Wednesday, June 10, 2009

PHIL SPECTOR - Walled

















PHIL SPECTOR'S PRISON MUG SHOTS


Former music producer Phil Spector's new home is North Kern State Prison in Delano known in prison system jargon as NKSP.


His stay may be temporary, as NKSP functions mostly as an inmate reception center.


The state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation posted his arrival mug shots.


Produced By Conference 2009:


Are Boomers Abandoning Movies?

At the Produced By conference on the Sony lot last weekend, which was organized by Gale Ann Hurd and the Producers Guild, some of the best and brightest in the profession complained that nobody wants to fund movies for grown-ups these days.


At Peter Bart's panel, Who Does What?, while producers Kathleen Kennedy and producing partners Lucy Fisher and Doug Wick talked about massaging tender egos, movies made to fill studio slots, fractious shoots turning out better movies than happy ones, and on-set disasters, they also complained that they can't make the films they'd like to make.


While big-budget high-concept four-quadrant movies get more care and feeding, "you've entered the business of making movies by committee," Kennedy admitted.


"It's a challenge, once every department and the studio are weighing in, to protect the creative process."


She described embarking on a $100-200 million studio tentpole as building a business from scratch:


"You start a company, build it, hire everybody, create a commodity, market and distribute it, and you disband the company, even if it is successful.


It's a ludicrous business model."


"It's what we do," sighed Fisher, who encouragingly suggested that with fewer companies making fewer movies these days, the studios are actually more powerful than the agencies, who no longer dictate or ram things down execs' throats.


Wick admitted that everyone is making less money--when movies that once cost $70 now cost $55 million, states like Michigan now look like viable places to shoot.


As long as the talent you want is still willing to make the movie, that's okay.


The studios are employing indie financing formulas and trying to apply them to talent, he said.


The current climate of fear causes less risk-taking and variation, said Kennedy.


"They're all looking for the same thing.


Tentpoles costing $150 to 200 million, formula pictures aimed at moviegoers 16 to 24, who are the movie-going demo.


That's what's working.


It's frustrating as a filmmaker.


I've been in the business 20 years.


My taste changes, evolves.


Yet the baby boom generation is not going to the movies anymore.


Few movies work in that demographic.


I realize if I'm going to stay active and get movies made, I have to focus on what the studios want.


They don't want movies that fall in the mid-range right now.


They want big movies."


(Here's EW's feature on adult films not working at the b.o.)


And these movies have to score right away, because three to four weeks later, they're gone.


"We've entered the business of sports," said Kennedy.


"Everybody's keeping track.


Nobody talks about whether the movie is about, whether it's good, or the acting.


That's changed a lot."


It had gotten too easy to get too many movies made, the producers admitted.


And they insisted that as difficult as things are now, it's still possible to make a movie out of a really great script.


Fisher holds on to the hope that we're in the midst of a cycle that will eventually give way to creative rebirth, while Kennedy finds that working with foreign partners is a positive thing, as she did with Diving Bell and the Butterfly and Persepolis.








Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson's TinTin will open overseas two months before it comes stateside.






The negative of working with foreign sales companies, said Wick, is "the weird board game you play" of picking actors from column A and column B who may or may not be right for the part, just because they are bankable in certain territories.


Even Clint Eastwood, who participated in his own panel with producing partner Rob Lorenz, was able to push and cajole and raise indie money to get two movies made that no studio wanted:


Mystic River and best picture Oscar-winner Million Dollar Baby.


"You're always having to sell, it's never easy, you always expect someone up there you're going to have to cross guns with," Eastwood said.


"I've gotten to the point where I've made pictures that were successful without catering to the 'core,' teenage kids.


I don't want to make pictures for teenage kids, but it's great if kids come to see Gran Torino or Iwo Jima.


I like to get the adults to come out.


It's a challenge to make subject matter the whole family can see."

The Malpaso way, which is Eastwood's way, is lean, quiet, streamlined, actor-friendly--as long as they're willing to deliver in just a few takes.


