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Happy Birthday Ringo! The Best Drummer in Rock Turns 75 with a Hollywood Event

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Ringo Starr, the best drummer in the history of rock and roll, celebrated his 75th birthday in style today in Hollywood. That’s our Leah Sydney interviewing him at a special midday event celebrating Peace and Love. Ringo never stops– he has a new album out called Postcards from Paradise. He’s on tour always with his All Starr Band. Oh yes, he was in the Beatles. Best drummer? Listen to his fills on those classics. Gorgeous.

Keep refreshing for Leah’s interview later this afternoon…

and listen to Ringo!

Thanks to Bill Palmer for the photo from today’s event.

Michael Jackson: Only One Member of the Jackson 5 Gets Money From His Estate

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Michael Jackson did not leave any of his estate to his siblings, as you know. All of it went to his mother and his children.

This has been a vexing problem especially for his brothers. Jermaine, Tito, Marlon, and Jackie were in the Jackson 5 but reap little reward from it. Randy Jackson was not in the group, briefly worked as Michael’s manager, and caused a lot of problems. (Let’s not rehash all that now.)

One of the four of the Jackson 5, however, is on the books of the Estate. Jackie Jackson receives a monthly stipend from Michael’s estate. Every thirty days Jackie gets a check for $6,033, sent to his company called Siggy Music. He’s been getting this since at least December 2011.

read today’s headlines from Showbiz411

Jackie is a nice guy, and no one begrudges him anything. He made many appearances in court in 2005 to show support for Michael. I’m told he’s on the books as a liaison between the Estate and the brothers.

Meantime, sources say Marlon Jackson is trying to make friends in Qatar, the same country where his sister Janet lives. Janet is married to wealthy Qatari businessman Wissam Al Mana. The Jacksons love wealthy Arabs, that’s for sure!

Michael Jackson Estate Accounting for 2013 Is An Eye Opener: Lawyers, Executors, Publicists Are Making Millions

They probably deserve it, but the lawyers and executors for Michael Jackson‘s estate are making millions and cleaning up. They won’t stop til they get enough, to paraphrase a Jackson hit.

In 2013, according to Estate papers just filed, legal fees for the Jackson estate– which go mostly to John Branca‘s firm– were $2.7 million.

Executor fees — to Branca personally and John McClain — came to $3.8 million. In 2012, the executor fee were actually higher– $4,454,011.

According to the filing, all of Michael’s loans on his MiJac Music Publishing have been paid off. His Sony/ATV Music Publishing loan is being paid off under a separate agreement.

Public relations fees — mostly to L.A. firm Sitrick–came to just under $800,000. For 2013, January-December. For a man who’s been deceased since 2009.

The Estate has $25 million in cash on hand.

Gross receipts in 2013: $67 million

The grunt work here is from a website called dailymichael.com which monitors every bit of Michael Jackson minutiae. They posted the papers. My hat is off to them.

Accordingly, Michael Jackson’s kids and his mother received $8,151,308 in 2013. On top of her $1.2 million guardianship fee, the 85 year old Katherine Jackson also received a $1.3 million consulting fee in 2013. Cousin T.J. Jackson, her co-guardian, received just $154,071.

read more of today’s headlines here

 

What is Mrs. Jackson doing with all that money? If history is a lesson, she’s splitting it up among many of her children and grandchildren and Joseph Jackson. All her bills are paid separately plus she’s taken loans from the Estate.

Michael’s three kids– Prince, Paris, and “Blanket” aka Bigi– received $4.3 million in allowance. That covered school, clothes, gas, snake food, and pencils.

There’s nothing egregious here, no smoking gun to suggest someone’s doing something wrong. But I do think of Michael talking on his cell phone to his friend Ron Burkle from the urinal in the Santa Maria courthouse in April 2005, begging for a loan because he had no money. Everyone was foreclosing on him. Burkle always helped him out. Or Michael grabbing $7 million in cash from Prince Abdul of Bahrain because he was broke. Or flying to Japan to sign autographs for money.

