Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Snow, Apathy May Cut into “Insurgent: Divergent” Box Office This Weekend

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It’s snowing in the Northeast and it’s not pretty. That’s not good news for “Insurgent: Divergent,” part two of the YA series starring Shailene Woodley as Katniss, er, Tris, the kickass leader of a dystopian world. Anyway.

Last night, Thursday night previews of “Regurgent” were down 16% from the first installment’s Thursday previews. And the weather was good. So either tweens are going to need a lot of convincing, or “Insurgent” is going to be in trouble come Sunday.

The show is also a big problem. This audience does not drive to theaters. Their parents have to take them. And parents are not going out in this weather.

“Insurgent” also has bad reviews. It’s at 33% on Rotten Tomatoes. The negative comments won’t deter the true believers, but the middlings and the parents will vote to wait until the sun is shining.

Stay tuned…

Amanda Bynes is Back on Twitter Using a Pseudonym, Having More Scary Problems

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Poor Amanda Bynes. I don’t understand why her parents cannot get hold of this situation. The former child actress is back on Twitter under a pseudonum and having a very bad time emotionally.

The name Bynes is using is Ashley Banks, and her handle is @PersianLa27. I had a brief Tweet-versation with her a couple of days ago that ended with Ashley telling me: “Don’t speak to me directly.” Bynes has started a GoFundMe page under that name, using a picture of Britney Spears. She writes: “With recent surgery and constant pressure to be seen in a new outfit everyday I am starting my own personal account so that I’m able to express my spending habits freely. I have money but because of my looks they put me on a budget. I’m also literally sporting an old Galaxy phone and would like a new iPhone ASAP.” She’s raised $164 of $500.

This morning Amanda wrote as Ashley: “I honestly need some money in my account so that I can fly to NYC as soon as possible because I am again being refused access to my money.” Her parents at least have locked down her accounts under a conservatorship so that Bynes can’t travel or hurt herself. She has a long history of mental illness, documented everywhere on the internet.

Bynes continues to have issues about her appearance. She regularly Tweets that she’s unattractive or very attractive. Of course, it’s not rational. She’s a beautiful girl. But her GoFundMe page is titled “Gorgeous Funds.”

She also issues with her parents. She’s threatened to kill them, and accused her father of molestation. But she did Tweet a picture of herself with friends who looked like surrogate parents. If anyone knows who they are, let us know.

 

 What a nightmare for her parents and relatives and friends. Hopefully they can help her. Soon.

 

 

Broadway: “Heidi” Opens to Raves As Stars Take Public Bus to After Party

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Wendy Wasserstein’s deep and funny 1989 play “The Heidi Chronicles” opened last night on Broadway to cheers and raves, with “Mad Men” star Elisabeth Moss brilliantly picking up the role originated by the great Joan Allen. And what a crowd: Renee Fleming sat in front of me, and Jane Seymour was behind me. “Mad Men” creator Matt Weiner and star John Slattery were there, as were the glowing Patricia Clarkson, Alessandro Nivola, and a score of other notables.

So: it’s freezing out, and there’s no transportation to the Red Eye Grill some ten or more blocks away. All the shows have let out at the same time including the “Heidi” premiere, so 8th Avenue was filled with patrons of other shows scrambling for cabs. What to do?

All of a sudden this large white vehicle with many huge windows arrived in the middle of the block. The door opened and other people lined up to get on. “Look, it’s a bus,” someone said. “Should we take it? Do you have that thing?”

“Do you mean a MetroCard?” someone replied. The group stared at this white alien machine as if it had landed from a Marvel comic movie.

One or two MetroCards were fished out from wallet and handbags, and, en masse, the “Heidi” party boarded. Regular customers of the M106 shifted over as our group embarked, including B52s star Kate Pierson, famed comedian Robert Klein, Tony winning costumer designer (and head of the American Theater Wing) William Ivey Long, and another dozen denizens of the live stage.

“How much is this bus ride?” someone who did not have a MetroCard asked. I answered, “two-fifty,” as I’d generously swiped for Kate Pierson, as a thank you for three decades of “Rock Lobster’ and “Private Idaho.”

“Two fifty!” Many were shocked. The last time they’d been on public transportation it had cost around twenty five cents.

“Stay here, the party’s better,” said a woman in a seat by the door as we landed on West 56th and Eighth, the “Patsy’s” sign glowing neon in the dark.

