Jumat, 15 November 2019

‘The Crown’ Executes a Peaceful Palace Coup - The New York Times

Salisbury, ENGLAND — The corgis just wouldn’t behave. Mid-take, they ran off, causing general hilarity. “Sit, sit!” Olivia Colman called out.

“Strong voice!” prompted the dog handler, standing nearby.

“Yes, thenk you,” said Colman demurely, in her best Queen Elizabeth accent. She frowned imperiously at the frolicking dogs. “SIT!” They sat.

It was a chilly November day last year, and the new cast of the Netflix series “The Crown” were arrayed across the gilded couches and crimson velvet chairs of a sumptuous state room at Wilton House, a 16th-century stately home standing in for Buckingham Palace. A precisely composed group — the Queen (Colman), Prince Philip (Tobias Menzies), Lord Mountbatten (Charles Dance) seated; Princess Anne (Erin Doherty) and the Queen’s aide Michael Adeane (David Rintoul) standing behind them — faced Prince Charles (Josh O’Connor). Like the central figure in the van Dyck painting of an aristocratic family hanging behind him, Charles cut a lonely, isolated figure, setting the tone for an episode in which he is obliged to leave university in Cambridge, and go to Aberystwyth to learn Welsh, in preparation for his investiture as Prince of Wales.

With its artful interweaving of British history and domestic angst, the scene was vintage “Crown.” Created and written by Peter Morgan, the series has spent two acclaimed seasons exploring the nation’s politics and social mores through the prism of Queen Elizabeth II’s reign, while offering a voyeuristic glimpse of the lives behind the royal family’s impassive facade.

The eagerly awaited third installment of “The Crown” debuts Sunday on Netflix, and much will be familiar: the exacting historical detail, the sumptuous interiors of palaces and manor houses.

But one major aspect will not. The actors who play the principal characters have all been replaced for Seasons 3 and 4.

It’s the first manifestation of what has been the show’s plan from the beginning: to regularly recast Elizabeth, Philip and other royals to better reflect the characters’ advancing ages.

“I think that the longest you can believe an actor in an aging part is about 20 years,” Morgan said in a telephone interview. “Right from the start, we decided that if it all worked and kept going, we would recast every two seasons.”

But it still feels unsettling, at least at first. “The Crown” winks at this by opening Season 3 as the Queen reviews her image on a new stamp set alongside the previous one, which shows the profile of Claire Foy, who played Elizabeth for the first two seasons.

“A great many changes, but there we are,” Elizabeth says, swatting away an underling’s compliments. “Age is rarely kind to anyone.”

The swap is also something of a gamble for a series that achieved rapturous acclaim for its principal actors, notably Foy, who won a Screen Actor’s Guild award and was nominated for an Emmy. But Morgan and his producers found a pretty sure casting bet in Colman, who is adored by the British public, and last year found broader fame when she won an Oscar for her portrayal of another English queen (Anne) in “The Favourite.” (There is at least one person who didn’t approve of the choice: Charles Moore, a well-known journalist and Margaret Thatcher biographer, wrote in The Daily Telegraph that Colman’s “distinctly left-wing face” made her unsuitable for the part.)

“Olivia has a similar, uncannily intuitive understanding of the role, and a stillness that Claire has,” Suzanne Mackie, an executive producer on the series, said in a telephone interview. “They feel like everyday women, that we should somehow know them, yet as they become the sovereign, they become unknowable and aloof.” (In a review of the new season, The Independent wrote that “there is something dazzlingly banal” about Colman’s portrayal of Elizabeth.)

Colman, who plays a more experienced ruler with a chillier, more confident mien, said in a sit-down interview last fall that she was trying not to think about following in Foy’s footsteps. “I am a massive fan; Claire was just breathtaking in that part,” she said. Sounding rather like her character, she added, “But you just plow on.”

Ben Caron, a director and executive producer on the show, said in a telephone interview that it had been “pretty terrifying” for the new cast. “Not only do you have the real-life ghost of the character, you have the ghost of the previous actor,” he said.

Helena Bonham Carter, who took over the role of Princess Margaret from Vanessa Kirby, echoed that sentiment. “My first thought was that I don’t look much like Margaret and definitely nothing like Vanessa,” she said in a telephone interview. “I am about five feet shorter and two feet wider. But they didn’t seem perturbed.”