When Kevin Costner didn't show up on time for a scene during Perfect World, Eastwood just shot over the shoulder of his stunt double and was ready to shoot his face too when Costner turned up, shocked.


"I'm paid to shoot film, that's what I'm here for," Eastwood told the star.


Producer-director-actor Eastwood resists taking a proprietary credit on a film.


"When I watch production credits go to people who have nothing to do with producing the film, it agitates me," said Eastwood.


"I like to see credit go to people who actually do work, not somebody's brother-in-law or agent.


I hire smart people who try to make me look good."


Typically, Eastwood's latest, the South African drama Invictus, which Morgan Freeman brought to Eastwood, who in turn brought in Warner Bros., came in under its $50 million budget and four or five days shy of its 55 day schedule.


"They bought it right away," said Eastwood.


"It was an easy sell.


Nelson Mandela is noble subject matter."


At age 79, will Eastwood keep making movies at his current pace?


"That's the plan," he said.


And westerns?


No other script has spoken to him as a wrap-up of the old west as Unforgiven did.


"It doesn't seem as if many people are writing them these days," he said.



LBN-COMMENTARY By KIM MASTERS:


Hollywood hasnt had a real strongman since Michael Ovitz built up the Creative Artists Agency in the 1980s and called the shots from his sleek I.M. Pei-designed headquarters in Beverly Hills.


Theres been such a long gap since he took a fatal step by accepting the No. 2 job at Disney in 1995 that a person had to wonder whether nature really did abhor this particular vacuum.


But in the past few weeks, agent Ari Emanuel is looking to some like a contender.


His agency, Endeavor, snapped up the far larger William Morris Agency, then, with the speed of what was lurking in the waters in Jaws, dispatched top man Jim Wiatt to that nether region where Ovitz now resides.


Can you hear that scary music?


Hollywood certainly does.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Eva and King of Hollywood, ARI emanuel




Ovitz Redux: Emanuel is Hollywood Chief-of-Staff

As someone who has been on the receiving end of this agent's charm, bragging prowess on behalf of his clients and wrath--
yes, I survived being yelled at by Ari Emanuel--I commend to you Kim Masters' report on the man running the new WME combine.


Masters makes the inevitable comparison between uber-agent on the rise Ari Emanuel and the last Hollywood Samurai, Mike Ovitz (whose Bible was The Art of War).

But while Emanuel can be manipulative, this power-agent is more impressive than Ovitz was in his prime.

Ovitz played mind games; I never believed a word that he said.

On the other hand, Masters suggests that Ovitz's CAA filled a Hollywood power vacuum that no longer exists.

CAA still dominates the agency field, and the WMA/Endeavor merger had to happen because the economy sucks.

Masters reports that at Fox:


Emanuel held up renewal of a major deal with Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, while demanding that his agency receive a mutimillion-dollar fee for “packaging” the show.

Studios routinely pay those fees when an agency puts together key elements in a program—say a writer and an actor.

What’s extraordinary in this case is that the show had been on the air since 1999.

Fox was staggered that Endeavor demanded the fees—outgoing News Corp. President and COO Peter Chernin is said to have described Emanuel’s demand as “extortion.”

But the show had a break from 2002 until 2005, when it returned thanks to strong ratings in re-runs and big DVD sales, so Endeavor argued that it was entitled to the money, and Fox, normally one of the toughest customers in the business, caved.

And a few years back, the model for Ari Gold in Entourage and then-partner Marty Adelstein:


...calculated how many average minutes they were on network television thanks to their floor seats at Laker games.

Then they contacted NetJets, a company that provides ownership stakes in those coveted private jets.

They offered to wear NetJets T-shirts or hats at those games in exchange for access to the G-V of their dreams.

NetJets passed and the two wound up with an unsolicited offer from Captain Morgan’s Rum—with the condition that the Captain sit with them at games.

They passed.


Actors ratify Hollywood movie & TV contract, give up fight for better Web compensation for now


Ryan Nakashima, AP Business Writer


On Tuesday June 9, 2009, 10:29 pm EDT


LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Members of the Screen Actors Guild voted overwhelmingly to ratify a two-year contract covering movies and prime-time TV shows made by the major Hollywood studios, the union announced Tuesday.


