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Pixar’s “Inside Out” Highest Opening Weekend Ever for a Totally Original Movie– Not Based on Anything or a Sequel

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A few weeks ago, everyone was complaining that “Tomorrowland” failed because it was original. Hah!

Pixar’s “Inside Out” is now the highest opening weekend ever- $92 million– for a totally original movie not based on anything or a sequel. It’s not from a comic book, and it’s the second, third, or fourth installment of anything. Isn’t it kind of sad that the entire list of opening weekend records is devoted to those movies?

“Inside Out” is 41st on the list of all time opening weekends including all of those sequels.

This is quite an achievement, and also because the movie is terrific and could be a Best Picture nominee. If you’ve seen it, and by now a lot of people have, you know it.

Meanwhile “Jurassic World,” not original but another excellent studio film, made $102 million this weekend and finished at number 1. It fell just a notch short of $400 million total, but will cross that line tomorrow.

As I wrote yesterday “Love & Mercy,” the Beach Boys movie, expanded by 220 theaters and made less money than it did last week. That party is over. Wouldn’t be nice if Roadside Attractions knew how to market a movie? I hate to say ‘I Told you so.’

“Cinderella” crosses the $200 million mark tomorrow. Disney is having quite the year with “Cinderella,” “Age of Ultron,” and “Inside Out.” “Tomorrowland” is just an aberration, although it’s still possible it will make $100 million.

Friday Box Office: Dinosaurs Whomped by Pixar, But Jurassic At $640 Mil Worldwide

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Pixar’s brilliant “Inside Out” debuted at number 1 last night, beating “Jurassic World” by $5 million. “Inside Out” took in a huge $34.2 million to “Jurassic”‘s $29 million.

But wow– those are Friday night numbers. That’s the second Friday for “Jurassic,” which now has $640 million in the bank world wide. China alone represents $100 million in the box office.

On the lower end of things, the Brian Wilson Beach Boys movie “Love and Mercy” is dead. They expanded to 792 theaters last night and made less than they did last Friday when they were in 573 locations.

I said it from Day 1– Roadside Attractions is Roadkill. They don’t know how to release a movie. “Love and Mercy” got solid reviews. Everyone who’s seen it has loved it. But Roadkill has no marketing or public relations. Nothing about this release makes any sense. I’ll get into this more tomorrow. But why anyone would sell them a movie now is a mystery to me. “All Is Lost” has become their motto.

Tony and Gaga Hit Radio City: She Has 9 Costume Changes, He Sings Like Time Has Stopped

Tony Bennett, ageless, and Lady Gaga, reinvented, took Radio City Music Hall last night for the first of four sold out shows. She had nine amazing costume changes. He sang like time has stopped still. Martin Scorsese was in the fifth row. What else do you want?

I’m a big fan of the Tony-Gaga project, the album “Cheek to Cheek,” the whole thing. Tony is really almost 89, and the classic American songbook just flows out of him. “My record company says why do you keep singing old songs?” he tells the audience. “And I say, because I don’t know the new songs.”

Also, they are not constructed in any way that would help him. They don’t have melodies, flourishes, or crescendos. Tony Bennett scales crescendos like they are Mount Everest. You had to watch him go after Duke Ellington’s “Solitude,” last night. It’s a not well known song, like “Cheek to Cheek” or “Anything Goes.” Bennett approaches it not just as a skilled mountaineer, but a mathematician. He conquered it with such grace last night that he got a standing ovation from people who didn’t even know what was going on. They just knew they’d heard something amazing.

tony and gaga 2

Gaga made nine costume changes in under two hours. She doesn’t need to. It’s her thing. Her voice stands on its own. But it’s part of her shtick. One of the outfits, a red lace number, was totally see-through. Totally. She also evoked Marilyn Monroe, Barbra Streisand, Cher, Totie Fields, and a half dozen other icons. She moves from elegant to kitschy and back again. Each one is a Broadway show unto itself. She knows how to make entrances.

After the show, backstage, I complimented her on the dresses. She said, wisely, “They’re just the dessert.” The voice is the main meal. It’s four star.

Gaga’s jazz voice was the surprise of all time when she sang with Tony on his Duets II album. Then they made “Cheek to Cheek” and you hear that it’s really real. She’s not quite Natalie Cole, but with time and training she will conquer some of the high notes she’s looking for. Her middle range is exceptional, like buttah. Obviously, her sense of theatricality doesn’t hurt. This is what she born to do.

