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Elton John Sends Statement to Russia on Anti-Gay Laws

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Sir Elton John has issued a statement to Russia and President Putin on the anti-gay laws that are causing violence and danger there. The statement was just posted on www.ejaf.org. Here it is:

I am deeply grateful for the support of the Russian people who have welcomed and accepted me in their country ever since I first visited in 1979.

On my last visit, in December 2013, I wondered whether the new legislation banning “homosexual propaganda” might have changed that. It hadn’t. I still felt the same warmth and welcome from the audiences that I have felt every time I have been in Russia.

On that trip I met with members of the LGBT community in Moscow. Although I was still welcomed as an openly gay foreigner, I wanted to really understand at first-hand what difference the legislation had made to Russian LGBT in their own country. What I heard reinforced all the media stories that have been circling since the propaganda bill became federal law: that vicious homophobia has been legitimised by this legislation and given extremists the cover to abuse people’s basic human rights.

The people I met in Moscow – gay men and lesbians in their 20′s, 30′s and 40′s –  told me stories about receiving threats from vigilante groups who would “cure” them of homosexuality by dousing them with urine or beating them up.  One young man was stalked outside a gay club by someone posing as a taxi driver who tried to garrotte him with a guitar string because he was a “sodomite.”  Everyone shared stories of verbal and physical abuse – at work, in bars and restaurants or in the street – since the legislation came into force last June.  And, some of the vital work providing HIV prevention information to the gay community has been labelled “homosexual propaganda” and shut down.

It was very clear to me that although foreigners like myself who are visiting Russia are not affected by this new law (and President Putin has recently confirmed this), it is a very different story for those living inside the country. As Maria Maksakova told her fellow Russian MPs last month:  “We are seeing extremely negative consequences as a result of this law, with the growth of hate crimes.”

President Putin asserts that this was not the intention, but it is undoubtedly the effect that this law has had by promoting misunderstanding and ignorance. In particular, it is very disappointing that the law explicitly links homosexuality with child sex abuse, which countless studies have shown to be conclusively wrong.

The people I met in Moscow were decent, kind, patriotic men and women who had no thought of forcing their sexuality on anyone. Whatever the intention of Russia’s homosexuality and paedophilia propaganda laws, I am absolutely clear from my own personal experience that it is proving deeply dangerous to the LGBT community and deeply divisive to Russian society.  I would welcome the opportunity to introduce President Putin to some Russians who deserve to be heard, and who deserve to be treated in their own country with the same respect and warm welcome that I received on my last visit.

Neil Young Will Unveil His Potential iPod Killer Music System in March

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Oh no, Pono is almost here. Neil Young told a large group of producers and engineers in the music industry last night that he will unveil his potential iPod killing music system in March at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas.

ponoThe great rocker/singer-songwriter was honored last  night in Los Angeles at the immense Village Studios by the Producers and Engineers Wing of the Recording Academy with a lavish and I must say cool celebration that brought out his singer songwriter wife Peggy Young, his pals Stephen Stills and Kris Kristofferson, as well as Jakob Dylan, Chad Smith of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, famed producer Al Schmitt, plus a double Beatles surprise of Peter Asher (producer extraordinaire, famed singer, innovator) and legendary engineer Geoff Emerick (The Beatles, Paul McCartney, Elvis Costello).

Every room of the massive multi-level Village Studios was packed with industry types chowing down and getting demo’s of things like new headphone technology (dts), sound systems, and Spotify-Pandora type rivals.

But it’s Young’s Pono that got everyone including Neil talking. (Also talking another Neil–Portnow, head of the Recording Academy-kicking off Grammy week, who introduced Young.)

There are currently no competitors for Apple’s highly compressed iPod sound. Samsung stopped making MP3 players. Creative Labs, my old favorite, rolled over and gave up. Pono could be a game changer if listeners realize they’re missing hearing most of the music on an iPod/iPhone etc.

