Wednesday, June 24, 2026
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RIP John McClain, 71, Co-Executor of Michael Jackson Estate, Longtime Family Friend Who Helped Janet Jackson Launch Her Career

Michael Jackson fans will know this name immediately: John McClain.

The co-executor of the Michael Jackson estate — with John Branca — was 71 and had been ill for a long time.

McClain was a long time friend of the Jackson family. He was at A&M Records in the 1980s when he helped Janet Jackson launch her career with the “Control” album. He started in the business as music director for R&B groups like the Sylvers and Shalamar.

His death is an added complication for the Estate, currently involved in a number of legal battles. The naming of a successor will be a big deal.

McClain was a very low profile guy. There are literally no photos of him from recent years. He did everything to stay out of the press and let Branca do the talking for him.

Branca said in a statement: “I am profoundly grieved at the loss of my partner and brother John McClain. One of the great innovators in the world of music and music marketing, John was a visionary, seeing past the mundane and into the future.

“When we were named in Michael’s will, I knew that he would bring great insight into Michael’s music and that his friendship and dedication to Michael would underscore all the great projects that we could bring to the world. He brought a passion and sense of conviction to all that he did and was the most generous of friends. It is difficult to imagine a world without him.”

New WWII Thriller “Pressure” Brings A “Billions” Reunion to High Atop Rock Center for Damien Lewis, Plus Brendan Fraser, Andrew Scott

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There were a lot of surprises last night at the premiere of “Pressure.”

Anthony Maras’s first movie since 2018’s very fine “Hotel Mumbai” is just as good if not better, a compelling World War II thriller with five star acting and a gorgeous production.

Most of the ensemble cast turned up last night for the premiere, including Andrew Scott (who’s in like every movie this year), Brendan Fraser, Damien Lewis, and Kerry Condon.

Focus Features is so high on “Pressure” that the after party was at the legendary Rainbow Room, high above Rockefeller Center. The views are still as stunning as ever. The Empire State Building may not the tallest building any more, but it’s the swankiest spot in town.

It was great to see Damian Lewis, star of TV’s “Homeland” and “Billions” back on film. But it was even more fun that his “Billions” co-stars David Costabile and Asia Kate Dillon came to support him. (Full disclosure: I was a “Billions” addict.)

They were happy to pose for a reunion photo. Costabile told me, by the way, he’ll be in the new gambling series from “Billions” creators Brian Koppelman and David Levien. He said it sort of picks up where the duo’s great film, “Rounders” left off, years ago.

Lewis — who has two more films coming soon — and I talked about his burgeoning music career. He’s an accomplished singer songwriter, but until he cut his debut album, he’d always worked alone. “There’s nothing like making music with a group of people creating something,” he said.

And then there’s Andrew Scott, who’s the star of this beautifully made film. He plays Captain James Stagg, a real life but unsung hero who helped the Brits prepare for D-Day and take the beach at Normandy with his meteorological expertise. After seeing “Saving Private Ryan” and “Dunkirk,” this gem of a picture acts as a link, where we get to see how brave men left their families to work in the background.

Scott and I talked about his other recent film, “Blue Moon,” for which Ethan Hawke received an Oscar nomination. Scott played Broadway musical composer Richard Rodgers. He and Hawke are sublime in the film.

Andrew Scott became famous overnight from playing the sexy priest in “Fleabag.” Now he’s in every movie. He’s got six of them coming soon including one that could put him in an Oscar race. In “Elsinore,” he plays real life “Chariots of Fire” star Ian Charleson, who was diagnosed with AIDS while playing “Hamlet” in the West End (he took over for Daniel Day-Lewis, who abruptly left) but didn’t let it stop him.

Scott’s no slouch as Capt. Stagg, abandoning his usual charms for a no-nonsense military man. “Blue Moon” fans will get a kick out of Stagg silencing a rowdy gang of soldiers singing and playing the piano. Richard Rodgers would be horrified.

(PS Value added — Tony and Oscar winner Ariana DeBose showed up as just a friend of a friend. What’s she up to? Starring in “Scarpetta,” the hit series, and appearing in a new film with Al Pacino and Jessica Chastain. Mic drop!)

“Pressure” opens Friday, and you’re under a lot of pressure to see it right away!

Broadway: Tony Awards Get a Boost from “Book of Mormon” 15th Year Reunion, Plus “Chess” Checkmated Will Close Early in June

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First, the good news:

“The Book of Mormon” will celebrate its 15th anniversary on the Tony Awards June 7th on CBS.

A live performance will feature Tony Award nominees Josh Gad, Andrew Rannells and Rory O’Malley and Tony Award winner Nikki M. James. They will be introduced by Tony Award winners Trey Parker, Matt Stone and Robert Lopez.

“Book of Mormon” has a lot to celebrate after a fire on the roof of the theater shut them down for weeks.

The Tonys are hosted by singer Pink. Last night I ran into one of my favorite people, two time host Ariana DeBose (and Oscar and Tony winner), who told me, “Pink is going to be fantastic!” I agree.