Four shows at Radio City, all sold out. As Tony sings, after eight decades, “Who’s got the last laugh now?” Also, really, you’ve got to see this audience. It’s one half middle aged- to senior citizens, one half young people and trans everything. And there’s a lot of crossover. For the younger half, the 36 piece orchestra plus Tony’s famed quartet must be a revelation. Please– shout outs for Mike Renzi, Harold Jones, Marshall Wood, and Gray Sargent. Live music! No pre-recording, samples, synthesizers. Imperfections. The most gorgeous trumpets, saxophones, piano, acoustic guitar, and “Count Basie’s favorite drummer.” (Who?, thought around three thousand people. Count Basie, dammit!)

Tony, Tony, Tony: He has this neat trick. He sings “Fly Me to the Moon” a Capella, unadorned, unplugged as the kids say, no mic. In gigantic Radio City, which he points out was “designed by Liza Minnelli’s father” (not exactly, but a beautiful Tony take on Vincente Minnelli’s two year run 1933-35 as set and costume designer for all productions). You could hear a pin drop in the hall, and Tony’s voice floated up, up, up to the farthest reaches or Art Deco arches on waves of cushiony air. The commitment, the resolve, the love made every note fly, and they landed in the rafters to rapturous delight. It was like a Derek Jeter home run.

That, my friends, is entertainment.

Rock Hall Scandal as One Third of Nominating Committee Dismissed

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Thanks to Billboard for reporting this story first: 16 of the 42 members of the nominating committee have been dismissed. Most or all of them have been there a long time and represent the bloc of voters who still lobby for early rock and R&B pioneers who’ve been overlooked or purposely dismissed out of hand for induction.

Among those artists would be people like Chubby Checker and the late Billy Preston, as well as Rufus Thomas and Carla Thomas and many artists from Stax Records.

I’m hearing that among those gone are famed publicist Bob Merlis, record exec and soul music specialist Joe McEwen, former Rolling Stone editor Joe Levy, etc.

I reported in January 2010 that Jann Wenner, who runs the Rock Hall, wanted to cut the eligibility time down from 25 to 20 years. The reason was that to sell the Rock Hall induction ceremony as a TV show to HBO, Wenner needed stars, not old or dead actual founders of rock.

Replacing nominators with younger people who have no attachment or feel for rock origins, and moving up the eligibility means Wenner can continue to skip over acts he doesn’t like and move on to more recent stars.

But there are plenty of artists not in the Rock Hall with lots to gripe about. J. Geils Band and Peter Wolf are an example. So are Chicago, the Moody Blues, Carly Simon all glaring omissions. And there are problems with Bon Jovi, whom Wenner has kept out, and Sting, whose solo career is now five times as long as the one he had with the Police. Nile Rodgers and Chic still aren’t in, neither are The Cars. Motown’s Marvellettes, and Mary Wells, Todd Rundgren, and many others.

The Rock Hall already is jeered by real rock fans. I’ve written about their financial situation for years– millions in the bank, no help to indigent musicians. The CEO gets $400,000 a year, etc.

Wenner may urge his new nominators to make the five year jump now simply because the crop of acts that are eligible in the next round aren’t that interesting. Smashing Pumpkins? A Tribe Called Quest? I don’t see it. You have to go to the next year to get Pearl Jam and Alannis Morissette. If he moves the full years up, Radiohead and Beck are actually eligible. And out the window would go the long list of real rock pioneers and influencers.

There’s also a theory that Wenner will now try to force in groups like Journey or Kansas so that the HBO show turns into 80s nostalgia.

Stay tuned…

Janet Jackson: New Single is Imminent, Album Will Make Grammy Deadline

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Janet Jackson’s album and world tour are on pace. This week she released a little video clip on Twitter of a potential new song. The exciting part is that she’s actually singing, not yodeling hip hop story. Her voice sounds great, very Jacksonian.

Meantime, I spoke with the head of BMG Recorded Music, Jon Cohen, co-founder of Vagrant Records. His company was merged into BMG Music Publishing and now they’re actually running a label, not just a music publisher. (“Vagrant,” Cohen reminds me, “still exists.”)

“We are working this record,” Cohen assured me of Janet’s new release. “And we are wholly invested in funding it. We’re not licensing it. We use a real recording selling staff. We’re in partnership with Janet creatively.”

Cohen says a single from Janet is due imminently– and the album should be delivered in July for a late summer release. They will definitely make the September 30th Grammy eligibility deadline.

Meantime, Janet’s social networking looks like it’s in place. She’s very active on Twitter and Facebook, where you can find videos from the dance auditions for her tour.

NBC’s Brian Williams Tells Matt Lauer on Today: “I told stories that weren’t true”

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Here’s the video of this morning’s interview with Brian Williams. It sums up at about 9:38. “I told stories that weren’t true,” Williams, now the former anchor of NBC Nightly News, says. Lester Holt replaces him. Williams gets kicked to MSNBC so that Comcast doesn’t have to pay out any part of his contract. Williams still receives $10 million a year. “This came from a bad place…inside me,” Williams says.

