Friday, December 19, 2025
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Prosecutor Says Settlement in Alec Baldwin “Rust” Case Has No Bearing on Possible Criminal Charges

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Alec Baldwin may have settled his civil case with the family of Halyna Hutchins but that doesn’t necessarily get him off the hook.

The Santa Fe District Attorney’s office is not letting down. Today they said in a statement: “The proposed settlement announced today in Matthew Hutchins’ wrongful death case against Rust movie producers, including Alec Baldwin, in the death of Halyna Hutchins will have no impact on District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altweis’ ongoing investigation or her ultimate decision whether to file criminal charges in the case. While civil suits are settled privately and often involve financial awards, criminal cases deal only in facts. If the facts and evidence warrant criminal charges under New Mexico law then charges will be brought. No one is above the law.” 

It was only last week that Carmack-Altweis secured $315,000 to begin her prosecution in the “Rust” case. She didn’t name Baldwin specifically, but told the Santa Fe budget office she needed funds to go after between 1 and 4 people in the case, and that one of them had lawyers in New York and Los Angeles.

Hutchins’ husband, meantime, has seemingly agreed as part of his financial settlement with Baldwin to become an executive producer on the movie, “Rust,” even though his wife died on the set. It does appear that he’s sold out, quite thoroughly, with the rationale that he’s finishing Halyna Hutchin’s work. The price was right!

“Rust” Never Sleeps: Alec Baldwin Settles with Halyna Hutchins’ Husband, Deal for Him to Exec Produce and Finish Unwanted Film

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Here’s a Hollywood ending you didn’t expect.

Alec Baldwin has announced that the producers of “Rust” — meaning including him — have settled financially with the husband of the woman who was killed on the set a year ago. Baldwin accidentally shot to death cinematographer Halyna Hutchins with a gun he didn’t know was loaded.

According to reports, the settlement includes resumption of filming “Rust” with Hutchins’ husband, Matthew, as executive producer. So he will share in the profits of the finished movie that claimed his wife’s life.

This is so tasteless and absurd, I’m actually flummoxed. In the post-Trump world, there is no bottom that can be reached.

Baldwin writes on Instagram: “We are pleased to announce today the settlement of the civil case filed on behalf of the family of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. Throughout this difficult process, everyone has maintained the specific desire to do what is best for Halyna’s son.  We are grateful to everyone who contributed to the resolution of this tragic and painful situation.”

“We have reached a settlement, subject to court approval, for our wrongful death case against the producers of Rust, including Alec Baldwin and Rust Movie Productions, LLC. As part of that settlement, our case will be dismissed,” said Matthew Hutchins, husband of the late Halyna Hutchins said this morning.

“The filming of Rust, which I will now executive produce, will resume with all the original principal players on board in January 2023,” says Matthew Hutchins..

“I have no interest in engaging in recriminations or attribution of blame (to the producers or Mr. Baldwin),” he added, “All of us believe Halyna’s death was a terrible accident. I am grateful that the producers and the entertainment community have come together to pay tribute to Halyna’s final work.”   

These people are rationalizing a financial arrangement. It’s not like they’re making “The Godfather.” “Rust” is a low budget, forgettable film that no one wants to see except as a morbid curiosity. But it seems that even Hutchins had his price. Sold!

Aaron Judge Hits 62nd Home Run, Surpasses Roger Maris: Long National Nightmare is Over

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Our long national nightmare is over. Aaron Judge hit his 62nd home run tonight, surpassing Roger Maris. It’s been 61 years since a Yankee hit 61 home runs, and now Judge has broken the record.

It hasn’t been an easy Yankee season (it never is). The first half was a dream as the team just won and won and won and fulfilled all expectations of a runaway success.

But after the All Star Game in July, injuries plagued the team. Suddenly the dream was a nightmare. We lost and lost and lost. Painful losses, Stupid losses. What seemed unforgivable at the time.

All though the summer, one thing worked: Aaron Judge. He just kept hitting homeruns. He didn’t care about his own record. He was only concerned about helping the team.

Since the end of August, Yankee luck picked up. But Judge never stopped. Even when he hit a seven game drought trying to make number 61, he stayed in good humor. How he managed the stress is anyone’s guess. He just didn’t let it affect him.

