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Author Michael Lewis Says FTX Founder Paid Larry David $10 Mil for Commercials, Anna Wintour Wanted Him to Back Met Ball

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On “60 Minutes,” author Michael Lewis has a lot of revelations about disgraced financier Sam Bankman-Fried of FTX.

Lewis says Anna Wintour called Bankman-Fried to underwrite the Met Ball even though “he’s the worst dressed person in America” and had no idea who she was.

The author also claims FTX paid Larry David $10 million for those awful commercials that played in the Super Bowl two years ago.

He paid Tom Brady $55 million for 20 hours a year for three years. He paid Steph Curry $35 million for– same thing for three years.

Lewis says: “He spent 100 and something million dollars, buying the naming rights for the Miami Heat arena…For which he then paid Larry David another $10 million, you know. It’s breathtaking, what’s on that list.”

The interview with Lewis will be up soon, and I’ll put it here. Lewis says he also thought of paying Donald Trump not to run for president again. The price would have been $5 billion.

Here’s the link to the transcript.

Lewis’s book, “Going Infinite,” will be published this week.

Review: Presenting Legendary Concert Promoter Ron Delsener in A Terrific Doc Headed to Hamptons Film Festival

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Growing up in New York in the 70s, every rock show had this line above the star’s name: “Ron Delsener Presents.”

Now that’s the title of a terrific documentary by Jake Sumner.

Delsener, as many in the world of music know, is a little like a Jewish Leprechaun. Slight and wiry, with an offbeat acerbic sense of humor, he is a self-made man who saw what the rock concert business could be and went for it. He always has a twinkle in his eye.

In the beginning, Delsener made a deal with New York Mayor Ed Koch and launched a summer music festival on top of the Wollman ice skating rink in Central Park. Rheingold Beer was the early sponsor, but Schaefer Beer took over the event from 1968-1976. That was the golden age of rock when almost all the artists we’ve loved were established. Not one of them came to New York without doing a Delsener show.

Central Park was not Delsener’s endgame. He put rock and roll into Carnegie Hall for the first time. The Hall was the crown jewel of all New York properties. Among the groups he booked there was Chicago, which recorded its famous live album in 1971. It was Delsener who also put the Beatles in Forest Hills Tennis Stadium — one of his original venues — in August 1964 on their first tour of the States. His legacy also includes concerts at Jones Beach, bigger than ever to this day.

Several witnesses speak candidly and warmly about Delsener and the history of New York gigs including Bruce Springsteen and Stevie van Zandt, Patti Smith and Lenny Kaye, Billy Joel, and Jon Bon Jovi, who’s kept a custom made wine bottle Delsener commissioned for him from the 1980s. Bette Midler, younger promoter Peter Shapiro, the group, KISS, and Earth Wind & Fire’s Verdine White also weigh in. Their affection for Delsener is obvious even though the concert business of the 70s and 80s is described as a kind of Mafia, with territories drawn up among rivals. Delsener controlled New York, John Scher had New Jersey, Don Law commanded Boston, and so on. The regions were specifically assigned and one when promoter stepped out of line, he was ousted and Delsener took over that spot for good.

You could think of “Ron Delsener Presents” as the flip side of Clive Davis’s “Soundtrack of Our Lives.” The two films together explain quite a bit about the record and music businesses, and how the culture rooted itself from the 60s til now. Where the two films overlap mostly is with Simon & Garfunkel. The hit recording duo wasn’t speaking in 1981 (what else is new?) but Delsener cajoled them into reuniting where else — in Central Park. The landmark concert on a September afternoon brought half a million people to the Sheep’s Meadow. A successful album and film followed, and cemented Simon & Garfunkel’s legacy for a second generation. It was another crowning achievement for Delsener.

Sumner and writer Dan Crane do a very good job fleshing out Delsener’s personal life, too, with his wife Ellin, daughter Samantha, and sister Harriett– who’s always worked with him — weaving in anecdotes. There’s pretty cool animation, too, and gems of archival material.

The Critics Choice Awards should have no trouble giving “Ron Delsener Presents” something for all this good work, not to mention the Gotham Awards. Music fans will lap up all this insight and gossip, I know I did.

“Presenting Ron Delsener” had an original screening at the Tribeca Film Festival and plays this coming week at the Hamptons Film Festival before its release. Don’t miss it.

Review: “May December” Opens the NY Film Festival With Powerful Performances from Julianne Moore, Natalie Portman, Charles Melton

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A young actress is to star in a biopic as a woman whose claim to fame is sexual deviance. That’s the premise of Todd Haynes’ latest film, “May December,”opening the esteemed New York Film Festival this week.

