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Weekday Update: Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost Have Quietly Married, Please Donate to Meals on Wheels

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“Black Widow” actress Scarlett Johansson and “Saturday Night Live” news correspondent Colin Jost have tied the knot. Congrats! If you’re counting, this is Scarlett’s third marriage, but it seems like it’s going to stick.

The announcement was made by Meals on Wheels, which the happy couple hopes you will donate to in their honor. Classy idea.

The Instagram has a picture of the Staten Island Ferry, because Jost is from the 5th borough. He lives in Montauk and Manhattan, however. But he didn’t forget his roots!

Why Is ABC Killing This Show? “The Conners” Drops to Lowest Numbers Ever, Another 16%, Total 31% Since End of Last Season

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Something extraordinary is going on at ABC. They’re actually killing their top rated comedy on purpose.

When we left “The Conners” last May for their season finale, they had 6 million viewers. They were ABC’s biggest prime time comedy. The show aired, as it had for two seasons, on Tuesdays at 8pm.

When we returned last week, “The Conners” had moved to Wednesdays at 9pm. This seemed like a strange choice. Why make it later? And on another day? The ratings proved a disaster: down to 4.9 million. Lowest numbers ever.

Last night, a new low on week 2, “The Conners” dropped to 4.1 million viewers, again at 9pm on Wednesday. The total loss from last season is 31%. It’s 16% more from last week.

You could argue that “The Conners” still won its time slot at 9pm. But its key demo is shrinking, and the audience is skewing much older than before.

If “The Conners” numbers keep falling, and ABC does nothing, it would seem like they’re trying to get the show cancelled. Weird, since they fought so hard for it after Roseanne Barr’s big scandal.

 

 

Watch the Trailer for “The Crown” Season 4: Princess Diana, Margaret Thatcher, and the Falkland Islands Rattle Queen’s Cage

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Poor Queen Elizabeth! In Season Four of “The Crown,” she faces three new obstacles: Princess Diana, Margaret Thatcher, and the Falkland Islands. How will she cope with all this?

Gillian Anderson, known to us best from “The X Files,” is very brave to take on Thatcher after Meryl Streep won the Oscar. Did you know Scully was British? So her accent, at least, will be accurate. Emma Corrin is Diana, Josh O’Connor is Prince Charles, Toby Menzies is Prince Philip, Helena Bonham Carter is Princess Margaret, and Olivia Colman returns as Liz.

The fun begins November 16th on Netflix. If we’re all still here.

Paris Jackson Dropping First Solo Single Thursday Night “Let Down” After EP with Ex Boyfriend Earlier

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Paris Jackson is determined to be a rock star. She and her ex boyfriend released an EP earlier this year. Now on Thursday night she’ll drop her first solo single, called “Let Down.”
She writes on Instagram:

“f**king stoked to announce that my first single as a solo artist, let down, will be released this friday. so thankful to my close friends, family, and work colleagues for always supporting me and encouraging me to do what makes me the happiest, and that is making music. words can not express the gratitude i have for andy hull, robert mcdowell, and dan hannon for bringing this song to life and taking it to a level i could have never imagined. and of course, the people here online who have been so kind and supportive and loving. this song means a lot to me because even though it’s a small part in a much larger story, i poured my heart and soul into it. this song is my baby and i’ve found so much hope and healing through creating this, and i hope it brings joy to others. presave will be in my bio, more exciting news to come !!”

Rooting for the single to be terrific.

View this post on Instagram

“let down” 10.30 🍄 link in bio

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Anonymous Comes Clean: Author of Best Seller and NYTimes Opinion Piece Reveals Himself as Republican DHS Chief of Staff

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“Anonymous” is no longer unknown. Miles Taylor, a Republican who was Chief of Staff for the Department of Homeland Security under General John Kelly, has come clean. Taylor says he wrote the best seller, “A Warning,” that followed the New York Times op-ed piece excoriating the Trump administration and revealing the disaster at the White House.

Taylor writes: “Make no mistake: I am a Republican, and I wanted this President to succeed.. I witnessed Trump’s inability to do his job over the course of two-and-a-half years. Everyone saw it, though most were hesitant to speak up for fear of reprisals.”