After reading some of the scripts, she said, she was captivated by Margaret’s complexities and contradictions, and she embarked on a period of “forensic” research, meeting friends of the princess and working through a list of books that Kirby had recommended.

“It’s very dynamic to be able to capture different aspects of a character through different people,” she said. “And I loved taking over the part from Vanessa, who was a huge help to me. We could compare notes and say: ‘What about this? How would she react to that?’”

(Sometimes there were more practical problems with the cast changes. The production initially attempted to use contact lenses and special effects to change Colman’s and Bonham Carter’s brown eyes to blue, like those of Foy and Kirby. “But then it didn’t feel like the actors we loved,” Caron said. “So much of their performance is through subtle facial expression that we decided to just live with it.”)

“The Crown” is both essentially historically accurate and also clearly fiction. “It’s not a documentary,” Morgan said. “But I try to make everything as truthful as possible even if I can’t know it’s entirely accurate.”

Or as Erin Doherty, who gives a memorably acerbic portrayal of the young Princess Anne, remarked on-set between takes: “After a while you have to drop your thoughts about who they are — you have to accept we are Peter Morgan’s royal family.”

“The Crown” was conceived from the start to span six seasons, each covering roughly a decade of Elizabeth’s life as a monarch, and it is Morgan’s particular take on each season’s epoch that has given the series its distinctive mix of the personal and the political.

Season 3 begins with the election of Harold Wilson and a Labor government in 1964 and ends with the Queen’s silver jubilee celebrations of 1977. Along the way, it layers globally monumental moments, like the 1969 moon landing, with lesser-known national events (the horrific avalanche of coal waste in Aberfan in Wales, which killed 116 children and 28 adults); political intrigue (the miners’ strike of 1973-74); and family drama, including the breakup of Princess Margaret’s marriage to Lord Snowdon and the thwarted romance of Prince Charles and Camilla Shand.

Each episode could be watched as a stand-alone drama, with overlapping plots that resonate in unexpected ways; these correspondences and echoes give the show its emotional heart, Morgan said. “Mapping out the season is the part I like best.”

Before writing begins, Morgan spends six months on a detailed timeline of the period that includes significant royal milestones like marriages and deaths, as well as major political and social events. Once Morgan has begun to write, a bigger team, including researchers, script editors and producers, are closely involved in the process.

“While we were making Season 3, we were probably at Peter’s house most days,” Mackie said. “It’s not enough to have the historical facts of the story; you have to find where the tension, the human side might be. When Charles goes to Wales, for example, it becomes not just about a young man learning Welsh for political expedience, but about a young man finding his own voice.”

Morgan said that when he considers an episode, he ponders what might have “intimately intersected” with the Queen. “You think about the Kennedy assassination, Carnaby Street, but what is the connection there?” he asked rhetorically. “But when I discovered that the astronauts from the moon landing had come to visit the palace with terrible colds, that was priceless.”

“At first you have all the same ideas as everyone else about the decade,” he added. “It’s like running a bath in an old house; at first all the rusty water comes out, then the clear.”

The moon-landing episode focuses strongly on Prince Philip, with a tour-de-force performance from Menzies as a man suffering from a crisis of identity, for whom the astronauts’ achievements come to represent his own missed chances. Other episodes focus on Princess Margaret, and the later part of the series gives considerable weight to the young Prince Charles, sympathetically portrayed by O’Connor as a sensitive and insecure young man at odds with the implacable imperatives of royal behavior.

“There is a difficult moral question at the heart of his life,” O’Connor said in a telephone interview. “Being a king in waiting means waiting for his mother to die.”

But the Queen is always the center of gravity, Morgan said. “Every time I try to write an episode that doesn’t involve her, it runs aground.”

What is different in Season 3, he added, is that “it has gone from being a story about a woman finding her way, navigating with her partner, to a woman at the heart of a family drama. I look at ‘The Sopranos’ or ‘Succession,’ and think, they are just different versions of what we are doing.”

