American actress
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It's Miriam Shor, y'all! You Might Know Her From Younger, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Magic Hour, GCB, Shortbus, Swingtown, Maestro, American Fiction, and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3. Miriam gave us all the scoop on grounding the zaniness of Diana Trout on Darren Star's Younger, leading the indie comedy Magic Hour, and appearing in "brilliant but canceled" series like GCB and Swingtown. All that, plus Miriam talked to us about being one of John Cameron Mitchell's "players," appearing in Shortbus and, of course, originating the role of Yitzhak in the Hedwig universe; popping up in prestige Oscar films; her musical theatre roots; New York City history; and dying by way of a paintbrush in The Americans. We just LOVED Miriam. Patreon: www.patreon.com/youmightknowherfrom Follow us on social media: @youmightknowherfrom || @damianbellino || @rodemanne Discussed this episode: Genesis' “Land of Confusion” + Garbage Pail Kids + Whoopi Goldberg latex mask Realistic latex masks on TikTok Eddie Fisher was married to Debbie Reynolds but cheated on Debbie with Elizabeth Taylor when her husband (their friend), Mike Todd died Christina Milian and The Dream; Little Wayne and Nivea swapped Damian loves a sexy network drama and also HBO's Real Sex, Taxicab Confessions People raising hyper realistic fake babies Lars and the Real Girl ; Companion MIriam's first leading film role is in Magic Hour Dons a bald cap in Guardians of the Galaxy III American Fiction had a $5M budget Cord Jefferson's Oscar speech Played Diana Trout on Darren Star's Younger for 6 seasons Darren Star also made Beverly Hills, 90210, Melrose Place, Sex and the City, Emily in Paris, Good Christian Bitches Robert Harling wrote Steel Magnolias Cricket Caruth Reilly Met her husband doing karaoke - also with Bridget Everett Marie's Crisis got a resurgence thanks to Younger St Marks Is Dead by Ada Calhoun Il Posto Accanto (thanks to Debi Mazar); Supper; Gnocco Swingtown was championed by Nina Tassler but killed by Les Moonves Hedwig and the Angry Inch was Miriam's first audition and show in New York Met Lou Reed, Joey Ramone, Elliot Smith, Pete Townsend because of Hedwig Anne saw Debbie Does Dallas in the Jane Street Theatre but didn't get to see Hedwig Shortbus with John Cameron Mitchell Did Fiddler on the Roof tour in 1994 with Theodore Bikel (Captain Von Trapp in Original Broadway cast of The Sound of Music). “Edelweiss” was written for him by Rodgers & Hammerstein Appeared at Public Theatre's production Lynn Nottage's Sweat (it later won the Pulitzer Prize) Wants to do Shakespeare in the Park Was Mary in Kennedy Center Production of Merrily We Roll Along (A GREAT DRUNK in a FAT SUIT, her big scene at 15:40) Was a waitress in Todd Haynes' Mildred Pierce miniseries Was directed by Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in Maestro Appeared as lesbian in The Wild Party with Sutton at Encores, played gay in And Just Like That Season 2; and was Yitzak in Hedwig Anne's obsessed with this portrait Morgan Freeman is supposed to have painted of a nude Diane Keaton in Five Flights Up (see right) Friends with Cynthia Nixon and her wife Christine Played an artist in The Americans (“I'm pulling the drawing OUT of the paper”) Adam Scott and Carol Burnett are great drunks; we love a pilled out Samatha Mathis in American Psycho “Room Tone” is when Sound Dept records sound of the room to lay under the scene if necessary “Corpsing” is when you break character (Peter Hermann is worst) Miriam is Directing a documentary about NDAs Quincy Jones said that Richard Pryor had sex with Marlon Brando We hope Amanda Bynes gets a comeback. Faye Dunaway, Tatyana Ali, Leanna Creel and her triplets. Not Millie Bobby Brown Matlock cast on Jennifer Hudson runway
Welcome back to another bite-sized episode of Look Behind the Look. Today, we're back with another obscure cinema excavation exploring Spike Lee's 1996 film, Girl 6. The film offers a unique take on the world of phone sex operators through the eyes of an aspiring actress in New York City and, of course, so much more than that. We'll explore how this film fell into obscurity...and the layered messages on race and female exploitation.Despite its ambitious narrative, the film received mixed reviews upon release and was a commercial disappointment, grossing approximately $4.9 million against a $12 million budget. Girl 6 was dismissed so hard when it came out; it's like it just vanished from Spike Lee's filmography. Reviewers like The Washington Post's Rita Kempley described it as "little more than a profane litany punctuated by Oscar-caliber orgasms," while the Post's Desson Howe stated that "it's enough to reduce expectations over him forever."Even when discussing He Got Game two years later, Spike wouldn't mention Girl 6…That's how much people sidelined it. It's wild because after Girl 6, Spike didn't make another film centered on a female perspective until Chi-Raq in 2015, almost 20 years later. You have to wonder if the reception to Girl 6 made Spike pull back from telling stories about women, especially Black women, navigating systems that weren't built for them. Girl 6 is one of Spike's most overlooked films, but also one of the most fascinating. That's exactly why it deserves a closer look behind the look.A Cultural ReassessmentIn 1996, people didn't know what to do with Girl 6. It barely made a dent at the box office, critics were lukewarm at best, and ultimately, it faded into obscurity. But here's the thing—Girl 6 wasn't a failure. It was a film about performance, sex, race, capitalism, and identity. It didn't fit the mold Hollywood—or even Spike Lee fans—wanted it to fit.This was Spike's first time directing a script he didn't write. The screenplay came from Pulitzer Prize-winner Suzan-Lori Parks, and what they created together was something totally different from the more straightforward sociopolitical narratives people had come to expect from Spike. Instead of overt protest, Girl 6 gives us a quiet, messy rebellion in the form of one Black woman trying to survive the film industry without selling her soul.Theresa Randle plays Judy, a struggling actress who ends up working as a phone sex operator to make ends meet. And that premise could've easily become male-gazey or exploitative in the wrong hands. But it doesn't. This is a story about the male gaze, not one that indulges it. The camera doesn't leer. It's observant. It's empathetic. It's watching Judy navigate objectification. Beyond general objectification, it shows how she manages which specific forms of objectification she subjugates herself to, like being told by her boss, Lil played by a perfectly cast, Hollywood legend, Jenifer Lewis, she needs to sound “Caucasian” on the phone, because that's what “the client likes.”The film also drops in these surreal, meta moments that throw you off, especially the interspersed news storyline of the young black girl who survived falling down the elevator shaft in her building, but that's the point. It draws a direct line from girlhood to adulthood—how young Black girls are burdened from the start with invisibility, impossible standards, and stereotypes they're expected to navigate alone just to survive. We see Judy auditioning for roles where she's told to be more "urban," more "real," while directors like Quentin Tarantino, in his now-infamous cameo, barks at Judy with lines laced in microaggressions that escalate—into full-blown aggression, unchecked racism, and flat-out exploitation as he demands she take her top off on camera. It's violent in its familiarity. And that's the point. Girl 6 doesn't flinch—it forces us to sit in the discomfort, to confront how easily Black women are dehumanized under the guise of “opportunity.” This isn't just a scene. It's a reckoning that begins Judy's arc. It's Spike and Suzan-Lori Parks holding up a mirror and asking, ‘How many times has this happened—and how many times did we call it art?' or better yet "This is what you do to Black women when you 'give them a chance.'"And that's why the ending hits so hard. Because after everything—after all that growth and pain and disillusionment—it's gutting to see Judy go back to Shoplifter. It's framed like a reunion, maybe even a resolution—but it isn't. It's a return to something familiar. Something that once had control over her.And when she heads to L.A. for her so-called fresh start, she walks right into the same kind of exploitative audition that launched this