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Saturday, December 31, 2022

Anita Pointer of the Pointer Sisters Dies at 74 - Variety

Anita Pointer, who rose to fame in the 1970s as a member of the hit sibling singing group the Pointer Sisters, died Saturday at age 74. No cause of death was given, but her publicist said she died surrounded by family.

“While we are deeply saddened by the loss of Anita, we are comforted in knowing she is now with her daughter, Jada, and her sisters June and Bonnie, and at peace,” said a statement jointly attributed to her four closest survivors — a sister, Ruth, brothers Aaron and Fritz, and her granddaughter Roxie McKain Pointer. “She was the one that kept all of us close and together for so long. Her love of our family will live on in each of us. Please respect our privacy during this period of grief and loss. Heaven is a more loving beautiful place with Anita there.”

Anita was with the Oakland-based group from its formation in 1969 until she was forced to retire due to unspecified health reasons in 2015.

The Pointer Sisters had a hit album right out of the gate in 1973 as their self-titled debut release reached No. 13 on the album chart. Their first major hit single was a recording of Allen Toussaint’s “Yes We Can Can,” which narrowly missed the top 10, peaking at No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 12 on the R&B chart.

As they abandoned the nostalgic look they’d started with, the sisters had their first and only No. 1 R&B chart hit in 1975 with “How Long (Betcha Got a Chick on the Side).” It would still be a few more years before they cracked the top 10 of the Hot 100, but once they did, the floodgates opened.

That phenomenal pop success got seriously underway with a version of Bruce Springsteen’s “Fire” that reached No. 2 on the pop chart in 1978. Recalled Anita in an interview with Goldmine about the Springsteen song, “I told Richard Perry that there was such a big voice on this song that maybe he wanted Ruthie to sing lead as she had the big voice, but he said, ‘No. I want you to sing it.’ So I did and it became our first gold single and I was just so thrilled.”

Then through the mid-1980s the hits kept coming. In 1980, “He’s So Shy” hit No. 3. “Slow Hand” went to No. 2 in 1981. “Neutron Dance” went to No. 6 in 1984, and “Jump (for My Love)” reached No. 3 that same year. Another essential hit of the era, “Automatic,” peaked at No. 5 in 1984. “I’m So Excited,” a track with lead vocals by Anita, was only a minor hit for the sisters in 1982, but was re-released in remixed form in 1984 and this time went as high as No. 9.

The group also had success on the legit stage and screen, touring with “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” based on the Fats Waller song catalog, and appearing in the hit 1976 film comedy “Car Wash.”

The pop hit streak came to an end in the mid-’80s, as the 1985 single “Dare Me,” at No. 11, marked the last time the Pointer Sisters reached the top 20. After being off the charts entirely since the early ’90s, the sisters had one last chart hit in 2005 with “Christmas in New York,” which reached No. 21 on the adult contemporary chart.

For as often as the sisters got held at No. 2 or 3 in their run of still-ubiquitous songs, they did have a brush with No. 1 as featured participants in the all-star “We Are the World” charity single in 1985.

Their biggest single album by far was 1983’s “Break Out,” which was certified three-times platinum; it was the LP that included “Neutron Dance,” “Jump” and “Automatic.” In 1984 it was reissued with the new version of the Anita-sung and co-written “I’m So Excited” added to the lineup.

The group received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1994.

The group’s three Grammys include one in a country category, for the 1974 song “Fairytale,” a point of trivia that often comes up as the lack of Black representation in that genre is discussed. Anita explained that a love of country music came naturally to them because they spent summers with relatives in Arkansas, where that was all they heard. “I only remember listening to one Arkansas radio station,” Anita said. “All they played was country music: Hank Williams’ ‘Your Cheatin’ Heart,’ Tex Ritter’s ‘Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darlin” and Willie Nelson’s ‘Funny How Time Slips Away.’ The only time I heard Black artists was when I snuck out to the local juke joints and pressed my ear to the door …. To me it was all good music. With country, the short story format really resonated with me.” The group legendarily performed on the Grand Ole Opry in ’74.

Pointer and her brother Fritz collaborated on a family memoir, titled “Fairytale,” in 2020.

Two other sisters who were with the group for most of its existence preceded Anita in death — June Pointer in 2006 and Bonnie Pointer in 2020.

Ruth Pointer is the longest-standing member of the group, having joined in 1972, three years after June, Bonnie and Anita began performing together. Ruth now tours under the Pointer Sisters banner with two younger members, Issa Pointer, who first joined in 2002, and Sadako Pointer, who joined in 2009. In a 2019 interview, Anita signaled her approval of the group continuing without her. “Yhey are doing some great shows and have been all over the world, without me,” she said. “I worked with Issa and Sadako, so they got a good feel for what I do until I had somewhat of a forced retirement, due to health reasons, but Ruthie can still sing so strongly and loves it.”

Pointer’s only daughter, Jada Pointer, who had inspired the 1973 Pointer Sisters song “Jada,” died of cancer in 2003, after which Anita dedicated herself to raising her only grandchild, Roxie.

“This has been a wonderful career. I didn’t plan any of this,” she told Goldmine. In 1969, she pointed out, “I was planning on continuing to being a secretary in a law office, like I was doing, when I heard Bonnie and June singing in the Northern California State Youth Choir, performing ‘Oh Happy Day,’ with Edwin Hawkins and Dorothy Morrison, and I just loved it. So I quit my job and said that I had to do this too.”

