Friday, December 19, 2025
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Amazon Books Editorial Director Quits as Hachette Mess Eats Away at Online Seller

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Amazon Books editorial director Julia Cheiffetz has resigned. She let it out on Twitter yesterday, and I spotted it in the New York Observer. No one else seems to have caught on:

Even the Observer didn’t notice this post from Cheiffetz on Twitter from a week ago:

 

Last fall, Larry Kirshbaum, formerly the long time head of Warner Books, left Amazon as editorial director after his books failed and he was sued for sexual harrassment by a former lover.

Amazon clearly is not a nice place to work if you’re publishing books. The company is also locked in a very public, noisy, and vindictive brawl with Hachette Publishing over fees. Amazon — as everyone knows by now– has retaliated against Hachette authors by slowing delivery of their books to customers. They’ve also made it hard to buy them at all.

Today the New York Times reports that Amazon is trying to make deals directly with authors in order to squeeze out Hachette. But the authors are loyal to their publishing companies. Amazon doesn’t get that. In the end, authors will always side with their publishers. That’s their family, for better or worse. Amazon is an interloper.

It’s unclear whether Cheiffetz’s resignation is tied to the Hachette mess. But it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to realize the longer she stayed with Amazon, the less likely she’d find welcoming arms at publishers if she needed a new job.

As long as Barnes & Noble is still semi-in business, I don’t know why they don’t take advantage of this situation. Before Amazon existed, B&N was the Death Star of publishing. Now they’re an underdog. Get up, B&N! Fight! Yo, Adrienne!

Katy Perry Really Sets Off Fireworks at 2nd Ever Madison Square Garden Show

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Yes, I went to see Katy Perry at Madison Square Garden. I took Hannah and Charlotte, the nieces. They brought their pal, Leah. They are all 14 years old, the exact age to which Katy Perry, 29, directs her show. Did they love it? You betcha. Did all the teens (mostly girls) in MSG scream through the show, sing a long, Snapchat it, Instagram it, video it, buy up lots of merchandise? Indeed.

I liked it, too. Katy has a great voice, and she’s a beautiful, athletic girl. Her songs don’t feel as manufactured as those of others in her peer group. Her show was far less contrived than Taylor Swift’s, for example. The production values are high, but they aren’t overwhelming. Kudos to whoever makes the costumes and the videos.

Further applause for her “band”– I don’t really know what’s going on, and it’s better not to ask. The show is programmed tightly. The band does play in some instances. There is a lot of pre-recording, but not of Katy’s voice. She’s a belter, with a clear strong vibrato. Like Lady Gaga, she is singing. You can tell she likes to sing, which is nice.

The show is G rated, with Katy as Cinderella or Sleeping Beauty. Knowing who the audience is, the performer leaves sex at home– even when she sings “I Kissed a Girl.” The songs are mostly anthems. She opens with the best one, “Roar,” and samples her way through her three albums until a triple-hit play at the end of two hours with “Teenage Dream,” “Birthday,” and “Fireworks.” The end is so good you want to buy her CDs, and a lot of t shirts.

There is a long soft middle. If you’re the adult chaperone, you can snooze or get a drink. This starts with “International Smile,” where suddenly Katy’s singing Madonna’s “Vogue.” Things get a little fuzzy here. “By Grace of God” is a bland ballad without much of a melody. Stripped down, “The One That Got Away” saves the section, and then “Unconditionally” wraps it up. There’s also some unexplained (and unnecessary) disco music

Katy is dressed like Glinda the Good Witch during this section, with cotton candy hair and a big white gown. She plays a little guitar. She tells the girls in the audience essentially to dream big, and live the dream, and everything will work out. (What’s she going to say to 14 year olds? “I’ve already been divorced from an addict, and I couldn’t commit to a roving eye Guitar Man”? TMI.)

The show is incredibly colorful, upbeat, and produced within an inch of its life. Katy is indefatigable. At least twice, she flies in a harness across MSG. Mick Jagger and Tina Turner have come close, but they’ve never done that. I’ve never been so impressed. She does one song in a giant black and white Ying and Yang costume that Julie Taymor would admire. Did I mention it rotates while she’s singing? Come on!

Toward the end of the show, huge radio controlled balloons, in the form of a hand bag, a taco box, and a Cover Girl lipstick (they’re the sponsor) also float through the air from one end of the arena to the other. Elaborate narrative and animated videos are projected brilliantly on a very clever simple stage piece that’s a folding triangle made to suggest a prism. Again, the set is a winner. I wish I could play you the cat videos. They’re great.

This was the 10th date on a long tour that runs through October. When it’s over, Katy’s going to need at least a weekend in an isolation tank. But for now, she looks like she’s loving it, the audience is wild for her, and she actually offers a well designed $5 bracelet at the merch table.

For the first six months of 2014, Katy Perry is far and away the best selling pop artist in the US. She is America’s Sweetheart. And we really needed one.

PS Capital Cities opened the show. They played “Safe and Sound,” their magnificent one off hit, a couple of times. They could have played it 10 times, it’s so catchy. Katy also featured a guy named Ferras, a sort of Elton John wannabe who has a lot of potential but a really bad hairstyle. Remember, Elton worked his way into Captain Fantastic from “Your Song.” He didn’t start there.

