Kesha has finally split from her producer Dr. Luke and his label, Kemosabe Records, after years of lawsuits.
A new TikTok video shows Kesha at the beach, running into the water, with the caption, “I haven’t felt this free since I was 18.”
Kesha also posted a photo on her Instagram, with the caption, “Coming back home to me.”
After the release of her latest album Gag Order in May, Kesha completely parted ways with Dr. Luke and Kemosabe Records.
She also left her longtime manager Vector Management.
Kesha released her statement on why she left.
“My manager has been an unwavering supporter of helping me get through the lengthy legal battle I have been embroiled in for almost a decade,” Kesha said. “We have achieved many great successes and have shared a magnificent part of my life with me. I am so grateful to them and always will be.
A new TikTok video shows Kesha at the beach, running into the water, with the caption, “I haven’t felt this free since I was 18.”
Kesha also posted a photo on her Instagram, with the caption, “Coming back home to me.”
After the release of her latest album Gag Order in May, Kesha completely parted ways with Dr. Luke and Kemosabe Records.
She also left her longtime manager Vector Management.
Kesha released her statement on why she left.
“My manager has been an unwavering supporter of helping me get through the lengthy legal battle I have been embroiled in for almost a decade,” Kesha said. “We have achieved many great successes and have shared a magnificent part of my life with me. I am so grateful to them and always will be.
- 12/22/2023
- by Zach Ament
- Uinterview
Kesha is opening up about how she feels after parting ways with Dr. Luke‘s label and her management team.
The 36-year-old “Praying” singer accused the producer of mistreatment and sexual assault back in 2014.
In June, they finally reached a settlement following the nearly decade-long legal battle. Kesha officially left his label, Kemosabe, and her management company, Vector Management, on Monday (December 18).
Now, she’s expressing how it feels on social media.
Keep reading to find out more…
On Wednesday (December 20), Kesha took to TikTok to share where she’s at days after the life-changing event. She posted a video of herself enjoying a sunny beach day and running into the ocean. “Space Song” by Beach House plays in the background.
Kesha captioned the post, “I haven’t felt this free since I was 18.”
After the exciting news surfaced on Monday, she also shared an Instagram photo of herself posing...
The 36-year-old “Praying” singer accused the producer of mistreatment and sexual assault back in 2014.
In June, they finally reached a settlement following the nearly decade-long legal battle. Kesha officially left his label, Kemosabe, and her management company, Vector Management, on Monday (December 18).
Now, she’s expressing how it feels on social media.
Keep reading to find out more…
On Wednesday (December 20), Kesha took to TikTok to share where she’s at days after the life-changing event. She posted a video of herself enjoying a sunny beach day and running into the ocean. “Space Song” by Beach House plays in the background.
Kesha captioned the post, “I haven’t felt this free since I was 18.”
After the exciting news surfaced on Monday, she also shared an Instagram photo of herself posing...
- 12/21/2023
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Andre Braugher, the two-time Emmy-winning actor who starred in Brooklyn Nine-Nine, died on December 11 after suffering a brief illness at 61.
He was known for playing the ethical Captain Raymond Holt on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, which aired on NBC from 2013 to 2021.
In 1998, Braugher won a lead actor Emmy for his role as Detective Frank Pembleton on NBC’s Homicide: Life on Street, the last year this show aired. He won a second lead actor Emmy for his role as the master criminal, Nick Atwater, in FX’s 2006 miniseries, Thief.
Braugher was born in Chicago, graduated from Stanford University and then attended Juilliard School in the drama division.
His first screen role was as the Union soldier, Corporal Thomas Searles, in the 1989 film, Glory.
The other cast members of Brooklyn Nine-Nine have paid tribute to Braugher.
On Wednesday, Melissa Fumero, the actress who played Detective Amy Santiago, posted a carousel of images consisting...
He was known for playing the ethical Captain Raymond Holt on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, which aired on NBC from 2013 to 2021.
In 1998, Braugher won a lead actor Emmy for his role as Detective Frank Pembleton on NBC’s Homicide: Life on Street, the last year this show aired. He won a second lead actor Emmy for his role as the master criminal, Nick Atwater, in FX’s 2006 miniseries, Thief.
Braugher was born in Chicago, graduated from Stanford University and then attended Juilliard School in the drama division.