Some 78 percent of those who voted were in favor of the deal, a show of unity following a bitter dispute that saw Guild members fighting among themselves and left them further behind than where they started.

About 110,000 SAG members were sent ballots and more than 35 percent cast votes.


The new contract immediately raises actors' minimum pay by 3 percent and grants another 3.5 percent raise in the second year of the deal, which along with better pension benefits and some Internet compensation gives them $105 million in overall gains, the union said.


But it does not improve upon the Internet terms that other unions have already accepted.

Negotiators replaced in January had sought more lucrative Web compensation.


SAG fought alone for better terms than were secured by writers, directors and another actors union called AFTRA, but the battle ended up hurting it as TV studios like ABC, NBC, Fox and CBS sent most of their new work AFTRA's way.

SAG maintains exclusive jurisdiction over feature films.


The deal comes nearly a year after the last contract expired, meaning SAG actors lost out on proposed raises over the past year that the studios estimated totaled nearly $80 million.


"We were behind the eight ball to some extent with the amount of time we had been working without a contract at all," said Adam Arkin, an actor who was elected to the Guild's board last fall.

"Whatever gains are to be made in the future are going to have to start with us not going down the road of this level of fracture within the community of SAG."


The new contract takes effect after midnight and expires on June 30, 2011, about the same time as those of other unions, allowing SAG to maintain the future threat of a joint strike.

That expiration date had been one of the final points of contention.


The past year's infighting came to a head in January when recently elected moderates staged a boardroom coup, ousting the Guild's national executive director, Doug Allen, and muzzling President Alan Rosenberg.


That set a new tone as Interim Executive Director David White worked to salvage a deal in back-door talks with executives such as Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Bob Iger and Warner Bros.

Chief Executive Barry Meyer. Warner Bros. is a subsidiary of Time Warner Inc.


A tentative deal was reached in April, about a year after talks first began.


White said in a statement that work on the next round of negotiations "begins now," adding that he would also begin to repair damaged relations with other unions.


SAG and AFTRA split acrimoniously last year and decided to negotiate deals with the studios separately for the first time in three decades.


Rosenberg acknowledged Tuesday that actors did not agree with his executive team's hard stance.

But he said he would run for a third term as president in the fall and hope to be part of the contract talks in two years.


"Our point of view was rejected for now. I don't think it was because they said necessarily we're wrong," he said.

"You need solidarity.

We weren't able to build that this time."


Every major segment of SAG voted for the deal, with 71 percent of voting Hollywood actors, 86 percent in New York and 89 percent in other U.S. regions voting in favor.

The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Artists, the coalition of major studios, on Tuesday called the ratification "good news for the entertainment industry."

The directors' guild and AFTRA also issued congratulatory statements.

Monday, June 8, 2009

CHEAPER I PHONES ?

c





Who's minding moguls' moolah?



Legislation could force Hollywood to disclose pay



There's a rebellion brewing around the world against what The Economist labels "the corporate gravy train" of executive compensation, but Hollywood until now has managed to elude the rebels.



That may soon be changing.




New legislation as well as new SEC rules could force studios and networks for the first time to disclose the paychecks of senior executives and star dealmakers --


disclosures that may fuel further resentment in the creative community over the shrinking salaries being allotted to actors, writers and other artisans.




"I keep explaining to my clients that they have to lower their expectations," one senior TV agent told me last week, "but some of the corporate guys who are crunching me just got pay raises."




The SEC plans to propose rules requiring companies to reveal details about the pay of middle-management executives -- not just the top five -- and Sen. Charles Schumer introduced a bill recently that would not only force more transparency on pay but would also require shareholder voting on executive compensation.




All this reflects a worldwide movement to clamp down on corporate perks stemming from the realization that, in many cases, the structure of executive compensation plans has encouraged irresponsible risk-taking, especially in the financial sector.