whole journey. The loop restarts. But this time—she doesn't freeze. She doesn't stay quiet. She doesn't submit. She assertively leaves. That moment shifts everything. Because even though the circumstances haven't evolved, she has. It's not loud. It's not celebrated. But it's powerful. It's self-possession. It's Judy refusing to play the part again, even if the script is exactly the same.So no, the ending isn't tied up in a bow. But it's not hopeless either. Girl 6 isn't offering a fantasy of escape—it's showing us what resistance looks like when the world and the people around you won't meet you halfway. Quiet, deliberate, exhausted… but still yours.So why did Girl 6 flop? Because audiences weren't ready for a Black feminist art film disguised as a phone-sex dramedy. It didn't check the boxes. It wasn't "important" in how people expected a Spike Lee joint to be. The film's portrayal of Judy's experiences resonates with contemporary discussions about the empowerment and exploitation inherent in everything we've come to understand about performance, labor, and digital sex work (hello, OnlyFans), Girl 6 feels prophetic. In recent years, Girl 6 has been reassessed for its ahead-of-its-time commentary on sex work and female agency.It's time we stop calling it a misstep. Girl 6 didn't fail. We did—for not seeing what it was trying to show us. With all that said, I do still think it's worth critiquing how a man directing the film despite having a female screenwriter is a statement and impression in and of itself that is left upon this film, and that's something we're still unpacking today.The wigs, costuming, and futuristic sets are all intentional and impeccably designed. Judy is a chameleon, adapting to the fantasies projected onto her. She tries never to lose herself, but as the film progresses, it becomes a hard line to walk. And Randle does it brilliantly. Her performance is nuanced, internal, and often quiet—maybe that's why it got overlooked. People expected something louder. But Judy's strength is in her stillness. I paused the film so many times in awe, wondering - how we didn't get Theresa Randle leading dozens of films post-Girl 6. Her performance has always stuck with me. She is the film.Girl 6 is a wig-lover's dream. Theresa Randle wears over 20 different wigs and styles throughout the film, and each one feels like a window into her state of mind or her persona at that moment. Her hair isn't just flair—it's fashion, character, power, and commentary all in one.There's the long honey-blonde crop she rocks in the phone booth—classic "sex symbol" vibes and we see everything from her an ode to Dorothy Dandridge, bantu knots, finger waves, a full-on Foxy Brown afro—it's a whiplash of transformations that, if you blink, you might miss one. Her hair becomes armor, a mask, a performance. And what's genius is that the wigs and styling reflect the emotional tone of each scene without her having to say a word.It also speaks to the fantasy that phone sex work sells. Every call, every client, is a role she steps into. And Theresa's ever-changing look mirrors that idea—who she is depends entirely on who's on the other end of the line and what they're paying for.Plus, let's give some flowers to the hairstyling team. There is not much information out there about who exactly was responsible. I tried to get in touch with Lisa Hazell, but could not reach her for an interview. The hair designs gave Theresa an entire visual vocabulary of Black femininity, expression, power, seduction, and identity.Theresa Randle played Judy, the lead role. Before this, Randle had appeared in supporting roles in Lee's "Jungle Fever" and "Malcolm X." Her performance as Judy marked her first leading role, showcasing her range and depth as an actress.And while a lot of this film wasn't exactly the norm for Spike, he still had a role, as he often does—but this time, it feels especially personal. He plays Judy's cousin and best friend, Jimmy, a comic book nerd obsessed with blaxploitation and sports memorabilia. It's sweet and totally feels like a little bit of an opportunity for Spike to get all his Brooklyn Dodgers gear into the production design. He's one of the only people in her life who doesn't sexualize Judy, who just wants to hang out and talk about old-school movies. It's giving Letterboxd boyfriend energy… uh if your boyfriend was your cousin and just wanted to debate Pam Grier films over pizza. Their friendship grounds the film, a reminder of who Judy is underneath all the wigs and roleplay.The opposite of Jimmy is Isaiah Washington's character—Judy's ex, known only as “Shoplifter.” And that name alone tells you everything. He's not even given the dignity of a real identity—just a label, a behavior, a red flag. He's controlling in the way so many men are: smiling, supportive on the surface, but constantly trying to reshape her into someone more manageable. He pushes her to get a “real job,” but what he really wants is her dependence. He wants her small.The tension between them is always there—quiet, but constant. And the way Spike shoots those scenes, you can feel the power imbalance. It's intimate, but it's not safe. These aren't just moments between two people with history. These are scenes about how easily women—especially Black women—are asked to compromise themselves in exchange for stability, approval, or love that's conditional.Both of these male characters exist to show us different versions of masculinity—Jimmy is supportive, if a little clueless, and Isaiah's character is the opposite: demanding, judgmental, and ultimately part of the reason Judy needs to reclaim her voice in the first place.The film is peppered with notable cameos, adding layers of meta-commentary. As mentioned previously, Quentin Tarantino appears as the self-absorbed director, and this collaboration, interestingly enough, occurred before the well-documented disagreements between Lee and Tarantino over the use of racial slurs in cinema.We also get Halle Berry, Debi Mazar, John Turturro, Ron Silver, John Cameron Mitchell, and Michael Imperioli giving their best, if not strangest, character acting bits to the film.Other notable appearances include Madonna as the competing strip club owner. She looked insanely good—possibly the best she's ever looked, and that's saying a lot for someone who literally invented iconic beauty in the 80s and 90s—and, of course, supermodel Naomi Campbell as a fellow phone sex operator, taking on a more demure and reserved role.Pete Travers at Rolling Stone called Girl 6 "the worst movie Spike Lee has ever made," one that "[resorts] to all-star cameos to disguise structural shortcomings." Still, I believe these cameos contribute to the film's commentary on fame, exploitation, and the blurred lines between reality and performance.The PRINCE SoundtrackI could never go without mentioning one of the film's most essential elements, being its soundtrack, composed entirely of songs by Prince. You can't say that about any other film outside of Purple Rain. The entire soundtrack is Prince. Yup. Not just a song or two—the whole thing. And it's not a greatest-hits situation either; We're talking deep cuts, unreleased tracks, B-sides, and songs he gave just to this movie. "She Spoke 2 Me"? Unreal. "Don't Talk 2 Strangers"? Are you kidding? These weren't just throwaways—he curated a whole vibe for Judy's world, and I can't even believe we aren't talking about this every day.Prince was famously selective about who he worked with, and it says a lot that he said yes to this film. You get the sense that he understood what the story was about—performance, femininity, identity, power. And that's all over his music, too. Prince elevates the whole damn film. That's the kind of creative alignment that doesn't happen often. Honestly, the Girl 6 soundtrack is one of the most slept-on parts of Prince's catalog—and of 90s cinema in general.How this happened still blows my mind and definitely leads me to believe that, aside from Spike distancing himself from the film, the complexity of continuing to secure rights to Prince's catalog may be why we haven't been able to stream the film. That's a whooooole other can of worms to dive into for another day…But I will get to the bottom of it.Girl 6's unique collaborations, themes, and the conversations it continues to inspire about representation, exploitation, and agency for Black women and in the entertainment industry are why it remains a fascinating entry in Spike Lee's filmography. Although its approach to these themes may have been clunky, convoluted—dare I say, disjointed—it's 1000% worth watching, studying, and taking the time to understand the story beyond traditional narrative form.Unless you own a VHS or DVD copy, it's a shame you can only find it for $100+ on eBay right now. Kelli and I mailed the DVD back and forth like it was 2006 to study and put this episode together. So, grab a friend or two and create an old-school Netflix sisterhood of the traveling DVD and watch for yourselves. If you do track down a copy, tag me @lookbehindthelook—I want to see your setups. As always, we love hearing your thoughts, what you want to hear more about, and what films you'd like us to dive into next.Thank you for joining me on another bite-sized episode of Look Behind the Look. Until next time...**At the time that I recorded this, the DVDs were $80-$100 on ebay but now it looks like it jumped to $225-$350! Keep your eyes on those DVD bins at the vintage stores, people!Girl 6 on eBaywritten by Kelli Reilly Get full access to Look Behind The Look's Substack at lookbehindthelook.substack.com/subscribe