Confirmed: Jack Nicholson Is NOT in the Warren Beatty “Howard Hughes” Movie

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This is sort of a non story. But I got so many whispered messages and emails that Jack Nicholson would “definitely” be in Warren Beatty’s new Howard Hughes movie, I had to check it out.

Alas, and alack, I’ve confirmed that Jack is not in the movie. He continues to live a wonderful life devoid of having go to work. Well, most people his age have retired. But Jack is ageless.

I’m told that scripts come in. But they are mostly “variations on the Bucket List,” says an insider. Nothing unique has been offered. And Jack doesn’t need to pursue the same path as many in his generation– making lots of forgettable films.

So while we wait, we can download, or stream to whatever Five Easy Pieces, About Schmidt, As Good As It Gets, Chinatown, The Last Detail and so on…

Viva Jack Nicholson!

Broadway: Producer of Proposed Stax Records Musical Has Dicey Track Record from Ray Charles Show

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A Stax Records musical on Broadway? Great idea. Produced by Stuart Benjamin? That’s another story. Four years ago, Benjamin tried to shepherd a Ray Charles musical to Broadway called “Unchain my Heart.” He’d already had a producer credit on Taylor Hackford’s “Ray” movie starring Jamie Foxx.

But “Unchain My Heart” never happened.Benjamin wound up suing his man investor for $20 million after checks didn’t clear and payments didn’t show up. “Unchain My Heart” is dead, although it did play briefly at the Pasadena Playhouse. The LA Times said the musical seemed “square, dull and suburban, like one of those embarrassing PBS specials celebrating the groovy sounds of yesteryear.”

That’s not good.

A big part of Benjamin’s bio is that was he was the producer of Sam Moore’s brilliant 2006 album called Overnight Sensational. Uh, not he wasn’t. Randy Jackson was the music producer. Joyce Moore was Executive Producer. Benjamin was listed as an Executive Producer for Rhino Records because he helped make some connections with Rhino. Valerie Ervin, head of the Ray Charles Foundation, and yours truly were associate executive producers. Benjamin had nothing to do with the making of the album.

A Stax musical is going to require all the artists/estates agreeing to participate, the same as with Motown: The Musical. It’s also going to require investors. I wouldn’t start whistling “Soul Man” or “Mr. Big Stuff” so quickly down Shubert Alley.

Lee Grant on Marlon Brando, Overzealous Fans, and Getting Fired By Bruce Willis

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Lee Grant has finally published her memoir, and it’s a must-read. (I know this not from a publisher sending it to me, but from downloading it from amazon. Worth every penny.) The Oscar winner and multiple nominee did not work between 1954 and 1966. Why? She was blacklisted by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee, Senator Joseph McCarthy and the rotten miserable Roy Cohn. That story alone is worth the price of “I Said Yes to Everything.”

I’ve pulled out a couple of anecdotes apart from the HUAC story. On Marlon Brando:

“Marlon had asked me out the year before. Picked me up on his motorcycle— thrilling— and took me to a nightclub in the Fifties on Eighth Avenue. We sat on a long leather settee, had drinks at a small black table, and silently watched a naked woman on a small black stage do artistic and lewd things with a giant cobra. Not a word exchanged. What can you say? Back on the motorcycle, holding on to his back, to my front door. I had my key out, no kiss, thanked him, opened and closed the door. Out of love.”

Winning an Emmy “Peyton Place” the TV series that brought her back to show business after 12 years:

“And I won. I won. From three nights a week Peyton Place could have gone to five. The line between the audience and the characters on the show was so fine. My character’s father died on a Friday . Saturday afternoon I drove into Santa Monica to buy shoes. I was trying them on when the clerk who was waiting on a lady nearby crept over to me. “Excuse me,” he said. “That lady wants to know, isn’t today your father’s funeral?” “Tell her,” I said, “that’s why I’m buying the shoes. I’m going to the cemetery right after I leave here.” The lady, the clerk, and I nodded conspiratorially at one another and I left.”

Lee tried to make a movie in 1997 directing Bruce Willis in “Broadway Brawler,” about a hockey player. Willis was in a bad slump at the time. He didn’t like the way the movie was going and had her fired. She was replaced, but no one would work for the new director. The $28 million feature was aborted.

Lee writes: “The problem when you are a star, when the money rests on you as an actor, is that your freedom to fail is gone. You can’t take chances. If you can’t take chances anymore, what kind of actor are you?”

Two years later, after a string of horrendous flops, Willis lucked out with “The Sixth Sense” and was back, big time.

More to come about “I Said Yes to Everything.” Let’s read it together!

Texas Gov. Rick Perry Finally Shakes Hands with President Obama

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Gov. Rick Perry of Texas had said he wouldn’t shake hands with President Obama on an airport tarmac. Later, he rethought this statement since it was kind of disrespectful. Later Perry was caught surreptitiously greeting Obama on a receiving line. He was disguised as a donkey. If you believe this, you also believe Zac Efron is dating Michelle Rodriguez. Namaste.

