Monday, December 22, 2025
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Will Sean Diddy Combs Beat Kanye to the Record Store? Diddy Aiming at a September 24th Release

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You may remember “Donda,” the Kanye West album that has never been released. There’s a third listening event for it this week, this time in Chicago. And then? Is it finished? Will it drop?

No one knows, and it’s hard to say if anyone cares at this point.

Meantime, Sean Combs, aka Puff Daddy, aka Diddy, and now aka LOVE, I’m told is working day and night on an album set for release on September 24th. It’s called “Off the Grid” and will be an R&B album.

Combs is the current cover subject on the September Vanity Fair but the article makes no mention of “Off the Grid.” I’m told several producers are involved including Mario Winans, who had a big hit with Puffy back in 2004 on “I Don’t Wanna Know.”

Puffy wound up making his money in other businesses than the music business, like with Ciroc Vodka. But he knows a hit. His biggest one was turning Sting’s Police hit “Every Breath You Take” into “I’ll Be Missing You.” Of course, Sting pocketed all the publishing royalties. What if Puffy comes up with something like that again?

And unlike Kanye, Combs is actually sticking to his release date. That album is coming. If Combs beats West to the punch, that will be a story. If I know Sean Combs, he’s going to do it.

 

Paul McCartney Sends a Video On the Passing of Charlie Watts: “He was a lovely guy, Charlie was a rock and a fantastic drummer”

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Paul McCartney, with a white beard, sends his condolences:

RIP The Rock World Cries for Charlie Watts, 80, Famed Rolling Stones Drummer

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Charlie Watts had the longest marriage, lived the best life, and was the standard bearer for The Rolling Stones. He has died at age 80. The rock world mourns the loss.

Bernard Doherty, Charlie’s PR guy, said Tuesday that Watts “passed away peacefully in a London hospital earlier today surrounded by his family.”

Doherty said: “Charlie was a cherished husband, father and grandfather and also as a member of The Rolling Stones one of the greatest drummers of his generation.”

Watts had pulled out of the Stones next tour after having a surgical procedure. He said on Twitter that he felt his timing was off, but expected to recover from whatever was ailing him.

Steve Jordan is replacing him as the Stones’ drummer but no one can really ever replace him. Charlie was the heart and soul of the Stones. With his exit, we are down to two original members, Mick and Keith.

Charlie married Shirley Ann Shepherd in 1964. They have a daughter, a grandaughter, and a step-grandson. They lived a grand life, but he was never like the other Stones. Watts was a family man, and a serious musician. What a shame.

Steve van Zandt Tweeted: “Oh no! This is terribly shocking. Not just one of greatest drummers in one of the greatest bands of all time, but a gentleman’s gentleman. He singlehandedly brought the Rock world some real class. Rock and Roll will miss him profoundly. We are significantly less without him.”

 

Keep refreshing…

The New “Spider Man” Trailer is Here, Complete with Doc Ock But No Sign Yet of Past Peter Parkers

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The teaser trailer for “Spider Man: o Way Home” is here after being illegally leaked. This is official. Seems like Peter Parker calls in Dr. Strange to erase the world’s knowledge of his alter-ego. And everything goes wrong.

In the teaser, Alfred Molina is back as Doc Ock after 17 years. Past Peter Parkers Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield are said to maybe appear also, but not yet. Tom Holland and Zendaya, who are maybe a real life couple now, star in the third iteration of this “Spider Man” series, which I think makes 9 movies devoted to this character.

Good use of the original theme music.

Elton John Samples Himself And Gets “Cold Heart,” His Biggest Hit in 21 Years, with Dua Lipa

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Why hasn’t anyone else thought of this?

Elton John has a smash hit with Dua Lipa, his first hit single in 21 years. The song is called “Cold Heart,” and it comes from Elton sampling himself, or interpolating.

Producer P’Nau took Elton’s 1989 single, “Sacrifice,” and mashed it up with his 1972 classic, “Rocket Man.” They retitled the song, “Cold Heart,” from the “Sacrifice” chorus. Elton sings from that song, Dua Lipa sings the refrain from “Rocket Man.”

The result is that “Cold Heart” has sold 40,000 copies in two weeks including streaming. Billboard just put it at number 81 on the new Hot 100. Radio is playing it. I actually heard it blaring from my neighbor’s apartment last week.