We're back from ITHACON, but we mustn't dwell, no, not today! We can't! Not on Rex Manning Day! We're rewinding to 1995 at the height of the record store boom. Directed by Allan Moyle and written by Carol Heikkinen, with an ensemble cast including Anthony LaPaglia, Maxwell Caulfield, Debi Mazar, Rory Cochrane, Johnny Whitworth, Robin Tunney, Renée Zellweger, and Liv Tyler, this comedy follows a group of record store employees through a wild twenty-four hours on that particular April 8th. Unfortunately, the film bombed spectacularly at the box office and was panned by critics at the time of release, but its eclectic soundtrack and stacked cast of future stars have made it into something of a cult favorite in the intervening years. But is this flick really The Breakfast Club for Elder Millennials, or does Empire Records belong in the bargain bin? For more geeky podcasts visit GonnaGeek.com You can find us on iTunes under ''Legends Podcast''. Please subscribe and give us a positive review. You can also follow us on Twitter @LegendsPodcast or even better, send us an e-mail: LegendsPodcastS@gmail.com You can write to Rum Daddy directly: rumdaddylegends@gmail.com You can find all our contact information here on the Network page of GonnaGeek.com Our complete archive is always available at www.legendspodcast.com, www.legendspodcast.libsyn.com Music: Title Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Closing out a decade comprising two iconic hits (Heat, The Last of the Mohicans), Oscar-nominated director Michael Mann decided to next collaborate with Oscar-winning writer Eric Roth (Forest Gump) on this docudrama about a controversial story which ran at the highly-rated news-program "60 Minutes" just a few years prior. This news segment focused on an interview with "Big Tobacco" whistleblower Jeffrey Wigand (Russel Crowe) and what damaging secrets he was able to review about the questionable business practices of his former employer, Brown & Williamson. Unfortunately this segment didn't air right away resulting from various complicating factors including political concerns at the network (CBS) airing it, ongoing litigation from Brown & Williamson, and Wigand's own personal history coming to light. The producer on this segment and the other key "insider" in this story was 60 Minutes' Lowell Bergman played by Oscar-winner Al Pacino. And what results is a stirring film which was beloved by critics though not by audiences....it would also receive seven Oscar nominations including for Best Picture. It remains one of the best films from a sterling year (1999) for cinema and also featured a stacked cast including Diane Venora, Christopher Plummer, Phillip Baker Hall, Michael Gambon, Debi Mazar, Gina Gershon, and Bruce McGill.Host & Editor: Geoff GershonProducer: Marlene GershonSend us a texthttps://livingforthecinema.com/Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/Living-for-the-Cinema-Podcast-101167838847578Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/livingforthecinema/Letterboxd:https://letterboxd.com/Living4Cinema/
PopaHALLics #132 "Into the Great Unknown"Can a rabbi and an agnostic shiksa find true love? Can humans meddle in the affairs of gods? If you could survive the zombie apocalypse, would you want to? Our pop culture offerings delve into these burning questions—and more!Streaming:"Nobody Wants This," Netflix. Sex podcast co-host Joanne (Kristen Bell) and "hot rabbi" Noah (Adam Brody) fall for each other in this charming rom-com. Their families and friends try to keep them apart.'Kaos," Netflix. This British dark comedy reimagines Greek mythology in a contemporary way. Three humans become involved in a power struggle among the corrupt, arrogant gods, played by the likes of Jeff Goldblum, Debi Mazar, Janet McTeer, and David Thewlis."Agatha All Along," Disney +. Kathryn Hahn plays "the Witchkiller," Agatha Harkness, who goes on a quest on "The Witches' Road" to increase her powers. With Patti LuPone and Aubrey Plaza."Shadow in the Cloud," Netflix. Shades of a famous "Twilight Zone" episode! A female WWII pilot (Chloe Grace Moretz) traveling with top-secret documents sees a creature on the wing of a B-17 Flying Fortress. Books:"From Here to the Great Unknown," by Lisa Marie Presley and Riley Keough. Julia Roberts narrates the autobiography of Elvis' daughter, who died before completing it. It was finished by Lisa Marie's daughter, actress Riley Keough."I Will Do Better," by Charles Bock. In this heartbreaking memoir, a writer and his young daughter struggle to find their way after his wife dies. "Zone One," by Colson Whitehead. This literary zombie novel examines themes of societal priorities, the trivialities of our lives, and gentrification as a 3-person squad rids New York neighborhoods of the undead.Click through the links to watch and read what we are talking about.
Chris and Taylor review the mythological black comedy television series, Kaos (stylised as KAOS), which was created by Charlie Covell for Netflix. It revolves around three humans as they discover their common connection to a prophecy and to each other while dealing with the corrupt and arrogant gods of Greek and Roman mythology. It stars Jeff Goldblum, Janet McTeer, Aurora Perrineau, Cliff Curtis, David Thewlis, Killian Scott, Nabhaan Rizwan, Leila Farzad, Stephen Dillane, Debi Mazar, and Suzy Eddie Izzard. Follow us on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepotential_podcast/ X: https://x.com/thepotentialpod TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thepotentialpodcast Support us on Patreon: patreon.com/thepotentialpodcast Thanks to our sponsor: LetsGetChecked: Get 25% off your health test at trylgc.com/potential and enter promo code POTENTIAL25
We mustn't dwell. No, not today. We CAN'T. Not on Sagpod Day! In this episode we go all the way back to a post-grunge 1995, as our special guest - New Zealand's First Lady Of Comedy Audrey Porne - has chosen the record store madhouse comedy, EMPIRE RECORDS.BEWARE: For about 5 minutes, this episode contains a lot of the bad swearword. You know, THAT one. The one that's worse than feck.END CREDITS- Presented by Robert Johnson and Christopher Webb- Produced/edited by Christopher Webb- "Still Any Good?" logo designed by Graham Wood & Robert Johnson- Crap poster mock-up by Christopher Webb- Theme music ("The Slide Of Time") by The Sonic Jewels, used with kind permission(c) 2024 Tiger Feet ProductionsFind us:Twitter @stillanygoodpodInstagram @stillanygoodpodEmail stillanygood@gmail.comFind Audrey:Twitter @audreyporneInstagram @audrey.prneSupport the show
Your astronomically impaired hosts hop a rocket to therapy as they talk about SPACE TRUCKERS (1996), directed by Stuart Gordon, written by Ted Mann and Stuart Gordon and starring Dennis Hopper, Debi Mazar and Brad Dorff. It's Unsane therapy of the stellar kind. Go pigs! LINKSWee Freekz FBUnsane Radio WebsiteTarr and Fether's WebsitePsycho Cinema FBUnsane … Continue reading "Unsane Radio 0277 – Space Truckers"
Diane and Sean discuss the first (and worst ?) Joel Schumacher Batman movie, Batman Forever. Episode music is, "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me", by U2 from the OST.- Our theme song is by Brushy One String- Artwork by Marlaine LePage- Why Do We Own This DVD? Merch available at Teepublic- Follow the show on social media:- IG: @whydoweownthisdvd- Tumblr: WhyDoWeOwnThisDVD- Follow Sean's Plants on IG: @lookitmahplants- Watch Sean be bad at video games on TwitchSupport the Show.
