Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Last Weekend: A Masterpiece of Contemporary Cinema by Tom Dolby

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I don't often write criticism, especially on films, but this exception has to be made. Not only is "Last Weekend" one of the best films I've seen in a very long time, but I'm appalled to see that it has received poor reviews. This speaks volumes about those who review films these days and very little about this fantastic movie by writer and director Tom Dolby.

It feels intellectually snobby of me to suggest that the problem is our shallow contemporary culture, but I can't help but feel that this is the issue to some extent. When reading the review by Peter Sobczynski on RogerEbert.com, I have to question his interpretation of this film. Did he understand it at all? One of this reviewer's chief complaints about the film is that it doesn't provide us with a good reason for watching, an "answer" as to why the film might be important. This, of course, is precisely what makes the film a contemporary masterpiece. There is no real answer or ending, and yet, it's not one of those films that has no ending to try and prove something - think French cinema.

This review goes on to criticize the film for being "top heavy" in characters. Seriously? Have things become so bad that we cannot handle a cast of eight characters? These criticisms are superficial and shallow. As I said, revealing ignorance on the part of the reviewer more than uncovering any verifiable weaknesses in the film.

Yes, this film is complex. Yes, this film requires intellect and some brain power to understand and enjoy. Yes, you might have to lay off the maryjane while watching. How terrible that someone attempted to make art and a movie all at once. The casting was superb with Patricia Clarkson and Devon Graye easily outshining the rest. Clarkson is nothing short of a genius in this role. Graye's unspoken acting is subtle and yet powerful and natural. And, indeed, he is the "unknown prince" of the film, as revealed by his shower scene where he bellows out a tear-jerking rendition of Nessun dorma.

In precis, Last Weekend is a highly successful attempt to put a little slice of life onto the big screen. Life doesn't have neat plots with easily understood themes or a simple casts of characters. Life is complex and beautiful and unknowable. This film not only captures that, but it does so better than any film in recent memory.

The interplay between the rich and not so rich is fresh in this film. It is an age old literary conflict, but is often overdone - not here. The fragility of life and the power of nostalgia is also present in subtle and beautiful ways. The dialogue is authentic and this lends credibility to the themes which the film takes on. In all, it is a well-written screenplay.

Good cinema is not for the masses, like good poetry or good wine. The success of Reader's Digest and American beer are a testament to this certainty. Therefore, I am not surprised that this film didn't have wide appeal. That doesn't mean, however, that it is no good. Indeed it is good, better than good. Last Weekend is real cinema.

So, if you have a brain, can handle more than four characters in a cast, and don't need someone to write an ending on the wall for you, give Last Weekend a shot. You might be pleasantly surprised. I know I was.

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The MovieFilm Podcast: Trailer-palooza! Star Wars, Batman v. Superman + More!



The Fandom Awakens! For this week's show, we're joined by a special guest, award-winning documentary filmmaker Ray Nowosielski, and we go through the big batch of trailers that dropped in the last few days, including Terminator GenisysJurassic WorldBatman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice, and, of course, Star Wars: The Force Awakens. But that's not all! We also talk up new releases such as horror thriller It Follows and the Netflix original series Daredevil, plus news that Netflix has a Full House sequel series on the way as well. You can listen in via the embed below, or stream at iTunes or Stitcher. And make sure you let us know how we're doing at our Facebook page!




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Gina Rodriguez's Wonderful Wisdom On Body Image

Like any actress, Gina Rodriguez can't always escape the pressures of Hollywood beauty standards. But she's well-prepared to deal with them constructively, she told HuffPost Live.

The breakout star of The CW's "Jane The Virgin" has struggled with thyroid disease since she was 19, and last year she was diagnosed with Hashimoto's disease, both of which affect her metabolism. Rodriguez, 30, described hearing that diagnosis -- particularly as she aspired to an industry where waifishness is front and center -- to host Caroline Modarressy-Tehrani.

"It was very interesting at a very young age to be told that was something I was gonna deal with -- weight control," Rodriguez said. "It wasn't going to be easy to be 'tight is right' -- as tight as possible."

That concern has followed the Golden Globe-winner through her recent success. She opened up to People last month about working in an industry where she is "constantly being told, 'You're not skinny enough. You're not tall enough. You're not ethnic enough.'" But Rodriguez told HuffPost about the positive perspective on beauty handed down to her by her father.

Beauty was very much on my mind. I had a father that would -- we would look up at billboards and he would say, "That's one version of beauty. You're another version of beauty. And she's a version of beauty. And that girl? She's another version of beauty." He always said that beauty came from within, and as much as you're younger and you're [sarcastically] like, "Yeah, beauty comes from within" -- no, beauty does come from within. I've met some of the most beautiful people, and sadly their heart is just not smiling, and that destroys it all. And then other people that aesthetically aren't considered as beautiful are the most gorgeous people I've ever seen in my life.


And the clincher: "We live in an industry where the desire to be something that you're not sells. But why can't we make the desire to be what you are sell? Why can't we make that profitable?"

Rodriguez 2016, please.


Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Gina Rodriguez here.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before.

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You Probably Won't See Danny Tanner On 'Fuller House' (No, Not That Danny Tanner)

"Full House" is officially coming back with revival "Fuller House," and Netflix is trying to get everyone to return. We're talking Uncle Joey, Uncle Jesse, the milkman, the paperboy and the evening TV. But there's one character you probably won't see: Danny Tanner.

No, we're not talking about Bob Saget. We mean the original Danny Tanner: actor John Posey.


Image: Yahoo


Wait, what?

It's true. "Full House" almost had a totally different Danny Tanner. Just watch how the opening sequence looked before Saget joined the show, and prepare to have your mind blown:



Weird, right? Saget was reportedly sought after by ABC, but he only came on board after the network had shot the entire pilot with Posey as the Tanner patriarch. And the remake was pretty much shot-for-shot:

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Image: YouTube Full House Opening/Pilot

(Those Olsen twins were probably some confused little girls.)

Posey recalled the experience to Yahoo TV:

I get a phone call, go to the phone booth, as we used to do in those days [laughing], returned the call, and it was my agent saying, "I don't know what's going on, but for some reason they're testing Bob Saget." And I said, "What are you talking about? Why would they do that?" I didn't know at the time that he was the guy that they originally wanted, that he was just unavailable ... And I guess the executive producer talked ABC into allowing him to re-shoot. So that was the end of that.


Things worked out for everyone in the end. "Full House" went on to be a colossal success and Posey would appear in a number of shows and projects of his own. He's also the father of "Teen Wolf" star Tyler Posey, so talent (and perhaps werewolf genes) seems to run in the family.

It's crazy to think how close the show was to being very different, but it's hard to imagine Danny Tanner as anyone else but this guy:


Image: Giphy

Posey did not immediately respond to The Huffington Post about his status for the "Full House" revival.

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5 Keys to Consider with a Label Deal in the Music Industry

As a child, somewhere in pages of a fairytale book, we would discover adventures that revealed a pattern for the characters in the story. The innocent-but-flawed hero eventually faced various challenges and villains to which perseverance and the eternal hope of good over evil would somehow manifest in the end. The storylines and adventures within these books were intentionally and thinly veiled parables for life to the mature reader. Even as an adult and many cobweb memories later, we deep down hope to experience a life that is worthy of an epic tale that with the right amount of embellishment could join that library of classics.

To some extent, the music industry is full of similar stories we've come to reference as the way it should be for the lowly and heroic emerging artist. Seemingly everyone I've met -- including myself -- trying to make their way in the music industry has an internal compass pointing to the fairytale North Pole of happy endings that drive them to continue. The catalog of music industry stories we cite in order to justify the tenacity to keep trying is riddled with enough hope to sometimes throw us off track to the reality of the business side of the music industry. We sometimes focus on the big payday and fame and forget that both of those are fleeting spoils of the war of making a living in the business. More importantly, we can get lost in the excitement of a label that shows interest so much that we overlook the fine print buried within flowery words of small novel called a "record deal" contract.

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Now, I've spent the better part of my adult life negotiating sales contracts in various industries, including the fun of drafting them and having lawyers red-pen them many times. I'm not a lawyer, but the process of reading through these intimidating documents can be overwhelming to most. So for the sake of lending unsolicited advice to my reader, I figured to point out the top five issues to consider when entering discussions with a label of any size. These are not necessarily in priority order for every case, but they are in my personal preference order of importance when I have considered them for Spencer's career.

