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White House Will Sponsor Film Festival This Friday– For Students

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Just when we thought the White House was cutting back on screenings, now this: President Obama is sponsoring a film festival at the White House with the American Film Institute. The White House Film Festival will not be like Sundance or Cannes. But on Friday, short films made by K-12 students on the subject of technology in education will be screened. Obama will deliver opening remarks.

The American Film Institute announced today its collaboration with the White House on its first-ever film festival.  With President Obama delivering opening remarks on February 28, 2014, the White House Film Festival will be held inside the East Room of the White House where the winning short films created by K-12 students on the subject of technology in education will be screened.

“AFI is proud and honored to support the White House in its celebration of tomorrow’s storytellers, “ said Bob Gazzale, President & CEO of AFI in a press release.  “Here they have shown that film and technology will help lead the nation forward – an enduring reminder that movies matter.”

Also from the press release: Last November, the White House announced the first-ever White House Film Festival, a video competition created for K-12 students to create short films on how technology is used in their classroom, the role technology will play in education in the future, and to support learning in key fields such as science, technology, engineering, and math. More than 2,000 videos were submitted and finalists have been invited to the White House for a film festival where they will have their short films screened.

 

 

 

The White House Student Film Festival highlights the Administration’s commitment to getting high-speed Internet connectivity and educational technology into classrooms, and into the hands of teachers trained to take advantage of it.  As part of the event, the President will deliver remarks on his ConnectED goal of transforming American education by connecting 99% of students to next-generation broadband and wireless technology within five years.

 

 

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Show: Many Inductees Won’t Perform, Tix Priced High High High

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The incredibly greedy Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation is at it again. And this time they may have painted themselves into a corner. The April 10th induction ceremony at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn is turning into a disaster.

This week KISS announced they’re not playing. Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley have not asked original but departed members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss to play with them. Simmons wants KISS’s newer members to play. So no one will play. The group looks like it’s bruising for a fight similar to Blondie several years ago. Nirvana won’t play without Kurt Cobain. If they did, they’d be the Foo Fighters. So scratch them.

Linda Ronstadt doesn’t perform anymore. If she even comes, someone else will have to do the honors.

The E Street Band was finally inducted this year to appease Bruce Springsteen. He was inducted years ago without them. Bruce and co. are on tour but they’re off on April 10th. Will Bruce play with them? Or will Steve van Zandt lead the group? The award is for them, in fact.

And then there’s the question of Cat Stevens. He’s Yusuf Islam now. And he’s had visa problems in the past. Will he make it? Will he allow anyone to call him Cat? Will he perform “Peace Train” if he performs at all?

Then there are the ticket prices. Tickets have already gone to scalpers. On Excite, the good seats are going for over $7,ooo. And they’re not even on the floor! Floor seats are reserved for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation, which is selling tables for a range that goes up to $50,000. The inductees only get a plus one– that’s right! Want your kids to come? You gotta pay up. And past inductees– everyone from Paul McCartney to the O’Jays– have to buy tickets. There are no freebies except maybe for Yoko Ono and Jann Wenner’s family.

Hollywood Charity: Motion Picture Home Chief Paid $800K in 2011

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It’s just about time for “The Night Before,” the annual celebrity event for the Motion Picture Televison Fund, at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Big stars are corralled by the studios for a photo op and to pick up gift bags full of junk they later give their staffs. The ticket prices are astronomical, even though the MPTF, which operates the Motion Picture Home in Woodland Hills, is well funded at this point from $10-$30 million pledges from Hollywood’s inner circle.

As the celebs stumble to their limos Saturday night, I do hope they stop and get some facts and figures on this nursing home where they might– it’s unlikely-wind up one day.  This is the same place that just went through several years of controversy when the MPTF announced it was shutting down their long term care unit. They are also the recipients of terrible reviews and grades from the State of California.

It’s not like the MPTF staff is suffering. According to the most recent Form 990 filed by the not for profit organization, CEO Bob Beitcher received $800,000 ($750K base pay) in compensation in 2011. We don’t know yet about 2012 because they haven’t filed their tax return. But Beitcher got a huge increase in salary– up from $441,486 in 2010.

In 2010, retiring CEO David Tillman– who had to resign during the scandal over shutting down long term care– waltzed out of the MPTF with a cool $1.6 million. In 2011, he still made another $600,000. With that kind of money, Tillman won’t have to retire to the Woodland Hills home, that’s for sure. He immediately got a job running private health care agency Partners in Care. The past chairman of their board is Seth Ellis, COO of the MPTF, who himself pulles down more than $500K a year from the stars’ nursing home before he was ousted in 2012.

