Sunday, December 21, 2025
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Watergate Stars Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein Say Washington Post Editorial Decision is “Disappointing”

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Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein are the most famous reporters who ever worked for the Washington Post. Their fame came from investigating Richard Nixon and the Watergate scandal.

Now the pair have denounced the Washington Post over its decision to not endorse a presidential candidate. They lay the fault — as most do — at the feet of owner Jeff Bezos and publisher Will Lewis. The Post decision came after the same one from the Los Angeles Times.

Both the Post and Times have been met with intense criticism and canceled subscriptions. Billionaire owners censoring the editorial direction of a newspaper isn’t new, but it’s the single worst they could do; the editors’ acquiescence is an example of monumental cowardice In the case of the Post, the late Katherine Graham is no doubt turning in her grave.

Woodward and Bernstein wrote (and I’ve added paragraph breaks for easier reading):

“We respect the traditional independence of the editorial page, but this decision 11 days out from the 2024 presidential election ignores the Washington Post’s own overwhelming reportorial evidence on the threat Donald Trump poses to democracy.

“Under Jeff Bezos’s ownership, the Washington Post’s news operation has used its abundant resources to rigorously investigate the danger and damage a second Trump presidency could cause to the future of American democracy and that makes this decision even more surprising and disappointing, especially this late in the electoral process.”

RIP Phil Lesh, 84, Bass Player and Founding Member of the Grateful Dead

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What a week for the members of the Grateful Dead.

A few days ago I announced they would receive the Musicares Person of the Year Award.

Now beloved bass player Phil Lesh, a founding member, has died at age 84.

I can tell you exclusively that Phil was on daily dialysis, and suffered from kidney disease for quite a while. I’m told that it was amazing he got this far.

Without Lesh there are only three original members of the Dead left to receive the Musicares award or the Kennedy Center induction in December. They are Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart, and Bob Weir.

Phil Lesh was the center of the Grateful Dead sound. He gave those songs and performances their driving energy on stage and on the records. His playing was mesmerizing — ask the Deadheads who could listen to him for hours and hours.

What a shame. Condolences to his family, fans, and friends.

Tom Hanks, Robin Wright’s Still Unseen “Here” Relies on “Forrest Gump” Nostalgia Without the Chocolates

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It seems like it happened yesterday, but Robert Zemeckis’s “Forrest Gump” was massive hit in 1994. That was (sorry) thirty years ago.

Now we’re about to get a new movie from Zemeckis, along with “Gump” stars Tom Hanks and Robin Wright. It’s called “Here.” But in the press, it’s also known as “Where?”

“Here” is supposed to arrive on 2,500 screens in one week. Yet no one’s seen it, there’s no buzz, and you can’t figure out from the trailer what it’s even about.

The few who have seen it have posted some reaction to Twitter X. Their comments are mostly about the technology — like Martin Scorsese used in “The Irishman” — so that Hanks and Wright can age and de-age as married couple going through a lifetime together.

Sony is depending on “Gump” nostalgia, almost making “Here” — which hasn’t been shown at a single film festival this fall — seem like the sequel to the Oscar winning film. Even the ads are similar. But that maybe where the similarities end. Will “Here” be a box of chocolates? Or something less tasty?

Stay tuned….

Broadway: “Romeo and Juliet” for Teens Makes Parting Easy With Mostly Negative Reviews

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“Romeo and Juliet.” How could you screw it up with hot young people in the leads?

Reviews are in from last night’s Broadway opening of the Sam Gold production. Yikes. According to didtheylikeit.com, the greatest tragic romance ever told did not go over well.

Of the main reviews, six were positive, seven were mixed, and five were out and out negative. The NY Times reviews, listed as mixed, is actually pretty damning.

The Washington Post: “Unfortunately, the production’s rave-like, nihilistic drive does little to make up for its lack of clarity or a pulse.”

The Times: “If you’re confused — and even a frequent flier might be — you can consult a program insert that visualizes the Montagues and Capulets as a mood board.”

Variety: “Although the production has a heartbeat, it’s missing a heart… When he kills Tybalt in revenge, the moment is empty of real feeling. In the moments after that — when he’s exiled and so must leave his love; when he discovers Juliet is dead; etc. — there is no heartbreak at all. There’s not a wet eye in the house.”