1. The Investment From The Label
The most important relationship matter to understand between an artist and label is that of the artist being a small business and the label acting as a managing investor in that small business. It is simply that easy. The label is investing in that artist and expects a return. As such, it is extremely important for the artist to look at a very detailed blueprint of WHAT is being invested, WHEN it's being invested, HOW it's being invested, WHO is investing it and WHERE it's being invested. These are standard questions to ask and understand clearly before entering the agreement. Too many artists regret signing a record deal because they didn't understand the investment structure in the light of these. In most cases, a label won't include an actual dollar amount they will invest or when. They will often verbally say they will do this and that, but when it comes to the actual contract, an artist should be comfortable that the wording holds them accountable to the investment plan you verbally discuss. It will be a critical part of whether they can succeed with helping the artist's career reach the levels both parties expect.

2. Term Of The Contract
It's also very critical to understand how long an artist is bound by the contract being offered. Be extremely careful to not miss sections of the agreement that are worded so that even when the term of the agreement is legally finished, some rights of ownership may extend after the label and artist part ways. Things like use of artists music, likeness, name, etc., may affect the artist down the line. Certainly anything that has financial upside for the label may appear as something that extends beyond the life of the agreement. Be very careful to find these sometimes less than obvious clauses within a contract.

3. Creative Control
One of the more difficult areas an artist faces is the reality that once a label invests in them, they essentially lose creative control over their music. The label can simply veto the artist's preference in their sound, style, lyrics, mix, live show, etc. Simply, when the artist signs the agreement, they are signing away their creative rights to the label's management team who can preference making profit over the artists desire to be unique in the marketplace. It may not be possible to word an agreement to protect the artist's creative rights, but I certainly recommend they try. A good entertainment lawyer may provide some practical language to help the artist have a voice in creative decisions.

4. Label Ownership
Face it, unless you're dealing with the big three labels like Universal, Sony or Warner Brothers or their direct subsidiaries, you're likely dealing with an independently owned label. Making sure you understand WHO is on the hook to enforce the contract is absolutely critical. Just because you may have a good relationship with the A&R or label representative, the fact is that people come and go and you may have to live with their replacement who may not have knowledge of the verbal conversations you had when negotiating your deal. Knowing the ownership as best as possible is critical. Do your homework and investigate them. Research any public records and get referrals from anyone in the industry who may have dealt with them before. Most importantly, if possible, make sure they have the financial wherewithal to uphold the agreement they are making with you.

5. Day-to-Day Support Staff
In today's music climate, many labels are creating 360 deals where they are entitled to a piece of many of an artist's income streams. While the artist may be ok with this financial model (which is a tough pill to swallow sometimes) the support of the artist in the areas the label is benefiting from financially should be carefully understood. If, for example, the label is getting a percentage of an artist's tour and merch income, they should be equally required to provide administrative staff and support for the artist in exchange for them participating in the income from those areas. In the most traditional sense, a label is an investor in producing and distributing music. Their sole income should be coming from music sales. When a label extends their income areas from other areas of an artist's income streams, they need to provide an equal investment against receiving that income in a tangible way like staff support.

I'm certain that another person's list may have other priorities to consider, but after now reviewing and experiencing nearly a dozen label offers the past four years with Spencer's young career, I've learned to ask a lot of questions and spoken with a lot of industry veterans on both side of the contract in order to gain valued insights into the potential pitfalls facing both.

A fairytale ending can certainly happen for an artist in the music business, but it usually comes in the form of having a wise and learned advocate who can point out the dangers that lie ahead in hopes of helping them navigate the landscape -- call it a good entertainment lawyer or a collective set of advice from those who have been there, done that. Either way, having a set of priorities planned before finalizing negotiations is the real formula for a happy ending.

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The New 'Little Prince' Trailer Will Make You Want To Be A Kid Again

Don't grow into a boring adult, little children.

If the growing-up ship has already sailed for you, the first English language trailer for the upcoming animated version of "The Little Prince" will at least remind you to keep your childish wonder alive. Featuring the voices of Rachel McAdams and Jeff Bridges, among other notable actors like James Franco and Paul Rudd, the film will debut at the 2015 Cannes film festival.

Check out the trailer, and then retire your life plan and learn to just, like, live.

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YouTube Is Killing Its App On Old iPhones, Other Devices

Your aging "smart" devices are about to get a bit dumber, thanks to a YouTube update.

Starting in May, the YouTube app won't work on devices manufactured before 2013. This means iPhones, Apple TVs, iPads, streaming video devices, Blu-ray players, video game consoles and smart TVs that are more than a couple years old will be unable to access their pre-installed version of the popular video app, according to a recent announcement from Google.

Google says it's necessary to shut down the older apps in order to introduce new features to the latest versions of YouTube.

According to MacRumors, individuals using devices old enough to be affected by the change are starting to see a discontinuation video at the top of any search they run on the YouTube app. The video explains that "YouTube is upgrading to a newer version, which is not supported by this device or app" and encourages viewers to visit http://ift.tt/18HmWfs for more information.

Here's that video:


You're not totally out of luck if you haven't upgraded to a new gadget in a few years. If you're using an older iOS device that supports iOS 7, for example, you can simply update the software and download the new YouTube app. The third-generation Apple TV, as well as certain streaming video devices, will also be able to get the new YouTube app following an update, according to Google.

If all else fails, you can try bypassing the defunct app and watching videos on YouTube's website within your device's web browser.

Still, this stands as a good reminder that even if your hardware seems fine, software might outpace it. For example, last year Apple's FaceTime video chat app stopped working for iDevice users who were behind on their software updates.

There are over 1 billion YouTube users worldwide. Hopefully, most of them are on shiny new devices.

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Adam Lambert Releases 'Ghost Town,' Announces New Album 'THE ORIGINAL HIGH'

One of our favorite queer musicians is about to be back on top.

There are few openly gay singers whose music is both as versatile and mainstream as Lambert's -- and now we have a whole new album of it to look forward to.

The singer announced the new album this week, a 14-track record called "THE ORIGINAL HIGH." Alongside a large-scale media campaign to promote this new artistic endeavor, Lambert has also released the lyric video for a song called "Ghost Town," which proves to be both haunting and dance-heavy at the same time.

With "THE ORIGINAL HIGH" slated for a June 16 release, keep your eyes out for more from Lambert over the coming months. Check out "Ghost Town" above.

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Amy Schumer Makes David Letterman Hilariously Uncomfortable With Her 'Vagina'

When you know you're having your last interview with David Letterman as host of "The Late Show," you obviously want to go out with a bang.

Comedian and Peabody Award winner Amy Schumer made the most of her late-night appearance on Monday after telling an anecdote from the MTV Movie Awards about how she always says the wrong thing to celebrities. Letterman basically gave her carte blanche by saying, "Since we probably won't be on the show together again, do something now that you'll regret."

Without missing a beat, Schumer gets up to show the audience her surfing scar, otherwise known as her "vagina," at least for the purposes of this bit. Watch the clip to see how fast Letterman's face turns red.

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Reba McEntire On Gay Rights, Same-Sex Marriage And The Evolution Of The Country Music Community

Country superstar Reba McEntire has pledged full support for same-sex marriage, noting that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights are "very important" to her for many reasons.

To promote her new album, "Love Somebody," McEntire, 60, spoke to PrideSource's Chris Azzopardi and recalled attending her first same-sex wedding earlier this year.

The singer's newlywed pals Michael and Steven had been together for 20 years before tying the knot, and she said, "I thought that it was not fair, and I didn't understand why they couldn't get married. It wasn't because they just wanted to get married. If one of them had gotten injured and gone to the hospital, the other one couldn't make decisions for them. It's very upsetting. It's not only for convenience or for romantic reasons -- it's for practicality."

McEntire also sounded off on country music's ever-growing line-up of openly gay and lesbian stars, which includes Ty Herndon, Billy Gilman, Chely Wright and Brandy Clark.

"It's really, really sad what they're living with before they decide to come out," she said. "And then why they decide to come out, and how they deal with it after they've come out -- the pressure society puts upon them, their families and what they put upon them, whether they accept it or they don't."

She even joked that she wished she'd titled her album "Love Everybody" instead of "Love Somebody."

"You gotta love people for who they are," she said. "Accept them, and then go on with life."

In a separate interview with NewNowNext, the star described the "evolution" of the country music industry when it came to LGBT issues. "I’ve always held the belief that people should not pass judgment on how others want to live their lives," she said.

McEntire, who has been embraced by gay country fans for some time, has previously spoken out in defense of LGBT rights, but Azzopardi told The Huffington Post that this is the first time the singer has been so forthright about her support of marriage equality in the media.

"I have gay friends who have partners, and I see where they would want to get married," she told Out magazine in 2009. "I understand why. So, I can't judge that."