Morgan said he tried not to write with a sense of retrospective knowledge of, say, Brexit. (In Episode 8, the Queen goes to Paris to petition President Georges Pompidou to allow Britain to join the European Union.) “I think the minute you write prescriptively, it loses power,” he said. He paused. “But there are times. In Episode 10, Philip makes a speech about politicians and I probably gave that one coat of extra paint that might angle towards the complete failure of the political class at the moment.”

But for the most part, he said, “what writing ‘The Crown’ teaches you is that Britain has been in a permanent state of crisis. We talk about a divided country, here and in the U.S., but moments of unity, when the majority of the country is in agreement, are really rare. We invent a settled past.”

But as Morgan wrote in his 2013 play “The Audience,” which inspired the series, the reigning monarch represents “an unbroken line, the constant presence” that represents that settled past and serene future. That’s the power of the crown — and “The Crown.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/15/arts/television/the-crown-netflix-season-3.html

2019-11-15 10:00:00Z
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Halsey Supports Taylor Swift Over Row With Scooter Braun and Scott Borchetta: 'This is Just Mean' - Billboard

Halsey is in TayTay’s corner. 

Hours after Taylor Swift took to social media to accuse Scooter Braun and Scott Borchetta of blocking her from performing her older music, the “Without Me” singer has joined Team Taylor.

“Not only are we looking at an awful business move…but this is just mean. This is punishment. This is hoping to silence her from speaking about things by dangling this over her head,” Halsey writes in her Instagram Stories

“These people are protected because they inspire complicity with fear. Banking on the illusion that people will not stand up for her. That the world will say she is over reacting. You’re barking up the wrong tree. It is her grace and patience in these moments that make her Artist of the Decade.”

Halsey drove her point home by posting a clip of herself singing along to “Mean,” vintage Swift from 2010’s Speak Now. 

Earlier, Swift claimed Braun and Borchetta wouldn’t allow her to access her back catalogue for a Netflix special and an upcoming American Music Awards performance, where she will be honored as Artist of the Decade.

In a lengthy social post, she wrote, "I've been planning to perform a medley of my hits throughout the decade on the show. Scott Borchetta and Scooter Braun have now said that I'm not allowed to perform my old songs on television because they claim that would be re-recording my music before I'm allowed to next year.”

Also, she called on her fans to get involved. “Please ask them for help with this. I’m hoping that maybe they can talk some sense into the men who are exercising tyrannical control over someone who just wants to play the music she wrote.”

It didn't take long for help to arrive. A Change.org petition started by fan Jade Rossi has raced past 50,000 signatures 

Swift isn’t on best terms with Scooter and Scott. The “Shake It Off” singer had a very public spat with the pair in June with the news of Scooter Braun’s acquisition of Big Machine Label Group, and with it Swift’s six-album catalogue. 

The pop singer has some bad blood with Braun going back several years.

Braun and Borchetta have yet to respond to Taylor’s latest claims.


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https://www.billboard.com/articles/news/8543736/halsey-supports-taylor-swift-over-scooter-braun-scott-borchetta

2019-11-15 07:30:47Z
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Kamis, 14 November 2019

Disney+ warns viewers of 'outdated cultural depictions' in old movies - Engadget

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It's no secret that some of Disney's old cartoons and movies contain racist and other offensive elements, and it was a mystery how the company would address the issue when its streaming service launched. To all of those who wondered: here's your answer. The entertainment giant has added a short warning at the end of the description for titles with problematic themes -- like Dumbo, Peter Pan, The Jungle Book and Lady and the Tramp, which perpetuated harmful racial stereotypes -- that says: "This program is presented as originally created. It may contain outdated cultural depictions."

As The Washington Post noted, the company's decision not to censor those titles was met with both praise and criticism. (You won't find the notorious Song of the South, criticized for glorifying plantation life and slavery, on the service, though.) Some think that Disney is taking accountability for its past by showing those titles as they were shown back then with a warning attached. But critics point out that the wording used is vague at best -- Gayle Wald, head of American studies department at George Washington University, said the company should've been more explicit about its intended message.

To emphasize his point about Disney's "dismissive" warning, Twitter user @unicornmantis posted the company's notice right next to Warner Brothers'. While Disney kept it vague and used the word "may," WB's warning acknowledged the ethnic and racial prejudices depicted in old cartoons like Tom and Jerry. "These depictions were wrong then and are wrong today," it reads.