The show will also feature performances from The Lost Boys, Schmigadoon!, Titaníque, Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York), CATS: The Jellicle Ball, Ragtime and Richard O’Brien’s (as opposed to someone else’s) “The Rocky Horror Show.”

Some good news for “The Lost Boys”: they’re doing so well, the run is being extended.

On the other hand, more closures.

The revival of “Chess” is wrapping up in mid June, three months early. The reason is that Lea Michelle is leaving then. The show was going to replace her and soldier on til September, but she was the draw.

“Chess” had mixed reviews and has been playing at 73% capacity. Danny Strong wrote a new book but in the end, the show was never very good. The whole thing hinges on one song, “One Night in Bangkok.” Lea Michelle, Aaron Tveit, and Tony nominee Nicholas Christopher gave it their all, but they couldn’t overcome the show’s deficiencies.

Also going soon: “Moulin Rouge.” And “Beaches” was closed due to sharks in the audience.

Broadway’s biggest night

Box Office Bust for Boots Riley: No One Wants to See His “I Love Boosters” Despite Good Reviews, Audience Has Dropped Every Day

So much for “I Love Boosters.”

Boots Riley’s latest comedy is dying fast at the box office.

Now at $5.2 million after opening this past weekend, every day numbers have dropped precipitously.

Yesterday receipts were down 50% from Monday.

It’s no surprise. The Rotten Tomatoes audience score is a woeful 72%.

This is in direct opposition to the critics score of 92%.

But Neon couldn’t make audiences come to “I Love Boosters,” which has ‘cult film’ written all over it.

The subject: professional shoplifters exact revenge on the fashion industry. Keke Palmer and Lakeith Stanfield lead the cast, which also features Demi Moore.

It sounds like a new idea, but I remember Kerry Washington’s first film, called “Lift,” which was totally winning and established her career.

Riley had the same problem in 2018 with his “Sorry I Can’t Hear You.” Good reviews, no audience. Maybe wait another six years and see if people come around.

Kanye West Welcomed by City of Tampa and Raymond James Financial Despite Rapper’s Nazi Leanings, So Far Slow Ticket Pre-Sales

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Apparently, the city of Tampa is ok with Kanye West.

So is Raymond James Financial Services in St. Petersburg, Florida.

They’re welcoming the pro-Hitler, Nazi leaning rapper to the Raymond James Stadium on Friday, June 26th.

The financial firm has naming right on the stadium, which is owned by the city of Hillsborough, Florida and financed with public funds.

They’re all cool with Kanye, singer of “Heil Hitler,” and seller of swastika emblazoned t shirts coming to their town for a musical night.

They don’t seem to be aware of the outrage Ye’s shows caused in Los Angeles. Or that he’s been banned from performing in several countries including England and France. Hey– it’s May. That was so April.

If I were a Jewish customer of Raymond James, I’d be getting out before this article ends.

Tampa might not be so keen on Kanye. So far, ticket sales are slow in pre-sales. The Blue Dot Fever is all over the stadium with loads of empty seats. It should also be noted that Kanye is not using the whole venue.

Stay tuned. This is going to get interesting.

Seat maps below.

Music: Legendary Parliament Founder George Clinton Claims Universal Music Got Funky with His Royalties, Asks for $1.1 Million in New Lawsuit

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Parliament-Funkadelic legend George Clinton — the reason we have a lot of our music — is going to court.

Clinton says Universal Music Group has gotten funky with his royalties. He’s suing them for $1.1 million in fees he says they withheld connected to another lawsuit.

The Detroit News reports that:

“In a complaint filed Friday in Detroit’s federal court, Clinton says UMG has been withholding 100% of his royalties for more than three years based on the company’s involvement in a separate case filed by the estate of a former bandmate.”

The bandmate is the late Bernie Worrell, also quite famous. Clinton and Worrell’s estate are in a battle over royalties, too.

Bernie Worrell’s estate claims that Clinton deceived him and failed to share millions of dollars generated by dozens of their songs, including hits like “Give Up the Funk,” “Flash Light,” and “Maggot Brain.”

“Give Up the Funk” also must have generated millions since Clinton first began recording for UMG in 1969.

Read all about it here.

Broadway: Julia Louis-Dreyfus Will Star in Revival of “Other Desert Cities” with Ed Harris, Allison Janney, Joe Keery and Lily Rabe

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Good news on Broadway.

Jon Robin Baitz’s very funny play, “Pther Desert Cities” is getting a revival this fall.

The casting is perfect. Julia Louis-Dreyfus will make her Broadway debut in the role created by Stockard Channing. Allison Janney will pick up Judith Light’s part, which will probably get her a Tony nomination. Light won the first of her two Tony Awards in the role of Silda. (She also won the Drama Desk.)

The men include the great Ed Harris and “Stranger Things” star Joe Keery. Also featured, the wonderful Lily Rabe.