Now the Yankees will have to pay up. They are in a tense contract negotiation. But there are no Yankees going forward without Aaron Judge. The Steinbrenners will have to mortgage the stadium. How much can he be paid? What can they give him? Cars? Jewels? Houses? Bobbleheads? Whatever it is, it’s his.

So Bravo to Aaron Judge and thank you for making this relatively grim year seem not so bad after all. And kudos to Roger Maris, Jr, and his family for being there the last two weeks, and demonstrating the description of graciousness.

PS Like Roger Maris Jr. I do not acknowledge the National League homerun winners who used performance enhancing drugs. Aaron Judge is the home run king of baseball.

Exclusive: Julianna Margulies Returning to Series TV with “The Longshot” on Netflix Next Year

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OK, who doesn’t love Julianna Margulies?

The star of “The Good Wife” and “ER” is returning to series TV next year, I am told.

Margulies will star in a series called “The Long Shot” or “Longshot” — still unclear. She will play a professional gambler.

The paperwork is just drying, but I love this idea. She is a perfect combination of sexy and steely. Right now Margulies is a special guest on “The Morning Show.” She did a great stint on “Billions.” She also appeared with Bryan Cranston in the hit movie, “The Upside.”

Julianna has won three Emmy awards, a Critics Choice Award, a couple of SAG Awards for acting. That’s pretty impressive. She will not be a long shot for more of these once the new series kicks into gear.

More details to come. Just watch this story get cherry picked across the internet.

Kanye West Releases a Line of Ugly Clothes, Says Stupid Things About Race, is Irrelevant

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Can this please be the end of Kanye West as a public figure?

He’s released a line of very ugly clothes for the Gap which collectors will buy but no one will be caught dead wearing. They’re also very expensive for Gap customers, like $400 shapeless jackets. Kanye has an obsession with the Druids. Yuck.

Even worse, on Instagram Stories, now deleted, he went after Black Lives Matter. With the moronic Candice Owens he posted pictures of the two of them wearing White Lives Matter shirts. Black celebrities have taken to social media to criticize him.

Kanye is a fool, and a tool. His bipolar condition is no excuse for his behavior. He doesn’t even provide clickbait anymore. No one cares what he says. His career is over. It’s time for him to go away but he won’t: the press loves a train wreck, and he’s just one after another.

RIP Loretta Lynn, Coal Miner’s Daughter Who Became a Towering Legend, Dead at 90

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Loretta Lynn was already a legend in 1981, some 40 years ago, when the movie about her life, “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” cemented her in the history books. Yes, she was only 50. What an achievement. Robert Altman had already fashioned a character after her in “Nashville,” five years earlier.

Loretta Lynn has passed away at age 90. She is likely the most famous of all country singers, a feminist, a trail blazer, with the voice of an angel. She had over 70 hits on the country charts during her lifetime. Her younger sister was the also famous Crystal Gayle.

“Saturday Night Live” Returns Down in Ratings with New Cast Members and Faves Gone, Down 900K from 2021 Premiere

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Lorne Michaels had a good and bad weekend. The Broadway play he produced, “Leopoldstadt,” opened to rave reviews. It’s a hit, and Tom Stoppard will be headed to the Tony Awards next June.

But back in real life, “Saturday Night Live” returned sans eight beloved cast members, and without Cecily Strong, who’s doing a play in Los Angeles. Reviews were not good even with new cast members who will have to prove themselves.

Ratings were down to just 4 million viewers with Miles Teller as host, and Kendrick Lamar as musical guest. That’s off by 600,000 viewers from the end of last season, and down 900,000 from last year’s premiere. This week, the host is actor Brendan Gleeson and the musical guest is Willow Smith. Ratings will be terrible. Let’s hope the cast does a better job.

Chevy Electric Car Commercial Pushes 1987 Fleetwood Mac Hit “Everywhere” to Top of iTunes

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Fleetwood Mac is the gift that keeps on giving. Their hit making days are long gone but the old songs were so well made they just keep coming back.

Now a song called “Everywhere” from 1987 has jumped to number 3 on iTunes. Fleetwood Mac’s Greatest Hits is up to number 11.

Why? “Everywhere” It’s used liberally in a Chevy commercial promoting electric vehicles. Everyone in the car sings along with it.

“Everywhere” was written by Mac’s premiere songwriter, Christine McVie, and co-produced by Lindsey Buckingham.

