Wednesday, June 24, 2026
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Trying Hard: Desperate Madonna Lip Syncs in Times Square Show at Rush Hour, Drops Another Disco Single Using Her Real Voice

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Madonna is trying very hard to sell her new album.

She appeared in Times Square today and performed a few songs from her forthcoming “Confessions on a Dance Floor II.”

One of them was a new song which she dropped into the world this evening (see below). Her voice sounds nasal and more natural, not as processed as her many hits of the past. That’s her ‘real’ voice, for better or verse.

Of course, there was a lot of lipsyncing. But there had to be, considering the production.

Did she spend more than she’ll make? Sure, but who cares? It’s not about that. Madonna wants to be relevant.

She’s leaning hard on her gay fans, picking Pride Month and appearing at gay clubs. That seems like a small sales yield, but who knows? Anyway, this keeps her busy and gives us some stories.

Harmless fun at this point!

PS I’ll say this for Madonna: at least she didn’t try to get her kids free rides at colleges. JLo did, click here.


Trump Plans Self-Serving America 250 Rally in Washington for June 24th Featuring Hackneyed Sycophants Lee Greenwood and Christopher Macchio

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Donald Trump is planning his own America 250 rally.

Set for June 24th in Washington, the musical acts will feature his hackneyed sycophants Lee Greenwood and Christoper Macchio.

The former will sing his one hit, about being American. The latter is a singer of opera, but not an actual opera singer. He’s known in conservative circles as “America’s Tenor.” Trump compares him to Luciano Pavarotti. The thud you just heard was the famed tenor spinning in his grave.

Trump can’t seem to get anyone else, not even his other sycophants like Kid Rock or Nikki Minaj.

He writes: “We don’t want singers with no talent, but big fees to put you to sleep, we’ve told them all to stay home. All we want is you, me, a few speakers, and the Greatest Music ever played, the same Music you have listened to for years!”

He’s referring, of course, to the acts who backed out of his Great American fair, like Morris Day, Young MC, Martina McBride, and so on.

No word on whether Vanilla Ice, his one loyal artist, will be part of the new rally.

Of course, it’s hilarious but sad, that he continues to celebrate himself when no one else will. All his cronies will be in the grandstands, like RFK Jr, Little Marco, Pistol Pete, and of course JD. It’s like having a “Saturday Nigh Live” sketch off season!

On the plus side, his name has to come off the Kennedy Center by Friday, June 12th. That will be his birthday present from us!

Music Mogul Clive Davis, 94, Home from the Hospital After Fighting Infection: “In Good Spirits and Happy to Be Recuperating” (Exclusive)

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Clive Davis, I am happy to report, has been sprung from the hospital.

The 94 year old music mogul went to the ER last Friday with an upper respiratory infection.

But good antibiotics and lots of love from around the world got him in shape.

“He’s happy to be home and recuperating,” says his spokesman Sean Cassidy

Viva Clive! I told you he overdid it on Memorial Day weekend with over 100 guests coming and going for various activities.

Like all of us, Clive still thinks he’s 30!

Now he can relax a little and listen to the insane amount of music he helped to create.

Last night, there was a cool shout out to him in the new HBO documentary about Earth Wind & Fire. Clive signed them to Columbia Records in 1970 but he did not go with Maurice White on his UFO spaceship adventure. We needed him here on Earth!

Sunday’s Tony Awards Set for Huge Ratings with Dozens of Stars from Host Pink to Opening Number by “Evan Hansen” Writers with 170 Performances

Sunday’s Tony Awards on CBS are set for huge ratings.

The show has no sports competition or anything else of note running against it. Luckily, the NBA finals are off that night.

Singer Pink is the off beat choice as host, and she’s going to surprise everyone with a knockout night.

The opening number at 8pm is written by Pasek and Paul — of “Evan Hansen” and “La La Land” fame — along with Mark Sonnenblick. The number should be spectacular with 170 performers on the stage at Radio City Music Hall.

