Friday, December 19, 2025
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Good Times! The Monkees Finish at Number 8 Chart Debut with New Album, Beat Adele, Prince, Ariana Grande

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All hail The Monkees.

In pure sales– CDs and digital downloads– the 50 year old group beat Adele, Prince and Ariana Grande this week on the charts.

The Monkees’ new album– “Good Times!”– sold a little over 24,000 copies and finished at number 8 for the first week on the charts.

They added about one thousand streams and finished at number 15 when streamed play was counted in according to hitsdailydouble.com.

For one week, “Good Times!” was number 1 on the amazon.com bestsellers. They’re at number 3 now as Paul Simon’s new “Stranger to Stranger” and the Broadway “Hamilton” score moved up to 1 and 2.

At the Monkees show last week at Town Hall, Micky Dolenz told me: “I’ll be happy to make the top 40.”

The number 8 finish is quite an accomplishment. It also means that Monkees fans, who are older, wanted to own the album not just passively listen to it on their phones. The royalty rate is higher for actual sales, too, than for streaming.

HBO Lets John Oliver Buy $15 Mil of Medical Debt for $60,000 from Encore Capital

Last night, HBO bailed 9,000 Texans out of medical debt.

The cabler let their brilliant weekly news star, John Oliver, buy $15 million worth of medical debt from Encore Capital for $60,000. And then Oliver forgave the debt. All those Texans are getting letters saying they no longer owe various medical bills.

Oliver — on fire last night about Trump and other issues– gave a scathing editorial about debt collection companies. He revealed how easy it was for his staff to start their own company, just with a website, which enabled them to solicit offers for bulk debt purchase.

Using the invented name CARP, Oliver bought a package from debt from Encore to prove how slimy the business is– in the files he received social security numbers and other personal information for 9,000 people Encore had been dunning. CARP stands for Central Asset Recovery Professionals — and carp, Oliver pointed out, are bottom feeding fish.


At that point, Oliver could have started dunning the customers himself. Instead, he and HBO turned the whole thing over to a firm that forgives debt without incurring tax fees.

Oliver billed it as the biggest TV giveaway of all time as he was relenting $15 million. But he and HBO had only spent $60,000 to buy it. So really, although he mocked Oprah Winfrey’s old auto giveaways, Oliver’s was a great act of generosity and mischief but maybe really not the biggest giveaway ever.

Still, it proved many points– not the least of which is how easy it is to buy junk.

Kris Kristofferson Releasing Album for 80th Birthday, Still Performing Live (And He’s Good-Watch)

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Holy moley. Kris Kristofferson is still out there performing and recording. Even though he’s talked openly about his memory issues, Kris hasn’t let anything stop him. I’m impressed. Here’s a video from this year– he’s still got it.

Now comes word that Kristofferson will release “The Cedar Creek Sessions,” recorded in 2014 in Austin, Texas. The album hits stores and online June 17th. There’s even a duet with Sheryl Crow.

When you see him Kris tells you right away his memory is bad, that he’s suffering from some kind of memory loss due to playing football in his youth or other blows to the head. I guess we won’t know until he’s gone and his brain is examined for CTE. But in the meantime, he’s upright, cogent, singing and playing like crazy. Mazel tov! You can see how happy he is–he’s enjoying himself regardless. This is much to be admired. He’s a role model.

KK has a bunch of dates booked for this month and September and November later this year.

Cedar Creek Sessions
Track Listing:
Volume One
1. Duvalier’s Dream
2. The Loving Gift (with special guest Sheryl Crow)
3. The Sabre and the Rose
4. The Law is for the Protection of the People
5. It No Longer Matters What I Do
6. Stagger Mountain Tragedy
7. The Wife You Save
8. Lay Me Down and Love the World Away
9. The Bigger the Fool (The Harder the Fall)
10. Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down
11. Spooky Lady’s Revenge
12. Forever In Your Love
13. Winter

Volume Two
1. Darby’s Castle
2. Me and Bobby McGee
3. Broken Freedom Song
4. Casey’s Last Ride
5. Billy Dee
6. Easter Island
7. For the Good Times
8. Help Me Make It Through the Night
9. Jody and the Kid
10. Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’ll Ever Do Again)
11. Risky Business
12. To Beat the Devil

Box Office: Tom Hanks “Hologram” Makes Just $4 Mil Bucks, All Time Career Low

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We’re not crying for Tom Hanks. He’s very wealthy and has two Oscars. But his box office run of three hits in a row– “Captain Phillips,” “Saving Mr. Banks” and “Bridge of Spies” — has ended with a whimper.

Hanks’s worst box office ever has occurred with the current “A Hologram for the King.” The Tom Tykwer feature has made just $4.1 million since its release on April 22nd. I doubt most people in the U.S. know it exists. The film has no foreign ticket sales either. It’s dead.

“Hologram” was released by Roadside Attractions, which has a decent reputation for sinking its films. They’re having a modest (nice way of putting it) success with “Hello My Name is Doris” starring Sally Field, which has scrapped together $14 million. Roadside is stymied by lack of marketing and publicity despite a nice owner, Howard Cohen.

