Monday, December 15, 2025
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Lady Gaga Posts 11 Songs in the iTunes Top 100 Including 2 from Last Night’s “SNL”

Last night’s “SNL” proved to be a winner for Lady Gaga.

She performed two songs, “Abracadabra” and “Killah.” The former shot to the top of iTunes today. The latter and 9 others are scattered through the iTunes top 100. Her album, “Mayhem,” is number 1, and four others are on the album chart.

Gaga performed in almost every sketch besides giving a great monologue, very funny and self-effacing about her recent movie flop, “Joker 2.”

“I promise not to do Joker 3,” she said.

We’ll see the ratings on Tuesday.

“White Lotus” Ratings Fell 26% from Episode 2 to 3, But Hang On Because Shocking Stuff is Coming

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“White Lotus” is on HBO and Max tonight for episode 4.

How’s it doing? There was a sharp drop last week from week 2, a stunning 26%. The 507,000 linear viewers was still higher than week 1. But you could tell from social media comments, there was disappointment that more didn’t happen.

Not much happened last week either, and the same can be said for Week 4. Mike White is laying out his story, peeling it like an onion. Tonight’s episode is more of the same as we learn things about each character. Jason Isaacs’ Timothy is slowly going crazy knowing he’s in massive legal trouble back home. The three women are still testing their friendships. Saxon Ratliff is looking for trouble.

Believe me, he will find it next week. Episodes 5 and 6 are going to buzz right through the internet like Elon Musk’s chainsaw. There’s also the arrival of an Oscar winning actor who kind of steals the show two ways — with their participation in a plot, and also personal revelation that should be some interest.

So watch tonight and get ready for the next two weeks after. I wish I could say more, but I wouldn’t be able to sleep tonight.

Also, I really love the music. I’ve read some comments about it but I think the Season 3 theme music is quite catchy. I also could watch Parker Posey reading from the phone book. So there!

Judy Collins’ Starry 85th Birthday at Town Hall A Night of Thrills with Stephen Stills, Rickie Lee Jones, Paula Cole and More

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As famed singer Judy Collins celebrates her 85th year, she’s hot stuff. But of course she has been since 1962 when she was on the forefront of the folk movement that launched her, Bob Dylan, and Joan Baez to dizzying heights.

Collins even has a feature last week in The New Yorker.

So why not celebrate 85 in fashion? Last night she filled New York’s Town Hall, the same place she played her second ever show back in ’62. She and the building have held up very well. On stage she welcomed her old boyfriend, Stephen Stills, plus Sophie B. Hawkins (who turned to be a most winning emcee), “Wicked” composer Stephen Schwartz, the astonishing Paula Cole, and Martha Redbone, Ari Heist, and many other collaborators including Fairport Convention legend, Richard Thompson.

Legendary Warner Bros. record producer Russ Titelman worked on the sound and it was probably the best show anyone’s heard in Town Hall or any theater in ages.

Collins is a full-throated smooth operator on stage, ever so comfortable telling jokes off the cuff, reading from a tight, punchy script recalling her amazing journey in music, and showing off her trained classical pianist moves. She’s also a pretty good guitar player.

But it’s The Voice. There’s a TV show called “The Voice” but nothing equals Collins’ clear as spring brook water tones even after 60 something years. The Voice sounds like what you imagine Colorado to be, and when she sings about her birthplace you feel like packing up and going there immediately.

Yes, she sang her hits like Stephen Sondheim’s “Send in the Clowns” and Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now.” Her version of the latter was the original, of course, making Joni’s recording a cover of her own song. The difference now is that Joni performs it with great drama and intensity. Collins’ take is almost a pop arrangement counterpointed by disarming phrasing that makes the clouds seem less threatening and more like the kind you see in great paintings.

Collins also delivered some acapella moments, on songs like “Where Have All the Flowers Gone” and Leonard Cohen’s “Suzanne.” (She made Cohen famous.) Her reading of “Who Knows Where the Time Goes” with Thompson was incredibly poignant. With Schwartz on piano, she sang a duet of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow,” with Schwartz singing and playing piano on that song for the first time ever. Considering his attachment to “The Wizard of Oz,” it was a once in lifetime moment.

