Thursday, December 18, 2025
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BREAKING Bill Cosby Found Guilty On All Three Counts of Aggravated Sexual Assault

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Bill Cosby has been found guilty on all three charges of aggravated sexual assault in the Andrea Constand case.

It’s hard to believe but Cosby, once a role model for the world, could get up to 30 years in jail. He’s 80 years old.

Cosby has been accused by dozens of women of drugging and/or raping them. In depositions for a civil case with Constand that preceded this one, Cosby admitted to giving the women Quaaludes among other things.

The trial’s outcome is an American tragedy. Cosby was a hero– a hero– to millions. Regardless of what he’s done to these women– and no one is saying he didn’t– Cosby’s fall is a monumental blow.

I’ll turn it over to the Philadelphia Inquirer here.

 

John Legend, Discovered by Kanye West, Texts Him: “I hope you’ll reconsider aligning yourself with Trump…don’t let this be part of your legacy”

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John Legend has texted Kanye West in regard to his Twitter meltdown yesterday that included more endorsements of Donald Trump– and Trump responding in kind to West.

Kanye posted Legend’s text to him and his response. It should be noted that Legend was discovered by West, who produced his first album, the one that made him an international star.

John Legend says to Kanye: “I hope you’ll reconsider aligning yourself with Trump…don’t let this be part of your legacy.”

West responded: “I Love you, John. You bringing up my fans or my legacy is tactic based on fear used to manipulate my free thought.” He also wrote: “I tweeted the John text to show that there are people around me that disagree with me and voice their opinion. I respect everyone’s opinion but I stand my ground.”

Legend, by the way, joked back to West in another text that as long as Kanye was publicizing their texts he — Legend– has a new single out today. Funny.

Kanye has put himself in a difficult position here after yesterday’s tsunami of Tweets and what looks like another one today. Of course, he has roped in Chance the Rapper, who immediately responded to Kanye’s endorsements of Trump by saying that not all black people had to be Democrats. A couple of hours he amended that to say they could be Independents.

But mostly Kanye’s colleagues, peers, and friends have chimed in on Twitter either denouncing him or imploring him to change his mind about Trump. That won’t happen– Kanye West is now a Kardashian, living in gated Calabasas, overcome by their shallow Republican lifestyle. Yesterday, he invited TMZ’s Harvey Levin into his studio so he could get a good plug on that website. That’s a Kardashian-Trump move if ever there was one. But this is Kanye’s world now– his mother is dead, they are his family. He’s like Patty Hearst once the SLA got her.

Mary Kay Place Gives One of the Finest Performances of Any Year in Understated Indie, “Diane”

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Mary Kay Place became an overnight TV star as wannabe country singer Loretta Haggers over forty years ago on “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.” She won an Emmy award and never looked back, working all the time without interruption in “The Big Chill,” lots of movies and lots of quality TV including a recent two parter on “Grey’s Anatomy.”

Writer director Kent Jones remembered her in a 1997 Francis Ford Coppola movie called “The Rainmaker” and decided she’d be perfect to play the part of his mother in a semi-autobiographical movie that opened this week at the Tribeca Film Festival. Mary Kay plays “Diane,” the lead character in a beautifully understated, subtle indie film that should earn her a lot of awards attention this fall. “Diane” just needs the right distributor, like Sony Picture Classics, to push it along.

What a little gem “Diane” is and so is the character. Diane and her extended family live around Pittsfield, Mass. Her husband is dead– we think from cancer, after working in factory. Her grown son is battling drug addiction. Her family is quickly dying off. And there’s Diane, who does for everyone else, beats herself up over one life mistake made 20 years ago. She’s kind of an everywoman but she’s not sentimental and she’s not looking for sympathy.

Jones surrounds Mary Kay with a great group of friends including Andrea Martin, Estelle Parsons, Joyce van Patten, Phyllis Somerville, and Deirdre O’Connell (who must get her name added to the IMDB page for this movie). Jake Lacy is a standout as Mary Kay’s son who may or not make it after trying to self-destruct in so many ways.

Women of a certain age (baby boomers) who are caught between their aging children and parents will identify strongly with Diane’s life. Mary Kay doesn’t wear her as an obvious warrior, but a survivor– a do-er– who is dedicated to making it to the finish line. Diane is noble, but not overtly, and there’s a scene of her dancing to a jukebox in a bar that is really one of the triumphs of acting– you’ll never forget it. Bravo!