Source: Disney+
Coverage: Gamespot
In this article: Disney+, entertainment, internet
All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
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https://www.engadget.com/2019/11/14/disney-outdated-cultural-depictions-warning/

2019-11-14 12:35:58Z
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'The Bachelorette': Tyler Cameron Told His Instagram Following That He's Looking For Love - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Tyler Cameron was a fan favorite on Hannah Brown’s season of The Bachelorette. When the reality star broke off her engagement with her season winner Jed Wyatt, Bachelor Nation was hopeful that she and Cameron, her runner-up, would get together. But shortly after the season finale, Cameron began to pursue supermodel Gigi Hadid. The two spent a good amount of time together until recently, when Cameron hinted that he’s a single man.

Tyler Cameron | Emma McIntyre/E! Entertainment/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
Tyler Cameron | Emma McIntyre/E! Entertainment/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Thanks to his Bachelorette beginnings, Cameron’s fans will probably always be especially curious about his romantic relationships.

Tyler Cameron is looking for love

Recently, Cameron hosted a fan Q&A on his Instagram and one fan asked him if he’s currently “looking for love.”

“Of course,” he responded. “Can’t wait to have that person you tell the good news to first. For now it’s mama and Harley [his dog].”

The rest of Tyler Cameron’s Instagram Q&A

Another fan asked Cameron if it’s “hard having all [his] choices judged by the media.”

“It can be challenging but you have to make yourself happy first and foremost. You have to sleep with your decisions. No one else. I am doing my best to make my family proud, my friends proud, and everyone of y’all that support me proud. This life is uncharted waters for me and my family but with my values and beliefs, I know I’ll be alright,” he wrote.

“Best thing to come out of being on the bachelorette?” asked another fan.

“Being able to share special moments with the ones that mean the most to me. Got to take my brother to Paris. Show mom and pops the city and so much more,” responded the model.

Another Instagram user wanted to know what Cameron’s favorite physical feature about himself is.

“My long a*s toe. Can pick up anything with that finger looking thing. Can also pinch very hard with it,” he responded.

Another fan wanted to know about Cameron’s food touring company, ABC Food Tours.

“What is one of your favorite memories about abc food tours!?” they asked.

“So it was towards the end of our tour. We just got done doing the cha cha slide in the park and me and one of the students are eating some pizza together watching skateboarders in the park,” responded Cameron. “We were going back and forth in conversation and all of a sudden he looked up at me and said this is the best day he’s ever had. When he said that, my heart sunk. Just didn’t realize the impact we were having. It completely moved me. Forever grateful for that moment with that student.”

Cameron also told his following that he’s “going to be spending some time in LA.” But wouldn’t spill the beans as to why. When a fan asked he responded: “Got a great job walking dogs!”

So he may be stepping away from his ABC FT duties for the time being. In the meantime, We’ll have to keep an eye out for Cameron’s mysterious project in Los Angeles in the coming weeks.

Read more: Former Bachelorette Hannah Brown Doesn’t Want To Be An Influencer And Doesn’t Want To Date An Influencer

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https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/bachelorette-tyler-cameron-told-instagram-hes-looking-for-love.html/

2019-11-14 13:03:09Z
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Why Is It Taking Disney+ So Long To Arrive In Europe? - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Some found it perplexing that Disney decided to launch first in The Netherlands during the early fall to test the waters of European public reaction. For many, that seemed strange from a business perspective when the U.S. has been chomping at the bit for the service to release.

The real reason for the debut in The Netherlands was because they have superior internet infrastructure, plus it is a densely populated country. Disney figured it would be a good beta testing ground in advance for American audiences.

No doubt the rest of Europe thought they’d be getting Disney+ not long after. Reports say the platform won’t be in the rest of Europe immediately due to some complicated European Union rules. Also, Disney+ across the pond may look slightly different from the U.S. library as a result.

Disney has to include 30% European Union sanctioned content

The Disney+ (Plus) logo is seen displayed on a smartphone.
Disney+ | Rafael Henrique/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Europe still has a lot of national pride in the content they offer to the masses in their respective countries. Some of it sometimes exceeds American content in terms of quality, particularly in U.K., a country the U.S. still pillages from.