Head over to PrideSource to read the full interview with Reba McEntire.

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'Inside Amy Schumer' Will Feature A Cosby Sketch, And 7 Other Things To Know About Season 3

Amy Schumer may have declared 2015 "the year of the ass," but we think it's more accurate to call this the year of Amy Schumer. The always inappropriate writer, actress, feminist and stand-up comic makes her feature film writing debut in this summer's "Trainwreck," hosted the MTV Movie Awards with a plethora of masturbation jokes and is set to return for Season 3 of "Inside Amy Schumer" on Tuesday.

After screening the premiere of the Comedy Central series' third season at the Tribeca Film Festival on Sunday, Schumer and her "Inside" writers, producers and director spoke on a panel about the show. They spilled exciting details about what's to come this season (yup, there's a Bill Cosby sketch) and the racy spoofs that didn't make the cut, and revealed that people actually thought Schumer was a real rapper in her amazing booty parody video. Here are the 8 best highlights from the panel:

1. Get ready for a Cosby parody sketch.
Schumer came up with the idea to have a support group of "girls who wouldn’t say what happened, but they were all wearing Cosby sweaters." The "Inside" writers first began working on the sketch when the Cosby sexual assault allegations started making headlines last year. Schumer said the sketch stirred some heated debates in the writers' room: "I think we probably talked about this scene more than any other scene we’ve done."

2. A "Dirty Dancing" abortion sketch didn't make the cut.
There had been an idea for a "Dirty Dancing" spoof to appear on "Inside," but it never happened. Schumer wouldn't reveal much about it, but it was more than enough to paint a picture: "There’s like a back alley abortion in 'Dirty Dancing' you forget about. What if there was an abortion clinic that was like 'Dirty Dancing'-themed?"

3. A TMZ baby coffin sketch didn't happen either.
Another idea that never happened was a TMZ spoof that would've showed a reporter following a celebrity with a baby coffin. "Then we we're like, 'Do we want to be on set with a baby coffin? No, no one wants to see that,'" Schumer said.

4. People thought Schumer was a real rapper.
Last week, Comedy Central released Schumer's "Milk Milk Lemonade" music video featuring Amber Rose and other celebs. The parody video opens the Season 3 premiere of "Inside," but Schumer noticed that some people commenting on a music website apparently didn't know that. "It’s on this website and people never heard of me and they all think I’m a rapper. They’re like, 'This girl sucks!'" Schumer also said she had never been as embarrassed in her life as she was while filming it.

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Image via Tumblr

5. Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Tina Fey and Patricia Arquette celebrated being "unfuckable."
In one of the best sketches from the Season 3 premiere, JLD, Fey and Arquette appeared to celebrate Louis-Dreyfus' last "fuckable" day. Writer Jessi Klein said the sketch was inspired by the idea of "actresses aging out of Hollywood."

6. An entire episode of "Inside" is a remake of "12 Angry Men."
Schumer really wanted to remake Sidney Lumet's classic film "12 Angry Men" for an episode, so she did. The entire third episode of Season 3 is a "shot-for-shot" black and white recreation of the 1957 movie featuring an array of A-listers including John Hawkes, Paul Giamatti, Jeff Goldblum, Vincent Kartheiser and Dennis Quaid. Spoofing the film's murder-trial-verdict plot, the episode has the men deciding if Schumer is good-looking enough to be on TV. Schumer, who also co-directs the episode, said she's more proud of it than anything she's done before.

7. A random old guy Schumer met on a plane is on the show.
"I got drunk on a cross-country flight with this guy," Schumer said. "He was like 89 or 90 or something." The two ended up bonding and now he's appearing on the sit-down interview segment of "Inside" with his husband.

8. Schumer thought the feminism aspect of the show was subtle.
Speaking about the first season of the "Inside," Schumer said she and Klein thought they were being "slick" about bringing a feminist tone to the show. "It still felt like something we had to sneak in," Schumer said. "We thought we were kind of tip-toeing." But then Schumer mentioned how one critic wrote that the show is "the equivalent of putting shaved carrots into brownies." But Schumer loves that, saying "I guess everyone sees what we’re doing."

"Inside Amy Schumer" returns on Tuesday at 10:30 p.m. ET on Comedy Central.

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Next 'Transformers' Expected In 2017

Since 2007, "Transformers" fans have never had to wait more than three years for another big-budget installment. And after 2014’s "Transformers: Age of Extinction" topped a billion dollars across the globe—and broke records in China—fans can expect Paramount to keep to that reliable schedule.

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Bobbi Kristina Brown Is Awake And Off Life Support, According To Family

Bobbi Kristina Brown is reportedly no longer in a coma. Bobby Brown clarified his comments on Monday to say that his daughter was "awake" at a Georgia care facility.

"Doctors have indicated that she will have a long life," said Brown's attorney, on behalf of the family, in a statement obtained by People. "However, Bobbi Kristina is presently embarking on a rehabilitation process and the quality of her life will not be known for years to come."

Cissy Houston also released a statement, saying her granddaughter has "global and irreversible brain damage," according to CNN. "Meeting with the doctors and understanding that she can live in this condition for a lifetime truly saddens me," Houston said. "We can only trust in God for a miracle at this time."

In a video obtained by TMZ, Bobby Brown announced that his 22-year-old daughter, who had been comatose since she was found unresponsive in a bathtub at her Georgia home on Jan. 31, was "awake" and "watching me" during a concert in Dallas on Saturday. Then, his sister Tina Brown took to Facebook to confirm the news that Bobbi Kristina had been taken off life support, although the post has since been deleted. According to various news sites, it read:

So many messages,sorry can't answer them all right now but I will get to them later..just allow me this time with my family,,yes,she woke up and is no longer on life support!!!!!:):)God is good!!thanks for your prayers,,still a process,but she is going to be ok:):):):).


The Huffington Post has reached out to the family for a comment.

After weeks in an Atlanta hospital, Brown and the late Whitney Houston's daughter was moved to a rehab facility last month. Nick Gordon, whom Bobbi Kristina called her husband, is reportedly being investigated by police for his suspected involvement in the case.

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The Uncomfortable Moment That Inspired Brian Grazer To Write 'Splash' (VIDEO)

Brian Grazer has a lot of incredible films and TV shows under his belt -- from "Arrested Development" to "A Beautiful Mind" to "Empire" -- but his Hollywood success all began with a hit film about a mermaid. "Splash," starring Tom Hanks and Daryl Hannah, was released in 1984 and went on to become one of the year's highest grossing movies. Yet, if it weren't for one particularly uncomfortable incident with another studio executive, there's a chance "Splash" might not have happened.

When Grazer sat down with Oprah for an interview on "Super Soul Sunday," the prolific producer shared a story about what inspired him to write the film that helped launch his career.

Years ago, Grazer was a young legal clerk at Warner Bros., eager to make his way up the ranks in show business. As part of his unrelenting practice of meeting one new person each day, Grazer had set his sights on legendary studio head Lew Wasserman, who Grazer calls "the patriarch of modern entertainment."

Grazer's daily practice of meeting new people led to some long-lasting friendships over the years -- it was how he met his now-producing partner, Ron Howard -- but not every meeting went as smoothly. The day Grazer got his chance to meet Wasserman, the exec didn't exactly give him a warm reception.

"He won't even let me go in the office; he meets me at the lobby as I get off the elevator," Grazers remembers. "As I got off the elevator on the 15th floor, I saw him coming at me, and he gave me that look like, 'Don't waste my time, kid."

Typically, Grazer would be undeterred by this attitude, but that wasn't the case with Wasserman. "I started out with my opening sentence," Grazer says. "And he just said, 'Look. You don't have much to say. Wait here a second.'"

Wasserman disappeared into his office and returned with a notepad and a pencil.

"He says, 'Put the pencil to the paper, and it's worth more than it is at separate parts,'" Grazer says. "I thought, 'What's he mean?' And he said, 'Okay, now get out of here!'"

Distracted by his nerves and confusion, Grazer was unsure what Wasserman was trying to tell him at the time. Now, however, he looks back on the incident with more clarity.

"What he meant was you have to own your own ideas," Grazer says. "He said, 'You don't know anybody, you're not the nephew or cousin of some movie star. You're a nice enough kid, but you don't have any connections. You don't have the money to buy a book to turn it into a movie. So, the only thing you've got a chance at is creating out of nothing an idea.'"

It sounds harsh, but Grazer found this sentiment strangely comforting. "I thought, 'Well, wow, that's actually kind of democratizing, because anyone can put the pencil on the paper,'" Grazer says. "Even though I never thought of myself as a writer, I could just dig stuff out of my imagination."

