Saturday, December 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 1445

(Watch) How Donald Trump, Who Wants to be President, Called Jon Stewart a “P—y” on Twitter

0

We learned last night that Jon Stewart was harassed by Donald J. Trump on Twitter three years ago.

Stewart told the story during the Stand Up for Heroes event. He recalled Trump calling him a “oussy” on Twitter after picking a fight for no reason. Trump, Stewart says, was obsessed with him having dropped his real last name, Leibowitz, for his stage name.

First, the Tweet:

and then here’s Stewart’s telling of the story last night

Journalism Under Siege: WSJ Massive Layoffs, More Layoffs Coming Elsewhere, Gawker Settles Hulk Hogan Lawsuit for $31 Million

0

Not a great day in journalism.

Gawker Media finally settled with Hulk Hogan for $31 million. Gawker filed for bankruptcy after losing to Hogan, and sold off all their sites to Univision. The settlement represents the end of this nightmare for Nick Denton, who went too far and left himself vulnerable to snake like billionaire Peter Thiel. Thiel funded Hogan’s lawsuit, then backed Donald Trump. Gawker is settling some other lawsuits, too. Maybe you hated Gawker but it served a purpose. Snark is a good thing for everyone, and now there is none.

Elsewhere the Wall Street Journal is shutting down its Greater New York section, laying everyone off and inviting the employees to reapply for 12 new positions in the main paper. Reports are that 48 others took buyouts, which could mean a loss today of 71 jobs. Yikes. Greater New York is a great read, and will be missed. but more so the people who made it.

I’m hearing more layoffs are coming at Time Inc. There’s also talk of more layoffs coming at places like the New York Times. No one wants to read a physical paper, the advertising has dried up because of it. Everyone wants to read from their phones and tablets, and no one knows how to monetize that two decades into the internet. On top of that, we have Jann Wenner selling 49% of Rolling Stone and US Weekly to the Chinese, turning over the company to his 26 year old son and getting out of Dodge before the UVA trial is over.

And then there’s the whole catastrophe at Gannet and the ill-named Tronc (former Tribune Publishing). The two companies couldn’t make a deal for Gannett to take over Tronc (LA Times, Chicago Tribune). No bank would fund the deal. There will be layoffs on both sides.

Will Carly Simon and Warren Beatty Cross Paths Tonight in NYC? They Probl’y Think This Item’s About Them

0

Tonight could be the night everyone’s waited for for 45 years.

Carly Simon and Warren Beatty are each in New York tonight for their own events. Will their paths cross? For four decades everyone has wondered if Carly wrote her mega hit “You’re So Vain” about Warren. Now the truth may come out!

Simon is in town for a huge book signing at the Union Square Barnes and Noble at 7pm. Her “Boys in the Trees,” a New York Times best seller, has come out in paperback this week.

Beatty is here to accept a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Museum of the Moving Image. He’s promoting his new movie, “Rules Don’t Apply,” which opens November 23rd. Warren co-wrote and directed the comedy, in which he plays Howard Hughes. The advance word is very high on Beatty getting nomination for Best Supporting Actor.

Warren’s event is on Park Avenue and 63rd St. It’s a black tie dinner that kicks off with cocktails around 6pm. A lot of stars will be there including his wife of 25 years, Annette Bening, plus Candice Bergen, Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker, and so on. But if Carly walks in, that could cause quite a commotion.

All we’re missing is Mick Jagger, who sang back up on the original 1972 recording produced by Richard Perry.

Stay tuned. This could be a fun night in NYC! (Not like the others aren’t!)

Hot Ticket Exclusive: Sting to Celebrate Release of New Album “57th and 9th” With NYC Club Show

0

The hottest ticket in town next week will be Sting at Irving Plaza.

I can tell you exclusively that the rock superstar will celebrate release of his new album, “57th and 9th” with a club show at Irving Plaza next Wednesday, November 9th. Tickets go on sale on Monday through Ticketmaster, and should be sold out in minutes.

Sting’s show at Irving Plaza reminds me of his solo debut way back in 1985 at the Ritz, now known as Webster Hall, when he released his “Dream of the Blue Turtles.”

