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Listen to Rose McGowan’s EDM Album, “Planet 9,” Fulfilling the Dreams of Cousin Serena from “Bewitched”

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Below you can listen to Rose McGowan’s sort of electronic dance music album, “Planet 9.” Here is my review: this the album cousin Serena always wanted to make on “Bewitched.” Since Rose played a witch on “Charmed Lives,” this all makes sense. Is it good? You can’t apply these mundane judgments. That “Planet 9” is digital only and is self-released says it all.

However, Rose has written liner notes:
Hello, I appreciate you taking the time to read this. I’m Rose McGowan and for a long time, I worked in a strange place called Hollywood. Being an actress was my day job, but behind the scenes I was honing my skills as a multi-media artist, writer and thought leader. After realizing I’d worked on sets for over 57k hours, I knew it was time to assert my own voice, so I directed a short film called Dawn which was nominated for the Sundance Grand Jury Prize. After Dawn, I began a three-year writing project, my book, BRAVE. While writing about my life and thoughts on society, I needed to create art that would be soothing. I’d always loved using my voice, it was my favorite part of performing. When I was a small child going through tough times, I created a utopian world in my mind and I named it Planet 9. I felt safe on this invented planet of mine. I also used to wonder what sounds existed on my planet. As life went on, I forgot about how special my planet was, I forgot I could go there in times of trouble. Six years ago, astronomers found a new planet they named Planet 9 – It’s the new planet that demoted Pluto to a star. Holy s! They found my Planet 9! Around the same time, I met some French electronic musicians and I decided to make music that has the power to lift your spirit. I know this, art heals. Planet 9 takes you on a very special journey. I am not trying to be a pop star, I will not be performing this album. By using my knowledge of cinema sound design, I carefully created the sounds and words for a better place, an unknown world in our own mind that we can all travel to. Planet 9 is an artistic endeavor that I hope will help others meditate in a unique way. Let go, come to Planet 9.

UPDATE: You Can Only Watch The “Yellow Submarine” Sing-a-long on YouTube Because They Disabled Embedding

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UPDATE: Anytime there’s a live anything on YouTube you can embed it onto another site. The advertising and clicks all go to the owner, but this way everyone can join in. However, today the Beatles have disabled embedding, so no one else can show their program. We’ll watch it on YouTube. Peace and love, kids. All you need is an ATM.

Join the viewing party Saturday, April 25th, noon Eastern time. The Beatles, “Yellow Submarine.” I saw it at the Little Carnegie Theater the week it opened, with my Aunt Jeannette. She was a sport!

All together now!

Fiona Apple: Fetch the Champagne, Her Fifth Album Sells Most Albums in Slow Week But Finishes at Number 4 on Charts

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Fetch the Champagne!

Fiona Apple’s “Fetch the Bolt Cutters” sold 30,000 albums and paid downloads this week. Apple’s fifth album since 1996 sold the most of any release, almost three times as many as the album by Da Baby (who will not be here in 26 years. Or months, maybe.)

Even so, “Bolt Cutters” finished in fourth place because it had little streaming– just 15,000 copies’ worth. Da Baby (yes. him again) streamed the equivalent of 115,000 copies. Plus his 11,000 downloads. So he wins. The Weeknd’s hit album, “After Hours,” finished in second place.

Fiona’s “hit” (30,000 copies is like nothing, really) was nevertheless a success for Sylvia Rhone at Epic Records. It was very well marketed. I mean, Fiona Apple? How they pulled that off, I’ll never know.

Will “Bolt” cutters even sell 250,000 copies in its lifetime? Who knows? I’m sure it will get Grammy nominations, as will The Weeknd’s record. If we have the Grammys. Good lord.

This week’s top 100 even with streaming was another low in the history of sales charts. Without each week’s new number 1, there would be no chart. Nothing is selling. Everything is stagnant. But at least the Rolling Stones are number 1 on iTunes today.

 

Billy Porter Drops the Artifice and Shows How He Got a Tony Award With Seriously Soulful “For What It’s Worth”

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Billy Porter has camped it up so much the last couple of years that we almost forgot why he won a Tony Award. He’s actually a very talented singer.

Now he’s recorded a cover of Stephen Stills’s Buffalo Springfield classic “For What It’s Worth.” Billy’s dumped the artifice and gotten serious on this one, and it’s a relief. Even Stills gave approval. The song is produced by Zack Arnett (not the football player/coach) for Arnett Music and executive produced by Bill Butler and Carmen Cacciatore for The Butler Music Company Inc.

Let’s hope if Billy performs this somewhere, it’s not in a gold lame dress. This is too good to have distractions.

Actually I did find a video of him performing the song at Cyndi Lauper’s house last December. That version, and then the better studio version, follow:

 

 

The Taylor Swift Live Album is Available for Streaming Despite Singer’s Complaints About Old Label

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The live album Taylor Swift was carping about yesterday it out and available at least on Spotify.

“Live from Clear Channel Stripped 2008” is streaming but it’s only on some platforms. It has a copyright 2020 Big Machine Records.

Swift is furious that Big Machine would issue such a record without her permission. But Big Machine owns her masters and catalog, so they can do whatever they want.

This sort of thing is part of the record industry tradition, it’s been going on for decades. That’s how we got Elton John’s “Here and There” live album in the mid 70s. Elton said in his book recently that he hated it, but I always liked. Best version of “Crocodile Rock.”

Anyway, Taylor will just have to Shake it Off and move on. Big Machine seems like they’re going to do more of these, so let’s get used to it.