This is exactly what the Oscar winner says he did for "Splash."

"['Splash'] was birthed out of that moment that I had with Lew Wasserman kicking me out of his office!" Grazer says.

"Super Soul Sunday" airs Sundays at 11 a.m. ET on OWN. You can also stream the program live during that time on http://ift.tt/1jUFnzR or http://ift.tt/18mhN9o.



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Ryan Gosling Responds to the Haters (VIDEO)

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This week Ryan Gosling dyed his hair brown, and the Internet was obsessed with talking about it. Articles online claimed he "risked his heartthrob status" with the color change. Because I do a mediocre-to-poor impression of Ryan Gosling, I thought now's as good a time as any to break it out.

WATCH:

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Larry Wilmore Mocks Ben Affleck's Ancestral Cover Up: 'His Ancestors May Have Owned Mine'

The host of "The Nightly Show" skewered actor Ben Affleck on Monday for turning "positively Nixonian" after finding out that he had a slave-owning ancestor on a 2014 episode of the PBS series "Finding Your Roots."

"It turns out his roots were a little too close to 'Roots' roots," Wilmore joked, before chastising Affleck for allegedly trying to censor the information, according to emails leaked during the great Sony hacking scandal of 2014.

Wilmore pointed out that other celebrities, like CNN's Anderson Cooper, have stumbled upon a similar revelation and acknowledged it accordingly. To further drive his point home, Wilmore summoned a vision of Affleck's great-great-great-great grandfather to the desk to find out who should really be embarrassed in the family.

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Why Padma Lakshmi Sticks To A Plant-Based Diet When Not Judging 'Top Chef'

According to "Top Chef" host Padma Lakshmi, eating a plant-based diet will benefit more than just your waistline.

"Eating vegetarian is more economical," she told HuffPost Live's Marc Lamont Hill. "It's hard to get organic vegetables that are lower priced, but a bag of beans or lentils, which gives you a lot of protein, costs less then the same equivalent weight [of meat]."

The diet may also contain other added perks. "It also makes your skin more beautiful. Your hair, your eyesight. All of those things," she added.

Lakshmi occasionally will eat "a steak, roast chicken once in a while, a burger now and then," but she strongly believes that "for a regular diet, you don't need that much meat." In order to get her daily protein, she goes for tofu, lentils and legumes, she said.

Check out the full HuffPost Live clip above for more on why Lakshmi chooses to follow a plant-based lifestyle and tips for starting one of your own.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before.

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Kim Richards Opens Up About Her Arrest To Dr. Phil

"Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star Kim Richards is opening up about her arrest, saying the incident last week never would have happened if she did not drink.

"I was angry and frightened and I was scared. I knew what I had done," Richards told Dr. Phil, according to an early transcript obtained by People magazine, about the night of her arrest at the Beverly Hills Hotel. "The whole night is my fault. None of this would have happened if I didn’t drink."




Richards was arrested early Thursday morning after security at the hotel called the police because of a possible fight. The reality star locked herself in a bathroom at the establishment and police had to enter the bathroom and arrest her around 2 a.m., TheWrap noted.

"Hotel security requested to make a Private Persons Arrest and BHPD officers entered the restroom and took her into custody," Beverly Hills Police Department spokesman Lt. Lincoln Hoshino told Us Weekly. "She was passively resisting and she was taken into custody on Private Person Arrest."

She was ultimately charged with trespassing, resisting arrest, public intoxication and battery on a police officer, after she apparently kicked a cop while at the station.

Richards' sobriety was a main storyline in Season 5 of the Bravo reality show. While Lisa Rinna questioned whether Richards, who checked into rehab back in 2011, was still sober, the mother of four lashed out at her, denying that she had fallen off the wagon.

The exclusive Dr. Phil interview airs Tuesday, April 28.

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Revisiting The Bottom Line: An Interview With Allan Pepper, Plus Jon Regen and Sarah Jaffe Exclusives

JON REGEN'S "STOP TIME" PREMIERE

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photo credit: Rebecca Meek

According to Jon Regen...

"The title track of my new Motéma album Stop Time is an example of how you just never know when and where a song will show up. In the fall of 2013, I had just finished performing on the London Jazz Festival when a friend of mine, noted British actor and recent Vivienne Westwood biographer Ian Kelly, invited me to a party at his London home. Ten minutes and numerous glasses of champagne after arriving, I bumped into the actor Jeremy Irons, who I have been a huge admirer of for many years. I told him, 'I'd love to take a photo with you, because like me, my Dad is also a huge fan of yours. He replied, 'I'll let you take a picture with me, if you play the piano for me.' And so, not wanting to disappoint a verified Academy Award-winning actor, we migrated over to the home's grand piano and I proceeded to get to work.

"After sitting down at the piano, my hands instinctively started playing a sort of New Orleans-style, blues vamp. Moment's later and without warning, Jeremy grabbed a cello that was hanging on a nearby wall and started playing it like an upright bass--you can see actual video footage from that jam session here. It was amazing. Minutes before we were just strangers meeting at a party, the next minute, we were locked in a fierce musical dialogue. We jammed together on that one song for nearly 15 minutes. When I returned home to New York City, I married the bluesy, New Orleans feel from that jam session to a set of lyrics I had written about a guy who has watched his youth slip away and is looking for a way to stop time. There was something about the sardonic nature of the lyrics, combined with the grooving backbeat of the music that immediately sounded right to me. The resulting song 'Stop Time' became the anchor for the album that was to come, and intrigued Motéma Music President Jana Herzen enough to sign me to her label. Davey Faragher and Pete Thomas from Elvis Costello and the Imposters instinctively knew just what to play on that song to make it deliciously dirty and fun. It's still my favorite song to play live from the new album. So I think the moral of the story is, be open and ready to follow a song - wherever it may take you. And of course, never turn down a party invite!"




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A Conversation with Allan Pepper

Mike Ragogna: Allan Pepper, what is the bottom line on Bottom Line Records?

Allan Pepper: This is a project that has been several years in the making but at last we've been able to pull it off. We have over a thousand performances in our vault that were recorded live at The Bottom Line. Some of them were radio broadcasts, some of them were board tapes, some of them were done on DAT, they're in all different formats, but there are a thousand different performances which constitute early shows and late shows. The reason it's taken so long is because first of all they have to get the rights to release this material and second of all we have to restore this material. Some of these tapes were done when the club opened in 1974, 1975, so there's a whole process of restoration that goes into it. Fortunately, we're working at The Magic Shop, which is one of the premier places of restoration. There's nothing that the people who work there have not not come across in their career. They've seen just about everything, which gives us a real comfort level in working with them.

MR: Does this also involve reissuing or reworking some of the older releases originally released on Bottom Line Records years back?

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AP: That's a great question. In the late nineties--I think '96 or '97--there were eleven titles released on Bottom Line Records, but five of those titles were live performances done at The Bottom Line and they were called The Bottom Line Encore Series. Basically, what we're doing is remastering and re-releasing those five titles along with two other CDs that we'll put out called In Their Own Words, which was a compilation of moments of the songwriter shows we were doing at the bottom line. So those seven titles are being remastered and re-released, plus we're going into the vaults and bringing out material that has never been out. So the first three releases came out on March 23rd and they are a Kenny Rankin performance at the Bottom Line which has been out already as part of the encore series, it has been remastered and it is a very important CD in the sense that from our knowledge it's the only live recording on CD of any of his performances.

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In addition to that, we're releasing for the first time a Brecker Brothers performance which took place in 1976 and is also a classic recording because at that time the band was composed of all these terrific studio players who were in enormous demand, so they never went out and toured because they were making so much money in the studio that to go out and tour they would've lost money. So this band has Michael Brecker who has unfortunately passed away, David Sanborn, Randy Brecker, Don Grolnick, who unfortunately has also passed away, Will Lee, Chris Parker and Sammy Figueroa. It's very important because it marks a real time when jazz fusion and jazz rock were kind of coming together as a concept and the Breckers were in the forefront of helping to make that happen.

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Then the third CD is a double CD of Willie Nile. That is comprised of two concerts he did, one in 1980, which is only the third time he had ever appeared with a band, and the other in 2000, so they're twenty years apart. This is the first batch of CDs that are coming out, and as I say, two of them have never been released before.

MR: Who are some other artists you'll be creating projects for?

