Saturday, December 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 1025

Justin Bieber Drops First New Album in 4 Years, Called “Changes” But Not Really Reflecting Any

0

He’s still full of tattoos. The main changes JUstin Bieber has gone through are getting married, and dealing with anxiety. He’s got video series on YouTube in which he keeps whining about mental health issues. But he’s not very introspective and he’s too bright. On the latest episode of “Seasons,” which sounds like the name of Hallmark card store, Bieber says of manager, Scooter Braun, “even if everything falls apart, he’ll always be there in some capacity.” (I cracked up at that one. I’m sure he will.)

The new album is called “Changes.” The first single, “Yummy,” is quite awful. The second single, with Quavo, was a bit better. But basically for a person who’s been all over the world, Bieber has life experience. He is a perfectly packaged piece of Kraft cheese substitute stored in a Ziploc bag. He is, to use an old word, thick. Someone should set him loose in the wild and see if he can make it back in one piece. He also looks, I’m sorry, like he never washes. So we’ve got that, too.

Stevie Wonder was 25 years old in 1976 when he released “Songs in the Key of Life.” Bieber is 25 now, and it’s clear something similar won’t be happening. (Stevie was also 6 years into his musical awakening and emancipation.) So whatever epiphany Bieber fans might have thought was coming is not. This is what it is.

The lyrics…what can I say? One song reportedly has a line “Let’s get it on expeditiously.” Basically, all the songs sound the same. They are sung the same, to computerized music. You could almost call it lounge music, very laid back. Ambien, not ambient. There is no musicality involved. Or particular musicianship. The lyrics are all about Justin, how he feels, what he says about the feelings. He has no view beyond his pre-fab McMansion life. I liked one song, “Come Around Me.” And the singer Kehlani makes for a nice break amid Bieber’s droning. But much of the production feels like it was lifted off a Babyface album circa 1992. But at least “Come Around Me” has a melody and a hook. That’s more than you can say, expeditiously, about the rest of it.

Oy, Justin. Smokey Robinson’s gonna smack you for “Second Emotion.” Are you kidding?

Let’s dig in

UPDATED Days of Our Lives: Three Long Term Actors Leaving, At Least Two More Have Chosen to Exit NBC’s Remaining Soap

0

UPDATE: Moss may be the unidentified actor #4, leaving by choice. Camila Banus may be number 5.

EARLIER “Days of our Lives” was recently renewed by NBC for another season. But the terms must not have been so great. Three long term actors are leaving the show, and two more are said to be going of their own accord.

Chandler Massey and Freddie Smith, who play a young gay married couple, are out. Smith announced it yesterday on his Twitter account, and more news is coming. Massey was already killed off the show once, then brought back.

Another young actor, Casey Moss, has already announced his exit.

Galen Gering, who’s been with the show for 12 years, is also out. He plays a good guy cop.

I’m told two more actors are leaving of their own accord, although I don’t know which ones yet. Actress Judi Evans, who’s been on and off the show for years, and came from other soaps as well, was written out when the show did a time jump recently.

“Days of our Lives” is already known as the cheapest show on television. It looks cheap. I give credit to the actors who’ve remained — some for hundreds of years — who have to “sell” some crazy stories, and take walks in fake looking parks, etc. The show is still using a house set from its debut in 1965. The furniture looks like it was bought in 1940. It’s not even mid century modern.

The inside joke, of course, is that one day Deidre Hall will just be sitting there talking to herself, acting out all the parts. It will be just her and an hourglass.

Hey look, all these young guys who are leaving should get parts on prime time, they’re at least as good as all the people on procedural police dramas and hospital shows. You’ll see them all again, I’m sure.

