Dear Donald Trump:
It’s over. Read this. All GOP read this. At least one Republican has the sense to end this chaos. Thank you, Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.

Dear Donald Trump:
It’s over. Read this. All GOP read this. At least one Republican has the sense to end this chaos. Thank you, Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.

Barack Obama, our last real president, says in his new book that he doesn’t remember all Inauguration parties. So here’s a flashback to January 21, 2009:
Even though Barack Obama‘s Neighborhood Ball was beaten in the TV ratings last night by “American Idol,” it was without a doubt the hottest of the official inaugural events.
Stevie Wonder, Sting, Mariah Carey, Aicia Keys, Queen Latifah, Jay Z and Beyonce were just some of the performers who wowed the crowd of 2,000 or more former Obama campaign workers and residents of Washington, DC.
And there was plenty of Hollywood star power with Denzel Washington, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Jamie Foxx all hanging out backstage and introducing segments. Leo brought his dad, who took video footage on a minicam of the acrobat troupe that formed a human pyramid. Denzel took a large freight elevator to the stage with a costumed gospel choir. They sang to him and asked if he had a voice. “Not me,” he laughed. “My wife can sing. You don’t want to hear me.”
At the back of the elevator Sting, incognito in his brown beard, almost went unrecognized until one of the ladies gasped and the attention shifted.
Down in the dressing rooms – thin curtained partitions with card tables and couches – Sting and Stevie Wonder were next door neighbors. While Stevie practiced his harmonica riffs, Sting listened to an instrumental track of “Signed, Sealed, Delivered” for the big group superstar singalong.
Suddenly Stevie started playing along from his side of the curtain while Sting tried out the lyrics on his side. Then Stevie went into a jazz riff that stopped everything. It was an extraordinary moment, topped only by the pair’s show closer on Sting’s “Brand New Day.”
Meanwhile in the holding area, Alicia Keys greeted Queen Latifah. Their moms talked about how much they loved the women’s performances in “The Secret Life of Bees.” Latifah looked sensational in her gown. Sean Diddy Combs, dressed to the nines in a spiffy tux, lingered in a corner ,even though he wasn’t on the show. Later Latifah went up on stage with the moms to watch Alicia’s knockout performance of “No One” and took pictures with a beautiful nine-year old girl in a formal white gown. The mother was over the moon.
And then, of course, there was Mariah Carey with her young husband, Nick Cannon. The latter was perched above the stage where was deejaying, playing the songs that went with the artists. When Wonder finished his terrific new single “All About the Love Again” from the new Obama CD (on Hdden Beach Records), Cannon launched into a medley of Stevie’s classic hits.
“Do you do bar mitzvahs?” I asked. He laughed. “Why not? It’s good money!”
Mariah meantime was glowing (but not pregnant) and very happy with her performance of “Hero.” “Was it ok?” she asked me when we ran into each other. Her next question was maybe more relevant. “Is Randy here?” She asked of pal Randy Jackson, our mutual friend.
Alas he wasn’t. Jackson was busy on “American Idol,” the ratings king, listening to “Gong Show” types. Something tells me he would have been happier here.
Hanging Out At The All-Star Obama Party
It was supposed to be an intimate affair but Arianna Huffington‘s gala last night in Washington was a wildly overbooked media bash for thousands.
They came to celebrate the inauguration of Barack Obama, and so they did, greeting the chiming of the clock at midnight as if it were New Years Eve. Huffington’s peeps handed out a ton of New Years Eve tchochtkes like hats and horns to make the most noise when the clock struck midnight.
Things were a little different this morning—Tuesday—as some stars made it in to the swearing in and some didn’t.
The crowds were so huge and the disorganization of security so massive that thousands of ticket holders were kept from seeing or hearing the Obama swearing in. I ran into actress and writer Anna Deveare Smith, an Obama supporter, who simply gave up rather than brave the bone chilling cold. Dana Delany hunkered down at a brunch where other luminaries watched ceremony in safety and warmth.
But plenty still made it, some with the Creative Coalition group, including Anne Hathaway, Tony Goldwyn, Tim Daly, Adrian Grenier, Barry Levinson, Matthew Modine, Gloria Reuben, Tamara Tunie, Lynn Whitfield, Giancarlo Esposito, and Rachel Leigh Cook.