His first screen role was as the Union soldier, Corporal Thomas Searles, in the 1989 film, Glory.
The other cast members of Brooklyn Nine-Nine have paid tribute to Braugher.
On Wednesday, Melissa Fumero, the actress who played Detective Amy Santiago, posted a carousel of images consisting...
- 12/14/2023
- by Alessio Atria
- Uinterview
One of Brooklyn Nine-Nine‘s other lead actors, Melissa Fumero, has shared her thoughts on frequent scene partner Andre Braugher’s passing.
Fumero, who played over-eager Amy Santiago to Braugher’s stoic Captain Raymond Holt on the Fox-turned-NBC police comedy, on Wednesday posted to Instagram a heartfelt message alongside series of photos, leading with a BTS pic of her and Braugher heartily laughing after getting unexpectedly doused by a wave whilst filming the “Beach House” episode.
More from TVLineThe Late Andre Braugher's Final TV Project: What's Its Status?Andre Braugher Remembered by Brooklyn Nine-Nine Co-Stars: 'To Just Be In...
Fumero, who played over-eager Amy Santiago to Braugher’s stoic Captain Raymond Holt on the Fox-turned-NBC police comedy, on Wednesday posted to Instagram a heartfelt message alongside series of photos, leading with a BTS pic of her and Braugher heartily laughing after getting unexpectedly doused by a wave whilst filming the “Beach House” episode.
More from TVLineThe Late Andre Braugher's Final TV Project: What's Its Status?Andre Braugher Remembered by Brooklyn Nine-Nine Co-Stars: 'To Just Be In...
- 12/13/2023
- by Matt Webb Mitovich
- TVLine.com
Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Bad Bunny fearlessly dives into a new romance, Ed Sheeran muses about an English lover in a foreign setting, and Latto parties with BabyDrull. Plus, new music from Pink Pantheress, ‘NSync, and Lil Yachty with J. Cole.
Bad Bunny, “Un Preview” (YouTube)
Ed Sheeran, “American Town” (YouTube)
Latto feat. BabyDrill, “Issa Party” (YouTube)
Pink Pantheress, “Mosquito” (YouTube)
Lil Yachty feat J. Cole, “The Secret Recipe” (YouTube)
‘NSync,...
Bad Bunny, “Un Preview” (YouTube)
Ed Sheeran, “American Town” (YouTube)
Latto feat. BabyDrill, “Issa Party” (YouTube)
Pink Pantheress, “Mosquito” (YouTube)
Lil Yachty feat J. Cole, “The Secret Recipe” (YouTube)
‘NSync,...
- 9/29/2023
- by Rolling Stone
- Rollingstone.com
Shudder and director Jeff A. Brown (The Beach House) are reteaming with The Unheard, reports Deadline. The horror streaming service has acquired the upcoming horror film.
The Unheard streams exclusively on Shudder beginning March 31, 2023.
The Unheard follows 20-year-old Chloe Grayden (Lachlan Watson), who after undergoing an experimental procedure to restore her damaged hearing, begins to suffer from auditory hallucinations seemingly related to the mysterious disappearance of her mother.
Nick Sandow (Orange Is the New Black) and Brendan Meyer (The Oa) also star.
Michael Rasmussen and Shawn Rasmussen (Crawl) wrote the script.
“I am beyond excited to be working with Shudder again,” Brown told Deadline. “We had a fantastic experience with The Beach House and I’m super grateful to have the opportunity to share The Unheard with its members. Our cast and crew have delivered a stunning piece of work and I cannot wait for audiences to take our trip...
The Unheard streams exclusively on Shudder beginning March 31, 2023.
The Unheard follows 20-year-old Chloe Grayden (Lachlan Watson), who after undergoing an experimental procedure to restore her damaged hearing, begins to suffer from auditory hallucinations seemingly related to the mysterious disappearance of her mother.
Nick Sandow (Orange Is the New Black) and Brendan Meyer (The Oa) also star.
Michael Rasmussen and Shawn Rasmussen (Crawl) wrote the script.
“I am beyond excited to be working with Shudder again,” Brown told Deadline. “We had a fantastic experience with The Beach House and I’m super grateful to have the opportunity to share The Unheard with its members. Our cast and crew have delivered a stunning piece of work and I cannot wait for audiences to take our trip...