The show will also feature performances from current musicals The Lost Boys, Schmigadoon!, Titaníque, Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York), CATS: The Jellicle Ball, Ragtime and Richard O’Brien’s The Rocky Horror Show.

There will be a special 15th anniversary reunion of the cast of “The Book of Mormon.” No less than Tony Award winner Leslie Odom, Jr. will honor those we’ve lost this year with a moving performance of “Without You” from Rent, in honor of the show’s 30th anniversary.

Also, Queen Latifah and Pink will lead a 30th anniversary tribute to “Chicago,” still playing like crazy thanks to the canny producers Fran and Barry Weissler.

The presenters list is off the charts, too. Look at this:

Adrien Brody, Annette Bening, Ariana DeBose, Ben Platt, Bernadette Peters, Billy Crystal, Bowen Yang, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Carrie Coon, Cole Escola, Darren Criss, Jack O’Brien, Jeremy Pope, John Leguizamo, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Kara Young, Kelli O’Hara, Kristin Chenoweth, Law Roach, Lena Waithe, Lily Rabe, Maya Rudolph, Megan Thee Stallion, Neil Patrick Harris, Nicole Scherzinger, Patrick Wilson, Paul Rudd, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, and Sarah Paulson.

Plus Sting, who opens next Tuesday in his musical, “The Last Ship,” at the Metropolitan Opera House, will give an award. (There are very few tickets left!)

Got other plans? Cancel ’em!

PS There’s a pre-show free on Pluto TV (streaming) with Laura Benanti and Tituss Burgess giving out a slew of other Tonys. It runs from 6:35 to 8pm. And no, Radio City offers no food to the black tie guests. We’ll be calling Door Dash for a pizza at some point!

Exclusive: Late Singer Peabo Bryson Recorded a Final Album with Star Producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis That Could Be Released This Year

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Peabo Bryson was such a spectacular singer.

Losing him this week at age 75 was a real blow.

Peabo still had his remarkable voice, and wasn’t done with his career.

It turns out the singer “If I Ever I Have You in My Arms Again” recorded what turns out to be a final album.

The collection is written and produced by two pretty big deals: Jimmy Jam Harris and Terry Lewis.

You may know them from all of Janet Jackson’s hits. Jam and Lewis have about two dozen other superstars under their belt from Mariah to Patti Labelle and the great Alexander O’Neal.

No word yet on a title or when the album will be released, but I am told we could hear by the end of the year. It would be a fitting tribute to Peabo, who was revered and adored by his fans.

Meantime, I see that Jimmy Jam is doing a Q&A tonight at Sony Hall in New York, under the Paramount Hotel. The event starts at 8. I’m sure all of this will be part of the conversation.

As for Jam and Lewis, and Jackson, here’s my favorite of their many hits:

Final “Euphoria” Episode Grew to 460K Viewers, HBO Says Another 8 Million Watched Rue (Zendaya) Die on Other Platforms Like HBO Max

As you have heard, “Euphoria” is done after three seasons on HBO.

The final season — completely detached from the first two — was not pretty.

Creator Sam Levinson — knowing no one was coming back — killed off two of the three main characters. They were Nate, played by Jacob Elordi, and Rue, played by Zendaya. He died from a snake bite while buried alive in a coffin. She OD’d on Fentanyl. Nice!

The second half of the final episode was devoted to a bloody, Tarantino style shoot out in a nightclub. Then Colman Domingo went to visit some people in the dust bowl.

Only Sydney Sweeney’s adult porn star Cassie survived, although it’s unclear if Sweeney’s career made it to the end. That’s the naked truth.

Linear ratings on HBO were 460,000 — a big increase from the average 300,000 of the season.

But HBO says another 8 million watched either streaming on HBO Max or via the wires in their mouth appliances. I suppose that’s possible since few young people I’ve met recently say they have cable subscriptions. It’s way too expensive.

