Friday, December 19, 2025
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Rock Hall: Tina Turner Leads 2021 Rock Hall Group of Inductees Including Billy Preston, Carole King, Jay Z, Todd Rundgren

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Tina Turner leads the list of inductees for the 2021 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Carole King, The Go Gos, Foo Fighters and Jay Z, who was dead last in fan voting, are the main class.

Billy Preston and Todd Rundgren, LL Cool J are among those chosen by the Hall separate from the voting. We’ve waited a long time for Billy Preston, so congrats to his manager, Joyce Moore, for fighting to protect his legacy. Billy was the actual Fifth Beatle. As the “Let it Be” anniversary release is coming this August, Billy’s induction is right on time.

For once the Hall got it completely right. John Sykes has transformed what was a mess into a success.

Carole King has already posted: “I wanted to be a songwriter so I could meet all the great artists and they would know who I was. I thought being inducted into the @rockhall
as a songwriter with Gerry Goffin was the pinnacle. Until now. Thank you for ALSO inducting me as an artist. And
Folded hands
to my fans always.”

Just a note on Todd Rundgren: always an innovator, like Billy Preston he had his own huge hits in the early 70s. But he also became a noted producer of everyone from Grand Funk Railroad to Meatloaf to XTC. He was way overdue.

Performer Category:

Tina Turner
Carole King
The Go-Go’s
JAY-Z
Foo Fighters
Todd Rundgren

Early Influence Award:

Kraftwerk
Charley Patton
Gil Scott-Heron

Musical Excellence Award:

LL Cool J
Billy Preston
Randy Rhoads

Ahmet Ertegun Award:

Clarence Avant

“Jeopardy!” Now in Real Jeopardy: Anderson Cooper’s Second Week Falls Below 5 Mil, Lowest Rating Recorded

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Beats me. I thought Anderson Cooper was a good Jeopardy host.

But Cooper’s second week was a disaster, sending the ratings below 5 million for the first time in recorded history. The total was 4.8 million, down severely from Ken Jennings’ 6 million earlier this winter.

For a first run, non repeat “Jeopardy!” show, the number is cataclysmic.

The Cooper fail dragged “Wheel of Fortune,” its companion show, down to 4.8 million also.

Syndicator CBS has wrapped the season, so there’s nothing that they can do to remedy the situation. Instead of just putting Jennings in, they had to make this mess of things with the guest hosts. Week by week the ratings have just slid down with no reprieve. Crazy.

At this rate, by the time they finish up the season the show will be in dire straits. They will have to run the best of Alex Trebek all through August and highlight Jennings’ old wins before naming him permanent host.

Ironic, isn’t it? Jennings was the only non-celebrity to guest host besides EP Mike Richards, and he got the best ratings.

 

 

(Watch) Extraordinary 50 Minute Film Character Study from Barry Jenkins, Director of Oscar Winner “Moonlight”

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First, here’s the film, followed by the explanation:

The Gaze from Barry Jenkins on Vimeo.

This 50 minute film is from Barry Jenkins, director of “Moonlight.” He posted it to Twitter today in advance of his series “The Underground Railroad” coming to Amazon Prime on May 14th. The music is by Nicholas Britell, one of our great modern movie composers.

The series is based on the award winning, bestselling novel by Colson Whitehead. The miniseries stars Thuso Mbedu, Chase W. Dillon and Joel Edgerton. Aaron Pierre, William Jackson Harper, Sheila Atim, Amber Gray, Peter De Jersey, Chukwudi Iwuji, Damon Herriman, Lily Rabe, Irone Singleton, Mychal-Bella Bowman, Marcus “MJ” Gladney, Jr., Will Poulter and Peter Mullan round out the cast.

Barry Jenkins serves as showrunner and directs all ten episodes of the limited series.

Here’s Barry’s explanation. Just gorgeous, and great PR:

In my years of doing interviews and roundtables and Q&A’s for the various films we’ve made, there is one question that recurs. No matter the length of the piece or the tone of the room, eventually, inevitably, I am asked about the white gaze. It wasn’t until a very particular interview regarding The Underground Railroad that the blindspot inherent in that questioning became clear to me: never, in all my years of working or questioning, had I been set upon about the Black gaze; or the gaze distilled.