Because of the new streaming universe, Europe has had to look at what that means in terms of providing the same type of national content they produce. Should they have capitulated to the newest avalanche of streaming services this month alone, they would have been watching 98% American-produced content.

Apple TV+ is mostly American-produced shows, and Disney+ will be as about as American as it gets. Recent European Union rules say 30 percent of any streaming content there has to be produced or acquired in Europe.

Disney+ now has to wait to debut in Europe to figure out how they’ll capitulate to these rules. There’s every indication they’ll have to produce some content there, which would make Disney+ differ from what American audiences see when traveling overseas.

Will Disney produce new content overseas, or just acquire it?

Disney may just pay out surcharges to acquire content being produced in Europe that fits the studio bill. These surcharges can become quite expensive, though, which might make the Mouse House balk a little more.

Netflix has been fighting the same thing in Europe, including going to court in Germany to override the charges. They ultimately lost and had to capitulate to the EU rules after all.

With Disney already being one of the wealthiest corporations in the world, some might wonder why they’d choose to fight these surcharges when the benefits may outweigh the financial inconveniences. Most likely, they won’t fight them in court and just find some creative ways to work around the issue.

Millions of more subscribers are at stake here, giving the potential for Disney+ to become a global leader in entertainment streaming. What can Disney acquire there, though? Should they produce new content, and would American audiences have a chance to see it?

One thing seen with Netflix is some internationally-produced shows sometimes catch on through the American version of the platform.

What do the European people want from Disney+?

At this point, it would be interesting to see polling data on what the European populace would prefer to see on Disney+ next year. Since the service won’t debut in most parts of Europe until next year — Western Europe reportedly next March — would the people there prefer seeing all American content, or do they really want locally-produced movies/shows?

When it comes to the classic Disney catalog, it’s always been universally acclaimed. Based on this, it seems most Europeans would want the majority of what Disney+ is offering here. No doubt this includes the original Marvel and Star Wars content.

If Disney creates new shows in Europe to fill the 30 percent quota, those shows might not be nearly as popular. Then again, it could spark a runaway hit that Disney+ will place on the American platform someday. Coming from Europe, it might be more human-oriented programming than anything from Marvel or the Star Wars realms.

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https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/why-is-it-taking-disney-so-long-to-arrive-in-europe.html/

2019-11-14 11:01:58Z
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CMAs 2019 winners: Garth Brooks named entertainer of the year - KABC-TV

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Garth Brooks took home the top honor at the 2019 CMA Awards, beating out four huge names in country music for entertainer of the year.

Eric Church, Chris Stapleton, Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban were also nominated. Had she won, Underwood would have been the first woman to win entertainer of the year since 2011, when Taylor Swift took home the honor.

Brooks singled out Kelsea Ballerini and Luke Combs during his acceptance speech as some of the country artists he respected the most.

Scroll down to see a full list of winners from Wednesday night's show.

During a special early presentation on "Good Morning America" earlier in the day, Maddie & Tae revealed which acts prevailed in two categories: "Old Town Road (Remix)" by Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus won CMA Musical Event of the Year, and "Rainbow" by Kacey Musgraves took home the trophy for CMA Music Video of the Year.


FULL LIST OF 2019 CMA AWARDS WINNERS, NOMINEES

ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR
WINNER: Garth Brooks
Eric Church
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
Keith Urban

SINGLE OF THE YEAR
Award goes to Artist(s), Producer(s), and Mix Engineer

"Burning Man" - Dierks Bentley Feat. Brothers Osborne
Producers: Ross Copperman, Jon Randall, Arturo Buenahora, Jr.
Mix Engineer: F. Reid Shippen
"GIRL" - Maren Morris
Producer: Greg Kurstin
Mix Engineer: Greg Kurstin
WINNER: "God's Country" - Blake Shelton
Producer: Scott Hendricks
Mix Engineer: Justin Niebank

"Millionaire" - Chris Stapleton
Producers: Dave Cobb, Chris Stapleton
Mix Engineer: Vance Powell
"Speechless" - Dan + Shay
Producers: Dan Smyers, Scott Hendricks
Mix Engineer: Jeff Juliano

ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Award goes to Artist and Producers