The guests did not let us down. Rickie Lee Jones’s version of “Mr. Tambourine Man” turned Dylan’s Byrds hit inside out. Cole — who had big hits in the 1990s and then fought for decades with her record company — emerged as a classic talent. Beth Nielsen Chapman was outstanding. Martha Redbone — performing at the Apollo soon — is a roots revelation, an overnight sensation after 40 years. (Her emotional performance last night reminded me of Rhiannon Giddens singing years ago at Town Hall.)

Well, they filmed the whole thing last night with about 20 discreet cameras for a long needed documentary about Collins’s life as a singer, songwriter, and activist, not to mention poet. Yes, she has a book of poetry coming out next month because…why not? The night, by the way, ended with everyone on stage singing the final section of Stills’ “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes,” the song he wrote for her in 1968 that has lasted our lifetime.

One last thing: Taylor Swift and her proteges like Gracie Abrams don’t realize how influenced they are by Judy Collins. Swifties would do well go to back and listed to albums like “Bread and Roses.” They’d be mesmerized.

Box Office: “Mickey 17” Is a Big Hit in South Korea, Of Course, But Not So Much in the United States

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Hey, Mickey, you’re so fine — in South Korea.

“Mickey 17,” Bong Joon Ho’s follow up to “Parasite” has made $9 million in South Korea, which makes sense because the director is a national hero in his come country.

But “Mickey” is a slight miss in the US, where it made $19 million over the weekend. That would be a lot except “Mickey” cost $120 million, so the possibility of breaking even is not possible. Oh my.

Meantime, Best Picture “Anora” added 1,130 theaters and made some money — $1.8 million. That’s a million dollars more than it’s made in 21 weeks.

I just heard a great story about the “Anora” Oscar party last Sunday at the Sunset Tower. Oscar winner Mikey Madison didn’t show up, according to spies. And the rest of the cast including director Sean Baker were separated by security from the guests, no matter who they were. Neon Pictures may have won the Oscar but they are largely clueless when it comes to press!

“Parasite” Director Strikes Out with $120 Mil “Mickey 17,” with Robert Pattinson, Set for Less Than $20 Mil Weekend

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Six years ago, “Snowpiercer” director Bong Joon Ho caused a sensation with “Parasite.”

The social commentary thriller caught on like wildfire and wound up winning the Oscar for Best Picture. Bong won Best Director, and Best Original Screenplay.

Now comes “Mickey 17” starring Robert Pattinson, a movie I know nothing about. All I do know is that “Mickey” cost around $120 million and is unlikely to make that back.

So far the box office is just $7.5 million over Thursday and Friday. Weekend estimates are less than $20 million. In other words, it’s a bust.

“Mickey 17” has a 79% on Rotten Tomatoes. But people are not eager to see it. The audience response is just 75%. I may not be alone in not knowing much about it. The cast is good — Mark Ruffalo, Steven Yeun, Toni Colette — but who knows what that means?

Stay tuned…

UPDATE Netflix’s $320 Mil All Star Sci Fi Film Panned By Critics with Just 18% Approval, from “Avengers” Directors

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FRIDAY MARCH 14TH– More reviews lowered the number to 18%.

EARLIER Directors Anthony and Joe Russo, the Russo brothers, made the big trilogy that ended the “Avengers” series. Altogether, the three films made $7 billion worldwide.

Their new movie, “The Electric State,” is so bad Universal gave it to Netflix, which has mostly hidden it from view.

“The Electric State” also happens to carry one of the highest price tags ever for a standalone movie: $320 million.

Are you sitting down?

“The Electric State” has only 22 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. Only 27% of them said it was “fresh.” The reason for the low number of reviews? Until today, no one has seen it, starting with reviewers.

For Netflix, which just announced an $18 billion investment in new movies this year, this one still has to hurt.

