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The Hollywood Reporter Fires Dean of Movie Critics, Todd McCarthy, Cuts 30% of Staff, Owner Todd Boehly Waves White Flag

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The Hollywood Reporter is kinda over, again. It’s a shame.

Yesterday they axed 30% of their staff including the dean of movie critics, Todd McCarthy. He’d been with them this time since 2009. He’d worked for them before, and for Variety twice in his career. Todd, who’s not dead, and will certainly surface successfully, is what gave THR any credibility. (I’m not discounting David Rooney, their excellent theater critic.)

But THR’s run from the time it was bought from Nielsen by a shaky consortium of Guggenheim Partners, Rudy Giuliani stooge publisher of “The Hill” Jimmy Finkelstein, and a guy named Matthew Doull (ex husband of writer Vicky Ward since vanished), is done. A decade of hubris and overspending has ended with hari kari, and a capitulation to non journalistic mandates.

First they ousted editor Matthew Belloni, who didn’t want to kowtow to celebrities or his overlords Modi Wiczyk and Asif Satchu of Media Rights Capital, whom Boehly put in charge of the magazine. MRC finances movies. They’re a company that THR would be writing about. But Boehly sucked them into his post-Guggenheim game (even though they’re all still tied to Guggenheim.) Last year, MRC made “Knives Out,” for example. They are in the game. They are heavily involved in TV production. Last year they formed a partnership with talent agency, UTA, which led to a civil war in the business. When push came to shove, which it did, MRC’s interests were more valuable than covering the movie business.

Boehly formed Eldridge Industries when he took the Reporter, Billboard, and other elements of Guggenheim like Dick Clark Productions, which produces the Golden Globes and the American Music Awards. Out of that came Valence, the publishing company name for the entity that has the trade magazines. THR is said to have been losing $20 million a year. Billboard probably was, too. He just kept pumping more and money into the balloon until it burst. Now all these people are out of work, McCarthy among them.

This site, Showbiz411.com, actually began because I had a contract with Nielsen to write a column and write for the Reporter in 2009-10. When Guggenheim–using the name Prometheus– bought the magazines from Nielsen at the end of 2009, they couldn’t have acted in a less honorable manner. First they renewed and extended my contract, then they tried to terminate it, then they asked me to keep writing for them, and then they terminated the contract. That was the day they pulled the plug on my column without warning.

Here’s a funny story. That same day, I got a call in the morning with a scoop: Rosie O’Donnell was returning to TV to do a talk show for Oprah’s OWN channel. I had the exclusive. But I was out at THR. So my trusty designer and “Scottie” (from “Star Trek”) pulled us away (somehow) from THR, designed a new site with the same name (I owned the url) and pointed everything anew. On the new site, the same day, I broke the Rosie story. And THR had to link to me. This was all in 8 hours.

Now they’ve fired Todd McCarthy, the main reason to read the Reporter. Variety and the Reporter break the reviews on movies, a signal to movie theaters, as well as moviegoers, about a film’s future. Without an eminent reviewer, the Reporter is an Oreo without the middle. Do you ever eat the wafers without the creamy middle? No.

Of course, Boehly and co’s rationale is probably that there won’t be much work for the next few months until big movies are allowed back into theaters. But McCarthy, who says he just got a raise, could have written lots of other stuff besides reviews. He’s an invaluable asset, and wherever he goes, that’s what he’ll do. In the fall, or sometime thereafter, the movie business will right itself and The Hollywood Reporter will be down many great journalists starting with McCarthy. I can’t wait for the day when they have to quote him from another publication. Todd, it’s a great feeling.

PS Deadline now reports that in addition to Belloni and McCarthy, THR also axed their publisher, Lynne Segall, who they had poached from the pre-Penske Deadline in 2011.  The irony is that Jay Penske, who came into all this with little background, scooped up Deadline, Variety, Rolling Stone, WWD, etc. and played the right game. He won.

Guys: Don’t Know How to Cut Your Hair? Watch Emmy and Tony Winner Billy Porter Demonstrate the Online Barber Barba Method

One of the less discussed challenges of the lockdown following the COVID-19 outbreak has been that individuals all over are finding themselves in dire need of a haircut with spouses, partners, parents and children are suddenly being drafted as amateur barbers and stylists – with potentially catastrophic (stylistic) results.