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Miley Cyrus, Paris Hilton and Sia’s Surprise ‘Stars Are Blind’ Performance - Yahoo Entertainment

Screen-Shot-2022-12-31-at-11.45.30-PM - Credit: NBC
Screen-Shot-2022-12-31-at-11.45.30-PM - Credit: NBC

After Miley Cyrus and Fletcher set tongues wagging with their duet version of “Midnight Sky,” Fletcher returned to Miley’s New Year’s Eve Party to introduce a very special performance.

With the backing of a full band, including some strident saxophone, Miley sauntered out onstage to perform a cover of Paris Hilton’s indelible aughts anthem “Stars Are Blind”—a refreshed version of which Paris released this week (“Paris’ Version,” a fun play on Taylor Swift) as the opening salvo of “brand new music” that’s set to come in 2023.

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“Looks like Y2K is here to stay and Paris Hilton is making music a key part of her 2023 plan,” read Paris’ press release accompanying the track.

Well, it seemed like the perfect soundtrack for Miley’s celebrity-packed NBC special. And, after singing the first few verses solo, Miley found herself joined by the singer Sia — sporting a giant magenta bow on top of her ubiquitous black-and-blonde wig.

“Even though the gods are crazy / Even though the stars are blind / If you show me real love, baby, I’ll show you mine,” they sang.

“Ready for this?!” Sia exclaimed.

And with that, Paris herself emerged from the shadows to join Miley and Sia on the final verse. Name a more iconic trio, I’ll wait.

“That’s hot! Keep sliving! Happy New Year, bitches!” Paris shouted.

You can watch the performance here:

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Foo Fighters end 'the most difficult and tragic year that our band has ever known' with pledge to carry on without Taylor Hawkins - Yahoo Entertainment

Pat Smear, Taylor Hawkins, and Dave Grohl of Foo Fighters attend the Los Angeles premiere of 'Studio 666' at Hollywood's TCL Chinese Theatre just one month before Hawkins's death. (Photo: Rich Fury/Getty Images)
Pat Smear, Taylor Hawkins, and Dave Grohl of Foo Fighters attend the Los Angeles premiere of 'Studio 666' at Hollywood's TCL Chinese Theatre just one month before Hawkins's death. (Photo: Rich Fury/Getty Images)

After Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins died suddenly on March 25, 2022, the future of the band was in doubt, given the extremely close friendship that Hawkins shared with Foos frontman Dave Grohl as well as his crucial role in the lineup (he’d been a core member since 1997, co-writing on every album starting with 1999’s There Is Nothing Left to Lose). Four days after Hawkins’s death, Foo Fighters indefinitely canceled all of their future gigs, including a performance at the 64th annual Grammys ceremony (where they ended up bittersweetly winning three awards in absentia.)

While Grohl has occasionally made live surprise cameos — with Lionel Richie at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony, with Billie Eilish at Los Angeles’s Forum, with Sir Paul McCartney at Glastonbury — the band’s only live performances have been at two all-star tribute concerts held in London and Los Angeles this past September. But now, Foo Fighters have confirmed in an emotional social media post that they will carry on without Hawkins — even though they will understandably be a "different band."

"As we say goodbye to the most difficult and tragic year that our band has ever known, we are reminded of how thankful we are for the people that we love and cherish most, and for the loved ones who are no longer with us," the band stated. “Foo Fighters were formed 27 years ago to represent the healing power of music and a continuation of life. And for the past 27 years our fans have built a worldwide community, a devoted support system that has helped us all get through the darkest of times together. A place to share our joy and our pain, our hopes and fears, and to join in a chorus of life together through music. Without Taylor, we never would have become the band that we were — and without Taylor, we know that we're going to be a different band going forward. We also know that you, the fans, meant as much to Taylor as he meant to you. And we know that when we see you again — and we will soon — he'll be there in spirit with all of us every night.”

The year and a half leading up to Hawkins’s shocking death had been an especially bustling and prolific time for the seemingly unstoppable Foo Fighters. They released their Grammy-winning 10th album Medicine at Midnight, the Record Store Day disco covers album Hail Satin, and the horror-comedy movie Studio 666; performed at President Joe Biden’s inauguration; received the Global Icon Award at the 2021 MTV Video Music Awards; and were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by McCartney.

 Inductee Taylor Hawkins of Foo Fighters speaks onstage during the 36th annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on Oct. 30, 2021. (Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame )
Inductee Taylor Hawkins of Foo Fighters speaks onstage during the 36th annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on Oct. 30, 2021. (Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame )

The Foo Fighters were also one of the first actively touring bands to get back onstage once COVID restrictions eased up in 2021, starting with a six-song set at SoFi Stadium’s Vax Live event on May 2 that year, followed by a full 23-song show at the 610-capacity Canyon Club in Agoura, Calif., to celebrate the “reopening” of Los Angeles County nightlife on June 15. The Foos also reopened New York’s Madison Square Garden just five days after the Canyon Club show and headlined several festivals, including Lollapalooza in Chicago. Overall, they played about 40 shows in 2021, and at the time of Hawkins’s death, there had been roughly 60 dates, throughout North America, South America, Europe, and Australia, on the Foo Fighters’ calendar for 2022.

Hawkins's final show with Foo Fighters was at Lollapalooza Argentina on March 20, 2022. Five days later, he was found dead in his hotel room in Bogotá, Colombia, just hours before the Foos were set to perform at the Estéreo Picnic Festival; in lieu of the concert, candles were placed onstage that night to honor him. Two months after his death, Rolling Stone published a bombshell report titled "Inside Taylor Hawkins's Final Days as a Foo Fighter," claiming that the drummer had been on the brink of exhaustion from playing so many physically taxing, nearly three-hour shows, and had been considering scaling back his duties or even quitting the band entirely because he “knew he didn’t have it in him.” The Foos’ camp never publicly addressed these claims, but two of Hawkins's close friends who were interviewed for the piece, Pearl Jam's Matt Cameron and the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Chad Smith, blasted Rolling Stone's report.