AP: The June release schedule right now is a box set of Harry Chapin on his two-thousandth performance. Two of those CDs were released as part of The Bottom Line Encore Series, but the third one has never been released before and it's part of that same performance. It's so weird when you go back and listen to some of that stuff, because this was in January to celebrate his two-thousandth performance and he says on this CD, "I've just had a birthday so two thirds of my life is over already," and unfortunately, he died five months later in June from a car accident. So because of when they were recorded and because they're live and none of the chatter with the audience has been edited it gives you a very unique look into the history of that time. There's also a set that we're re-releasing from Janis Ian and we're also re-releasing the In Their Own Words series that had previously been out on Razor & Tie, which is a collection of some amazing songwriters. Then there are a lot of current discussion of additional artists that will follow the June release schedule.

MR: With this series, are you also attempting to communicate the intimacy between the audience and artist?

AP: We're trying to duplicate that very intimate experience you had sitting at The Bottom Line, so we purposely have left in as much banter and chatter as possible because we want the listener to feel that they're really attending the performance. We're coming at this from the perspective of the fans and what would make this meaningful to someone who either went to some of those concerts or who've read about them or heard about them or people who've never visited The Bottom Line but know about it because they've read about it, we want to really give them the feeling of being there at a performance. Of course, many of them differ, you have some artists who don't talk a lot and just go from song to song, and some artists who can almost become confessional during a performance. We're trying to preserve it all.

MR: Allan, you co-owned The Bottom Line for many years with your partner Stanley having passed away years ago.

AP: The Bottom Line was co-owned by Stanley Snadowsky and myself for thirty years. Stanley unfortunately is deceased, but these recordings stand as a legacy to what he and I accomplished in the thirty years we were in business together.

MR: After having listened to all these recordings, in 2015, what are your thoughts about the venue and its closing?

AP: The Bottom Line has been closed for eleven years, it closed January 2nd, 2004. I think about it all the time because I spent a great deal of my life there. One of the things I'm working on is an oral history of The Bottom Line viewed from the perspective of the performers who performed there and the fans who went there and the people who did business there and the staff that worked there. I'm currently talking with several publishers. I think that it was a very important part of not only what happened in terms of music but also that it was thirty years of New York culture. Believe it or not if I found the money to reopen I'd consider reopening. In this day and age that would take an enormous amount of money to do, but I'm very much committed to keeping the name alive.

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MR: In your opinion, why do you think The Bottom Line became so popular?

AP: I think it's beloved because it was about music. If you think about it for a minute, on opening night we had Dr. John, but there was a jam session on stage during the performance with Dr. John, Stevie Wonder and Johnny Winter. I always said that one of the reasons that stage meant so much is that on opening night three magical wizards appeared and just blessed that stage. So many careers got started there. The one that's always talked about is Bruce Springsteen, but when you think about all the different artists that appeared I think one of the things that I'm most proud of is the eclecticism of that stage. It had not only Bruce Springsteen but Count Basie, Tony Bennett, Elvis Costello, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, Charles Mingus, Lucinda Williams, Buddy and Julie Miller, Sun Ra, Prince, Ringo Starr, Alicia Keyes, Keith Urban, Chris Rock. Bill Mahr and possibly one of the things I'm most proud of, it had Aaron Copland. Plus we did all kinds of other things. Once I had Richard Price reading from Clockers before the book was released, on the same bill as Suzanne Vega. We had songwriter shows, which featured Lou Reed, Kris Kristofferson, Suzanne Vega and Victoria Williams on the stage at the same time. And kd lang got signed as a result of her appearance at The Bottom Line. Also the Broadway show
Leader Of The Pack was created there. Not to mention the many magical nights where performers like Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Johnny Cash, Eric Clapton and Neil Young sat in with performers they admired!

We did so many different things, but we were always about music. There was never a minimum, you paid an admission to come in, you didn't have to eat, you didn't have to drink, Stanley and I felt that what we were selling was music given context for people to sit there and enjoy. We wanted people to feel like they were in their own living room. It was a very intimate place. The focus was always on music. There was food and drink available, but only if you got thirsty or hungry along the way. You never had to have anything. You were able to listen to music and that was that. In fact in the late seventies when standup clubs became fashionable and people wanted to stand up and listen to music there was an enormous amount of pressure put on Stanley and myself to take out the tables and chairs. We said we didn't want to do it because we said that's not what the club was about. The agents said, "You're going to lose acts," because MTV had just come into being, people wanted Studio 54 or The Ritz, they wanted to stand, dance and listen to music. Again, we felt that for us--maybe not for others, but for us as the proprietors of a place like this which we took great pride in--that would get in the way of the listening experience. That's what we were about; we were about listening. So we never took out the tables and chairs, we lost several acts that went to other places, but we stuck to our guns. In fact, Stanley and I used to create our own Christmas cards, and that year we made up a card that we sent out to the industry: The front of the card said, "We always wanted to open a dance club..." and when you opened it, it was Stanley and I dressed as two women selling tickets to sailors for ten cents a dance, and when you close the card on the back it said, "Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from the club with the chairs." So I always said what happened on the stage and The Bottom Line was very much a reflection of the culture at the time, and not only what was current and happening, but also in our counter-booking. If standup and dance was the thing that was happening, we didn't feel comfortable with that, so we booked in a different direction.

Our booking policy reflected our feelings about what was currently happening. The interesting thing is from the late seventies to the mid-eighties it was a difficult road to hoe, so that's when I started to create more and more shows. I remember one summer I walked around the street watching street performers and then I presented a show called Sidewalk Vaudeville where we just had an evening of street performers. We kind of lived by our wits. In the mid-eighties, CDs came into effect and CD players came out. One of the things that happened with record companies is that now that the technology had come out they needed something to feed it, so they were releasing a lot of material that had been done already and they saw that from a customer base the people who were buying CDs were not buying new stuff as much as they were recycling their record collection. They wanted to have on CD the things that they had grown up with and lived with. A lot of those recordings had been paid for already and the royalty rates were a lot lower, so the record companies basically recycled their catalogs and made a fortune. Then they wanted to sign new acts and put them on the road and support them, so all of a sudden more talents started to go out on the road and the shift wasn't to dancing anymore, it was in a different direction and all of a sudden we got very busy all over again. It was a real up and down period but we lasted for thirty years and only basically left that place because NYU wanted that property back. We were a victim of gentrification and higher rents. Had the values of real estate not gone up the way it had we might still be on that corner of West 4th and Mercer.

MR: It seems that The Bottom Line's strongest promotional tool was its integrity.

AP: It was always about our integrity. I fought very, very hard to keep ticket prices low. That was part of Stanley and my vision. We had a real vision of what we wanted the club to be, none of that stuff happened by happenstance, the same reason there wasn't a minimum. I fought with agents all the time. A big act wanted to come in, and I wasn't concerned with selling out because if it was a big enough act all you had to do was pay them what they want and then pass that cost on to the consumer, but I didn't want to do that because I wanted that stage to be accessible to a lot of people. I was very against the notion of high ticket prices, so I fought very hard. I'll tell you a funny story. Stanley loved Harry Chapin. He knew every lyric to every Chapin song and he would listen over and over again. One day I got a call from an agent at ICM named Mike Piranian. He said, "I've got good news and I've got bad news." He said, "It's Harry Chapin's two thousandth performance and we want to do a date in the village and we chose The Bottom Line. So that's the good news." The initial guarantee wasn't going to be a big deal, but they wanted a deal where if he sold out they wanted an enormous amount of money. They wanted basically ninety percent of the box office. It was the kind of deal that we would not cut under any circumstances, so I was about to say, "Pass," but Stanley was sitting right next to me and I didn't feel it was fair, so I said, "Let me put you on hold."

I said to Stanley, "Listen, the good news is that Harry Chapin wants to do a date here," and his face lit up from ear to ear, he was like a little kid on Christmas day. But then I said, "But the bad news is," and I tell him the deal and his face chances in a nanosecond and he says, "We can't do that." I said, "look, we're the first one, but they're not going to negotiate this because they have another promoter who's willing to take the date on their terms, but they wanted to do it here and Harry's preference is to do it here." So you could see Stanley is going through these machinations right in front of me, I see all kinds of emotion on his face. I click back onto the phone and I say, "Hold one more minute, I'll have an answer for you." I say to Stanley, "Look, Stanley, I know how much this means to you. Think about this. You'll be able to see every single show ringside. You'll only aggravate yourself if this goes to another place. You'll only be really upset about this." He's contemplating it, and I say, "Look. Sometimes rules are meant to be broken. If this matters that much to you I don't have a problem. Let's do this." It looks like he's going to give an answer so I click back on and say, "Okay, I'll have an answer for you in a second," and before I know it he says, "No. Pass."