Today's Sponsor: Zenni Opticalhttp://thisistheconversationproject.com/zenni Today's Rundown:Breakdancing isn't returning in for the 2028 Olympicshttps://www.nbcchicago.com/paris-2024-summer-olympics/breaking-2028-olympics-here-are-sports-leaving-entering-los-angeles-games/3519429/ Elon Musk's Trump Interview Flops Immediately with Tech Glitches, He Claims ‘Massive DDOS Attack'https://www.mediaite.com/politics/trump-musk-interview-disaster-gets-immediately-compared-to-2023-desantis-debacle-after-users-left-unable-to-tune-in/?utm_source=mediaite_smartnews_redirect RFK Jr. won't appear on New York state presidential ballot after court rules he's not a residenthttps://nypost.com/2024/08/12/us-news/rfk-jr-wont-appear-on-new-york-state-presidential-ballot/?utm_source=smartnews&utm_campaign=nypost&utm_medium=referral Young Thug's long-running criminal trial returns with jury and reluctant star witnesshttps://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/young-thugs-long-running-criminal-trial-returns-jury-reluctant-star-wi-rcna163455 Google and Selena Gomez partner to fund teen mental health in the classroomhttps://apnews.com/article/google-selena-gomez-mental-health-8081308cb7d0f0300a996fdca49f631a Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan Announce Title of 'Freaky Friday' Sequelhttps://www.marieclaire.com/celebrity/jamie-lee-curtis-linday-lohan-freaky-friday-sequel/ Illinois school worker Vera Liddell gets 9-years for $1.5 million chicken wing heisthttps://nypost.com/2024/08/11/us-news/illinois-school-worker-vera-liddell-gets-9-years-in-prison-for-stealing-1-5-million-in-wings/ Billionaire Richard Lugner Dead at 91 – Just 2 Months After Tying the Knot with Sixth Wife, 42https://people.com/billionaire-richard-lugner-dead-91-months-after-marrying-sixth-wife-8693930 Website: http://thisistheconversationproject.com Facebook: http://facebook.com/thisistheconversationproject Twitter: http://twitter.com/th_conversation TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@theconversationproject YouTube: http://thisistheconversationproject.com/youtube Podcast: http://thisistheconversationproject.com/podcasts ONE DAY OLDER ON AUGUST 13:Danny Bonaduce (65)Debi Mazar (60)Sebastian Stan (42) WHAT HAPPENED TODAY:1942: Walt Disney's animated feature Bambi premiered at Radio City Music Hall in New York.1960: The first two-way telephone conversation by satellite took place with the help of Echo 1, a balloon satellite.1961: Berlin was divided as East Germany sealed off the border between the city's eastern and western sectors in order to halt the flight of refugees. WORD OF THE DAY: epistolary [ ih-pis-tl-er-ee ]https://www.dictionary.com/browse/epistolarycontained in or carried on by letters The novel's epistolary format, consisting entirely of letters between characters, offered a unique and intimate glimpse into their lives. DAILY AFFIRMATION: I Am Proud Of Myself And All That I Have Accomplished.Boosts Self-Esteem: This affirmation reinforces self-worth by acknowledging your achievements, which can significantly boost self-esteem and confidence, making you more resilient against negative thoughts and self-doubt.https://www.amazon.com/100-Daily-Affirmations-Positivity-Confidence/dp/B0D2D6SS2D/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3EETIICRH9WKL&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.fTzmfgWDkLbB298QSG1XHw.XNema1TWDSl7tirdaNi6vv-LBlJA9T-P0y-UeCE2MN8&dib_tag=se&keywords=100+affirmation+payne&qid=1722807450&sprefix=110+affirmation+payne%2Caps%2C1345&sr=8-1 PLUS, TODAY WE CELEBRATE:International Left-Handers Dayhttps://www.lefthandersday.com/Today is the 32nd annual Left Handers Day! August 13th is a chance to tell your family and friends how proud you are of being left-handed, and also raise awareness of the everyday issues that lefties face as we live in a world designed for right-handers.
Here's another episode of the TV BINGEBOX podcast to tide you over in the absence of the TV BLACKBOX podcast.-----SURPRISE! It's a Wednesday, not a Tuesday record this week (oh well) but that only means BIGGER, BETTER, and somehow MORE INTERESTING things. Four new shows, community recommendations, and a bunch of new UpMolk and DownMolk quick-ish-fire suggestions to keep you on your toes and have your bingelists continuing to grow! Shows covered in this episode:• Top Gear Australia S05 (8 eps), starring Jonathan La Paglia, Blair "Moog" Joscelyne, and Beau Ryan - streaming right now every Friday, dropping weekly, on Paramount+.• Ren Faire (3 eps), starring George Coulam, Jeffrey Baldwin, Louie Migliaccio, and Darla Smith - airing in full right now on BINGE.• Presumed Innocent (8 eps), starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Ruth Negga, Bill Camp, O-T Fagbenle, Peter Sarsgaard, Noma Dumezweni, and Chase Infiniti - streaming right now (first 2 eps), dropping weekly, on Apple TV+.• Ladies In Black (6 eps), starring Debi Mazar, Miranda Otto, Jessica De Gouw, Clare Hughes, Azizi Donnelly, Gemma Ward, Kate Box, Huw Higginson, Julian Maroun, Todd McKenney, Russell Dykstra, Thom Green, and Sacha Horler - premieres Sunday 16 June 8:30pm, dropping weekly (all eps on iview), on ABC. Join us every* Tuesday 8pm AEST on any number of places (mainly the TV Blackbox Facebook page, YouTube channel, and Insta live...plus a few others), and keep in touch with the TV Bingebox show & host Steve Molk at linktr.ee/SteveMolk.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/tv-blackbox. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week on TV Gold, a US docudrama with two Australian lead actors, a quirky UK comedy and a much-anticipated Australian drama. Clipped (Disney+, 6 episodes) tells the story of the owner of the LA Clippers NBA team and the trouble he got into over secretly recorded racist comments. Playing the wife and the mistress of the Clippers owner are Aussies Jackie Weaver and Cleopatra Coleman. The Cleaner (ABC/iview and BritBox) stars Greg Davies as a cleaner working on murder scenes after the police finish with the scene. The two series feature some notable guest stars including Helena Bonham Carter, Mark Lewis Jones, Harriet Walter and Zoe Wanamaker. Ladies in Black (ABC/iview, 6 episodes) continues some of the storylines from the 2018 movie of the same name. The key cast is Debi Mazar, Miranda Otto, Jessica De Gouw and they are joined by newcomer Clare Hughes who has an impressive screen presence in her first professional role. A huge supporting cast includes Sascha Horler, Carlos Sanson Jr, Ngali Shaw, Todd McKenny, Krew Boylan, Gemma Ward, Hazem Shammas, and scene stealer Peter O'Brien as a flamboyant fashion photographer.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, the schnooks talked about ‘Goodfellas' in our featured segment 'Films of 1990'. After Dave tells you whether or not he liked ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire', we gripe about AirBnB and autocorrect, rob a few trucks, pinch a few goons, then set the scene. We'll give you some context, talk about other movies that came out in 1990, about Paul Sorvino cutting garlic, Scorcese's parents' perfect casting, whether or not we're animale, and *why Dave didn't like the movie*. Our phone number is 646-484-9298, it accepts texts or voice messages. 0:00 Intro; 7:28 Gripes; 14:39 ‘Goodfellas': Films of 1990; 1:14:29 What You Been Watching?; 01:25:17 Next Week's Episode Teaser Additional Cast/Crew/Mentions: Robert DeNiro, Ray Liotta, Joe Pesci, Martin Scorcese, Michael Ballhaus, Nicholas Pileggi, Lorraine Bracco, Paul Sorvino, Frank Sivero, Samuel L. Jackson, Frank Vincent, Gina Mastrogiacomo, Catherine Scorsese, Charles Scorsese, Debi Mazar, Lorraine Bracco, Tony Bennett, Sid Vicious. Hosts: Dave Green, Jeff Ostermueller, John Say Edited & Produced by Dave Green. Beer Sponsor: Carlos Barrozo Music Sponsor: Dasein Dasein on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/77H3GPgYigeKNlZKGx11KZ Dasein on Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/dasein/1637517407 Additional Tags: The Lion King, Pivot, Ross, Friends, Couch, NASA, Killers of the Flower Moon, Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert DeNiro, Martin Scorcese, Lily Gladstone, Jesse Plemmons, David Ellison, David Zazlav, Al Jolson, Oscars, Academy Awards, BFI, BAFTA, BAFTAS, British Cinema. England, Vienna, Leopoldstadt, The Golden Globes, Past Lives, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, The Holiday, The Crown: Season 6 part 2, Napoleon, Ferrari, Beer, Scotch, The Weekend, Clifford Odets, Travis Scott, U2, Apple, Apple Podcasts, 101 Dalmatians, The Parent Trap, Switzerland, West Side Story, Wikipedia, Adelaide, Australia, Queensland, Melbourne, Indonesia, Java, Jakarta, Bali, Guinea, The British, England, The SEC, Ronald Reagan, Stock Buybacks, Marvel, MCU, DCEU, Film, Movies, Southeast Asia, The Phillippines, Vietnam, America, The US, Academy Awards, WGA Strike, SAG-AFTRA, SAG Strike.