- 2/9/2023
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
Carly Rae Jepsen has dropped “Talking to Yourself,” the third single from her forthcoming LP, The Loneliest Time. The upbeat, ’80s-tinged dance-pop anthem was produced by Captain Cuts, and co-written by Jepsen, Ryan Rabin, Benjamin Berger, and Simon Wilcox.
The pulsating, beat-driven song sees Jepsen recalling a past relationship, wondering if feelings still linger. “Are you thinking of me when you’re with somebody else?/ Do you talk to me when you’re talking to yourself?” Jepsen croons on the buoyant track. “Are you reaching for me, making love to someone else?...
The pulsating, beat-driven song sees Jepsen recalling a past relationship, wondering if feelings still linger. “Are you thinking of me when you’re with somebody else?/ Do you talk to me when you’re talking to yourself?” Jepsen croons on the buoyant track. “Are you reaching for me, making love to someone else?...
- 9/16/2022
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
People keep asking Carly Rae Jepsen how she’s doing. After all, between the pandemic and the three-year gap since her last proper album, we haven’t heard much from the pop star lately. “It’s a loaded question,” she says, “and my answer has been complicated.” Jepsen admits she struggled to adjust to life at home during quarantine after years of nonstop touring and recording, and she suffered a family loss during the pandemic that led her to therapy to deal with her grief. “It caused a lot of contemplation,...
- 8/23/2022
- by Jodi Guglielmi
- Rollingstone.com
It’s a big week for Carly Rae Jepsen. Just days after announcing the name of her fifth studio album, The Loneliest Time, the singer has released a new single from the coming record, titled “Beach House.”
The catchy track explores dating in the modern world — particularly the ups and downs of trying to find love on dating apps.
“Boy number one made a picnic for two/Saw he was nervous, I thought it was cute/Until I found out that his mom made the food/It was good though,...
The catchy track explores dating in the modern world — particularly the ups and downs of trying to find love on dating apps.
“Boy number one made a picnic for two/Saw he was nervous, I thought it was cute/Until I found out that his mom made the food/It was good though,...
- 8/5/2022
- by Jodi Guglielmi
- Rollingstone.com
Long-running indie duo Beach House — who released the sprawling 18-song double album, ‘Once Twice Melody,’ just a few weeks ago — are making their film-scoring debut with Netflix’s “Along for the Ride,” which is described in the announcement as “a sweet summer film based on the popular YA book by New York Times bestselling author Sarah Dessen.” The film arrives on Netflix on Friday.
Written and directed by Sofia Alvarez (who wrote the screenplay for both “To All the Boys I’ve Love Before” and its sequel), “Along for the Ride” tells the story of Auden (Emma Pasarow), who’s decided to spend her last summer before college in picturesque Colby Beach, according to the synopsis. While other teens party in the sun, loner Auden spends her time roaming the streets after everyone else is asleep. Everything changes when she meets Eli (Belmont Cameli), a charming and mysterious fellow insomniac.
Written and directed by Sofia Alvarez (who wrote the screenplay for both “To All the Boys I’ve Love Before” and its sequel), “Along for the Ride” tells the story of Auden (Emma Pasarow), who’s decided to spend her last summer before college in picturesque Colby Beach, according to the synopsis. While other teens party in the sun, loner Auden spends her time roaming the streets after everyone else is asleep. Everything changes when she meets Eli (Belmont Cameli), a charming and mysterious fellow insomniac.
- 5/3/2022
- by Jem Aswad
- Variety Film + TV
Many, if not most, of Spain’s Malaga Festival’s main section lineup, from Berlin Golden Bear winner “Alcarrás” to Panorama player “Lullaby,” will screen for buyers during the Spanish Screenings. Festival titles are detailed in a separate article. Following, a breakdown of further titles swelling the Screenings to a record 63-title cut.
“Ainarak,”
Directed by Juan San Martín and starring singer-songwriter Anne Etchegoyen, the documentary follows the annual diaspora from 1870 to 1940 of hundreds of women from Navarre and Aragon to Mauléon in the French Pyrenees, where they worked from fall to spring making canvas shoes. First presented at Conecta Fiction in 2021.
“Beach House,”
Hector H. Vicens, co-director of the genre-twisting “The Corpse of Anna Fritz,” which caught some heat at 2016’s SXSW, is back with a reportedly acerbic beach-set young adult comedy which lifts off as a thriller. Carles Torras, director of Malaga winner “Callback,” produces.
