Thursday, December 18, 2025
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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.”

Review: Hooray for “Inside Out,” Pixar’s Most Exhilarating, Clever Film in Years

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“Inside Out” is Pixar’s most original, complex, clever, illuminating and exhilarating film they’ve had in years.  By far their smartest animated feature, is a truly heartfelt and moving exploration of the mechanism of the brain (inside) as it affects a young girl’s adventures from birth (outside).  At the recent morning screening at the famed El Capitan in Hollywood, children were surprisingly quiet and completely transfixed.  Director and co-writer Peter Docter (he helmed the wise “Up,”) has created an innovative story that depicts the myriad emotions kids feel in particular and how they voice them. Inside Out is a dazzling, creative film that will surely put Docter and co. back in the Oscar race.

The set up is deceptively simple: We watch Riley, a cute baby girl, grow into a popular athletic 11 year old in cozy Minnesota. But when her family is uprooted to San Francisco as she turns 11, Riley starts grappling with adolescence. From the very beginning, as we watch her development in the world, we also see Riley’s five emotions– hugely inventive characters inside her head.

Joy  is played by Amy Poehler,  Fear by Bill Hader, Anger by Lewis Black, Disgust by Mindy Kaling and Sadness by Phyllis Smith.  All these said emotions are based at ‘headquarters,’ where they operate from a control panel inside her lively head.  Just as in life the Emotions can’t agree on how to handle the seemingly seismic events going on in and outside of Riley.

This leads Joy and Sadness lurching out of home base into way weird and perilous adventures in Riley’s brain that are all visually simply stunning. Eventually they run into Riley’s imaginary friend, Bing Bong, lovingly voiced by Richard Kind (he sounds like your favorite great uncle and the Maytag repairman all rolled into one, and maybe smells like fresh deli pickles), who kind of steals the show as the most memorable of the characters.

The kids in the audience, while not getting all the emotional concepts, were nonetheless rapt in awe from what they were seeing on screen.  The adults, me for example, never lost interest for a second. That’s because Josh Cooley and Meg Lefauve’s terrific script works on several levels simultaneously– small children understand are able to laugh at and identify with the simple issues, while adults may be surprised at the layers of sophistication the screenwriters took in parsing the cerebellum.

“Inside Out” is a tour de force along the lines of “Wall E” and “Toy Story 3.” It’s totally original, not from a sequel or known material, and sheer perfection. This is one time when you hope there will be sequels.

 

 

Music Birthdays: Rocker Paul McCartney, Producer Richard Perry Each Turns 73

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What a weird musical coincidence: rocker and Beatle Paul McCartney, and famed record producer Richard Perry, each turn 73 today. Some music giants have the same birthday– Elton John and Aretha Franklin, for example– but they aren’t the exact same age. Anyway Happy Birthday to both of them. Did you know that Paul and Linda McCartney sang backup for Carly Simon on her song “Night Owl,” produced by Perry in 1972? It’s one of the many anecdotes from the memoir he’s writing about being one of the most successful producers in rock history.

Madonna’s Wreck of a New Video: 3 Weeks of Post Production, Micro Management (Watch Here)

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Madonna’s video of “Bitch I’m Madonna” was a production disaster, I’m told. UPDATE It’s finally been released to YouTube after only being on JayZ’s pay per view system Tidal.

The video is filled with cameos by contemporary stars like Beyonce and Jay Z, and is basically a mess. I’m told that Madge either kicked out director Jonas Akerlund or he just left because of the chaos. “Madonna wants what she wants,” says a source.

Once the video was shot it required three weeks of post production. “Everybody was retouched over and over,” another source says.

Madonna micro managed the project, too, coming into the city from her various country locales to nitpick over nonsensical things.

“It’s her worst song ever,” adds one critic. Well, the reality is, she did it well on the Tonight show, but the momentum from that is long gone. Too bad, too, because as one participant says, “She had to pay for it herself.”

Donald Trump Foundation Has $2 Mil Benefactor in NY’s Most Famous Ticket Scalper

Donald Trump has announced his presidential candidacy, and is now a target for everything. He can take it.

But he does have at least one really big fan: Richard Ebers, aka the Ticket Man. Ebers is the most famous ticket scalper in New York. He’s been featured in the New York Times. A few years ago, after being a one man Stub Hub, he joined another entertainment company that sells secondary market tickets to concerts and sporting events. Then they were bought by Creative Artists Agency.

Richard Ebers is famous for getting tickets to events where there are no seats. He also loves Donald Trump. Ebers has donated almost $2 million over the last four years to the Donald J. Trump Foundation. He’s the foundation’s largest donor by miles, Trump at one point did get $1 million out of the World Wrestling Foundation.

Right now the Donald Trump Foundation claims $1.37 million in total assets. In 2013, according to their federal tax filing, they gave away $913,075 to a variety of worthy charities. There wasn’t a single questionable item. The most unusual entry was a donation to the Trump Foundation from Rupert Murdoch’s 20th Century Fox Foundation for $10,000.

I spoke to Richie Ebers briefly today. All he said was he really liked Donald Trump. Otherwise, he said, he was not at liberty to say why he’d given him almost $2 million. He said, mysteriously, that maybe he could explain it in the future.

Meantime, if you need tickets to anything, now we know who to call.