The production comes to the Hudson Theater in September, directed by John Benjamin Hickey.

This is a good move for JJ Abrams’ Bad Robot Live productions, which has recently given us Keanu Reeves in “Waiting for Godot,” and “Sunset Boulevard.”

“Other Desert Cities” had five Tony nominations back in 2012 and was a finalist for the Pulitzer.

I don’t want to jinx it, but this one is a no-brainer! It’s about time JLD brought her exquisite comic chops to Broadway!

Expect to see Anna Wintour, with sunglasses, in the front row on opening night. Her daughter, Bee Carrozzini, is an investor/producer.

Watch Robert Kennedy Jr Wrangle Two Snakes at Dr. Oz’s $18 Million Palm Beach House: They Bite Him, But He Doesn’t Eat Them

This is completely normal.

In a shirt and tie, Secretary of Health Robert Kennedy Jr. wrangled two snakes in the backyard of Dr. Oz’s $18 million Palm Beach beach house.

Of course, Dr. Oz lives in a beach house. MAGA, you voted for people just like yourselves!

The good news, is Kennedy didn’t eat the snakes.

So many good snake jokes here. PS Kennedy captions the video that wife Cheryl is his cheerleader. Please, curb your enthusiasm.

American Music Awards: Who Won? No One Cares, Almost No Stars Showed Up for Debacle of CBS Show, But the Ones that Did Got Their Prizes

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The Knicks destroyed the Cavaliers tonight. I’m sure the ratings were very high.

In the real world, jazz great Sonny Rollins died at age 95. He was a magnificent musician. God bless him.

In the pretend world of commercial music and network TV, The American Music Awards were aired on CBS but no one cared. Very lame. Few stars showed up. The ones that did got a prize. They included BTS, Katseye, and Sombr, who are all lovely but not important musicians.

BTS — the Korean KPop group — won a bunch of awards but didn’t even perform live. They used a pre-tape on the pre-taped show.

All the big names that were “nominated” skipped the show. That’s Taylor Swift and her ilk like Olivia Dean, Teddy Swims, Olivia Rodrigo, Sabrina Carpenter (who won Album of the Year), Justin Bieber, and so on.

Who did show up? Past stars like the Goo Goo Dolls, the Black Eyed Peas, twentyonepilots, and Billy Idol. Yikes. They multiversed in from the 1990s. They all got something called “throwback awards,” which I swear I heard as something else. 

Rolling Stone was so confused they reported the show took place on Sunday night. (see below)

Deadline.com had a headline tonight that could make you cry. “AMAs 2026 Red Carpet Photos: Hannah Berner, Karol G, Ejae, GloRilla, Maluma, Hilary Duff.” Most of the guests were filler from reality shows.

CBS is the big loser. They let the Grammys go, and made a deal with Dick Clark Productions for the AMAs, the Golden Globes, etc — the also ran awards shows that fill the time between the Oscars, Emmys, Tonys, and Grammys. I guess they didn’t understand that Bruno Mars, Lady Gaga, and the like had better things to do.

It’s overall a sad story. What makes it worse is that when the show concluded, no one reported the full list of winners. No trades, not even Billboard. Social media was silent except for paid BTS social media pluggers. The complete list wasn’t issued until about 11:40pm Eastern. By then most smart people had gone to bed.

And Sonny Rollins? The greatest saxophone player of all time entered heaven having never heard of any of these people. He was given wings and a halo.

Who Was Peter Ustinov? Paul Mescal Was Clueless When Paul McCartney Mentioned Him in Their 11 Minute Interview Today (Watch 2 Clips Here)

You’ll see below the 11 minute interview actor Paul Mescal had with Paul McCartney today on amazon.com.

It’s a cute plug since Mescal is playing the Beatle in four films coming in April 2028.

In the interview, McCartney mentions “an actor named Peter Ustinov.” Mescal had no idea what he was talking about. He’s young, he’ll learn. He just found out about Shakespeare!

So who was Peter Ustinov? I was lucky enough to know him. He was a great British actor, but also a hilarious, erudite writer and filmmaker. You couldn’t make it through a meal without collapsing in laughter. His memoir is called “Dear Me.”

Peter won TWO Oscars, for Supporting Actor in “Topkapi” and “Spartacus.” He had one other nomination, for “Qup Vadis,” and one for writing the screenplay for a film called “Hot Millions” in 1969.

A few weeks ago I ran into David Letterman at the opening of Lorne Michaels’ documentary I reminded him of the time, 40 years ago this fall, when I brought Peter to his show on NBC. He was promoting a book for UNICEF. Producer Bob Morton asked if Peter would be agreeable to the following: during the show, it would look like the stage was turning upside down, rotating a full 360 degrees. When Peter came on, he’d have to pretend that he was hanging on to the deskn.

Of course, Peter said Yes. He did it, and it was brilliant. The clip is below.

I urge Paul Mescal and everyone else to see Peter’s movies and read his books. There’s no one like him now, and we are the poorer for it.