“Cold Heart” is number 14 on iTunes, and climbing!

Whoever thought of this gets a prize. Now all legacy artists will start digging through their catalogs. Self-sampling will be a new thing!

And PS Elton John is always “in,” in every generation.

 

Paul McCartney Reveals the 154 Songs He Writes About in His Two Volume Memoir Including a Lost One Just Re-discovered

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Paul McCartney is releasing a two volume memoir on November 2nd in which he reminisces about 154 of his songs. Today the list of songs was released. This career-spanning selection also includes a set of lyrics to an unrecorded Beatles song: ‘Tell Me Who He Is’. During the writing of “The Lyrics” the hand-written lyrics were discovered in one of Paul’s notebooks, believed to date back to the early 1960s.

Some songs are left out. I’m most sorry that he didn’t include a great gem, “Daytime Nighttime Suffering,” which is sort of a sequel to “Another Day” and “She’s Leaving Home.” You can’t have everything. But this sort of goes with Paul’s recent six part series on Hulu with Rick Rubin. And it precedes the big Beatles “Let it Be” Peter Jackson doc, “Get Back.”

The book was announced at $100, but now I guess it pre-sold so well amazon is listing it at $79.99. I’m ordering one today!

VOLUME 1:

All My Loving
And I Love Her
Another Day
Arrow Through Me
Average Person
Back In the U.S.S.R.
Band On The Run
Birthday
Blackbird
Café on the Left Bank
Calico Skies
Can’t Buy Me Love
Carry That Weight
Check My Machine
Come and Get It
Coming Up
Confidante
Cook of the House
Country Dreamer
A Day In The Life
Dear Friend
Despite Repeated Warnings
Distractions
Do It Now
Dress Me Up as a Robber
Drive My Car
Eat at Home
Ebony and Ivory
Eight Days a Week
Eleanor Rigby
The End
Fixing A Hole
The Fool On The Hill
For No One
From Me to You
Get Back
Getting Closer
Ghosts of the Past Left Behind
Girls’ School
Give Ireland Back to the Irish
Golden Earth Girl
Golden Slumbers
Good Day Sunshine Goodbye
Got to Get You Into My Life
Great Day
A Hard Day’s Night
Helen Wheels
Helter Skelter
Her Majesty
Here, There and Everywhere
Here Today
Hey Jude
Hi, Hi, Hi
Honey Pie
Hope of Deliverance
House of Wax
I Don’t Know
I Lost My Little Girl
I Saw Her Standing There
I Wanna Be Your Man
I Want to Hold Your Hand
I Will
I’ll Follow the Sun
I’ll Get You
I’m Carrying
I’m Down
In Spite of All the Danger
I’ve Got a Feeling
Jenny Wren
Jet
Junior’s Farm
Junk
The Kiss of Venus

VOLUME 2:

Lady Madonna
Let ‘Em In
Let It Be
Let Me Roll It
Live and Let Die
London Town
The Long and Winding Road
Love Me Do
Lovely Rita
Magneto and Titanium Man
Martha My Dear
Maxwell’s Silver Hammer
Maybe I’m Amazed
Michelle
Mother Nature’s Son
Mrs. Vandebilt
Mull of Kintyre
My Love
My Valentine
Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five
No More Lonely Nights
The Note You Never Wrote
Nothing Too Much Just Out of Sight
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
Oh Woman, Oh Why
Old Siam, Sir
On My Way to Work
Once Upon a Long Ago
Only Mama Knows
The Other Me
Paperback Writer
Penny Lane
Picasso’s Last Words (Drink to Me)
Pipes of Peace
Please Please Me
Pretty Boys
Pretty Little Head
Put It There
Rocky Raccoon
San Ferry Anne
Say Say Say
Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
She Came in Through the Bathroom Window
She Loves You
She’s a Woman
She’s Given Up Talking
She’s Leaving Home
Silly Love Songs
Simple as That
Single Pigeon
Somedays
Spirits of Ancient Egypt
Teddy Boy
Tell Me Who He Is
Temporary Secretary
Things We Said Today
Ticket to Ride
Too Many People
Too Much Rain
Tug of War
Two of Us
Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey
Venus and Mars/Rock Show/Venus and Mars – Reprise
Warm and Beautiful
Waterfalls
We All Stand Together
We Can Work It Out
We Got Married
When I’m Sixty-Four
When Winter Comes
Why Don’t We Do It in the Road?
With a Little Help From My Friends
Women and Wives
The World Tonight
The World You’re Coming Into
Yellow Submarine
Yesterday
You Never Give Me Your Money
You Tell Me
Your Mother Should Know