 

(Listen) Multiple Grammy Award Winner Billie Eilish Unveils Her Ethereal James Bond Theme Song, “No Time to Die”

0

Billie Eilish’s “No Time to Die” James Bond theme song is here. (Keep refreshing!) The ethereal track is being released two months before the final Daniel Craig 007 thriller hits theaters. Eilish, who just appeared on the Oscars and recently won a bunch of Grammy Awards, is 18 and hot stuff in pop music. The Bond producers hope having her sing the theme song will light a fire under kids her age and get them into theaters come April. Eilish joins a long line of stars who’ve had successes– Paul McCartney, Shirley Bassey, Sheena Easton, Carly Simon– with Bond themes, and failures– Alicia Keys, Madonna among them.

The track was teased yesterday on Twitter. It goes live at 7pm Eastern time.

In Tough Winter Broadway Hopes for a Hot Holiday Weekend with Total Box Office Down, Lowest Since September

0

It’s been a tough winter for Broadway at the box office. This past weekend’s take was $27.9 million, the lowest since last September, and before that almost exactly a year ago. By President’s Day weekend, the theaters are praying for a surge in customers.

A lot of the big shows are way down because of their relative age.  “The Book of Mormon,” especially, could use a kick in the pants. They’ve missed the $1 million mark for two weeks. Last week they were at $967K.

The Great White Way is waiting for the new “West Side Story,” which has been doing very well in its long non review preview period. But I’ve seen it, and I can tell you, I’m not sure the reviews on February 20th will be so glowing. The Times may like it just to appear hip, but the show is mostly video screens. Once it can be reviewed, “West Side Story” won’t be such a snap to sell to the masses.

All the newer shows have toughed it over the cold, dark days of winter, even the Tina Turner musical. “A Soldier’s Play” and “Jagged Little Pill” have done “alright” but they haven’t stirred the pot. Others like “Grand Horizons” are really struggling. The only real hit is David Byrne’s “American Utopia,” but it closes on Sunday. Byrne must need a rest. But the show could play for months more to sold out houses.

 

Wes Anderson’s “French Dispatch” Trailer Scores 1 Mil YouTube Views, Headed to Cannes as Opener or Centerpiece Selection

0

Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” made quite a splash yesterday.

The trailer already has 1 million views on YouTube. The movie, starring Anderson’s regulars like Bill Murray, Bob Balaban, Adrien Brody, Frances McDormand and Tilda Swinton, also has a raft of new stars like Timothee Chalamet and Saoirse Ronan. Most of them worked for scale as the Fox Searchlight feature is said to have had a meager budget of just $25 million. (If all those people had been paid properly, the lowest bottom line would have been $60 million easily.)

“The French Dispatch” will release on July 24th. But first it will play at the Cannes Film Festival, which opens on May 12th. Since it was filmed in the southwest French town of Angouleme, this makes sense. Also, July 24th is too soon for the late summer-fall festivals like Venice or Telluride. So Cannes is Disney-Searchlight’s only option for a splashy debut. The only question now is how many of “The French Dispatch” stars will Disney fly over and what kind of premiere will they put on.

Luckily, Cannes is hot again. The festival director, Thierry Fremaux, looks like a genius now (he always was) for insisting on having Bong Joon-Ho’s “Parasite” in last year year’s competition. “Parasite” won the Palme D’Or, and has now won the Academy Award for Best Picture and for Best International Film. Suddenly everyone wants to be in the Festival de Cannes again!  Fremaux can use “The French Dispatch” as an opener, or keep it until the third night, which is usually the Centerpiece, or even better– hold it til the second week and make everyone wait!

PS Good news for Searchlight, formerly Fox Searchlight’s Nancy Utley and Steve Gilula. They have “French Dispatch” later. Sooner they’ll release Armando Iannucci’s wonderful, hilarious  “Personal History of David Copperfield” next month.

Late Actor Rip Torn’s Advice to Younger Cousin Sissy Spacek On Becoming An Actress: “Don’t tell anyone you’re related to me. It wouldn’t help”

At the Greenwich House Theater for a memorial for Oscar nominee and Emmy winner Rip Torn, awesome clips revealed the evolution of this legendary actor’s astonishing career that spanned movies, TV, and theater. From Bible epics through roles as a good guy and menacing bad ass, the reel covered his Emmy winning television work on HBO’s “The Larry Sanders Show” and hilarious clashes on “30 Rock” with with Alec Baldwin. A bit from his 1969 “The Bearding of the President” showed him with his “Nixon” nose, his own invention, and at least one friend opined that he would have been an even bigger presence in film and stage but for his politics. (He was publicly opposed to the Vietnam War.)

