Friday, December 19, 2025
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Strike News: “General Hospital” Starts Airing Episodes This Week Written by Scabs and “Fi-Core” Writers

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Starting Monday, ABC soap “General Hospital” will be written by scabs and “fi core” writers, meaning union members who have forfeited voting rights, etc but will will still be part of the Writers Guild when the strike is settled.

“GH” writer Shannon Peace announced on Instagram today that her last episode aired last Thursday. She has no idea whether the interim writers have continued her stories, as well as the other staff writers’, or if suddenly everyone will start doing weird things.

No one from “The Young and the Restless” or “The Bold and the Beautiful” has announced anything but it’s likely this has already begun over there on CBS.

Writers from the soaps have been on strike since it began

on May 2nd so their scripts were written before that date. The soap actors are not on strike as they are signed to a different contract.


As for “Days of our Lives” on Peacock, they film months, not weeks, in advance. So “Days” has shot through the fall. Next week they’ll acknowledge the death of actor John Aniston when his character, Victor Kiriakis, dies in a plane crash, I am told. They were smart to get this under the wire.

The Other Oppenheimer Movie Connection: How John Wayne, Other Stars, Died from Cancer After Shooting a Film in Utah Several Years Later

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Everyone is celebrating the movie “Oppenheimer” and that’s a good thing. Christopher Nolan did a great job.

But J. Robert Oppenheimer left another movie connection in the desert. Years after the bomb tests we see on screen, more and much large testing went on out there in Utah and New Mexico. The after effects were devastating not only to the people who lived there, but to a movie that was shot there.

The move was called “The Conqueror” and it wasn’t very good. Starring a miscast John Wayne — legendary from American Westerns — as Mongolian Emperor Genghis Khan. The movie was a critical and financial disaster. Producer Howard Hughes was so embarrassed by it he’s said to have bought up all the existing prints and took it out of circulation for years, (It turns up now on TCM.)

“The Conqueror” was often glibly referred to as “radio active.” This is why: It was shot around St. George, Utah, 137 miles from where above ground tests were conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission in Nevada from 1951 to 1963.

The result, many have speculated, was the consequent illnesses of at least 91 of the 220 people who worked on the film. Of the 91, 46 died from cancer. All the principals from “The Conqueror” succumbed to cancer, presumably from breathing the air, water, and minerals left poisoned by the AEC.

Here’s the list:

In 1960, actor Pedro Armendáriz was diagnosed with kidney cancer. He killed himself in 1963 after learning that his condition was terminal.

Also in 1963, director Dick Powell died at age 53 of lymphatic cancer. Powell was a huge star for decades, a best selling pop star aka crooner who transitioned to movies and became a TV icon on screen and a busy director/producer. He was married first to wise cracking Joan Blondell and then to June Allyson, beloved star of MGM musicals and comedies.

Susan Hayward, a top star of the time, was claimed by brain cancer in 1974 at age 57. She’d won an Oscar in 1959 after four nominations. Agnes Moorehead, who’d had a wildly successful second career on “Bewitched,” also died in 1974 from cancer. Actors Lee Van Cleef and John Hoyt were hit by cancer in 1989 and 1991, respectively.

Wayne died in June 1979 at age 72. He’d suffered from lung, throat, and stomach cancers. Because of his politics, Wayne had lost a lot of his luster during the anti war movement of the 60s and 70s. But he was a towering Hollywood figure, bigger than Stallone and Schwarzenegger rolled into one. He won an Oscar two years before his death, for “True Grit.”

I’m not the first to write this story. There are plenty of reports on line. People magazine— back when it was a real magazine– broke the story back in 1980, revealing the number of primary deaths and illnesses as well as those who visited the set including family members. They didn’t even get into how the radiation the people who lived in the area, and this was 43 years ago. Click on the People link above to read the comments by the stars’ family members at the time.

As good as Nolan’s movie is, there’s a conversation to be had now about the disastrous, lingering effects of Oppenheimer’s brilliance. The movie doesn’t endorse what the scientists at Los Alamos created, it just tells their story. But there are a lot of other stories to be told, going forward.

If you know anyone who was affected, please drop me a line at showbiz411@gmail.com.

Greece is the Word: Despite Roaring Temps, Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson, Sacha Baron Cohen, Tim Burton Other Stars All Over the Place

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This summer I keep hearing these words: Patmos, Paros, Antiparos. There’s an anti-Paros?