“57th and 9th” is a collection of 10 songs that hearken back to Sting’s best rock/pop/soul work. The first single, “I Can’t Stop Thinking About You,” is on Sirius constantly. The album has more potential hits, I think, including “One Fine Day,” “Petrol Head,” and “Down Down Down.”

IHeartRadio and AT&T are sponsoring the album party and show at Irving Plaza, and they’re going all out for it, too. The “57th and 9th” celebration will be broadcast on all their platforms — iHeartMedia AAA, Classic Hits and Classic Rock radio stations throughout the country, video stream on ‪iHeartRadio.com/WatchATT‬ and televised on the AUDIENCE Network available on DIRECTV and U-verse ‪on November 18 at 8pm ET‬/PT / ‪7pm CT‬. ‬‬

The album was recorded with Sting’s long-time collaborators ‪Dominic Miller‬ (guitar) and ‪Vinnie Colaiuta‬ (drums), plus drummer ‪Josh Freese‬ (‪Nine Inch Nails‬, Guns n’ Roses) and guitarist Lyle Workman with backing vocals by the San Antonio-based Tex-Mex band The Last Bandoleros. Martin Kierszenbaum is the producer.

I’m told the Irving Plaza show will feature tracks from the new album, plus hits from the past like “Roxanne” and “Message in a Bottle.” But you know, I want to hear these new songs live– they are great on the album, which hits stores November 11th.

Bruce Springsteen Signed Guitar Sells for $280K At 10th Annual Charity Show for Vets

0

A guitar signed by Bruce Springsteen sold for $280,000 last night at the 10th annual Stand Up for Heroes charity show for veterans. Stand Up for Heroes is the brainchild of ABC News correspondent Bob Woodruff and his wife Lee. Bob was nearly killed in 2006 when he was embedded with US forces in Iraq.

The guitar also came with a promise from Springsteen– who performed for the 10th year in a row– of all “the hot dogs and hamburgers” the winner could eat with him at his favorite New Jersey dive. Springsteen may have also thrown in his mother’s lasagna.

The two guys who bought the guitar don’t play the instrument. But one of them, Dan Rosensweig, is a tech multimillionaire from Silicon Valley. The other is his New York pal, Dan Benton, who just happened to be on a date with “Law and Order” actress Stephanie March.

The last time I saw a Springsteen guitar go for so much was at the 2013 MusiCares dinner. The winner was Steve Jobs’ widow Laurene Powell, who bought it for her sister for $250,000.

The other stars who performed at Stand Up for Heroes in the Theater at Madison Square Garden were the creme de la creme of comedians– Jerry Seinfeld, Jon Stewart, Jim Gaffigan and Louis C.K. The evening was created a decade ago and still produced with panache and passion by Caroline Hirsch and Andrew Fox of Caroline’s Comedy Club as the kick off to New York Comedy Week.

Springsteen used to be joined by Robin Williams, an early supporter of the group, when Stand Up for Heroes launched at New York’s Town Hall.

Last night Andrew Fox estimates over $6 million was raised in total for veterans.

Later in the evening, Springsteen and the four comics helped auction off a Harley Davidson motorcycle that had been donated by a local dealer. When the bidding seemed slow, each of the stars offered to donate $50,000 to the charity if someone would buy the bike for $150,000. That did the trick. The comics also promised to eat dinner with the winner, just to get things moving.

Springsteen performed acoustic versions of “Dancing in the Dark,” “Long Walk Home,” “Working on the Highway,” and a couple of others with his usual ferocity. He interspersed the songs with some of his best “dirty” jokes, a Stand for Heroes tradition.

The comedians were all at the top of their respective games. They’re the best of the best, and needless to say, hilarious. “American Idol” star Phillip Phillips opened the evening with the National Anthem, and spotted in the audience were actor Adam Driver, restaurateur Drew Nieporent, Springsteen managers Jon Landau and Barbara Carr.

