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No Time to Die: Sean Connery, the Greatest James Bond of All, Passes Away at Age 90 in the Bahamas

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Sean Connery, the original and greatest James Bond of all, has died at age 90 in the Bahamas, where he and his wife have lived for decades. He was 90 years old.

Connery, the most famous Scottish movie actor, was known all over the world for playing Bond in six memorable films starting with “Dr. No” in 1962, and including “From Russia with Love,” “Thunderball,” “Goldfinger,” “You Only Live Twice,” and “Diamonds Are Forever.” That run ended in 1971, but Connery returned in 1983 in the ill fated “Never Say Never Again” after producer Albert “Cubby” Broccoli had replaced him as Bond in “On Her Majesty’s Secret Service,” and then “Octopussy.” Connery was so furious with Broccoli that he never spoke him again and refused to participate in the franchise’s 50th anniversary a few years ago.

Connery’s whole career was identified the Bond character but at least he won an Oscar, and not for that role. He won in 1983 for “The Untouchables.” The following year he won a whole new audience and more acclaim as Indiana Jones’ father in “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.” His career had a major revival through the 1990s right up through “Finding Forrester” in 2000. But he was so upset that he wasn’t nominated for an Oscar that he fired his publicist. He made one more movie, “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen,” in 2003.

But what a life and what a career. Swashbuckling, the envy of all, Sean Connery was a Hollywood man’s man. He was so macho in his way that Darrell Hammond created a hilarious parody of him on “Saturday Night Live.”

The real Sean Connery, however, was married twice, first to Diane Cilento, with whom he had a son. He’s survived by his wife of 45 years, Micheline Roquebrune. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 2000.

Sony Music’s Self-Defeat: New Springsteen Album Finishes in 2nd Place to New Luke Combs, Also from Sony

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Bruce Springsteen’s “Letter to You” should have been sent certified by Sony Music’s Columbia label in New York.

In a bitter chart race, “Letter to You” finished 2nd today for the week in its debut. The album sold around 83,000 copies with all but 3,000 CDs and downloads. The remainder was gained from streaming.

But what was number 1? Surely it came from another record company? Alas, no, it was Sony’s Nashville branch. In a deal they made with Nashville’s River House, country artist Luke Combs finished above Bruce with 106,540 copies of his “What You See is What You Get.”

Yes, “What You See is What You Get” is the name of a famous 1973 hit by the Dramatics on Stax Records. But country is famous for lifting titles of pre-existing hits and making them over into a new horse and saddle.

But Ouch! If Sony had just postponed Combs or moved it up a week, Bruce might have been numero uno. But he was undone by his own record company. And it’s the only one he’s ever had. Bruce has been on Columbia Records since 1972. Only Barbra Streisand can say that. I do think that Tony Bennett and Bob Dylan each wandered off and returned. But Bruce has always been there.

“Letter to You” sold in its first week more than Bruce’s last album, “Western Stars,” sold in its first three weeks. There’s nothing like adding the E Street Band that won’t put some pep in your step! Bruce is nevertheless number 1 on the charts this week for this writer. I don’t use combs!

 

Michael Bay, America’s Worst Director, Exploits the Pandemic and 220K Dead People, with New Movie

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“Transformers” and “Pearl Harbor” director Michael Bay is America’s worst filmmaker. He’s made crap out of garbage for years now. His new film, “Songbird,” was shot during the pandemic — yes, the one we’re in now. It’s set in 2024 and we’re still under lockdown suffering from COVID-23. Not Strawberry Letter 22 or Catch-22.

So you know this is an exploitation of our current health crisis, of 220,000 dead people, of the massive damage the pandemic has done to our economy, psyches, and souls. I’m surprised Bay didn’t include holograms of the recently deceased, a la Kim and Kanye and her ghostly father.

I’ll pass on seeing more than the trailer. I’m surprised Bradley Whitford, a smart guy, though this was a good idea. As Green Day sings, wake me up when tomorrow comes.

As someone on YouTube quipped, this is as if someone made a film on 09/11 about 9/11 in between the two towers exploding. Well put.

Forgotten TV Star Kirstie Alley Rebuked by CNN: “You are welcome to change the channel – just like countless viewers did every time “Veronica’s Closet” came on TV”

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Forgotten TV star Kirstie Alley, popular in the 1980s until she was revealed as a Scientologist and right wing nut, has been rebuked by CNN. And what a lovely job they did. When she complained of “living in fear” by watching the real news, CNN Communications replied: “Kirstie, you are welcome to change the channel – just like countless viewers did every time “Veronica’s Closet” came on TV. But don’t downplay the loss of nearly 230K American lives. And please, wear a mask.”

Hey Kirstie, whatever happened to your Diet company, the that was funded by Scientology and went bust overnight? Those were the days, weren’t they? PS Sam married Diane, they had a great life, and visited Rebecca in the nut house once a year.

