Friday, December 19, 2025
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Armie Hammer’s Aunt Sells Him Out in a New 3 Part Documentary Detailing His Rough Times

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Every world eats its own.

So now, Discovery Plus, part of the new Warner Bros, is going to nail Armie Hammer to the wall.

They’ve got a three part documentary coming September 2nd that really make Hammer’s life worse despite his efforts to regroup.

And guess who got paid to be a consultant? Armie’s aunt Casey Hammer. You only hurt the one you love!

Casey is the sister of Armie’s father, Michael. She hates the family (despite the money) and is willing to be the Mary Trump, so to speak, in this case. So there will be no Thanksgiving dinner this year for the Hammers. I hope whatever they paid her is worth it. You can read my Hammer family story here.

My attitude toward this is, interesting as the Hammer family is, Armie deserves a chance to recover, explain himself, and apologize. We don’t know everything that happened, just the surface. This doc is not going to give us any understanding.

A press release promises:

“Each episode will shine a light on a depraved pattern of abuse that extends far beyond the accusations brought against the disgraced actor. Coupled with a trove of incredible archival footage, House of Hammer weaves together a chilling story of the dysfunction and wickedness that grow behind decades of power and money.”

Box Office: “Bullet Train” Is Slowing Down But Not Picking Up More Passengers

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“Bullet Train” is attracting a lot of puns and cliches.

The Brad Pitt studio thriller flick is slowing down day by day and not picking up as many passengers as predicted.

It’s not Brad’s fault. But the movie has low ratings with critics, not much word of mouth, and no pull for the rest of cast. That’s how it’s playing out.

Last night “Bullet Train” made just $3.85 million. Its total since the weekend is an enervating $36.5 million. If the next couple of nights don’t bring more ticket payers, the conductor is going to stop the train.

Maybe they should open the bar car. That might help a lot.

Britney Spears’ Husband Posts Sadly Illiterate, Misspelled Defense of Wife’s Naked Pictures

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I don’t know who Sam Ashgari is, really, but he’s Britney Spears’s husband. He appears to have less of an education than she does, which is hard to believe.

Ashgari posted a defense of his wife’s exhibitionism on social media. He can’t spell embarrassment properly. And he doesn’t know anything about prepositions. The statement

“embarrassed of their parents” actually hurt me in the solar plexus.

Why don’t these people understand that if the kids are embarrassed they should take down the pictures and refrain from this kind of activity altogether? They seem determined to hurt the teen boys. And listen, Sam, I’m embarrassed for Britney and I’m not even a fan.
The whole thing is like an episode from an X rated “Beverly Hillbillies.”

Report: NBC Trading One Soap Opera (Days of our Lives) for Another, the Golden Globes to Return January 2023

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We thought NBC was getting out of the soap opera business– they cancelled “Days of our Lives” from the network.

But they’re bringing back an old soap — The Golden Globes. It looks like the Globes are coming back to TV after being put on hold for lack of diversity and financial improprieties.

The Hollywood Reporter says the show will return on January 10, 2023– a Tuesday night, on NBC. Of course, The Reporter is owned by the same man who now owns the Globes and the Hollywood Foreign Press, so they would know, wouldn’t they?

There’s no real confirmation, but it makes sense. The studios want the Globes imprimatur and figure most people don’t know all the scandals and inside stuff that has hobbled the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

Will publicists return, too, and bring their clients to HFPA press conferences and parties? Will the old members of the HFPA go along with the new rules after decades of being gifted and favors curried?

The new date– January 10th — will put the Globes just five days ahead of the Critics Choice Awards, a legit organization. Will the TV audience watch both shows? And who will host the Globes? Bring back Ricky Gervais! (No, actually they should get Chris Rock. Now that would be genius!)

“Beast” Premiere: After Slap, Will Packer Says He’ll “Never” Produce the Oscars Again, It’s for “the End of a Career”

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“Beast” is coming from Universal next Friday, August 19th with a big roar. Last night the studio threw a big time splashy premiere screening the movie at the Museum of Modern Art and then a swinging dinner at Nobu 57 complete with a deejay and dancing. It was almost like old times.

“Beast” is kind of a horror thriller set in South Africa directed by Baltasar Kormákur with pulse-racing CGI lions, Idris Elba showing off his talents as a major leading man, Sharlto Copley turning in his best performance since “District Nine,” and phenomenal cinematography from Philippe Rousselot, and a screenplay by Ryan Engle that brings depth and humor to what could have been a simple set up. Universal has a hit, I think: the audience loved it with a capital L.

Most interesting person at Nobu goes to Will Packer, who produced — or survived — this year’s Oscars including the three hosts and the world-shattering Will Smith slap of Chris Rock. Packer is already a popular Hollywood figure. He emceed last night’s party and proved to be a gregarious host. And no one slapped him!

Would he produce the Oscars again, I asked? “Never!” he cried. “It’s really a job for someone at the end of their career, who’s not busy with a regular schedule. It takes so much work!”