“Euphoria” was visually expressive. But it’s not a story anyone wants to hear again.

How? JLo — Worth $400 Million — Says Her Kids with Marc Anthony — $80 Million Banked — Applied for and Accepted College Scholarships

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Our system really is broken if Jennifer Lopez is telling the truth.

She says her twins — Max and Oskar (formerly Emme and referred to by Lopez as Lulu) — each got into the five colleges to which they applied.

Congrats, they’re smart kids, especially since they deal with ADHD, according to Lopez in People magazine.

But the kids also applied for accepted scholarships. As in, financial aid.

She tells People: “I am so proud that they set goals for themselves,” she began. “They all got into all five colleges that they applied to. They both got a scholarship to each, you know, one scholarship to each. Each one got a scholarship to a school. And I just felt like they work so hard.”

How could this have happened? Lopez is worth by estimates $400 million. The father, singer Marc Anthony, is listed at $80 million.

All we read about Lopez is her buying a $64 million mansion with Ben Affleck, flipping it, and moving into an $18 mil empty nester.

The Lopez-Anthony kids do not need to money so they can attend college. If anything, they should be giving scholarships to other kids.

And under what circumstances would these colleges be offering them scholarships? Especially when so many kids have to decline education because of the high costs. Or work three jobs as they matriculate.

Congrats to Max and Oskar, but whatever schools they attend, I hope the parents of incoming students question that financial aid office. Two other deserving students need that money!

Robert De Niro Doesn’t Name Trump, Takes Swipe at “Monstrous Leaders” Running the Country at Joyous Earth, Wind & Fire Film Opening Tribeca Fest

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What inspired Stevie Wonder to write one of his biggest hits?

A hit from Earth Wind and Fire.

Steve concedes the point in Questlove’s joyous documentary, “Earth Wind & Fire: (To Be Celestial vs That’s the Weight of the World),” which opened the 25th anniversary of the Tribeca Film Festival last night.

The Beacon Theater was strained to its limits as fans poured in not only for the film but a live performance that followed.

Robert DeNiro and Jane Rosenthal opened the evening, with De Niro taking a swipe at the “monstrous leaders” running our country. He didn’t say Trump’s name, but did say “you know who I’m talking about.”

The crowd exploded in laughter and applause.

But the real stars of the night were the famed R&B group, together now for 55 years although lacking late leader Maurice White. Still, Verdine White, Philip Bailey, and Ralph Johnson have acquitted themselves well since Maurice’s death from Parkinson’s in 2016.

Director Questlove, who knows how to put together great archival footage, lets the very out there, UFO loving, spiritual Maurice — an unabashed musical genius — tell his story in old interviews and clips. It’s quite a saga about how a Memphis kid who was abandoned by his parents picked up drum sticks and just started hitting the skins. Pretty soon he was commanding a massive group of musicians who were making celebratory R&B, and African tinged music who had hit after hit.

Maurice’s trajectory was not straightforward. It required experimentation, and a lot of regrouping. But in 1975, after a couple of minor hits and signing by the great Clive Davis at Columbia Records, the group hit pay dirt with an album called “That’s the Way of the World.” The first single, “Shining Star,” went to number 1 and stayed there for weeks. The album sold millions, and EWF was off and running.

The rhythm and construction of “Shining Star” was so influential that Stevie Wonder concedes on film for the first time that his 1976 hit, “I Wish,” is really just a new model built on the EWF chassis.

Over time, the group had many more hits from “Let’s Groove” and “Getaway” to what would become their all time anthem, “September.” As they got bigger and bigger, though, Maurice neglected including the band in writing and decisions to including outsiders like music producer David Foster.

The group began to sputter in the 80s, and had a long fallow period. Maurice released the other guys (including his magnificent star bassist brother Verdine). Johnson talks about having to get a manual job to support his family. But Bailey had a massive hit with Philip Bailey called “Easy Lover,” and by the mid 90s the group reunited and started over.