To me he sounds like Richard Nixon. He never once says these words, “I lied.” Watch this video. It’s brutal– especially since NBC has embedded a Dunkin Donuts commercial with Joel McHale. Keep refreshing.

Aretha Franklin Almost Had the Hit “Upside Down” in 1980, Before Diana Ross

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Andrew Cuomo, governor of New York, didn’t think he’d be stuck in Albany on the night of his big fundraiser in the Plaza Hotel ballroom. But you know, all that rent stuff, and other matters, meant he and the legislators were not leaving the capital.

To the rescue: Aretha Franklin, Queen of Soul, resplendent in a silvery super hero gown with cape. And she was like Wonder Woman, singing a few songs in exceptionally fine voice– the classic “Spring is Here,” (from offstage, and the audience was wowed), her own “Chain of Fools,” Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive.” Aretha saved the day!

She did something for the Cuomo faithful that was so brilliant they almost didn’t deserve it– Aretha sat down at the shiny black shellacked baby grand piano in the Plaza ballroom and accompanied herself on “My Cup Runneth Over.” (She is a naturally gifted intuitive keyboardist who still takes lessons.) The acoustics were amazing, plus Aretha brought in a sound guy. The result was something beyond magic. She should really do a whole album like that, live and unadorned. The audience went crazy.

Afterwards, Aretha and co. headed off to her favorite spot, the Ritz Carlton bar lobby, where the staff whipped her up all kinds of delicacies. For fun, Aretha surprise-called producer Nile Rodgers to reminisce about how she turned down the song “Upside Down,” which went to Diana Ross.

“I didn’t like his presentation,” Aretha said, laughing about it now. “They wanted me to just sing it. I wanted to study it. I could have had a big number 1 hit, but I threw them [Rodgers and Bernard Edwards] outta my house!”

Luckily, she had a lot of other hits anyway.

PS The big white bandage on her arm? I’m told she got a second degree burn from steaming one of her gowns. Why she was steaming her own gown is beyond me, but Aretha likes to do-it-for-herself, like the song says.

 

photo c2015 Showbiz411.com

Emmy Voting: Why Mad Men, Grace & Frankie, Kyle Chandler and Laura Carmichael Can’t Be Ignored

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Today starts one week until Emmy Awards voting concludes on June 26th at 10pm. That’s when all ballots are due in for nominations. I watch just enough television to make some recommendations:

Without a doubt “Mad Men” is the Best Drama of 2015. Jon Hamm, who should win Best Actor, obviously gets nominated. But then, in supporting, comes John Slattery, Elisabeth Moss, Christina Hendricks– at the very least. This was a show of such intelligence and humor, and real relationships and dialogue. When Don Draper comes to the desk at Esalen in the last episode, he utters what should be one of the greatest lines in drama: “People come and go, and no says goodbye.” That’s it, Matt Weiner and friends win. Also, the penultimate episode was my favorite, in which everyone gets their finale, and Don gives his car to the kid who got him beaten up.

On Netflix: Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin must be nominated for “Grace and Frankie.” The series picks around the 3rd episode, and it never stops. Like “Veep,” this is sophisticated humor that needs to be recognized. Christine Lahti needs a Special Guest nomination, too.

Also on Netflix: Kyle Chandler and Ben Mendelsohn are standouts on “Bloodlines.” The series is growing on everyone. Both actors are terrific. And while I am a huge Mendelsohn fan, I do think Chandler exceeds all his previous kudos.

Netflix has great material right now. And believe me, I pay for it. Titus Burgess, from “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” seems like the no brainer Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy this year. The “Veep” guys are all MVPs, Timothy Simons maybe most especially. But Burgess is burgeoning.

“Downton Abbey” earned Joanne Froggatt praise this year, and a Golden Globe award. I’d be very happy to see her in the Emmy race. Michelle Dockery gets a lot of attention, and she’s lovely. But somehow I think Laura Carmichael, as the put upon Edith, is constantly overlooked. On the men’s side, Hugh Bonneville is my “Downton” hero. “Downton” will have its day in 2016, when the show ends. That’s when the Emmy appreciation will come.

On the networks: We may have three African American women in Best Actress in a Drama: Viola Davis, Taraji P. Henson, and Kerry Washington. I sure hope they make it. Julianna Margulies is the creme de la creme. But I really enjoy Tea Leoni. She can do anything. Mariska Hargitay is good every year.

As for men on network dramas, there’s a scarcity of award winning work. “Hannibal” has a raft of good actors starting with Hugh Dancy.

In comedy: if “The Comedians” isn’t nominated, along with Billy Crystal and Josh Gad, something is very, very wrong.

More Emmy thoughts later…

Neil Young New Statement: Would Have Said “No” If Trump Asked to Use Song– “Democracy Has Been Hijacked by Corporations”

This new message from Neil Young is intended to clear things up about his song, “Rockin in the Free World” and Donald Trump.