“Pono” by the way means ‘righteousness’ or ‘goodness’ in Hawaiian. It could mean ‘money’ in English if all goes according to plan.

Dave Matthews was a surprise guest. He played three songs for Neil on acoustic guitar, doing a pretty good Neil Young imitation on “Hey Hey My My.”

Check back here for a video of Neil’s terrific speech. Here’s a transcript:

So this is a cool night because we’re all here together. I know almost everybody here. If I don’t know you, I thought I did when I saw you. It really is great. A lot of us, you know, producers and engineers –I’m kind of a producer, partially, an engineer, I’m not really good at either one. It’s hurt my records in the past. We’re performance-oriented: technical things don’t matter that much.

That’s only one way of making records. A lot of you out here are craftsmen: just beautiful records, and take great care with every note. And I know I’m not one of them. I like to capture the moment. I like to record the moment. I like to get the first time that I sung the song. I like to get the first time the band plays the song. So there’s a lot of compromises you make to get that feeling, but in the long run, that’s where the pictures are when I hear my words and when I see the pictures while I’m listening. So that’s what we try to record.

Recording is so important. We think about the equipment, we think about what are we using, what do we have, what are we recording on, what are we singing through, where is it going, how long is the wire? Why is that piece of shit in the wire between me and where I’m going? Get that out! Don’t join the wire together, get one wire, because every time you go through one of those pieces of crap, something happens. We paid big bucks for this place, and we’re going to use every bit of it. And we’re not going to use what we don’t want. Thank you. Great recording here.

I did record here! I think I recorded a few tracks here a long time ago. There’s a song, “Like a Hurricane,” that I didn’t record here. But I couldn’t sing at that time, when I recorded that, because I had just had some sort of operation. They told me to stop for a month, but I couldn’t stop the music, so in my studio at home, me and Crazy Horse got together and we played this track. It was about fifteen minutes long, because I’d just written it the night before. I recorded it on an acoustic – now let’s play with all these other instruments and it’s going to be great.

So we got the instruments out and we played it once. And we screwed it up really badly at first. If you listen to the record, you can tell we screwed it up. We cut it off. It just starts out of nowhere. But that was over – now we’re in the record. And it’s divided, it doesn’t matter how cool and together the beginning was, but where it went as soon as it started. So we shortened a little bit.

Then I was here at this place, in 1974 or something, and I said, “You know, a couple of weeks ago, when I couldn’t sing – ” By the way, I know I can’t sing. I mean I couldn’t make a sound. And of course, this was back in the day, way back there. So I’m saying, “We have this tape here. I brought this piece to multitrack. We’ve never played it. I’m going to sing it, because I never got a chance to sing it.”

So we put it on, and he played back about ten seconds, and I said, “Okay, stop. Everything was working, right? We heard everything? Okay, there’s no reason to listen to it. Because I was there – I know what it is. And it’s on the tape. We don’t have to listen to it. Let’s not wipe the shit off the tape listening to it. Let’s record while the stuff is still on – let’s listen to what’s there, and record it to a two-track while it’s still there.” Because if you listen over and over and over again, it goes away, bye-bye! Because the tape doesn’t like to rub over this head, and then part of it goes away, it’s terrible. That bothers me every time the tape plays. So I never hardly ever listen!

Okay, they put the tape on and I went out and I talk: “Am I there?” Yes. “Good. Okay. Record. Number one. Just record all the time – that’s why we’re here. Don’t not record at all, ever. Record! It’s a studio! Record! Practice at home! The red button’s not that scary, really not.”

So we press the button and they start the tape, and I start singing the song. It’s long, so it’s like, four or five verses over and over again. So I sing one verse, and then the other verse – there’s only two verses, so I just keep singing them, one after the other. Later on, we can cut it down. The other guys aren’t here, and I hear the harmony part, so I want to sing the harmonies now. We did the harmonies, so we did three tracks, three times through, one time on each track. We had all this stuff, and it was the first time I ever heard it. The first time I ever listened to “Like a Hurricane.” And I was hearing it, and I was singing it, and I sang the harmony, and I sang the other harmony, and then we mixed it. So it was like the five-and-sixth time, and then we mixed it. There’s a message in there somewhere.