“Will & Grace” Round 2 Ends Its Run with Highest Rating of Season But One Third of Its 2017 Premiere

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“Will & Grace” is gone again.

Last night’s series finale scored 3.1 million viewers, their highest of this season. That’s about the same audience as a daily episode of “General Hospital.”

When the rebooted show debuted in the fall of 2017, they had just over 10 million viewers. After around 8 episodes they drifted down to around 4 million per episode, then a little less. But the demos were always good, and so was the publicity.Most of this season averaged 2 million or less, which is less than even “Days of our Lives.”

So they managed to squeeze out 52 more episodes to market with the old series. Will, Grace, Jack, and Karen will live on in syndication forever. In the final episode, Grace gave birth even though she’s about 75 years old by now. (Seriously, Debra Messing is 51.)  Everyone moved somewhere. Maybe they met up with the “Modern Family” cast on an island with a smoke monster.

Media Melt Down Continues: New York Magazine Company “Furloughs” Chunk of Staff Including Film Critic David Edelstein

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New York Magazine joins the media meltdown this week. Their parent company, Vox Media, “furloughed” a chunk of the stuff including their respected long time film critic David Edelstein. Edelstein joins Todd McCarthy, dean of film critics, who was laid off last week by the Hollywood Reporter. I don’t get it. Edelstein could be writing pieces about film for New York Magazine. Ridiculous.

Edelstein writes on Facebook:

“Most of you have heard that because of the, you know, thing, Vox Media (which has owned New York Media since the beginning of the year) has cut or “furloughed” nine percent of its workforce for a minimum of three months and a maximum of forever, and I am in that group. Privately, I’ve been assured that they chose to furlough the most dazzling, beloved, and essential writers in order to highlight the sacrifices that we all—as citizens of the world—must make, and that someone of my stature will of course be coming back because the economic future of journalism is so bright we gotta wear shades. [Insert emoticon of choice]

“…Since January 2006, New York Magazine/Vulture has been a wonderful home, my colleagues as convivial as they are driven. They’ve supported me at times when it wasn’t so easy. They rock. Given the brilliance of New York/Vulture critics Alison Wilmore, Bilge Ebiri, and Anjelica Jade Bastien (as well as editor Katherine Brooks), the section will be dandy even sans my eloquent self.

“As all of my FB friends know, I was feeling a bit worn out earlier in the year, and I don’t mind sitting back for a while—as long as I can afford to, anyway—watching the passing parade. Unfortunately, that parade is now of ambulances. I am so thankful that my family and friends are well and have not lost hope. We’ll come out this wiser and—eventually—stronger. So… as that Scottish guy said on Lost, “See you in another life, brother.”

 

The Rolling Stones Hit Number 1 on iTunes (First Time Ever) with Spectacular Quarantine Anthem “Living in a Ghost Town”

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The Rolling Stones haven’t had a number 1 hit probably since 1981’s “Start Me Up.” They’ve had scattershot singles since then– they were never a great singles chart band. They certainly have never had a number 1 hit on iTunes, a relatively new service.

But this morning the nearly 60 year old Best Rock and Roll Band in the world is number with “Living in a Ghost Town.” The single was dropped yesterday to great acclaim. With a nod to the Specials’ “Ghost Town,” the song by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards couldn’t be more timely.

Ironically. the group recorded the song last year. But recently, Mick says in his video, they realized it might have some impact now, The accompanying video is excellent, also. So interesting that our anthems for this moment are coming from the Stones and Jon Bon Jovi, older acts that have stood the test of time.

 

 

Donald Trump Suggests Testing Injections of Disinfectant Under the Skin or Exposure to UV Rays Would Kill the CoronaVirus

Is it time for the 25th Amendment? Actually it’s long past that time. Your president, Donald J. Trump, today gave “Saturday Night” a potential Emmy winning sketch. He suggested at his press conference that there could be testing of injections of disinfectant under human skin or that exposure to UV rays would kill Coronavirus. You have to watch this clip, carefully.

“…then I said supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you could do either through the skin or in some other way. I think you said that you are going to test that, too. And then I saw the disinfectant, where knocks it out in one minute, and is there a way we could do something like that by injection inside or almost a cleaning. As you see it gets in the lungs, it does a tremendous number on the lungs, so it would be interesting to check that.”

He added: “Maybe it works, maybe it doesn’t work.”

No, really. Alec Baldwin must be rehearsing this right now. Seriously, it’s not funny. This idiot is in charge of our lives. This must stop.

Jane Fonda Won $125,000 on “Who Wants to be a Millionaire” And Told the Story of Meeting Famous Tortoise Lonesome George

Two time Oscar winner Jane Fonda appeared on “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” Wednesday night. She won $125,000 which will go to her Fire Drill Fridays activist program at Greenpeace.

Fonda looked fantastic, of course, with a “Klute”-like short hair cut, all shiny gray. She wore a Fire Drill Fridays t shirt. Her “smartest friend” who accompanied her was comedian Louis Virtel, who actually was pretty smart. Jane stopped from answering what would have been the $250,000 question about cities in time zones. Good thing, too, because she would have lost.

One question was about Lonesome George, a famous gigantic tortoise in the Galpagos. Turned out, Jane had met him. Here’s the clip. PS If the Kennedy Center is going to do their honors this year, it’s well past time for Jane to be inducted. She’s the most fearsome and devoted American. Plus, all the awards. And her contribution to American culture is incalculable.