“Beast,” about a rogue lion who’s lost his mind– yes, there is such a thing, at least in this movie — comes from an idea from writer and producer Jamie Primack Sullivan. She pitched it, and before you could say Simba the idea was green-lit. Among her next films? “I have a Judd Apatow project. I can’t discuss it yet, but it’s female-led.” So stay tuned…

Diana Ross Remembers Lamont Dozier, 81, Co-Writer of Motown Hits with the Holland Brothers for the Four Tops, Supremes, More

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Lamont Dozier has passed away at age 81. He and brothers Eddie and Brian Holland wrote literally all of the hits for the Four Tops, the Supremes, many other Motown acts. The trio was called HDH. They left Motown at the end of the 60s and sued Berry Gordy for millions. HDH started Invictus Records and had a new slew of hits with Freda Payne, the Honey Cone, and other groups. I knew Lamont, and he was just a lovely, sweet, sweet guy. He had his own recording career as well, releasing a couple of albums and several singles including a minor hit called “Fish Ain’t Bitin’.”


But really, without Holland-Dozier-Holland we would be missing a sizeable chunk of the soundtrack to not just the 60s but our lives. Everything from “Bernadette” and “Reach Out I’ll Be There” to “Where Did Our Love Go” and so on.

Valerie Simpson, of Ashford and Simpson, the other main Motown hit songwriting team, told me today. “Lamont was such a delightful guy. And he was a good singer himself. We were all just blessed to be in tune with the times.” Simpson also credited Berry Gordy for all their successes. “He really created the atmosphere for all those hits.”

Mary Wilson told writer Harvey Kubernick in a 2002 interview: “Just to talk about H-D-H was such a wonderful experience for our growth and journey. They took us through the times that was going on in the world. Each time they would bring us to another level. The records show this. We did ‘You Can’t Hurry Love’ and ‘You Keep Me Hanging On.’ Those were great albums. That’s why we had wanted them in the beginning. We had to grow into that.”

Maybe as a tribute to Lamont and HDH today, the hottest day of the year in NYC, we should listen to one of their greatest compositions, “(Love is Like a) Heat Wave.”

Here’s his full bio from The New York Times.

RIP Great 70s Singer, Pop Star, Movie Star Olivia Newton John, Dies at 73 from Cancer After Long Struggle

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Olivia Newton John’s long battle with cancer is over. She died this morning at age 73 in California.

Olivia struggled through several bouts, never flagging, always putting up a battle. She’s survived by her daughter, Chloe.

The English singer made a name for herself in the 70s with a string of hits including “Have You Never Been Mellow” and the dance hit, “Physical.” But she also turned out to be a movie star, featured with John Travolta memorably in the film version of “Grease.” The latter cemented her place in pop culture, producing even more hits.

There wasn’t a radio station anywhere that wasn’t playing Newton John’s hits for twenty years. Even when her heyday passed, the “Grease” fans kept her on the front burner.

She won four Grammys and was nominated for 8 others.

Condolences to her family and friends. Olivia Newton John she will be sorely missed.

Elton John’s “Tiny Dancer” Remix with Britney Spears Has New Title: “Hold Me Closer” This Friday

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The promised duet between Elton John and Britney Spears is coming on Thursday night.

The remix of “Tiny Dancer” is called “Hold Me Closer.” It’s unclear what other Elton and Bernie song will be folded in, a la “Cold Heart.” with Dua Lipa, which had several.

Spears is not a great singer, but the PR value should be enormous and create a lot of interest.

Controversial Danish Filmmaker Lars von Trier Diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease at Age 66

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Lars von Tier, whose name in Danish must mean “controversial,” has had a terrible health diagnosis. According to reports, he’s learned he has Parkinson’s Disease.

Much as von Trier in more recent years has made incomprehensibly negative films — and public statements, this is really terrible.

von Trier was banned from Cannes in 2011 after he declared, “I am a Nazi!” at the press conference for his excellent film, “Melancholia.” It was at that press conference that he said on stage that he’s like to make a “porno” with his actresses, Kirsten Dunst and Charlotte Gainsbourg.

At the premiere of his most shocking and disagreeable film, “Anti-Christ,” one critic stood up and demanded to know why he made it, and to justify its existence.

But von Trier has made a lot of edgy, unusual, and provocative films of artistic integrity including “Melancholia,” “Dogville,” “Breaking the Waves,” and “Dancer in the Dark.”

Because of the diagnosis, von Trier will skip promotional activities at the Venice Film Festival for his latest Danish TV series.

Bert Fields, Hollywood Lawyer Who Bulldozed Journalists, Enabled Pellicano, Dies at 93

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I know it’s considered bad form to speak ill of the dead. But Bert Fields hated journalists, and bulldozed us if we had anything negative to write about his clients. He also enabled private detective Anthony Pellicano, who went to jail for spying on Field’s enemies (although Fields himself was not formally accused of anything). So forgive me if I’m not sobbing about Fields’s death at 93.

I’m sure Bert Field’s celebrity clients will miss him and leave tributes. Tom Cruise, especially, has thrived for decades with Fields at his side. You can read some of that here.