Ryan Gosling, Damian Chazelle May Get “La La Land” Oscar Revenge with “First Man” About Moon Landing

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Ryan Gosling and Damian Chazelle were robbed two years ago when the actor and the movie “La La Land” failed to win their Oscars– big time.

But today the pair have returned at Cinema Con in Las Vegas with the trailer for “First Man,” their new movie. And look out– according to reports, they may yet get their revenge.

“First Man” concerns Gosling as Neil Armstrong taking the first walk on the moon. Tweets from Cinema Con are glowing with enthusiasm.

The movie will be released this fall by Universal. And value added: Claire Foy, aka The Queen from the Crown, plays Mrs. Armstrong. Bryan D’Arcy James, Corey Stoll, Jason Clarke are also featured.

We can’t wait to see this trailer! Or to hear the soundtrack! Justin Hurwitz, who wrote all that great “La La Land” music with Pasek and Paul, is the composer.

Is this the new odds-on Oscar favorite? You betcha. Chazelle is gifted. And everyone loves NASA movies. “Apollo 13” won Best Picture. “Capricorn One” was so good that people in red states think it was real!

“Roseanne” Ratings Fall to Earth as Reruns of First 4 Shows Beaten Soundly By “The Voice,” and an “NCIS” Repeat

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“Roseanne” fell back to Earth last night.

Five weeks in, ABC ran not an original episode but a two hour “marathon” of the first four episodes. They averaged 6.1 million viewers, way off from the 13 million of the last two weeks and 15 million of the premiere week.

Indeed, “Roseanne” fell spectacularly in the 9-10pm hour to “The Voice” with its 9 million pairs of eyes.

The comedy was also beaten by back to back reruns of “NCIS” at 8pm and 9pm, with nearly 7 million.

But “Roseanne” is still scoring high with women in the 18 to 49 demographic, so advertisers and ABC are happy, happy, happy.

The show returns next week with a new episode. In the meantime, here’s a look back:

 

Robert Smigel Directs Adam Sandler, Chris Rock for Netflix But Where is Triumph the Comic Insult Dog? “In a Duane Reade Bag”

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Adam Sandler, who is always taciturn when it comes to talking to the press, told journalists on the red carpet at the premiere of his new comedy, “The Week Of,” Monday night at the AMC Lincoln Square, “Hopefully people will connect with it and why we did it.”

Sandler plays a working class dad who wants to give his daughter (Allison Strong) the wedding of her dreams. Chris Rock plays the wealthy surgeon dad of the groom who volunteers to pay for the wedding Sandler’s character can’t afford.

Rock said on the red carpet, “Adam’s the lead, I play the tambourine. I play a mean tambourine— and we got a guy with no legs (in the film) so that made for interesting banter.”

Robert Smigel, a Saturday Night Life writer, is making his feature directing debut with the film. He also co-wrote the script with Sandler.

Smigel is probably best known as the creator of Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog. He’s a sort of Don Rickles of puppets, a Rottweiller with a growly voice and a bad attitude, always chomping on a cigar. Triumph hasn’t been around for a while. On the red carpet I asked Smigel what it was like being in the director’s chair for the first time and what Triumph was up to.

What would Triumph say about this movie?

Robert Smigel: (He launches into Triumph’s scratchy voice) “I can improve on the script. Give me five minutes and a couple of drinks of water and … I read it. I’s very absorbing.”

Where’s Triumph been during all the political meshuggah?

RS: He’s been in a Duane Reade bag. I actually had to make a choice. Adam offered me this opportunity and I decided I was going to take pretty much the whole 2017 (off to do it). I was excited about this project and I felt like I got a lot of Triumph in 2016. And you know what, it became less fun the fewer candidates. I started in Iowa, New Hampshire, then it was the conventions and then it was just the last man standing. Everybody’s piling on anyway, and I didn’t feel like I had that much more to contribute from that perspective but I will try to get back into it. I’m talking to some people about an insane idea that I’m not sure I can pull off.

What inspired “The Week Of?

RS: It’s a very human, relate-able story. It’s about a father of a bride who doesn’t have a whole lot of money but too much pride to let anybody else pay for the wedding. It was Adam’s premise, but Adam and I, we bring a lot of silly things together but one of the ways we bonded at Saturday Night Life was because we both have very close knit families. We both worshiped our fathers, so you know it was easy for us to write this kind of character comedy. We never go to do it before, so it’s sort of a culmination of our friendship in a way, creatively, to finally get to write about our lives this way.

This is your first time directing a film. So what was it like directing Chris Rock and Adam Sandler?