More on Jon Stewart later today…

Bruno Mars in Pop Plagiarism Claim of the Week: “Uptown Funk” Came from 1983 Record

0

If it’s Tuesday, it must be time for a new pop plagiarism claim: the writers and makers of a 1983 record called “Young Girls” by a group called Collage say Bruno Mars and Mark Ronson’s “Uptown Funk” comes from their record.

“Uptown Funk” was already acknowledged to be nicked from a Gap Band record.

There’s a weird coincidence here. The lead track from the last Bruno Mars album was also called “Young Girls.” That’s from the same album that had Bruno’s Police soundalike song “Locked Out of Heaven.” Hmmmm….

You be the judge. Does “Young Girls” sound like “Uptown Funk”? Has sampling and interpolating gotten completely out of hand?

 

In Netflix’s “The Crown,” Prince Philip Is A Stud Muffin Who Sleeps in the Nude (And Is Seen That Way Too)

0

“Is it good to be the queen?” Showbiz411.com asked Claire Foy.

The 32-year-old actress plays Queen Elizabeth II in “The Crown,” the new lush and lavish Netflix series about the early years of the Monarch’s reign.

“It’s certainly good to be Peter Morgan’s queen,” Foy said.

The aforementioned Morgan knows a thing or two about the subject; he’s spent the past 20 years writing about Elizabeth II, notably “The Queen” and the hit West End and Broadway play, “The Audience,” starring Helen Mirren.

At a recent BAFTA screening, Morgan sheepishly said he was not obsessed with Queen Elizabeth but just found he had a natural affinity for writing dialogue for her.

Foy was the star attraction at the junket to promote the series at the Essex House in Manhattan recently, along with Matt Smith (Prince Philip), Vanessa Kirby (Princess Margaret), Jared Harris (King George VI) and John Lithgow (Winston Churchill).

“The Crown” keeps it sexy among the Royals, casting them in a new light. Prince Philip in particular gets a major makeover and comes across as a doting dad and devoted husband. Also he comes off as a bit of a stud muffin and sleeps in the nude. (You can Google it.)

One scene that takes place in Africa while he and Elizabeth are on an official visit – and before she is Queen – shows Philip naked, sleeping on his stomach, showing off a shapely derriere.

Showbiz411.com asked Smith, who’s best known as the youngest Dr. Who in the long-running popular Brit series, what he thought Philip would say if he happened to catch that on his telly?

“Is that my bum?” Smith said laughing. “That’s the best bit of acting I did in the whole series. That’s my most truthful moment.”

As to why he felt the nudity was important in the telling of events, Smith laughed, “Stephen Daldry wanted them.”

“There’s like five or six of those shots,” Foy said. “There are quite a lot of bum shots of you,” she turned to Smith. “A crucial thing is that Philip sleeps naked. That was in the research. It’s just the fact that there are bed scenes and what do you do, put Philip in a pair of pajamas? That’s not right for the character.”

Smith added, “Would it have been the same if he’d have got up in a pair of pajamas? Is it not better this way?” (Yes we agree.)

Smith said of his character, “He was a very different man when he was young and even the man he is now. I think he’s completely misread.”

Another Royal who was often misread was Princess Margaret, played by 28-year-old English actress Vanessa Kirby, who said of her character, “Margaret died from several strokes from drinking and smoking too much and had lots of affairs and lived a full, crazy, brilliant and vibrant life but also for me, one that was tainted with so much sadness and pain and internal conflicts,” which the actress said was juicy and challenging stuff “to explore.”

Jared Harris is terrific as George VI, a man who never really wanted to be king. He dies in the second episode, but here’s hoping Harris comes back as an apparition.

Asked what he learned about the Royals that surprised him the most, Harris said that what “struck hardest home for me on this is Prince Philip, who’s probably been subject to the worst character assassination and ridicule and when you look and you see who he was back then, who he was in the beginning. I mean, what a magnificent man! He’s like a movie man. He’s a Greek god or something. He was absolutely fantastic! Also, we have a cynical attitude towards them in that we think that it’s an arranged marriage and that it’s not a sincere relationship. And then again when you look back you see that they were absolutely smitten with each other.”