Here’s his confession. It’s worth reading the whole thing:

Why I’m no longer “Anonymous”

More than two years ago, I published an anonymous opinion piece in The New York Times about Donald Trump’s perilous presidency, while I was serving under him. He responded with a short but telling tweet: “TREASON?”

Trump sees personal criticism as subversive.

I take a different view. As Theodore Roosevelt wrote, “To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. Nothing but the truth should be spoken about him or anyone else. But it is even more important to tell the truth, pleasant or unpleasant, about him than about anyone else.”

We do not owe the President our silence. We owe him and the American people the truth.

Make no mistake: I am a Republican, and I wanted this President to succeed. That’s why I came into the Administration with John Kelly, and it’s why I stayed on as Chief of Staff at the Department of Homeland Security. But too often in times of crisis, I saw Donald Trump prove he is a man without character, and his personal defects have resulted in leadership failures so significant that they can be measured in lost American lives. I witnessed Trump’s inability to do his job over the course of two-and-a-half years. Everyone saw it, though most were hesitant to speak up for fear of reprisals.

So when I left the Administration I wrote A Warning, a character study of the current Commander in Chief and a caution to voters that it wasn’t as bad as it looked inside the Trump Administration — it was worse. While I claim sole authorship of the work, the sentiments expressed within it were widely held among officials at the highest levels of the federal government. In other words, Trump’s own lieutenants were alarmed by his instability.

Much has been made of the fact that these writings were published anonymously. The decision wasn’t easy, I wrestled with it, and I understand why some people consider it questionable to levy such serious charges against a sitting President under the cover of anonymity. But my reasoning was straightforward, and I stand by it. Issuing my critiques without attribution forced the President to answer them directly on their merits or not at all, rather than creating distractions through petty insults and name-calling. I wanted the attention to be on the arguments themselves. At the time I asked, “What will he do when there is no person to attack, only an idea?” We got the answer. He became unhinged. And the ideas stood on their own two feet.

To be clear, writing those works was not about eminence (they were published without attribution), not about money (I declined a hefty monetary advance and pledged to donate the bulk of the proceeds), and not about crafting a score-settling “tell all” (my focus was on the President himself and his character, not denigrating former colleagues).

Nevertheless, I made clear I wasn’t afraid to criticize the President under my name. In fact, I pledged to do so. That is why I’ve already been vocal throughout the general election. I’ve tried to convey as best I can — based on my own experience — how Donald Trump has made America less safe, less certain of its identity and destiny, and less united. He has responded predictably, with personal attacks meant to obscure the underlying message that he is unfit for the office he holds.

Yet Trump has failed to bury the truth.

Why? Because since the op-ed was published, I’ve been joined by an unprecedented number of former colleagues who’ve chosen to speak out against the man they once served. Donald Trump’s character and record have now been challenged in myriad ways by his own former Chief of Staff, National Security Advisor, Communications Director, Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, Director of National Intelligence, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and others he personally appointed.

History will also record the names of those souls who had everything to lose but stood up anyway, including Trump officials Fiona Hill, Michael McKinley, John Mitnick, Elizabeth Neumann, Bob Shanks, Olivia Troye, Josh Venable, Alexander Vindman, and many more. I applaud their courage. These are not “Deep Staters” who conspired to thwart their boss. Many of them were Trump supporters, and all of them are patriots who accepted great personal risks to speak candidly about a man they’ve seen retaliate and even incite violence against his opponents. (I’ve likewise experienced the cost of condemning the President, as doing so has taken a considerable toll on my job, daily life, marriage, finances, and personal safety.)

These public servants were not intimidated. And you shouldn’t be either. As descendants of revolutionaries, honest dissent is part of our American character, and we must reject the culture of political intimidation that’s been cultivated by this President. That’s why I’m writing this note — to urge you to speak out if you haven’t. While I hope a few more Trump officials will quickly find their consciences, your words are now more important than theirs. It’s time to come forward and shine a light on the discord that’s infected our public discourse. You can speak loudest with your vote and persuade others with your voice. Don’t be afraid of open debate. As I’ve said before, there is no better screen test for truth than to see it audition next to delusion.