RS: I mean I know them both so well. They’re both very good friends of mine so I felt very comfortable with them. And Adam especially really had my back. He surrounded me with amazing people. You know the director of photography was amazing, so I really felt like I really had a lot of safety nets, so it was shockingly fun. I didn’t expect it to be. I expected agony. ‘Cause usually when I work, the most fun part is coming up with the initial idea. Then the rest is just executing it. It’s agony just getting every detail right. I’m a detail freak.

It seems critics are always shocked when Adam Sandler does a film like “Meyerowitz Stories” and shows he can act.

RS: I don’t know why they’re shocked at this point. He’s done it so many times. He’s actually amazing in some of his own movies. He never gets credit for that. I think his performance in this movie is as good he was in the Meyerowitz movie. It’s a very human role.

How will this comedy stand out from the other offerings on Netflix?

RS: I hope it stands out a little bit because Adam set out when he had this idea that the movie would not look like a typical summer comedy. It would have more realism, more verite feel to it, almost like an independent film kind of style. We talked about John Cassavetes as one of the directors we admired… It’s definitely got a different energy. We didn’t write it towards one liners, we wrote it towards characters and situations. Some of the situations get very broad, but the characters always stay grounded and recognizable.

You don’t mention the inter-racial aspect of the marriage do you?

RS: I felt like it’s kind of boring at this point to make an issue of it. I wanted to look forward and think about there’s been so much progress in that regards since “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.” I thought it wasn’t worth commenting on. There were a couple of times when jokes were suggested that would allude to it and I tried to go out of my way to keep them out of the movie. I don’t think you miss it.

“The Week Of” premieres Friday, April 27 on Netflix.

Kanye West’s Morning Meltdown: “I am this generation’s Ford Hughes Jobs Disney…Yeezy will become the biggest apparel company in human history”

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Kanye West is looking for attention this morning and he’s going to get it. He’s issued a series of Tweets declaring: “I am this generation’s Ford Hughes Jobs Disney”

There will be more to come. I’ll try to update them. It’s a game at this point to see how outrageous and over the top he can be to get publicity. He does say he fired his manager and lawyer, that he can’t be managed, and that his lawyer wouldn’t leave his huge law firm to come work for Kanye in house.

there’s been a lot of fake news so I just wanted to give you the facts. Yeezy will become the biggest apparel company in human history by working with the most genius level talents and creating product at an affordable price. I hired the head of supply chain from the Gap.

Rocker Bebe Buell Brings Outstanding Nashville-Asbury Park Album to Joe’s Pub: “While I deal with my Me Too moments privately, I say, Stormy Daniels for President”

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It’s a big week for rocker Bebe Buell, the release of a new album, “Baring It All: Greetings from Nashbury Park,” and a show this Sunday night (April 29th) at Joe’s Pub. Last time she made the New York scene at this premiere downtown venue it was packed to the rafters. She gives a great show, with a sweetly throaty Grace Slick-esque voice, a dream rock band, and a muscular performance that plays to her ardent fans.

And she has stories (read her wonderful memoir, “Rebel Heart” for details) a Ford model at age 18, launched in to the world of Andy Warhol and Max’s Kansas City, a long relationship with rocker Todd Rundgren, a baby who became a movie star (Liv Tyler) with Steven Tyler, and her lifelong fight to move from muse to rock star.

As Bebe told me in this interview a week before the album release, the music on “Baring it All” is close to the bone, the album an autobiography –and that coming from a woman has who had had a front seat, often center stage, to rock history. Joe’s Pub will be an event. You never know who will show up! (Last time, it was Stevie van Zandt and his wife Maureen, among other notables).

How is the music different from your earlier records?

In 1994, I put out my first record in France, “Retrosexual.”  Now, at 64, I’ve made the best album of my life, this is a record for everybody. Each song is a chapter like a book.

What do the songs on Baring It All mean to you?

I hope “By a Woman” will become a feminist anthem. The songs are
personal. I was raised by a strong woman—you’ll meet my mother at
Joe’s Pub—when I sing the lyric “You’re finally starting to feel the
power of a woman,” I think of this moment: we’ve got all these Me Too
stories, how tragedy brought this fight to the forefront. The only
cover on the album is “Yesterday When I Was Young,” from Dusty
Springfield. “Can You Forgive?” is for Todd Rundgren. I wanted to be
truthful. In “Frenemy Mine,” well, I’ve decided to deal with some of
my issues privately.