My memory of this place is what it is, that we do records like that. The idea is, for me, to try to get magic. Who knows where the hell it’s coming from? I don’t – so please record. It’s expensive to sit here and not push the button.

I know who you people are. I know you’re animals, and I know some of you are very funny. Some of you are just dry – never laugh. “Good morning.” I love you all people, because I know what you’re doing. I know how crazy you are about all the things that I don’t care about. Sometimes you make great records, and it’s fantastic. They’re not like my records – sometimes I can’t feel them, but I really appreciate them. No, sometimes I can feel them and I go, “Holy shit, how did they do that? How did they make that record? I know they layered it – it’s not like a documentary where something happens and you take a picture, cinema verite. This is a movie: somebody created all the scenes, and there was the dialogue, and then they did the dialogue again, and there was the foley to do the sounds, and they did all the stuff, and everything’s perfect – but it’s still good.”

There’s nothing wrong with that – it’s just a different way of doing it than I could ever do, because I have so little ability to do that, that it would really suck: over and over again, getting it right. That’s why I’m flat, that’s why it doesn’t matter that there’s bad notes. That doesn’t mean it’s not production – it just means it’s the kind of production that we do.

Some people are here tonight that I’ve worked with over the ages that are just really incredible people. Al Schmitt’s here tonight. And Niko Bolas, he’s here. John Hanlon is here. I really appreciate that these guys are – I know you really appreciate, especially Al, because he’s the father of what’s going on here, and he’s still here. He has staying power. And he was recording the way that I want to record now. I’m going to make a record with Al – we’re talking about making a record together where there’s only one mic, but we do a huge orchestra. And when we finish doing that performance, and every guy’s standing the right length from the mic: the background vocal is like “hey-hey-hey,” and of course I’m up here, but they’re right there, so it sounds like that there. So we’re going to do it that way. We’re not going to mix it: we’re going to do it, and mix it while we do it. Everybody can get in the right place, and if it’s not righ – -well, we’ll move the bass up. Move the bass closer. It’s not loud enough? Move the amp closer, then! It sounds good, but it’s just too quiet, so move it up. Move it in, and the drums? Leave it over there, go back farther.

Do you know how fun that is to do? That is so much fun. It’s like playing music – it’s not making music, it’s playing it. I love doing these things. And I’m anxious to do something I’ve never done before, because there were great records made that way. There’s something that happens with one mic. When everyone sings into one mic, when everybody plays into the same mic: I’ve just never been able to do that, with some rare instances like when I record in a recording booth from a 1940s state fair. I got that sound by closing myself into a telephone booth. And I notice, it sounds just like an old record. And I like the sound of old records! I’ve always loved that.

So all I’m trying to say is I’m one of you. You honor me, you’re honoring yourself. It’s not me: it’s you. It’s what we do. Thank you so much. Digital. Digital is not bad. But Xerox is not good. I always like to say Picasso was really happy to see original Picassos everywhere, but when he went into some places and saw Xeroxes of Picassos, it didn’t make him as happy, because he thought people thought that we was making those things. The thing we do is, we make great stuff in the studio and then we kiss its ass goodbye, because nobody’s ever going to hear it. That’s unfortunate, and it didn’t use to be that way. That’s something that happened to us – that’s an injury we sustained, and it deeply hurt us. So the time has come for us to recover and to bring music back to the people in a way that they can recognize it in their souls – through the window of their souls, their ears. So they can feel and vibrate and so that they can get goosebumps. We cherish those fucking goosebumps. We really need those.