Right now Roadside (which I like to call Roadkill) has a good Whit Stillman film called “Love and Friendship” which looks like it may already be in decline with $7 million at the box office. It had what I called a stealth opening. Next up is “Genius” with Colin Firth and Jude Law, and Nicole Kidman in a strong supporting role. It has a 42 on Rotten Tomatoes. (I’m told “Genius” would have been better off on HBO.)

For Hanks, “Hologram” is a shocking low. You’d have to go back to 1990– some 26 years– to “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” which made around $16 million– of all the movies he’s headlined or starred in. Even the terrible “Larry Crowne” made $35 million back in 2011. (That was a bad year for Tom, who also starred in stinkers “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” and “Cloud Atlas.”)

Tom will rise like a phoenix from these Roadside ashes in the fall, with “Sully” (he plays hero Sully Sullenberger) and Ron Howard’s “Inferno” (based on Dan Brown’s bestseller). “Hologram” will play on airplanes and head to cable as an anomaly in his long, storied career.

Muhammad Ali Flashback: Fight Night Raised Millions Ever Year for Parkinson’s Disease Research

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I wrote this back on March 22, 2010– a report from the annual celebrity Fight Night that raised millions over the years for Parkinson’s Disease research. It was all done in the name of Muhammad Ali, who appeared at the yearly dinners less and less as time went by, waved to the audience, and little by little was unable to speak.

Here’s my report from 2010. The following year, 2011, Champ skipped the Friday night dinner and only saw a handful of notables at the big dinner.

From 2010:

I always liked Reba McEntire, but get this: on Saturday night in Phoenix, at the Muhammad Ali Celebrity Fight Night concert and dinner, three bidders spent a total of $900,000 to have dinner with her.

The winners were Bill Austin, of the Starkey Hearing Foundation; Bob Parsons, of GoDaddy; and self made philanthropist Walter Scott, one of Warren Buffet’s childhood buddies.

Each spent $300,000 to have a meal with Reba, and presumably, her husband and manager Narvell Blackstock. Each of these men actually went to spent hundreds of thousands more during a live auction that raised, all told, over $5 million for research into Parkinson’s Disease.

There were plenty more exciting bids, including $70,000 to hear R&B legend Sam Moore sing his most famous hit, “Soul Man,” with Randy Jackson playing bass, and comedian Chris Tucker singing and goofing along.

Let me tell you: Chris Tucker does a very exact imitation of Michael Jackson doing “Billie Jean.” I am told he is very keen on playing an R&B great like Jackie Wilson or Otis Redding on the big screen. From the looks of it, he could do it. Brett Ratner, where are you?

Record producer and songwriter David Foster emceed the evening, the second in a row over the weekend, with more performances by Kris Kristofferson, Jessi Colter, Reba, comedienne Melissa Peterman, the Canadian Tenors, and a special appearance by Eagles front man Glenn Frey. The afterparty music was supplied by John Corbett and his band, with his beau, Bo Derek, dancing along. In the all star band: music greats Nathan East and Greg Phillinganes.

Others in the audience included baseball great Dave Winfield and stars like Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald and women’s basketball great Nancy Lieberman. During the day on Saturday, by the way, the latter two had a one on one at a local basketball court. What was the score? “No score,” Larry said. “We were just having fun.”

Best quote of the night, from Glenn Frey, who told the audience: “Back in 1970, Don Henley, Jackson Browne, J.D. Souther and I hit on every waitress at the Troubador. But they were only interested in one guy: Kris Kristofferson.”

As for Muhammad Ali: his Parkinson’s is severe. He can walk, with assistance, but tires easily. He does not speak very much at all, and remained silent throughout the presentation given by wife Lonnie. He is mostly attended to by Lonnie’s sister, who is his trusted caregiver. However, say friends: “His mind is all there.” Ali simply suffers from waging a war against Parkinson’s. But his Foundation is now world famous, and a cure gets closer and closer.

(Watch) “The Greatest Love of All” Was Written for Muhammad Ali BioPic “The Greatest”

Before Whitney Houston turned it into her anthem, “The Greatest Love of All” was sung by George Benson for a biopic of Muhammad Ali called “The Greatest.”

Linda Creed and Michael Masser wrote the song (which inadvertently nicked 24 bars from Gordon Lightfoot’s ‘If You Could Read My Mind”). Benson had an R&B hit with it from the soundtrack on Arista Records. When Whitney came along a few years later, Clive Davis and Gerry Griffiths had her re-record it for her first album. The rest is history.

Ring Lardner Jr. wrote the screenplay for “The Greatest” based on Ali’s autobiography. Tom Gries directed. Ali played himself. The movie co-starred Ernest Borgnine and John Marley.

Muhammad Ali Dead at 74, But Silent for a Long Time: Champ Stories Will Soon Surface

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It’s a sad night, as Muhammad Ali has finally died at age 74. He was and will always be the Champ, a symbol of so many things for blacks, for everyone, in the United States and the world. His life will be celebrated accordingly.

But what comes next will be the stories of his last several years, of silence. The Champ really couldn’t talk and was used as a prop, sources say, at his annual Fight Night gala in Scottsdale, Arizona to raise money for Parkinson’s Disease research.