Given their equity-based bonus plans, top bankers were motivated to launch potentially catastrophic initiatives even if their companies ended up in TARP hell.




No direct parallel exists in the entertainment industry, but some Wall Streeters worry about what is arguably an imbalance between performance and compensation.



Companies in the entertainment sector have taken a battering both in terms of earnings and stock prices, but the pay levels of some top executives have attracted wide attention:



The total compensation packages of three of the industry's top execs -- Bob Iger of Disney, Les Moonves of CBS and Peter Chernin, the now-departed chief operating officer of News Corp. -- hovered around $30 million each last year , and Chase Carey's return looks to bring him a payday commensurate with Chernin's.




One agent who represents mainly filmmakers asks: "If the studio guys are still making the big bucks, why are my clients being compromised?"




These comments are reflective of a sort of unspoken class warfare that has broken out in Hollywood.



There's a mounting sense that the global conglomerates are rewriting the values of the talent business and that talent is the loser.




Hollywood's battles are minor, however, relative to the global outrage against corporate greed that is resulting in the firing of top corporate hierarchs.



In France a fat payoff to a departing auto executive produced a public rebuke from France's prime minister, Francois Fillon, who said compensation policies "put our entire economic system at risk."



The Economist reports that a majority of shareholders of Royal Dutch Shell surprisingly rejected a pay deal for the company's senior executives.




Warren Buffet last month denounced the system whereby chief executives are allowed to choose members of their compensation committees and came out in favor of "say on pay" policies for shareholders.




Mary Schapiro, the new SEC chairman, is leading the government inquiry into corporate pay structures that may require more data beyond just the five highest paid execs.



The Wall Street Journal noted that movie studios as well as financial firms could be impacted because they all have "superstar" traders or dealmakers whose pay far exceeds normal executive pay.



The theme underlying all this:



It is clearly crunch time around the world, and even corporate hierarchs may no longer be immune.




June 8





The iPhone just got a lot cheaper - and a lot stronger



Apple today cut the price on the iPhone 3G to $99, effective immediately.



The company also unveiled the iPhone 3GS, an advanced version of the popular smart phone that will go on sale June 19.




The one-two punch comes a day after Palm launched its eagerly anticipated Pre, which analysts estimate sold between 50,000 to 60,000 units in its opening weekend.




$99 is considered a magic price point and could double demand for the iPhone.



It also could move the company into a neck and neck race with Research in Motion for the second place spot in worldwide Smartphone sales within the next year.




(Nokia remains far and away the segment leader.)



Apple claims the iPhone 3GS is two- to three-times faster than existing models.



The 32GB model will sell for $299, while a 16GB model will go for $199.




LBN-BOOK NEWS:



***Hollywood, you're not off the hook yet.



Producer Jon Peters is still determined to publish his tell-all, according to his ghostwriter Bill Stadiem -- even if Peters has to publish it himself.



Last month, Peters handed back a reported $700,000 advance to HarperCollins for his autobiography, "Studio Hit," after Page Six published details of the book proposal.



In a May 22 letter to HarperCollins, Peters wrote, "I have been besieged by lawsuits and threatened litigation by some of the most important figures in show business."



LBN-HOLLYWOOD INSIDER:



***After playing doomed spouses in "Brokeback Mountain," Jake Gyllenhaal and Anne Hathaway are in negotiations to reteam for "Love and Other Drugs" at Fox 2000/New Regency.



Ed Zwick is directing the project which Charles Randolph adapted from Jamie Reidy's nonfiction book "Hard Sell: The Evolution of a Viagra Salesman."



***Following his Tony hosting gig last night, Neil Patrick Harris is in the news today with two new feature projects.



The "How I Met Your Mother" star will take a role in indie farce "The Best and the Brightest" and a supporting part in CBS Films' "Beastly," according to The Hollywood Reporter.



***Stephen Colbert is taping four episodes of his Comedy Central show in Baghdad this week.


***After Comedy Central and the Sci Fi Channel, Sharon Levy is out to refocus the channel with a reputation as a sort of Maxim magazine for television.