A cause of death has still not been revealed, and Foo Fighters’ Dec. 31 statement did not mention who might replace Hawkins in the lineup or any specific plans for a new album or tour.

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Friday, December 30, 2022

Keenan Cahill, YouTube lip syncer, dies at 27 - CNN

CNN  — 

Before there were countless TikTok users lip syncing and attempting complicated choreography to pop hits, there was Keenan Cahill – lip-sync extraordinaire.

With little more than a desktop computer and pure passion, Cahill racked up millions of views on his YouTube channel by mouthing the words to hits of the day. He even got celebrities, including Katy Perry and 50 Cent, to join him.

Cahill, a charming, bespectacled musician in his own right, whose videos delighted millions, died Thursday in a Chicago hospital, his manager David Graham confirmed to CNN. He was 27.

The Chicago native had Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome, a condition that causes organs to enlarge among other symptoms, for which he received frequent treatments and underwent several surgeries. According to his verified social media accounts, he was scheduled to undergo open heart surgery earlier this month.

“Complications arose that he couldn’t overcome,” his family noted in a GoFundMe organized by his aunt and also shared on his Facebook page. The fundraiser was started to help pay for Cahill’s medical and funeral expenses.

Cahill became one of the first viral stars of the 2010s with his lip-syncing videos, filmed in his bedroom from his desk while he was still a teenager. The concept was simple: An ever-expressive Cahill would simply mouth lyrics to hits of the era like Usher’s “DJ Got Us Fallin’ in Love” and Rihanna’s “Only Girl (In the World)” with aplomb and watch the views pour in.

Keenan Cahill, then 16, pictured in the room where he became a viral sensation.

These videos often reached the singers behind the hits, beginning with Perry after Cahill lip synced to her “Teenage Dream,” one of his most popular videos. She tweeted her love for his rendition and later invited him to appear on a Pennsylvania tour stop in 2011.

Cahill recruited celebrities like 50 Cent and Ariana Grande to lip sync in his YouTube videos, and some, including Jennifer Aniston, producer David Guetta and the contestants on “America’s Next Top Model” borrowed his viral star power for their own videos. Per his manager, Cahill became one of the first YouTubers to pass 500 million views on his personal channel.

But Cahill wanted to be known for more than simply lip syncing, releasing a single of his own in 2013 and later becoming a DJ and producer.

“He never made a lot of money, but he enjoyed what he was doing and brought smiles to the faces of so many people,” his family said on GoFundMe.

Cahill performed with LMFAO at the 2011 American Music Awards.

His friends and admirers remembered Cahill’s joy and love of music. DJ Pauly D of “Jersey Shore” fame thanked him for “always making the world smile.” Perez Hilton, gossip staple of the mid-aughts internet, reshared a video the two had made years earlier to “Moves Like Jagger” by Maroon 5. And the popular Twitch user Ellohime, with whom Cahill played the video game “RimWorld” regularly on the platform, paid tribute to Cahill as a “Viking forever,” from one viral star to another.

Graham, his manager, called Cahill a “legend.”

“Keenan inspired millions worldwide by being his true self despite his short stature, disease, and age of 15-16,” he said in an email to CNN, referring to the age at which Cahill became famous.

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Kim Kardashian confesses she prefers less makeup after focusing on skincare - Geo News

Kim Kardashian confesses she prefers less makeup after focusing on skincare
Kim Kardashian confesses she prefers less makeup after focusing on skincare

Kim Kardashian has confessed that she prefers less makeup after focusing on skincare.

The reality TV star, 42, told her new pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 50, during a GOOP podcast that she feels like she became an expert before launching SKKN by Kim.

'I thought that I have learned so much in my journey and I have had the best facialists, the best aesthetician, tried every laser,' said the ex-wife of Kanye West.

'I've tried everything … and I wanted to bottle that up and take everything that I've learned and work with my favorite aesthetician... and develop products that are the next level.'

She added she has toned down her make-up in recent years after focusing on skincare during lockdown.

The reality TV star - who has created her own skincare line SKKN By Kim - has revealed the way she uses cosmetics has changed since being forced to stay at home during the COVID-19 pandemic - and she now feels more confident about wearing less on her face.

Speaking to Paltrow on her Good podcast, Kim explained she decided to focus on improving her skin rather than covering up imperfections.

She said: 'I don't wear as much make-up as I did now that I've got my skin [improved].

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Thursday, December 29, 2022

Box Office 2022: What Worked, What Flopped and What to Make of a Rollercoaster Year at the Movies - Variety

When “Everything Everywhere All At Once” premiered last spring, Alamo Drafthouse offered special screenings where attendees were gifted with packets of googly eyes. The peepers were a reference to a central character’s habit of putting the gag item on everyone and everything he can. Then when “Nope,” Jordan Peele’s twisty horror film, opened in July, the Texas-based theater chain hosted a pop-up screening at a horse ranch in Hollywood. It was a sly nod to the equine-wrangling siblings at the center of the extraterrestrial thriller. And when “The Menu,” a horror film that sends up haute cuisine, debuted last November, Alamo offered up multi-course feasts featuring slow-poached oysters and biodynamic wines for guests so they could dine in style as the character on-screen were killed off with panache.