Ali’s fourth wife, Lonnie (Yolanda) has been in charge of his care and his estate for the last couple of decades. But it’s Lonnie’s sister I am told who has been the really active caregiver. Meantime, there have been interviews with Ali’s children and siblings over the last few years expressing fear about how the Champ’s estate will be divided. Something tells me this will turn into a bigger story.

More to come. In the meantime, thanks to Muhammad Ali for setting many examples in his lifetime.

Johnny Depp’s Wife, Amber Heard, Sues Comic Doug Stanhope for Allegedly Libeling Her

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Amber Heard has sued comic Doug Stanhope in an Arizona court for libel. Stanhope wrote a piece on website TheWrap.com basically calling Depp’s soon to be ex wife a liar in her accusations of domestic abuse against Depp.

Statement from Charles J. Harder, civil litigation counsel for Amber Heard:

Amber Heard filed a lawsuit today in the Arizona Superior Court for the County of Cochise. The defendant is Doug Stanhope, a resident of that county. The Complaint alleges that Stanhope is a close friend of Johnny Depp and, as part of a coordinated effort, wrote a highly defamatory article about Ms. Heard, filled with completely false, highly defamatory and very hurtful statements. Ms. Heard seeks the maximum possible jury award, and will donate 100% of the proceeds from the lawsuit to Chrysalis, a domestic violence shelter in Arizona, in an effort to counter the setback made to women by the defendants’ defamatory article and related wrongful acts.

Harder says in his complaint: “Defendants published the Defamatory Article with the intent to interfeie with
Heard’s actual and prospective economic relationships and to cost her valuable work in the
industry, to add pressure to Heard to resolve the pending divorce case on favorable terms, and also
in retaliation for Hoard’s decision to end her marriage with Depp and protect her safety by seeking
a restraining order against Depp. In the alternative. Defendants’ actions were negligent in that
they disregarded the risk that by publishing the Defamatory Article, they would harm Hoard’s
prospective economic relationships. As a result of Defendants’ actions. Heard has suffered actual damages in an amount to be proven at trial.”

In other Hollywood legal news, Dr. Rob Huizenga is suing the New York Post and the contestants from “The Biggest Loser” who accused him of forcing them to take drugs to lose weight.

I wrote about Huizenga because he was OJ Simpson’s doctor. But Huizenga’s whole claim to fame is getting athletes OFF of drugs. He’s written about it extensively. He was hired as OJ’s doctor to solve his steroid addictions. That should be one interesting trial.

Oscar Winning Italian Composer Ennio Morricone, 87, Signs Record Deal

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When he turns 88 this fall, Oscar winning Italian composer Ennio Morricone will have a new record out.

He’s just made a deal with Universal’s Decca Records, which I didn’t think existed anymore, for a greatest hits CD.

“Morricone 60” will celebrate the composer’s six decades as a film composer.

Morricone won his first ever Oscar this past winter for Quentin Tarantino’s “The Hateful Eight.” He said in a statement: “After the success of The Hateful Eight score, I’m delighted to be returning to Decca with my own record deal – an extraordinary moment in my 60th professional anniversary year. It’s been a wonderful experience to be able to conduct my scores and to record these with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra. The quality of their performance of my work is truly outstanding.”

Morricone isn’t the oldest musician with a new recording contract– Tony Bennett has him beat. But he’s up there.

Here’s the track list:

‘Morricone 60’ – Tracklisting:
1. The Man with the Harmonica (from Once Upon a Time in the West)
2. The Fortress (from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly)
3. The Good the Bad and the Ugly – Main theme (from the film)
4. Jill’s Theme (from Once Upon a Time in the West)
5. A Fistful of Dynamite (from the film with the same name)
6. The Ecstasy of Gold (from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly)
7. Gabriel’s Oboe (from The Mission)
8. Falls (from The Mission)
9. On Earth as it is in Heaven (from The Mission)
10. Nuovo Cinema Paradiso
11. Abolisson (from Quemada)
12. Chi Mai
13. H2S
14. Metti una Sera a Cena (from the film)
15. Croce d’Amore (from Metti una Sera a Cena)
16. Deborah’s Theme (from Once Upon a Time in America)
17. Stage Coach to Red Rock (from The Hateful Eight)
18. Bestiality (from The Hateful Eight)

Jay Z: New Single Coming? Video Will Shoot on Monday Featuring Cops and Prisoners

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What’s Jay Z up to?

A casting call has gone out for a new video that will be shot in New York on Monday.

The scenario is looking for two police officers, one older, the other younger. They can be black or Hispanic.

Director Daniel Kaufman is also said to be casting four “prisoners” in age range from 20 to 80. There’s also a mother in her 30s and an angelic young boy.

There are rumors that Jay Z and Beyonce cut a whole album separate from “Lemonade.” But it could be this is Jay Z’s new album. His last one, “Magna Carta,” came via Samsung and never charted although it had a hit single courtesy of Justin Timberlake singing “Holy Grail.”

Of course, that was before Tidal existed. A new Jay Z single would only be available on his service, where many records have been sacrificed (see: Kanye, Life of Pablo) to make a point.