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Pop Sales: Adele’s “Easy on Me” Has Sold Five Times as Many Copies This Week as Idiotic Anti-Biden Novelty Song

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iTunes is being gamed, as it happens, by people “stuffing the ballot box.”

An idiotic novelty song by very low-minded people who don’t believe the pandemic exists and are anti-Joe Biden is at the top of the iTunes T0p 100. It’s leapt over Adele’s “Easy On Me” out of the blue.

But the reality is this: “Let’s Go Brandon” (code for “f— Biden”) has sold just 37,800 copies so far this week. The good news for singer Bryson Gray is that it’s all downloading, no streaming. No one is streaming this record. (Do Trumpers subscribe to streaming services? I guess not.)

Meantime, “Easy on Me” has already sold over 180,000 copies this week. The total so far is almost at 700,000. The bulk of the sales are streaming, although 17,500 are from downloads.

“Easy On Me” has around 121 million views on YouTube. Loza Alexander’s original stupid version of “Brandon” has around 3 million.

Adele will win the week in streaming. Bryson Gray will soon return to oblivion. Why anyone would spend money on the latter junk is beyond me. The pandemic is real, it’s killed over 300,000 Americans. Get vaxxed, don’t be an idiot. I just don’t understand how people who’ve had COVID or lost loved ones to it are too stupid to get this. You would lose a job and livelihood rather than get a safe shot?

Ironically, the people the government is probably tracking are the ones who refuse the jab, not the ones who got it!

Wednesday Ratings: World Series Beats Everything, Sends “The Conners” and ABC Comedies into Basement

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Last night’s ratings were predictably bad for the ABC Comedy block. The World Series on Fox scored over 8 million viewers as the Astros trounced the Braves (not thrilled, frankly). It is hoped the Braves will get a grip and control over what’s going on.

ABC on Wednesdays is a mess. “The Conners,” as we know, has gone into a tailspin. Last night the “Roseanne” spin off dropped almost 11% from last week in total viewers and 18% in the key demo, 18-49. They lost almost 400,000 fans from last week. Those viewers must be Astros fans!

The sad part of this story is that “The Conners,” with just 3.2 million viewers, is the high ground for ABC Wednesdays. “The Goldbergs” was at 3.1 million. “The Wonder Years” 2.0 and “Home Economics” are way behind, and they’ve been issued extensions through May. I’ve never heard anyone mention “A Million Little Things,” a ‘thirtysomething’ lite soap opera. If ABC wants a soap, they’d be smart to revive “Knots Landing,” or actually bring back ‘thirtysomething’ (whatever happened to that idea).

 

 

Review: HBO Produced “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Returns With Larry David Taking a Jab at Competitor Netflix

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Yes, it’s time for season 11 of “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” It would be hard to top Season 10 and the Spite Store, but Larry and his team seem like they’re ready for anything.

Two things pop out in the first episode of Season 11. Larry has sold a TV pilot called “Young Larry” to…Netflix. Indeed, Netflix is all over this episode, which is a sharp dig at HBO’s main competitor in the off network TV races. Larry and manager Jeff (Jeff Garlin) visit the Netflix digs, take meetings there, and even have auditions for the show.

Back when David and Jerry Seinfeld had their storyline on the latter’s show about “the show about nothing,” Jerry and George pitched it to NBC, the same network as “Seinfeld.” But now Larry David seems to be taking a poke at Netflix, and we’ll see where that goes.

Also of interest is the addition of the great Albert Brooks, who seems to be taking the place, at least for now, of Richard Lewis. It’s great seeing Brooks, who doesn’t love him? This may be an homage to Brooks’s real life brother, Bob Einstein, who played Larry’s friend Funkhauser until his untimely death in 2019. No mention has been made of Funkauser’s passing on “Curb,” and now his real life brother appears.