***CAA has signed Tommy Lee Jones, who exited WMA after its merger with Endeavor.



Jones is starring in John Wells-directed drama "The Company Men."


He is also in the process of talking to financiers for "Islands in the Stream," an adaptation of the Ernest Hemingway tale that Jones wrote and hopes to direct, star in and produce through his Javelina Film Co. banner.


***Director-producer Brian Robbins has also inked with UTA after exiting the newly formed WME.


Robbins returns to his longtime UTA rep Jeremy Zimmer after spending about a year at WMA.



Robbins, who most recently helmed Norbit and Meet Dave, is in post-production on DreamWorks A Thousand Words, which marks his third straight comedy with Eddie Murphy.



***Ghost Whisperer exec producer-showrunners Kim Moses and Ian Sander have inked with UTA. Moses and Sander, who are heading into their fifth season of Ghost Whisperer, made the move to UTA after their longtime WMA agent Aaron Kaplan left the percentery to form a management company.



***Arthur Canton, an influential PR and marketing exec who was the father of producers Neil and Mark Canton, died June 3 in Los Angeles following a brief illness.


He was 88.


LBN-MEDIA INSIDER:


***Sirius XM Radio has seen its stock fall 95% since Howard Stern's first satellite radio show. U.S. auto sales are dropping, and Sirius XM is feeling the impact as fewer vehicles with satellite radios are sold.



The company has lost more than $300 million in the past two quarters.



***The New York Observer is laying off a significant number of employees, including as much as a third of its editorial staff.



The salmon-colored weekly newspaper owned by Jared Kushner says in a statement that it is "not immune to the economic pressures being felt industry-wide."



***A one-time charge of $527 million tied mainly to a write-down of goodwill resulted in an operating loss of $535.9 million at Readers Digest for the third quarter ended March 31, compared to a loss of $8.2 million in the third period of fiscal 2008, the company said in a filing with the SEC.


Total revenue fell 16.7%, to $479.1 million.



Sales were off in all three operation segments, dropping 10.3% in the Readers Digest U.S. division, to $162.2 million, as most of the units affinity groups were hurt by the recession.



Among the areas that had soft sales were childrens publishing and certain direct mail titles in the food and entertainment group.



International sales fell 23.6%, to $298.4 million, with results hurt by the change in currency translation and a decline in most of its major markets.



Sales in the school & education group fell 3.5%, to $24.5 million.



***At 24, producer and actor Jordan Yale Levine has already executive-produced nine feature films.


Hes currently wrapping up on "Wreckage", directed by John Asher and starring Aaron Paul and Cameron Richardson.



Next month, Jordan is going into production as an actor and producer on "The Land of the Astronauts", directed by Cal Colpaert.



LBN-COMMENTARY By PASTOR BOB (Founder of the First Fundamental Church of the Bible):



Don't wait for six strong men to take you to church.



It used to be Ouija boards.



Now Satan is using Harry Potter books to suck kids into witchcraft.


It was dead wrong for that lunatic to shoot the abortion doctor in Kansas.


Instead, the abortionist should have been tried for his crimes as a baby killer.



If you are watching sports all day on Sunday instead of going to worship, you are an idolater.



In Bible times, women like Amy Whorehouse, Madonna, and Britney were not called pop stars, they were called prostitutes.



I'm praying for Britney Spears...and I'm praying for you.


***To reply directly to Pastor Bob e-mail LBNElert@TimeWire.net.



(Please Note: The opinions expressed by Pastor Bob are those of his alone and do not necessarily reflect those of the LBN E-lert or its staff.)

Thursday, June 4, 2009













SASHA "BRUNO" BARON COHEN


***Sacha Baron Cohen's new movie isn't in theaters yet, but it's already producing the same sort of buzz and legal backlash that his last hit, "Borat," created.



Richelle Olson sued the 37-year-old actor and NBC Universal on May 22, claiming an incident at a charity bingo tournament that was filmed for the upcoming "Bruno" left her disabled.