Center Point Road - Thomas Rhett
Producers: Dann Huff, Jesse Frasure, Thomas Rhett, Julian Bunetta, The Stereotypes, Cleve Wilson
Cry Pretty - Carrie Underwood
Producers: David Garcia, Jim Jonsin, Carrie Underwood
Dan + Shay - Dan + Shay
Producers: Dan Smyers, Scott Hendricks
Desperate Man - Eric Church
Producers: Jay Joyce, Arturo Buenahora, Jr.
WINNER: GIRL - Maren Morris
Producers: busbee, Maren Morris, Greg Kurstin

SONG OF THE YEAR
Award goes to Songwriters

WINNER: "Beautiful Crazy"
Songwriters: Luke Combs, Wyatt B. Durrette III, Robert Williford

"GIRL"
Songwriters: Maren Morris, Sarah Aarons, Greg Kurstin
"God's Country"
Songwriters: Devin Dawson, Jordan Schmidt, Michael Hardy
"Rainbow"
Songwriters: Natalie Hemby, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves
"Tequila"
Songwriters: Dan Smyers, Nicolle Galyon, Jordan Reynolds

FEMALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR

Kelsea Ballerini
Miranda Lambert
Maren Morris
WINNER: Kacey Musgraves


Carrie Underwood

MALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR

Dierks Bentley
WINNER: Luke Combs
Thomas Rhett
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban

VOCAL GROUP OF THE YEAR

Lady Antebellum
Little Big Town
Midland
WINNER: Old Dominion
Zac Brown Band

VOCAL DUO OF THE YEAR

Brooks & Dunn
Brothers Osborne
WINNER: Dan + Shay
Florida Georgia Line
Maddie & Tae

MUSICAL EVENT OF THE YEAR
Award goes to Artists and Producer(s)

"All My Favorite People" - Maren Morris (feat. Brothers Osborne)
Producers: Maren Morris, busbee
"Brand New Man" - Brooks & Dunn (with Luke Combs)
Producer: Dann Huff
"Dive Bar" - Garth Brooks & Blake Shelton
Producer: Garth Brooks
WINNER: "Old Town Road (Remix)" - Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus
Producers: YoungKio, Michael Trent Reznor, Atticus Matthew Ross

"What Happens In A Small Town" - Brantley Gilbert & Lindsay Ell
Producer: Dann Huff

MUSICIAN OF THE YEAR

WINNER: Jenee Fleenor, Fiddle
Paul Franklin, Steel Guitar
Mac McAnally, Guitar
Ilya Toshinskiy, Banjo/Guitar
Derek Wells, Guitar

MUSIC VIDEO OF THE YEAR
Award goes to Artist(s) and Director

"Burning Man" - Dierks Bentley Feat. Brothers Osborne
Director: Wes Edwards
"GIRL" - Maren Morris
Director: Dave Meyers
"God's Country" - Blake Shelton
Director: Sophie Muller
WINNER: "Rainbow" - Kacey Musgraves
Director: Hannah Lux Davis

"Some Of It" - Eric Church
Director: Reid Long and John Peets

NEW ARTIST OF THE YEAR

Cody Johnson
WINNER: Ashley McBryde
Midland
Carly Pearce
Morgan Wallen

"THE 53RD ANNUAL CMA AWARDS" - FINALISTS FOR BROADCAST PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR


NATIONAL

"The Blair Garner Show" (Blair Garner and "Off Eric" Garner) - Westwood One
WINNER: "The Bobby Bones Show" (Bobby Bones, Amy Brown, "Lunchbox" Dan Chappell, and Eddie Garcia) - Premiere Networks
"The Mayor of Music Row" (Charlie Monk) - Sirius XM Satellite Radio
"Nash Nights Live" (Shawn Parr and Elaina Smith) - Westwood One
"The Storme Warren Show" (Storme Warren) - Sirius XM Satellite Radio

MAJOR MARKET

"Chris Carr & Company" (Chris Carr, Kia Becht, McKaila Granning, and "Maverick" Jeffrey Bolen) - KEEY, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.
"Mason & Remy" (Mason Schreader and "Remy" Zachary Hoesly) - WIL, St. Louis, Mo.
WINNER: "The Morning Wolfpack with Matt McAllister" (Matt McAllister, Emily Raines, and "Slow Joe" Wallace) - KKWF, Seattle-Tacoma, Wash.
"The Rob + Holly Show" (Rob Stone and Holly Hutton) - WYCD, Detroit, Mich.
"Tanner in the Morning" (Rob Tanner, Catherine Lane, Chris Allen, and "Captain Jim" Homa) - WSOC, Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, N.C.-S.C.
"Tony, Jake & Jenn" (Tony Russell, Jake Byron, and Jenn Hays) - KUPL, Portland, Ore.