The $25 million the Estate has on hand now? Michael would have blown through it in a week, maybe less.

The accounting here is ironic. Yes, a lot of people are now making millions from Michael Jackson. A lot of people also aren’t, some of whom are in dire straits. At the same time, it’s true that if Michael had listened to his advisers when he was alive, he’d have had money and not been so desperate all the time. The Estate and executors, though their fees are astronomical (not just this year but cumulatively since Michael died) have turned the Estate into a well oiled machine.

More to come… keep refreshing…

Mj Estate 4th Accounting by Ivy

Bill Cosby testimony: “She meets me back stage. I give her Quaaludes. We then have sex”

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The unsealed deposition from a 2005 case against Bill Cosby is a spectacularly revealing document. Cosby admits to doping women in order to have sex with them. He admits to a variety of sexual affairs. (The Associated Press first scooped the unsealing of the deposition and its contents.)

In the 2005 deposition Cosby reads a statement from a woman who was 19 years old, in 1976. (Cosby was 41.) He reads it in his own words and doesn’t disagree with it: “She meets me back stage. I give her Quaaludes. We then have sex.” He adds: “I do not — I can’t judge at this time what she knows about herself for 19 years, a passive personality.”

The 19 year old woman is Therese Picking, now Serignese. Therese was one of the “Jane Does” who supported the case brought by Andrea Constand, Cosby’s original accuser and a former Temple University employer. Picking-Serignese said that Cosby picked her up in Las Vegas in 1976, drugged her with Quaaludes, and had non consensual sex with her. When Picking-Serignese came out with her story last fall, she  was not taken seriously by Cosby or his attorney.  Her original claims can be read in People. But the 2005 deposition from Cosby validates her story.

Cosby initially agrees in the deposition that he was planning to give Quaaludes to “women” plural. Then he says– after coaching from his lawyer– he misunderstood– it was just Therese Serignese.

Here’s the simple question and answer. Dolores Troiani, representing Constand, asks the question. Cosby answers it:

Q. When you got the Quaaludes, was it in your mind that
you were going to use these Quaaludes for young women that you
wanted to have sex with?
A. Yes.

Cosby is also questioned about how he drugged Constand, who brought the case against him. This is how he does it. Here is Bill Cosby describing how he will use a drug– in this case, he says, Benadryl– to knock out a woman in order to have sex with her without her consent:

Q. So, you broke one pill in half. Where are the three?
If you have one half and one whole one, that’s two. Are you
saying you broke the whole one so you had three halves?
A. Yes.
Q. Why would you break the whole pill in half and give
her both halves?
A. Because they’re long.

The deposition also concerns how Cosby gave the National Enquirer an interview in exchange for them keeping quiet about his relationship with Beth Ferrier. In 2006, Ferrier went public with what she claimed was a years-long affair in the 1980s with Cosby, who she said drugged her.

The actual 2005 deposition is wild. Cosby’s attorney turned the proceedings into a circus while Andrea Constand’s lawyer Dolores Troiani tried to question the comedian seriously. Cosby’s lawyer eventually stopped the deposition but the damage had been done.

Now there is no doubt that Cosby’s legacy is destroyed. His entire career is now revealed to be a sham. What a tragedy for everyone. The women who joined Andrea Constand in 2005, as well as all the women in the last year who’ve come forward with stories about Cosby– including Janice Dickinson–will all be taken seriously now.

 

Game over.

George Clooney on Jerry Weintraub: “Applaud His Great Accomplishments”

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George Clooney made three movies with Jerry Weintraub, all hits. Plus Weintraub got behind his Save Darfur efforts and started a charity called Not On Out Watch.
Clooney says:

“In the coming days there will be tributes, about our friend Jerry Weintraub. We’ll laugh at his great stories, and applaud his accomplishments. And in the years to come the stories and accomplishments will get better with age, just as Jerry would have wanted it. But not today. Today our friend died. To his family and friends, Amal and I send our love. And to those who didn’t know him we send our deepest sympathy. You would have loved him.” — George Clooney

Bill Cosby Smoking Gun Found: 2005 Deposition Reveals He Admitted Drugging Women

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Stick a fork in Bill Cosby. The AP obtained court papers that were just unsealed revealing that Cosby– in a 2005 deposition– admitted to drugging women for sex. He also admitted to asking his William Morris agent to send money to women to keep them quiet.

