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Beastie Boys fans who want to immerse themselves in the world and ethos of the pioneering rap band will get a chance to do so in Los Angeles next month.
Beginning Dec. 10, street art gallery Beyond the Streets will mount an exhibition of archival items and memorabilia spotlighting the raucous hip-hop group, who became the first rap act to chart a Billboard top album with 1986’s Licensed to Ill, which included the songs “Brass Monkey,” “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party!)” and “Girls.”
The exhibit, which will be free to the public and open through Jan. 23, is set to include a trove of items from the personal collections of Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz and Michael “Mike D” Diamond. (After the death of third member Adam “McA” Yauch in 2012 from cancer, the group disbanded.)
Titled Exhibit and presented in partnership with Goldenvoice (the...
Beastie Boys fans who want to immerse themselves in the world and ethos of the pioneering rap band will get a chance to do so in Los Angeles next month.
Beginning Dec. 10, street art gallery Beyond the Streets will mount an exhibition of archival items and memorabilia spotlighting the raucous hip-hop group, who became the first rap act to chart a Billboard top album with 1986’s Licensed to Ill, which included the songs “Brass Monkey,” “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party!)” and “Girls.”
The exhibit, which will be free to the public and open through Jan. 23, is set to include a trove of items from the personal collections of Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz and Michael “Mike D” Diamond. (After the death of third member Adam “McA” Yauch in 2012 from cancer, the group disbanded.)
Titled Exhibit and presented in partnership with Goldenvoice (the...
- 11/17/2022
- by Degen Pener
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
About a decade ago, when Doug Davis was 35, he was experiencing what he assumed were your standard, garden-variety symptoms of indigestion and heartburn. Not one for running to the doctor for what he presumed to be a minor ailment, the preeminent entertainment and sports attorney and founder of the New York-based Davis Firm, contemplated heading to the pharmacy.
But the pain persisted, then worsened. Finally, Davis made an appointment with his physician. There followed a string of events that would forever, in his words, “change the course of [my] life.”
“The doctor ordered an emergency appendectomy and, when I woke up, [he] told me that they had found a carcinoid tumor while they were removing my appendix,” says Davis, Variety’s 2018 Power of Law honoree.
“It turned out it had spread to one lymph gland and it would likely have spread throughout my body,” he recalls. “It probably would have become terminal...
But the pain persisted, then worsened. Finally, Davis made an appointment with his physician. There followed a string of events that would forever, in his words, “change the course of [my] life.”
“The doctor ordered an emergency appendectomy and, when I woke up, [he] told me that they had found a carcinoid tumor while they were removing my appendix,” says Davis, Variety’s 2018 Power of Law honoree.
“It turned out it had spread to one lymph gland and it would likely have spread throughout my body,” he recalls. “It probably would have become terminal...
- 4/18/2018
- by Malina Saval
- Variety Film + TV
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