The back of Baring It All reads “Greetings from Nashbury,” which
suggests a mashup of locations. How are places significant?

I grew up in Virginia Beach, and lived in Maine. I went to Asbury Park
with Todd—I was impressed by Convention Hall. There was something
about the air and vibe, especially when I went for the summers. Now
I’ve moved to Nashville, where songwriting is an art, and I am
learning from this company. My next door neighbor (highly regarded producer) Jon Tiven has a set
up. I go over there. We sit around a table. I’ll have a hook, and a
community of artists helps me develop a song. I never went to college;
now I’m getting my doctorate in everything.

What image of you would you like to change, or keep?

I’ve been a rebel and a punk rocker. People need to focus on my animal
activism; I raised a successful daughter. While I deal with my Me Too
moments privately, I say, Stormy Daniels for President. I’m happily
married for 16 years, to Jimmy “Walls” Wallerstein, a virtuoso
guitarist and record producer.

What is your message?

Open your eyes a little. I like to show people another way to go, humanism. I’m on my “isms.” I want it to be like when you heard “Tapestry” or “Sticky Fingers” for the first time, you wanted to listen from beginning to end.

Kanye West Has Tweeted 140 Times in 10 Days, Backed Trump, Suggested a 2024 Presidential Run, Announced Several Albums, Lost His Manager

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Kanye West’s 2018 spring breakdown is now ten days. It began on April 15, the day he returned to Twitter after almost a year away following his 2017 breakdown.

He’s backed Donald Trump again, suggested a 2024 Presidential run after I guess cancelling his 2020 run. He’s endorsed a crazy black female ultra-right personality, shown pictures of women’s shoes he’s designed that look like Lucite picture holders. He’s announced several albums including maybe one solo, one with Kid Cudi, and few he’s produced and will release.

I didn’t know that back on March 29th, Kanye’s long time manager and confidant, Izzy, left. That’s a very bad sign. Then Page Six reports that Scooter Braun, who’s got enough patience to have lasted all this time with Justi Bieber, has also left Kanye. Braun has been through too much to tolerate this craziness.

Let’s not forget that Kanye’s 2016-2017 nosedive into mental chaos came when he released “The Life of Pablo” with no marketing or PR or really a label, then re-released it, and it sold a very measly 27,700 copies. He placed it on Jay Z’s long suffering Tidal service, where streaming has brought it up to a million copies (maybe). Kanye thought he was Pablo Picasso when in fact he wasn’t. (We could have told him that.) He also claimed he had no money and went around asking people for some. “Pablo” has not been a great money maker. (One of his problems on all his albums is paying for samples of old music. He doesn’t write his own.)

Kanye continues to sink lots of money into his fashion lines. They are unwearable, not wanted except by collectors and hard core fans. His sneakers make your feet ache just by looking at them.

But the Tweets keep on coming. And it’s not getting better.

Trump’s First State Dinner: No Movie Stars, Artists, Performers, or Media Stars or Famous Chefs to Greet French President

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I’ll bet right about now, French president Macron and his wife are wondering why they came to the White House. It wasn’t to meet Donald and Melania.

The Macrons were thinking they were guests of honor at a White House state dinner, the kind thrown by the Obamas or the Clintons or even the Bushes. Emmanuel Macron thought he’d be sitting next to Shirley MacLaine or Jessica Chastain. Mrs. Macron envisioned George Clooney or maybe Robert Redford.

Maybe Sting would be performing, or Aretha Franklin.

Instead, the Macrons didn’t meet one movie or pop star tonight. No one from Hollywood came, no one from TV or the media except maybe Rupert Murdoch. No Diane Sawyer, no Oprah, no Tom Brokaw.

There were no painters, sculptors, artists, musicians of any ilk. America, the country that exports its culture around the world, couldn’t turn up one member of even the literary world to meet the Macrons. There wasn’t even a famous French chef from America, even with all the cooking shows.

No, the state dinner tonight comprised a guest list of Republican senators and congressmen, dry dignitaries, no one the Macrons could even gossip about in Paris.

What? No Ted Nugent? No Scott Baio? What about Trump’s “good friend” Sylvester Stallone, who told him–l0l–about the boxer Jack Johnson?

Apparently, everyone was busy. Tuesday night, you know. Even Roseanne Barr was tied up. And Kanye West? They’re running around the Kardashian home right now with a big fish net and a tranquilizer gun.

“I thought we’d at least get to meet Ivana or Marla,” said Mrs. Macron to no one, because I made it up. Maybe.