All of a sudden, on the other side of the phone I hear somebody yell, "I won! I won!" and I'm looking at the phone like, "What is going on?" I hear these two guys going hysterical. It was a bet between two agents, Mike Piranian and Ed Micone, and one of them said, "Stanley loves Harry Chapin so much, every guy's got a price, he'll give in," and the other said, "You don't know Stanley. There is no way in the world that he'll take that deal." People knew us that well in the business. We were a really interesting combination; I was the one that was all about music and passion and finding new stuff and Stanley was the guy who was very measured, he was really smart, he was the business guy, he was a lawyer by training, he saw clear implications way beyond what I could see. We were the perfect match, in fact somebody told me recently that people in the business used to refer to us as the doberman and the curious cocker spaniel. I'll let you guess who was who.

MR: Did Stanley know how big of an impact The Bottom Line made?

AP: He was very much aware and very proud of what we had accomplished. The club meant a great deal to him, the artists that performed meant a great deal to him, and although he and I did not have the same musical tastes the music meant a great deal to him. He died surrounded by his family listening to the Meatloaf album Bat Out Of Hell, believe it or not. It's one of his favorite records, so they just put it on repeat. Although that's a bizarre kind of thing, Stanley went out of this world loving his music. He was very proud of our accomplishments and very proud that so many artists we presented, in many cases, their first major date, a lot of these people became household names. He called me after the club was closed and he said he was just watching History Of Rock 'N' Roll, a tape series, and that he'd bought me a set and was sending it to me as a present. He said to me, "You know, we presented many of the people on this series of tapes." He was very proud of what we had accomplished.

The reason we had such a good partnership is we were very cognizant of each other's strengths and weaknesses. There was no ego between he and I. If something came up that I couldn't handle or he couldn't handle, we had no problem handing them off to each other.There were times I'd look at him and say, "I'm way over my head, this is something you have to deal with," and there were times when he said to me, "Look, you're just better off at stuff like this." I could be like a dog with a bone if there were certain things that I wanted, and I would be merciless about going after them. He had a problem with that. From a personal place, he couldn't do some of that, and he would acknowledge that to me. One day he said to me, "I'm really proud of you. People don't realize what you were able to do and what you cobbled together." We acknowledged each other's strengths. I've said in every interview I've done I've never met a guy smarter than he was. Although he was really an intense businessman and very smart he was always very fair, he always took the attitude that a deal was not a good deal unless both parties got something from it. He was very sensitive and very savvy.

MR: Though it's been a little while since you've dealt with them firsthand, what advice do you have for new artists?

AP: The lyric from that Peter Allen song, "The more things change, the more they stay the same," I would say to somebody today what I would've said thirty years ago: You have to have belief in yourself and you have to want it more than anything else. If you don't want it more than anything else you shouldn't be doing it. The world of technology has changed in some ways it's much harder and in some ways it's a lot easier for artists to showcase themselves and to get their product out and to get their music out. You can't be rigid in terms of your approach, you have to be flexible wherever you can and think in non-traditional ways more than ever before. The key is you have to really believe in yourself. If you don't believe in yourself nobody else is going to. There used to be a sign in the dressing room of the Apollo theater--I don't know if it's still there--it said, "If your friends won't pay to come and see you, who will?"

MR: Is there also going to be a website where one might be able to catch material that couldn't make it to the CDs?

AP: There is a website, which is just going up this week, it's
http://ift.tt/1cVtrhy. Right now it's just announcing these three releases, but there's also a series of interviews with Gregg Bendian, who is the producer of these CDs, and myself, and there's a performance by Willie Nile of a song that he wrote specifically for the thirtieth anniversary of The Bottom Line called "The Ballad Of The Bottom Line." I believe there's also a chronology to a certain extent of many of the years of the shows that were at the club, and probably more things will be added to it as we go on, but it's http://ift.tt/1cVtrhy. I think we will be putting other stuff on it that might not actually be released in a more traditional way.

MR: What do you think its legacy will be?

AP: Throughout musical history, there have been a lot of special places where music was performed and music was discovered. These places stand out, whether it was The Copacabana or The Cotton Club or the Troubadour, these were magic places that allowed artists to present the best of themselves. Those stages were very important. As well as stages like the Apollo Theater, The Filmore and The Grand Ole Opry. I think as time goes by there'll be an appreciation by people who weren't there, who either weren't born at that time or were too young or lived in a different part of the country or lived outside of the country, to realize that The Bottom Line was a very important stage. I think one reason that club became so important was it was basically curated by Stanley and myself who cared enormously about the music. The music came first to us before anything else, sometimes to our detriment. People came in and would sit and talk and I thought nothing of coming over to them and telling them to keep quiet or, if they couldn't keep quiet, to leave. The Bottom Line was all about the experience of listening and discovering music. Stanley and I aspired to have this kind of situation.

I mentioned some famous clubs. Certainly, Folk City was a famous club; a lot of people who got into the club business, whether it was the D'Lugoff brothers at The Village Gate or Mike Porco at Folk City, they kind of backed into it. They didn't aspire to it. They were bar owners, or they had a different kind of situation and they turned around and had a scene on their hands. Stanley and I purposely put this together. We planned it out, we put dressing rooms backstage so the artist would not have to walk through the audience to go on stage, so the magic of the performance started with him or her coming on the stage. We put mirrors in the dressing room and we had the best sound that was available at the time that we put the club together.

MR: Are there any favorite personal stories about The Bottom Line?

AP: I always tell this story, there's a couple, Budd and Perri Mishkin who met each other for the first time on a blind date at The Bottom Line. I guess somebody introduced them, they spoke on the phone, and he described to her what he would be wearing as he stood on line. The show was Karla Bonoff and JD Souther. She walked down the block and found him on the line, they went in to see the show, that was their first date. They dated for a year or so and then she got a business opportunity I believe and went to Boston. They stayed in touch, but ultimately she came back to New York and they started seeing each other again and he wanted to propose to her. So I get a call out of the blue from this guy Budd Mishkin who said, "You don't know me, but I would like to ask you, since you have Karla Bonoff playing at your club tonight, I would like to ask if I could borrow your club this afternoon because I want to propose to my girlfriend at the Bottom Line." I said, "Not only can you borrow the club, but why don't you tell her that you're doing an interview with me for your job at New York One and we'll be on stage." He wanted to play his guitar, too, so I said, "Have your girlfriend come in, we'll stop the interview and you'll introduce me to her and I'll disappear and you can propose on the stage at The Bottom Line."

So that's what happened. They got married, and then on the day we were closing the club and I was to turn the keys in to NYU, I got a call from the box office That there was a Budd and Perri Mishkin to see me. I went downstairs to see them and they were there with their little girl in a stroller, a little girl who they had just adopted from China. This was the third or fourth day she was in their lives and they wanted to take her to places that meant something in their lives. So I posed for pictures with them and their child. That's how important the club was to people. That's what it meant to certain people. I hear stories all the time. "I met my husband there," "I met my wife there," "I discovered somebody there who changed my whole life." So for the people who were fortunate enough to live in the city and go there on a regular basis or for the people who came through and saw a show that they liked, The Bottom Line is indelible in their rolodex of memories.

MR: The Bottom Line definitely left its mark.

AP: I would've paid somebody to let me do what I did for thirty years. The fact that I was able to make a living and have four kids and live the life that I led for those thirty years, being blessed to have a foot in every different world of music from folk to rock to jazz to experimental music and theatrical stuff, I've had an opportunity that few people did. I was able to follow my dream and be paid for it. It doesn't get much better than that. What I'd like to do now, which would put the icing on the cake, is if I could continue to take what it is that we've created and make sure its legacy is codified in some way that others will be able to visit, whether it's a book full of pictures and an oral history or whether it's these recordings or who knows what lies ahead, that would be my pleasure. To be able to leave behind The Bottom Line Legacy that somebody could actually go and visit and be back there and witness what it was.

Transcribed by Galen Hawthorne

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SARAH JAFFE'S "VISION" WITH SAM LAO AND ZHORA DEBUT

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photo credit: Dylan Hollingsworth

According to Sarah Jaffe...

"Making a video with Jeremy Biggers was definitely something I wanted to happen ever since I met him and saw his work. And collaborating with Sam Lao was the same story. After first seeing her live and getting to know her and realizing it wasn't just her music that was awesome; she's an awesome human being. The exact same goes for Taylor Rea of Zhora. We had such a good time in the studio together and making the video with Jeremy was no different. I hope we can do it again.


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Miley Cyrus And Patrick Schwarzenegger Reportedly Split

It's definitely breakup season in the pop music world. On Monday, Ariana Grande and Big Sean split and now, it looks like Miley Cyrus and Patrick Schwarzenegger are following suit.