Revival: Composer Michael Penn (“No Myth”) Is Back with His First Song in 15 Years, Beautiful Ballad “Revival”

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Michael Penn is back. Composer of movie scores, producer, husband of Aimee Mann, Penn hasn’t had an album out in 15 years. But he says on Twitter “During the pandemic I’ve been writing songs again. The first one I recorded is out today.”

“Revival” is a beautiful anthem. Can’t wait to hear the rest of what he’s done.

You may recall Michael’s 1989 hit, “No Myth.” If you don’t know it, this is called a perfect single.

Pop Cherry: Ariana Grande’s X Rated New Single Features the F Word, Titled “34 Plus 35,” Tests Limits of Taste

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Congrats to Ariana Grande. When she goes low, she goes lower. Her new single, following “Positions,” is called “34 + 35.” What does that equal? It equals crudeness and lack of taste. Really, this is garbage. She’s wasting a good voice on utter crap. And “F**k me til daylight.” It’s not even sexy. (See Millie Jackson for the real thing.) How unfortunate. Is that hard to sell records? Thank you, next.

Want a sexy song by a great singer songwriter? Try this one instead

Lady Gaga: “My voice will be heard this election. Will yours?” Watch Award-Worthy Video Full of Costume Changes

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Lady Gaga doesn’t need to sing in this video urging everyone to vote. But it’s full of music anyway. Lots of costume changes, very clever.

Elvis Costello’s Renaissance Continues with “Hey Clockface,” An Eclectic, Brooding Collection of Artful Rock and Ballads

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Any career of 40 plus years takes a long and winding path. Elvis Costello’s is rare because his has followed his first statement: “My Aim is True.” Sometimes the path has wobbled, sprung from high to low and back again, but it never fails to regain its momentum.

This is true of Elvis’s “Hey Clockface,” the eclectic, brooding group of songs to follow up his recent masterwork and Grammy winner, “Look Now.” The latter album was unexpected, a depth charge after a long period of laying low. But Costello is a song machine. He can’t stop composing and finding new ways to approach the writing, the singing, the furthering of that original mission statement.

There are sounds we’ve never heard before on “Hey Clockface” coming from punk rock’s angry young man. That’s because the musicians are not the Attractions or the Imposters, with the exception of multi-talented pianist Steve Nieve. Costello recorded in Helsinki, Paris and New York and mixed by Sebastian Krys in Los Angeles. Recalling the Paris recording session, Costello said in a recent interview, “I sang live on the studio floor, directing from the vocal booth. We cut nine songs in two days. We spoke very little. Almost everything the musicians played was a spontaneous response to the song I was singing. I’d had a dream of recording in Paris like this, one day.”

The album is such a big meal that I’m focused right now on “No Flag,” which seems to mirror the empty reaction to politics now. It’s followed by a gorgeous ballad called “They’re Not Laughing at Me Now.” There are a couple of media send ups in “Newspaper Pane” and “Hetty O’Hara Confidential.” There are several ballads, in fact, and some spoken word which is kind of different. The ballad that closes the album, “Byline,” strikes me as something of an instant classic. I’m listening over and over to “The Last Confession of Vivian Whip” which Costello co-wrote with Steve Nieve and his wife Muriel. Again, beautiful and biting.

I guess the main difference between “Look Now” and “Hey Clockface” is that the former felt like a great summing up, almost a greatest hits of what I can do at my best for Elvis, and latter– at age 65 — is edgier and more experimental. He’s opening up new avenues with “Hey Clockface.”

Don’t miss it. And I’m coming back to it again after a few more listens. Bravo!

(Watch) Paris Jackson, Michael Jackson’s Daughter, Debuts Her Solo Single “Let Down,” from New Album “Wilted”

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Come here at 11:40pm as Paris Jackson debuts her solo single, “Let Down.” Songs are produced by and I guess co-written with the Manchester Orchestra and Andy Hull. I like their sound. Paris’s album with them comes November 13th on Republic Records, called “Wilted.”

Kanye West Gives Kim Kardashian a Hologram of Her Father, Who Doesn’t Explain Covering Up Simpson-Brown Murders

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We know the Kardashians are disgusting. Kim’s 40th birthday vacation post showed that amply. Now we learn that to cap the vulgarity, Kanye West had Kim’s father resurrected from the dead for a hologram. Alas, Robert Kardashian doesn’t explain covering up the murders of Nicole Brown and Ronald Goldman.

It’s all about Kanye’s ego, too. The dialogue coming from the dead man is about what a genius Kanye is. No, he’s a Vulgarian with too much money. He’s out Trumping Trump. That’s right– what the hologram says is all scripted by Kanye praising Kim on her 40th birthday. This is really vile.

There is no bottom to low these people will go. Hard to imagine what’s next.