David Letterman Walks Out on Joan Rivers in Gag, Everyone Takes it Seriously

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Are people really this dumb? On tonight’s Late Show with David Letterman, the host pretends to be affronted and walks out on guest Joan Rivers. CBS released an official clip that got picked up everywhere after 7pm, to promote the Letterman show. Did people really take this seriously? It was a JOKE. It was a GAG. Well, anything to pump up ratings. Joan has promoted her new book with a lot of media savvy, including walking off of CNN in a “huff.” Joan Rivers is a marketing genius, kids. Watch amazon.com and see if it helps sales. What I really think is hilarious is that I’ve known Joan since the 80s, appeared several times on her talk shows, and now her publicist refuses to put her on the phone with me. Joan, if you’re out there, fire her and call me.

Robin Thicke Scores Lowest Sales of Any Major Pop Release This Year

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That’s it. The US figures are in for Robin Thicke’s “Paula”a album. He sold roughly 23,000 copies– less than Jennifer Lopez’s 33,000 debut or Mariah Carey’s in May. That’s the lowest debut week for any major pop star this year or in recent memory. The only other complete dud I can think of is will.i.am’s last album, which topped out 55,000 copies. Basically no one in the United States bought Thicke’s album or his shtick about estranged wife Paula Patton.

This is a truly extraordinary situation. Thicke debuted on the charts a year ago with 177,000 copies of his “Blurred Lines.” Something like 14 million downloads were sold of the single “Blurred Lines” which featured Pharrell, who wrote the non Marvin Gaye part of the song.

Karma is a bitch. And Thicke engendered a lot of bad karma for ripping off Marvin Gaye’s essence, if not his song. He pre-emptively sued Gaye’s family, making Thicke look worse than thought possible. Then came all the Miley Cyrus stuff, dancing suggestively with her on an awards show. And then there were stories that he was fooling, accompanied by photos.

On top of that, it turned out Pharrell had something up his sleeve: “Happy,” a song that ripped off no one, and eclipsed “Blurred Lines.”

Meantime, the UK Guardian newspaper is claiming that “Paula” has sold only 530 copies in Britain. That’s right– five hundred and thirty.

The good news: There’s only one place to go from here and that’s up.

Jimmy Fallon’s Neil Young Gets to Play with Crosby, Stills and Nash (Watch)

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Jimmy Fallon’s Neil Young finally got to play with the real with Crosby, Stills and Nash last night on the Tonight show. The song was “Fancy” by current pop star Iggy Azalea. (Not to be confused with Rhoda Dendrum.) I’ve gotten so used to Jimmy being brilliant that I haven’t written about him in a while. The show remains top notch. Great backlighting for Crosby.

and here’s “Neil Young” with Bruce Springsteen:

“Boyhood” with Patricia Arquette, Ethan Hawke, Filmed Over 12 Years, Joins 2015 Oscar Pre-List

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An original work, “Boyhood” directed by Richard Linklater is a masterpiece. It’s funny and sad, it’s about life, and it’s entirely accessible to people of all ages. Young, old, in between can appreciate it at different levels. And of course, you’ve read that Linklater filmed it over the course of 12 years, tracing the lives of a fictional family he created. The trick is, you feel like you’ve lived their life and vice versa.

Last night the film premiered at the Museum of Modern Art (which Ethan Hawke excitedly called the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art) to massive ovations and applause. The director and cast were there, as well as lots of real “New York actors” like Bob Dishy, Dana Ivey, Tovah Feldshuh, Lois Smith, Joel Grey, and Rutanya Alda.

Over the moon was “Orange is the New Black” star Taylor Schilling, a major contender for an Emmy award next month.

Everyone sat through the two and half hour film rather spellbound. Linklater has taken a simple, elegant original idea and created magic. There isn’t exactly a plot to “Boyhood.” In fact, you know the plot. A young couple get pregnant, marry, have a second child and break up. The husband is a Peter Pan  who is likeable. The wife wants more for her life and her kids, a boy and a girl who are about 6 and 8. And so we follow them over 12 years, from the boy’s first grade to high school graduation.

There are no kidnappings, murders, random acts of violence or super heroes in capes.

Linklater simply captures the nuances of life as it rushes by, in linear order. The idea is to live in the moment and try not to forget what’s happening to you, or what’s happened. But time flies, for the audience and the viewer. You think of your own life constantly while watching “Boyhood.”

The real and the fictional are so entwined that later, at the party, we quizzed Arquette about what she thought might have happened to a character who drops out of the story never to be seen again. We were all very happy to see the young actress who played the character turned up. Of course, it’s not real. But you like the people in “Boyhood” so much, from the beginning you want nothing bad to happen to them.

I’m going to tell you more about “Boyhood” this week.  It opens in New York and LA on Friday, then goes wide the following week. “Boyhood” joins “Foxcatcher,” “Whiplash,” “Begin Again,” and “Grand Budapest Hotel” on the early Oscar list.  If this were 1975, Pauline Kael would be raving about Linklater in The New Yorker. Smart people would be lined up around the block to see it. I hope by some miracle that happens now.