According to People, the couple broke up for good, while sources told E! News that they are merely on a break. People's unnamed source told the magazine that the two are going their separate ways since they're in different places in their lives. Reps for Cyrus and Schwarzenegger did not immediately respond to The Huffington Post's request for comment.

In November, Cyrus and Schwarzenegger looked official when they were spotted kissing and snapping selfies at a USC Trojans game. Last month, rumors circulated that Schwarzenegger had cheated on Cyrus when photos appeared online of the 21 -year-old taking body shots off of a brunette girl in Mexico. The USC student quickly denied the cheating rumors on Twitter, insisting the girl was his "best friends [sic] girlfriend."

For more on the alleged split, head to People and E! News.

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'Inside Amy Schumer' Renewed For Fourth Season

Comedy Central already wants another dose of Inside Amy Schumer, so the network's ordered a fourth season even though the third hasn't even started.

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The New 'Bachelorette' Teaser Pits Two Women Against Each Other, Is So Depressing

"Fifty Shades of Cray." That's the tagline ABC is using to promote the next season of the "The Bachelorette," which will pit two contestants from Farmer Chris Soules' season against each other: fan favorite Kaitlyn Bristowe vs. last season's painted villain Britt Nilsson.

When the network first announced the twist, fans were understandably ticked off. "So the 25 men, on night one, they are going to have the ultimate say on who they think would make the best wife," host Chris Harrison had said when making the announcement. Taking the power away from the woman -- and in this case women -- seemed to go against the (albeit low) morals that made "The Bachelorette" different than "The Bachelor" in past seasons.

Even Season 17's "Bachelor" Sean Lowe spoke out against the new format. "It’s downright degrading for the women -- for the two chosen and the women watching at home,” he wrote on his blog. “This move transfers the power back to the men on the show specifically designed for the women. As one tweet said, ‘Once again, you’ll have women competing for the attention of men.'"

The new 30-second spot (watch below) shows that the season will start off just as grim as we'd feared. The teaser previews the first night in "The Bachelorette" mansion and Harrison further explains how this whole "two Bachelorette" thing will work. "There are two bachelorettes," he tells the 25 male contestants. "But that's about to change. There's going to be a vote." Great. Sounds totally fair. Can't wait. Womp.

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Rihanna Doesn't 'Give A D-ck' About Privacy Anymore

Kneel before Queen RiRi. In her most recent cover story for V Magazine, Rihanna admitted what every high-profile celebrity would probably kill to say. When asked about privacy, she told V, "Do I even give a dick about that anymore?”

Uh, no. No she does not. Because she is Rihanna. Screw 'em. (We, the fans and critics, are 'em, by the way.)

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She does, however, care about her new music. “Dude, I’m in love with my interludes. This one called ‘James,’ joint is on constant repeat," she told the magazine. "[The album is] soulful and aggressive, whether it’s lyrically, musically, or just the tone of my voice.” It'll feature a few songs that have already come out including, "Bitch Better Have My Money," "American Oxygen" and "FourFiveSeconds," which she collaborated on with Paul McCartney and Kanye West.

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“The thing that made me fall in love with [‘FourFiveSeconds’] is the juxtaposition of the music and the lyrics," she told V. "When you read the lyrics it’s a completely different song than what you are hearing. The music is easygoing, but the lyrical content is very loud and in your face. In performing this, the key was to make sure the aggression wasn’t lost.”

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For more with Rihanna, pick up the new issue of V Magazine, on newsstands May 7.

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Roseanne Barr Reveals She Is Slowly Going Blind

Roseanne Barr revealed she is losing her vision in a candid interview with the Daily Beast.

She made the revelation while discussing her love of marijuana. The 62-year-old comedian said she has macular degeneration and glaucoma, and is dealing with pressure in her eyes. Weed, she said, is " a good medicine."

Barr admitted doctors cannot give her a time frame for when she will ultimately go blind.

“No, they can’t. My vision is closing in now,” Barr told the Daily Beast. “It’s something weird. But there are other weird things. That one’s harsh, ’cause I read a lot, and then I thought, ‘Well, I guess I could hire somebody to read for me and read to me.’ But I like words and I like looking. You do what you have to do. I just try and enjoy vision as much as possible -- y’know, living it up. My dad had it, too.”

She tweeted about her symptoms Monday, clarifying that she is not blind yet.







Macular degeneration leads to haziness of the vision and can result in a blind spot in the center of the vision field, according to Mayo Clinic. Glaucoma is a group of eye conditions that cause nerve damage and can lead to vision loss.

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HuffPost Wants To Celebrate Its Birthday With Fellow 10-Year-Olds!

The Huffington Post was born on May 9, 2005 as an adorable little website with just a handful of bloggers.

Our childhood was filled with milestones and regular kid memories -- we napped, we learned, we played, we broke news and won fabulous prizes (like a Pulitzer!) We're about to turn double digits, and want to celebrate with other kids who will be 10 on the same day as us.

If you know of anyone born on May 9, 2005, email Turning10@huffingtonpost.com, and we might feature them in an upcoming story on The Huffington Post.

turning ten


Can't wait to party!

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Netflix's 'Full House' Revival Is Officially Happening

Those Neflix/ "Full House" rumors are actually true. The streaming service ordered a 13-episode revival of the show, which will be called "Fuller House." John Stamos, who will produce and guest-star, made the announcement on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" on Monday night.

"Fuller House" will be a multi-camera sitcom featuring original cast members Candace Cameron Bure, Jodie Sweetin and Andrea Barber. According to Netflix, appearances from Bob Saget, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, Dave Coulier and Lori Loughlin are up in the air.

"As big fans of the original 'Full House,' we are thrilled to be able to introduce 'Fuller House'’s new narrative to existing fans worldwide, who grew up on the original, as well as a new generation of global viewers that have grown up with the Tanners in syndication,” Cindy Holland, Netflix’s vice president of original content, said in a statement.

"Fuller House," like "Full House" will be set in San Francisco, and will follow D.J. Tanner-Fuller (Bure) as she navigates life as a pregnant, and recently widowed, mother. Stephanie Tanner (Sweetin) is now an aspiring musician and Kimmy Gibler (Barber) is a single mom with a teenage daughter, Ramona. They move into D.J.'s house to help take care of her two sons, 12-year-old J.D. -- not a joke -- and 7-year-old Max.

"It's a labor of love," Stamos told Kimmel. "We've been literally trying for so many years to do it right and I think we finally got it perfect." Watch Stamos' announcement below:

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DVDs: Film School Or Criterion? You Decide

Every once in a while, a great director or screenwriter will offer up a list of their favorite films. Martin Scorsese just did it, sort of. (Actually, he gave an interview and talked at length or briefly or just referenced 89 films, which was immediately turned into The 89 Films Martin Scorsese Says Every Filmmaker Needs To See!) It's fun. You see the list, you check off the ones you've seen, make a note of the ones you haven't and scoff at a few you wouldn't include yourself. (Though of course Marty surely has some insightful reason for every film on the list -- like maybe an innovative production design or great camerawork as opposed to, you know, the movie as a movie.)

I actually prefer Scorsese's list of 39 international films everyone should watch; it seems less haphazard. And Akira Kurosawa had a pretty great list of 100 classics that his daughter made available to the world.

So people display the lists, name the directors like Paul Thomas Anderson and Quentin Tarantino and countless others who never went to film school or quit and basically educated themselves on VHS or laser disc or DVD by watching the movies referenced by their favorite directors. As they say, you could do worse.... Mind you, I'm almost certain it would be useful to learn practical stuff like how a camera works and the different lenses and Avid and so on. Actually that's a good argument for learning everything from craft services to acting if you want to direct (just like every reporter should start in copy or fact checking).

But forget ALL of that. Forget film school. Forget lists by favorite directors. Forget reference books like The 136 Films You Should See Before You Die. If you really want a great and eclectic film education, go to the School Of Criterion. Sure, the benefit of a quirky list by Scorsese is precisely that it's quirky. Anyone can make a list of 100 movies most people would agree are classics. So you want some personality, some oddballs to give your education spark. Criterion has that: most of their movies are classics. But they also dig into the nooks and crannies of cinema. They champion current directors. They reveal some passion projects. And literally everything released by Criterion is worth a look. (Except for The Rock. That was a mistake, but they could use the money and it became their best-selling release ever, so shame on us. And at least it IS the best movie associated with director Michael Bay.) But it gets better: Criterion releases often get released with commentary tracks, making-of features, brief celebrations of the film by admirers -- which is like having a major director come in and share what they love about a film before your class screens it -- and more. It's truly an education about each particular film. Yes, they've released hundreds and hundreds of titles by now. So to be clear that we're not cheating, start with the first one hundred, from Grand Illusion to a compilation of Beastie Boys videos and you'll see what an awesome education it would be. Then watch the next one hundred. And then the next one hundred after that.