Kit Connor, age 20, and Rachel Zegler, 23, star in the title roles. There are no other names known to anyone over 21, if that. Yet the play — cleverly marketed — is making $1 million a week so far. Will this decidedly ambivalent reaction keep the box office going? We’ll see.

If anyone can explain to me, please do:

Exclusive: Sales of Melania Trump Souvenir Memoir Down 59% in Second Week Despite PR Push

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Melania Trump’s book sales are as successful as her husband’s other businesses, like hawking steaks and suits and his Trump University.

“Melania,” a memoir with no memories, dropped 59% in its second week of sales according to Circana Book Scan.

The tome, which comes in an odd sticky cover, dropped from 85,000 to just 35,000.

The book is currently number 12 on amazon.com. On the New York Times best seller list, “Melania” plummeted from one week at number 1 to number 5.

“Melania” has been roundly criticized as a piece of campaign propaganda with no self-reflection or revelations. None of Donald Trump’s scandals or trials is addressed, and even the author’s history as a model in Slovenia reads more like a bad novel than anything remotely factual.

The current book retails for $30 but the author promises a “collector’s edition” for $250 that includes her photos of the sky while traveling aloft Air Force One.

Watergate Stars Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein Say Washington Post Editorial Decision is “Disappointing”

Lady Gaga Returns to Form, and the Dance Floor, with Very Catchy “Disease”

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Lady Gaga is back.

She’s back to form, and on the dance floor, with “Disease,” the first single from her upcoming 7th album.

And while her jazz performances on “Harlequin” were impeccable and her ballad singing is plaintive on “Die with a Smile,” Gaga knew it was time to back to her core business.

“Disease” should spread pretty quickly on the radio and in dance clubs. It’s a little bit of a throwback to her “Fame Monster” days. And we all need that right now in time of incredible stress.

Trump Homage Rally to MSG 1939 Nazi Rally: No Balls Allowed, or Firearms, Explosives, Pepper Spray

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You may have heard Donald Trump is planning a rally this Sunday at Madison Square Garden.

It’s an homage to the 1939 Nazi rally hosted the Garden. Of course, there wasn’t media like there is today. No one got what was going on. You have plenty of notice today.

Trump organizers have sent a list of items not allowed in the Garden. (I feel bad for Garden security. They’ll have their hands full with right wing nuts and MAGAts.)

Top of the list to leave at home: Balls. MAGA has no balls, so it shouldn;t be a problem.

The whole list:

UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE PROHIBITED ITEMS LIST

• Aerosols

• Alcoholic beverages

• Appliances (i.e. Toasters)

• Backpacks, bags, roller bags, suitcases, and bags exceeding size restrictions

(12”x14”x5”)

• Balloons

• Balls

• Banners, signs, placards

• Chairs

• Coolers

• Drones and other unmanned aircraft systems

• E-Cigarettes

• Explosives of any kind (including fireworks)

• Firearms

• Glass, thermal and metal containers

• Laser lights and laser pointers

• Mace and/or pepper spray

• Noisemakers, such as air horns, whistles, drums, bullhorns, etc.

• Packages

• Poles, sticks and selfie sticks

• Spray containers

• Structures

• Supports for signs/placards

• Tripods

• Umbrellas

• Weapons

• And any other items that may pose a threat to the security of the event as

determined by and at the discretion of the security screeners.

Bob Dylan Says Sad to Miss Meeting Book Publisher: “I thought they might be interested in some of my stories”

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Is Bob Dylan alright?

His Tweets on his verified account are getting more peculiar every few days.

Bob says he was on tour in Frankfurt and went to the famous Book Fair there.

He writes: “At the hotel in Frankfurt there was a publishing convention and every room was taken, parties all night. I didn’t know there were so many book publishers in the world. I was trying to find Crystal Lake Publishing so I could congratulate them on publishing The Great God Pan, one of my favorite books. I thought they might be interested in some of my stories. Unfortunately it was too crowded and I never did find them.”