The real vindication is that EWF is still here today, on tour right now with their old friend, Lionel Richie, who’s among the stars in the film along with HER (aka Gabi Wilson) plus producer Jimmy Jam Harris and Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Tribeca threw a swinging opening night party at Tavern on the Green, on a perfect spring night and buoyant music in the air. (The food was another story.) Among the guests was Tony winner Renee Elise Goldsberry of “Hamilton” fame, and Motion Picture Academy chief Lynette Howell Taylor. Plus there was a nice gang from the real world of music — famed promoter Ron Delsener, and former MTV honchos Judy McGrath and Tom Freston. Maurice looked down in heaven as his wife, Marilyn (a nice Jewish girl from LA) and son — each interviewed in the film — accepted compliments.

And of course the main trio of EWF — Verdine, Bailey, and Johnson — the latter has just published a memoir of his life in music. By the way she doesn’t take too much credit, but Verdine has been married forever to the former Shelley Clark, lead singer of the 70s hit group, the Honey Cone (“Want Ads,” “Stick Up,” etc).

And yes, Maurice — who was into every single New Age trend you can imagine — did actually claim to have been abducted by aliens on a spaceship. If only he were alive, there could be a cross over with Steven Spielberg’s new “Disclosure Day.”

Great film, great night, great work. This is one film I wish were shown on a big screen, but turn on HBO and start dancing.

Peabo Bryson, RIP, Places Six Singles in iTunes top 20 Including Songs from “Beauty and the Beast,” Roberta Flack Duet, “If Ever”

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Sadly yesterday, R&B superstar Peabo Bryson passed away.

He was 75. His death was the result of a stroke over the weekend.

Today, six of his singles from the 1980s are in the iTunes top 20. They include “If Ever I’m in Your Arms Again,” and his duet with Roberta Flack, “The Closer I Get to You.”

He also had two hits from the Disney film, “Beauty and the Beast.” The title track with Celine Dion, and “It’s a Whole New World” with Regina Belle.

Peabo was much beloved, especially among his peers. What a magnificent voice! He deserves all the accolades now. Rest in peace.

Exclusive: Yet Another Toronto Police Scandal Involves Admission That Missing Emails Were Not Produced During a Criminal Trial for Music Manager

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Oh Canada!

I’ve told you over the last several years about Steven Nowack, a music biz entrepreneur in the who lives in Toronto.

In 2019, despite pleading innocent and mounting a rigorous defense, Nowack was convicted of fraud and sentenced to 9 years in prison, a $16.5 million fine, and a further 7 years in prison if he doesn’t pay the fine within three years. He spent a year in prison in an arbitrary incarceration ordered by Justice Robert F. Goldstein of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.

What happened next: In 2021, Nowack and his highly respected lawyer, Paul Slansky, made a shocking discovery: the Toronto Police had claimed in evidence at his trial that they had “systematically deleted” the emails from his investigation. But in 2021, once Nowack had served his time in prison, the TPS came clean and admitted that they had never “systematically deleted” the emails at all. There were 15,731 of these emails, which Nowack was not able to use at his trial to make full answer and defense. They were there all along. The emails quite possibly could have affected the outcome of Nowack’s verdict.

Since that time, Nowack has continued to fight the government — what’s called The Crown in Canada — and come up frustrated. The court system has rebuffed them at every turn.

For the Toronto Police Service, this is maybe the worst scandal they’ve had recently among many. Recently, three of its officers were charged in Barcelona, Spain following what Spanish authorities have described as serious allegations including sexual assault. Seven officers are charged — six serving, one retired, all suspended — in connection with Project South, Canada’s largest active police corruption investigation. And the unsolved murders of Barry and Honey Sherman — among the most prominent Canadians of their generation — remain open after eight years.

