Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Leonardo DiCaprio: Second BFF in a Dozen Years Pleads Guilty to Fraud

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Leonardo DiCaprio: if you want to be his BFF, be a criminal, too. This week Helly Nahmad, the son of an international art dealer, pleaded guilty to a single  count of gambling in Federal court. He’ll pay $6.4 million in restitution and give up a painting worth of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Nahmad, who has been Di Caprio’s best pal for some time now, faces a sentence of 12- 18 months in federal prison.

District Attorney Preet Bharara’s office said in a statement: “Hillel Nahmad headed an illegal sports gambling business with ties to a Russian-American organized crime ring. Nahmad bet that he would never get caught and he lost.”

Helly told the court: “Judge, this all started as a group of friends betting on sports events, but I recognize that I crossed the line, and I apologize to the court and my family.”

In the end, Nahmad got a sweet deal. If he’d gone to trial and had been convicted he could have gotten 92 years in the pokey.He had to admit to being the primary financier of a $100 million gambling ring. His sentencing isn’t until next March and he probably won’t go to jail. The $6.4 million fine is like pocket change. He and his family are worth billions. Crime pays!

For Leo it’s his second pal since 2001 who’s had to admit guilt of fraud in a federal court. Dana Giacchetto served a little more time in jail and was ordered to pay $14 million in restitution to his victims. It’s unclear if he’s ever paid anyone back for ripping off celebrities and local friends includign DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire in a Ponzi scheme.

Ironically each of Di Caprio’s movies this year– “The Great Gatsby” and “The Wolf of Wall Street”– are about questionable or criminal financiers. Maybe he’s just studying these people for his roles.

 

Mark Wahlberg Film “Lone Survivor” Could Be This Year’s “Hurt Locker”

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Could “Lone Survivor: be “The Hurt Locker” of 2013? Maybe so. Peter Berg’s intense war film had its premiere at the AFI in Hollywood on Tuesday night.  At a recent  Q & A  for ‘Lone Survivor, the real Navy Seal, Marcus Luttrell, on whose book the film is based,  joined stars Mark Wahlberg (who plays Marcus) co-star Taylor Kitsch and director Peter Berg.

This blistering, riveting Universal film is fast becoming a serious awards contender.  Universal Pictures chief Ron Meyer introduced the film. To say that it transfixed the Academy members, VIP’s and press that were in the audience is an understatement. The theater was packed for the both the screening and afterwards.

Wahlberg is clearly a candidate for Best Actor nominations. But he joins a crowded field: Redford, Hanks, Dern, Eijofor, Whitaker, Elba, maybe DiCaprio, Affleck or Bradley Cooper. Tough, tough, tough.

It was a rare night in Hollywood.  Luttrell, a low key Texas boy with southern charm, took the stage and set the tone for a respectful, earnest and fascinating Q and A. The actors portray SEAL Team 10 members on a mission to capture a Taliban leader in the Afghan mountains in 2005.  They run across three goat herders, and the fateful decision whether or not to release them leads to tragic results.  The battles with the Taliban soldiers kills them all except Luttrell, who’s badly wounded and was kept alive by some kind Afghan villagers.

Luttrell, with a service dog close by, recounted the story to the unusually appreciative jaded show business crowd.

Mark was asked why he took the role.  Mark answered, “I was so inspired by the act of courage.  I read the script and the book and saw Marcus on the ‘Today’ show.  It was hard to make the movie with Marcus there.  I was determined to make him and the families of the men that were lost, as proud as I could.”

Peter Berg recounted that, “I read the book and I couldn’t put it down.  I arranged a meeting with Marcus and did my best to convince him to hire me.  We went to a bar and had about 500 beers.  Marcus then told me he would give the book to me, but that I better not fuck it up.”

Marcus was then asked what convinced him?

Marcus replied, “Peter’s attention to detail.  Attention is such a big part of our lives, so I gave him the book.”

Wahlberg summed it up by saying, “For me or anyone else to talk about what we went through is bullshit compared to the sacrifice these men and women make on a daily basis.  I’ve played quite a few real people.  But I’ve never had the sense of responsibility that I had with this.  Look he’s 6’6 and 250 pounds.  So I had to my best to embody him.  I never felt more pressure playing somebody, but I also never felt more pride.”

“Lone Survivor’  is set to have a limited release on December 27, 2013, and have a wide release on January 10, 2014.

Greatest Soap Villain Ever? Roger Thorpe? Stefano DiMera? No: Jeff Kwatinetz

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In what has become a joke of sorts, Prospect Park Productions has filed a $125 million lawsuit against ABC over soap operas. See if you can follow this: ABC cancelled One Life to Live and All My Children. They were done with soaps thanks to Brian Frons, then head of ABC Daytime. They were on the verge of killing General Hospital as well.