Olson claims she was severely injured after struggling with Cohen and his film crew at the event, held in Palmdale, Calif., two years ago.


The lawsuit states she now needs a wheelchair or cane to move around.


The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages of more than $25,000.

LBN-HOLLYWOOD INSIDER:

***For the first time in 15 years, James Cameron has agency representation.

Variety reports that the "Titanic" director has signed with CAA.
The move comes just as Cameron returns to dramatic filmmaking with Fox's upcoming "Avatar."

LBN-MEDIA INSIDER:

***The music industry publication Radio and Records shut down today, costing thirty jobs says The Wrap.
Visitors to the website are re-directed to Billboard.biz.
Also, The Hollywood Reporter eliminates another ten positions, including the one filled by associate publisher Rose Einstein.
***L.A Mayor Villaraigosa said today his relationship with TV reporter Lu Parker won't affect his decision on whether to run for governor.
***It's not entirely clear who's leaving who here, but this much I know.
Martin Berg, who was replaced abruptly last December as editor of the Los Angeles Daily Journal and redeployed as a columnist, has left the building.

His column job has been eliminated
***In a study on social networking trends, Nielsen said the amount of time people in the U.S. spend on social networking sites has increased by 83 percent over the past year.
According to the study, Facebook users in the United States collectively spent 13.9 billion minutes on Facebook in April 2009.
That's up 700 percent from the 1.7 billion minutes they were spending in April 2008.


LBN-DID YOU KNOW:


***Emergency medical personnel recommend performing CPR chest compressions in time to Stayin Alive. Its 103-beats-a-minute rhythm is close to the ideal 100.


***The New York Times reports that 17% of inked Americans regret their tattoos.


***$200 an hours is the price for a drug-sniffing dog from the company Sniff Dogs.


The keen canines can detect pot, heroin, coke and meth- in case your roommate is holding out on you.



LBN-QUOTE:


A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation with the bricks others have thrown at him.


-David Brinkley.


LBN-HISTORY:

On June 4, 1989, Chinese army troops stormed Tiananmen Square in Beijing to crush the pro-democracy movement; hundreds - possibly thousands - of people died.



In the worst quarter in modern history for American newspapers, advertising sales fell by an unprecedented 28.3% in the first three months of 2009, plunging sales by more than $2.6 billion from the prior year.

Statistics posted without publicity on the website of the Newspaper Association of America show that print ad sales fell by a historic 29.7% to $5.9 billion in the first period of this year and that online sales fell a record 13.4% to $696.3 million.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Music's Best Kept Secret - Producer ROSLAN AZIZ, exclusive and very rare interview....


WILL AMY WINEHOUSE LIVE LONG ENOUGH TO MAKE ANOTHER ALBUM?

HER LAST-DITCH CARIBBEAN DETOX HAS GONE NIGHTMARISHLY WRONG:
Wednesday, about 9am, at the Cotton Bay Village resort in St Lucia and Amy Winehouse is at the bar drinking her second shot of tequila of the day.
'I think I'm doing very well,' she chirrups.
'I'd normally have had six shots by now.
Today I've only had two.'
LBN-COMMENTARY By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN:
During a telephone interview Tuesday with President Obama about his speech to Arabs and Muslims in Cairo on Thursday, I got to tell the president my favorite Middle East joke.
It gave him a good laugh.
It goes like this:
There is this very pious Jew named Goldberg who always dreamed of winning the lottery.
Every Sabbath, hed go to synagogue and pray:
God, I have been such a pious Jew all my life.
What would be so bad if I won the lottery?
But the lottery would come and Goldberg wouldnt win.
Week after week, Goldberg would pray to win the lottery, but the lottery would come and Goldberg wouldnt win.
Finally, one Sabbath, Goldberg wails to the heavens and says:
God, I have been so pious for so long, what do I have to do to win the lottery?
And the heavens parted and the voice of God came down:
Goldberg, give me a chance!
Buy a ticket!
I told the president that joke because in reading the Arab and Israeli press this week, everyone seemed to be telling him what he needed to do and say in Cairo, but nobody was indicating how they were going to step up and do something different.
Everyone wants peace, but nobody wants to buy a ticket.