It’s not like he doesn’t have a book publisher who’d like his stories. Simon & Schuster published his “Chronicles, Part 1” in 2004. . They also published his “Philosophy of Modern Song” in 2022.

I’m sure they’d be up for a book of short stories.

Maybe he’s kidding, maybe not. I wish we could have seen Dylan going up to these people at the Fair and introducing himself!

Broadway: All Star “Our Town” Packs Devastating Punch with Jim Parsons, Katie Holmes, Richard Thomas

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Thornton Wilder won a Pulitzer Prize for “Our Town” in 1938, it was one of his three Pulitzers. It went on to become a staple of American theater, but sometimes we forget its powerful gut punch.

It’s impossible to forget in Kenny Leon’s slow burn production that just opened on Broadway with Jim Parsons as the stage manager leading a cast of 28 people. As he says breaking the fourth wall at the start of the play, some of those people include Katie Holmes (her best stage work ever), the eternally young Richard Thomas, Zoey Deutsch, Ephraim Sykes, and Julie Halston.

“Our Town” is a three act play, but Leon has condensed it and taken out the intermissions, which makes the thrust of the story even more powerful. In the first act we see life in Grover’s Corners, a small town where everyone knows each other going back generations. In the second, the two primary young people, George and Emily, marry, guaranteeing the future generations of Grover’s Corner.

For the first two acts, there’s a glow of nostalgia over small town Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire. Wilder wrote it in 1938 but the action takes place between 1901 and 1913. Even in 1938, people were trying to remember when America was great, a simpler time that — as you find out in act 3 — never existed. That’s because Act 3 takes place in a cemetery, where reality has set in along with the cycle of life and great tragedy. People in the audience last night were in tears by the of the play.

Plenty of good actors have played the stage manager over the years including Paul Newman, Spalding Gray and David Cromer in his own landmark production downtown in 2009. Jim Parsons, who will always be referenced as Sheldon in “The Big Bang Theory,” is astonishingly good in the role and brings out the best in the whole cast. But that’s not hard because they are each exceptional.

Broadway is brimming with wonderful productions this fall. Everyone is asking me to what to see. “The Hills of California” by Jez Butterworth, starring Laura Donnelly, is a stunner not to be missed. More on that later.

RIP John Titta, 69, ASCAP Chief, Popular Longtime Music Exec, A Man with “Ears”

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My great friend, John Titta, died yesterday after a two year battle with cancer. He was 69.

John was most recently the Chief Creative Officer at ASCAP, the gigantic music licensing company. He had held high positions at Warner Chappell Music Publishing.

Singer songwriter Rob Thomas of matchbox twenty wrote on Instagram: “For the last 30 years, @johntitta had been a champion for my music and my career. It didn’t matter if we were working together or not. He loved music more than anyone. A true friend to so many artists and a true gentleman. The business of music is a little less than it was without you in it. RIP, my man.”

John was a sweetheart in a business of vipers. He was also a great husband and father and a musician as well. He performed over the course of his career on albums by Ringo Starr and Gizelle D’Cole and played with Michael McDonald, the Doobie Brothers, Duane Eddy, Richie Sambora and Omi. He also worked with Bon Jovi keyboardist David Bryan on the Tony Award winning musical “Memphis,” and contributed as a producer or A&R on albums by Dionne Warwick, Todd Rundgren, Melinda Doolittle, Smash Mouth and Donny & Marie Osmond. He also contributed A&R work to the 1990 compilation “Two Rooms: Celebrating the Songs of Elton John and Bernie Taupin,” which featured covers by Kate Bush, the Who, Sinead O’Connor, Tina Turner, Sting, Eric Clapton and George Michael, among others.

John and I went to many shows together, or we’d inevitably turn up at the same events bonded by our love of music. He was a gem of a human being. This is a terrible loss.

“All of us at ASCAP are heartbroken,” commented ASCAP President & Chairman, songwriter Paul Williams. “John Titta was one of a kind, and truly one of the most beloved music industry executives I have known, with deep ties to songwriters across genres and generations. John – you had a song in your heart always, and you will always be in our hearts. I miss you already.”

So long, John. See you one day on the other side. It will be so much fun!