More to come … stay tuned tonight as the A-list really rolls out the red carpet. But some are wondering why it’s Beyonce and not R&B legend Etta James who’s singing the Obamas’ favorite song, “At Last,” tonight to the First Couple. James is alive and well, and it’s her hit the Obamas have swooned to all these years.
The White House needs a director of music, I think—a new cabinet post!
Ariana Grande is selling records this week, but only some.
Her raunchy single, with the refrain “F**k me til the daylight,” is not something a lot of people want on their phones or in their iPods. Imagine who might find it!
The result is that “34+35” has sold only 6,500 paid downloads according to Buzz Angle Music. Are you one of those people? Everyone check your devices.
On the other hand. the song that adds up to 69 is very popular on streaming. The total sales equivalent now is 357,000. That’s coming from streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music. It’s much safer to sing along to “34+35” and then let it go rather than have it turn up by accident forever.
The video for the song has 26 million views, as well.
But rest assured, this is not a song you’ll be hearing on Z100 anytime soon.
SUNDAY NOV 22 UPDATE “Fat Man” took in just $51,266 in its second weekend, for a total of $192,501 on 177 screens. It’s a bomb, just like Mel’s other movies from the last decade or more, like “The Beaver.” Now it goes to Video on Demand, where only mental patients would plunk down 20 bucks to see it. Appearing on “GMA” didn’t help.
EARLIER First, let’s ask: why is Mel Gibson welcome on “Good Morning America”? A noted racist, Gibson was allowed to promote his flop, “Fat Man,” with Michael Strahan, a Black man who should know better. I can’t imagine Robin Roberts getting that interview. She’s at least a journalist.
Yet, there Gibson was back on “GMA” pushing “Fat Man,” which made $140,000 in theaters last week and has the usual terrible reviews. This time he was accompanied by the obnoxious 15 year old from the movie, Chance something. I cannot stand this kid. On “GMA” he rattled off his rote PR notes like a pro and it was scary. He talks like he’s been programmed by a studio brainwashing team.
Three years ago Gibson appeared on “GMA” to tout “Hacksaw Ridge.” He told them then that “Lethal Weapon 5” was in the works. This week, Strahan asked him again about a movie that will never happen. This time Gibson said it was definitely happening and that Richard Donner. age 90, was working on it.
Though we all love Dick Donner, this is not going to happen for so many reasons. First of all, there’s so sign of it “in the works.” Second, the new people at Warner Bros. aren’t stupid. They would never invite that kind of bad PR. Also, Danny Glover? He’s 74, and looks it. He’s not running around, even for stupid money. And then there’s Mel, who’s box office poison, and human poison.
Keep trying, Mel. And good work, “Good Morning America.” It’s nice to see a racist, homophobic, anti-Semite on your show.
Ricky Schroder will not be eating lunch in this town again.
The has been child star of “Silver Spoons” and later the milquetoast second stringer on “NYPD Blue” declared his career over on Friday. It was revealed he donated funds to the $2 million of Kenosha killer Kyle Rittenhouse.
The 17 year old is out on bail after posting the $2 million cash bond set by a judge earlier this month. According to Rittenhouse’s attorney Lin Wood, Schroder and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell were responsible for “for putting us over the top” and covering the cost of Rittenhouse’s bail.
Lindell is already cancelled. His COVID-19 cure, touted by former president Donald Trump, was a failure apparently. He’s now including doses for $19.99 with two lumpy pillows and a set of itchy sheets.
Schroder hasn’t worked much in the last few years. He’s been arrested twice for domestic violence. Even Sipowicz couldn’t help him. His last credit was in 2014. I’m surprised he had any money to help Rittenhouse. “Silver Spoons” can’t be throwing off much in the way of residuals. But now this guarantees he won’t work again in anything legit.
There are two main sad ironies in George C. Wolfe’s soaring film adaption of August Wilson’s “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.”
The first is obvious: the leading man, Chadwick Boseman, has passed away recently but not before leaving this final, memorable performance. He died on August 28th from pancreatic cancer at age 43.
