Thursday, December 18, 2025
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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.

Box Office: Arnold’s Terminator Stripping Magic Mike For Tepid July 4th Weekend

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All that press and marketing- so much, everywhere but “Magic Mike XXL” so far is not causing much of a commotion this July 4th weekend. So far, the beefcake backstory sequel is running 4th in the top 5.  It’s being beaten, slightly, by Arnold Schwarzenegger’s poorly reviewed “Terminator Genisys.” The top 2 movies remain “Jurassic World” and “Inside Out,” which are holdovers.

On Saturday morning, after three days of holiday release, “Magic Mike” is at $21.3 million. “Terminator” is at $26.3 million. If fireworks are rained out tonight, maybe something miraculous will happen. But right now $40 million is where each of these new entries is hoping to land by Monday morning. If not, there will be a lot of headlines that read “No Box Office Fireworks” for these films.

This is pretty much the last weekend for “Love and Mercy.” Roadkill Attractions will try and squeeze it up to a $10 million gross by leaving it in small out of the way theaters. They may not achieve such a lofty ambition. It’s a really good film. Shame.

Three Years After Whitney Houston Coffin Pic, Reports of Photo Being Shopped to Tabs of Bobbi Kristina’s Death Bed

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I’d like to say I can’t believe it, but I can. TMZ reports that a photo of Bobbi Kristina Brown on her death bed is being shopped to the tabs. They say it was taken by “an extended family member.”

Let’s recall that when Whitney Houston, Bobbi Kristina’s mother, lay in her open coffin, “an extended family member” sold a photograph of her lifeless body to the National Enquirer for $1 million. The woman who ran the funeral parlor told me who she thought had taken the picture, and what had gone on. I wrote that story in this space, and on Forbes.com. (The latter, a bunch of amateurs, have since deleted the article. But it exists around the ‘net.)

Are we seriously doing this again? Could it be a repeat of what went on in February 2012? Are the same people peddling the photo? And taking it? Is this what we can expect from Bobbi Kristina’s imminent funeral, too?

What is it with these two families? Do they really need money this badly? And do they have no shame whatsoever? We’ll find out soon, the minute that photo appears somewhere.

Disgusting.

Report: Taylor Swift’s Anti-Streaming Campaign Was Great for Her, But Streaming Otherwise Rules So Far in 2015

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Taylor Swift kept her music off of streaming services, which turned out to be a great idea. At the the year’s mid point, Swift has sold the most CDs and digital downloads–1,328,000 CDs (incl downloads) and a whopping 6,834,000 digital tracks downloaded– in other words, owned by er fans. But Taylor had only 188,000 streams– and didn’t care. The actual sales were more important.

Nielsen monitors all music and video sales, and they say today that audio and video streaming was 92% so far in 2015. Audio alone was up 74%. Fans are not buying CDs or downloading, the result being a 10% loss in that department (except for Swift).

Look at it this way: Drake, who allows streaming, sold only 965,000 copies of his 2015 CD. He sold a total 1,927,00 CDs and digital tracks. His streaming number was 409 million. That means his tracks were streamed 409 million times. But that was part of subscription packages and who knows what he’s been paid. Taylor Swift, on the other hand, put that music into fans’ players one way or another.

Overall digital downloading for tracks was down 10%, while full albums were unchanged from last year. Physical CD sales were down 7%.

Vinyl is up, way up, which is so weird because I was happy to get rid of hundreds of albums when CDs really broke through in 1986. But kids want turntables and the records, which you can buy pretty reasonably at places like Urban Outfitters. Nielsen says vinyl sales now take up 9% of all physical sales. Listen, go for it, kids. Of course, the vinyl now is all this special stuff. When we had records, they warped and woofed, and scratched and jumped. Nilsson’s “Nilsson Schmilsson” on RCA Dynaflex barely stayed on the turntable. Vinyl was up 38%.

What does it mean? The music today is not something kids need to own in their hand. Given the choice of ordering the CD, or downloading the track into their players, kids would rather just stream it casually as part of an overall plan– like having HBO and watching movies or shows whenever you want.

The days of waiting to see album art, read lyrics, read the tech notes– that’s like having a Gramophone. I used to clutch new albums like they were deliveries of the Ten Commandments. But of course, that’s when music was good, lyrics weren’t X rated, and teeny bopper meant something negative. Now it’s all teeny bopper all the time. And the music is disposable.