Enter Jeff Kwatinetz, the controversial head of Prospect Park. He and former ABC Disney exec Rich Frank run the company. They announce a plan to license the soaps and put them online. They stall as long as they can, and then announce that Prospect Park can’t pull it off. ABC takes three actors from One Life to Live and puts them and their characters on General Hospital.

Prospect Park finally says they will indeed put the shows online, and they want the characters back. Only, two other OLTL characters– minor, and resurrectable– are killed om GH. So Kwatinetz files suit against ABC saying they’ve ruined the potential success of his online plan.

The shows launch anyway online. Susan Lucci, star of All My Children, sees the chaos at Prospect Park and declines to join the effort. They won’t pay her what she wants. So she gets “Devious Maids” on Lifetime, and it turns out to be a hit. Goodbye Susan.

Prospect Park launches The Online Network. Immediately there’s trouble. They cut back the schedule and they keep on issuing crazy press releases. The feeling is, they have no money and no idea of what they’re doing. They get into a squabble with the local unions as well.

The shows have their run. Then Prospect Park says they’re shelving One Life to Live because ABC has ruined their show, and the lawsuit needs to be resolved. They claim All My Children will return, but it never does. And they sue ABC again, this time claiming the network had some kind of conspiracy brewing against them.

Is Kwatinetz the worst soap villain of all time? Possibly. I hate to say I told you so, but I did. Kwatinetz has a long trail of enemies and bad karma. The lawsuits do seem to be smoke screens for Prospect Park’s lack of resources to make The Online Network a reality. The losers are not just the fans, but the actors and crew and production people who depended on those shows for a livelihood. Prospect Park has played fast and loose with them.

Meanwhile: I’ve said this before. Prospect Park’s complaint about ABC killing off soap characters they needed is simply ridiculous. Soap characters are resurrected every day. Characters are successfully recast all the time. If Prospect Park had wanted, they could have done all of these things and more.

PS One victim of this whole mishegos is Leslie Miller, the TV journalist and former host of The Online Network’s weekly wrap up shows. In real life, Miller is Mrs. Frank.

 

Wes Anderson Short Film Starring Jason Schwartzman Is Here

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“Castello Cavalcanti” is a short film sponsored by Prada. It debuted at the Rome Film Festival on Wednesday. As usual, nicely done. Anderson’s next feature, The Grand Budapest Hotel, opens early next year.

You do know that Jason Schwartzman is the nephew of Francis Ford Coppola, son of Talia Shire, first cousin of Sofia Coppola, Roman Coppola, and Nicolas Cage. Just FYI.

American Music Awards: Katy Perry Will Sing But It Won’t be Her Big Hit

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It’s nice to hear that Katy Perry, Jennifer Lopez and TLC have all been lined up for the American Music Awards. Unfortunately, they are relevant to nothing concerning January’s Grammy Awards.

Perry will open the AMAs with her current single called “Unconditionally.” She will not sing her monster hit, Roar, the only single of hers to make the Grammy eligibility deadline of September 30th. So let her sing the new song and get off the stage. The Grammys will get her for the song everyone wants to hear, not the follow up.

Jennifer Lopez: she hasn’t had a real hit in years. She’s not Grammy material anyway. And she’ll lip synch to some convoluted  dance number on the AMAs.

TLC: they are now an emeritus group headed to Las Vegas. They are not chasing waterfalls, just a meaningful paycheck. They wouldn’t be on the Grammys anyway.

The AMAs will be fine, but they will also be cheesy. Yesterday someone alluded to this column saying that things have changed, and that performers can do both the AMAs and the Grammys. Oh no they can’t. And if deals have been worked out for Perry, Gaga and Timberlake, the AMAs will settle for a second tier song or a less spotlighted performance.

Scorsese Film Gets Latest Premiere Possible; “50 Shades” Moved to 2015

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Martin Scorsese and co. are working like crazy to finish “The Wolf of Wall Street.” I can tell you that the movie will get a star studded New York premiere, but really, really late. “Wolf” is set to walk down the red carpet on December 17th at the Ziegfeld Theatre. That’s two days after everyone’s left town. It’s also two weeks or more after the New York Film Critics and other groups have to announce their awards.

Hmm… How is this going to work? Because even if film groups see “Wolf” in some form around December 1st, when Scorsese is back from the Marrakesh Film Festival, that leaves two more weeks to fiddle with the film. And you know they will…”Wolf” opens nationwide on Christmas Day…

“50 Shades of Grey,” a disaster in the making, has been moved to February 2015. Let’s just say they’ve been handcuffed to that day. The film was supposed to open on August 1, 2014. But you know, casting issues have held it up. Now it will arrive for Valentine’s Day. In 2015. Which is too far away to think about now.