I don’t remember when we began making the piece you see here. Which is not and should not be considered an episode of The Underground Railroad. It exists apart from that, outside it. Early in production, there was a moment where I looked across the set and what I saw settled me: our background actors, in working with folks like Ms. Wendy and Mr. and Mrs. King – styled and dressed and made up by Caroline, by Lawrence and Donni – I looked across the set and realized I was looking at my ancestors, a group of people whose images have been largely lost to the historical record. Without thinking, we paused production on The Underground Railroad and instead harnessed our tools to capture portraits of… them.

What flows here is non-narrative. There is no story told. Throughout production, we halted our filming many times for moments like these. Moments where… standing in the spaces our ancestors stood, we had the feeling of seeing them, truly seeing them and thus, we sought to capture and share that seeing with you. The artist Kerry James Marshall has a series of paintings of ancestors for whom there is no visual record but for whom he has supplied a visual representation of their person. For me, most inspirationally, “Scipio Moorehead, Portrait of Himself, 1776.”

Of the painting, from the Met Breuer exhibit KERRY JAMES MARSHALL: MASTRY – “In this painting Marshall created an imagined self-portrait of a real African American artist, Scipio Moorhead, who was active in the 1770s. Few if any images of Moorhead exist in the historical record. Everything we know of his legacy is based on Phillis Wheatley’s first book of poetry, published in 1773 while she was a slave [sic] in Boston. The book’s title page illustration is an engraving of the writer, reportedly modeled on a painting by Moorhead. The engraving remains the only visual proof, however tenuous, of Moorhead’s existence.”

In the way that Mr. Marshall sought to honor Mr. Moorhead through this imagined physical representation of the artist, we have sought to give embodiment to the souls of our ancestors frozen in the tactful but inadequate descriptor “enslaved,” a phrase that speaks only to what was done to them, not to who they were nor what they did. My ancestors – midwives and blacksmiths, agrarians and healers; builders and spiritualists, yearn’ers and doers – seen here as embodied by this wonderful cast of principal and background actors, did so very much.

Housekeeping: From end to end what you are hearing here is Nick’s original score. And yet even at fifty minutes, this is barely twenty percent of the score for the show. The same with the images; maybe five of these shots are in the actual show? There are no spoilers here. Other images in this format appear there but not here. All told, we archived four hours of these portraits. They flow in story order, from Georgia to Indiana. NOTE: one of these things, you’ll notice, is not like the others. In the context of the show, its presence will make sense.

A FEW SHOUTOUTS – None of these shots are planned. Occasionally, when the spirit moved us, we stopped making the planned thing and focused on making THIS thing. So shoutout to my brother James for sure; we had a show to film and yet he never questioned, he brought his best to this. Always. Caroline Eseline. Our costume designer. The majority of the souls you see here are inhabited by background actors. Which meant at any moment, the camera could go from a close-up of number one on the call sheet to… a portrait of number 500. It did not matter. Every soul needed full embodiment. And every damn time I saw someone and was moved to portraiture, there was no doubt of their readiness. The same goes for Lawrence Davis and his wonderful group of hair stylists. And Doniella Davy and her makeup team. Liz Tan, Spoon, Jesse and the directing team. Alex Bickel. Daniel Morfesis, who cut this and all the teasers that came before. OUR BACKGROUND ACTORS. My most humble thanks.

This is an act of seeing. Of seeing them. And maybe, in a soft-headed way, of opening a portal where THEY may see US, the benefactors of their efforts, of the lives they LIVED.

Much love to you. And so much love to THEM.

-B

Ratings: “Mare of Easttown” Breaks the Million Mark in 3rd Week, with Major Plot Twist Reveal at the End

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HBO’s “Mare of Easttown” broke the million mark Sunday night, posting 1.049,000 linear viewers on the main channel at 10pm. That’s up over a million viewers from episode 2.

It’s obvious that was word spreads, viewers are catching up. Plus, the show was spoofed hilariously on “Saturday Night Live.”

Episode 3 slowed the pace a bit but introduced a lot of new ideas and characters. There was also a big reveal and plot twist at the end of the hour that no one was expecting.

Here’s my two cents: I think the Evan Peters character, Colin, is the son of the Guy Pearce character, Richard. One of them is the abductor/killer. Colin’s mother would be Richard’s ex-wife. Richard talked about them in Episode 2. So we had to meet the mom this past week and see Colin with her.

At first I thought the killer was Richard. But Colin is super creepy. He hit on Mare, then asked her out. Very inappropriate.