As for Pellicano, my late friend, journalist John Connolly, covered Pellicano and Fields to a farethewell. I was in court for a lot of the Pellicano machinations. There are endless stories about Fields manipulating and terrorizing just about everyone in Hollywood. He worked for everyone and no one was safe from him.

So RIP, I guess. He goes to his grave with a lot of secrets. But a lot of people still know some of them, too. Anyone with a good Fields story, drop me a line at showbiz411@gmail.com.

Here’s a column I wrote back in 2008:

Hollywood Heavies Walk On Pellicano?

Late on Friday, the government issued its trial memo in Hollywood’s Anthony Pellicano case, and it was pretty interesting.

Missing almost entirely from the government’s planned attack on Pellicano is the sexy stuff we were tantalized with, seemingly, for years.

Hollywood heavies may take a walk on Pellicano, as it turns out, at least for now.

Instead, the U.S. attorney, perhaps aware of the circus-like negative effect celebrities have on California cases (O.J., Jacko, Robert Blake, etc.), is concentrating on four non-stars to support their assertion of Pellicano’s wrongdoings in the U.S. vs. Anthony Pellicano and four other defendants.

The four key witnesses in this case (there will be a separate trial after this one, with defendant Terry Christensen, a famed Hollywood attorney, added) will be: Adam Sender, Sandra Will Carradine, Alec Gores and Susan Reddan Maguire. Their cases, the government feels, distill the case to its essence without distracting a jury by dragging in celebrities who would simply entertain and not enlighten.

So even though I shared with you an early list of potential witnesses last week, it’s unclear if 75 percent of them will be brought to the stand.

Barely mentioned in the memo are the Pellicano big fish: attorney Bert Fields, studio exec Brad Grey or any of the stars whose paths crossed Pellicano and Fields like Sylvester Stallone or Chris Rock.

Ricardo Cestero, the former Pellicano employee who went to law school so he could join Fields and work just on cases for Tom Cruise, is also not mentioned once.

The only truly juicy section of the 129-page memo is on page 96, where former super agent Michael Ovitz makes an appearance. There, the details get interesting. In 2002, the trial memo states, Ovitz paid Pellicano $25,000 to investigate sports promoter Arthur Bernier and sports agent James Casey. Ovitz was suing each of them.

The memo states:

“In addition to the specific matters for which PIA was retained, Pellicano and Ovitz discussed individuals within the entertainment community who were the source of bad press against Ovitz. During these conversations, Ovitz and Pellicano discussed Ovitz’s belief that New York Times writer Bernard Weinraub had been recycling negative stories about him and that, on occasion, he was assisted by Los Angeles Times writer Anita Busch.”

What followed, the government charges, was the illegal wiretapping of Busch’s phones and illegal investigations of her life. Pellicano’s interest in Busch is what eventually put him in prison for possession of illegal firearms.

Another name that comes up less than expected is that of Brad Grey, now the head of Paramount Pictures. His name appears just five times, all on page 88, and all in relation to a long-running lawsuit we’ve explored in this column between him and movie producer Bo Zenga over the 2000 film “Scary Movie.” Grey hired attorney Bert Fields to represent him, and Fields hired Pellicano.

From the memo: “During the course of the subsequent investigation, confidential information regarding multiple investigative targets was acquired through, among other means, protected law enforcement database inquiries and illegal wiretaps. For these services, Grey’s attorneys paid Pellicano $25,000, which cost was then passed on to Grey as part of the firm’s monthly bill for litigation costs. Again, Pellicano, at the outset of the investigation, tasked Arneson with obtaining criminal history information on the investigative targets.”

Look back to the middle of that paragraph. The government carefully does not identify “Grey’s attorneys.” But they are attorneys who work for — if not the man himself — Bert Fields. The omission is intentional.

And what of Bert Fields? His mentions in the trial memo are limited to two, both on page 91, as attorney for Adam Sender. Sender, a hedge fund manager, was suing Aaron Russo (now deceased, Bette Midler’s one-time infamous manager) over a movie company deal that didn’t pan out.

The trial memo states: “On Fields’ recommendation, Sender retained PIA in March of 2001. During the course of the subsequent investigation, confidential information regarding multiple investigative targets was acquired through, among other means, protected law enforcement database inquiries and illegal wiretaps. For these services, Sender paid PIA $500,000.”

Pellicano allegedly commenced the extensive illegal wiretapping of Russo and his family. The memo states: “… two PIA employees will testify about how this wiretap was used to serve legal process on Russo outside of the Giuseppe Franco Salon in Beverly Hills on April 21, 2001. After learning that Russo would be at this location from the wiretap, the employees traveled to the salon, where they subsequently chased Russo through several buildings before effecting service on him.”

There are two big questions that come out of this: Will the government tie Fields to the Pellicano investigation of the Russo’s? And will they want to?

More importantly, if the government’s case with just the four witnesses is very tight, will it force Pellicano to roll over on his famous friends in exchange for leniency?