To help remedy the situation and deliver some much-needed relief, New York City’s Up-Scale men’s grooming boutique Barba, in partnership with agency, Terri & Sandy has launched the Quarancuts Virtual Hair School.

Each day, Barba’s Owner and Master Stylist, Xavier Cruz, will guide student “stylists” through the techniques of men’s haircuts online using Zoom. Anyone interested in taking the “course” can Direct Message (DM) Barba on Instagram, with all Quarancuts sessions airing simultaneously on IGTV so that friends, family and the wider community can get in on the lesson.

Every ground-breaking initiative must have a first star and the first amateur stylist to attend Quarancuts was Grammy-winning singer, Tony-winning actor, and renowned style icon Billy Porter, who enlisted to cut his husband Adam Smith’s hair.

The Billy Porter kick-off IGTV Episode at the Quarancuts Virtual Hair School can be viewed here.

Of his first Quarancuts experience Billy Porter said, “My nerves faded away with Xavier’s guidance. Humbling and Fabulous!” His husband Adam added, “Xavier saved the day teaching my husband how to give me a desperately needed trim”

Xavier Cruz of Barba says, “Without a doubt, these are hard times, but not all is lost. Quarancuts puts us closer together. We created this program to not only make us feel great over our appearance, but to also have fun. We will certainly have some good laughs during our sessions.”

Digital and social content for the Quarancuts Virtual Hair School will be broadcast across social media on Facebook, YouTube and Instagram, as well as on Barba’s website www.barbamgb.com.

Famed Elusive Artist Banksy Is “Bored at Home” and Driving His Wife Crazy Decorating Their Bathroom with Art

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Banksy, whoever he is, has a wife. And she’s not happy. He’s bored at home in quarantine, putting his art all over the bathroom– and maybe other places, too. Poor Banksy likes to get out and tattoo his stuff on concrete walls and such, forcing normal people to chop up their homes and businesses so they can sell his art for lots of money.

Who knows? Maybe that’s what his wife will do.

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. . My wife hates it when I work from home.

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Get Out Your Crayons: Here’s A Gift from “Bill & Ted Face the Music,” Keanu Reeves and Alex Winters’ Long Awaited Sequel

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It’s hard to believe, but the last “Bill & Ted” movie was in 1991. You weren’t even born. Now, almost 30 years later, there’s a third part to the first two installments, making a trilogy that no one knew we needed.

So Orion Pictures, which I thought was out of business 20 years ago, and used to release Woody Allen movies in the 1980s, has sent fans a gift: three coloring book pages. And the news is so slow that I’m putting them right here. Copy them, color them in, and tweet to @BillandTed3.

“Bill & Ted Face the Music” may be released in August, directed by Dean Parisot (Galaxy Quest), from a screenplay by Chris Matheson and Ed Solomon (Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey) – and produced by Scott Kroopf, Alex Lebovici, and Steve Ponce. (I’m pretty sure Ed Solomon is the guy Paulina Porizkova “abandoned” Ric Ocasek for.) There’s a plot to the film, about going to the future, but let’s not worry about that now.

Here are the drawings:

Donald Trump’s $1200 Stimulus Check Might Cover Dinner for 2, Possibly 3, at Restaurants of Chefs He Named Today

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Donald Trump’s daily insane ramble, today from the Rose Garden, included a long list of CEO’s and companies he said he would consulting about re-starting the economy. It reminded me of a satirical list Kurt Vonnegut once included in one of his books, where just name dropped everyone he could think of who was famous.

For Trump, it sounded like he was reading off donors to the Jerry Lewis Telethon. “From Brown’s in the Catskills…$500… love ya…Do ya still make the matzoh ball soup?”

Trump had the list of businesses alphabetized by genre, so eventually he got to “food” and reeled off McDonald’s. Coca Cola, “Pepsi-cola,” Wendy’s, and assorted fast food brands. But then he just blurted out these names: “Wolfgang Puck, Thomas Keller, Jean-George– “my friend, Jean Georges” meaning Jean-Georges Vongerichten, and “Danielle” meaning Daniel Bouloud.

All the Chick-Fil-A eaters must have wondered who those men were? They are world class chefs who despise Trump and wouldn’t welcome him on a regular day if their lives depended on it. But also, Trump’s $1200 stimulus check will not be going to their customers, since people with incomes that can afford their eateries are ineligibe for relief (I hope).