Still, Torn had a long and illustrious career. He was memorable in everything he did, from “Men in Black” to Albert Brooks’ “Defending Your Life.” On Broadway in his early days, Torn was a Tennessee Williams regular, earning a Tony nomination in 1960 and appearing in several Williams productions. His last Broadway appearance was in 1997’s “Young Man from Atlanta” written by Horton Foote.

But among the ample work that was not screened, was a bit of voiceover in the Oscar winning documentary “Harlan County, USA.” Filmmaker Barbara Kopple needed someone to say, “We’ve got our guns now,” and asked him to say the line so it could be heard. “I’ve never told anyone, but now I am telling you,” Kopple confessed to a crowd of New York friends and family, among them musician David Amram who led the speakers off and concluded with a special song for Rip, and accompanied Rip’s twin sons with late Oscar winner Geraldine Page, Jon and Tony Torn, in a reading of Whitman’s “Song of Myself.”

This was the second memorial for Rip Torn (SAG had hosted an event in Los Angeles earlier), who died July 9, 2019 at age 88. This celebration was also a birthday celebration (February 6th) which  revealed Torn’s love of fishing, family, and his dedication to craft. A blowup of Rip Torn as Hamlet adorned the stage, a remembrance of the time he wanted to explore the character and staged Shakespeare himself at his Sanctuary Theater, housed in this very West Village locale. Back then, Page performed, as did Amy Wright, who would become wife number three, and his widow.

Two nieces read his first cousin Sissy Spacek’s tribute to the New York crowd. Eighteen years his junior, Sissy visited them in the city. Rip, with Geraldine, quickly embraced her, folding her into their Bohemian lifestyle, bringing her to Broadway theaters with the other children as the actors performed in their respective plays. Sardi’s would deliver dinner backstage, with waiters in waiter garb. When Sissy announced she wanted to become an actress, she asked Rip for advice. He said, “1. Do it for the right reasons—not because you want to see your name on a marquee. 2. Study your art. 3. Don’t tell anyone you are related to me. It wouldn’t help.”

 

Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation Plans First Ever Studded Gala, with Possible Elton John Performance and Bill Clinton on Host Committee

0

Elizabeth Taylor must be smiling in heaven! She started the whole raising-money-for AIDS research thing. Now her family has announced its first ever Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation gala in Los Angeles. The date is April 30th. The place is the backlot at 20th Century Fox, where she made “Cleopatra” and so many other movies.

The Host Committee includes Dr. Gabriel and Christine Chiu, President Bill Clinton, Colin Farrell, Aileen Getty, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson, Kathy Ireland, Sir Elton John and David Furnish, Earvin “Magic” and Cookie Johnson, Elizabeth Segerstrom, Sharon Stone, and Whoopi Goldberg.

And guess who doesn’t have a tour show that night? Sir Elton, of course. My guess is he will perform. He has to. And I’m sure there will be other stars singing their hearts out.

By the way, the benefit committee includes Paris Jackson, daughter of Michael Jackson, which is a sweet touch. The other names are Angela Bassett, Dame Joan Collins, Alexandra Daddario, Tom Ford and Richard Buckley, Sherry Lansing and Billy Friedkin, Jean-Paul Gauthier, Valentino Garavani and Giancarlo Giammetti, Christian Lacroix, George Hamilton, Iman, Isabelle Huppert, Zac Posen, Lionel Richie, Darren Star, Carole Bayer Sager and Vanessa Williams.

Sponsors are Bulgari, and Gilead Sciences, Inc., a research-based biopharmaceutical company that discovers, develops, and commercializes innovative medicines in areas of unmet medical need.