Eminem Sells More Than Expected: 780K Won’t Be Matched by Lady Gaga

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Eminem really hit it out of the park this week. His “Marshall Mathers 2 LP” sold 780,000 copies according to hitsdailydouble.com. This is thirty or forty thousand copies more than anyone expected. But the strength of that album, as I’ve said before, comes directly from the single “The Monster” with Rihanna. It just shows what a real hit single can do to drive an album’s sales if it’s timed properly.

This week, all eyes will be on Lady Gaga’s ArtPop album. Can it pull Eminem like numbers? No. But everyone will be happy if “ArtPop” does half that quantity. A 350K sale for Gaga will be met with much applause.

The other big hit this past week was an album from The Robertsons. The family from the hit cable show “Duck Dynasty” actually sold around 75,000 copies and finished at number 3. Why would anyone would want to hear those people “sing” is a mystery to me but the Duck Dynasty brand is huge right now.

The number 2 album: not to leave out Sony Music. They actually pushed Celine Dion up to 77,000 units of her “Loved Me Back to Life” CD. That number is roughly what every “adult” artist sells in their debut week of a new release these days, Five years ago there were 300,000 people who’d buy an album like that. Then there were 100,000. And now it ranges between 60K and 80K. And that’s with a lot of marketing and appearances. Paul McCartney and Elton John just saw that. Reality bites.

 

Lady Gaga PR Push Pays Off: Jeff Koons Sculpture Sets Auction Record for Living Artist

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Art pop indeed! Months and months of press by association with Lady Gaga has paid off. Last night artist Jeff Koons set an auction record at Christie’s. His “Balloon Dog (Orange)” was sold for $58.4 million ($62.6 million including fees.) The price smashed Koons’s previous auction high of $33 million. Not only that, it beat the auction house’s set price of $55 million. And it ended Gerhard Richter’s big sales record from last spring.

The Koons sale was the largest ever for a living artist.

Art auctions are emotional, especially when the numbers are so dizzyingly high and the room is full of crackle and pop. Peter Brandt was the owner of the Koons. There are five others, each in different colors, owned by the likes of disgraced financier Steven A. Cohen, Christie’s owner Francois Pinault, Dakis Joannou, who’s a Greek industrialist, and Los Angeles billionaire Eli Broad.

What’s all the fuss about Koons? The new owner and the bidders involved may not be one of Lady Gaga’s little monsters. But they know the value of press. And for months the pop star has touted Koons as an equal. He designed her album cover, and sculptures for her performances. Teens around the world know his name more than Picasso or Matisse.

There’s no doubt, too, that Gaga benefits from all of this. Presumably the newly minted 27 year old multi millionaire owns some Koons pieces. Their value has just skyrocketed. Koons was a great investment for Gaga.

Judi Dench is M, Steve Coogan is Double-Oh-2: See the New Philomena Video

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Thank god there’s some fun this Oscar season. “Philomena” with an R rating? F that. Leave it to Harvey Weinstein and crew to come up with something fun and ingenious. Frankly if they just Skype Judi Dench into the ratings board meeting, they’ll win. Who could say ‘no’ to her?

Lady Gaga Biggest Sales Problem: No Hit Single to Drive Album Sales

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Will sales of Lady Gaga’s new “ArtPop” album exceed this week’s Eminem debut of around 750,ooo? It’s unlikely. Gaga has a big problem. While “ArtPop” is number 1 right now, it has no hit single.  What’s driving the Eminem album is his hit “The Monster” with Rihanna. It’s number 1 following the path of Katy Perry’s “Roar” which is still high on the charts.

But the highest charting single so far from “ArtPop” is “Applause” at 13 on iTunes. Her R Kelly duet, “Do What U Want,” is further down at 23. This suggests that while Lady Gaga certainly has devoted fans, she’s not reaching beyond them with a big breakout song.  And that’s where her album sales may break off.

Gaga is getting help again from Amazon. The massive retailer is selling the MP3 download for “ArtPop”, clean or dirty, for just $5.99. That’s three to four dollars lower than most other albums. Arcade Fire’s new “Reflektor” album MP3 for $11.99. Miley Cyrus’s “Bangerz” album is selling for $3.99.

Of course, Amazon.com deep discounts most MP3 downloads. Their audience typically buys physical CDs. On Amazon, the actual CDs are often offered with a free MP3 download.

That’s because the real downloading goes on at iTunes, Amazon’s competitor.  Amazon’s audience skews older, so their exposure isn’t a question. For example, they’re selling the explicit (lots of the f word) version of Eminem’s new album for just $3.99.

In 2010, Amazon got into trouble for selling Lady Gaga’s “Born this Way” for just 99 cents. A rule went into place immediately that only albums selling for $3.49 or more would be counted in the weekly charts by SoundScan.