Saturday, December 20, 2025
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UPDATE NY Daily News Closing Newsroom But NOT Closing Paper, Says They Will Continue to Publish, “No Layoffs”

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UPDATE: Sources say the paper is not closing. But they are getting out of their lease as only a half dozen people have been coming into work, the rest of the skeletal staff if working from home. “They want to find a new smaller space by November 1st,” I am told. But for New York’s hometown paper not to have a home is very distressing.
My source stressed: No layoffs. (There aren’t many left to lay off.)

EARLIER REPORT:
The New York Times reports that the Daily News is basically dead, even if it will continue on like the Walking Dead.

Today the News will close its newsroom downtown and employees will have til the fall to come and get their things.

Will the paper continue a print edition? No one knows yet. Online edition? Why not?

The paper was sold to Tribune Publishing — then known as Tronc– in 2017 by Mort Zuckerman, who bought the paper out of bankruptcy in 1993. The previous owner was Robert Maxwell, who died mysteriously on his yacht. Maxwell was the father of Ghislaine Maxwell, now in prison and awaiting trial in the Jeffrey Epstein sex scandals.

Tribune, dedicated to killing newspapers, is also closing the newsroom of the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Maryland. Two years ago a gunman killed five of the reporters there. This is Tribune’s tribute to those brave heroes.

Zuckerman will have no comment on the end of the Daily News, which he legitimately loved. A few years before he sold the paper, he exited the public stage as a form of dementia, and perhaps Alzheimer’s, began to take over. His nephews assumed control of his companies, and got rid of the News as soon as possible. They basically gave it to Tribune — for one dollar — and walked away.

Another irony: Pete Hamill just died last week. He was one of the best Daily News editors of all time. But all the great News writers are gone. The paper is assembled in Chicago, and written assembled by robots. (There are still a few great New York journalists hanging in there every day.) There’s no sense of it even being in New York.

This will leave New York with one print tabloid, Rupert Murdoch’s Post. The Post loses tens of millions of dollars a year, and will surely cease print when Murdoch, 84, pushes up daisies. New York once had 10 or more newspapers publishing in the morning and afternoon. But as the city has been hobbled by COVID and DeBlasio, the newspaper’s death becomes an achingly sad symbol.

Just as an example of how disgracefully Tribune runs the show, the current front page of the News website makes no mention of this monumental decision. But they are running the same story side by side as you can see here. How awful.

 

Broadway’s Royal Flush: “Diana” Musical, Postponed from this Season, Will Air on Netflix Before May 2021 Opening

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Things could not be stranger now on Broadway.

With the season demolished, and no Tony Awards, and no fall season, producers are trying to gauge when the Great Bright Way will re-open next year.

Some shows have posted previews for March 2021, with April opening nights. They assume theaters will be ready for customers. Also, the assumption is that April 30th or so will be the 2021 Tony Awards cut off, and that the Tony’s will happen in June.

Scott Rudin– who’s in a lot of trouble with a $6.3 million lawsuit over unpaid for ads– decided to skip the Tony deadline and open “The Music Man” in late May. Of course, since part of that lawsuit is over “Music Man” ads, who knows if that show will even come to fruition?

Now the great producer Frank Marshall and his team have decided to open their musical about Princess Diana on May 25, 2021. But before he does that, Marshall will film “Diana: The Musical” a la “Hamilton” and show it on Netflix before the stage production begins previews.

This is unheard of.  In a joint statement, the “Diana” producers said, “We speak for the entire company when we say that we couldn’t be more excited to finally be able share our show with theater lovers everywhere. Though there is no substitute for the live theater, we are honored to be a part of the quality entertainment that Netflix provides its subscribers worldwide.”

This is a big gamble. What if “Diana” stinks? If it gets bad reviews on Netflix, that will kill the Broadway audience. But I think producers are signalling that this will now be a summer run, no Tonys expenditure, and let the show either catch on or close by Labor Day.

Marshall knows what he’s doing. Steven Spielberg’s long time movie producer, he last tried his hand with the Jimmy Buffet musical “Margaritaville” in 2018. (It wasn’t a success.) He has nothing to lose, really, but plenty to gain with a long investment in “Diana.” And Netflix needs the content.

Is this the beginning of a trend for musicals? Not yet. They’ll wait and see how Marshall’s gambit pays off.