This election is a two-part referendum: first, on the character of a man, and second, on the character of our nation. That’s why I’m also urging fellow Republicans to put country over party, even if that means supporting Trump’s Democratic opponent. Although former Vice President Joe Biden is likely to pursue progressive reforms that conservatives oppose (and rest assured, we will challenge them in the loyal opposition), his policy agenda cannot equal the damage done by the current President to the fabric of our Republic. I believe Joe Biden’s decency will bring us back together where Donald Trump’s dishonesty has torn us apart.

Trump has been exactly what we conservatives always said government should NOT be: expansive, wasteful, arbitrary, unpredictable, and prone to abuses of power. Worse still, as I’ve noted previously, he’s waged an all-out assault on reason, preferring to enthrone emotion and impulse in the seat of government. The consequences have been calamitous, and if given four more years, he will push the limits of his power further than the “high crimes and misdemeanors” for which he was already impeached.

Trust me. We spent years trying to ameliorate Trump’s poor decisions (often unsuccessfully), many of which will be back with a vengeance in a second term. Recall, this is the man who told us, “When somebody’s president of the United States, the authority is total.” I believe more than ever that Trump unbound will mean a nation undone — a continued downward slide into social acrimony, with the United States fading into the background of a world stage it once commanded, to say nothing of the damage to our democratic institutions.

I was wrong, however, about one major assertion in my original op-ed. The country cannot rely on well-intentioned, unelected bureaucrats around the President to steer him toward what’s right. He has purged most of them anyway. Nor can they rely on Congress to deliver us from Trump’s wayward whims. The people themselves are the ultimate check on the nation’s chief executive. We alone must determine whether his behavior warrants continuance in office, and we face a momentous decision, as our choice about Trump’s future will affect our future for years to come. With that in mind, he doesn’t deserve a second term in office, and we don’t deserve to live through it.

Removing Trump will not be the end of our woes, unfortunately. While on the road visiting swing states for the past month, it’s become clear to me how far apart Americans have grown from one another. We’ve perpetuated the seemingly endless hostility stoked by this divisive President, so if we really want to restore vibrance to our civic life, the change must begin with each of us, not just with the occupant of the Oval Office. Fortunately, past generations have lit the way toward national reconciliation in even harder times.

On the brink of a civil war that literally split our nation in two, Abraham Lincoln called on the people not to lose sight of one other. He said in his Inaugural Address:

We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.

Heed Lincoln’s words. We must return to our founding principles. We must rediscover our better angels. And we must reconcile with each other, repairing the bonds of affection that make us fellow Americans.

Miles Taylor
October 2020

Written by
Miles Taylor

Sting Releasing Album of “Duets” Including Mary J. Blige, Herbie Hancock, Eric Clapton, Annie Lennox, Sam Moore, Shaggy and More

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Sting is here, Sting is here. (Sing that to Spring is here…)

Even if everything goes sideways next week, we still have a treat coming on November 27th. Sting is releasing an album of duets including one new song, “September,” the great Zucchero.

His other duet partners include Mary J. Blige, Herbie Hancock, Eric Clapton, Annie Lennox, Sam Moore, Chris Botti, Charles Aznavour, Mylène Farmer, Shaggy, Melody Gardot, and Gashi. The latter two songs “Mama,” with Gashi and “Little Something,” with Melody Gardot are current releases and very hot right now in Europe. Eric Clapton’ joining in on “It’s Probably Me” is one of Sting’s hidden gems. Ditto “Don’t Make Me Wait,” with Shaggy, one of my all time favorite tracks.

Sting recorded “None of Us Are Free” in Los Angeles in 2006 with Sam Moore. It’s from Sam’s “Overnight Sensational” album.

“September” is all new, and you know that Zucchero can sing.