Gracie (Julianne Moore), a baker and housewife in Savannah, now married to her much younger lover with whom she has college aged twins, is so reviled she receives a box of shit at the start and spends much of the movie managing the pain of being ostracized. When Elizabeth (Natalie Portman) arrives to take notes for her role, the two women dance a pas de deux of cautious friendliness, with Gracie demonstrating her cake-making skills, her beauty tips, her hold over her family. Edgy music keeps the viewer alert: who is playing whom?

Or, how much does an actor really need to research to play a role? Joe, now 36 wasn’t yet a teen when he and Gracie first had sex. Deep into a guilt driven relationship, he becomes the movie’s center.

Introducing the film at Alice Tully Hall, director Todd Haynes signaled as much in stressing Charles Melton’s outstanding performance. With a nod toward his composer, Marcelo Zarvos, he spoke about the music leading events, a technique taken from a classic movie he saw on TMC, “The Go-Between.” In the end, though, we don’t much like Gracie either, while the film offers an exceptional view of shifting perspectives on an “icky” subject.

“May December” features excellent performances by Moore and Portman– in a festival that showcases the actresses sure to garner awards this year: Emma Stone in “Poor Things,” for example, and a wonderful Sandra Huller, star of both “The Zone of Interest” and “Anatomy of a Fall.” In roles richly drawn, these are the women to watch.

The Amazing Lee Grant, 95?, Oscar Winner, Steals the New York Film Festival with Double Screening of Films She Directed

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Lee Grant is the eighth wonder of the world.

She’s 97 years young and will turn as astounding 98 in November. But the two time Oscar winner and double Emmy Award winner whose life was temporarily wrecked by the blacklist in the 1950s and early 60s, stole the show last night at the New York Film Festival.

The occasion was the screening of two films she directed, a hit feature called “Tell Me a Riddle,” based on Tillie Olsen’s bestseller, and a short called “The Stronger.”

Lee’s Oscars came for acting in Warren Beatty’s “Shampoo” and a decade later for directing the documentary, “Down and Out in America.” She’s published a best selling memoir, has dozens of other acting nominations, and so on. She is a survivor in the truest sense because Sen. Joseph McCarthy and his evil associate, Roy Cohn, upended her life in 1952 when she was accused of being a Communist.
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Lee looks and acts much, much younger than whatever her numerical age is. She’s full of energy. Bravo, Lee!

George Clooney Says He’s Not Selling Lake Cuomo Estate, NY Post Just Made Up the Story

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George Clooney is not leaving Italy for France, Lake Como for Provence.

Clooney told an AP reporter this week that the story wasn’t true, that the NY Post just made it up. He loved the price the Post said he was getting for it, though — “A hundred seven million dollars!” he exclaims.

The Post ran their first story on September 7th saying Clooney and wife Amal were definitely decamping. The Post: “We’re told Clooney, whom sources have described as “like the mayor of the lake” has pulled the trigger this time. Our source told us it’s a “very quiet listing” which we’re guessing means you won’t find it on Streeteasy!”

Two weeks later, the Post followed up with a lengthy story saying that Clooney had found a buyer. Clooney denied it but the Post left that out of their headline and just went on quoting an Italian realtor was insisted it was true.

So here’s what George has to say:

Box Office: “The Creator” DOA for Disney, “Paw Patrol” Wags the Tale, as $100 Mil “Saw X” Slices Through the List

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Not a sterling weekend at the box office, as we expected.

Disney spent at least $100 million making the very good sci fi movie, “The Creator.” But the title is terrible, no one knows what it is, and so receipts were minimal — just $14 million. What a shame. Lack of promotion played a big part, but also just indifference. “The Creator” is a film you’ll recommend to friends in years to come, and they will say they never heard of it. Too bad.

“PAW Patrol” the sequel won the weekend with $23 million. Families needed a movie, and this was it. The first “PAW Patrol” made a total of $40 million, but that was two years ago in the middle of the pandemic panic.

“Saw X” — was there a Saw 9? Anyway, good reviews pushed this one to $18 million, which is probably what it cost.

Sony expanded “Dumb Money” but did nothing to help it. so the total was $3.5 million. Again, when it’s streaming people will say “That was a good movie, how come I didn’t know about it?”

The biggest calamity remains “Expendables 4,” which has so far earned just $13.2 million, which is what Sylvester Stallone spends on lunch.

Box Office Emergency as Top 3 Movies Have Middling Friday, No Promotion Available as SAG Strike Must End This Week

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The SAG strike is starting to kill the box office.