It will be interesting to see what happens next. Swift clearly should win the Grammy for Album of the Year. But Justin Timberlake should have won two years, and was basically shut out. Swift’s letter to AppleMusic made the company change their policy, but she was in the catbird seat: her physical sales had peaked. She’d made her money. Everything else is gravy. And she’s the captain of her own gravy boat.

 

 

Vanessa Redgrave’s Grandson, Micheal Neeson, Joins Family Acting Dynasty

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The Redgraves do have a family business.

First there was Sir Michael Redgrave and his wife Rachel Kempson, each famous and revered British actors. Then there were the children– Vanessa, Lynn, and Corin. The granddaughters, Vanessa’s kids– Natasha (Richardson) and Joely (Richardson), joined the business next. Not to mention those girls’ father, Natasha’s late husband, director Tony Richardson.

Now there’s Micheal Neeson, son of Liam Neeson and the beloved, late Natasha. The 20 year old grandson of Vanessa Redgrave is going to make his acting debut playing Michael Collins, the Irish revolutionary. Liam Neeson, his dad, played the role in a movie named “Michael Collins” 19 years ago.

Micheal Neeson joins the Redgrave family dynasty now. It was only a month ago that he opened a fashion boutique in London’s SoHo neighborhood. He also gave interviews about going off the deep end when his mother tragically died. Neeson went to rehab and straightened himself out.

He immediately becomes a new character for the London press to hound into submission. I hope he’s ready.

Oh that weird way of spelling Michael as “Micheal”– it’s a variant, it’s hard to remember, but will make him stick out. It was very popular in the 1950s, not so much now.

Prince Takes His Music Catalog Off Of All Streaming Services Including Spotify and Apple Music

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Prince took his entire music catalog off all streaming services this week. It looks like he tweeted his unhappiness with streaming on June 25th. (No one noticed?)He’d read an article on the Daily Beast that summed up Spotify’s relationship with the record labels. And then he yanked it all away.

Remember– this is the same Prince who changed his name to a symbol and fought with the old Warner Music Group over ownership of his masters and royalty payments. He re-recorded his whole catalog just to take it away from them. Prince is quite savvy about ownership rights in the music business. That’s how he’s maintained his independence.

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Good for Prince. Tonight I tried to get the 3 month trial membership to AppleMusic. This would have required turning my entire music library over to them to be grilled as little dogs on the iTunes grill. I said no thanks.

Prince also released a cool new track on SoundCloud. Let’s enjoy that.

TV: “Nashville” is Casting for A Leading Man Rock Star Who Transitions to Country

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“Nashville” is going to take page out of real life. I hear the ABC music soap is interested in the fact that Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler roamed away from his group this year and did some recording in the country music capital. To spice up the show, the “Nashville” producers are said to be looking for a young Tyler, a rock star age 20 to 40 who leaves his rock band (unlike Tyler, who’s still very much with Aerosmith) and looking for new musical adventures.

Here’s the description of Marcus Kane: Marcus receives an intriguing and unexpected offer from Rayna Jaymes
(Connie Britton) — she wants him to sign with Highway 65 and expand into country music. She believes that beneath
the screaming guitar licks and pyrotechnics, Marcus is a storyteller at heart, and no genre is friendlier to his creative truth than country. Marcus likes what he hears and signs with Highway 65 and as he and Rayna begin working
together, Marcus’s soulful artist side fully emerges — but as he realizes that Rayna’s fortunes are tied to his success, so does his demanding, controlling, narcissistic side. Refusing to respect boundaries, Marcus relishes in testing Rayna’s limits while they write, record, and release his first solo album.”

I’m told the actor has to be a real singer, and a good one, who plays guitar and has a strong musical background. He may be in 10 episodes all together.

If I were the producers, I’d make a call to Steve Kazee, who won the Tony Award for the musical “Once.” But no one asked me.

Exclusive: American Sniper Screenplay Writer to Make Directing Debut for Dreamworks

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EXCLUSIVE Big news: “American Sniper” screenwriter Jason Hall will direct his first movie for Steven Spielberg and Dreamworks. “Thank You for Your Service” is described thusly: “follows three U.S. soldiers returning from Iraq who struggle to integrate into family and civilian life, coping with her horrific memory of a war that threatens to destroy them. long after they left the battlefield.”
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Hall wrote the screenplay from the bestseller by David Finkel published in October 2013. There were rumors that Spielberg would direct the movie. But after reading Hall’s screenplay, Spielberg suggested Hall do it himself. Spielberg would likely be executive producer, although I’m told no production credits have been assigned yet.

Hall’s screenplay of Chris Kyle’s “American Sniper” was nominated for many awards and much lauded.