That amount of money would just about cover two people for dinner at Keller’s Per Se, and maybe four at Bouloud’s Daniel restaurant. The Chef’s Menu at Keller’s Per Se, for example, was $355 on March 14th. The Salon menu was $225. That’s for one person.

So I’m not sure how Keller, or any of the others, will be useful on Trump’s commission. And if Trump thinks he’s getting a free meal at any of those places, he can forget it. Someone in the kitchen will spit in his Oysters and Pearls before they make it out the door.

You can hear it 1:50:30

Lifetime’s Terrific Clark Sisters Movie Grabs 2.7 Mil Viewers, Number 1 Scripted Cable Show on Saturday Night

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I know a lot of people were watching “The Clark Sisters: First Family of Gospel” on Saturday night. Social media was buzzing about it.

Now we know that this terrific little film brought 2.7 million viewers to Lifetime. It was the highest rated scripted show on cable on Saturday night. Lifetime says the movie was the highest rated original movie of the year so far. I have no idea if that’s true. But it’s ok.

Queen Latifah, Mary J. Blige and Missy Elliott executive produced the film. But hats off to Holly Carter, who was the visionary behind “First Family,” and director Christine Swanson. Sylvia L. Jones and Camille Tucker wrote the screenplay. I was really impressed by their work. This is kind a formula movie but they bent it to their needs. Everyone of the Clark sisters and their mother, Mattie, were fleshed out enough that I remember every one of them even today. This wasn’t easy to do. Swanson also kept it moving with the musical pieces, which felt authentic and organic.

The actors were just right, too. Aunjanue Ellis was sensational as the rigid visionary Mattie Clark, the mother hen and “Joseph Jackson” of the family. I really liked the five Clark sisters (Christina Bell as “Twinkie,” Kierra Sheard as “Karen,” Raven Goodwin as “Denise,” Sheléa Frazier as “Dorinda,” Angela Birchett as “Jacky”). Each one brought something special to their character. Sheard is the real life daughter of Karen Clark, which was cool casting. Also, she can sing! Christina Bell as Twinkie broke my heart.

The Emmy Awards shun Lifetime as a crap cable channel. But “First Family” is special. They’d better get a raft of nominations above and below the line. This was not a “Don’t Steal My Daughter” film. It was a cut way above, and important to the black TV community. If the Emmys are really promoting diversity, they better have these women front and center next fall.

Postponed Cannes Film Festival Won’t Happen in June, and Probably Not This Year, Also, Let’s Face It, Venice is Unlikely

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Everyone is holding onto shreds of hope that a film festival will happen this year. Listen, no, I’m sorry to be a buzz kill but let’s accept it.

The Cannes Film Festival thought it would go in June after postponing from May. But that’s not happening now. Last week the French government sent a private plane back to London after a bunch of nudnik rich people were trying to get to a villa in Cannes. You think Macron is going to have thousands of people in movie theaters soon? Uh, no.

“Following the French President’s statement, on Monday, April 13th, we acknowledged that the postponement of the 73rd International Cannes Film Festival, initially considered for the end of June to the beginning of July, is no longer an option,” said the festival. “It is clearly difficult to assume that the Festival de Cannes could be held this year in its original form.”

“Nevertheless, since yesterday evening we have started many discussions with professionals, in France and abroad. They agree that the Festival de Cannes, an essential pillar for the film industry, must explore all contingencies allowing to support the year of Cinema by making Cannes 2020 real, in a way or another.”

Cannes could try for October, I suppose, but it will be cold by then and not very welcoming. Better to wait til next year and come back big.

Ditto for the Venice Film Festival. Italy is the hardest hit country other than the US. The government is not putting out a welcome mat for movie stars. They’ll be lucky to have any tourists by the end of the summer. And those travelers will be keeping six feet away from each other if at all.

Again, next year for film festivals.

 

UPDATED: “Avenue Q” Creator Jeff Whitty Writes Scathing Screed About Gwyneth Paltrow and Other Collaborators of Flop Musical “Head over Heels”

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UPDATE April 15th: Jeff Whitty removed his Facebook post, and at his request I’ve removed it, too. But the substance of it — that he and the “Head Over Heels” team fell out grievously over that show — remains. So I’ll have more on that in the days to come. Certainly, something is very wrong with this story. So more to come. Stay tuned.