There was a recurring bit on Sunday night’s episode of people walking into glass doors that was funny, and laughed out loud during JB Smoove’s auditioning for girlfriends with the same name was his ex, but what I didn’t enjoy was the whole subplot of Larry being blackmailed by a Mexican family. It came off as cruel and a little racist. And kinda stupid.

But off we go for another season which won’t be boring, that’s for sure. And, of course, Susie Essman rocks.

 

Santa Fe Sheriff’s Department: Alec Baldwin Active Part of Investigation, Too Early for Charges, Live Rounds Found on Set

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The Santa Fe Sheriff’s department has no news yet about bringing any charges in the “Rust” movie Alec Baldwin scandal concerning the death of Halyna Hutchins and shooting of Joel Souza.

The sheriff, Adan Mendoza,  said at a press conference going on right now that they’ve got the bullet that killed Hutchins and was removed from Souza’s shoulder. More importantly, they also have matching live rounds from the weapon that killed Hutchins found on the set. This indicates that the gun was shot more than once, not necessarily only by Baldwin but by others also perhaps prior to the incident. There have been allegations that the gun was used for fun before its use on set.

The sheriff says there were was other ammunition in the fun fired by Baldwin.

Further investigations are pending. All the evidence is going to the FBI crime lab for testing.

The local District Attorney said at the press conference: “No one has been ruled out at this point. Right now [Alec Baldwin] is an active part of this investigation.”

Elvis Costello Debuts New Single, “Magnificent Hurt,” Steve Nieve Returns to Tour After False Positive COVID Test

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Elvis Costello and the Impostors dropped a new single this morning, “Magnificent Hurt,” and it’s really terrific. You will hear Steve Nieve’s organ featured prominently. Nieve missed Monday’s show at the Capitol Theater after receiving a false positive COVID test. He was back last night on the tour. I’m sorry I missed him.

“Magnificent Hurt” comes from a new album coming January 14, 2022 called “The Boy Named If.” Other songs from the album currently being road tested on tour include “Farewell OK” (which I did get to hear Monday night), plus “What If I Can’t Give You Anything but Love?” and “Mistook Me for a Friend.”

On the tracklist is a song called “My Most Beautiful Mistake” featuring Nicole Atkins. Of course, there’s a famous Costello song already called “Brilliant Mistake,” so we’ll see what that’s all about. Costello has almost never had a duet singer credited to any of his records, so who is Nicole Atkins? The 43 year old is not that well known although she’s had a lot of releases and praise. All of a udden she’s going to get a big boost from this recording. And we’ll learn all about her.

An interesting PS: Elvis has been on Concord Records for a while now. But with “The Boy Named If” he moves to Capitol Records at Universal Music Group. Capitol is a little more commercial than Concord, which suggests the album has some sales potential. From the tracks I’ve heard, I’d agree, although there’s nothing better than Costello’s Grammy winning “Look Now” album. Still in my car player!

ABBA SOS: On Eve of Marketing Launch, Three New Singles in a Row Have Failed to Sell or Get Radio Play

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ABBA, the fabled international Swedish pop stars, are coming with the first new album since 1982. On November 5, the world will hear “Voyage,” the opening salvo in their mega return.

But aside from the two men in ABBA, does anyone care? Even the two women in the group are half-heartedly participating. They’re not even doing promotion.

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The public seems less than interested, especially in ABBA’s new music. As with all legacy acts from the 70s, 80s, and even 90s, the fans just want to hear the hits. Their brains aren’t wired to accept new music.

And so ABBA has released three failed singles since September 2nd. All duds, not only sales wise, but on the radio, and critically. They are bad records. And the public has responded in kind.

Here are the sales figures according to Buzz Angle/Alpha Data:

Just a Notion – 3,000 copies total mostly streaming, only 574 paid downloads
Don’t Shut me Down — 37,000 copies, 5,800 downloads
I Still Have Faith in You — 25,000 copies, 4,300 downloads

Those numbers don’t augur well for “Voyage,” even though the album is currently listed at number 7 on Amazon based on advance sales. But “Voyage” could have one or two big days based on those sales, and then peter out quickly if there aren’t tracks getting attention. So far radio has ignored the new ABBA songs, and with good reason. They are not nearly as charismatic as ABBA’s fabled hits which have been featured in two movie musicals, one Broadway musical, a covers album by Cher, and so on.