But the party at the Red Eye Grill was pretty good after our adventure. It was crowded, but the food was fine, and producer Jeffrey Richards, who is also bringing “Wolf Hall” parts 1 and 2, to Broadway, next week, was pleased with the reviews and the reactions. “How about Elisabeth Moss?” he said. “She’s the real thing.”

He’s right. She couldn’t be better as Heidi Holland, the art historian who comes of age in 1968 as the women’s movement starts up. She wants it all — career, family, love, friends– but only can have some of it. By the mid 80s, when the play ends, she’s grown and so have we. Jason Biggs and Bryce Pinkham are excellent as Heidi’s not-boyfriends. The whole cast resonates, especially newcomer Ali Ahn as Heidi’s career driven super-woman pal Susan. Susan says toward the end of the play when she and Heidi reunite, “I do miss the Heidi chronicles,” and I’ll tell you what: I did too.

UPDATE: Six New “X Files” Episodes Will Start Shooting in June with Duchovny, Anderson

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MARCH 24TH: Fox has confirmed “X Files” is on. New eps will commence.

MARCH 20TH The truth is out there. So are Mulder and Scully. In the UK my friend Baz Bamigboye has some earth shattering news for fans of “The X Files.” He reports that the show is probably coming back with six new episodes for Fox. Baz interviewed Gillian Anderson, aka Scully, for his popular weekly column in the UK Daily Mail. He writes:

“…if intense negotiations can be finalised soon, then filming of six episodes of the very last look at the X-Files, the sci-fi show that launched [Anderson] and David Duchnovny 22 years ago, could be under way as early as June.

Writers who worked on the original series have been asked to contribute. ‘The idea is to get the old gang back, have some fun and get a bit of closure for us and the audience,’ she told me.”

I can’t remember where “The X Files” is now plot-wise. Do Mulder and Scully have an alien child by now? Do they lie on Mars? Did the smoking man die of lung cancer? Did Mulder’s sister come back? Please, fans, fill me in! I used to love this show.

Charlie Sheen Posts Racist Tweet to President Obama, Goes Too Far (Again) #Losing

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Charlie Sheen won’t shut up and won’t go away. He posted this racist Tweet to President Obama last night. Are we done yet with this moron? Jon Cryer has now written a book about how awful he was to work with. His “Anger Management” TV series, now in syndication, is unwatchable. His father, Martin Sheen, must be so embarrassed that is his offspring. The reactions to the Tweet are wholly negative. Enough. #LOSING

Watch Madonna Get All G-Rated for “Ellen” to Promote New Album

Madonna may have a rebel heart but she’s also realistic. A lot of her fans are long past the Mudd Club era and are at women at home in the afternoons. Some may be watching grandchildren! To sell “Rebel Heart,” Madonna’s been appearing all week on “Ellen,” the kind of bourgeois show her “Desperately Seeking Susan” character would have loathed. But it’s 2015, ain’t it?

Madonna has been all G rated in her song presentations on “Ellen.” We’ve never seen so little skin from the woman who once starred in her own “Sex” book. But you don’t want to threaten an audience whom you need to buy your CD and concert tickets. Watch these videos. She’s made good choices so far.

 

Russell Simmons Bringing Rap’s Golden Age to Broadway in “The Scenario”

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Stand back, Broadway. Here comes rap, again. This time Russell Simmons, creator of DefJam, philanthropist and tastemaker, is bring rap’s golden age to what may now be called The Great Black Way.

“The Scenario” is the name of a musical Simmons is funding for development that will showcase rap from the early 80s through the mid 90s.

Simmons says he will produce through his own Def Pictures, “alongside Tony Award-winning Broadway producer Big Block (Scott Prisand/Jamie Bendell) (Rock of Ages, Heathers, Gentleman’s Guide To Love And Murder). THE SCENARIO will feature an original story written by acclaimed author and hip-hop historian Dan Charnas (The Big Payback). The show will debut in the fall of 2016.

Rap is a so so proposition on Broadway. A musical based on the work of Tupac Shakur called “Holla If You Hear Me” had a short interesting run a couple of years ago. “Hamilton” is coming to Broadway this summer, and is sort of rap lite with a lot of R&B and mainstream melodic music to buffer it. “Hamilton” also works because it has a brilliant book. A jukebox rap musical will depend on a strong story, performers, and arrangements that don’t send regular theatergoers, black or white, scrambling for ear plugs.

Mariah Carey’s First Epic Album Will Have Greatest Hits, New Songs, And No Xmas

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I did tell you first that Mariah Carey was returning to Sony and Epic records.