More to come…cosby

Jerry Weintraub, Famed Beloved and Feared Hollywood Superstar Producer, Dead at 77

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One of the great Hollywood producers of all time, Jerry Weintraub, has reportedly died at age 77. He was at his home in Palm Springs. Weintraub is one of the great modern Hollywood legends, with huge successes and massive failures. He’s been on a roll for the last several years, though, with the “Oceans Eleven” movies among others. He got so involved with George Clooney and Don Cheadle on those films that he even helped them raise money for Darfur and the Sudan. I knew Jerry, and he was a really amazing person. It’s sort of inconceivable that he’s gone.

Weintraub was just seen at the June 9th premiere of his HBO series “The Brink.” Sources tell me he seemed fine was “acting like Jerry”– meaning expansive and happy. Weintraub was at the premiere with his long time girl friend Susan. (Weintraub had an usual personal situation, having a wife of 50 years at the same time.)

Jerry had lots of projects in development. His first executive producer credit was Robert Altman’s Oscar nominated classic “Nashville” in 1975. He produced the “Karate Kid” movies and many others. He recently had a major hit “Beyond the Candelabra” with Michael Douglas and Matt Damon, and has “Westworld” series coming for HBO.

So many stars are close to Jerry– Clooney, Affleck, Damon, Michael Douglas. And of course, there’s the story of Weintraub’s great failure– a movie studio in the 1980s that was propelled by “Look Who’s Talking” and then collapsed.

But Jerry Weintraub mainly was just huge, and a great great guy. This loss is big, and it’s too soon.

More to come shortly…

Robin Thicke Is Back–And This Time He’s Used Barry White Instead of Marvin Gaye

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Robin Thicke is back. His “Blurred Lines” Marvin Gaye debacle wasn’t enough for him.

Now he poses this question? Can Thicke actually write a whole original song that sounds like something no one else has done? The answer is No!

His new song, “Morning Sun,” uses a fully orchestration track from the late, great and totally original Barry White. The whole underpinning sounds like it comes from one of Barry’s hits. And it does!

This time Interscope got smart, and put Barry’s name on the song credits. I sure hope Barry’s estate got a big license for “Morning Sun.” My question is, why does anyone listen to or buy records from someone who just riffs on old music? I think the real Robin Thicke was the guy on that atrocious “Paula” album that sold 8 copies and sounded like crap.

Here’s Morning Sun:

And here’s Barry:

And here’s Robin’s other big Marvin Gaye rip:

And Marvin’s classic Trouble Man:

Marvel Scores a Dud as Live Show Cancels Summer Tour Produced by “Spider Man: Turn off the Dark” Team

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“Spider Man: Turn off the Dark” producer Michael Cohl must be having gruesome nightmares these days.  After that $75 million debacle he probably thought he was the only producer to have problems with otherwise golden Marvel Comics.

But Cohl and his team have just announced the cancellation of this summer’s Marvel Experience, a live stage show that is finishing a disastrous run in Philadelphia tonight. The Marvel Experience will not be coming to New York, Philadelphia, Chicago or St. Louis next. It’s done, it’s over. Tickets just didn’t sell.

Call it “Spider Man: Turn off the games!”

The Marvel Experience– described as “immersive” and 3D, where kids (or adults with issues) played games and acted out super hero experiences– was of such little interest that despite over 70,000 views on YouTube, no one bothered to comment on it.

 

The show received terrible reviews, too.

From Scottsdale last December someone wrote:
Not worth the time, much less the price of admission. The VIP package doesn’t add anything of value.

It’s a colorful game of waiting in line, dodging small children. The “training simulations” aren’t calibrated, so you can’t play them without encountering more glitches than hits, making the 40 minute wait that much more bitter in hindsight.