“The Electric State” stars Chris Pratt, Oscar winner Ke Huy Quan, Millie Bobby Brown of “Stranger Things,” Jason Alexander from “Seinfeld,” Stanley Tucci, Billy Bob Thornton, the current “Captain America” Anthony Mackie, and Woody Harrelson, among many others. Even former MTV newsman Kurt Loder is listed in the credits as well as a Russo wife.

This boondoggle hits Netflix on March 14th without ever showing up in a theater. One good thing about a robot movie: you don’t have to worry about their old tweets. (It’s a joke.)

Trump Creates Kennedy Center Conflict of Interest, Adds Fox News Anchors Maria Bartiromo, Laura Ingraham to the Board

Rocker Peter Wolf Memoir: Roman Polanski Hosting 13 Year Old Natassja Kinski, Nicholson and Dunaway Sealing “Chinatown” Deal

Trump Creates Kennedy Center Conflict of Interest, Adds Fox News Anchors Maria Bartiromo, Laura Ingraham to the Board

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It’s clear now that Donald Trump wants to kill off the Kennedy Center.

In a Friday night news dump, Trump has added Fox News anchors Laura Ingraham and Maria Bartiromo to the Kennedy Center board.

They are each Trump sycophants, extremely right wing, and have no business being there.

They are also both white, which means no effort has been made to diversify his new board. There remains not a single Black person on the board.

The new board now features many women without qualifications but who are married to wealthy men. Bartiromo, a disgrace as a news person, calls Jonathan Steinberg, a Republican billionaire, her husband. He’s the son of billionaire Saul Steinberg.

Naming Fox News anchors to any appointments in the government woyld ordinarily constitute a conflict of interest. If Biden or Obama had put a CNN or MSNBC anchor on that board, the howling from Republicans would have been deafening.

But neither Trump nor Fox has any integrity, so this will be rubber stamped without question.

This cinches the ongoing disaster at the Kennedy Center as no actual artist deserving of a Kennedy Center Honor will ever accept one now.

This also comes as the musical “Hamilton” has cancelled its 2026 run at the Center, and Whoopi Goldberg announced she will not appear there until Trump is out.

No celebrity or past honoree will come near the place now.

Meanwhile, Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson must be disappointed they haven’t been asked to join the board.

Andy Borowitz, humorist from The New Yorker, posted this week:

Reacting to the decision by the producers of “Hamilton” to withdraw the show from the Kennedy Center, Donald J. Trump announced on Thursday that he would replace the production with a new musical, “Burr.”

The show, which will star Ted Nugent as Aaron Burr, will be produced by a new patron of the arts, The National Rifle Association.

“‘Hamilton,’ quite frankly, is no great loss,” Trump said. “It was an unsuccessful musical that no one wanted tickets for.”

“Burr is my kind of American hero,” he added. “He shot a guy.”

Report: Gene Hackman Had Alzheimer’s, Probably Didn’t Know Wife Betsy Had Died A Week Earlier

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Gene Hackman and wife Betsy did not die of carbon monoxide poisoning, or suicide.

According to the official medical examiner’s report, Gene had Alzheimers and a week after Betsy.

He probably didn’t know she had already passed.

“Mr. Hackman showed evidence of advanced Alzheimer’s disease,” Chief Medical Investigator Dr. Heather Jarrell said. “He was in a very poor state of health. He had significant heart disease, and I think ultimately that’s what resulted in his death.”

“Mr. Hackman showed evidence of advanced Alzheimer’s disease,” Jarrell said. “He was in a very poor state of health. He had significant heart disease, and I think ultimately that’s what resulted in his death.”

Betsy’s death was attributed to hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a rare but potentially fatal disease spread by infected rodent droppings. She was 65. He was 95.

It’s amazing to me that Hackman’s children were not in touch with the couple at all. Their protestations of “being close” sound ridiculous. Also, no one came looking for Betsy even though she had a 91 year old mother.