I told you next that she’d signed a deal with Epic, and would release an album of 18 number 1 hits to coincide with her Caesar’s Palace run that starts May 6th in Las Vegas.

Today someone suggested that Mariah was going to make a Christmas album for Epic. I can tell you that she is not. She is continuing with the Greatest Hits album. And I guess the only news is that the album will have a couple of new tracks, maybe as many as four. This is typical of greatest hits albums. And some of them have launched new classics. Think of “Ribbon in the Sky” and “Do I Do” on Stevie Wonder’s greatest hits many moons ago. It happens.

Do look for Mariah’s “All I Need for Christmas Is You” on the album. Maybe that’s what the fuss was about. That song is the best selling Christmas tune of all time. It must be included. I hope that the “new” songs are covers a la “I’ll Be There” or “Without You.” But we shall see, and soon. Carey’s been in Los Angeles working hard on the Vegas show and this album.

Ratings: Everyone Watched “Empire” and Not Much Else on Wednesday Night

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Wednesday night was all “Empire” from 8 to 10pm. The show scored 16.7 million total viewers and a 6.5 in the key demo. It had a 20 share. This is called a phenomenon.

Not much else happened because the rest of broadcast TV was in reruns. At 10pm, two shows– the “CSI Cyber” premiere and Diane Sawyer’s special about “The Sound of Music” — tied at around 7.3 million viewers. They skewed to older audiences. I missed “CSI” but I did watch Julie Andrews, and the show was lovely. I figure “CSI” I will be seeing in reruns and syndication for years to come.

Meanwhile, the “Empire” CD is number 2 on amazon and on iTunes, selling like hot cakes right behind Kendrick Lamar’s “To Pimp A Butterfly.” If “Empire” can sustain story burnout– too many plots, characters, and quick things going by– they could go a possible four or five seasons. But it will be tough at this rate. Every show like this– huge sudden successes–like “thirtysomething,” “Moonlighting,” and now even “Glee”– cannot sustain itself for too long. So let’s enjoy it while we can.

TV: “Empire” Goes For It Big Time with Two Hour Ratings Buster Season Finale

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“Empire”, the TV phemon of the season, went for big time tonight with a two hour finale that was cutting edge and old fashioned at the same time. There were gasps of revelations, cliff hangers, secrets, a possible murder. Or two. It was a Wow from beginning to end. By Thursday noon Eastern time we should know how many millions watched it.

The Lee Daniels-Danny Strong soap opera recalls the best and most exhilarating, crazy and delirious moments of “Dallas,” “Dynasty,” “Falcon Crest” and daytime dramas. The main difference is that nearly everyone is black. And the actors are the creme de la creme, top notch black thespians who’ve mostly been in movies: Oscar nominees Terrence Howard, Gabourey Sidibe and Taraji P. Henson, Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson, respected actors Malik Yoba and Derek Luke, guest stars like Patti Labelle and Mary J. Blige, and a ton of talented newcomers.

Did I mention that Naomi Campbell has a recurring role?

Why does “Empire” work? Because it’s about members of a core family struggling to take control of a family company. Sound familiar? They’re the Ewings, the Carringtons, the Quartermaines of “General Hospital.” The formula is so simple and traditional, but this time the “Empire” everyone’s fighting over is a fictional version of a modern Motown. Mom has been in jail for 17 years while Dad has been building the biz. One of the three sons is gay. One of them is married to a white girl. Ready set go.

Tonight we had a bunch of cliffhangers. You know, they will all work out. At the end of next season it wouldn’t be surprising if Terrence Howard’s Lucious, the JR Ewing of the story, is shot in a whodunit. Why not? Howard is just perfect as the selfish, capricious, scheming patriarch. And Henson is superb as Cookie Lyon, the Sue Ellen Ewing of the story. Last night she may have gotten herself an Emmy in a scene where she’s watching the white son of a hostile takeover king try to be a rapper. Taraji just gives a look of masked derision, and steals the whole show.

“Empire” is also fun because it’s a Twitter game. Imagine if Twitter had existed in the 80s. Those soaps would have been the main topic of the night. I was busy Tweeting with other “Empire” fans last night and never had more fun. Can’t wait to see the Twitter results tomorrow.

Let me tell you now– if the Emmy Awards ignore “Empire” instead of embrace it, they will be wiped out. This is the show of 2015, hands down. And imagine a Best Actress category that would include Taraji P. Henson, Kerry Washington, and Viola Davis. Nirvana.