 

 

Director of Amy Winehouse Doc Says One Person is Responsible for Singer’s Death

Be prepared for major heartbreak with “Amy,” Asif Kapadia’s exceptional documentary about jazz/soul/R&B singer Amy Jade Winehouse. The Grammy-Award winning “Back to Black” singer died at age 27 of alcohol poisoning. She also suffered for many years with bulimia that weakened her heart. The movie opens with Amy as a chubby-cheeked, bubbly and bright teenager with a powerhouse voice. It ends less than a decade later with Amy as an emaciated mess stumbling on a Belgrade stage months before her death on July 23, 2011. (“Amy” comes out July 3rd, in a couple of weeks.)

Another reaction you may have is anger.

“I kind of wanted people to get angry,” Kapadia told me following a private screening at the Crosby Street Hotel last week.

There is plenty of anger to go around. It can be directed at the crazed paparazzi camped outside Winehouse’s London home that captured every stumble she made to the food and liquor shops. There’s her concert promoter turned manager who booked her into disastrous performances in Brazil and Belgrade when she could barely stand let alone sing. There’s also ex-husband Blake Fielder who turned her on to crack and heroin but was in prison when Winehouse died. Then don’t forget the many hangers on and enablers who lurked in the background who profited financially and did nothing to help her.

For the director there was the central question of Winehouse’s death. “It’s sad that nobody stopped it. That was the big question was why nobody stopped it. Why’s she onstage? I don’t get it. Who’s paying for those tickets? Who’s enjoying that performance?”

Kapadia interviewed hundreds of people and told me, “I know a lot.” There was a lot of material he decided not to include which would have made the film even darker.

The Winehouse family is problematic. Probably no one comes off more poorly than Amy’s father Mitchell Winehouse. He initially participated in the documentary but after he saw it he has badmouthed the film and how he is portrayed. At best he’s an indulgent and doting father who was helpless to cure Amy of her addictions. At worst the former taxi cab driver comes off as a father who basked in his daughter’s celebrity and profited personally and professionally.

In the film Amy’s mother Janis comes off weak and unable to control her daughter. Although he tried to contact him, the director told me Winehouse’s brother Alex would not talk to him.

Early on in the doc it’s revealed that Mitch began having affairs when Amy was 18 months old. Her parents divorced when Amy was 9. There’s audio in the film where Amy complains about her father not being around. It’s not clear when he came back into her life.

The scene in the film where Mitchell comes off the worst took place in 2005, when Amy’s first manager, Nick Shymansky – who contributed some great never-before-seen video footage taken from early in her career – tried to get her into rehab. Amy said she would go only if her father said she needed to. She sweet-talked him and it became the line in her famous hit, “Rehab”:

“I ain’t got the time and if my daddy thinks I’m fine

He’s tried to make me go to rehab but I won’t go, go, go.”

When I asked Kapadia if anyone could have done anything for Winehouse he said it was then. “I think the more you do the earlier the better,” he told me. “You get diminishing returns if you wait too long.”

Director Kapadia said in particular one person in Amy Winehouse’s life is responsible for her death but he wouldn’t divulge the name. He would only say that person is not Mitch Winehouse, who’s been on the warpath against the film.

I mentioned to Kapadia that Mitch overlooks how the documentary showcases her great singing-songwriting talents. “I know,” he told me. “It’s all about him. It’s all about him,” he said. “He never mentions her.”

The biggest gift of the film is how it focuses on Amy Winehouse’s amazing lyrics, which appear on the screen as she sings. The director told me that finding that approach to tell her story was accidental.

“I started doing research and it was exactly the same, you’re like, ‘God! It was always there in front of us but I didn’t listen carefully enough or something. And it’s really after doing a bit of research, you go back you look at the lyrics and you go, she’s written it all down. Everything you need to know about Amy’s life was there, in her diary that are her lyrics. Every single song is based on a real incident kind of documenting her own life in her own words. You know ‘Stronger Than me’? It’s all about that. She wants someone who’s stronger than her.” Noted Kapadia, “She’s a great writer. That was the big revelation. The voice is what everyone talks about. But I think the writing is even better.”

The biggest challenge to making the film Kapadia said was initially getting people closest to Amy to talk. This was unlike his documentary “Senna,” about Ayrton Senna– the subject of the director’s BAFTA Award winning documentary about the Formula One driver, where everyone close to him wanted to contribute. “Sadly, tragically, with Amy it was almost the opposite. Nobody wanted to talk,” Kapadia told me. “Reading between the lines it was about me. It was about me. What are you going to do for me?” He added, “There were a lot of people who didn’t get along. A lot of people in different places who disliked one another, who blamed one another.”

Kapadia admits the movie is heavy going for audiences. “But there is laughter. People do laugh. She’s amazing.” Noting that Amy Winehouse’s public drunken binges became comedy fodder, he said his “main job if there was a job was to” show another side of her. “People knew the records and liked the songs but didn’t like her,” he said. After viewing the doc, “People come out of watching these scenes loving her.”

Helter Skelter Lite: Charlie Manson’s Coming to Lifetime

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First Will Ferrell and Kristin Wiig. Now Charlie Manson is coming to Lifetime. Why not? He’s been everywhere lately. The crazy killer and cult leader from the 60s is currently on TV in NBC’s “Aquarius.” There’s also a feature film that’s been completed called “Manson’s Girls.”

Now Lifetime is casting for their own Manson for one of their insightful movies of the week. Leslie Libman, a prolific TV director, is helming from a script by Stephen Kronish and Matthew Tabak. According to sources, the actor who plays Manson “must be able to play guitar and sing.” John Mayer, get out your eight-by-tens.

The “Manson” movie fits nicely with Lifetime’s movies about “Melrose Place,” “The Brady Bunch,” and “Saved by the Bell.”

PS The real and very serious author of “Helter Skelter,” the real book about the Manson family killings, Vincent Bugliosi, passed away last week.