As Bruce Springsteen sings, “We take care of of our own.” (I don’t think he meant it in that way!)

Not bad considering a ripping negative report in fall 2012 from the state that described “needless suffering” and “deficient care.”

You can read all about the state report here: http://www.showbiz411.com/2012/10/16/shocking-report-about-hundred-million-dollar-hollywood-nursing-home-needless-suffering-deficient-care

A source who worked on the report told me: “The MPTV Fund exec [Beitcher] went kind of ballistic attacking the messenger and put a lot of money into addressing our concerns (while denying that any of them were valid).”

All the executive salaries at MPTF are high, well into the six figures. Of course their revenue for 2011 was $82 million. But compare that to other good nursing homes, like the Hebrew Home for the Aged in Riverdale, the Bronx, New York. In 2011, their total revenue was ten million dollars more than MPTF’s– over $93 million. And their CEO’s base compensation was far less than Beitcher’s $750,000.

Something to think about while the A listers are carting home free sneakers, iPods, and gift certificates.

The new Form 990 for MPTF should emerge shortly. The tradition is for it to be published right after the Oscars and The Night Before events.

 

 

 

 

 

(Video) Jimmy Fallon Takes on Paul Rudd in Lip Synch Battle

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Jimmy Fallon is putting out about 200% every night on The Tonight Show. In his seventh show, last night, Fallon did another musical number– this one, a lip synch battle with actor Paul Rudd. The show was top notch all the way through. Comedian Hannibal Buress did a hilarious stand up routine about New Orleans. Shaquille O’Neal actually picked Fallon up and twirled him around.

MSNBC Throws Ronan Farrow into the Deep End, And He Drowns

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Ronan Farrow’s debut on MSNBC on Monday was a ratings disaster, but that’s not all. Farrow, despite his show business lineage, came off today– his second day– like the host of a show on UHF or closed circuit TV in a community college. Physically, he comes off as small. The set doesn’t help him. His voice his high and uncertain. He reminded me (this is an old reference) of the high school stringer hired by Lou Grant who phones in a scoop. Watch this clip below. Does this seem like a show that should be on a network connected to NBC?

Really? This is enough to make me turn to Fox News.

Today Farrow put up Arizona Governor Jan Brewer’s phone number. He urged the audience to call her if they don’t agree with her position on gay rights. (Later, he will call Justin Bieber and egg her house.) I think we did this in 11th grade to our high school principal.

Meanwhile, Farrow, one day on the job, is hitting the lecture circuit. He’s already booked Fairfield (CT) University for March 18th on the topic “A New Generation of Protest: How Technology Is Changing the Art of Uprising.” His official bio says he’s the son of Mia Farrow and Woody Allen. So much for Frank Sinatra!

If only Farrow had started out as a contributor on some show first. You think of all the talented people who could host that hour and do a great job. This is going to end in tears, I’m afraid.

Bruce Springsteen Releasing New Songs, MusiCares Concert DVD

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It’s never too soon for more Bruce Springsteen releases. His new album, “High Hopes,” is just a few weeks old. But on April 19th, Springsteen is putting out a four track “EP” (EP used to mean extended play, like a big single. Now it’s just four songs on iTunes.) They didn’t make the cut apparently. But now they do! The EP is called “American Beauty.” You can guess that Jimmy Fallon has already booked Bruce for that week.

There’s more. At last, MusiCares, one of the two official NARAS branded foundations, is releasing a DVD of one of its Person of the Year concerts. The first one is 2013’s Springsteen tribute. That release is March 25th. I hope MusiCares releases more of these DVDs soon. This year’s Carole King concert would be perfect, so would the Don Henley, Neil Young, and Barbra Streisand shows. Maybe they can take great tracks from each of the annual shows and make them a compilation album.

Here’s the tracklist for the Springsteen:

  • 1. “Adam Raised a Cain” Performed by Alabama Shakes
  • 2. “Because the Night” Performed by Patti Smith
  • 3. “Atlantic City” Performed by Natalie Maines, Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite
  • 4. “American Land” Performed by Ken Casey
  • 5. “My City of Ruins” Performed by Mavis Staples and Zac Brown
  • 6. “I’m On Fire” Performed by Mumford and Sons
  • 7. “American Skin (41 Shots)” Performed by Jackson Browne and Tom Morello
  • 8. “My Hometown” Performed by Emmylou Harris
  • 9. “One Step Up” Performed by Kenny Chesney
  • 10. “Streets of Philadelphia” Performed by Elton John
  • 11. “Hungry Heart” Performed by Juanes
  • 12. “Tougher Than the Rest” Performed by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill
  • 13. “The Ghost of Tom Joad” Performed by Jim James and Tom Morello
  • 14. “Dancing in the Dark” Performed by John Legend
  • 15. “Lonesome Day” Performed by Sting
  • 16. “Born in the USA” Performed by Neil Young with Crazy Horse
  • 17. “We Take Care of Our Own” Performed by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
  • 18. “Death to My Hometown” Performed by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
  • 19. “Thunder Road” Performed by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
  • 20. “Born to Run” Performed by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
  • 21. “Glory Days” Performed by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band & cast ensemble