Last night the top three movies had middling to poor openings simply because no one in their casts can promote them.

“Saw X,” which got good reviews, “PAW Patrol,” a family film, and “The Creator,” top notch sci fi that looks amazing — all of them landed with a thud.

Why? Ordinarily, for example,”The Creator” star John David Washington would have been on every talk show. Allison Janney would have been everywhere, getting great reviews. The little girl from the movie would have been in People. There would have been premieres in New York and Los Angeles to generate excitement.

But with the SAG strike, everyone is immobilized. Millions and millions of dollars are being flushed away.

Luckily, the studios and the union will begin on Monday to resolve their conflicts. If it takes more than week, the business is sunk. The conventional wisdom now is that the studios, if they want to save the fall and holidays, will have to make concessions quickly and bring this to an end.

Meantime, go see “The Creator.” It’s excellent. Washington ably carries the brilliant looking, smart film. If you liked “Rogue Nation,” you’ll love Gareth Davis’s sensational film.

Madonna Warning Tour Drama: Shows Off Ailing Knee as London Dates Two Weeks Away, US Ticket Sales Lagging

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Madonna is two weeks away from starting her Celebration tour in London. She kicks it off with four dates at the O2 Arena.

But is drama coming? On Instagram Madonna dumped a bunch of rehearsal photos including two indicating her left knee is causing a commotion. In one picture she’s got a blue brace on it. In another. she’s lying down with some kind of compress on the knee and a tour assistant bending down and tending it.

Forget about the postponement of this tour in June when Madonna had to be raced to the hospital with a scary if short-term ailment. On her last tour, Madame X missed many shows citing physical injuries. After many breaks she cancelled even the final performance because of “indescribable pain.”

Injuries and illnesses are to be expected for artists of a certain age, and Madonna is now 65. This fall we’ve seen Bruce Springsteen and Steven Tyler each felled by different conditions resulting in the cancellation of tours. These people are human!

Meanwhile, Madonna’s US ticket sales are lagging. The first US show isn’t until December 13th in Brooklyn, but there are plenty of seats available at reasonable prices — and some way over the top! One problem with this tour is that there’s no album, or film, or scandal to propel it along. The tour itself doesn’t have a “hook” yet other than it’s the most successful female performer ever celebrating 40 years of hits. Even in Europe, where there are sold out shows, there are tickets available.

Something tells me that as we get closer to Madonna’s arrival here, sales will pick up. After all, there are few superstars left and, aside from Taylor Swift, few coming!

click here for all of today’s Showbiz411 headlines!

Charts: Olivia Rodrigo Leads a Soft Week with Just 89K, Diddy Drops 45% in 2nd Run Despite Bieber, Weeknd Tracks

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The numbers are in for the last week of pop record sales.

Olivia Rodrigo led a very soft list with just 89,000 including streaming, of “Guts.” There’s no glory, however.

Diddy’s “Love Album: Off the Grid” dropped 45% from its poor debut last week. He sold just under 17,000 copies. Justin Bieber and The Weeknd on tracks were no help whatsoever.

Taylor Swift sold around 200,000 albums this week from a half dozen titles. She wins something.

The charts reflect ambivalence from fans about recent releases. Next Friday we’ll have the new Ed Sheeran album, and Drake the week after. But there’s no excitement out there. The music biz needs a couple of new hot mainstream stars ASAP.

Robert Kennedy Jr. Will Run as Independent Candidate After Lying to Vanity Fair That He Wouldn’t

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Robert Kennedy Jr. is going to run as independent candidate for president. It’s a folly from nutjob but that’s his problem.

More importantly, he lied through his teeth this summer to Vanity Fair writer Joe Hagan, who has an award winning piece of journalism online right now.

Kennedy told Hagan:

“Even if I was going to run as a third-party candidate, which I’m not, I would probably take more votes from Trump than I would from Democrats.”

So much for that.

Look, we have enough problems with Donald Trump. Kennedy is a conspiracy theorist who’s used all the far right people on Fox News and the other wackadoodle channels to convey his crazy ideas. He’s also a well known philanderer. The New York Post once published his sex diary, kept during his second marriage. That wife killed herself in their barn very flamboyantly. She was sending a message.

Kennedy is very busy doing push ups on social media, as if that meant something. It just means he can do push ups. He trades on his father and uncle in his posts, as if they would approve of his candidacy. They would not. Joe Biden should certainly give him protection, however, so he’ll shut up about being assassinated. But no one will debate him if he’s an independent, and that’s just fine. He can talk to himself.

PS The picture at right is of Mary Richardson Kennedy. She’s dead.