LARGE MARKET

"Amanda and Jesse" (Amanda Valentine and Jesse Tack) - WUBE, Cincinnati, Ohio
"J.R. and Beth in the Morning" ("J.R." Jon Jaus, Beth Boehm, and Chris Cardenas) - KCYY, San Antonio, Texas
WINNER: "Q Morning Crew" (Mike Wheless and Janie Carothers) - WQDR, Raleigh-Durham, N.C.
"The Randy, Jamie, and Jojo Show" (Randy Carroll, Jamie Martin, and Jojo Meza) - KAJA, San Antonio, Texas
"Ridder, Scott and Shannen" ("Ridder" Shaun Ridderbush, Scott Dolphin, and Shannen Oesterreich) - WMIL, Milwaukee-Racine, WI

MEDIUM MARKET

"Clay & Company" (Clay Moden, Rob Banks, and Val Townsend) - WYRK, Buffalo-Niagara Falls, N.Y.
"The Doc Show with Jessie" (Ken "Doc" Medek and Jessie Roberts) - WGGY, Wilkes Barre-Scranton, Pa.
WINNER: "Mo & StyckMan" ("Mo" Melissa Wagner and "Styckman" Greg Owens) - WUSY, Chattanooga, Tenn.
"Scott and Sarah in the Morning" (Scott Wynn and Sarah Kay) - WQMX, Akron, Ohio
"Tony and Kris" (Tony Randall and Kris Rochester) - WIVK, Knoxville, Tenn.

SMALL MARKET

"Barrett, Fox & Berry" (Bill Barrett, Tim Fox, and Tracy Berry) - KKNU, Eugene-Springfield, Ore.
"Ben & Arnie" (Ben Butler and Arnie Andrews) - WCOW, La Crosse, Wis.
WINNER: "Dr. Shane and Tess in the Morning" (Shane Collins and Tess Connell) - WPAP, Panama City, Fla.
"Mackey and Miles in the Morning" (Jim Mackey and Deb Miles) - WBYT, South Bend, Ind.
"Officer Don & DeAnn" ("Officer Don" Evans and DeAnn Stephens) - WBUL, Lexington-Fayette, Ky.

"THE 53RD ANNUAL CMA AWARDS" - FINALISTS FOR RADIO STATION OF THE YEAR

MAJOR MARKET

KILT - Houston-Galveston, Texas
KPLX - Dallas-Ft. Worth, Texas
WINNER: WIL - St. Louis, Mo.
WKLB - Boston, Mass.
WYCD - Detroit, Mich.

LARGE MARKET

KCYY - San Antonio, Texas
KUBL - Salt Lake City-Ogden-Provo, Utah
WFMS - Indianapolis, Ind.
WLHK - Indianapolis, Ind.
WQDR - Raleigh-Durham, N.C.
WINNER: WSIX - Nashville, Tenn.

MEDIUM MARKET

CKRY - Calgary, Alta.
KXKT - Omaha-Council Bluffs, Neb.-Iowa
WBBS - Syracuse, N.Y.
WINNER: WIVK - Knoxville, Tenn.
WXCY - Wilmington, Del.

SMALL MARKET

KCLR - Columbia, Mo.
KFDI - Wichita, Kan.
KKNU - Eugene-Springfield, Ore.
WBYT - South Bend, Ind.
WINNER: WYCT - Pensacola, Fla.

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2019-11-14 04:15:15Z
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The Surprising Way 'The Office' Inspired the New 'High School Musical' Series on Disney Plus - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

The Disney Channel movie High School Musical premiered in 2006, followed by two successful sequels. After rumors swarmed about a potential fourth movie, Disney announced that instead, a television series would be the thing to fill the HSM-sized hole in our hearts. Tim Federle, an executive producer of the new series, sat down with Entertainment Weekly to discuss his role in High School Musical: The Musical: The Series. Surprisingly, a big inspiration for this new iteration of the show came from mockumentary-style comedies like The Office.