“The Buried World,...
“Ainarak,”
Directed by Juan San Martín and starring singer-songwriter Anne Etchegoyen, the documentary follows the annual diaspora from 1870 to 1940 of hundreds of women from Navarre and Aragon to Mauléon in the French Pyrenees, where they worked from fall to spring making canvas shoes. First presented at Conecta Fiction in 2021.
“Beach House,”
Hector H. Vicens, co-director of the genre-twisting “The Corpse of Anna Fritz,” which caught some heat at 2016’s SXSW, is back with a reportedly acerbic beach-set young adult comedy which lifts off as a thriller. Carles Torras, director of Malaga winner “Callback,” produces.
“The Buried World,...
- 3/21/2022
- by John Hopewell, Emilio Mayorga, Justin Morgan and Anna Marie de la Fuente
- Variety Film + TV
Each year the Guadalajara Film Festival (Ficg) invites a crop of the most exciting projects from around Latin America to participate in its Co-Production Meetings. This year, organizers are excited to welcome back in-person visitors for its rescheduled 17th edition of the event, where teams representing 24 feature film projects will meet with potential partners, financing organizations, sales agents and more.
Below, a look at this year’s participating projects.
“Animals,”
From Waissbluth, whose enterprising 2016 “A Horse Called Elephant” marked a rare Southern American movie play for family ads. Billed as a near-future dark dramedy, his latest pictures a world where animal rights begin to be widespread and upheld by law.
“The Bad Mother,”
Victoria, a successful journalist, decides to have a baby, regrets it later, which plunges her into depression.She writes a book, “The Bad Mother,” which creates a movement. A horror drama marking the director’s first feature.
Below, a look at this year’s participating projects.
“Animals,”
From Waissbluth, whose enterprising 2016 “A Horse Called Elephant” marked a rare Southern American movie play for family ads. Billed as a near-future dark dramedy, his latest pictures a world where animal rights begin to be widespread and upheld by law.
“The Bad Mother,”
Victoria, a successful journalist, decides to have a baby, regrets it later, which plunges her into depression.She writes a book, “The Bad Mother,” which creates a movement. A horror drama marking the director’s first feature.
- 10/1/2021
- by John Hopewell, Jamie Lang and Anna Marie de la Fuente
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: Tribeca and Comedy Dynamics are reteaming for a slate of 10 stand-up comedy specials to be filmed at the Tribeca Film Festival, which runs June 9-20 in New York City.
The two entities partnered up in early 2020 to produce original stand-up comedy specials that were slated to be filmed at the annual fest. But after Covid restrictions took hold nationwide, they pivoted and evolved the indoor festival into an outdoor comedy drive-in set across the country at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. Tribeca x Comedy Dynamics Drive-In featured hourlong comedy sets from Ester Steinberg, Dave Helem, Erica Rhodes and Daniel Webb — the first set of drive-in comedy specials filmed in the midst of the pandemic.
Produced by Tribeca and Comedy Dynamics and directed by the latter’s founder and CEO, Brian Volk-Weiss, this month’s slate of specials is part of Tribeca’s expansion into new storytelling platforms and its...
The two entities partnered up in early 2020 to produce original stand-up comedy specials that were slated to be filmed at the annual fest. But after Covid restrictions took hold nationwide, they pivoted and evolved the indoor festival into an outdoor comedy drive-in set across the country at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. Tribeca x Comedy Dynamics Drive-In featured hourlong comedy sets from Ester Steinberg, Dave Helem, Erica Rhodes and Daniel Webb — the first set of drive-in comedy specials filmed in the midst of the pandemic.
Produced by Tribeca and Comedy Dynamics and directed by the latter’s founder and CEO, Brian Volk-Weiss, this month’s slate of specials is part of Tribeca’s expansion into new storytelling platforms and its...
- 6/1/2021
- by Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
Chile’s Santiago International Film Festival (Sanfic), which is preparing for its rescheduled, entirely digital industry section which will run March 18-25, ahead of its traditional in-person festival, scheduled for August, has revealed the projects’ lineup for its Santiago Lab Fiction, Documentary and Series sections.