Katie’s mom, who has cancer, gives me very Laura Palmer’s mother vibes from “Twin Peaks.”

Whatever happens, Kate Winslet and co. should easily have a new mystery for a second season. She’s spectacular, Jean Smart and Julianne Nicholson are wonderful, and let’s hope there are more twists and turns.

Tom Cruise Still Defends Scientology, Is “Disconnected from Teen Daughter,” But Sends Back Golden Globes

Big news yesterday: Tom Cruise sent back his 3 Golden Globe awards. Why? He wants to seem like a hero, as he has a megalomania complex. Do you think Tom cares whether or not the HFPA has Black members? He’s sucked up to them for years. He must have noticed there were no Black people.

What Cruise didn’t do was renounce his membership in Scientology, a religious cult known around the world for harming its members and breaking up families. It broke up his own family. Tom hasn’t seen or spoken to his daughter, Suri, in years. He was told to “disconnect” from her after he divorced Katie Holmes.

Cruise also has made it difficult for his two adopted kids to have a relationship with their mother, Nicole Kidman.

Back in 2005, when Tom “kidnapped” Katie and appointed her his wife, he separated Holmes from her family. It was a scary time for the Holmes family. Tom also made his mother break up with her second husband in Florida and move to L.A. to watch Katie and take care of Suri when she was first born.

Cruise has consistently represented Scientology and defended it on TV and at every opportunity. Sending back Golden Globes is meaningless. Owning the horrors of L. Ron Hubbard’s cult would be a significant place to start being a hero.

UPDATE Netflix Trailer for Season 2 of Hit Series, “Lupin,” Starring Omar Sy in Hit French TV Thriller

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“Lupin” is coming back on June 11th! Hallelujah! The French thriller TV show is a sensation on Netflix. Omar Sy stars. This show had better get a lot of Emmy nominations this summer. So clever and fun. And we’re learning French in the process!

Sacre bleu!

PS I have no idea why this trailer keeps coming and going.

Don’t Stop til You Get Enough: Michael Jackson Musical “MJ” Will Get 7 Preview Weeks, Open February 1, 2022

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The Michael Jackson musical is here.

“MJ” will get seven weeks of previews beginning December 20th and open February 1, 2022. This will be a show dependent on suspension of disbelief and a willingness to dance in the aisles.

There have been worse ideas.

The Michael Jackson musical will go from his childhood through the success of “Thriller,” and there before things get too weird. Maybe they’ll throw in some songs from “Bad,” too.

Running concurrently with the Temptations musical, “Ain’t Too Proud,” we’ll be getting real dose of Motown and a third show in which Berry Gordy is a character. That may be a record.

Look for a lot of Moonwalking, beaded silver gloves for sale in the lobby, and everyone singing “Billie Jean” together, standing in the theater. It should be a lot of fun.

Don’t stop til you get enough!

PS You know, this would after the story of the musical, but Michael did make his kids wear masks all those years. He was prescient!

Broadway’s Back! Tina Turner Musical Returns October 8th, Temptations Motown Show on October 16th

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Broadway will be full of R&B again soon, I’m happy to report.

“Tina– The Tina Turner Musical” will return to its performances on Friday, October 8th. And the “Ain’t Too Proud,” the musical about Motown’s Temptations, hits the stage on Saturday, October 16th.

For “Tina,” the re-opening is important because it’s a Tony Awards nominated musical from 2020. Star Adrienne Warren has had to wait 18 months to be announced as Best Actress in a Musical. It’s been a cruel season for the 2020 performers and nominees.

Will we see Tony Awards of some kind this fall? It is hoped that the Broadway League will do something in September or October to welcome shows back and close this strange chapter.

“Ain’t Too Proud” was from the prior season. Great show, and I can’t wait to see it again!

PS that date for “Tina” is a couple of week after the Emmy Awards when HBO’s Tina documentary should have picked up some awards too!

 

Exclusive: John Mulaney Returns to the Stage 141 Days Sober: “I was the best looking person at my intervention”

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John Mulaney told us last night at City Winery that he is 141 days sober after a terrifying battle with cocaine addiction and alcoholism. It was his debut, the first of five nights in a row, his return to performing.

“I was the best looking person at my intervention,” he said, because he was dressed up, had just had a haircut, and unlike everyone in the room who’d gained weight during the pandemic, Mulaney was down to about 105 pounds thanks to lots of drugs.