This is not a good look for Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, or Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

Nowack’s case is now under appeal. For the first time I can report on the evidence that was removed. The 15,731 emails weren’t discovered until 2021. Among them was an email written in 2015 — two years after Nowack’s arrest and four before his trial — by the then prosecutor Stuart Rothman, who doubted privately that Nowack’s case had merit. He conceded that certain records from 8 of Nowack’s “allegedly fraudulent accounts” had not been produced. Rothman wrote:

“Without the records from those eight accounts, the Crown cannot prove that Mr. Nowack did not in fact have hundreds of millions of dollars in those accounts and that he was not really making money for his investors.”

Rothman was soon replaced. Whatever doubts he had about the strength of the case against Nowack were not known to the jury, as that email disappeared into the 15,000 no one knew about. They didn’t surface until 2021, two and a half years after Nowack’s conviction.

The 8 missing accounts? They were never obtained.

The volumes of missing emails in the Nowack case paint a far different picture of the defendant. Would he have been acquitted if the Toronto Police Service had produced the emails before or during the trial? It seems more than possible a jury would have concluded that Nowack was innocent. Nowack was clearly denied the opportunity to defend himself thoroughly.

Rothman did not write his email in a vacuum. Lori Toledano — the Ontario Securities Commission forensic accountant who testified at trial — was copied on every email in this chain. She was there for all of it. She knew about the 8 missing accounts. She knew Rothman said the Crown couldn’t prove the case without them. She then testified at trial about Nowack’s trading records as if the analysis was complete.

There’s more. I’ve been listening to this case since 2013, curious about how the Canadian court system worked. Down here, we have this dream that Canada is a fairy tale, that everything is so much more lawful than in the US.

That turns out to be BS.

It wasn’t until November 2021 that Nowack and Slansky were told by the Toronto Police that they had discovered this massive volume of emails which had been systematically deleted from their system.

Now, in a 2019 email never before seen, Detective Constable Valerie Dahan is shown claiming that she didn’t know how her computer system worked. She claimed in evidence that the Toronto Police Service computer system “systematically deletes” emails after 2.5 years. In fact, the actual stated policy of the Toronto Police is that they “systematically delete” emails after 3.5 years unless a never-delete rule is placed on the emails. Dahan’s claims that the TPS had “systematically deleted” 3.5 years’ worth of email evidence in the Nowack case — which is false — jeopardized Nowack’s right to a fair trial. She wrote to the prosecutor in the case, Renna Weinberg, who’d replaced Rothman:

“Throughout the Steven Nowack investigation, I believed that as the emails were automatically being archived, this resulted in them being safe from deletion. As I did not have a need to access archived emails, I did not realize that as time went on the emails were being systematically deleted.”

Dahan continued:

“I accessed the archived R v NOWACK email folder as well as the current R v NOWACK email folder. At that time, I discovered that the emails had been systematically deleted.”

Since then, for the last seven years, Slansky and Nowack have conducted their own investigations and have only met with stonewalling from the courts. In a new email, also published here for the first time, Alpha Chan, Chief Information Security Officer of the Toronto Police, actually instructs his associate to lie about how the Nowack emails were deleted, when they were not.

Chan wrote:

“Let them dig, but don’t give the directions where to dig. I would remove the ‘and their account and email can be relinquished’ because the next set of questions would be for that chunk. We don’t need to tell them timelines or approval processes right away. All they want to know is if the account is gone, so is the settings.”

The associate replies that he agrees to cover up the truth.

Flash forward to December 2025 and April 2026, when two separate three-judge panels of the Court of Appeal for Ontario — Canada’s second highest court — reviewed all of this evidence, including the Chan email, and found there was no dishonesty by the Toronto Police. The December 2025 panel wrote:

“There is no basis, on this record, to suggest that the TPS, or the prosecuting Crown, was ever anything but honest and open about what they knew at the various times that they advised the trial judge that the emails had been deleted.”

The Chan “let them dig” email was before the court when that finding was made.

PS Why am I writing this? Because Canadian media is afraid to deal with anything even remotely scandalous in their government…

To be continued…