Friday, December 19, 2025
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Cannes 2020 Selections Announced, Better Late than Never (Watch LIVE): Wes Anderson’s “French Dispatch,” Pixar’s “Soul” Lead List

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We’re going to see these movies next year in Cannes, plus new ones from next year. Cannes 2020 should have taken place last month but the pandemic stopped it. There’s a list of 15 films. The full list is coming. There’s a 5 hour movie! So far, almost no American movies. Very little in English. Not much Hollywood glamour for the red carpet. And the Pixar movie, “Soul.”

Thierry just said, “I don’t know if the Oscars will take place.” Don’t worry, they will.

Wes Anderson, The French Dispatch
Francois Ozon, Summer of ’85
True Mother
Steve McQueen, West Indian mini series
Last Words

Chrissie Hynde, Pretenders Release Cool Stealth Single from New Album that Recalls Buddy Holly, Bo Diddley

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For some reason, the new Pretenders single, called Didn’t Want to Be This Lonely, was sort of stealth released recently. It’s the third or fourth single from an album coming out in July that has no marketing plan. They’ve all been very good but this one is my favorite. It’s got a little “Not Fade Away,” a little Bo Diddley, a pinch of “Don’t Get Me Wrong.” I love the video, too. “Hate for Sale” comes July 17th, it will sell 10,000 copies, no one will know what the hell is going on, and of course, there’s no tour because of the pandemic. It’s a shit show. Who’s in charge? I dunno. I think 2020 is the Pretenders’ 40th anniversary. Am I right? There’s a marketing hook. Someone use it!

PS What are they doing with those Bob Dylan covers?

And here’s “The Buzz”:

title track “Hate for Sale”:

George Floyd Family GoFundMe Campaign Hits $10.5 Mil with New Donation from Jay Penske, Publisher of Variety

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The George Floyd Gofundme campaign is up to $10.5 million as of 7:15pm Eastern.

The latest donation is $25,000 from Jay Penske, publisher of Variety, Rolling Stone, Deadline and other websites and magazines.

The top donor is someone named Samuel LeBlanc, with $45,005. If anyone knows who he is, please give me a shout at showbiz411@gmail.com

A number of celebrities and famous people have contributed large sums, including U2 Manager Guy Oseary, actor Chris Evans, and model Georgia Jagger.

Most of the donations, though, are from regular folk, and they’re in the range of five-to-100 dollars. A food producer called Strong Roots donated $10,000. So did Dumbgood, a company that makes t shirts. I don’t if these companies have a strong sense of justice or just want publicity.

The actor Guillermo Diaz, from “Scandal,” gave $5000. So did designer Gabriela Hearst.

More to come…

“Orange is the New Black” Actress Taryn Manning Cancels Herself With (Now Deleted) Pro-Trump Instagram Post

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Taryn Manning was featured on “Orange is the New Black.” Today she posted and quickly deleted a message on Instagram that was pro-Trump, pro-conspiracy theory and completely crazy. Who knew? (I suppose people around her did, but not us.)

Four times she uses the hashtag #q, which is code for Qanon, the fringe right wing conspiracy group. She attacks Democratic fundraiser George Soros, the frequent target of right wing conspiracy theorists who believe Soros is conducting a Dark war in secret. (They remind me of the Lyndon LaRouche follower who told me in the fall of 1976 that the world “would come to an end” in four weeks, and he had proof.

Funny thing about “Orange is the New Black.” Laura Prepon went in as a Scientologist, but they say she’s given that up. Turns out Prepon was normal compared to this kook. I hope she’s got a back up plan, because after this, well…Anyway, her next role is playing skeezy Faye Resnick, Nicole Brown’s low life friend, in a B movie about the OJ Simpson murders.

Here’s the post:

I never pop political but I want to start by saying if I was being attacked the way everyone attacks him I would hold the HOLY BIBLE too. People can feel scared right now. Donald can feel scared too. I do say with all my love in the name of Jesus Christ my savior to be mindful of dragging God into the fake media and trying to pick this choice of his apart. Not about him, it’s about God. This is what I saw, I don’t watch fake news-#q. Who cares? Let it ride. I am happy because Donald chose the power of the sword in his hand #righthand and maybe if we lifted him up rather then tear him apart daily – since he is still in office, wished him the best and that we pray Jesus wrap his wings around the man for heavens sake then he could think straight and make better choices that please all the humans full of hate. Whatever it will take to shush the idle chit chat that is only the devils play time ✝️ No I don’t ‘support trump’ as you will all attack me. I support humans. Let it ride. I see his errors of course but let the Holy Spirit reign supreme now. Donald can be very nice actually. If you’re not attacking him constant. We are in times of utter peril. ✝️ Much bigger beasts at work. I mean for now. #gameover ;) remember in the end. We win. Book of revelations. Stay close to the ✝️ #q ALL I SEE IS THE BIBLE. That’s all that matters to me. #q funded protests – white antagonist – blaming BLM – nice Soros- #gameover #breadceumbs #q know the #truth do the research. It’s all there for you to see. Turn off your TVs. They got you by the ball sacks. I don’t care about Trump I care about kindness and peace #love q Do you know he’s saved more children from human trafficking than Obama ever did. No? Look it up. Stop reading the fake hate news and look at facts. Look at the symbols. Mass arrests. All darkness comes to light. You think this ONE man is the sole problem for the globe? We are 45 in the freedom of the press. Read news from other counties. Read about the Pope. Wake. C’mon. Think bigger for fun.