We wrap up Jamuary with the mother of all '90s record store pics.. "Empire Records."
Dennis Hopper, Debi Mazar, and Stephen Dorff invite us to join them on a late '90s, low budget outer space adventure. It's SPACE TRUCKERS, the perfect movie for our INESSENTIAL SCI-FI series. Myrriah Gossett of Star Trek Discovery Pod joins Mike to shower some love on this insane 1996 flick from director Stuart Gordon. Enjoy! Chapters: 0:00:08 Introducing Inessential Sci-Fi with Mariah Gossett 0:02:21 The Insane and Terrible, Yet Great, "Space Truckers" 0:05:17 Discovering "Space Truckers" and Trashy Movie Nights 0:11:33 George Wendt's Surprising Role as a Villain 0:13:26 The Director's Passing and the Potential for Even Wilder Scenes 0:15:19 Blending Trucking, Space Pirates, and Country Music 0:18:56 Inconsistent Special Effects and Wardrobe Choices 0:23:02 Surprising Political Themes and Creative Budget Solutions 0:26:35 Anti-corporate vibes and grounded characters 0:29:19 Resolving romantic relationships and commentary on old guys 0:31:38 Recommended for a fun movie night with friends 0:35:04 Outro Intergalactic is a podcast reviewing the most essential entries from the greatest science fiction franchises of all time. From the makers of Star Trek Discovery Pod, Mike Moody-Garcia and Clyde Haynes. Sub to the pod: http://intergalacticpod.co Follow the pod: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/intergalacticpod Threads: https://www.threads.net/@intergalacticpod Follow Mike Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mikemoodygarcia Threads: https://www.threads.net/@mikemoodygarcia Follow Myrriah Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/myrriahgossett/ Twitter/X (ugh): https://twitter.com/MyrriahGossett Podcast: https://startrekpod.libsyn.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/intergalacticpod/message
Writer, editor and podcaster Edward Ongweso Jr. returns to the show to kick off Denzember, a monthlong celebration of our greatest living actor, with a conversation about Spike Lee's seminal 1992 biopic 'Malcolm X'. It stands as one of Lee's most triumphant achievements and one of Denzel Washington's very best performances as one of the most significant figures of 20th century America. We discuss the film's trouble gestation period, taking nearly 30 years to get to the big screen then courting controversy throughout its production. We also discuss the film's portrait of Malcolm X and offer our readings of Spike's ultimate intention - presenting a fractured portrait that embraces the many sides of the man and the many ideologies and sects that claim him. Finally, we talk about the film's noteworthy detractors, including social critic and theorist bell hooks, who makes a compelling case that the film ultimately fails to bring a meaningful portrait of Malcolm to the big screen.Read bell hooks's review of Spike Lee's 'Malcolm X' at Artforum.Edward's Top 5 Denzel Performances:1. Malcolm X (1992)2. Fences (2016)3. Training Day (2001)4. The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021)5. Philadelphia (1993)/The Hurricane (1999)Follow Edward Ongweso Jr. on Twitter. Listen & Subscribe to This Machine Kills.Read Edward's Substack The Tech Bubble.Get access to all forthcoming Denzember episodes as well as our entire back catalog and bonus content by becoming a Hit Factory Patron for just $5/month.....Our Denzember theme song is "FUNK" by OPPO.
Get access to this entire episode as well as all of our premium episodes and bonus content by becoming a Hit Factory Patron for just $5/month.Another solo episode this week as we discuss Michael Mann's thriller 'The Insider', based on the true story of whistleblower Jeffrey Wigand and his explosive 1996 interview with 60 Minutes that exposed secrets about the tobacco industry and their complicity in manipulating their product with known carcinogens to increase the addictive effect of nicotine. The film is at once the story of the the tremendous power of corporate entities to take down those who seek to share the truth with the American public and an expressionist masterpiece that showcases some of Mann's most disciplined and mature directorial work. We discuss the film's seismic lead performances from dual leads Al Pacino and a career-best Russell Crowe. Then, we praise the Michael Mann & Eric Roth script, and its critical portrayal of its subjects, avoiding lionization. Finally, we discuss the story's terrible prescience, and how the film's shock at corporate media interests overruling the efforts of journalists can sometimes feel quaint by today's standards. Read Marie Brenner's profile of Jeffrey Wigand "The Man Who Knew Too Much" in Vanity Fair. ....Our theme song is "Mirror" by Chris Fish
This week we riddle over who's afraid of the big black bat, nothing homoerotic about that! We watched Batman Forever! Inspiring the newest ride at a Six Flags near you! How will Batman Forever hold up? Host: Nic Panel: Matt, Charlie Directed by Joel Schumacher Starring: Val Kilmer, Tommy Lee Jones, Jim Carrey, Nicole Kidman, Chris O'Donnell, Michael Gough, Pat Hingle, Drew Barrymore, Debi Mazar, Rene Auberjonois "Surf Shimmy" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
This week we riddle over who's afraid of the big black bat, nothing homoerotic about that! We watched Batman Forever! Inspiring the newest ride at a Six Flags near you! How will Batman Forever hold up? Host: Nic Panel: Matt, Charlie Directed by Joel Schumacher Starring: Val Kilmer, Tommy Lee Jones, Jim Carrey, Nicole Kidman, Chris O'Donnell, Michael Gough, Pat Hingle, Drew Barrymore, Debi Mazar, Rene Auberjonois "Surf Shimmy" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
0:13:00 - Box Office and upcoming releases. 0:28:00 *** What's Streaming *** AMAZON HACKSAW RIDGE, Dir. Mel Gibson – Andrew Garfield, Hugo Weaving, Vince Vaughn, Rachel Griffiths, Teresa Palmer, Milo Gibson, Sam Worthington. 2016 NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN, Dir. Ethan / Joel Coen – Tommy Lee Jones, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Woody Harrelson, Kelly Mcdonald, Stephen Root. 2007 NO TIME TO DIE, Dir. Cary Joji Fukunaga – Daniel Craig, Ana De Armas, Rami Malek, Lea Seysdoux, Lashana Lynch, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Whidhsaw, Naomie Harris, Rory Kinnear, Jeffrey Wright, Christoph Waltz. 2021 0:38:45 - Trailers: VACATION FRIENDS 2 – John Cena, Lil Rel Howery, Yvonne Orji, Meredith Hagner, Steve Buscemi. Feature THE CONTINENTAL: FROM THE WORLD OF JOHN WICK – Mel Gibson, Colin Woodell, Adam Shapiro, Ayomide Adegun. Mini Series THE KILL ROOM – Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Maya Hawke, Debi Mazar, Matthew Maher. Feature 0:44:00 - THE LAST VOYAGE OF THE DEMETER, Dir. Andre Ovredal ( Grayson 6.5 / Chris 5.5 / Roger 5 ) Hosted, produced and mixed by Grayson Maxwell and Roger Stillion. Music by Chad Wall. Guest appearance by Christopher Boughan. Quality Assurance by Anthony Emmett. Visit the new Youtube channel, "For the Love of Cinema" to follow and support our short video discussions. Roger wears aviators! Please give a like and subscribe if you enjoy it. Follow the show on Twitter @lovecinemapod and check out the Facebook page for updates. Rate, subscribe and leave a comment or two. Every Little bit helps. Send us an email to fortheloveofcinemapodcast@gmail.com Thank you for listening!