His intervention, by the way, included Seth Meyers, comedy partner Nick Kroll, Fred Armisen, Natasha Lyonne, and Bill Hader. None of them, he was disappointed to say, were doing bits. They were afraid for his life.

Mulaney has decided to work out his rehab on stage, with his interventionist watching from the balcony of City Winery. It’s a brave call. Mulaney, kind of a comedy genius who’s got a serious drug and addiction problem, joked that “the press” would be wondering if he “still had it.” Don’t worry, he does.

But Mulaney is fragile. His show for now will be like group therapy. He interacted a lot with the audience, discussing a raft of prescription drugs he’d been given by doctors, or bought from drugs dealers– besides cocaine. That part was endearing and sad. You can’t feel anything but sympathy for someone so talented and so plagued by his demons. He said it was once thought he suffered from ADHD but “I was just bored.”

For the opening show, Mulaney was dressed casually in a blue and white striped long sleeved Polo shirt, dark jeans, and white sneakers. He confessed to a stint in rehab that had been a secret last fall before hosting “Saturday Night Live.” It didn’t work, and he went right back in after bizarre appearances on Seth Meyer’s “Late Show.” He also talked about briefly taking a job at “Late Night” for the structure of having a place to go. That didn’t work out either. He went back into rehab in December 2020 and came out in February.


The rehab is a work in progress. “I’d kill all of you for a line of coke,” he joked, then took it back. “I’m a friendly addict,” he said. He said that in December he apparently gave an interview to GQ magazine but has no memory of it whatsoever. As a bit, he read some of it aloud, laughing at some of his responses to the reporter’s questions.

There’s a rawness to what Mulaney is doing. Since it was the first night, he maybe surprised himself with some of his comments. He said that he had never been comfortable with people, always felt alone, and that his experience with the audience was his most intimate relationship.

“When I’m alone,” he said, “I’m with someone who tried to kill me.”

I went to the opening night show out of curiosity mostly. Here is a troubled genius. He said that at the intervention, all the comics there talked about how brilliant he is. They’re right. Even when he made odd appearances on talk shows, you could see something unique behind those eyes. It’s mischief. When Mulaney does his musical parodies, they are off the wall, as if he’s channeling Jack Paar and Steve Allen and Sid Caesar.

This show will evolve as Mulaney finds his footing and renews his most successful intimate relationship– with the audience. They love him, so there won’t be a problem. I was surprised how many young people were at the show– I mean under 16 with parents, and just over 18. They have always seen a kindred soul in John Mulaney. Long may he wave.

PS If you’re lucky to get in, City Winery makes you place your phone in a locked envelope for the duration of your stay. No pictures, no videos, no social media while Mulaney is on stage or prior to the show. Everyone survived, I must report, although the comedian chastised the audience for being moderate in their drinking. “What? Just  one glass of wine?” he quipped, jealously.

 

 

Golden Globes’ Biggest Problem: Do-Nothing CEO With a High Six Figure Salary, Other Members Getting Rich

EXCLUSIVE Who is Gregory Goeckner? No one knows, but he makes $250,000 a year thanks to several steep salary increases as CEO of the Hollywood Foreign Press.

When Goecker first arrived at the HFPA in 2013 he received just $108,000. He’s had a 131% salary increase over five years. (The latest tax return is for 2014.)

I’ve talked to several HFPA members who have no idea what Goecker does. He’s not a journalist or movie reviewer. If he was supposed to guide the HFPA through their many legal machinations, he’s failed. Now when the Globes have been cancelled for 2022 by NBC and are in disarray, Goeckner’s name has not been heard.

But Goeckner isn’t the only one who benefits from the cascades of millions that come in from Dick Clark Productions and NBC, all tax free. In 2019, the Globes claimed salaries  of $3.4 million for their own people, up from $2.9 million in 2018.

Back in 2014, the Globes then president Theo Kingma made around $58,000. In 2019, president Meher Tetna earned $135,957. That’s a huge increase. Lorenzo Soria, now deceased, was paid $75K in 2019. Zoya Malinskaya, billed as “Financial officer,” took home $114K.

A source from the HFPA says, “It’s just a matter of time before the IRS takes a long look at all of this.”

What’s amazing is that with $3.4 million distributed among a few people no one in this group has been able to step up, take control, resolve the pending issues of racism and inclusivity, and rectify the situation. Instead, they’ve let it get so out of hand that there may not be a way for the HFPA to survive.