Sanfic’s brand new Series Lab, headed by Agustina Lumi and Alejandra Marano, has selected six Chilean productions or co-productions representative of the region’s impressive push into original TV production with the legs to travel to international broadcasters and platforms – see Fabula’s Amazon Prime Video pickup “La Jauria” or Germany-Chile co-production “Dignity” for German platform Joyn.
Santiago Series Lab is highlighted by Kathy Harder’s “Silver Bridges,” from “Invisible Heroes” producers Parox. The series was first announced at MipCancun 2018 and dramatizes the origins of Chile’s cocaine trade. Another standout can be found in International Emmy winner Hernán Caffiero’s “Anonymous Voices,” produced by Btf Media.
Sanfic’s brand new Series Lab, headed by Agustina Lumi and Alejandra Marano, has selected six Chilean productions or co-productions representative of the region’s impressive push into original TV production with the legs to travel to international broadcasters and platforms – see Fabula’s Amazon Prime Video pickup “La Jauria” or Germany-Chile co-production “Dignity” for German platform Joyn.
Santiago Series Lab is highlighted by Kathy Harder’s “Silver Bridges,” from “Invisible Heroes” producers Parox. The series was first announced at MipCancun 2018 and dramatizes the origins of Chile’s cocaine trade. Another standout can be found in International Emmy winner Hernán Caffiero’s “Anonymous Voices,” produced by Btf Media.
- 3/5/2021
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
The MPAA has long placed teen movies in a tricky bind: When they reflect the lives of their young target audience a little too relatably, they’re slapped with a rating that excludes the very demographic they’re about. It’s an irony that corners too many films in the genre into a safely sanitized PG-13 space, clean and cute and not entirely real. That “Chemical Hearts” has bitten the bullet and accepted an R initially bodes well: Unafraid of depicting casual teenage swearing, drug-taking and modest sexual activity, Richard Tanne’s melancholic, tastefully presented romance promises a more mature, impressionistic take on standard adolescent rites of passage. It’s going out on Amazon Prime, after all: Who’s going to keep the kids away?
Yet for all its serious-faced surface grit, “Chemical Hearts” never quite rings true. There’s a lot of solemn pondering here on the disorienting nature of so-called “teenage limbo,...
Yet for all its serious-faced surface grit, “Chemical Hearts” never quite rings true. There’s a lot of solemn pondering here on the disorienting nature of so-called “teenage limbo,...
- 8/21/2020
- by Guy Lodge
- Variety Film + TV
Soft boys, assemble! since February’s “All the Bright Places” has finally arrived, and it is not holding back. This movie has it all: An affluent teenage introvert who’s desperately waiting for something interesting to happen to him, a mysterious blonde transfer student named Grace Town(!) whose pronounced limp suggests a tragic past, a wistful voiceover track laced with pearls of wisdom like “you are never more alive than when you’re a teenager,” a queer Black best friend character who spends the whole film making out with her girlfriend in the background, so much Beach House on the soundtrack that you can practically feel the sand between your toes (one of the band’s songs even becomes a plot point), and an overreliance on a flimsy metaphor that’s meant to trigger some kind of profound understanding — in this case, the idea that heartbreak causes the same bodily response as physical pain.
- 8/20/2020
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
Even if “Nadia, Butterfly” weren’t set during the Tokyo 2020 Olympics — the film offering an impressively staged glimpse into an alternate timeline where the world’s biggest sporting event hasn’t been postponed due to a pandemic — Pascal Plante’s sensitive and tactile second feature (following 2018 debut “Fake Tattoos”) would still feel like .
This intimate, unhurried story of a swimmer at the first major crossroads (or pool turn) of her life may not share the wry comic touch or May/December undercurrent of Sofia Coppola’s Japan-set romance, but it paints a similarly woozy portrait of self-discovery around a young woman who finds herself on the other side of the world. There’s even a karaoke sequence in the middle, a bittersweet drive back to Narita Airport at the end, and a bunch of Beach House cues on the soundtrack (a band that basically emerged from the morning-after haze left...
This intimate, unhurried story of a swimmer at the first major crossroads (or pool turn) of her life may not share the wry comic touch or May/December undercurrent of Sofia Coppola’s Japan-set romance, but it paints a similarly woozy portrait of self-discovery around a young woman who finds herself on the other side of the world. There’s even a karaoke sequence in the middle, a bittersweet drive back to Narita Airport at the end, and a bunch of Beach House cues on the soundtrack (a band that basically emerged from the morning-after haze left...