The second is more to the point of the film and play on which it’s based. In the 2003 Broadway revival of this play, the key character of Toledo, who dies violently, was played by the actor Thomas Jefferson Byrd, who received a Tony nomination for his work. Byrd was shot dead recently in his own home, a victim of sudden violence.
There’s a third irony, and I’ll get to it in minute.
Ma Rainey was a real person, the original female blues singer, who died in 1935 at age 39. She was deep-throated, sassy, and a diva. Pulitzer Prize winner Wilson dramatized her life in one of his ten plays in the Pittsburgh cycle. “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” was nominated for a Tony Award and won a Drama Desk Award.
So now we have Oscar winner Viola Davis as Ma Rainey in a performance quite unlike anything we’ve seen her attempt before. For one thing, she’s been bulked up to give Ma some heft. For another, she sings! And she moves. She’s no longer sophisticated Annalise Keating from “How to Get Away with Murder” or any of the earnest characters she’s played in movies, such as Rose Maxson in Wilson’s “Fences.” Davis’s Ma is a star, she’s no victim, and she doesn’t suffer fools silently. Davis is, as they say, lit. She is glowing. The performance is so organic you can’t believe she hasn’t been wowing audiences for years.
Ma Rainey has a band, led by Colman Domingo as Cutler, who is also the bandleader who tolerates her outsize demands for the greater good. Michael Potts is the bass player Slow Drag, Glynn Turman is Toledo the pianist, and Chadwick Boseman is Levee, the horn player. They’ve come to Chicago to record an album for Irvin, the producer (Jeremy Shamos) and the record company owner who will undoubtedly cheat them (Jonny Coyne as Mr. Sturdyvant).
Wilson is photographing a moment in time for Ma and her band, that’s all it is. Unlike “Fences,” “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” is less a three act play than a long one-acter with gorgeous set pieces and monologue. One thing happens, and it’s a stunner. But we don’t get to see the consequences. The great actor and director Ruben Santiago Hudson adapted the play for the screen, and he’s made it seem like more, digging into corners and lighting up unforgettable moments. He and Wolfe do what they can to open up the play but the movie still remains, in a good way, stagey. There’s no way around it.
To compensate for the lack of what I’d call “action,” we have the individuals. Boseman, who looks thinner than in the past (sadly we know why), and a little older than his years, still commands the film as Levee. He’s tired of being on the team, he wants his own band and has written the songs for it. They’ll be hits one day, one way or another. But Levee is also pent up with rage over his inability to make things happen. His eyes flash with danger even while he’s making sweet sounds with his horn. And when Boseman– in his finest moment of his short career — delivers his principle monologue about Levee’s childhood, you worry about what lurks underneath.
Levee’s ire is focused on Toledo, the piano player, here in the person of the great Glynn Turman. This is the supporting performance that will get the awards attention, as Turman– with a long history of subtle and graceful TV work– is charming and devastating in this pivotal role. I suspect he’s been waiting to play Toledo all his life. In 1960, Turman debuted on Broadway in the original “A Raisin in the Sun,” directed by the late Lloyd Richards, the man who brought August Wilson’s plays to life subsequently in New Haven and New York. This is Turman’s moment even more than it is Boseman’s. We’d better see some statues in his hand this winter.
Equally good are Domingo and Potts, in less showy roles but just as fine and important. Shamos and Coyne are indelible in their own little drama, good cop/bad cop in wanting Ma’s music and making Levee miserable.
Wolfe and Santiago-Hudson have made a powerful, moving film experience that you’ll want to watch again and again. The entire production is top notch, with special kudos to cinematographer Tobias A. Schliesser and editor Andrew Mondshein.
PS Here’s my third irony. Glynn Turman maybe brings more to “Ma Rainey” than even he realizes. He was married in the 1970s to the legendary diva Aretha Franklin. Having known Aretha pretty well, I couldn’t take my eyes off Davis as many of Ma Rainey’s situations and comportment reminded me of the Queen of Soul. I wonder if Viola didn’t have Aretha in mind a little bit in this performance. Certainly, Turman saw it, too: this woman an independent artist, knowing what she wanted from her craft, and determined to get it. I’m relieved now that the Aretha movie, “Respect,” isn’t competingt with “Ma Rainey” in the same year. “Ma Rainey” is almost the preface to Franklin’s story.