RIP Micki Grant, First African American Character on a Soap, Won Many Awards for Theater Work

Back in 1965, there had never been a full time character on an afternoon soap played by an African American woman. Then came Micki Grant, who played legal secretary Peggy Nolan for seven years on NBC’s “Another World.” The character was created by Agnes Nixon. According to the IMDB she was  in nearly 500 episodes.

Micki Grant died this weekend, and it seems like she was possibly 90 years old. Someone on Wikipedia has written that she looked young so she shaved a decade off her age to get roles. I remember when I was in grade school, she was a cute as a button on “Another World.” What’s interesting is that she was the forerunner of Peggy, the legal secretary played on “Mannix” beginning in 1968. Great minds think alike.

But Micki Grant had another life. She was a dynamo in New York theater. She had three Tony nominations for writing shows including the hit, “Don’t Bother Me I Can’t Cope.” She received an Obie award for writing the music and lyrics to that show when it started off Broadway. She worked often with collaborator Vinnette Carroll, and contributed to more than a dozen shows including “Yours Arm Too Shot to Box with God” and “Eubie!”

Grant continued to appear on the New York soaps after she left “Another World,” taking roles on “Guiding Light” and “The Edge of Night.”

The New York Times had better give her a big obit and send off.

Mayim Bialik Gets the Temporary “Jeopardy!” Host Job, Will Tape Three Weeks Right Away

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From “Blossom” to “The Big Bang Theory” to “Jeopardy!”

Mayim Bialik has been chosen to tape three weeks as temporary host of the game show following the ouster of Mike Richards.

Bialik had already been tapped as host for specials and spin offs. It was thought that she didn’t have time to do regular hosting because she’s involved in the second season of her Fox sitcom, “Call Me Kat.”

But it looks like she worked it out. A week of “Jeopardy!” tapes in one day, so it’s three days work for Bialik equaling three weeks. And who knows? Maybe the two shows will complement each other and boost ratings for each.

Richards taped two weeks of shows before he was forced to step away, so those shows will run first, then Mayim’s shows will follow. “Jeopardy!” says there will be more guest hosts to come. Maybe they’ll give shots to Laura Coates and Alex Faust, as well.

 

 

“Jeopardy!” Ignored Alex Trebek’s Choices for a Successor, Didn’t Even Give Them Auditions

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The producers of “Jeopardy!” and Sony TV obviously didn’t care what Alex Trebek thought about who should succeed him as host of the game show.

In 2018, Trebek told TMZ’s Harvey Levin on the air that he’d suggested two people to the show. These ideas obviously fell on deaf ears.

One was Los Angeles King announcer Alex Faust, who would have been competition for EP Mike Richards. Faust is a young, good looking white guy. Whoops! That’s what Richards thought he was himself!

The other was CNN legal analyst Laura Coates, a Black woman who is smart, intelligent, and articulate.

Everyone forgot about this interview, it was all forgotten, and Sony TV didn’t even ask these people to do a week’s worth of shows. Instead we got people like Dr. Oz, and both Good Morning America hosts, neither of whom could have done the show anyway.

Now we’re in this weird situation with Richards out. Ken Jennings is who I was told producers expected to choose last winter before Richards took over the process and rigged the competition in his favor. Some insiders also speculate the Mayim Bialik was on track for the job but her current Fox sitcom precluded her doing it full time.

Interesting that Trebek’s wishes were ignored, and a whole new marketing shpiel was introduced. What a shitshow.

 

Showtime’s Cindy Adams Gossip Series: Tom Cruise’s Two Front Teeth Fell Out at Lunch with Newspaper Editor

Showtime’s four part “Gossip” series dropped last night, a rarity since they put it all on their On Demand channel. I guess, better get it over with all at once.