“We’re doing everything we can to bring people back to the movies,” says Sarah Pitre, the lead film programmer at Alamo Drafthouse. “We’re passionate about movies, and we want to do more to maximize the content we’re showing. It’s about rebuilding that relationship with our customers.”

Going the extra mile appears to be paying off. As a result, in a rollercoaster year for movies, Alamo has outperformed the industry by double digits. It’s a reminder of the kind of hustle that was necessary at a time when the movie business struggled, and largely failed, to re-gain its post-pandemic footing. Overall, domestic ticket sales plunged more than 30% in 2022 from pre-COVID levels and analysts expect that Stateside revenues will top out at just over $7.5 billion. That’s largely due to the fact that studios released 40 fewer films over the last 12 months than they did in 2019 as they labored to get projects back into production in the midst of an unpredictable health crisis. The drop in theatrical releases equated to roughly the same shortfall in revenue declines. Theaters need movies to show and for much of 2022, there was too much blank space on their marquees.

“It was definitely a rebound year,” says Tearlach Hutcheson, VP of film at Studio Movie Grill. “There’s still a lack of product from studios, and it’s going to take a while to change that.”

Movie theater owners believe that next summer will be stronger, with the release of sequels including “The Guardians of the Galaxy” and “The Fast and the Furious.” However, they don’t expect things will return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024. That’s a long time to wait for a business that has been hit hard by an extended shutdown and shifting tastes as viewers get more accustomed to watching on streaming services. It’s already resulting in closures and bankruptcies — Cineworld, the owner of Regal and the second biggest exhibitor in the world, filed for Chapter 11 protection in September and some industry observers think other chains might be forced to follow suit if things don’t improve.

“You’re going to see a wave of bankruptcies,” predicts one executive, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “Private equity will probably come in, buy some of these theaters and shut down their underperforming screens and cut costs. They’re not going away, but it’s going to be rough.”

COVID and politics have fundamentally altered a business that, let’s face it, was retracting even before the virus upended things. It was an industry that had become reliant on spectacle and superheroes to sell tickets, and those cost a lot of money to deliver. As a result, the great changes that have taken place in a diminished global landscape for theatrical releases are making it increasingly difficult for movies to turn a profit. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine means that Hollywood films are no longer released in the country — that’s a blow considering that Russia is one of the 10 largest markets for movies. Even more troubling, tensions between the U.S. and China have resulted in fewer studio films getting into the country or being saddled with unappealing release windows. And the country’s rocketing rates of COVID may have negatively impacted the results for “Avatar: The Way of Water,” one of the rare Hollywood productions to get a coveted release date in China. That’s a problem because for a major blockbuster with a budget of more than $200 million, doing well in a massive market like China can be the difference between turning a profit and losing money.

“China has been tumultuous, to say the least,” says Veronika Kwan Vandenberg, president of distribution for Universal Pictures International. “There’s still a lot of opportunity in China, but it’s never a guarantee. It’s more of a cherry on top.”

It was also a year of shifting fortunes, illustrated most dramatically by Paramount Pictures, which had been largely written off as a major player after a decade of corporate changes and instability. Instead, Paramount surged back into contention, fielding the year’s highest-grossing release in “Top Gun: Maverick” and rounding that out with hits such as “Sonic the Hedgehog 2,” “The Lost City,” “Smile” and “Scream.” “Babylon,” Damien Chazelle’s $80-million look at the early days of the movie business, was its lone flop.

“It was truly a fantastic year,” says Brian Robbins, Paramount Pictures president and CEO. “And I did feel like we were living in an alternative universe.”

Indeed, Paramount’s experience seemed to unfold in another reality. Even as it prospered, most other studios were saddled with painful failures. Disney missed the mark with its two animated features, “Strange World” and “Lightyear,” both of which bombed at the box office and likely lost more than $100 million a piece. Their collapse spells trouble for family features, which had been one of the most reliable theatrical demographics before COVID upended things. There were also several attempts to launch or extend new franchises that collided with audience indifference such as Warner Bros.’ “Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore” (it turned out that nobody cared about where to find them); “Black Adam,” which saw DC’s new leadership announce that Dwayne Johnson’s anti-hero would not play a role in the next phase of its universe building; and Lionsgate’s “Moonfall,” a disaster flick that cost more than $140 million to produce and earned a catastrophic $67.3 million.

Prestige fare, the kind of titles positioned to win awards, also had a rough go at the box office. Films like “She Said,” “Bones and All” and “The Fabelmans” earned critical raves, but failed to turn those reviews into lines at the multiplexes. Those films have yet to earn $15 million globally, a dismal result that could mean that movies aimed at adults, at least ones that don’t feature special effects and explosions, will continue to migrate to streaming services where they will be better insulated from commercial considerations.

So what worked? Franchises, particularly ones with a comic book connection, continued to dominate the box office. Domestically, nine of the top 10 grossing films were sequels — the one entry that didn’t come with a Roman numeral, “The Batman,” wasn’t exactly an original movie. It’s a reboot of a character that has headlined more than a dozen films. And what worked for U.S. crowds also delivered for international ticket-buyers. Globally, eight of the highest-grossing films were also sequels, with “The Batman” and Chinese sci-fi comedy “Moon Man” proving to be the exception to the rule. These films accounted for a disproportionate amount of box office revenue. In 2022, the box office is more heavily concentrated at the top with the 10 highest grossing films contributing over 60% of the overall ticket sales compared to 47% in 2019. And that’s a problem, because those major movies are supposed to be the big draws, but for the business to keep humming, there have to be more complementary pieces.