It’s quite possible this whole ABBA revival is going to be the Titanic of comebacks. What the fans wanted is a tour with the original four members singing “Dancing Queen.” Maybe a live album would have followed. But so far, a new album of original songs is not what they wanted. And the fake ABBA non-hologram whatever-it-is thing? We’ll see if that sells tickets. They may get away with it in Europe, but in the US it’s doubtful.

Is Brandi Carlile a Roots or Pop Artist? Grammys Move Her into the Big Time Mainstream And She’s Not Happy

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Brandi Carlile performed two songs on “Saturday Night Live” this past weekend. Both songs were wonderful, and Grammy worthy. But Carlile is disappointed the Grammys moved “Right on Time” out of the Americana category and into pop. Listen to the song. What do you think? It’s Americana/roots but I see the point: Brandi Carlile is now mainstream, and that’s what pop is.

PS Brandi’s album, “In these Silent Days,” was held for release til October 1st, one day past the eligibility deadline. So it’s going to be in the 2023 Grammys. Why? I have no idea. It would have been an Album of the Year nominee this time without a doubt. Labels think this extends the life of an album but I think people forget and move on. We’ll see.

A few words from Brandi about the Grammys.

Americana/American Roots music is more than a genre to me. It represents my community, my family, my friends and my beautiful island of misfits. I am also proud that it represents a great number of people actively WORKING to platform marginalized people – LGBTQIA, women, and people of color (who, of course, actually built the genre).

The importance of staying and working within Americana is greater than just me. There is not a moment where I don’t view my role as something larger. I feel great responsibility in representing marginalized queer people in rural America who are raised on country and roots music but are repeatedly and systematically rejected by the correlating culture. Every rung I can sling my gay sequined boot up on top of gets queer people a little higher on the ladder to being seen as just a bit more human in the great American roots landscape

I am very proud to be the Americana Association’s Artist of the Year two years in a row and to have debuted at number one on the Billboard Americana chart! It was an honor to have made my album at the same place I made my last one….and with all the same folks! Same producers and band. I cut every song live with acoustic guitars, vintage electrics plugged into old fender amps, beautifully aged pianos and with my fog horn vocals bleeding into every mic.

While I’m incredibly flattered to be considered “pop” as a 40 year old crooning lesbian mother, I would be lying if I said I wasn’t a bit surprised and disappointed to learn the Recording Academy decided to move “Right On Time” out of the American Roots genre and into the pop category.

Being recognized by the Grammys — in any form — is a great honor. I just want folks to know this wasn’t my decision. Regardless, it doesn’t change who I am or what my Americana community continues to mean to me.

Weapons Handler for Alec Baldwin Film Bragged on LinkedIn About “Ensuring gun safety on set along with instructing actors on how to use their guns”

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EXCLUSIVE Hannah Gutierrez has been identified as the armorer or weapons handler on the movie, “Rust.” According to reports, she laid out three guns on the Santa Fe set. One of them wound up killing Halyna Hutchins and wounding director Joel Souza, fired by an unwitting Alec Baldwin.

Gutierrez’s LinkedIn page includes a resume note from this past spring and summer working at Yellowstone Film Ranch in Montana from March through June. She described her job there: “Loading firearms with appropriately sized blanks. Ensuring gun safety on set along with instructing actors on how to use their guns.”

She is young and pretty, and according to LinkedIn a student at Northern Arizona University from 2017 to 2020 in “creative media and film.”

It’s unclear if Gutierrez was union approved or licensed, or still a student. But she comes from a family of “armorers.” Her father is the famous armorer and movie gun consultant Thell Reed, who she said trained her in an affidavit.