McVie sold her catalog rights to Hipgnosis Music last year, and they are busy placing the songs in commercials. Very successfully, I’d say.

But that whole Mac catalog never goes away — “Dreams” had a huge renaissance last year, “Go Your Own Way” is in a pharma commercial, “Don’t Stop” is omnipresent. I’m surprised an older song, “Hypnotized,” hasn’t found its way into a commercial yet. It will, I’m sure!

https://youtube.com/watch?v=XoTeNPRW3u0

Review: Cate Blanchett Conducts a Master Class in Director Todd Field’s Oscar-Buzzed “Tár,” Remains Composed

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Classical music conductor Lydia Tár is no day at the beach. She is a “Maestra,” a unique female star of the podium, an international sensation who bears a strong resemblance to real life photographer Annie Leibovitz, is self absorbed, headstrong, unpleasant, disloyal, and often downright mean.

Lydia is the creation of writer-director Todd Field, and she’s not based on anyone but sprung from his imagination. Field — who made terrific films like “In the Bedroom” and “Little Children” — debuted “Tár” at the New York Film Festival last night to a cheek by jowl audience in Alice Tully Hall, followed by a very chill, low key dinner at the Plaza Hotel’s Oak Room. Some of the guests included Claire Danes and Hugh Dancy, Julianna Margulies, and Gina Gershon.

But the center of attention was Cate Blanchett, two time Oscar winner, who gives a performance fot the ages as Lydia. She’s on screen for almost all of the two hours and forty minutes. You can’t take your eyes off of her, except when Nina Hoss, who plays a top violinist in her Berlin Symphony and her partner (they’ve adopted a cute little girl together) slyly works the edges around Lydia in what should be a Best Supporting Actress nomination.

There is just about nothing likeable about Lydia Tár. Blanchett plays her as anti–heroine, and that’s right. Even as you see her musical genius, you question everything about her life. She is the least composed composer of all time. We know she’s a musical genius, and she has personal style. But she’s the Anna Wintour of classical music, perfectly horrible and very successful.

Field starts his movie with a couple of speed bumps. The film opens with end credits that run over atonal screeching, a female vocal not unlike Yoko Ono. This is supposed to be one of Lydia’s cutting edge compositions. (She’s no Gershwin.) This is followed by Lydia and real life New Yorker writer Adam Gopnick onstage at a faux New Yorker Festival style event in front of an adoring audience. It’s so pretentious I was looking for the exits. But Field uses all this as a way to establish for the audience that Lydia knows what she’s talking about. She’s a bit of a genius.

But keep the faith! Once this business is over, “Tar” begins and all this mishegos is forgiven. You see Lydia in her natural habitat for the first time, the movie begins and so does a film adventure that is often mesmerizing even when it can feel exasperating. Field peels Lydia back like an onion, layer by layer, so that by the time we get to the last hour — and all hell breaks loose — we are experts about her world.

The last hour — it’s worth the first hour and forty minutes. It’s no surprise that Lydia has invented herself from nothing. Disgraced, she returns home to the US for a moment where we see her origins. Her undoing results not in destruction but yet again another reinvention. Lydia Tar is a survivor.

“Tár” has a significant musical score not just from classical composers like Mahler, but from the great modern composer Hildur Guðnadóttir, who will also be Oscar nominated (she won for “Joker” in 2020). There are wonderful supporting players like Julian Glover as the former orchestra leader who tries to advise Lydia, and Noemie Merlant as the long suffering assistant who does her boss in. Bravo to all of them.

Some people will find “Tár” slow. I was thinking as I watched it that it reminded me of last year’s “Drive.” These movies are journeys, they’re in their own category, and their existence may be a response to the short attention span of the contemporary audience. Put away your phones, this is what an immersive experience is supposed to be.

Oh My My: Ringo Starr Tests Positive for COVID, Cancels Six Shows on All Starr Band Tour

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Back Off COVID: Ringo Starr announced today he’s tested positive for COVID. Ringo’s All Starr Band has cancelled its next six shows.

What a shame. I just saw Ringo’s show and it was terrific. But it was also outdoors. Ringo said from the stage he was freezing, wearing a couple of North Face jackets Our favorite rock drummer is 82, and even though he looks 52, he’s still human.

Feel better, Ringo!