“Studios always focused on home runs, but the singles, doubles and triples kept the distribution channels going,” said Greg Foster, an exhibition industry consultant. “In 2022, there simply weren’t enough wide releases.”

And while the summer box office got off to a hot start with “Top Gun: Maverick” and built on that success with hits such as “Jurassic World: Dominion” and “Minions: The Rise of Gru,” the business entered a prolonged slowdown in August, one it hasn’t really recovered from as the year ends. To be sure, there have been a few big hits such as “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” and “Avatar: The Way of Water,” but those successes haven’t been enough to lift other new releases. They’ve also been few and far between — for too long, there weren’t any big movies to show. As a result, the likes of “Bros,” “Devotion” and “Easter Sunday” suffered some of the worst wide-release debuts in the history of movies.

“We had some problematic lulls in 2022,” said Megan Colligan, president of Imax Entertainment. “Having a lull in August happens all the time. You can live through it. But when November and December are lulls, that’s not good.”

As for theater executives like Pitre, they’re already looking ahead to the coming months, hoping to find the kind of offbeat or unconventional offerings that can draw crowds and serve as a bridge until the next blockbuster. She thinks she may have found one in “Cocaine Bear,” a darkly comic thriller about a black bear who ingests a lot of blow and goes on a murderous rampage.

“We’ve got some pretty wild ideas for parties we can have in the lobbies of our theaters,” says Pitre. “That’s the kind of movie we love.”

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Vivienne Westwood, fashion designer and style icon, dies at 81 - CNN

Written by Nick Glass, CNN

British fashion designer and style icon Vivienne Westwood has died aged 81. She passed away peacefully, surrounded by her family, at her home in London on Thursday, according to an official statement from her eponymous company.

To the media, she was "the high priestess of punk" and the "Queen of Extreme." To the fashion world she was a beloved character who energized and pushed the boundaries of the industry until her death.

She twirled sans culottes for photographers after receiving her Order of the British Empire from the Queen in 1992. In April 1989, she made the front cover of Tatler magazine, dressed in an Aquascutum suit she said was intended for Margaret Thatcher.

Westwood, frankly, didn't give a hoot. As the oldest of ingénues with periodically orange-tinted hair and alabaster complexion, she rose disgracefully to the revered status of British national treasure.  

"I have an in-built perversity," Westwood's reported to have said, per Jon Savage's seminal "England's Dreaming: The Sex Pistols and Punk Rock," "a kind of in-built clock which always reacts against anything orthodox."

She was born Vivienne Isabel Swire in Derbyshire, England on April 8, 1941. Her mother worked as a weaver at local cotton mills; her father came from a family of shoemakers. She began making clothes for herself as a teenager.

After a term at Harrow Art School, she worked as a primary school teacher, and married a factory worker, Derek Westwood, in 1962.

But everything changed when she left her husband, and met Malcolm McLaren in 1965.

"I felt as if there were so many doors to open, and he had the key to all of them," she told Newsweek in 2004.

It's impossible to imagine 1970s Britain without their creative partnership. McLaren managed the Sex Pistols and from a shop on London's King's Road, Westwood helped develop a visual grammar for the punk movement.

"Sex Pistols" manager Malcolm McLaren with Vivienne Westwood outside Bow Street Magistrate Court in London.

"Sex Pistols" manager Malcolm McLaren with Vivienne Westwood outside Bow Street Magistrate Court in London. Credit: Bill Kennedy/Mirrorpix/Getty Images

The shop changed names — Let It Rock; Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die; Sex; Seditionaries — but you couldn't escape its impact on the street.

"It changed the way people looked," Westwood told Time magazine in 2012. "I was messianic about punk, seeing if one could put a spoke in the system in some way."

Her clothes ranged from fetishistic bondage gear to massive platform shoes and slogan T-shirts. Seditionaries famously sold a t- shirt showing the Queen with a safety pin through the royal lip.

Westwood eventually moved on. In 1981, at 40, Westwood launched her first catwalk collection with McLaren. The gender neutral clothes evoked the golden age of piracy, highwaymen, dandies and buccaneers. Westwood studied old tailoring techniques and subverted them, an approach later imitated by other British designers like John Galliano and Alexander McQueen.

Over the course of the decade, Westwood drew inspiration eclectically from Keith Haring, "Blade Runner" and the French Foreign Legion.

She introduced the mini-crini (combining the tutu and Victorian crinoline), flesh-colored tights with modesty fig leaves and signature corsetry worn as outerwear; she designed frocks for women with breasts and hips (ask Nigella Lawson or Marion Cotillard, who both wore Westwood to dramatic affect); she would experiment with Harris tweed and tartan.

Vivianne Westwood takes a bow at the end of her Spring-Summer 2003 fashion show in Paris.

Vivianne Westwood takes a bow at the end of her Spring-Summer 2003 fashion show in Paris. Credit: Bassignac/Benainous/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

John Fairchild, then the all-powerful editor of Women's Wear Daily, conferred his blessing in 1989. In his view, she was one of the six most influential designers of the 20th century, along with Yves Saint Laurent, Karl Lagerfeld, Giorgio Armani, Christian Lacroix and Emanuel Ungaro. Westwood was the only woman, the only Brit, and the only designer on his list who was not already a multi-million-dollar brand. (In 1989, she was still living in an ex-council flat in South London and was "virtually bankrupt," according to Jane Mulvagh's 1998 biography, "Vivienne Westwood: An Unfashionable Life.")