 

Here Are Your Protestors, Marching Up Fifth Avenue, While Some Hand Out Butter Cookies in Locked Down Village

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Driving home about 5pm, down Fifth Avenue, I was startled to see this group of protestors marching toward me suddenly as if Tom Hooper had picked them up out of “Les Miserables” camera ready, no songs in their hearts. I managed to get one photo before I had to ditch west on Seventeenth Street because this group of rabble rousing yuppies would have walked right over me if they had the chance.

My first afternoon back in the city since this all began was initially quiet. The Upper East Side is fairly languid. Upper Park Avenue is blissfully unaware that last night Macy’s, the Microsoft store, and other favorite locales were looted for no apparent reason, and not by anyone we knew. No one called to ask if they could pick me up a Surface Pro 6 with a black keyboard (hint: by all means, if you go back tonight).

But once I started down Lexington, hitting the 60s, it was a different story. Bloomingdales– which has very ornate Art Deco grates– is all boarded up. And from 59th St. down, the wood planks are filling windows and doorways even if it’s a futile attempt to stave off some invasion later tonight. People have cleared out. It’s a lot like an old Western, when the whole town seeks cover because they know there will a gunfight in the OK Corral. You hear the silence. You can hear the subways underground, which is unusual.

At Lexington and 21st I headed west listening alternately to WINS and Newsradio 88. They were confident they knew where all the marches were currently underway. I turned left on Fifth Avenue to find all the stores boarded up. In 40 years I’ve never seen anything like it. Kudos to Club Monaco, they seem to have custom boards. Everyone else just had planks, and I was looking at them, with no traffic behind me, when  I saw this crowd advancing.

Years ago I wandered out onto Lower Fifth and saw a huge protest going on by the Washington Square arch. I had taken some cold medicine, and wasn’t paying attention. I thought they were NYU students protesting the Gulf War or something like that. I actually thought, good for them, at last that generation is putting up a fight. But as I got closer, I discovered it was a movie shoot. Julie Taymor was shooting a scene for her Beatles movie, “Across the Universe.”

And that’s kind of what this looked like. Another car pulled up behind me, and some pesky bike rider went around me. He shouted, I guess to the other driver, He’s taking pictures. There was a city bus and an ice cream truck, and everyone had stopped. The news radio stations made no mention of a crowd coming up Fifth, which is a scene that makes no sense to a New Yorker since Fifth Avenue has only gone downtown since the late 1950s.

When I got home, I parked, and walked over to the Patchin Place post office, which should have been closed. One of the nice postal ladies was hanging on the open front door. “Our truck is late,” she said, shaking her head. Across the street, two women– maybe a youngish yellow haired mother and her 10 year old, in cloth masks– were drawing white doves on the dark green planks covering the bank. There was almost no one else on the street. Again, the Villagers had scattered in anticipation of not the Halloween parade, but something bad. The postal lady pointed to a couple of young white people dressed in black, carrying signs that read “Black Lives Matter.” “Those are the protestors,” she said, “they’re here.”

A group that looked like they’d been propelled from a summer camp walked up to us– a couple of 40sih white guys, their kids, all in shirts, shorts, and sneakers, carrying what looked like pizza boxes. “Want some cookies?” one of them asked. “Cookies? Do I have to pay for them?” asked my friend. “No, they’re free.” They were from a place called Insomnia Cookies, in the West Village. They were just going around handing out cookies, like placing a daisy in a rifle. We each tried a butter cookie.

“If you come back tomorrow,” I said, “bring chocolate chip.”

“I think we have them,” said the little girl. “I can look.”

No need, I told her, we said thanks and they headed to Washington Square Park.

 

What to Do on Blackout Tuesday: Watch Jamie Foxx and Michael B. Jordan in “Just Mercy” for Free on All Platforms

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“Just Mercy” should have been an Oscar nominee, as well as its actors, but Warner Bros. put all its efforts into “Joker.”

Now Destin Daniel Cretton’s excellent film about civil rights lawyer Bryan Stevenson is FREE on all streaming platforms for the month of June. Jamie Foxx and Michael B. Jordan star. Brie Larson appeared in a secondary role as a gift to the filmmaker. “Just Mercy” is a story of triumph as Foxx’s Walter McMillian is arrested and convicted of a crime he didn’t commit. You don’t want to miss this film. Foxx will bring tears to your eyes. Tim Blake Nelson is amazing playing a terrible character. Rob Morgan shines.