Ratings: Seth Meyers Gets Biggest “Late Night” Numbers in 9 Years

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The last time “Late Night” got numbers as big as they got last night, Michael Jackson was on trial in California. George W. Bush was president. Conan O’Brien was the host of the show.

From NBC this morning:

  • At 12:35 a.m. ET, “Late Night with Seth Meyers” has delivered strong ratings with its premiere telecast, averaging a 2.6 rating, 9 share in household results from the 56 markets metered by Nielsen Media Research.  It’s the highest “Late Night” rating on a Monday in nine years (since Jan. 24, 2005 for a “Late Night” encore, 4.2, which followed a high-rated “Tonight Show” tribute to Johnny Carson).

 

  • The debut of “Late Night with Seth Meyers” is up 63% versus “Late Night’s” season average (2.6 vs. 1.6, L+SD).  Monday’s “Late Night” retained 58% of its “Tonight Show” lead-in (2.6 vs. 4.5), versus the show’s 55% season average (1.6 vs. 2.9).  The 2.6 topped the combined ratings in the time slot of ABC’s “Nightline” (1.4/5 for the first half-hour of the time period) and CBS’s “Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson” (1.0/4).

 

  • In the 25 markets with Local People Meters, “Late Night with Seth Meyers” averaged a 1.2/8 in adults 18-49, best for “Late Night” on a Monday since June 1, 2009 (1.4, following Conan O’Brien’s “Tonight Show” premiere).

Robert DeNiro: “I Don’t Know If I’ll Ever Direct Another Movie”

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Robert DeNiro, a man who does not like to talk too much, was left to do a lot of talking last night at the First Time Fest’s  20th Anniversary Benefit screening of his directorial debut, “A Bronx Tale.” The star of the movie, Chazz Palminteri, who wrote the screenplay, was a no show because of food poisoning. This left DeNiro and actress Katherine Narducci, to handle the screening and Q&A moderated by David Schwartz from the Museum of the Moving Image. The audience was formidable: it included DeNiro’s beautiful wife Grace, plus Tony Bennett, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, and Gay Talese. Bennett’s daughter, Johanna, presented the evening as part of her First Time Film Festival along with co-founder Mandy Ward and the Tribeca Film Institute. DeNiro made his directing debut in 1994 with the critically acclaimed film, set in the Bronx in the 1960’s. He’s only directed one other film since then, “The Good Shepherd,” with Matt Damon. The famed actor was unexpectedly poignant. He said, “I don’t know if I’ll ever direct another movie. If I did 5 in my life I’d be happy. I might not do three. I don’t know if I’ll do another movie because it’s a lot of work.” “A Bronx Tale: a rueful story about a kid’s relationship with a local gangster (Palminteri), which troubles his bus driver father (De Niro.) The “Raging Bull” actor said getting the film on the big screen took six years, give or take a year. He’d Palminteri’s one-man show in L.A. and knew there was a “feeding frenzy” by the studios to get it on the screen. Palminteri turned down many offers. “He wanted to make sure that he could play the part of Sonny. If you opt to sell it to them,” De Niro told him, “at the end of they day they’re going to want somebody with a name to hedge their bets and they’ll probably come to me.” “Let’s eliminate that whole process.” De Niro promised him, “Give it to me and I’ll promise you that you can play the part of Sonny, and that’s what happened.” As why he chose to make his directing debut with “A Bronx Tale,” De Niro said, “I wanted to direct a movie for a while, but I wasn’t sure what I was going to do. You always want to tell the perfect story. In a movie you want to make it your letter to the world. It’s not quite what I imagined that I would want to make it my letter to the world, but I liked Chazz, and the whole thing, and I knew at least (I could) attempt something special out of this material, and that I understand that world.” Many of the roles were cast with non-actors, especially the children. “You gotta find kids from that neighborhood. Kids that understand that world,” De Niro said. The first boy who played his son, Francis Capra, was 12. “He’d say to me, ‘You want me to cry yet?’ I’d say hold on,’ so he understood the meaning and the reason and the importance of that emotion and he was ready to do it so I was always amazingly surprised how he understood that at such a young age.” De Niro added, “These are kids, 14, 15, 16, who want to be men. In that culture they want to be grown ups. They aspire to what they see before them in the gangster culture, the Sonny culture.” It was about 13 years after “A Bronx Tale” when De Niro directed his next film, “The Good Shepherd,” about the early history of the C.I.A., starring Matt Damon and Angelina Jolie. “I’d always been interested in that subject matter,” De Niro explained. The screenplay is by Eric Roth (“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”). “I wanted to do a sequel to it but he (Roth) has not come up with that. He dilly-dallied with doing a television show, which would mean we would have more time to get into details, all the intricies of that world. In a feature you don’t have time to do that, but at the same time it’s more grand, it’s more like opera.” As for whether there will be a sequel, “It’s unresolved at this point,” De Niro said. De Niro took questions from the audience. The last one was from an acting student who asked the “Taxi Driver” actor about his “process,” whether it was a method approach or more technically driven, and if these techniques had an “inherent danger.” “I don’t know what the dangers are because I’ve never experienced that,” De Niro said. “I don’t know if you’re saying somebody gets so involved in their role that they’re going to wind up losing themselves and go crazy. I’ve never seen that ever. Ever! Ever! Ever!” De Niro said. “Whether it’s Stella Adler or whether it’s Lee Strasberg, do the technique whatever, and they overlap a lot, because at the end of the day actors use whatever works for them. When they’re in there, in the moment, you have to use what’s good for you. You think about your mother who died last week. You think about this, you can think about that. You do whatever. My two things are, you don’t hurt yourself. You don’t hurt others. Everything else is okay. Whatever your wildest imagination is that can make you arrive at that point in that scene that’s fine,” De Niro said, “but the rest of it is all bullshit.” (Everyone cheered at the last sentence.)