High School Musical: The Musical: The Series Cast
Cast of the Disney+ series ‘High School Musical: The Musical: The Series’ | Jeff Neira/Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

The ‘High School Musical’ series has a new crop of characters

Federle told EW he wanted to “keep the High School Musical franchise going” for Disney. Considering how well the HSM movies did for the network, they no doubt jumped at the opportunity. But the executive producer didn’t just want nostalgia-factor to carry the show, he wanted to bring in an original take.

“Federle didn’t want to carbon-copy Troy and Gabriella for a new generation,” Entertainment Weekly wrote.

High School Musical: The Musical: The Series Cast
Monique Coleman, Joshua Bassett, Tim Federle, and Olivia Rodrigo | Kevin Winter/Getty Images

He also wanted as many songs sung live as possible, meaning he needed a cast with true talent for the new series.

“I knew that if we cast the right talent who had the right chemistry and who were proud theater kids themselves, the audience would become engaged with their journeys,” Federle said. “Casting was key and we looked really, really hard for this group.”

Federle was inspired by TV series such as ‘The Office’

The new show is, according to Federle, heavily influenced by the comedies of Christopher Guest. If you’re not familiar with Guest’s work, he wrote the film This Is Spinal Tap, the mockumentary that basically defined the genre itself. He also directed documentary-style comedy classics Best In Show, Waiting For Guffman, and A Mighty Wind. Guest’s films laid the groundwork for more recent mockumentary-style television shows, such as The Office, Parks and Recreation, and Modern Family.

Much like these very popular sitcoms, the new HSM series breaks the fourth wall and gets self-referential.

Entertainment Weekly reports that the High School Musical series portrays theater students “who occasionally talk to the camera about how they’re staging HSM at their high school (the very one where the 2006 movie was filmed, both in real life and in the shows’ overwhelmingly meta universe).” Federle also confirmed that “every episode should contain Easter eggs and callbacks and references to the original.” He said we will see an original movie cast member drop in on the series as well.

“I can confirm [it] happens, I just can’t say who or when!” Federle told EW.

‘HSM’ series producer says it’ll have ‘winks at the original but ‘with new songs’

The Office cast
The Office | Paul Drinkwater/NBCU Photo Bank

Federle said that the mockumentary style allowed them to create their own creative vision within the High School Musical universe.

The Office approach allows us to include winks at the original but do it with new songs,” Federle told EW. “It’s not a remake, it’s not even a reboot—it’s a remix of the original.” Federle didn’t want to copy the source material, and he knew a distinct style would distinguish the two.

… I wanted to differentiate us from the original [movies] right away. I knew that camera-style-wise, if I could borrow some of the elements from The Office, with characters talking to the camera and whip pans and zooms, it would immediately announce it as not a copycat of the original, but a new way in. And the docu-style would allow me to revisit the original music but not feel like we’re doing direct karaoke covers.

The new High School Musical series was ranked at number 6 on Entertainment Weekly’s “Must List” in its November issue. Disney+ debuted Nov. 12.

Original ‘High School Musical’ cast member Vanessa Hudgens sang this nostalgic song at karaoke

Actress Vanessa Hudgens played Gabriella Montez in Disney’s hit original film High School Musical (as well as HSM 2 and 3, of course). On Nov. 10, Hudgens took to Instagram to share a video of herself singing a song Disney fans will know by heart.

Hudgens threw it back big time to the HSM classic ballad, “Breakin’ Free.” This is the song introduces us to Gabriela’s singing talent in the early scenes of the first High School Musical film.

“Um,” the Princess Switch star started off her post. Hudgens poked fun at her own “really bad, aggressive, and totally sober” rendition of the hit HSM song. She admitted in her caption, “it hurts my ears but it also makes me laugh.”

We hope the new Wildcats can live up to this energy.

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https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/the-surprising-way-the-office-inspired-the-new-high-school-musical-series-on-disney-plus.html/

2019-11-14 09:33:02Z
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