Rocker Peter Wolf Memoir: Roman Polanski Hosting 13 Year Old Natassja Kinski, Nicholson and Dunaway Sealing “Chinatown” Deal

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Rocker Peter Wolf was the heart and soul of the J Geils Band in the 1970s.

After having smash hits with “Centerfold” and “Freeze Frame” in 1980, Wolf went out on his own with more hits like “Lights Out.”

He was the real deal rock star. All through the 70s he lived with actress Faye Dunaway in Boston and Hollywood.

Now Peter has written a memoir, which he calls a book of vignettes.”Waiting on the Moon” will be published Tuesday. Wolf does write all about his Hollywood experiences via Faye, almost as if he were detached from the memories. He  maintains a surprisingly non judgmental attitude throughout.

But there it is, in the middle of the book, the story of Faye, Jack Nicholson, and Roman Polanski making the classic “Chinatown” in 1973. (It was released in June 1974.) There are disagreements, a lot of coke, and many wild parties.

At one point, Wolf and Dunaway visit Polanski in a guest house. And the guest was Natassja Kinski, the actress and model and daughter of Klaus Kinski. By Wolf’s recollection, Natassja would have been 13 years old at the most, more likely 12, if his facts are straight.

Wolf writes:
Faye spoke to him in French, and just as they began a lengthy dia-
logue, a beautiful young woman appeared from the other room. Bare-
foot, she had thick light brown hair down to her shoulders and was
dressed in a diaphanous white nightgown that exposed her youthful,
delicate body. She, too, spoke French. I assumed it was Roman’s daughter as she sat on the floor next to him…

The young woman, transfixed, staring at Faye with doe-eyed admira-
tion, got up, hugged Roman goodnight, and left. He then told us that the girl, Nastassja, was the daughter of actor Klaus Kinski and was in Los Angeles for tutoring as well as dancing and acting lessons while preparing for her first film role. He added, “Klaus has not been much of a father.”

Not long after, Wolf and Dunaway go to a party at Jack Nicholson’s house.

Wolf recalls the other guests “drifting away.”

He writes: Jack invited Faye upstairs to work on
the script, and Faye asked if I would mind waiting. I answered, “Of
course not.”
When a half hour became an hour, and then another, I called up the
staircase— “Faye?”— but got no reply. I continued to wait in the living
room.
Finally, as I saw the sun coming up, it occurred to me that what I
thought might be happening was definitely happening.

Wolf calls a cab and while he’s waiting throws a lot of furniture in Nicholson’s pool including a glass table piled high with coke. A year later Wolf and Dunaway nevertheless embark on a tempestuous five year marriage, much of which took place in Boston (where I happened to be at the time– they were the talk of the town!). Fighting, infidelity, and divorce follow.

“Waiting on the Moon” reads like the flip side of Julia Phillips’ “You’ll Never Eat Lunch in This Town Again.” It’s a chronicle of Hollywood and the rock world at their most dizzying, with scores of cameos from the most famous celebrities of that time. The book should be number 1 with a bullet when it’s published next week.

PS There’a going to have to be a Volume 2, because the book makes no mention of Dunaway’s Oscar in 1976 for “Network,” or even what happened to Polanski in 1977. Stay tuned…

Gayle King, Katy Perry Urged Not to Go Up, Up and Away After Musk Spaceship Explodes on Take Off

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So…

Gayle King and Katy Perry are being pleaded with by fans.

I must agree with everyone. These two ladies should not go up in Jeff Bezos’s rocket ship.

Not after today’s debacle as Elon Musk’s SpaceX sent a rocket up, up, and away only to watch it explode into a million pieces.

The other ladies set for Bezos’s trip include his fiancee, Lauren Sanchez, an actual scientist, and a couple of women with rich husbands. They can make their own decisions.

Katy Perry does not want to become like her song, a “Firework.”

And my friend Gayle would really miss a lot of great music shows after she’s scattered over the Atlantic. Plus, Oprah would really miss her.

Let’s get a grip and have NASA do the space trips with real astronauts and scientists. Musk and Bezos could spend all that money ending hunger around the world.