The Show Must Be Paused: Entire Music Industry Will Take Tuesday as a Day of Reflection, Community, No Business

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Two record execs from Atlantic Records, Brianna Agyemang and Jamila Thomas, came up with the plan for a Blackout Tuesday tomorrow, June 2nd. The entire music industry will stop and pause for reflection and involvement in community. Implicitly this in memory of George Floyd, and all victims of anti-black racism.

I think the only thing that will continue will be the counting of record sales. Otherwise, every artist and record label has announced they will observe theshowmustbepaused.com. All offices will be closed. Radio will go on, and hopefully programmers will play meaningful music throughout the day. It feels like 1968, and that’s a good thing. (PS Nice that this is coming from Atlantic Records. Ahmet, Nesuhi, Arif, Jerry, Tom– they’d be proud.)

 

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#theshowmustbepaused

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Controversial British Retailer Boohoo Is Now the Top Donor to George Floyd Family’s GoFundMe Campaign

EXCLUSIVE There’s a new top donor to the GoFundMe campaign set up by George Floyd’s family.

Website prettylittlethings.com has donated $35,000 to the campaign, which now boasts $7 million in donations. Pretty Little Things is a company that specializes in cheap clothes for teens. Last Thursday, another retailer, called Boohoo, bought out the minority stake in Pretty Little Things for a reported $338 million.

The whole deal is pretty sketchy. Boohoo bought a 34% stake in Pretty Little Thing owned by Umar Kamani, the son of Boohoo’s chairman and co-founder Mahmud Kamani, and business partner Paul Papworth.

The deal drew criticism in London from Matthew Earl, the head of hedge fund ShadowFall, who is known at the “Dark Destroyer” for the effect his research can have on companies’ share prices. “Above all, this is another example of the Kamani family reducing its ownership in the company largely using cash,” Earl said.

What PrettyLittleThing cares about George Floyd’s family is unclear. But Boohoo is not a popular company in the fashion world. According to the website labourbehindthellabel.org: “boohoo sells dresses for as little as £4, a price that is too good to be true. With prices this low it is unlikely that the workers making their clothes will have fair wages and be free from exploitation. boohoo won’t tell us which factories produce their clothes, so the human cost behind the price tag remains hidden.  We are calling on boohoo to publish their supply chain and tell us about the working conditions and wages behind their low-cost clothing.”

The Floyds might want to consider rejecting the donation.

As I wrote yesterday, the Floyd GoFundMe campaign has attracted a lot of famous donors. Add to the list today Georgia Jagger, model and daughter of Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall, who kicked in $2,000.

 

 

(Watch) Dion aka “The Wanderer” Is More Timely Than Ever — You Forgot He Sang “Abraham, Martin, and John”

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Everyone remembers Dion DiMucci for “The Wanderer” or “Runaround Sue.” That was Dion and the Belmonts, and those were classics. They sound better than ever today.

But we forget Dion was much more than those top 40 hits. In August 1968 he released “Abraham, Martin, and John” at a critical moment in civil unrest in this country, after the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy.

Dion has never gone away. He has SIX new singles out this week from an album coming out Friday called “Blues with Friends.” The first single, “Song for Sam Cooke (Here in America)” is coincidentally very timely. I love this song. Dion says in an interview with Paul Zollo for American Songwriter: “At first, I just had the melody and the refrain ‘Here in America.’ A friend suggested I use an episode from my memoir about walking southern streets with Sam Cooke in 1962. It’s a good story, a true story. We were in the South together. And he stood up for me. He was a good guy. I miss him.”

He finished the song, he said, but put it aside, thinking it was too personal for other people to get. He put it in his drawer, where it remained, unsung and unrecorded, for years.

“Then in 2019,’ Dion said, “I saw the movie Green Book and after that, I couldn’t shake the song. I thought, `Hey, they almost wrote a movie about my song.’ I loved the movie so much that I thought I’d better take that song out to see it if works. And it did. It actually did.”

More from this album to come this week. In the meantime, here’s Dion. He looks pretty good, doesn’t he? Dion turns 80 in July. God bless.

And just in case you don’t know it, here’s “Abraham, Martin, and John”

Basic Instinct: Sharon Stone Explains How to Make a Safe Room in Your Home In Case the Rioters Get Near

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I do love Sharon Stone. And now the movie star of “Basic Instinct” and “Casino” fame has made an Instagram video that’s very useful. It’s How to Make a Safe Room in Your Home In Case the Rioters Get Near. Sharon recommends the bathroom as a place to seal yourself off from the chaos. Get food and water, “some fruit and protein bars,” your computer, phone, chargers, and so on. Listen, all advice is good. “You want to try and board up the window that’s in there if you can, if you’re in a rioting area.” She advises: “Don’t panic but if you think you’re going to panic, take any panic medications you think you might like to have in there.” That is good advice!

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Make a safe room here’s how 👍🏻💪🏻

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