In June of 1984, a show aimed at helping America understand and embrace all the myriad aspects of hip hop aired across the country. But hip hop might have already outgrown this kind of presentation. It might be outgrowing during this show. And so there was never another episode. And to this day the world continues to mourn... Graffiti Rock. Nate Runkel from Yo! That's My Jawn! is with us to bask in the freshness. @DerickArmijo @SingleSeasonTV singleseasonrecord@gmail.com
RMR 0221: Join your hosts Chad Robinson, Dustin Melbardis and Lizzy Haynes for the Retro Movie Roundtable as they revisit Toys (1992) [PG-13] Genre: Comedy, Drama, Adventure Starring: Robin Williams, Michael Gambon, Joan Cusack, Robin Wright, LL Cool J, Donald O'Connor, Arthur Malet, Jack Warden, Debi Mazar, Wendy Melvoin, Julio Oscar Mechoso, Jamie Foxx, Shelly Desai, Blake Clark Director: Barry Levinson Recorded on 2022-06-21
Welcome to the Re:Review Podcast, where we watch movies from our past with a perspective from today. Your Hosts are Matt, Bobby, and Austin. We have an immense love for the films of our youth so we're taking a look back to see if they still hold up. On this episode we are discussing Empire Records. Movie Details: Release: 1995 Director: Allan Moyle Starring: Anthony LaPaglia, Debi Mazar, Maxwell Caulfield, Renee Zellweger, and Liv Tyler [FOLLOW US] on Social Media Instagram - @rereview_podcast Youtube - Re:Review
Get your interstellar rigs ready to ride because this week, we're watching "Spaces Truckers." Stuart Gordon directs this 1996 sci-fi adventure starring the late Dennis Hopper, Stephen Dorff, Debi Mazar, and Charles Dance. With killer robots designed by the one and only Screaming Mad George, this is a forgotten movie that shoots for the stars, but does it end up crashing back down to earth? Its 15% Rotten Tomatoes score would have you believe it's an interstellar stinker, but we've got some thoughts of our own. Join Us! Join the conversation! Send us your questions, comments, criticisms, or witticisms at videojunkyardpodcast@gmail.com or send a comment on the socials: Twitter - @videojunkpod Facebook - www.facebook.com/videojunkyardpodcast Instagram -videojunkyardpodcast The music and movie clips are the property of their respective creators. No infringement is intended or implied. Video Junkyard Podcast EP 235 - Romancing The Stone By VideoJunkyardPodcast is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Video Junkyard Podcast - EP 236 - Razzies Special - Blonde By VideoJunkyardPodcast is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
We're open at midnight - today is the day, it's Rex Manning (Maxwell Caulfield) Day and we mustn't dwell, not today. One of the hottest casts (Liv Tyler, Robin Tunney, Ethan Embry, Rory Cochrane, Johnny Whitworth, Renee Zellweger, Coyote Shivers, Brendan Sexton III, Debi Mazar, Anthony LaPaglia, and James Willis) of the 90s damns the man to save the Empire so why don't you all just fade away and join us for Empire Records - Now on Doom Generation, Support this podcast at patreon.com/doomgeneration --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/doomgeneration/message
Couch Potato Theater: Empire Records (1995) & Rex Manning Day (April 8th)! Watch the video version of this Couch Potato Theater episode on the Fandom Podcast Network YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@FandomPodcastNetwork Welcome to Couch Potato Theater here on the Fandom Podcast Network! On Couch Potato Theater we celebrate our favorite movies! On this episode your Couch Potato Theater hosts discuss Empire Records (1995) & celebrate Rex Manning Day (April 8th)! Empire Records is a 1995 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film directed by Allan Moyle, starring Anthony LaPaglia, Maxwell Caulfield, Debi Mazar, Rory Cochrane, Johnny Whitworth, Robin Tunney, Renée Zellweger, and Liv Tyler. The film follows a group of record store employees over the course of one exceptional day. The employees try to stop the store from being sold to a large chain, and learn about each other along the way. It went on to become a cult hit, and several of its stars launched successful careers. Celebrated annually on April 8, Rex Manning Day commemorates the day that washed-up 1980s pop idol Rex Manning (played by Maxwell Caulfield) visited the fictional Empire Records. An Internet meme among the film's fans celebrates "Rex Manning Day" on April 8, the date Rex appears at Empire Records in the film. #RexManningDay is a recurring trending hashtag on Twitter. GIFs commemorating the event show Embry's character bounding down the stairs from the store's loft, declaring "Not on Rex Manning Day!!" Fandom Podcast Network Contact Information - The FANDOM PODCAST NETWORK YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/FandomPodcastNetwork - Master feed for all FPNet Audio Podcasts: http://fpnet.podbean.com/ - Couch Potato Theater Audio Podcast Master Feed: https://fpnet.podbean.com/category/couch-potato-theater - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Fandompodcastnetwork - Email: fandompodcastnetwork@gmail.com - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fandompodcastnetwork/ - Twitter: @fanpodnetwork / https://twitter.com/fanpodnetwork Fandom Podcast Network Couch Potato Theater Host & Guest Contact Info: Host Contact Info: - Kevin Reitzel on Twitter & Instagram: @spartan_phoenix - Kyle Wagner on Twitter: @AKyleW / Instagram: @Akylefandom Guest Contact Info: - Lacee Aderhold on Twitter: @LaceePants / Instagram: @thelaceepants - Lee Fillingsness on Twitter: @TheWayOfTheWay / Instagram: @the_way_of_the_way - Alex Autrey on Instagram: @went_there / Youtube: Yeah We Went There - Tee Public Fandom Podcast Network Store: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/fandom-podcast-network #Empire Records #Empire Records1995 #RexManningDay
Open 'til Midnight. This week are reviewing the 90s Cult-Classic Empire Records starring: Anthony LaPaglia, Maxwell Caulfield, Debi Mazar, Rory Cochrane, Johnny Whitworth, Robin Tunney, Renée Zellweger, Liv Tyler and directed by Allan Moyle. WARNING: There will be SPOILERS!
Put on the tail-fringe-rat-jackets Jerks! It's a new year!.. and we're ringin' it in by talkin' ‘bout the old one. The JERKS pull their microphones out of the toilet to talk tryin' on “Air Franks,” searching for John Hughesly's Gold, and blasting ball bearings at Debi Mazar's butt-hole! “Go left cheek, right cheek, then right in the middle.” “So it's not just finger-less gloves and bad attitudes?” #ChristmasStew #RatusKhan #AudioSnakeOils #AirFranks #ElegantEric #MilkyNeckMeat
Ryan breaks down the world cup. Brant comes clean about his childhood infatuation with Debi Mazar. Everybody loves Charles Dance's robotic wang.
