

But you ended on a cliffhanger, when we don’t know if there’s a Season 5.

I think that speaks to all of our optimism!

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