Last summer the A list went to Italy and discovered Tuscany, Venice, etc. It was annoying after a while.

This year, it’s Greece. If you don’t have a villa or a yacht and a private tour of the Acropolis, I don’t want to hear about it!

So who’s there? Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson were seen, they own a spread. Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher are renting. So, too, apparently are Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci.

The good news is, Paros is not expensive. Prices for a nice villa with a pool, on the water, begin around 7,000 Euros a week. It’s a steal! But word to the wise: AntiParos is double.

Already installed is multiple Oscar winner Alexandre Desplat. He’s composing himself on the beach.

And this all despite the temperature being 98 degrees earlier today. You can cook the Souvlaki right on the stone steps!

“X” Marks the Spot: Elon Musk Chucking 18 Years of Twitter Branding to Rename Platform with New Logo, Website

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Very shortly, maybe tomorrow, the blue and white bird logo for Twitter will fade into history.

Owner Elon Musk says he’s changing the name of the platform and the logo to “X.” He Tweeted this morning: “If X is closest in style to anything, it should, of course, be Art Deco.” The new “X” which you can see here has nothing to do with Art Deco. I have no idea what he’s talking about.

There is a lot of outrage and mockery over this ridiculous decision. It sounds as bad as the coming very ugly Tesla truck.

Is it a case of being on the spectrum? Is he just nuts? Is he trying to do more damage to Twitter? Last week he Tweeted that the company was in a financial mess. This won’t help matters.

You can only wonder what it’s like to work for Musk and have to nod “yes” to all this stuff. Maddening.

“Oppenheimer” Movie Success Pushes 2005 Paperback to Number 1, Hardcover Selling for $2,799 on Amazon — But No “Barbie” Book Tie-In

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If you happened to buy and keep a copy of Kai Bird and MArtin Sherwin’s “American Promotheus” back in 2005, you’re in luck.

First edition hardcovers are now selling for $2,799 on Amazon. And so far there aren’t many of them. There’s one on ebay going for $2,500 and a couple under $1,000– that is until those sellers see what the market will bear.

The book upon which Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer: movie is based is now in very demand.

The Vintage paperback of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize winner has shot to number 1 on Amazon among all books. That edition sells for a normal $15.99.

Bird is next publishing a thorough biography of evil disbarred lawyer Roy Cohen in 2025. According to descriptions, Bird will lay out the way Cohn mentored Donald Trump to become the monster he is today. Should be riveting.

Unfortunately, Sherwin died from non smoker lung cancer shortly after “American Promotheus” was published.

Oddly, there is no “Barbie” book tie in. Mattel and Warner Bros. are plugged into every other object in the world. But I guess they figured Barbie has never read a book in her life, why should her character? But maybe a release of the movie’s screenplay will be coming in the near future. I can’t believe the producers missed an opportunity to make money!

Boffo Barbenheimer: $230 Mil Haul for Barbie, Oppenheimer Combo, Not Sequels, No Streaming Hollywood Weekend!

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It’s a Barbenheimer world this morning!

Hollywood is celebrating as the double release of two blockbusters on the same weekend paid off handsomely.

“Oppenheimer,” an Oscar worthy three hour epic, made $80 million.

“Barbie,” the best marketed movie in eons, raked in $155 million. The worldwide take is $337 million.

Each movie was original, not a sequel, and didn’t involve streaming. If it weren’t for two union strikes at the same time, this weekend would be declared a national holiday.

For “Barbie,” Warner Bros. can say it’s the biggest debut of a movie in 2023. It’s also the biggest one for a female director. “Barbie” can also claim to be the biggest movie based on a toy, like “Transformers.” In fact. the “Barbie” weekend take is the same as the latest “Transformers” made in 7 weeks!

For “Oppenheimer,” the success guarantees Oscar nominations– about a dozen of them. Director Christopher Nolan has his biggest non-“Batman” moment. Robert Downey Jr. overcomes his “Iron Man” legacy — even though it made him very rich — and returns to being a serious actor.

Meantime, “Mission Impossible Dead Reckoning” finished fourth with $19.5 million. This movie suffered from poor timing. Tom Cruise knew that and tried to get release dates moved around. But “MI” should have opened a week earlier instead of challenging this pair of hits. Lesson learned the hard way.