LBN-MUSIC INSIDER:

***Cher is filing a lawsuit against Universal Music, claiming that the label's "creative" accounting has shortchanged her and the heirs of her late ex-husband Sonny Bono some $5 million.
Universal is toying with "one of the most popular and iconic artists of all time," says Cher's lawyer.
***Edgar Bronfman, the billionaire heir to the Seagram fortune and CEO of Warner Music, is leaving his native New York for a home in Kensington, West London, with his wife, Clarissa, and four young children.
He plans to run Warner Music from both London and New York.

LBN-HOLLYWOOD INSIDER:
***Jack Nicholson is close to finalizing a deal that would reteam him with his "As Good As It Gets" director James L. Brooks for an untitled romantic comedy at Columbia.
The ensemble project has already cast Paul Rudd, Reese Witherspoon and Owen Wilson.
Nicholson would replace Bill Murray who had been in talks but whose interest in the project has since waned, reports Variety.
***Senior WMA agents Ramses IsHak and Mike Sheresky have joined the lit department of United Talent Agency.
The two were pink slipped following WMA's merger with Endeavor.
The agents, who both began in the WMA mailroom, were initially not invited to join WME but were told they would be beached for the duration of their contracts.
After a short standoff, they became free agents.
They had several offers from major agencies and committed to UTA Monday night.

***Hollywood publicist Michael Levine returns to speak at the Fine Arts Theatre in Beverly Hills on June 20th, just prior to the theatres permanent closing.


The event will be a "Part 2" to last years sold out speech at the theatre and will be done completely in Question and Answer format.
The event is free but R.S.V.P.'s are essential - E-mail HollywoodEvents2009@gmail.com.


LBN HISTORICAL COMMENTARY By NELSON MANDELA:








I was called a terrorist yesterday, but when I came out of jail, many people embraced me, including my enemies, and that is what I normally tell other people who say those who are struggling for liberation in their country are terrorists.
I tell them that I was also a terrorist yesterday, but, today, I am admired by the very people who said I was one.

LARRY KING LIVE - MAY 16, 2000

Music's Best Kept Secret

---Producer Roslan Aziz



Go to the link for his Exclusive and very very Rare Interview...

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

WILLIAM MORRIS ENDEAVOR



Agency takeover stirs Hollywood fears


Issues arise from WMA-Endeavor merger


It was Pablo Picasso who famously said, "I like to live like a poor man -- but with lots of money."



Talent agents are the mirror opposites. They like to live like rich men -- but without lots of money.


Their "money" stems from the prospective earnings of their clients.


All this comes to mind as a result of the Big Deal that will take effect this coming week.


The "deal" in question is the merger of the William Morris Agency with Endeavor, or rather Endeavor's confiscation of William Morris, which is the way insiders prefer to describe it


Though the surviving entity, WME Entertainment, is only now taking its first breath, Hollywood is still struggling to figure out how the deal came about and what its implications may be.


Several issues continue to resonate:


In Hollywood, there's a pervasive desire to "follow the money," and in this case the "money" consists of roughly $143 million.


That's the presumed amount the William Morris Agency elicited from the sale of its three buildings in Beverly Hills.


The big question: How many people shared in that largesse -- and how many lawsuits will ultimately be filed as a result?


The individual who theoretically was master-minding the process was Jim Wiatt, a man considered to be both savvy and shrewd.


These talents notwithstanding, Wiatt clearly lost control of the process and ended up getting voted off the island, apparently without even knowing it.


Was Wiatt, too, "following the money"?


Talk to the heads of rival agencies, and you quickly sense both an appetite and a dread.


The two mega-agencies, WME and CAA, now loom large in the marketplace, but competitors are convinced that clusters of agents will break away from the monoliths.


And many working artisans will find themselves without an agent.