How do you get tickets? I guess, beg. Or email the foundation.   info@etaf.org

Roseanne Spin-Off “The Conners” Jumped 1 Mil Viewers in Ratings With Live Show and Guest Star Katey Sagal

0

First of all, I didn’t realize that Katey Sagal’s appearance last night on “The Conners” was her ninth. Has ABC promoted this at all? The famed “Married with Children” star plays Louise, the waitress whom Dan (John Goodman) is dating after the death of his wife, Roseanne.

Roseanne Barr has really been replaced for good on her show. Last night, Dan and Louise broke up, and she left town, because he’s still not “over” Roseanne. But Sagal is too good not to have her return. My guess is she will marry Dan. Barr must be livid.

Last night’s episode was LIVE, and used cut ins from ABC News about the New Hampshire primary. The result was a JUMP of 1 million viewers, to give the series its best ratings this season– 6.3 million people, and a 25% increase in the key demo. I watched it LIVE on Jet Blue and was very impressed, although Goodman’s health always seems fragile. He’s gained back a little weight, which is good, but his breathing is a concern. He’s a national treasure, so I hope he’s ok.

All in all, “The Conners” was very strong last night. The kids have gotten better, much more comfortable. Laurie Metcalf is wonderful, as always. I really like Lecy Goranson. She’s also much improved and very engaging. Michael Fishman also seems more relaxed.

Maybe “The Conners” should go live during every sweeps period. Metcalf is a Tony winning actress, they know how to do this very well.

“Empire” Actor Jussie Smollett Indicted in Chicago on 6 Counts of Disorderly Conduct from his Prior “Hate Crime” Case

0

The sixth and final season of “Empire” on Fox isn’t as good as the real story of former star Jussie Smollett.

Smollett was indicted yesterday on six counts of disorderly conduct concerning his allegedly fake racist mugging incident from January 29, 2019. Smollett pleaded not guilty to 16 counts of disorderly conduct after claiming he’d been mugged. The story became an international phenomenon when he couldn’t prove that it happened. The charges, however, were dropped in March 2019. Smollett thought he’d walked away a free man with no jail time or trial. But now he’s been indicted anyway.

“Smollett planned and participated in a staged hate crime attack, and thereafter made numerous false statements to Chicago Police Department officers on multiple occasions, reporting a heinous hate crime that he, in fact, knew had not occurred,” Webb’s office said in a statement, adding that further prosecution of Smollett is “in the interest of justice.”

“Empire” has been off the air since December. The first 10 episodes of its final season averaged 2.7 million people. They’ve lost most of their viewers. The final 10 start airing March 3rd, without Smollett. “Empire” will get some kind of happy ending so it can be rebooted or revisited sometime in the future. But Smollett’s character will not be part of the ending.

Independent Spirits Awards Telecast Once Again Misses Top 150 Cable Shows on Saturday with Low, Low Ratings

0

You think the Oscars ratings were bad?

How about the Independent Spirit Awards? They went on live at 5pm Eastern on the IFC Channel. Their lead in was a showing of the movie, “The Intern,” with Robert De Niro and Anne Hathaway. The movie scored 149,000 viewers.

And the Spirit Awards? Nada. Once again, they didn’t make the cut for the top 150 cable shows of the day. The number 150 show was College Basketball at 12:05am earlier that day. That managed to find 133,000 people. The Spirit Awards were somewhere below that. Last year they had 106,000 viewers.

“The Farewell” won the Spirits Best Feature award. The top actor as Adam Sandler, top actress Renee Zellweger. Jennifer Lopez was there, but she lost Best Supporting Actress. Willem Dafoe won Best Supporting Actor for “The Lighthouse.”

The combo of Sandler and JLo didn’t add anything to the ratings. Aubrey Plaza hosted the show. The whole thing is so irrelevant now, I went out to lunch. Remember when John Waters hosted the show? Those were the days. It’s a snore now.

I told you Film Independent paid $5 million in salaries last year. Divide that into around 100,000 viewers.