TSHE's latest Thanksgiving Spectacular continues as Ann, Hillary and Bobby continue talkin' turkey—this time, figuratively.From flipping the bird (or is it flicking?) to the poultry's place in everything from cessation to bowling. And of course, some on-brand tangents along the way, like how Ann lost a weekend to going DC-free, Hillary allegedly looks like Debi Mazar, and Bobby recently discovered he's coconut-curious.TSHE RecommendsIf Books Could KillConnect with the show!This is your show, too. Feel free to drop us a line, send us a voice memo, or fax us a butt to let us know what you think.Facebook group: This Show Has EverythingFeedback form: throwyourphone.comEmail: tsheshow@gmail.comTwitter @tsheshow
País Estados Unidos Dirección Woody Allen Guion Woody Allen Fotografía Vittorio Storaro Reparto Kate Winslet, Justin Timberlake, Juno Temple, James Belushi, Jack Gore, Max Casella, Michael Zegarski, Tony Sirico, Debi Mazar, Geneva Carr Sinopsis En la Coney Island de la década de los 50, el joven Mickey Rubin (Timberlake), un apuesto salvavidas del parque de atracciones que quiere ser escritor, cuenta la historia de Humpty (Jim Belushi), operador del carrusel del parque, y de su esposa Ginny (Winslet), una actriz con un carácter sumamente volátil que trabaja como camarera. Ginny y Humpty pasan por una crisis porque además él tiene un problema con el alcohol, y por si fuera poco la vida de todos se complica cuando aparece Carolina (Juno Temple), la hija de Humpty, que está huyendo de un grupo de mafiosos.
Join your hosts Bryan Frye, Dustin Melbardis, and Russell Guest for the Retro Movie Roundtable as they revisit Collateral (2004) [R] Genre: Action, Crime, Drama Starring: Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx, Jada Pinkett Smith, Mark Ruffalo, Peter Berg, Bruce McGill, Irma P. Hall, Barry Shabaka Henley, Richard T. Jones, Klea Scott, Bodhi Elfman, Debi Mazar, Javier Bardem, Emilio Rivera, Jamie McBride, Ken Waters (as Ken Ver Cammen), Charlie E. Schmidt, Michael Bentt, Ian Hannin, Robert Deamer Director: Michael Mann Recoded on 2022-07-03
Snap those fingers and blow out that candle, man, as we immerse ourselves in Mike Myers's personal mythology in Tommy Schlamme's So I Married an Axe Murderer. Is this movie basically a Rosetta Stone for all of Myers's future films? How does a beat poet afford an incredible apartment in San Francisco—unless he's actually the one who is a black widow killer? Are the comedy cameos in this, from Charles Brolin to Steven Wright, the best of all time? Or do the incessant “bits” that it spawned ruin the fun? The only thing we can say is: Let's get pissed!
Sizzling Samachar of the day - 19th May 2022Welcome to OTTplay Sizzling Samachar, I'm your host Nikhil.News first up,From Maya Hawke to Julianne Moore, from Love, Death + Robots to Rick and Morty, and more storiesMaya Hawke to star alongside Uma Thurman in The Kill RoomStranger Things star Maya Hawke is all set to star alongside her mother Uma Thurman for the first time in the upcoming dark comedy The Kill Room. Directed by Nicol Paone, the movie also features Samuel L. Jackson, Joe Manganiello, Debi Mazar, and Larry Pine. The film revolves around the characters of Manganiello, Thurman, and Jackson, who get involved in a money-laundering scheme.Simon Rex joins Pussy IslandRed Rocket actor Simon Rex has joined the cast of Pussy Island helmed by The Batman star Zoë Kravitz. The movie features Channing Tatum and Naomi Ackie in lead roles. Kravitz also serves as the writer of the film along with E.T. Feigenbaum.Lynne Ramsay to direct movie adaptation of Margaret Atwood's Stone MattressLynne Ramsay, best known for the films We Need to Talk About Kevin and You Were Never Really Here, is set to helm the movie adaptation of Margaret Atwood's short story Stone Mattress. The film has Oscar winner Julianne Moore and Killing Eve actor Sandra Oh in pivotal roles. Free episode of Love, Death + Robots Volume 3 out on YouTubeAhead of its much-awaited premiere this Friday, an episode of the third season of Love, Death + Robots has dropped on Netflix's YouTube channel. The episode titled Three Robots: Exit Strategies is a sequel to the season 1 episode, Three Robots, and is available for free. Rick and Morty gets a spin-offA spin-off of the Emmy-award-winning animated sitcom Rick and Morty is in the works. Takashi Sano who has previously directed two animated shorts, Rick and Morty vs. Genocider and Summer Meets God (Rick Meets Evil), will helm the project for Adult Swim. Steven Lang, Nick Cassavetes, and Diego Tinoco join Muzzle. Steven Lang, Nick Cassavetes, and Diego Tinoco have joined the cast of the upcoming thriller Muzzle. Directed by John Stalberg Jr, the film has Aaron Eckhart essaying the role of LAPD K-9 officer Jake Rosser. Carlyle Eubank, who has previously worked on the 2014 sci-fi thriller The Signal, serves as the writer.Mel Gibson stars in action thriller Hot SeatMad Max and Lethal Weapon actor Mel Gibson will star alongside Kevin Dillon, Shannen Doherty and Sam Asghari in the action thriller Hot Seat. The movie directed by James Cullen Bressack revolves around an ex-hacker who must break into banking institutions after receiving a call from an anonymous man who planted a bomb.Kerala to launch state-owned OTT platformKerala will launch the country's first state-owned OTT platform on November 1. The platform, CSpace, will feature an extensive collection of award-winning movies, short films, and documentaries. Well, that's the Sizzling news from the world of movies and entertainment for today, until the next episode it's your host Nikhil signing out.Aaj kya dekhoge OTTplay se poochoWritten By Arya Harikumar
Hoda Kotb and Jenna Bush Hager are chatting with Mandy Moore about her new music, the end of “This Is Us” and motherhood. Plus, pop culture expert Andrew Freund has your summer movie preview. And, Debi Mazar talks starring alongside eight different Mike Myers characters in “The Pentaverate.”
Q&A on the series The Pentaverate with actor/creator/writer/executive producer Mike Myers, director Tim Kirkby, and cast Ken Jeong, Debi Mazar, Lydia West & Richard McCabe. Moderated by Mara Webster, In Creative Company. A Canadian journalist tries to uncover the truth about a society of five men who have controlled the world since 1347.
Actress, cook, and all around fabulous New Yorker Debi Mazar stops by to discuss her latest TV series, the Mike Myers comedy, "The Pentaverate."