(republished 10/26, first published 10/22)

More to come…

Review: In “King Richard,” Story of Serena and Venus’s Dad, Will Smith Makes a Royal Pain Likeable

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For months now I’ve been hearing how Will Smith ‘will win the Oscar’ for playing Richard Williams in “King Richard.”

Now that I’ve seen this two hour and twenty minute epic about the coaching father of Serena and Venus Williams, I will concede this much: Will will be nominated, no question.

If he wins the Oscar, Will will do it on the strength of his own enormous likeability. It won’t be for the character he plays in “King Richard.” Richard Williams is one of the most annoying main characters I’ve seen on screen in a long time. He is a royal pain, that’s for sure.

For about forty five minutes, director Reinaldo Marcus Green has “King Richard” in hand. He shows a determined father of five daughters trying to lift his family out of obscurity in Compton, Los Angeles by making two of them into tennis stars. Richard is single-minded, and has his own “plan” he intends to follow even as he courts, hires, insults, and fires famous coaches to help him. Luckily, he has a very understanding wife in Brandi, played by the wonderful Aunjanue Ellis. (She’s the key to this movie, and will get a Supporting Actress nod).

Those first forty five minutes are important. We see this very devoted nuclear family, charming and loose, authentically organized by Green. It’s the best part of the movie, the stuff before the fame and the irritating sports announcer narration booming over loudspeakers, and Richard telling everyone that he knows best. He’s a little like Allie Fox from “The Mosquito Coast.” You know he’s kinda nuts, kinda brilliant, and for a while, if you’re a kid, you’ll follow him.

Eventually, though, the family starts to question Richard’s authority, and we start to wonder what the point is here. His character arc doesn’t show growth, it just shows persistence and hard headed-ness. Did he create two superstar athletes? Sure. But what about all the experts he squandered and used along the way?

The most likeable people in the movie are Richard’s victims, like Tony Goldwyn as super coach Paul Cohen and Jon Bernthal as Rick Macci. Everything they say to Richard makes sense to us. Richard doesn’t listen. He just keeps talking. After a while you want to say, hey, Richard, will you shut up and take some advice these people?

I loved Will Smith in “The Pursuit of Happyness,” “Ali,” and a few other of his “serious” movies. In the former, he managed to make a determined man with a dream into someone you rooted for. He’s trying hard in “King Richard,” and almost makes it. That he doesn’t quite have a Grand Slam isn’t his fault, it’s the character. Richard is self-defeating.

So is this movie. Instead of having a “Rocky” type ending, we get something of a downer. That’s an interesting choice for screenwriter Zach Baylin and Greene. I was a little surprised by the direction they took. But there are lessons galore to be learned. “King Richard” is meant to be inspirational, and it is. I won’t deny it that power.

Greene is very good with the actors particularly the young women (Saniyya Sidney and Demi Singleton) who play the Williams sisters. There are cute moments with supporting players, like soap star Judith Chapman as Nancy Reagan. Goldwyn and Bernthal are incredibly winning. Ellis builds a stock loving wife into something deeper. She digs into Brandi and speaks for the exasperated audience a couple of times.

“King Richard” will debut in theaters and on HBO Max, where I think it will have a big audience. And watch for Will Smith and Aunjunue Ellis to be big players in awards season.

 

These John Lennon “Crocs” Have Ventilation Holes That Look Like Bullets on Beatle’s Face

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Here’s a really bad idea: Crocs customized with John Lennon’s image. Were they licensed by Yoko Ono? I doubt it. The company is called Lefuca and they’re from Alabama. They sell other Crocs with branded material, you can look through their website.

The problem besides possible licensing is the design. Because Crocs are ventilated, they have holes in the top so your feet don’t sweat. The design of the Lennon Crocs puts holes on his face. They look a lot like bullet holes from the picture. Unintentional, but still…Imagine wearing them. Lefuca is playing Mind Games. If you want them, well, whatever gets you through the night…

I’d rethink this design…