Well, here are Miley Cyrus and Dua Lipa on a duet from Miley’s forthcoming album. “Prisoner” is the title. It’s short and catchy and reminds me a lot of Olivia Newton-John’s “Physical.”
Quite a shock tonight to see that a woman in Arizona has filed a rape lawsuit against Sting. The woman, a Jane Doe, says Sting raped her in 1979 when she was 15 and he was 27. She says he wrote the song, “Don’t Stand So Close to Me” based on the experience. This woman must have a very active imagination, and a dangerous one. Sting has denied the whole thing through his attorney, and of course, he’s telling the truth.
Some rock stars, maybe you could say, ‘I could see that’ when you hear bad things about them. Sting was married in 1979 to Frances Tomelty and had a three year old son. He was then as he is now, a mensch for all seasons. He hadn’t begun his period of being a world ambassador, a supporter of indigenous people, Amnesty International, and so on. But read his book, “Broken Music.” He’s been the same from beginning to now. Jane Doe has chosen the wrong target for this insane claim. He’s one of the most moral people I’ve ever met.
And family man? He and Tomelty had a daughter, Kate, in 1982. And then Sting, who’d fallen in love with Trudie Styler, had four more kids. Sting and Trudie have been happily coupled since the mid 80s. They have eight grandchildren. I’m sure he was no saint when The Police were at the apex– he’s a man and he’s a rock star– but this? A 15 year old? Not even the most remote chance.
But the clue to all this, I think, is the claim that the song was written about this incident. Sting is really a writer of fiction. His compositions are story songs, filled with characters who have imagined situations. Whoever Jane Doe is, she’s conflated her own imagination with reality. In this time when accusations are indeed flying, it’s a shame a law firm anywhere would entertain her claim as possibly true. I’d bet my own life on it.
SATURDAY 3PM UPDATE: “Jeremih has been transferred out of ICU. He will spend the rest of his recovery time in a regular hospital room. The true healing begins. Thank you all for your continued prayers and wishes.” – Jeremih’s Family
November 19th:
Rapper Jeremih — real name Jeremy Phillip Felton — is in critical condition in Chicago battling COVID-19. His agent told Variety: “J was just pulled off the ventilator,” his agent said in a statement to Variety. “He’s still in ICU in critical condition. Please keep him in your prayers.”
Jeremih hit it big in 2009, when he signed with Def Jam Recordings and released his debut single, “Birthday Sex,” that led to his self-titled debut album. His success continued with his second album, “All About You,” featuring his hit single “Down on Me.” In 2014, his track “Don’t Tell ‘Em” with YG once again topped the charts, followed by his third studio album, “Late Nights,” that was released in 2015.
The performer is 33 years old and has a strong following. (To be completely honest, I’d never heard of him before this terrible occurrence.) He’s received an outpouring of support from the hip hop community. We’re sending positive thoughts for a quick recovery. But you see at 33, anyone of any age is susceptible to this virus. Take it seriously.
Something’s going on, maybe Bruce Helford or someone at “The Conners” knows the answer. (Email me showbiz411@gmail.com). The sitcom has turned into “How to Get Away with Murder.”
The victim is “The Conners,” which returned last night after a week off to just 3.5 million viewers. That’s down from 3.9 million two weeks ago. You get the picture. Each week represents a further decline.
ABC moved “The Conners” from Tuesdays to Wednesdays, and from 8pm to 9pm. They shook off 50% of their audience by doing so, leaving “The Conners” — which last season was their highest rated half hour — in tatters. Is it contractual? Maybe if the show falls below a certain level, ABC can cut the salaries. I don’t know. But it’s mystifying.
The whole Wednesday night ABC schedule is getting killed by the NBC Dick Wolf “Chicago” juggernaut, and also by “The Masked Singer.” “The Conners” isn’t the only victim of this murder. “Blackish” is also suffering. It’s ABC’s only Emmy or Golden Globe-nominated show, and it’s being flushed down the toilet. Amazing!
As for “The Conners,” don’t worry, Laurie Metcalf and John Goodman have other things to do. Sara Gilbert can go right back to “The Talk.” But all the other cast and crew would probably like to stick around. If the numbers go under 3 million, they’ll have to bring back Roseanne! (Just kidding.)