When talent agencies purge their client lists, they inevitably surrender their "research and development" function -- veterans of the agency business remember how Freddie Fields of the old CMA discarded a young agent named Sandy Bresler along with his client, Jack Nicholson.


The upshot of all this is that everyone involved feels the pressure.


CAA and WME must persuade clients that they won't get lost in the new mega-structures - a special problem for WME since its management structure is yet to prove itself on the battlefield.


And given the inevitable defections, agents at ICM and UTA feel pressure to evaluate and sign agents and clients who are torn loose amid the melee.


Agents and clients alike realize that the balance of power in Hollywood today favors the big conglomerates, not the talent.


The long-standing expectation in show business was that the deals kept getting fatter; that's not the case any more.


Hence some important clients already are telling their agents, "you guys are cooking big deals for yourselves, now do it for me."


They have a point.


The wheeling and dealing of the past two weeks has triggered some amazing paydays for an inner circle of talent agents.


Their clients have been watching avidly.


Jim Wiatt presumably was part of that circle.


On the other hand, he's also out of a job.


The last major agent who got a big payday along with his exit visa was Michael Ovitz.


He has not gone on to a distinguished post-agenting career.


Jim Wiatt would doubtless like to do better.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Q on being CREATIVE - May 13, 2009

LBN-COMMENTARY

By QUINCY JONES

(Composer, record producer, multi-media entrepreneur):


Can we really run the risk of becoming a culturally bankrupt nation because we have not inserted a curriculum into our educational institutions that will teach and nurture creativity in our children?
LBN-MEDIA INSIDER:
***Reeling from declines in readership and advertising, Playboy magazine is contemplating "radical changes" that may include cutting its circulation and reducing the frequency with which it is published, Jerome Kern, interim chairman and chief executive of Playboy Enterprises Inc. told analysts Monday.
The troubled publisher has embarked on a series of cost cuts in recent months, including closing its New York offices on May 1. Christie Hefner departed as CEO in January, after two decades as leader of the Chicago-based media firm, and Playboy's board is in the process of finding her replacement.
***Hollywood publicist Michael Levine analyzing the Miss California controversy for "Good Morning, America" today and correctly predicting that she will stay on a Miss California.
***The audience for the 10-11 p.m. hour of Anderson Cooper's "AC360" has dropped this month to 933,000 viewers -- the first time he has fallen below the 1-million mark since the dog days of last August. CNN has invested heavily into marketing Cooper as the face of the network.
Much as the digitally savvy love to criticize big media for not embracing new digital business models enough, we have to acknowledge sometimes those moves bit them in the ass.

Case in point: Warner Music Group, which yesterday took a $33 million write-down on its $35 million (combined) investment in LaLa and iMeem, two social music discovery sites, as noted by PaidContent.
As CEO Edgar Bronfman put it, that essentially erases its digital investments.
The company is now focusing on its artists and letting other folks try to figure out online and see if there are any good ways to compete with Apple.

Particularly disappointing has been MySpace Music.
As Bronfman put it bluntly, "MySpace Music has been slow to create monetization tools and to be able to impact in a revenue-generating way the massive audience that they have been able to attract."

He's not the only one. CNET News recently reported, "At a MySpace Music board meeting last month, the company's CEO, Courtney Holt, got an earful from several music label representatives" unhappy about the lack of money they're making.

Yesterday in its earnings call, News Corp. (MySpace's corporate owner) admitted that MySpace costs have risen 7% in large part due to the rollout of music, but ad revenues are down 16%. However the company thinks it has a bright future.

"I think MySpace Music is less than six months old and has a tremendous amount of traffic," president/COO Peter Chernin said on a conference call with analsyts and media.
"We're working hard on monetization opportunities that are just beginning to roll out."

Warner's Bronfman seemed optimistic about Vevo, the new musicvideo portal that Universal Music is launching with the support of Google's YouTube.
But he's none-too-excited about the prospects of another site built on advertising alone.

"Any premium video model is going to have to include very significant monetization opportunities above and beyond advertising in order to be effective," he said bluntly.

Charging for music videos?
Well, good luck with that.