Style writer Peter York summed her up in a 1990 documentary: "All the things that fuel her, and all the obsessions she builds her work around are typically British: The whole thing about class and sex, the particular obsession with the Queen. You couldn't develop those anywhere else."

Vivienne Westwood and her husband and fellow designer Andreas Kronthaler at Paris Fashion Week in 2013.

Vivienne Westwood and her husband and fellow designer Andreas Kronthaler at Paris Fashion Week in 2013. Credit: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

In 1992, Westwood married an Austrian design student, Andreas Kronthaler, 25 years her junior. They worked as co-designers, before he took over her ready-to-wear line in 2016. In a statement released with the announcement of her death Kronthaler said, "I will continue with Vivienne in my heart. We have been working until the end and she has given me plenty of things to get on with. Thank you darling."

Westwood was an outspoken advocate for the planet, often promoting quality over quantity when it came to fashion consumption. For her Fall-Winter 2019/20 show at London Fashion Week, Westwood sent models, actors, and activists down the runway with political signs — one of which read "What's good for the planet is good for the economy."

The Vivienne Foundation, a not-for-profit company, founded by Westwood, her sons & granddaughter in late 2022, will officially launch next year. According to her spokespeople it will "honour, protect and continue the legacy of Vivienne's life, design and activism."

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T.J. Holmes files for divorce from wife amid reported affair with 'GMA3' co-anchor Amy Robach - USA TODAY

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Kim Kardashian’s daughter North, 9, is almost as tall as famous mom in sky-high stilettos for new family C... - The US Sun

KIM Kardashian's daughter North, nine, is growing fast and is nearly as tall as the Skims founder as they family lined up for new Christmas photos.

North looks so grown up in the snaps wearing silver sparkling pant shoes, and stilettos, and snagged a few solo shots with her mom.

Kim Kardashian's eldest daughter North looked so grown up in new photos

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Kim Kardashian's eldest daughter North looked so grown up in new photosCredit: Instagram/Kim Kardashian
North stood nearly as tall as Kim wearing a pantsuit and heels

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North stood nearly as tall as Kim wearing a pantsuit and heelsCredit: Instagram/Kim Kardashian

Kim, 42, took to Instagram to share her family's Christmas photos now that she has finalized her divorce from her ex-husband Kanye West, 45.

The photos included all four of their shared children, but Kanye was missing.

Kim and Kanye share North, Saint, Chicago and Psalm.

The Skims founder stunned in a sparkling silver gown with her hair returned to her usual dark shade after spending a solid few months of 2022 bleach blond.

Kim Kardashian shows off real skin texture makeup-free in new TikTok with North
Kim Kardashian poses with kids on theme park fun day in new photo

North looked so grown up in the matching pantsuit and nearly stood as tall as her mom as she wore cute stilettos.

She also goofed around and took a few funny photos with her younger sister Chicago and Kim.

Kim captioned her post: "Happy Holidays."

Even close Kardashian friend Simon Huck commented on the post: "Omg, North is so tall!"

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His post racked up over 4K likes and other fans commented.

One remarked: "I thought the same thing."

Another said: "Right? I was like, what happened? Who is this tall kid?"

Others remarked how grown up North appeared in the adult outfit.

MINI ME

Although fans loved the Christmas photos, they slammed Kim for letting North get a full glam makeover.

In November, fans called out Kim after North released a TikTok video of herself getting ready and using products from her mother's skincare line SKNN.

Soon after the video began trending on social media, critics reprimanded North for acting maturely and Kim for being passive about it.

One person criticized: "I don’t think she is supposed to be using all of this at a very young age!"

Another wrote: "When your mom controls even your skincare options... Can we say 'free promotions?'"

A third wrote: "The chokehold Barbies had on me as a 9-year-old, that's all I cared about!! I don't know anything about a skincare routine."

CONJURE-GATE

In the same month critics slammed Kim for North's Get Ready With Me TikTok, Kim was also shaded for allowing her daughter to watch an R-rated film.

North revealed to her fans via TikTok that she began each day watching her favorite movie, The Conjuring 3: The Devil Made Me Do It.

The film is rated R by the Motion Picture Association because it featured "terror, violence and some disturbing images".

Before the TikTok post was deleted, fans took to social media to express their concern.

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One fan asked: "Why is North West's favorite movie the Conjuring 3?"

Another Tweeted: "North West’s favorite movie being 'The Conjuring 3' was something I simply never would have guessed in my entire life."

Even Kardashian friend Simon Huck chimed in to comment on how grown-up North appears

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Even Kardashian friend Simon Huck chimed in to comment on how grown-up North appearsCredit: Instagram/Kim Kardashian
Kanye West was missing from the family photos as Kim finalized the divorce from her ex-husband this year

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Kanye West was missing from the family photos as Kim finalized the divorce from her ex-husband this yearCredit: Getty
Kim has been slammed for allowing North to be too glammed up at nine

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Kim has been slammed for allowing North to be too glammed up at nineCredit: Instagram / Kim Kardashian

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'Ozark' Actress Celebrates 3rd Wedding Anniversary With Touching Throwback Photo - Yahoo Life

Julia Garner is honoring her husband, Mark Foster, in a sweet Instagram post.

Julia Garner and Mark Foster are celebrating three years of marriage. 

The Ozark actress, 28, took to Instagram to share a throwback photo of her and her husband, 38, to honor him on their third wedding anniversary

The photo featured blurred lights in the background as the couple walked up the aisle after saying "I do." Garner rocked her curly blonde locks as she donned a fluffy white coat and held onto a bouquet of white roses while smiling at the camera. The leading man of Foster the People looked dapper while wearing a simple black and white tuxedo that featured a white boutonnière on the side.