Video: Jimmy Fallon on How the Beatles Would Have Liked Twitter, Instagram, Etc.

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Jimmy Fallon simply excels at these skits. Here he’s John Lennon in a witty take from last night’s show. How would the Beatles embrace social networking? Remember, they licensed “Baby You’re a Rich Man” to “The Social Network for well over a million dollars. (That was a Showbiz411 scoop a couple of years ago.)

Seth Meyers is Relaxed and Confident in his “Late Night” Premier

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Seth Meyers’ debut  tonight as host of “Late Night” signals Lorne Michaels’ full takeover of NBC’s late night schedule. Michaels has Jimmy Fallon’s “Tonight” show and “Saturday Night Live.” Fallon debuted last week to great reviews and huge ratings. Now comes Meyers, straight from head writing “SNL” and doing the Weekend Update for years, along with plenty of stand up comedy.

You can’t predict a golden era, but maybe we’re starting one. The combination of Fallon and Meyers is sort of brilliant. Meyers also brings with him “SNL” key player Fred Armisen as leader of his band. On tonight’s debut, we get a glimpse of how much Armisen is value added just in a little repartee at the start of the show about Fred’s supposed new series called “Recent History.” Watch Seth playing with the idea, and then Amy Poehler pick it up later.

But the show is about Seth Meyers, who I really did hear — some 18 months ago– would be Kelly Ripa’s permanent co-host in the morning. He had no trouble playing a young Regis and engaging the audience. (Michael Strahan has done fine, too.)

Meyers is made for “Late Night.”  He’s got to be fun but he doesn’t have to go big big big like Fallon. This isn’t the Tonight show, after all. “Late Night” gives Meyers the ability to get serious sometimes, be on a smaller scale, and still get in a lot of trenchant observations. His opening guests are Poehler, whom he describes as his “best friend” or “close friend,” and you know he really means it.

Poehler is followed by Vice President Joe Biden, who came to the studio Monday night with a huge contingent of Secret Service. He and Poehler had history from his appearance on “Parks and Recreation.” Meyers, rather than get into anything heavy, played off their past. It worked pretty well. Biden proved to funny enough. The studio audience enjoyed him. The Secret Service agents never cracked a smile. The trained German Shepherd attack dog, whose named, coincidentally was Seth, slept through the whole show.

Musical guest is A Great Big World, featuring Ian Axel singing their big hit “Say Something.”

Meyers makes the most relaxed, confident debut ever as a talk show host. Fallon at least had five years of “Late Night” to prepare him for the Tonight show. Meyers just steps into it, and scores. There are some things to tweak, including a very cluttered set that contains not the most interesting furniture. There is no couch. The chairs provided for the guests look uncomfortable and, dare I say, cheap. But those things are minor. The set also has no reference to New York, although the studio does. But you can’t see it unless you’re in the studio.

I can’t wait to see how this week unfurls for “Late Night,” and how Meyers secures the show in his own image.