Being impressed by something, and how cool it is, and how sharp it is, and how snappy it is, is one thing, and that translates into almost any media. But when you’re singing something very soulful from your heart, and the echo is perfect and everything’s great and you’re using maybe an acoustic chamber and everything sounds great. And then you listen to it and you love it, but you hear it somewhere else and it’s gone – that’s terrible. We don’t like that. Not many of us like that, we’re not happy about it. So we’re trying to change that, and we’re trying to make it better. We’re trying to make music sound technically better, and that’s what I want to do. So we have a player that plays whatever the musicians made digitally, and that’s going to come out. We’re announcing that at SXSW, we’re introducing it, it’s called Pono, and that’s my commercial, thank you very much.

Tarantino Says He’s Shelving New Movie After Script Leaks

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Quentin Tarantino says he’s shelving his new script, “The Hateful Eight,” because it ‘leaked’ (not literally). Mike Fleming of Deadline.com has been covering this all day after breaking the story that the script existed at all. Tarantino told Fleming he started getting calls from agents about actors for different roles.

Tarantino told Fleming that he’d shown the script to three actors– Bruce Dern, Michael Madsen, and Tim Roth. Madsen and Roth are Tarantino regulars. Dern is new. There was buzz around town over Golden Globe week that Christoph Waltz was involved, too.

Here’s an ironic moment for you: I ran into Dern and Waltz with their respective agents in a long narrow corridor in the Beverly Hilton on Golden Globe night. They were each coming from The Weinstein Company party. We clogged up the hallway talking about Tarantino’s script. Dern told me he’d be thrilled to be included but knew nothing. Waltz was totally perplexed. He said he really hadn’t heard a word from Tarantino.

This went on for quite a while. Fleming’s boss, Jay Penske, and his beautiful wife actually encountered our whole weird meeting. (It is a narrow hallway.) I never wrote about it because everyone denied any knowledge of “The Hateful Eight.”

Fleming says Tarantino feels betrayed. But he should calm and give it a second thought. Whoever leaked the script, it doesn’t matter. But we always need good new movies. I wish he’d bring back Robert Forster, too.

I hope Mike can talk him back into doing it!

 

Bruce Springsteen Enters Charts at Number 1 with “High Hopes”

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Yo! Bruce Springsteen is back and on top of the charts. His “High Hopes” is numero with 102k copies sold including one I bought today physically on CD at the Culver City Target. Let me tell you, this album sounds fantastic on a good car stereo.

The song choices are just fine, and the band and Bruce are kickin’. Tom Morello guest stars on some of the tracks. After 40 years, Bruce can put out anything out he wants. He’s got nothing to prove. I think “High Hopes” will actually be one of his biggest sellers.

Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings come in at number 22 with 12,105 copies. That’s pretty good considering there’s a smallish effort behind it at best. Sharon may be benefiting from her appearance in “Wolf of Wall Street” singing “Goldfinger.”

Also,Roseanne Cash has a new album out. And for some reason the soundtrack to “Pitch Perfect” is back on the charts. Britney Spears’ “Britney Jean” sold 5,300 copies as it exits the chart at number 48.

Wolf of Wall Street Producers Settled by the Academy

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We now know who would be allowed on the stage at the Dolby Theater if “The Wolf of Wall Street” won Best Picture. The Motion Picture Academy has winnowed down the long list of credited producers to the four who actually did the work and deserve the credit. They are Martin Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio, Emmy Tillinger Koskoff, and Joey McFarland. Crossed off the list are producers who helped out or raised money in some way: Rick Yorn, Irwin Winkler, and Alexandra Milchan, Richard Barratta, Georgia Kacandes, Danny Dimbort, Riza Aziz, and Adam Somner. They will all be at the party, however. Now if someone could explain why Thelma Schoonmaker wasn’t nominated for Best Editing…

Grammy Awards Finale Will be Rockin’: Nine Inch Nails, Queens of Stone Age, Dave Grohl

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It’s going to a rockin’ finale for this Sunday’s Grammy Awards. The producers just announced a finale performance with Nine Inch Nails, Queens of the Stone Age featuring Dave Grohl and Lindsey Buckingham. Plus they just added the amazing Gary Clark Jr. and country star Hunter Hayes.