 💫 3 years today 💫," Garner wrote in the caption. 

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Many friends and family took to the comments to wish the duo a happy anniversary, including fashion designer, Tan France, who wrote, "Happy Anniversary 🥰"

Foster also chimed in, writing, "my sweet bride 😘" 

Actor Taylor Lautner shared a red heart emoji in the comments.

"Happy anniversary lovebirds ❤️❤️❤️," one fan wrote. 

Garner and Foster originally met at the Sundance Film Festival in 2013, but it wasn't until a few years later when they started dating after the singer popped into Garner's Instagram DM's, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The couple then got married in December 2019 where they said "I do" in an intimate setting at a courthouse in the big apple. 

"We went back and forth from having a big wedding to eloping in Vegas," Garner told Vogue in a 2020 interview. "We ultimately decided to get married at City Hall in New York City, just like my parents did 40 years ago."

Happy anniversary to these two!

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'Avatar: The Way of Water' Hits $1 Billion Globally, Fastest 2022 Release to Reach Box Office Milestone - Variety

Avatar: The Way of Water” has sailed past $1 billion in global ticket in just 14 days, becoming the fastest movie this year to cross the coveted box office milestone.

In total, only three films released in 2022 managed to surpass the billion-dollar mark, a short list that includes “Top Gun: Maverick” (which took 31 days to clear the benchmark) and “Jurassic World Dominion” (which took more than four months to join the club). By comparison, nine movies released in 2019 surpassed $1 billion worldwide. “The Way of Water” is the fastest to hit the mark since 2021’s “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” which took 12 days. Only six movies in history have cleared $1 billion in their first two weeks of release.

James Cameron’s long-delayed sequel to “Avatar” opened in mid-December with $134 million in North America and $435 million globally, and it’s remained a huge draw in the days since its release. So far, the Disney and 20th Century film has generated $317.1 million in North America and $712.7 million overseas, bringing its global tally to $1.025 billion. It’s surpassed “Jurassic World Dominion” as the second highest-grossing movie of the year, and it’s the third highest of the pandemic era.

“Avatar 2” looks to stay strong into the new year, which is necessary to justify its massive price tag. Cameron estimated the $350 million-budgeted movie (not including at least $100 million in marketing fees) needs to generate roughly $2 billion to break even, though analysts believe the threshold to profitability is probably closer to $1.5 billion. There’s a lot riding on “The Way of Water,” not just because of its huge price tag, but also because it’s the first of three planned follow-ups in Cameron’s otherworldly series.

The original “Avatar” was released in 2009 and stands as the highest-grossing release in history with $2.97 billion worldwide. The follow-up film, which arrived on the big screen 13 years later, will struggle to near those heights because the global box office hasn’t fully rebounded from the pandemic. Moreover, China, a major theatrical market, is experiencing a resurgence of the virus and Russia, another big territory, won’t have access to the film.

“Avatar” stars Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña and Sigourney Weaver returned for the sequel, which follows the Sully family as they head underwater to battle the elements and keep the Na’vi safe from humans. Other cast members include Stephen Lang, Kate Winslet, Edie Falco and Jemaine Clement.

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Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Ryan Seacrest Says CNN Axing Alcohol During New Year's Eve Broadcast Is a 'Good Idea' - Yahoo Entertainment

Ryan Seacrest New Years Eve Broadcasts
Ryan Seacrest New Years Eve Broadcasts

Jeff Neira via Getty

2023 is right around the corner and Ryan Seacrest is ready to ring in the new year sans alcohol.

In November, Variety reported that CNN was cutting down on drinking both on and off-camera during its New Year's Eve programming. Seacrest, the longtime host of ABC's Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve, told EW that he commends the network's decision.

"I don't advocate drinking when one is on the air," he told the magazine. "I don't know how that started as a tradition but it's probably a good idea [to scale back], CNN."

RELATED: Andy Cohen Plans to 'Cocktail It Up' on CNN's New Year's Eve Show Despite Reports of Drink Limits

Seacrest, who said he and other ABC stars won't imbibe until after 1:05 a.m., admitted that viewers may not agree with CNN's choice to discourage alcohol consumption among its anchors and, in fact, probably "wish they would drink more."

"There's some pretty respectable people or at least one, right?" joked Seacrest, 48, of CNN's New Year's Eve Live, which is co-hosted by friend duo Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen. "I think there's a serious journalist and then a friend of mine who has a lot of fun, but it's probably a good idea."

The Live with Kelly and Ryan co-host speculated that CNN's decision to limit alcohol — which CNN executives made to uphold the network's respectability and credibility, per Variety — may have had something to do with an incident that occurred during last year's programming.

Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper
Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper

Andy Cohen Instagram

RELATED: Andy Cohen's 'Only' Regret on New Year's Eve Was Calling Out Ryan Seacrest: 'Stupid and Drunk'

Last year, Cohen, 54, who said he was "overserved," took a jab at Seacrest and ABC, saying: "If you look behind me, you'll see Ryan Seacrest's group of losers performing. I'm sorry but if you're watching ABC, you're watching nothing."

Seacrest told EW that the New Year's Eve Live hosts "had something to say about my show at one point," likely referring to the now-infamous incident. The host added that he doesn't "think they would say what they said about our performers if they weren't drinking."

"I might send them some Casa Dragones Tequila just to tempt them while they're on the air," Seacrest joked.