Neil Young’s Online Archives Spending $20,000 to Detach Itself from Facebook: “Simply put, Facebook is screwing with our election”

You know Neil Young. He’s on the cutting edge of everything.

Last week he sued Donald Trump for copyright infringement because the Republican incumbent was using Neil’s songs without permission at campaign rallies.

Now, Neil’s archives are spending $20,000 to detach themselves from social media. They want their members to sign in directly and not through Facehook or Google. (Neil Young has the most extensive archive website I’ve ever seen. You could go down a rabbit hole and never return!)

Members received this message today. I guess there won’t be any Facebook Live shows with Neil any time soon.

NYA DAYS AWAY FROM DROPPING SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM
We have been working on this project for a couple of months. Trying to disengage from the corrupt social platform is a costly and time-consuming process for NYA. Our cost will be almost $20,000 to disengage, while treating our subscribers with respect, making it as easy as possible for them to continue with us after Facebook.
Facebook knowingly allows untruths and lies in its political ads to circulate on the platform, while bots sow discord among users. Sowing dissent and chaos in our country via political disinformation is something we can not condone. Simply put, Facebook is screwing with our election.
The money we are spending to get out of this mess is designed to make it as easy as possible for our valued Facebook users to log in simply and securely to NYA without the social media platform involved in any way. It is in keeping with what we have been maintaining re: the irresponsible social media platform for the past two years.
NYA strives to be a place where music lovers can get all of my music at its highest quality, while keeping up on news and views from around the world that we wish to share. We are primarily a music platform featuring all the background information, films, videos, and credits associated with each piece of music we present while offering unparalleled listening quality.
thanks for your support,
NYA

Joe Biden Chooses Kamala Harris for His Veep, Her Debate with Mike Pence Should Be Historic

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California Senator Kamala Harris is Joe Biden’s pick for Veep. This just shows how classy Biden is: Harris gave him a rough time in the debates, but he didn’t hold a grudge. Harris is smart smart smart and a perfect running mate. If she has to step in for Biden, you know she can do it.

What I want to see is the Senator debate Vice President Mike Pence, who runs on batteries and a program installed at the factory. That should be the biggest TV rating in history. Pence may start crying when his wires get all crossed.

Harris beat a great field of potential candidates for Vice President including Susan Rice. But Rice with that son who loves Trump would have been an issue they couldn’t get around. And Karen Bass with her Scientology speech wasn’t going to make it.

Congrats, Senator Harris. We’re with you!

 

Review from LA: Adam Rifkin’s “Last Movie Star” Resonates More than Ever Now that Film Festivals Are in Chaos

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I was thinking about Adam Rifkin’s “Last Movie Star,” starring the late Burt Reynolds, now that film festivals are in chaos. A trenchant movie that will hit home with industry types, “Last Movie Star” has Burt’s character, a down on his luck film star, being honored by a two bit festival in Nashville. It’s very sweet and hits home. A lot.  “The Last Movie Star” is on Amazon Prime.

The film borrows heavily on Reynolds’s career in real life, in the film he plays Vic Edwards, when in the late 1970’s Burt was absolutely the biggest movie star in the world.  From “Smokey And The Bandit,” to “Deliverance” to “Boogie Nights,” and so many more classics.  Burt /Vic was riding high.  Then the fall from grace; with too much hubris, bad career moves and even worse romantic and financial choices.

When Vic is offered a seemingly prestigious life achievement award in Nashville, he’s reluctant at first, but then his old buddy Sonny (Chevy Chase) nudges him to accept. So he grudgingly goes and there he meets and eventually bonds with a young cast of misfits, (Clark Duke, Ellar Coltrane and Ariel, Winter) all who are solid matches for the at times bitter but honest and self-deprecating Vic.  Bottom line, Reynolds shines in his late major role, his cinematic swan song. “Last Movie Star” sweetly, respectfully and with caustic humor, lovingly honors Burt Reynold’s iconic career. (Look for a lovely performance by Kathleen Nolan, and great supporting work from Ariel Winter, Clark Duke, Ellar Coltrane and Chevy Chase.)

Amazon Prime now has two films by Rifkin that should not be missed. Rifkin also is a documentarian with his “Giuseppe Makes A Movie,” a pop culture classic about musician Giuseppe Andrews, a one-time teen actor who was in “Independence Day” and Rifkin’s “Detroit Rock City.”  A filmmaker himself, Andrews has made over 30 experimental features and his idols are Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Luis Bunuel.  Andrew’s actors are people on the fringes, on the margins of society, transients, drug addicts and the like.  Filmed in Ventura, CA, the enormously entertaining Andrews is compelling and as “beautifully eccentric” as he describes his friend.  Rifkin adeptly captures all in a rough and ready, humorous style.