And when you're ready for your post-graduate level work, dive into the Eclipse series.

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SILENT OZU: THREE CRIME DRAMAS ($44.95 DVD; Criterion's Eclipse)

Eclipse is the "no frills" line of releases by Criterion. What they lack in bonus features, they make up for in eclecticism. The prints are always of a solid quality and the range of offbeat, fascinating and downright revelatory movies that are included have me more excited for the latest releases from Eclipse than from Criterion itself. I'm thrilled to get great new BluRay editions of classic films like The Thin Blue Line and recent movies like Moonrise Kingdom. But Eclipse takes me to school in the best sense of the word.

Here are three early films from Yasujiro Ozu, one of the greats. If you're like me, you know Ozu as a master of quiet, contemplative family dramas. Now his earlier work is getting a better hearing in the West and we're discovering gems like I Was Born, But... and now three gangster-ish movies. How can you not get excited by That Night's Wife, a noir all set during one fateful evening; seeing Kinuyo Tanaka of The Life Of Oharu get fiercely jealous over her gangster boyfriend's new female pal in Dragnet Girl (awesome title!); and watching an everyman forced to commit a brutal crime in Walk Cheerfully? School is in session, the prints look solid and I've never been happier to have homework.

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THE BABADOOK ($29.99 BluRay; Scream! Factory)
THE MISSING ($54.99 BluRay; Anchor Bay)

Nothing is scarier than a threat to your child. Two new works -- a horror film and a miniseries -- explore that terror from different angles. The Babadook is more a work of suspense than a full-on horror film. Don't look for maniacal blood-letting from this one. The horror starts within as a single mother and her son struggle to make a life for themselves. You keep swinging in your sympathies and your suspicion: first the mother seems like she's losing it and perhaps mentally unhinged; then the little boy seems disturbed. It kicks into high gear when a mysterious picture book about The Babadook appears on their doorstep. Don't read it! Indeed, don't read any creepy picture books that appear mysteriously; it's just good advice. As the mom, Essie Davis gives a very good performance and the project overall is an impressive calling card for director Jennifer Kent. I look forward to what she does next.

The Missing is very different. It's a UK miniseries about a family torn apart by the disappearance of their son. A supernatural demon would actually be welcome to them; at least, they could name the terror and fight it. All they have is an absence, an absence that tears apart their family and haunts everyone, including the police involved with the case. A clever structure makes this drama especially compelling. It takes place over eight episodes and this is a genuine miniseries, with a beginning and middle and end.

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COOLEY HIGH ($29.95 BluRay; Olive Films)

I don't think Cooley High is on any of Martin Scorsese's lists of notable films. but Quentin Tarantino would be smart enough to include it on one of his lists, not to mention rattle off facts about the making of the film or detail the careers various actors went on to have that would enlighten me. Churned out by the exploitation label AIP in 1975, it was clearly an attempt to cash in on the success of American Graffiti by creating an all- black version. Set in Chicago in 1964, Cooley High is episodic and sweet and sad and -- though it was probably the last thing on AIP's mind -- a gem. Screenwriter Eric Monte went on to help launch the TV shows Good Times and What's Happening!! (nominally a spin-off of the film). Director Michael Schulz did Car Wash and Greased Lightning and god help us the Bee Gees movie Sergeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band (plus a lot of TV). This is the one they'll all want to be remembered by.

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THE STEPHEN SONDHEIM COLLECTION ($129.98 DVD; Image)

Every season on Broadway, the highest compliment a new show can get is to be compared to composer Stephen Sondheim's work. Just check out the reviews for Fun Home! Classics are rethought in his honor as well. The King And I, critics say, is revealed to be complex and a worthy precursor to Sondheim. (Needless to say, Sondheim would extoll the greatness of Rodgers & Hammerstein before anyone else could beat him to it.) Off Broadway, a stripped down and acclaimed new production of Into The Woods just received some end of the season nominations for top awards while the feature film version just became one of the highest grossing musicals in North American history. Gypsy just opened in London starring Imelda Staunton to such raves I'm thinking of selling a kidney so I can fly over and check it out.

In other words, anyone who loves Sondheim can't get enough of him. So buy them this: it's a six disc collection of six stage productions filmed for TV, concert productions and a birthday celebration. You get the legendary performances of Mandy Patinkin and Bernadette Peters in Sunday In The Park With George from 1986. You get the recent 2011 edition of Company with Neil Patrick Harris and Stephen Colbert. I'll take the 1990 Into The Woods capturing of that show over the feature film any day. Like most people (that's the nature of theater), I didn't get to see Patti Lupone and George tackle Sweeney Todd, so the 2001 concert with the San Francisco Symphony is a treat. (Sometimes, cast albums aren't enough.) Toss in the all-star performance of Follies from 1985 that may be the show's ideal version and a tribute to the composer with countless legends, such as Elaine Stritch doing "I'm Still Here" and you've got yourself a whole lot of Sondheim. It's not enough. It never is. But it's a start.

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JAG: THE COMPLETE SERIES ($119.99 DVD; CBS TV?Paramount)

The TV drama JAG haunts the dreams of every TV executive. Whenever they pull the plug on a TV show, some little part of them hesitates and wonders with fear if someone else will pick the show up. Will it win Emmys? Will it hang on long enough somewhere else -- maybe in first run syndication -- to be considered a hit? Will canceling it make them look bad? One has to pity the poor fools at NBC who kicked JAG to the curb. It was a solid performer but decidedly uncool and NBC was still very cool in 1995: it was airing Frasier, NewsRadio, Friends, Seinfeld, ER and Homicide: Life On The Streets. It had Law & Order as a durable programmer and that one at least got good reviews. No one paid attention to JAG. It ranked 79th and NBC cancelled it and CBS picked it up, probably thinking the show might provide some good filler come mid-season when the inevitable holes appeared in its schedule.

So CBS picked it up and the show found a home on Friday night. Critics still ignored it (think Tom Selleck's Blue Bloods, also a big hit on Friday night now). But it grew and grew and became a massive hit around the world, airing for ten seasons and producing 227 episodes that made everyone a LOT of money. As if that weren't bad enough, it spun off NCIS, which became the #1 show on primetime and spun off NCIS: Los Angeles and NCIS: New Orleans and counting. Dumping JAG was literally one of the biggest and most expensive blunders in TV history. So don't give this boxed set as a gift to any executives at NBC. It's the sort of show that doesn't really need to be seen in order (which is why it was so successful in syndication). But for fans -- and JAG has many -- this compact, less expensive boxed set is not as fancy as the original collection put out in 2005 but it's a lot more affordable. And JAG was always a meat and potatoes show anyway.

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ANTARCTICA: A YEAR ON ICE ($34.95 BluRay; Music Box)
THE RIVER ($39.95 BluRay; Criterion)

Sometimes you just want to wallow in beauty and both these films offer that, to say the least. Antarctica is a documentary film about life at the bottom of the world. You'll like it more if you haven't already seen director Werner Herzog's typically quirky project Encounters At The End Of The World, which covers the same territory in a more quixotic, offbeat manner. This one has a fair amount of humor as well, not to mention some stunning images. Similarly, Jean Renoir's first film after World War II and his awkward time in Hollywood is a visual stunner. It tells a simple tale about life on the river for three young women in India who all fall hard for a handsome soldier now home minus a leg and his self-confidence. Renoir captures an entire world with this gorgeous film, a paean to man and nature that looks particularly stunning on BluRay. Typically, Criterion pulled this print from an excellent 2004 restoration and includes extras like a one hour documentary, comments from Renoir and even comments from Martin Scorsese (again!). I can't wait for the restored Satyajit Ray Apu trilogy to open up in May. The River is the perfect movie to tide me over until then.


Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the founder of BookFilter, a book lover's best friend. Looking for the next great book to read? Head to BookFilter! Need a smart and easy gift? Head to BookFilter! Wondering what new titles just hit the store in your favorite categories, like cookbooks and mystery and more? Head to BookFilter! It's a website that lets you browse for books online the way you do in a physical bookstore, provides comprehensive info on new releases every week in every category and offers passionate personal recommendations every step of the way. It's like a fall book preview or holiday gift guide -- but every week in every category. He's also the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox, a weekly pop culture podcast that reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog.

Note: Michael Giltz is provided with free copies of DVDs and Blu-rays with the understanding that he would be considering them for review. Generally, he does not guarantee to review and he receives far more titles than he can cover.

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