APRIL 14TH: Jeff Whitty is a seasoned Broadway pro. But on Monday night (Tuesday morning) Whitty let loose on Facebook against his collaborators on the ill fated musical, “Head Over Heels.” The show closed January 6, 2019 after 188 performances and 37 previews.

On Facebook, Whitty didn’t hold back as he savaged everyone involved with the show, which was a head scratcher, frankly, and very, very bad. It combined the music of the Go-Go’s with an Elizabethan period farce that was hard to follow. Gwyneth Paltrow and Donovan Leitch were among the producers when I announced the show, but seemed far removed from it when it opened.

Whitty won a Tony Award for writing “Avenue Q” in 2004. He also wrote the libretto for “Bring it on the Musical.” which earned him a Drama Desk nomination. But “Head Over Heels” was a disaster. And now Whitty is venting. All opinions or citations are his, by the way.

Hard Times: For Five Months, Vogue Editor Anna Wintour Will Have to Make Do with $1.6 Mil Salary

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(Editor’s note: thanks to everyone who pointed out my math problem. The fog of quarantine sometimes turns off that part of my brain. I’ve fixed the number to $1.6 million. So Anna should be okay after all!)

Hard times have come to Conde Nast Publications, part of Advance Publications.

Other Advance newspapers, like the Cleveland Plain Dealer, have recently been gutted. They’re down to just four reporters after a tug over war over unionizing. Advance/Conde Nast has gutted their newsroom because they don’t are about journalism. That’s no longer an issue.

Now in Manhattan, Conde Nast itself will suffer. Anna Wintour will see her $2 million salary cut by 20% for…five long months. She’ll have to tighten that Prada belt from May 1st til September 30th. If she hasn’t been evicted or gone to seed by then, she’ll be back to the $2 million base. How she will make it through the summer is a frightening thought.

According to reports in the New York Times and elsewhere, everyone at Conde Nast making over $100,000– which is a lot of people– will get similar 20% cuts for those five months. It’s dastardly. But ads at the print mags are down, and the web sites are exactly booming. At least no one will be assigned to Cleveland, so that’s a relief.

Meanwhile, the inside baseball media are waiting for a 30 % layoff at The Hollywood Reporter and Billboard. So says Variety, the Daily Beast, and other reports.  THR’s print weekly loses $10 million a year– and that’s an underestimate. THR and Billboard tried to make themselves into magazines for the public, which they are not. They are for the trade.

Owned by Guggenheim Partners’ Todd Boehly, they’ve over spent like sailors on leave, as they used to say. Now the whip comes down. THR recently also ousted Editor in Chief Matthew Belloni because they didn’t think he was being nice to celebrities. Whoops! A big problem for Boehly is that he’s got a lot of conflicts of interest if he wants to be a news mogul and also throw parties for the stars. He also now owns Dick Clark Productions, which produces a lot of awards shows including the Golden Globes. All of that is very complicated.

So stay tuned. Houses of cards are about to collapse.

PS I only wish Nikki Finke wasn’t gagged from speaking on all this. But maybe she is, and we don’t know it.

 

Liv Tyler, Just Renewed for Season 2 of “Lone Star 911,” Will Join Friday’s “That Thing You Do!” Reunion

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Liv Tyler is on  a roll.

The star of “Lord of the Rings” and many other hit films was just renewed for her second season of “Lone Star 911” on Fox. The spin off of “Rescue 911” co-stars Rob Lowe and has turned into a ratings grabber.

Now Liv will join her 1993 co-stars from Tom Hanks’s “That Thing You Do!” in a reunion honoring songwriter Adam Schlesinger. Adam died April 1st from coronavirus. He was the leader of Fountains of Wayne and wrote many hits (“Stacy’s Mom”) including the title song from the Hanks film.

Co-star Ethan Embry says on Twitter the whole fictional band, The One-ders, are reuniting, Tyler will be there, and I’m sure Hanks will make an appearance. After hosting “SNL” this past weekend via remote from home, Hanks– who has survived the virus– will surely honor Schlesinger.

Congrats to Liv, who did the tricky thing of taking a break after her much applauded run in HBO’s “The Leftovers” to have two more children. (She already had son, Milo, who’s 15.) Her parents, Steven Tyler and Bebe Buell, are very proud.