Entrevista con la actriz Debi Mazar sobre su nueva serie de comedia The Pentaverate - disponible en Netflix. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cinexpress/support
Scandal, Pose, Da Five Bloods, Les Miserables, Porgy & Bess, Chicago, Daytime Divas, Blue Bloods, Mrs. America ... The list of Norm Lewis's Broadway musicals, TV series and films is spectacular. But WHO IS this familiar face with the smile that lights up a room? A very nice guy, as you'll witness here on Really Famous. You'll also see how his winning ways started - and the secret to their power and longevity. Join us for an enlightening and entertaining chat! LINKS My Tony Goldwyn interview: https://youtu.be/cX1VCKd5uV0 My Younger interviews: Peter Hermann https://www.reallyfamouspodcast.com/now/peter-hermann Debi Mazar https://www.reallyfamouspodcast.com/now/debi-mazar Miriam Shor https://www.really-famous.com/miriam-shor Shop on my Amazon Storefront to: Support the show! Get really cool stuff! Amazon.com/Shop/ReallyFamous Watch Really Famous on Facebook Watch: https://www.facebook.com/karamayerrobinson/ Join my Really Famous Friends & Fans Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/reallyfamous/ Watch Norm Lewis and me on YouTube: https://youtu.be/5ZWchUxbNiA (Remember to subscribe and tap the bell!) Support Really Famous by shopping for all your Amazon purchases through my link: https://www.amazon.com/shop/reallyfamous Visit the Westgate New York Grand Central - https://www.westgateresorts.com/hotels/new-york/midtown-manhattan/westgate-new-york-grand-central/ Share your thoughts! Email me reallyfamouspodcast@gmail.com Join my Special Insiders Group Connect with me and get behind-the-scenes scoop on social media: Instagram Facebook Twitter TikTok Connect with me: Subscribe to Really Famous on YouTube: YouTube.com/ReallyFamous Follow me on Instagram: @karamayerrobinson Follow me on Twitter: @kara1to1 Follow me on Facebook: @karamayerrobinson Follow me on TikTok: @karamayerrobinson Live events notification: really-famous.com/contact Everything! https://linktr.ee/reallyfamous Celebrity interview by Kara Mayer Robinson Music credit: Take a Chance by Kevin MacLeod incompetech - Creative Commons
This week, we watched Red Ribbon Blues, a 1996 HIV medication heist film starring Paul Mercurio, Lipsinka, Debi Mazar, and RuPaul, but don't get too excited by the cast because it's not very good. It does, however, introduce us to a certain cop named Detective Bones. Topics discussed: Air Bud as a cop Batman villains are weird What could these red ribbons mean We're making an art wish list The unfortunate history of the appetite suppressing chocolate called Ayds Links mentioned in this episode: https://www.thirdplacebooks.com/event/duncan-robertson-visegrad-capitol-hill-cider https://www.amazon.com/Visegrad-Novel-Duncan-Robertson/dp/1734537930 We Read Movies This podcast is hosted by ZenCast.fm
Rodney Dangerfield stars as the most outrageous TV talk show host. Throw in Dangerfield's patented comic one-liners and you have an over-the-top box office bust. What other podcast would cover this film? What other podcast host would even have this film in their DVD collection? Co-starring Debi Mazar, David Ogden Stiers, Cindy Williams, and Burt Reynolds.
It's another certified Robards Classic! This week, the sibs gleefully cover what is now a '90s cult phenom: 1993's 'So I Married an Axe Murderer.' For those sweet babes not around in the '90s, this was Mike Myers before Austin Powers, in a regular guy romantic comedy role. Quotability is at an all time high. And besides a very charming performance by Nancy Travis, there is a murderer's row of amazing cameos: Phil Hartman, Charles Grodin, Steven Wright, Debi Mazar and Alan Arkin, to name a few. In the second and final segment of the show, Sam blind pitches three non-SNL character movies for episode 31.Hosts: Eden Robards, Sam RobardsInstagram: storageroommovieboomTwitter: storageroompodEmail: storageroompod@gmail.com
Share a special brownie with your favorite 90s boyfriend Ethan Embry because it's time for us to celebrate Rex Manning Day, aka Allan Moyle's Empire Records. Did you know there was an alternate universe edit of this movie that actually explains everyone's motivations? Why were the 90s so lily white? What happened to the dog from the movie poster? And can we ever look at blue cheese the same way again? This is the episode where all agree Renée Zellweger is a better friend—and actor—than Liv Tyler.Read Randall's full episode notes at yourenofun.com.And follow us on Instagram and Twitter.
"Younger" is one of my absolute favorite shows, and I am so sad it's coming to an end. That said, I was elated to talk to the cast again for the 4th time! From what I have seen, Season 7 is going to be a fantastic ride. Join me for a fun and heartfelt conversation with Sutton Foster, Peter Hermann, Debi Mazar, Nico Tortorella and Molly Bernard. We missed Hilary Duff, Miriam Shor and Charles Michael Davis this year, but I am sure our paths will cross again! Enjoy!To see the video version of this interview or any of our other interviews, head over to aspoonfulofpaolo.com or our YouTube channel. Thanks for listening and enjoy the show!FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER https://twitter.com/PaoloPrestaFOLLOW ME ON FACEBOOK http://www.facebook.com/spoonfulofpaoloWATCH ALL OF OUR CELEBRITY INTERVIEWS AT http://www.aspoonfulofpaolo.com
Ricky Powell captured some of the wildest moments in New York fashion, music, and art with his portraits of the downtown New York scene of the 80s and 90s. He befriended the Beastie Boys and joined the band on tour as part of their entourage. In this episode he tells the story of his epic journey to join the Beastie Boys who were on tour with Run DMC in St. Petersburg, Florida. Planes, Forties, and Pick up Trucks. If the Tribeca Film festival would have happened last year, one of the films that would have premiered would have been the documentary The Individualist, which through testimonies from those were on the other side of Ricky's camera—including Natasha Lyonne, Debi Mazar, Mike D, Laurence Fishburne, Chuck D, and LL Cool J—tells the story of Ricky's rise, then fall, then rise again.
The cooking couple's Spaghetti alle Vongole recipe
At a time when women were women, men aged prematurely, and the moon was inhabited by a race of underground alien women who all look like Debi Mazar, there was Cat-Women of The Moon! Katie and Chris take you to a far off place where all the women dress in cat suits and live in a society bereft of the feeble yet fertile partiarchy. Can they seduce their way back to earth and breed? Will the leading men put aside their romantic pissing contest in order to save human kind? Will there be MOON SPIDERS?! These questions and so much...other questions...will be answered? This one's on YouTube and Amazon (Public domain, baby!) Shoot us a message! b.trothed@gmail.com Follow us! @btrothed on twitter @btrothedpod on instagram
Cook, author, and TV personality Gabriele Corcos about the new cookbook he wrote with wife & actress Debi Mazar. Milwaukee-based chef Justin Aprahamian talks about coming into Viking territory for a Taste of the NFL event.
AFTERBUZZ TV -- Younger edition, is a weekly "after show" for fans of TVLand's Younger; this week the hosts Tara Johnson, Dan Babic and Sam Davidson discuss episode 12. Younger is an American television comedy-drama series based on the Pamela Redmond Satran novel of the same name. The series stars Sutton Foster as the lead character, with Hilary Duff, Debi Mazar and Miriam Shor co-starring in other main roles. The single-camera project, was created and produced by Darren Star. Patricia Field, who worked with Star on Sex and the City, will be a costume consultant on the production. The first season will consist of 12 episodes, and is set to premiere Tuesday, March 31, 2015 at 10 pm. Follow hosts @DanicaKennedy @Annika_Michelle @SamD43 on Twitter! Follow us on http://www.Twitter.com/AfterBuzzTV "Like" Us on http://www.Facebook.com/AfterBuzzTV For more of your post-game wrap up shows for your favorite TV shows, visit http: --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
AFTERBUZZ TV -- Younger edition, is a weekly "after show" for fans of TVLand's Younger; this week the hosts Lindsey Miller and Sam Davidson discuss episode 11. Younger is an American television comedy-drama series based on the Pamela Redmond Satran novel of the same name. The series stars Sutton Foster as the lead character, with Hilary Duff, Debi Mazar and Miriam Shor co-starring in other main roles. The single-camera project, was created and produced by Darren Star. Patricia Field, who worked with Star on Sex and the City, will be a costume consultant on the production. The first season will consist of 12 episodes, and is set to premiere Tuesday, March 31, 2015 at 10 pm. Follow hosts @DanicaKennedy @Annika_Michelle @SamD43 on Twitter! Follow us on http://www.Twitter.com/AfterBuzzTV "Like" Us on http://www.Facebook.com/AfterBuzzTV For more of your post-game wrap up shows for your favorite TV shows, visit http://www.Aft --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices