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Here’s the actual video for Elton John and Brandi Carlile’s duet, “Who Believes in Angels?”
The song and video are out now, the album of the same name hits on April 4th.
Elton and Brandi perform a once in a lifetime show in London on March 26th.
The singing is great, but I could also listen to Elton John play piano all day long!
The video is directed by famed photographer David LaChappelle – who is not the comic Dave Chappelle!
LaChapelle says: “It’s been a wonderful continuation of this journey with Elton over the last 20+ years – projects, videos, stage productions, photo shoots… We created a gigantic pinball machine and made a magical world that reminds us of where we’ve been as kids – that dreams do come true – and creating together with your heroes can be a sublime experience.”
The band comprises of Chad Smith (Red Hot Chili Peppers), Pino Palladino (Nine Inch Nails, Gary Numan and David Gilmour) and Josh Klinghoffer (Pearl Jam, Beck).
Some of the songs are by Elton and lifetime collaborator Bernie Taupin. Some are from Brandi and her team. Andrew Watt is the producer, mediator and creative conduit. He produced the Rolling Stones’ Grammy winning album, “Hackney Diamonds.”
Timothee Chalamet interviews rapper Kendrick Lamar during the Super Bowl!
The full video has dropped. Oscar nominee Chalamet is in a three minute thirty second black and white ad for Apple where all the pair do is drive around and chat!
Lamar just picked up two Grammy wins for his song, “Not Like Us,” which he will somehow perform on the Super Bowl half time show despite lawsuits and censors.
Here’s the video. It’s a little like Oscar Nominee and Grammy Winner Getting Coffee in Cars.
If you were wondering the real Kanyey West has never gone away.
He is still antisemitic and racist, posting and then deleting sick statements backing both Sean Puffy Diddy Combs and Chris Brown. He’s even revived his reviled “Slavery is a choice” slogan.
This is just a few days he paraded his wife, Bianca Censori, onto the Grammys red carpet naked, covered in a see through sheath.
Suddenly Kanye is obsessed with Diddy. You can see his posts below. Don’t be fooled, this man will not change. He is just as odious as he was last year and all the years before.
The reference to Diageo is the liquor company that disposed of Diddy as he was being charged and sued for multiple counts of rape and sexual violence.
These are just a couple of the deleted posts that appeared between 11pm and midnight tonight. Chris Brown, who just the Grammy for R&B Album of the Year, was arrested in 2009 for beating Rihanna the night before the Grammys. He served 5 years suspended sentence and community service.
Kanye West descends deeper and deeper into the abyss of antisemitism.
Yet he continues to be invited to the Grammys as if he had done nothing wrong. West should be ostracized for his rabid antisemitism. pic.twitter.com/R2Hc5UuGcz
Controversial “Emilia Perez” actor Karla Sofia Gascon has posted to Instagram that she will now be silent.
Gascon is at the center of a scandal involving her previously unknown racist tweets. The Tweets have ended her relationship with Netflix, their Oscar campaign, and director Jacques Audiard.
She “apologizes,” but doesn’t say for what and doesn’t recant her horrible Tweets that are anti-Muslim, anti-Asian, and just plain racist. The Tweets, uncovered by a free lance journalist, have caused a firestorm that have likely destroyed the film’s awards chances.
Chloe Zhao won the Oscar for directing “Nomadland,” the 2021 Best Picture at the Oscars. “Nomadland” was a work of art, something really original and fresh.
So now what? She’s going to develop and direct a revival of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” with Sarah Michelle Gellar.
This is like going from the Baccarat table to the penny slots in Vegas. I don’t get it. Why would Zhao want to do this? (Answer: money.)
The Ezra Edelman-made six part, nine hour documentary series about Prince is dead.
Netflix and Prince’s Estate just announced the project is over. It will be replaced by an authorized film with material from the Prince archives.
I CAN TELL YOU EXCLUSIVELY that on Sunday I discussed the documentary with an insider who told me this very thing. They said that the Edelman film concentrated on Prince’s sex and drugs but not on his rock and roll.
“It made no sense,” said my source, “it was petty and no one would have watched it. It did nothing for Prince’s legacy.”
Edelman won many awards for his doc series about OJ Simpson. It’s unclear if he will be involved in the new project, although I doubt it. The big question is, will anyone ever see the series he made?
The good news: there are hundreds if not thousands of unreleased songs being prepared for release.
The official announcement that the doc would be replaced also came with a video saying the Prince archive is now #Free. What form this freedom will take is anyone’s guess.
Ellen L. Weintrraub, head of the Federal Election Commission, says Donald Trump fired her today.
She’s not going.
She writes on X:
“Received a letter from POTUS today purporting to remove me as Commissioner & Chair of @FEC. There’s a legal way to replace FEC commissioners-this isn’t it. I’ve been lucky to serve the American people & stir up some good trouble along the way. That’s not changing anytime soon.”
Good for her!
See below.
Received a letter from POTUS today purporting to remove me as Commissioner & Chair of @FEC. There’s a legal way to replace FEC commissioners-this isn’t it. I’ve been lucky to serve the American people & stir up some good trouble along the way. That’s not changing anytime soon. pic.twitter.com/7voecN2vpj
— Ellen L. Weintraub (@ellenlweintraub.bsky.social) (@EllenLWeintraub) February 6, 2025
Tomorrow night’s Critics Choice Awards — on the E! channel, 7pm Eastern — are suddenly the hot topic in Hollywood.
Originally set for January 12th, the CCAs were moved — twice — because of the wildfires.
The result is that CCA winners will have more impact on Oscar voting than the SAG, DGA, or PGA winners. Or even BAFTA.
Oscar voting starts Tuesday, February 11th and lasts one week, through the 18th. So Oscar voters will have the CCA winners fresh in their minds when it comes time to cast ballots.
The SAG Awards, strangely, come after the Oscar voting closes, on February 23rd. The DGA and PGA are this Saturday night. The BAFTAs come on February 16th.
A curious footnote to all this is that the CCA voting closed three weeks ago when we thought the show was going to be on January 12th.
The Critics Choice Awards — which cover movies and TV — are hosted by Chelsea Handler.
Presenters include Aldis Hodge, Craig Robinson, David Alan Grier, David Harbour, Ewan McGregor, Jackie Chan, Jesse Eisenberg, Jimmy O. Yang, Josh Groban, Justine Lupe, Kate Hudson, Kathryn Hahn, Keri Russell, Kristen Bell, Lupita Nyong’o, Matt Bomer, Michelle Yeoh, Natasha Lyonne, Orlando Bloom, Rachel Brosnahan, Randall Park, Rufus Sewell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, and Wendi McLendon-Covey.
Voting for the Academy Awards begins next Tuesday, so the last minute campaigning is in full effect.
Best Actor is where the action is this year. Timothee Chalamet, Adrien Brody, Colman Domingo — they’re all the thick of it.
All three are on top magazine covers as we speak, in addition to a barrage of TV appearances.
Ralph Fiennes, Sebastian Stan — not so much. The former — star of “Conclave” — is British, and they don’t do much campaigning. Stan is in a movie, “The Apprentice,” without a budget.
But the top trio are hard at work.
Chalamet was just the host and musical guest on “Saturday Night Live,” scoring 5 million viewers. The star of “A Complete Unknown” may have one more rabbit to pull out of his hat. As I reported earlier, Chalamet also hits “60 Minutes” on Sunday, February 16th,
Brody is on the talk show circuit. He just promoted “The Brutalist” on Jimmy Fallon, and was recently on Late Night with Stephen Colbert.
But print is where it’s at.
Domingo, star of “Sing Sing,” just hit the cover of TIME Magazine. He was just profiled in the New Yorker, and is also featured in the LA Times this week.
Brody is featured on Variety this week after appearing stripped to the waist on the cover of New York magazine. He’s also featured in the current Jewish Daily Forward.
But Chalamet may play the winning card yet. He is about to surface — next Wednesday — on the cover of W, photographed by his Oscar winning “Dune” cinematographer, Gregg Fraser in a production conceived by “Dune” director Denis Villeneuve.
Curiously, Vanity Fair — still throwing a mega Oscar party without a charitable component for the LA wildfires — has done little for the Academy awards. They have a Q&A with Brody, but their Hollywood issue was published two months ago. Weird.
Will any of this sway Academy voters? Stay tuned…
Meanwhile, all eyes are on “Emilia Perez,” Netflix’s now castigated film thanks to racist tweets from Best Actress nominee Karla Sofia Gascon. The studio is trying to distance itself from Gascon to preserve Zoe Saldana’s Best Supporting Actress nomination, and the film’s chances for Best International Feature. Walter Salles’s “I’m Still Here” is picking up speed because of it.
Gotti was the founder or Murder Inc Records, an imprint of DefJam.
For Mariah Carey fans, Gotti should stand out in her history. More than twenty years ago, Mariah had a breakdown with her “Glitter” album. Gotti revealed that Tommy Mottola — her ex husband and mentor — had been surreptitiously working against her, funneling music she’d created to Jennifer Lopez.
I wrote about this in 2002 and in 2017. You can read it here, and all below, in my original article.
Gotti led a life inspired by his hero, the late mobster, John Gotti. In 2005 he and his older brother, Chris, also a record producer, were acquitted of money laundering and conspiracy to launder money.
A year ago, Irv Gotti described himself on Instagram as “Just a kid with a dream from Hollis, Queens who rose from a DJ to A&R at Def Jam and founded my own record label. Tune in as I detail my journey creating Murder Inc., launching hip-hop stars, and becoming a force in music, film, and television.”
Irv Gotti will be remembered for a history of feuds with other rappers including 50 Cent.
This video encapsulates his artistic legacy.
Mariah ‘Ripped Off’ Twice on Same Record — from April 4, 2002
The situation is worse than I thought.
In the below story, which we published yesterday, rap impresario Irv Gotti conceded for the first time that Mariah Carey had her work on Glitter lifted for Jennifer Lopez’s J.LO album.
It turns out however that before it was released Glitter was pilfered from not once but twice by Lopez. Not only was a song sample Carey intended to use taken from Glitter, but a concept as well. All of this has to do with Lopez’s hit song, “I’m Real,” which in fact is two different songs. Confused? Welcome to pop music in 2002.
On Lopez’s album J.LO, “I’m Real” appears as an upbeat dance number. There’s no rapping or male vocal accompaniment. The record does sample the old disco song, “Firecracker.” The songwriting credits for that version of “I’m Real,” list Martin Denny (who wrote “Firecracker”) as well as Lopez and three producers. J.LO was released on July 24, 2001.
The remixed “I’m Real,” which was released a few weeks later, is quite different. It’s a slow give and take duet between Lopez and rapper Ja Rule. Denny’s name is gone from the credits, replaced by Ja Rule (real name Jeffrey B. Atkins). This version became Lopez’s hit single. Two songs, one title. For Glitter, Mariah Carey had found the “Firecracker” sample and recorded it on her soundtrack as “Loverboy.”
For another Glitter track called “If We,” she and Ja Rule recorded a slow give and take vocal. On J.LO, the upbeat “I’m Real” ripped off Carey’s planned — and subsequently scuttled version — of “Loverboy.”
The remixed version of “I’m Real” — which Irv Gotti referred to in his XXL interview — copied the style and substance of “If We.” Creatively, Carey — who’d worked hard on Glitter for a year in secret — could say she was plundered twice. Wouldn’t that be enough to drive anyone crazy? Thanks to the Internet, Carey’s fans can make the “If We”/”I’m Real” scandal a party game simply by logging on to cdnow.com which features audio clips of all three songs — “If We” plus the two “I’m Real” versions. It’s fun, free entertainment!
Mariah Vindicated: Her Song Was ‘Swiped’ from April 4, 2002 Mariah Carey may finally have been vindicated. It seems that there was more than a little truth in her accusations last summer that someone was out to get her. In the new issue of a rap magazine called XXL, record executive Irv Gotti admits that Tommy Mottola, Carey’s ex-husband and the head of Sony Music, instructed him to make a record for Jennifer Lopez that sounded exactly like one Gotti’s company had made with Carey for her movie, Glitter — even though Glitter was not finished and Lopez would beat Carey to the punch and undermine a project she was recording for Sony.