Kirby asked, “Was it daunting when he jumps out of the bed in front of you starkers?”

She was referring to a scene where King George goes into Philip’s bedroom in the morning to make sure he’s properly attired to go duck hunting.

“No, I knew it was going to happen,” Harris said.

“He’s completely naked. We go straight into a room and there are two dressers there and we throw all the hunting clothes on him. It was a game. You look straight in the eye and although you know he’s completely naked you don’t say anything, and it’s about the embarrassment of it.”

“There was another scene after that,” Harris said, where King George walks into the corridor with the valet and eventually they look at each other and go, “Bloody hell!’ – We give an idea of Philip’s being well endowed.”

The most unconventional casting in the series is John Lithgow, the only American in a key role. Showbiz411 asked the two-time Tony winner if it always his dream to play Winston Churchill?

.

“Never occurred to me,” he laughed. “I was astonished when I was offered the part. I’ve played FDR in my day with Bob Hoskins playing Churchill and Michael Caine playing Joseph Stalin in a television series in the early 90’s and even then it never occurred to me that I would play Winston Churchill. For one thing, Bob came up to here on me,” he pointed to his chest, “which seemed quite right and proper, even when I was in a wheelchair.”

It was casting director Nina Gold’s “bright idea” to cast him as Churchill Lithgow said. “Peter Morgan describes a certain Churchill fatigue that had kicked in. We’ve seen so many of the knights play Churchill by now. For some reason they thought this would shake up people’s expectations.”

Asked by a Brit journalist if he was apprehensive about talking on the ole of such a revered and iconic historical figure, Lithgow said, “Somewhat yeah. Not at first but when I started a couple of my British friends I could tell they were a little skeptical.”

Lithgow said Churchill helped prepare Elizabeth to be Queen. “His job was to give her confidence and make her feel like the Queen. And that’s a very general thing, the specifics are you never ask me to sit down and you never offer me tea,” lines the actor said came from “The Audience.”

As for what he thinks Buckingham Palace’s reaction to the show will be, Lithgow said, “You know it is a matter of such policy for them just never to say a thing in every area, including this. But I think this is going to be so good and so popular at a certain point somebody’s going to let slip how much they love it. And who wouldn’t want Clare Foy playing you as a young woman.”

Churchill doesn’t come off nearly as flattering. Lithgow plays him in his decline, when he was a doddering old man. He’s seems like a dirty old man in one scene. In another he stands up among his cabinet members and puts his hands down his pants for everyone to see. You can only imagine what the Queen would say to that although she’s probably wondering if Peter Morgan will ever let her alone.

“The Crown” debuts Friday, November 4 on Netflix.

Zayn Malik Leaves One Direction Bandmates Out of Book, Says He Has ADHD and Suffers from Anxiety

0

One Direction’s Zayn Malik has published a book. Well, it’s like a book. It’s called “Zayn.” It’s also a souvenir, something for his fans to spend fifteen bucks on. It’s more like a press release, in long form, with photos.

Not mentioned: the names of any of his band members from One Direction, no Harry Styles, or Liam or Niall or Louis. Did he like them? Did they help him? Was there camaraderie or fighting? Were there resentments? Was he closer to one of the other? You won’t find out here.

There’s also no mention of Simon Cowell, who packaged the group from its appearances on his UK talent show. Zayn refrains from mentioning his girlfriend, the model Gigi Hadid, or any of her extended reality TV show model family. He does refer a couple of times to his former girlfriend, singer Perrie Edwards, only to say their relationship broke up.

Zayn does reveal that he was diagnosed with ADHD when he was younger.  He also suffers from anxiety, a word that appears 31 times in this very slim volume. That’s admirable, and quite an admission from a young man trying to make a big career on his own.

He writes: “Probably one of the worst experiences of anxiety I had pre-Wembley was in the lead-up to the iHeartRadio Music Awards in LA, not long after the album was released. I’d got myself into this headspace where I was just like, ‘No way. I can’t do it. I’m not doing it.’ Out of nowhere, I felt totally paralysed. My whole team came around to the house. They were trying to shake me out of it, but, for the longest time, I just couldn’t see how I was going to do it.

Then something clicked, and about thirty minutes before the show I managed to break through that wall, or whatever it was, and I did it. I felt sick. I was vomiting backstage before the performance, but I remember coming off after singing feeling so elated. It was so awesome playing that gig, the crowd was so supportive and it was like a huge victory for me: I hadn’t let my anxiety get the better of me; I’d done it.”

“Zayn,” the book, offers no insights into any of Malik’s experiences with the members of One Direction, or much about the band except that he didn’t like their songs in general. He was raised, he says, on Biggie Smalls, and Tupac.

One thing is for certain: Zayn’s book will find itself included in the hilarious “Celebrity Biography” readings off Broadway. And, maybe sooner, Stephen Colbert can do a dramatic reading from it.

Pop Chart Update: Lady Gaga’s “Joanne” in Sales Struggle Eleven Days After Release

0

I think my neighbors three houses away just heard my audible gasp!

Lady Gaga’s “Joanne” album is in a chart free fall. It’s now number 4 back to number 2 on iTunes eleven days after it debuted at number 1.

On amazon.com, the physical CD has dropped to number 5 for the deluxe edition and 17 for the regular one..

The first week sales for “Joanne” were weak, with 161K copies sold, and another 40K streams. But it seemed like it was holding its own, and Gaga was doing lots of publicity. What wasn’t there was buzz, and a hit single on the radio.

All in all, “Joanne” has been a botched job. I can only think that the usual elements weren’t in place to make the album a hit. And now things are unraveling fast.

On iTunes, Gaga has been replaced by Kenny Chesney and two rap stars. And today is only Monday.

I still say her biggest issue is that she doesn’t have one single on the top 50 streaming singles chart put out by hitsdailydouble.com. That chart is full of today’s hitmakers and, like the radio top 40, it’s fueled by marketing money. You get the feeling that Interscope has no one working on “Joanne.”

This is in no way Lady Gaga’s fault. The album is very, very good. She’s a huge talent. But when there’s no internal support, albums die. That’s the brutal reality of the record business. It always has been.

 

Mariah Carey Engagement to James Packer 86d by (Maybe Former) Scientology Celebrity Wrangler

0

In the end, Mariah Carey was not going to be a Scientologist. But her engagement to billionaire James Packer seems to have hinged on getting along with Packer’s right hand man, Tommy Davis, whom he hired earlier this year.

Many people, including TMZ, think Davis, the son of actress Anne Archer, is out of Scientology. But that’s inherently ridiculous. His mother and stepfather, Terry Jastrow, are embedded in the cult. His wife, Jessica Feshbach, comes from a family that’s donated millions to the cause of L. Ron Hubbard.

A few years ago, Davis was demoted by Scientology’s Napoleon, David Miscavige, and sent into the woods, so to speak. But this year, Davis re-emerged as Packer’s lackey, indicating that Packer was still connected to the group of nuts depicted in “Going Clear.” The conventional wisdom is that Miscavige sent Davis on a mission to make sure that Packer and his money wouldn’t be lost to Scientology by marrying Carey.

Now TMZ is saying that Davis clamped down on Packer’s spending regarding Carey, which may be correct. No one knows how to waste money like Mariah Carey. Still, the constant barrage of anti-Carey publicity that’s suddenly emerged has all the earmarks of a Scientology campaign. In the end, Mariah should be grateful she’s out of this mess.

It is kind of laughable to think that Mariah is ‘demanding’ $50 million from Packer for anything. I rather doubt it. Mariah has lots of money. If she wanted to stay in California, she’d buy a house. My guess is, she’ll return to New York. She’s a New Yorker through and through.

Also, Mariah and Packer still share a mutual friend in movie director Brett Ratner. Ratner, Packer, and Trump finance chair Steven Mnuchin run RatPac, a film financier that is underwriting a lot of Warner Bros. movies. Ratner has probably refereed an ending to this romance gone bad that doesn’t include payouts.

But Davis’s involvement with Packer should be more worrisome to those around him than anything to do with Carey.