Taylor Swift’s “Folklore” Passes 1 Million Mark in Less than 3 Weeks, Including Streaming as of Sunday

It’s Taylor Swift’s world and we just live in it.

On July 24th she surprised everyone with a new album called “Folklore.” The first week of sales were big, although a little less than her last album. It looked like it might not have “legs.”

But “Folklore” has really been a surprise in that it launched a lot of simultaneous singles hits. Two versions of the song “Cardigan” and another song, “The 1,” have really taken root. And that’s how you keep an album alive. The individual tracks have to catch fire.

So “Folklore” passed the 1 million mark on Sunday including streaming, it came to 1,037,000. Of that, 675,000 is downloads. There are no CDs.

This week right now, “Folklore” is ahead of all other albums with 43,060 total including streaming. Around 12,000 are downloads.

Streaming is a big factor this time around for Taylor, especially since there are no CDs. And she has plenty more tracks to push, including “Betty,” which I think might wind up being the longest lasting song. Swift has 7 of the top 50 streaming songs on Spotify. She doesn’t have number 1, but she’s got her soldiers on the battlefield, and pretty well placed. That’s all you can ask.

And so we wait for more videos, some live performances on TV, etc. “Folklore” is going to be the #1 hit of 2020 in the music world. Let’s hope the Grammys don’t screw her again. But it will all depend on whether she hooks up with the American Music Awards again in November, or lets them pass.

 

Disney Flushes 100 Years of 20th Century Fox History, The Only Studio to Have a Classic Rock Song Named for Them

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Disney is flushing the name 20th Century Fox a year or more after acquiring the 1oo year old movie studio. All the brands that came with the Fox name are gone now, replaced by Disney’s.

The Mouse House can do whatever they like. But 20th Century Fox is the only movie studio that had a great classic rock song named in their honor.

The song was the Doors’ “20th Century Fox,” the fourth track on The Doors debut album in 1967. And what a debut album. It also includes “Light My Fire,” “Break on Through,” “The Alabama Song,” “Crystal Ship,” and “The End.” It’s an album for the ages, released three months after the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper.”

“20th Century Fox” was not a single. But over the last 53 years it’s become a radio staple and an incredibly popular deep track. Jim Morrison was very clever to take the double entendre of “fox”– a hot girl — and put a spin on it with the studio name. Who knows? If he’d lived past 1971, Morrison might very well have become a movie star. He was also a 20th century fox, and he knew it.

Disney will never have a classic song named for them. They’re way too animated. A real 21st century fox is very chill.

“Twentieth Century Fox”

Well, she’s fashionably lean
And she’s fashionably late
She’ll never rank a scene
She’ll never break a date
But she’s no drag
Just watch the way she walks

She’s a twentieth century fox
She’s a twentieth century fox
No tears, no fears
No ruined years, no clocks
She’s a twentieth century fox, oh yeah

She’s the queen of cool
And she’s the lady who waits
Since her mind left school
It never hesitates
She won’t waste time
On elementary talk

‘Cause she’s a twentieth century fox
She’s a twentieth century fox
Got the world locked up
Inside a plastic box
She’s a twentieth century fox, oh yeah
Twentieth century fox, oh yeah
Twentieth century fox
She’s a twentieth century fox

Irony: Kelly Clarkson Won the Very 1st American Idol 18 Years Ago Hosted by Simon Cowell, Whom She Now Replaces on “America’s Got Talent”

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18 years. The student replaces the teacher. Or something like that.

It was September 4, 2002 when Kelly Clarkson won the very first “American Idol.” Simon Cowell was the host of the show.

Now nearly two decades later, Cowell has broken his back trying to ride a motorized bike without looking at the directions. He can’t host “America’s Got Talent.” Clarkson, who has recently become ubiquitous on television, will step in for him.

She says on Twitter, “My friend, Simon Cowell, is doing better now but was in an accident and won’t be able to make Tuesday and Wednesday’s live shows for AGT, but no worries America, someone far wiser, cooler, and hotter is taking his seat! The unbelievably amazing Kelly Clarkson 😜 You’re welcome in advance!”