In XXL, Gotti is asked by writer Keith Murphy: “Is it true that Tommy Mottola asked Murder Inc. [Gotti’s production company] to do he remix of [Jennifer Lopez’s] “I’m Real” after hearing a song Ja Rule did with Mariah Carey on the Glitter soundtrack?” Gotti replies: “Ja wrote a song with him and Mariah singing back and forth on the title track. I get a call from Tommy Mottola, who I have a great relationship with, and he’s like, ‘I need you to do me a favor. I want you to do this remix for Jennifer Lopez. I want you to put Ja on the record.’ Immediately I knew what he was doing because we just finished the Mariah record.”
The Mariah record Gotti refers to is “Loverboy,” from the movie Glitter. Carey had picked out a sample from Yellow Magic Orchestra’s recording of “Firecracker” to be the basis of the song. She and Ja Rule worked on it, and the song was included on daily viewings from the filming of Glitter. But Glitter was a Sony Pictures release, which is a sister company of Sony Music. Mottola, according to sources who worked on the movie, was surreptitiously viewing footage of Glitter while his ex-wife was shooting it.
“Mariah was so paranoid about the music getting out that we had another singer sing the temporary versions,” says a Glitter insider. “When Jennifer Lopez’s record came out, and had the exact same song, we knew she had a right to be paranoid. We couldn’t believe it.” Indeed, Gotti’s statement to XXL suggests that once Mottola heard Carey’s song — and knew Glitter was months away from completion — he stole the idea and gave it to Lopez for the remix of her song, “I’m Real.” The hit version of “I’m Real” with Ja Rule was released after Lopez’s album was already out. It’s substantially different from the original version.
Murphy, the reporter who interviewed Gotti, said yesterday that the rap music executive told him that Mottola wanted Ja Rule to make a record “in the same style” for Lopez that he’d already made for Carey. “It was exactly the same style — with Mariah and Ja talking back and forth, just the way he does with Jennifer on I’m Real.” But here’s a key revelation: the music publisher of “Firecracker” — the sample that Ja Rule used first with Carey and then with Lopez — told me yesterday: “Mariah Carey called us to license a sample from “Firecracker” first. Then, within a month, Jennifer Lopez also called for it.”
The publisher of “Firecracker” also pointed out that the composition, by Martin Denny, had never been sampled before Mariah Carey called about it. Sony Music spokesperson Patricia Kiehl said yesterday: “One song has nothing to do with the other. This is absolutely untrue.” When the possible theft of “Firecracker” was brought up in Talk magazine last fall, Mottola and Lopez’s producers immediately invoked that idea that it was a coincidence that the sample was used twice, though — a different defense altogether. Ironically, the “Firecracker” case found Carey getting a taste of her own medicine when she — and not Lopez — had been Mottola’s darling.
During Carey’s 11 years at Sony Music, she, Sony, and Mottola were sued at least three times for plagiarism. Each case was settled out of court for roughly $1 million, with Carey making no admission of guilt. In one instance, Randy Hoffman — Mottola’s business partner and Carey’s then manager — wore a hidden tape recorder to a meeting with a witness hoping to get him to change his testimony. Just as other songwriters had once been affected by having their songs swiped, the impact on Carey of losing the “Firecracker” sample for Glitter was deep. The singer was forced to quickly change the sample on “Loverboy” from “Firecracker” to Cameo’s old hit, “Candy.”
“We had to work fast,” says a Glitter source, “because we had to find music that would fit what was already filmed.” Nevertheless, the damage was done. When “Loverboy” was released it was savaged by music industry trade paper Billboard in an unusually harsh review. Carey — exhausted from working on the project and then knocked out by the scathing reaction — snapped and became the subject of public derision.
Insiders speculate the Mottola-Lopez theft may have had a silver lining. Carey was able to use it to free herself and Glitter from Sony, even though she still owed them an album on her contract. One source told me: “Mariah and her lawyer, Don Passman, went to Tommy and told him that if they didn’t let her go, she’d let the higher-ups at Sony know what he’d done to her-and to a Sony project.”
The speculation is that Mottola had to make Glitter look as bad as possible to Sony’s Japanese honchos, who loved Carey and wanted to keep her as an artist. Ironically, Glitter still sold like crazy in Japan. Carey wound up taking Glitter to EMI/Virgin as the first record on an $80 million deal. When the album tanked, EMI panicked and paid her a total of $49 million to cancel her contract. Carey is now fielding offers from Universal Music Group, J Records, and Warner Music Group for a new contract.