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According to Cohen, Seacrest's tequila gift won't be necessary, however. The Watch What Happens Live host — who said that his comment about Seacrest was the "only thing that I regret saying" on New Year's Eve last year — isn't ready to give up his boozy tradition just yet.

"My only direction is to have fun," Cohen told PEOPLE last month of the upcoming show. "That's what I plan to do and I'm happy to cocktail it up."

"I think people enjoy seeing me feed Anderson shots and that's on the menu," he added.

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Monday, December 26, 2022

The most satisfying movies of 2022, from 'Avatar' to 'Everything Everywhere' - CNN

CNN  — 

The movie business is undergoing a transformation, fueled by declining box-office revenues as more people prefer consuming entertainment in the comfort of their homes. That also merits looking back at the movies released in 2022 in slightly different fashion, from the most disappointing titles to, here, the most satisfying.

“Satisfying,” in this case, differs from the traditional “best” lists that many critics assemble, since it allows for including more populist movies that excelled by nicely accomplishing what they set out to do.

As it happens, that approach also reflects a year where many of the traditional awards-bait movies were flawed in one way or another, and some of the highest-profile commercial fare (see “The Batman” and Marvel’s Thor, Black Panther and Doctor Strange sequels) didn’t fully live up to expectations to varying degrees.

As for the sequels that did make this list, in a movie business built on franchises and relying on familiar properties, the challenge of pulling off those extensions well is both vital to the industry’s financial health and, creatively speaking, deserves applause when it’s done right.

In terms of omissions, it’s worth noting that there were numerous releases this year from acclaimed directors – including Darren Aronofsky, Noah Baumbach, Damien Chazelle, Antoine Fuqua, Martin McDonagh, Sam Mendes, and David O. Russell – that were seen, considered and didn’t make the cut. Indeed, if there was a bias here this year, it was toward movies that broadly entertained, with some exceptions.

So what made the “nice” list? In alphabetical order:

“Apollo 10 ½: A Space Age Childhood”: Richard Linklater’s rotoscope-animated look back at his youth growing up in the shadow of NASA is the kind of breezy nostalgic exercise that really illustrates what life was like back then, during an era when TVs were small and before everyone took a phone everywhere.

"Avatar: The Way of Water" returned to Pandora, 13 years later.

“Avatar: The Way of Water”: Overcoming skepticism about a 13-years-later encore with a wave of dazzling spectacle, James Cameron again takes a pretty basic story and turns it into an epic, state-of-the-art demonstration of movie magic that practically demands you get off the couch, put down the remote and drive to a theater to see it on the biggest screen you can.

“Everything Everywhere All at Once”: Not everything worked about this foray into alternative universes and paths not taken, but this action-comedy-sci-fi mashup represented one of the year’s most inventive efforts and happily struck a chord with audiences, while showcasing the remarkable Michelle Yeoh and the uplifting comeback of one-time Indiana Jones kid Ke Huy Quan.

Gabriel LaBelle as Sammy Fabelman in Steven Spielberg's "The Fabelmans."

“The Fabelmans”: Steven Spielberg’s deeply personal window into how his youthful experiences forged him into the filmmaker he became is obviously filled with nostalgia, but it also provides a welcome ode to the power of movies. A bit scattered in its format, the movie nevertheless works as a superhero origin story for a director whose half-century of filmmaking has etched so many moments into our memories.

“Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery”: Writer-director Rian Johnson has managed to reload and still capture the whimsy, wit and fun of his original whodunit, with Daniel Craig as the lone holdover in a movie that really should have spent more time in theaters before landing on Netflix.

Emma Thompson and Daryl McCormack in "Good Luck to You, Leo Grande."

“Good Luck to You, Leo Grande”: Sent directly to Hulu, this two-hander for Emma Thompson as a widow who retains a sex worker (Daryl McCormack) and peppers him with questions about his life and work was sweet, funny and generally delightful, a little gem in a year with a lot of rhinestones. (Thompson, as a footnote, is also smashing in “Roald Dahl’s Matilda the Musical.”)

“RRR”: Like “Avatar,” don’t let the three-hour-plus running time scare you off (besides, you’ll most likely watch it on Netflix anyway). This Indian historical fantasy has it all, including an abundance of energy, wild action sequences and exhausting dance numbers. A film that draws upon any number of genres, from superhero to western, and still manages to feel fresh and invigorating.

Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Mobley in "Till."

“Till”: Danielle Deadwyler’s wrenching performance as Mamie Till Mobley, grappling with the murder of her son Emmett in Mississippi in 1955, elevated and brought renewed attention to this tragic story, in a movie that sensitively deals with the murder in order to focus on how it gave a civil-rights activist her voice.

“Top Gun: Maverick”: Despite coming 36 years after the original (time flies too, apparently), this sequel waited through the pandemic in order to share the experience with movie-goers and rewarded them with a stirring flight that gave Tom Cruise a perfectly tuned encore, while flying what amount to a rescue mission for movie theaters. Frankly, it would be nice to leave well enough alone after that, but nothing that makes that much money can be allowed to stay grounded for long.

Pixar's "Turning Red" featured its young protagonist transforming into a giant red panda.

“Turning Red”: Pixar hasn’t been treated particularly well by its parent studio in the Disney+ era, which explains why this wonderfully warm and very funny coming-of-age story – a genre so overworked it’s really hard to do this well – was funneled directly to streaming. The film works on multiple levels, but transforming into a giant panda turns out to be a wonderful metaphor for the indignities and confusion associated with puberty.

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