Here’s the full tracklist:

DUETS Track Listing:

Standard CD
1. Little Something with Melody Gardot
2. It’s Probably Me with Eric Clapton
3. Stolen Car with Mylène Farmer
4. Desert Rose with Cheb Mami
5. Rise & Fall with Craig David
6. Whenever I Say Your Name with Mary J. Blige
7. Don’t Make Me Wait with Shaggy
8. Reste with GIMS
9. We’ll Be Together with Annie Lennox
10. L’amour C’est Comme Un Jour with Charles Aznavour
11. My Funny Valentine with Herbie Hancock
12. Fragile with Julio Iglesias
13. Mama with Gashi
14. September with Zucchero
15. Practical Arrangement with Jo Lawry
16. None Of Us Are Free with Sam Moore
17. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning with Chris Botti

VINYL LP 1
A1. Little Something with Melody Gardot
A2. It’s Probably Me with Eric Clapton
A3. Stolen Car with Mylène Farmer
A4. Desert Rose with Cheb Mami

B1. Rise & Fall with Craig David
B2. Whenever I Say Your Name with Mary J. Blige
B3. Don’t Make Me Wait with Shaggy
B4. Reste with GIMS

VINYL LP 2

A1. We’ll Be Together with Annie Lennox
A2. L’amour C’est Comme Un Jour with Charles Aznavour
A3. My Funny Valentine with Herbie Hancock
A4. Fragile with Julio Iglesias

B1. Mama with Gashi
B2. September with Zucchero
B3. Practical Arrangement with Jo Lawry
B4. None Of Us Are Free with Sam Moore
B5. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning with Chris Botti

Listen to Bruce Springsteen’s Astute Assessment of This White House: “We Are Lost, No Art, No Socks the Family Pet, No Images of First Family Enjoying Themselves, No Reagans on Horseback”

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Take two minutes and listen to this astute assessment of this White House from Bruce Springsteen. It’s worth our time.

Listen:

“General Hospital” Ratings Spiral: Two Beloved Actors Reported Ousted as Show Turns to Past Prime Time Stars for Help

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“General Hospital” is in the Emergency Room, and expensive transplants seem to be the diagnosis.

Word went yesterday that actors William DeVry and Emme Rylan, who’ve each been with the show seven or eight years, have been let go. It wasn’t their work that got them fired. It’s the ratings. They’re terrible.

Since returning from the pandemic break, “General Hospital”– ABC’s remaining soap– has been off by several hundred thousand viewers. Last week, they were down a “mere” 136,000 to 1.9 million from 2019. But the trend is off by about 700,000 or more over the last two years.

And what do networks and producers do when they can’t think of anything else? They start firing actors.

It doesn’t help that coming in, at the same time, are two former prime time TV stars. Kim Delaney, of “NYPD Blue” and “CSI Miami” fame, has already started. Long ago “Trapper John MD” actor Gregory Harrison arrives shortly. Delaney, at least, has soap cred from “All My Children” in the 1980s. It’s unknown whether Harrison can handle the soap workload. Neither of them was a superstar at night, but ABC must think familiar and expensive faces will give “GH” a jolt.

In DeVry’s case, I’m told, his character was being painted into a corner for dastardly deeds and will likely “die” in an explosion. (No one ever dies on soaps unless the actor actually buys the farm.) As for Rylan, there are rumors the show may reach back to the previous actress who had her role, Julie Berman, to get viewers’ attention.

There’s also a big question mark hanging over show perennial Genie Francis, who’s played Laura since Jimmy Carter was president. She’s been off screen since the pandemic, staying safe in Maine. But with the prospect of Susan Collins winning re-election, she’d be wise to get back to California.

Will there be more changes? Watch those ratings. If they keep going down, actors may be paging through their scripts to see if their characters suddenly develop a bad cough.

“Grey’s Anatomy” Star Ellen Pompeo Takes Contract Negotiation into Press, Says This Year Could Be Show’s Last

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“Grey’s Anatomy” star Ellen Pompeo is taking her contract negotiations into the press.

In a new interview with Variety, she announces– and no one asked– that this could be the last season of her show. (Please god.) Variety, it seems, is complicit in the negotiation.

“Grey’s Anatomy” has been on the air since the spring of 2005, 17 seasons. I remember seeing the debut while I was covering the Michael Jackson trial in Santa Maria, California. Pompeo has outlasted nearly everyone from the original cast save two actors. Her 2018 contract brings her more than $20 million a year — $575,000 per episode, along with a seven-figure signing bonus and two full back end equity points on the series, estimated to bring in another $6 million to $7 million.

But that deal will end with this season, and then it will be interesting to see if ABC will pay her more or just throw in the towel.

And does it matter? Couldn’t the show go on without Meredith Grey? She’s the least compelling character on the show. Pompeo has never won an acting award for her role. She’s never been nominated for an Emmy Award, although she was a Golden Globe nominee in 2007. “Grey’s” could go on without her, cost less, and still pull in 5 million viewers a week. It’s a soap opera.

It’s not up to Ellen Pompeo whether the show stays on the air. ABC and Shondaland make that decision. I’m curious to see if Pompeo’s opening gambit works. It could be next year we’ll be without two Pompeos– Ellen, and Mike in Washington. I can live without that.

PS They should have called the story “Pompeo and Circumstance.”

AOC Covers Vanity Fair: Lighting Rod Congresswoman Gets Death Threats Forwarded from FBI: “These are the people who want to kill you today”

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Vanity Fair doubles down on diversity this month with Alexandra Ocasio Cortez, Bronx congresswoman and lightning rod across the country. There has rarely been a first term member of Congress, not even old enough to run for president, who’s gotten this much attention. Will this sell issues? Seems more like an inside story, but Vanity Fair is eschewing celebrity and Hollywood and ditching their old readership. I find it fascinating.

What do we learn? Her close friends call her Sandy
A few, like Representative Ayanna Pressley, go with “Alex.” But becoming AOC—and @AOC—has simultaneously vaulted her into a pantheon of triple-initialed legends and, alternately, given a handy tagline to the right’s worst nightmare. Her beatific face is commodified on twee Etsy greeting cards (“I AOC It’s Your Birthday”) and stamped alongside those of RBG and Frida Kahlo on “feminist prayer candles” and “Latina icon stickers.” Conservative attack ads depict her as socialist villainess. One especially disturbing spot shows a photo of her face on fire before cutting to a pile of skulls.

“It’s very dehumanizing in both ways, strangely, both the negative and the positive,” the congresswoman tells me one afternoon from behind the desk of her Bronx campaign office. “It’s not an accident that, every cycle, the boogeyman of the Democrats is a woman,” says Ocasio-Cortez. “A couple of cycles ago, it was Pelosi. Then it was Hillary, and now it’s me.”

She also gets death threats constantly.
“The death threats seem to spike in concert with Fox News rhetoric. “I used to wake up in the morning and literally get a stack of pictures that were forwarded by Capitol police or FBI. Like, ‘These are the people who want to kill you today,’ ” she says. The torrent of abuse spread to her mother, Blanca, and her younger brother, Gabriel.

“It’s the epitome of being shaken to your core,” Gabriel says. “Getting a phone call from the FBI saying, ‘Hey, don’t open your mail. They’re mailing out bombs.’ ” A designer of AOC’s Cesar Chavez–inspired campaign posters gets death threats; her former dean at Boston University, who introduced Ocasio-Cortez in a 2011 speech viewable on YouTube, regularly fields emails calling him the N-word for “training” her. When President Trump lobs one of his attacks at Ocasio-Cortez—he has called her everything from a “poor student” to a “wack job”—her offices are flooded with calls, voicemails, and emails echoing him.”

She has fashion issues: With a congressional salary now—$174,000, stretched over two of the most expensive cities in America—dressing for the job remains fraught. “It’s legitimately hard being a first-generation woman…and being working class, trying to navigate a professional environment,” Ocasio-Cortez tells me at our Bronx breakfast, where she wears a rust-colored suede moto jacket and a Black Panthers T-shirt. 

But she’s also an influencer: Sharing her go-to red gloss—Stila’s Stay All Day Liquid in Beso—translated to a sales spike. “Every time I go on TV, people ask for my lipstick,” she says.