I can tell you exclusively that Steven Tyler will present Album of the Year.

There’s also a big Beatles segment with Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. There are rumors of Julian Lennon and Dhani Harrison possibly joining in. Olivia Harrison and Yoko Ono will make an appearance. The Beatles are getting a Lifetime Achievement Award on Saturday evening in honor of their 50th anniversary and being the greatest pop act in history  (my words).

Katy Perry, Lorde, Robin Thicke and Daft Punk are also going to perform on the show. And there may be a surprise appearance from Beyonce with or without Jay Z.

More to come…

NFL Commish Makes $29.5 Mil a Year– 15 Times More Than Tax Free Org Gives to Charity, More than CEOs of Ford, Heinz, FedEx

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As the Super Bowl approaches New York much like a blizzard, here are some things to think about: in 2012, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell was paid $29.5 million to run the organization. And that’s not all. The NFL, if you didn’t realize it, exists as a 501 c 6 organization. It’s not for profit!

In order to have that status, the NFL must be run as a charitable foundation. In 2012, they gave away a meager $2.3 million. Almost all of it–$2.1 million– went to the NFL Hall of Fame.

Goodell made 15 times what the group donated to other charities.

More crazy: Goodell’s salary is 1/10th of what the NFL claimed in total assets for 2012– $255 million.

Or even crazier: the NFL only made charitable donations equaling one-one hundredth of their annual income.

Here are the stats: The NFL’s most recent Form 990 filed with the IRS ended on March 31, 2012. They claimed revenue of $255 million, up from $240 million in 2011. So, if you were concerned, things are good. The NFL has assets of over $822 million.

Under “grants”– meaning donations to other non profit organizations, the NFL did increase the number from just over $900,000 to $2.3 million. Generous right? However: their total salaries increased by $27 million to a total of over $107 million.

Here’s the best part: after all that, thanks to creative thinking, the NFL claims it finished the year in the red  with negative $316 million.

What else did they spend money on? Well, for one thing, new office construction cost $36 million. That’s thirty six million dollars.

Just to put all this in perspective: going by numbers in Forbes, Goodell would come in at around number 28 of the highest paid CEOs in 2012. He made more than the heads of FedEx, AT&T, Heinz, Ford Motors, Goldman Sachs, as well as Rupert Murdoch.

Remember– they’re for profit, not tax free foundations.

And if you’re wondering, neither Major League Baseball nor the National Basketball Association is registered as a charity, foundation or trade organization. They each gave up their tax- free status years ago.

 

 

 

PGA: Ben Affleck Is Man Enough to Play New Batman Says TV Producer Chuck Lorre

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“Don’t worry Comic Con, he’ll be a very good Batman.” That’s how Two and a Half Men producer Chuck Lorre praised Ben Affleck at last night’s PGA Awards. Lorre, recipient of a tribute at the PGA for a long list of hit TV shows, gave a very funny, a little off color speech last night that hit on several topics.

One of them was once pulling up next to Affleck in a men’s room. “Yes, you can ask, I looked,” quipped Lorre, who went on to reassure fan boys that Affleck was man enough for the job.

Later, when Affleck took the stage to give out the award for Best Produced film– which turned out to be a tie– he got a lot of raucous applause. “Of course I’d be out of the room when someone mentioned that I had [redacted]!” Affleck joked.

Lorre also thanked producers Tom Werner and Marcy Carsey for making him work with Roseanne Barr, Brett Butler , and Cybill Shepherd– all three, in a row!” His funniest observation: how he wrote a spec script for “Golden Girls” which Betty White loved but was shot down by a Warner TV exec who said it didn’t meet the show’s high standards.

“She’s still at Warner Bros,” Lorre said. “And when I see her in the commissary she pretends not to see me.”