The series is really about gossip doyenne Cindy Adams, now unbelievably 91 years old, famous for her daily (now thrice a week) column at the New York Post since the 1980s. On a personal note, I love Cindy and respect her incredible work ethic (which only comes up in the fourth chapter). She is an original and deserves all her success. She is totally self-invented. Her devotion to her late husband, Joey Adams, and to her mother was exceptional. Not a trained journalist by any means, she willed herself into a historic career. More on that later.

But the filmmakers decided to set Cindy’s story in the context of gossip since the 1980s including the history of the Post and Rupert Murdoch. This isn’t easy for me, because I’ve been around the whole time, know the whole story, I know what’s missing from this “documentary,” what the filmmakers didn’t know or excised, and so on. I know too much about all of this. All I could think while I watched the four episodes was, thank God I’m not in this.

They should have just made a documentary about Cindy. She’s enough to carry a two hour film that would have been more cohesive. Instead, there’s two more hours woven throughout about all this other stuff. Various friends and colleagues of mine turn up. Some are hilarious and honest, some aren’t. The best include George Rush, Ben Widdicombe, Flo Anthony, and Jeane Macintosh. There are others, I won’t get into. The filmmakers omit a lot of people who should be here including James Brady, Claudia Cohen, Susan Mulcahy, and Jeannette Walls. This is really criminal. Again, the filmmakers know very little. What a shame they missed so many great opportunities.

On the positive side, Liz Smith, who deserves her own documentary. comes off very well. Cindy says she’s not sure Liz loved her, they were rivals and Cindy protested Liz joining the New York Post. A couple of Posties say Liz’s column didn’t have any bite, which was very much not true. I wish Liz’s memoir, “Natural Blonde,” was still in print. I’m going to ask her Estate to do something about that.

Liz’s nemesis at the Post was editor-in-chief Col Allan, who comes across in this series like a dorky buffoon. Not mentioned in this film is that Col was removed from his position after two innocent people on the front page of the Post as the Boston Marathon bombers. He’s back there now, though, revving up the right wing attacks on Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.

So Col tells a story in “Gossip” that got my attention: he went to lunch with Tom Cruise to discuss the paper’s coverage of the Scientology star. During lunch, Tom’s two front teeth fell out on the table. And Cruise popped them back in! The diminutive star begged Col not to tell anyone, but Allan told Cindy when he got back to the office. He made Cindy promise never to say anything. But now he “outs” Tom. (Remember when Cruise famously got braces? He’s had had some dental issues, I guess.)

Writing a gossip column involves a lot of horse trading. I know that. But at the Post, it got out of control (and still is out of control). Don’t write this, I’ll give you something better and so on. At the Post it turned into payoffs. Writers got big book advances from Harvey Weinstein (thank God, again, I never did that). Free meals and various are a currency dealt in only at the Post to this day. It’s an open secret all over town. A lot of people in this movie are a little too candid about mucking around in this department.

One thing I don’t get about the filmmaking is that there isn’t a single reference to the one movie that binds this whole group, including me, together: “Sweet Smell of Success.” The story of gossip columnist JJ Hunsecker, based on Walter Winchell, and a small time flack named Sidney Falco, is literally the Bible of all columnists. (Also no mention of Winchell, just Cindy’s passing reference to Earl Wilson.) This is a grave error.

Instead, the filmmakers rely on Roger Stone as if he were a hero and oracle when he is known as a criminal and a bottom feeder. (He had to be pardoned by his crony, Donald Trump). Their take on Roy Cohn pales by comparison to the two real documentaries done on that evil creature last year. The filmmakers have little to no idea how all these people were connected, especially to Barbara Walters, a major missing part of this jigsaw puzzle.

Again, there’s a lot of information here. Cindy’s revelation of how she broke with Leona Helmsley is startling. But there is no mention of their involvement with Doris Duke, which would have made a better story than most of this stuff. In the story of how the Post was sold, bought, sold and bought again in the 80s, nutty real estate dealer Abe Hirschfeld is egregiously missing.

But “Gossip” is what we have, and some of it smells like Cindy’s short lived fragrance, which she jokes about. Indeed, Cindy is so self-effacing, honest, and real everything she says is worth listening to, twice.  “Gossip,” like “Leaving Neverland,” “Allen v Farrow,” and “Respect,” and a lot of other recent films purporting to deliver history, winds up being its own fiction. We are getting a generation of “non fiction” films that are worthless for veracity.