The number 3 movie is “Sound of Freedom,” which is living on a free ticket distribution and must have an asterisk next to its box office report.

Complaints that “Barbie” Marketing Infiltrates TCM: Long Planned Harry Belafonte Tribute Night Yanked with No Notice to Push Doll Movie

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It’s not like David Zaslav hasn’t caused enough trouble at Turner Classic Movies. He was shredded in the press last month for firing all the top execs at the beloved movie channel and causing three famous directors (Spielberg, Scorsese, Anderson) to come after him.

Tonight, TCM viewers were aghast to learn that a long planned tribute to Harry Belafonte, set for this evening and announced in April, has been scotched. In its place, TCM host Ben Mankiewicz is interviewing “Barbie” director Greta Gerwig about movies that influenced “Barbie.”

The replacement movies are “The Philadelphia Story,” which was shown on TCM just recently, and “The Red Shoes.” (What they have to do with “Barbie” is beyond me.)

The Belafonte tribute was supposed to include remarks by Harry’s actress daughter, Shari, plus screenings of “Carmen Jones” and the rare “The World, the Flesh and the Devil.”

Fans are irate that the evening was scuttled for promoting Warner Bros. “Barbie” because the studio also owns TCM. Gerwig is lovely and her thoughts on film are not uninteresting. But the “Barbie” logo and a pink set and the blatant plug of a new movie vs. the tribute to a movie legend and civil rights hero is…gross and tasteless.

Plus, “Barbie” doesn’t need this attention. It’s making well over $100 million this weekend. The whole thing is unnecessary and crass.

Friday Box Office: “Oppenheimer” Scores Big, Blows Away Audiences, “Mission Impossible” Suffering Barbenheimer Weekend

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Last night. Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” opened big — $22.5 million added to its previews of $10.5 million for $33 million so far. For a three hour epic drama in the summer, that’s explosive. Audiences are blown away by “Oppenheimer”! Cliches are coming in fast and furious.

The cross marketing scheme of “Barbenheimer” has worked like a charm. Someone must have thought of it, and they deserve a prize.

But “Barbenheimer” is taking a toll on the new “Mission Impossible” movie. Its total is at $104 million on its second official weekend. The slow down is concerning. It’s possible once “Barbie” fever is over, audiences will go back to “Dead Reckoning.” Let’s hope so.

So Who is the “Barbie” Audience? Not Children, Very Few Men, and Not Older Adults, But the Sweet Spot in Demos Ages 25-34

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So who’s watching “Barbie”?

According to Warner Bros, the movie has an overall Cinemascore of A, which is the most desirable score in the world.

But then they break it down by age and sex and the results are not shocking. Women love it, men are not that interested. If they’re going, it’s as a plus 1.

Even more interesting: Children are not so into it. And why would they be? The movie is a feminist polemic and very arch. It’s going to sail over their heads. So it’s not a kids movie.

The sweet spot age wise is 25 to 34. That’s the age of nostalgia for your childhood, thinking back to when life was easier. That age group is grappling with dating, mortgages and having children. They need some comforting. The total there is 41% of the audience.

After age 35 the numbers drop sharply. People my age — 50 and over — are going to see “Oppenheimer.”

CinemaScore: A
Females: A 65%
Males: A‐ 35%
Under 25 Years Old: A 40%
Over 25 Years Old: A 60%
Females Under 25: A+ 26%
Males Under 25: A 13%
Under 18 A 11%
18‐24 A 29%
25‐34 A 41%
35‐49 A 13%
50 and Up A 6%

Barbie Box Office Boffo: $70.5 Mil Opening for a Record Shattering Weekend, Marketing Triumph

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“Barbie” is a marketing colossus.

Last night, the Greta Gerwig directed comedy made $48 million on top of $22 mil in Thursday previews and is headed to a record shattering weekend. That’s a $70.5 mil opening night. The weekend will be double that or more.

The marketing part of it is pure genius, and will be studied for years to come. Mattel and Warner Bros. have collaborated on a pink revolution. There isn’t anyone who doesn’t know about this movie. The whole branding has been indelible. You can’t escape “Barbie” if you tried. She’s bigger than Mission Impossible and Indiana Jones.

And all this time we thought she was just a toy!