MESSAGE FROM NEIL YOUNG

 Yesterday my song “Rockin’ in the Free World” was used in an announcement for a U.S. presidential candidate without my permission.

 

A picture of me with this candidate was also circulated in conjunction with this announcement but It was a photograph taken during a meeting when I was trying to raise funds for Pono, my online high resolution music service.

 

Music is a universal language. So I am glad that so many people with varying beliefs get enjoyment from my music, even if they don’t share my beliefs.

 

But had I been asked to allow my music to be used for a candidate – I would have said no.

I am Canadian and I don’t vote in the United States, but more importantly I don’t like the current political system in the USA and some other countries. Increasingly Democracy has been hijacked by corporate interests. The money needed to run for office, the money spent on lobbying by special interests, the ever increasing economic disparity and the well-funded legislative decisions all favor corporate interests over the peoples.

 

The Citizens United Supreme Court ruling is proof of this corruption, as well as the proposed trade deals, which would further compromise our rights.

 

These Corporations were originally created to serve us but if we don’t appropriately prioritize they will destroy us. Corporations don’t have children. They don’t have feelings or soul. They don’t depend on uncontaminated water, clean air or healthy food to survive. They are beholden to one thing – the bottom line.

 

I choose to speak Truth to this Economic Power. When I speak out on corporations hurting the common man or the environment or other species, I expect a well-financed disinformation campaign to be aimed my way.

 

Such is the case with the reaction to my new album The Monsanto Years, which covers many of these issues. I support those bringing these issues to light and those who fight for their rights like Freedom of Choice.

 

But Freedom of Choice is meaningless without knowledge.

 

That’s why it’s crucial we all get engaged and get informed.

 

That’s why GMO labeling matters. Mothers need to know what they are feeding their children. They need freedom to make educated choices at the market. When the people have voted for labeling, as they have in Vermont, they need our support when they are fighting these corporate interests trying to reverse the laws they have voted for and passed in the democratic process.

 

I do not trust self-serving misinformation coming from corporations and their media trolls. I do not trust politicians who are taking millions from those corporations either. I trust people. So I make my music for people not for candidates.

 

Keep on Rockin’ in the Free World.

 

– Neil Young

Kate Winslet Talks Kids, Hectic Family Life and How New Husband Ned Rocknroll Makes it Work

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So much went on last night at the premiere of Alan Rickman’s “A Little Chaos” including a reunion with Oscar winner Kate Winslet, former New Yorker, and maybe will-be-again. She’s been living in London since having her third child– a boy named “Bear”– yes, really, and we all growled when she told me because you know, Kate Winslet is terribly funny.

At the swell party at the Monkey Bar following the MoMA screening– packed with A listers like Diane Sawyer, Christian Slater, director Fred Schepisi, and so on– Kate said of Ned (real name Abel Smith, nephew of Richard Branson): “He makes it all work. Whenever I’m too tired to do something, or I just throw up my hands and say, There’s no way we can get from here to San Francisco in three days, he calms me down and says Yes we can and does it. It’s quite remarkable.”

She said that her son, Joe, whose father is director Sam Mendes, recently realized he wasn’t living in New York anymore and really missed it. Kate said, “I think he wants to come back. You never know.”

Truly, Winslet– who I met years ago when she told me to “bugger off” at a cocktail party–looks and sounds better than ever.  She’s also at the height of her acting powers. In “A Little Chaos” her character at one point must relive a terrible trauma from her past. Winslet just seeps through until you’re so mesmerized that you forget it’s an actress speaking the lines. She knows what she’s doing.

Later in the night, when I circled back, Kate was sitting in a Monkey Bar booth having a heavy conversation with a woman who was ablaze in long, thick, frizzy gray hair framing a cherubic face. Winslet, you know, has all kinds of friends in New York from her long stint as a Mom in Chelsea. (Her PTA pals used to come to all her premieres.)

“This is Belinda,” Kate said. “She’s a magician.” An illusionist? I asked. “No, a real magician,” Belinda replied. As a journalist, I worried: “Can you make people disappear?” “I can’t,” she said, and I was relieved. Kate said, “You must visit her parlour, and she’ll show you. You can only bring eight people.” She gave me such a dead serious expression that we both almost laughed. “Now we must get back to our important conversation.”

Kate has two big movies coming this fall, after “A Little Chaos,” which is a summer break from dinosaurs and the like.  She co-stars with Michael Fassbender in the Steve Jobs movie as Joanna Hoffman, and in Jocleyn Moorhouse’s “The Dressmaker,” which we should see in the fall and sounds like her ticket to back to the Oscars. Winslet already has a Best Actress statue for “The Reader.”