The registration was broken, so we didn’t get several of the features of the expensive package or any of the personalization that is supposed to be a feature of the whole Experience itself.

The opening scene had to be restarted several times because the audio and video didn’t sync up.

The room transitions were poorly managed, with a bored looking person in a SHIELD t-shirt letting the music play a few loops before pressing the button to open the doors, making for a really engaging and immersive time, imagining you’re in training for an actual government contract job, waiting for the instructor who is running behind due to a pile of paperwork and red tape.

Don’t waste your time, money, or sanity.

Other reviews were similar from Philadelphia, where the show closes tonight.

Is there a moral to be learned? Like– Marvel is meant for film and not for theatrical? I think we’re starting to get that message.

PS If you’ve seen the Marvel Experience somewhere, please tell me what it was like– either @showbiz411 on Twitter or here on the comments section.

Paul McCartney Reignites Decades Old Feud with Yoko Ono, Recalls Lennon Resentments

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Paul McCartney– he’s been in a tough spot since December 8, 1980. That’s when his best friend and forever songwriting partner John Lennon was murdered and became a legend. McCartney, wildly successful before and after, has had to live with this as sort of a penalty for being the surviving Beatle. I remember when Robert Christgau wrote they got the wrong Beatle. Insane.

I interviewed McCartney extensively in 1989 and he was still very bristly and not entirely nice about John and Yoko; he was clearly still sorting it all out. In 1996, McCartney got into a big flap about changing songwriting credits to McCartney-Lennon from their original billing. There was also an issue about Ono, as Lennon’s heir, getting money and rights back from Michael Jackson because of the songwriting law. It didn’t occur to McCartney that his rights were still tied up with Jackson because he, McCartney, was lucky enough to still be alive.

Now McCartney has given a startling interview to Esquire’s UK edition in which he reignites his old feuds with Yoko and calls out Lennon for having become a James Dean-like martyr. It’s very weird because over time he and Ono seemed to lay down arms and embrace as formerly estranged family members. Just last winter, Ono was invited to a dinner at Lincoln Center for Stella McCartney where she was treated like a favorite aunt by the whole extended Beatles family. Everything seemed hunky dory.

But McCartney says he really resented her after Lennon died because she kept saying that “John was everything” in the Beatles. He says: “But then strange things would happen. Like Yoko would appear in the press, and I’d read it, and it said [comedy Yoko accent], “Paul did nothing! All he did was book the studio…” Like, “F–k you, darling! Hang on! All I did was book the fucking studio?” Well, OK, now people know that’s not true. But that was just part of it. There was a lot of revisionism: John did this, John did that. I mean, if you just pull out all his great stuff and then stack it up against my not-so-great stuff, it’s an easy case to make.”

So that’s saying let’s take “Imagine” and “Watching the Wheels” and compare them to a bad Wings song, like “Let ‘Em In.” That’s an easy case. But in this writer’s opinion, sorry, McCartney’s best outweighs Lennon’s best, with maybe the exception of “Imagine.” And that’s a debate that goes on forever without resolution.

 The other big quote from the interview which will live on: “When John got shot, aside from the pure horror of it, the lingering thing was, OK, well now John’s a martyr. A JFK. So what happened was, I started to get frustrated because people started to say, “Well, he was The Beatles.” And me, George and Ringo would go, “Er, hang on. It’s only a year ago we were all equal-ish.” Yeah, John was the witty one, sure. John did a lot of great work, yeah. And post-Beatles he did more great work, but he also did a lot of not-great work. Now the fact that he’s now martyred has elevated him to a James Dean, and beyond. So whilst I didn’t mind that – I agreed with it – I understood that now there was going to be revisionism.”

Anyway, great work by Alex Bilmes. Paul McCartney is indeed our greatest living rock star. His story is THE story of post-Tin Pan Alley music. His influence, like George Gershwin’s, will go on forever. But we love the gossip, and we love him regardless. He’s 73, and playing shows this week somewhere, and  all summer, as if he were 33. Why? He tells Bilmes: “Because it’s my job.” We’re amazed. No maybe about it.