Polite Canadians, Rude Publicist Make “Klondike” Red Carpet Memorable

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“That’s ridiculous!” Tim Blake Nelson fumed about Joel and Ethan Coen’s Oscar snubs for “Inside Llewyn Davis,” Thursday night at the premiere of “Klondike,” the Discovery Channel’s first scripted mini-series. “It was hands down the best movie of the year.”

The V.I.P. screening of “Klondike” took place at the Best Buy Theater on 44th Street, and the lavish afterparty – with dancing saloon girls, top-drawer liquor and Klondike bars for dessert – was across the street at the Discovery Center, which was recreated to look like the frontier town of Dawson, where most of the adventure story takes place. (The series airs on three consecutive nights beginning tonight.)

“Klondike” stars Richard Madden (“Game of Thrones”) as Bill Haskell, a college grad who sets out with his best friend Byron Epstein (Augustus Prew of “Borgias” and “Kick-Ass 2”) to the wilds of the Canada Yukon to find their fortune during in the 1980’s Klondike Gold Rush. These guys don’t know what they’re getting into. They try to cross dangerous mountains sheeted in ice, and to survive desperate, treacherous characters out to hustle or kill them. (The series is based on the fact-based book by Charlotte Gray, “Gold Diggers: Striking it Rich in the Klondike.”)

Abbie Cornish, who is a natural blonde, is unrecognizable in the role of dark-haired Belinda Mulrooney, a tough-talking, successful Dawson businesswoman. Other cast members are Sam Shepard, Conor Leslie, Ian Hart, Johnny Simmons (as Jack London) and Tim Roth.

The cinematography is beautiful, with sweeping landscapes, and snow-covered mountains. And although it’s still a standard adventure yarn as far as Westerns go, the action scenes are nifty and the production values are high. My favorite scene is in the wilds where the hero is surrounded by wolves, the four-legged kind. (In the theater, there was an adorable stuffed animal wolf on each seat.)

Earlier on the red carpet, Nelson, who was at the premiere with his very nice and attractive wife and cute kids, told me he took the role of Joe Meeker, a man of few words but deep loyalty, after he learned screenwriter Paul Scheuring (“Prison Break”), producer Ridley Scott and director Simon Cellan Jones (“Treme”) were all involved.

He added, “I love shooting in Canada, particularly you had to shoot this in Canada. I suppose we could have shot in Alaska, but it was the perfect place to shoot it, so you didn’t have the usual negatives about Canada, which it’s shot for the U.S. and ends up looking generic and unspecific and doesn’t ultimately have that detail and credibility that movies really need to strive for, but in this case, where we were looked like the Klondike.”

As for working in the Canadian cold, Nelson said, “It was a big budget. They gave us jackets and foot warmers. That was fine. Nobody has anything to complain about.”

The “Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?” actor-director had kind words for Sam Shephard. “We were best buddies on this. We went out almost every night. He’s a great guy. He has humility to match his intelligence and that’s quite rare.”

Cornish, who wore long dangling diamond earrings, and whose blonde’s tresses were styled into a low chignon, told me that working in the harsh weather conditions made everything more realistic. “It was fantastic. It was frozen over with ice. We really did all the dog sledding, and we really rode all the horses What I felt was that the space and the elements started to inform us on a much more deeper level of what these characters went through and the incredible achievements they made in an environment like that. It changed us for sure from the first day.”

By the way, it was the most polite and laid back red carpet I’ve ever been on since most of the press were Canadians and said “sorry” every few seconds. Most of their questions were about shooting in Canada.

“I have a massive soft spot for Canada,” Cornish said, thereby winning over the entire Canadian press corps. She added, “I shot ‘Sucker Punch’ in Vancouver and obviously ‘RoboCop’ in Toronto, and this one in Calgary, Canada. As an Australian, I can say we’re very similar, right? And I think it was the perfect setting for it because it gave us space and it gave us the environment that we needed for the film. We shot everything outdoors. Nothing was on the stage or it was never make believe. It was all real and I think when you watch the show you can feel that, and I think as actors you thrive off that and I think it pulls things out of you that you don’t even know you have within you.”