Simon says: “Some good advice… If you buy an electric trail bike, read the manual before you ride it for the first time. I have broken part of my back. Thank you to everyone for your kind messages.”

Cowell thinks he will just miss this week’s live shows and be back next week like nothing happened. That’s because the pain meds haven’t worn off.

Kelly already hosts her own hit talk show and appears wherever else she can, including “The Voice.” Did she send him the bike as a gift? Nooooo. But let’s start that rumor.

Get well, Simon. Hurry! (In the accompanying photo, Kelly tried to swear herself in as president.)

Was Broadway Producer Living in a House of Cards? Scott Rudin Sued for Not Paying Ad Agency $6.3 Million

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Scott Rudin has lived large on Broadway for years.

He’s made his recent reputation in the last decade for bringing in big stars, charging very high ticket prices, cutting out the Broadway press, and making a lot of enemies.

Now it turns out his whole set may have been a house of cards.

Broadway’s biggest ad agency, Spot Co, is suing him for non payment of $6,331,972 and four cents in ads. You can read the complaint here.

Rudin blanketed shows like “CBS This Morning” and “60 Minutes” with ads for shows like Jeff Daniels in “To Kill a Mockingbird” and several others including Elaine May in “The Waverly Gallery,” the current and much criticized revival of “West Side Story,” “The Lehman Trilogy,” Nathan Lane in the great failure, “Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus,” Glenda Jackson in a disappointing “King Lear,” the about to open and unnecessary “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” and this fall’s now postponed “The Music Man” with Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster. He also covered every NYC bus, bus shelter, taxi, any surface available with his ads for his shows.

There’s a lot of minutiae in the lawsuit, but the gist of it is found in this paragraph: “Throughout the business relationship between SpotCo, Rudin, and SRP, Rudin and SRP have had a practice of being delinquent on outstanding invoices. Rudin and SRP’s usual practice is to make partial payments on outstanding invoices on the one hand, while requesting additional services on the other. In other words, while the oldest debts were paid off, new debts were incurred, and the result was that the totality of the debt was never paid in full.”

And here we have the mystery solved of how Rudin was affording big two paid spreads in the Sunday New York Times and all those TV splashes even for shows we all knew were duds. Ironically, Rudin always held himself out as the anti-Harvey Weinstein, who was also slow to pay his bills and for juggling accounts. But — aside from Weinstein’s situations with women– the two were not that different.

Two shows not mentioned in the lawsuit are Rudin’s actual hits– “The Book of Mormon” and the Bette Midler revival of “Hello, Dolly!” The latter is long since closed, and the former was struggling for a good year or more before the pandemic shut down.

An even bigger mystery is why the New York Times downplayed this story on August 7th. They barely acknowledged it. That’s because so much of the advertising Rudin didn’t pay for was in their paper. One thing we learn in the lawsuit is that this past February, Rudin went around SpotCo and paid the Times $3 million directly. This is was not the usual way things were done, but the suggestion is that Rudin could see Tony season coming and needed the Times more than he needed the agency.

Rudin’s attorney says: “The case has no merit and the defendants intend to contest it vigorously.”

But it’s hard to imagine Jackman and Foster, or other big stars, committing to Rudin for big budget productions with this lawsuit hanging over his head. And what of “Mockingbird,” which ended abruptly with the arrival of the pandemic? Will it return?  And with Ed Harris, who’d succeeded Daniels as Atticus Finch? The jury is out.

 

 

Viral Video of Teens Hearing Phil Collins’ “In the Air Tonight” For 1st Time Sends Single to Top 10 iTunes

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Tim and Fred Williams are the stars of the month.

Their viral videos on YouTube have featured the 22 year olds from Gary, Indiana filming themselves hearing old music for the first time.

Their latest is a video of them listening to Phil Collins’s 1981 hit, “In the Air Tonight.” It’s become such a hit that “In the Air Tonight” has risen to the top 5 on iTunes. On Friday and Saturday alone the song sold over 14,000 copies.

The Williams– who are like Wayne and Garth from “Wayne’s World” — are hilarious and sweet as they discover Whitney Houston, Frank Sinatra, Al Green, the Carpenters, Dolly Parton, and so on. Wait til they get to the Beatles, the Stones, and Aretha.

How long before they’ve got their own show on MTV? That depends if MTV is still alive, if anyone’s there to realize this is a show that doesn’t include a paternity test. I hope these guys get a decent agent who cares what happens to them.