I asked about her look in “Klondike,” how her big, black hair and leather garb – very dominatrix –  helped her get into the role.

“For me, because I have blond hair, to put on a wig that is dark and with this long hair, you’re steeping into this other characters in so many ways in regards to their clothes, in regards to the way they look. There were small things that the make up ladies did, you know, very small things that you don’t really notice, but they changed the shape of my eyes a little bit and darkened my eyebrows and as soon as that wig went on, I was Belinda.” Cornish added, “So much came from inside, but all of those things give you the reassurance that it will register quite easily on the outside.”

Red carpets are always a little wacky but a head scratcher was why was Jerry Springer suddenly there doing interviews, while Richard Madden – the handsome actor just got killed off in last seasons “Game of Thrones” – was kept from talking to the press?

Even Springer seemed a little puzzled why he was there. But it turns out he’s on a new crime show on Investigation Discovery Channel about “the greatest crimes of the last 20-30 years. We look into it and look into the backstory and where they are now, the ones that survived.” He says these people are even scarier than the ones on his tabloid trash show. “At least the ones on our show haven’t committed crimes, they’re just dysfunctional.”

At the party I started to ask Richard Madden, who was at the premiere with his parents and who is next up in the Cate Blanchett starer “Cinderella,” how rough it got shooting in Alberta. He started to reply when he was pulled away by the Discovery Channel publicist, who said, “I’m sorry. He’s done. I promised him drinks.”

The charming Madden turned around and said plaintively, “I’m sorry.” He stayed at the party with his parents until midnight.

 

Oscar Wars Begin as “Gravity,” “12 Years” Tie at the Producers Guild

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The Oscar race turns into a war among three big studios now as “Gravity” and “12 Years a Slave” tied for the win at the Producers Guild Awards on Sunday night. With “American Hustle” the winner of the Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble, there is now a big studio war among Warner Bros., Fox Searchlight, and Sony Columbia.

A tie is a good enough surprise in a season when everything looked pretty rote at this point. The other big winners of the night were Alex Gibney’s Wikileaks movie as Best Documentary, “Modern Family” as Best TV comedy and “Breaking Bad” as Best TV drama.

There were tributes to Disney’s Bob Iger (presented by Robert Downey Jr) and TV producer Chuck Lorre (very amusing speech). There were also tributes to James Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson, the daughter and stepson of Albert “Cubby” Broccoli. Stephen Colbert and chef Anthony Bourdain won in the non fiction category. “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” wasn’t mentioned or even nominated. “Duck Dynasty” lost to Bourdain. The republic is safe.

Some big names who turned up either in the audience or on stage in the Beverly Hilton Ballroom were Brad Pitt, Daniel Craig, Leonardo DiCaprio, Julia Louis Dreyfus, Forest Whitaker, Ron Howard, producer Jerry Weintraub and director David O. Russell.

The best presenters of the night were a tie between Kevin Spacey, who opened the show with a dead on Johnny Carson imitation; and “Captain Phillips” actor Barkhad Abdi. He said, “I am from Minnesota and I drive a limousine. Tonight I came here in a limousine. I did not drive it. Thank you, Hollywood.”

After winning the PGA, “12 Years” director Steve McQueen was having trouble holding back tears. Are you overwhelmed, I asked him? He nodded. “Yes.”

He wanted to know what a tie means. If only I knew. Sue Kroll, who has masterfully guided Warner Bros.’ “Gravity” to this moment, is tenacious and smart. The Fox people are too. The Sony people aren’t giving up.

What next? Directors Guild should go to Alfonso Cuaron for “Gravity.” The Writers Guild will split between “Hustle” as original script and — because “12 Years is ineligible– “Wolf of Wall Street” maybe for adapted. And February will be  a long, long month until the Oscars on March 2nd.