- 7/29/2020
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
Are you feeling aimless, adrift and sad in Week 5 of self-isolation? Then Drake Doremus and Shailene Woodley have a movie for you.
Granted, there’s nothing about the coronavirus or anything like it in Doremus’ “Endings, Beginnings,” which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival last fall but lost its scheduled May 1 theatrical opening to the pandemic and is instead opening digitally on Friday. This is an indie drama about a young woman who’s chosen to self-isolate, and who doesn’t need a virus to nudge her into aimlessness and melancholy; the situation is different, but the feelings might hit home for more than a few viewers these days.
Then again, her isolation turns into a fairly steamy love triangle between Woodley, Jamie Dornan and Sebastian Stan, an option that’s not exactly available to anybody who’s stuck at home watching. Caveat emptor, I suppose.
Also Read: All...
Granted, there’s nothing about the coronavirus or anything like it in Doremus’ “Endings, Beginnings,” which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival last fall but lost its scheduled May 1 theatrical opening to the pandemic and is instead opening digitally on Friday. This is an indie drama about a young woman who’s chosen to self-isolate, and who doesn’t need a virus to nudge her into aimlessness and melancholy; the situation is different, but the feelings might hit home for more than a few viewers these days.
Then again, her isolation turns into a fairly steamy love triangle between Woodley, Jamie Dornan and Sebastian Stan, an option that’s not exactly available to anybody who’s stuck at home watching. Caveat emptor, I suppose.
Also Read: All...
- 4/17/2020
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
Orchestras are indie rock’s new Marshall stacks. That’s fitting on a lot of levels — as a satisfying class-action appropriation of elitist cultural tropes, as a deconstruction of those same tropes, and as an elevation of collectivism over American myths of individualism and exceptionalism that’ve lately been twisted into such ugly shapes. Also: done right, orchestrations just sound dope. There’s plenty of ‘em done right on Angel Olsen’s latest, All Mirrors, her best record yet in an excellent ouevre, giving her goth-folk drama queen tendencies room to roam far and wide.
- 10/2/2019
- by Will Hermes
- Rollingstone.com
Sad news out of Hollywood today.
Brian Turk has died following a battle with cancer.
He was 49.
Turk passed away on Friday, over a year after he was diagnosed with brain cancer.
His death is said to be a result of complications with cancer.
A GoFundMe was set up back in July as the actor fought the disease.
It reads:
"Just over a year ago our dear friend, Brian Turk, was diagnosed with cancer."
"Being the selfless and private person that he is, Brian kept this quiet so as not to concern his family and friends.
"Brian has impacted so many of us in a positive way whether it be on the football field, at Mater Dei or USC, on stage or in our personal lives. He has always been there for us in our times of need and celebration."
Related: Beverly Hills, 90210 Cast: Where Are They Now?
Born in May 1970 in Colorado,...
Brian Turk has died following a battle with cancer.
He was 49.
Turk passed away on Friday, over a year after he was diagnosed with brain cancer.
His death is said to be a result of complications with cancer.
A GoFundMe was set up back in July as the actor fought the disease.
It reads:
"Just over a year ago our dear friend, Brian Turk, was diagnosed with cancer."
"Being the selfless and private person that he is, Brian kept this quiet so as not to concern his family and friends.
"Brian has impacted so many of us in a positive way whether it be on the football field, at Mater Dei or USC, on stage or in our personal lives. He has always been there for us in our times of need and celebration."
Related: Beverly Hills, 90210 Cast: Where Are They Now?
Born in May 1970 in Colorado,...
- 9/16/2019
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
Gene Clark’s seminal 1974 solo album No Other will be rereleased as a deluxe reissue this fall. Remastered at Abbey Road Studios, the album will be available on November 8th via 4Ad in honor of the late musician’s 75th birthday.
The eight-track LP will be released on vinyl and CD, as well as a recording of “Train Leaves Here This Morning,” a song Clark wrote with Bernie Leadon the Eagles made famous on their 1972 self-titled debut. The No Other tracks “From A Silver Phial” and “Silver Raven” are available now,...
The eight-track LP will be released on vinyl and CD, as well as a recording of “Train Leaves Here This Morning,” a song Clark wrote with Bernie Leadon the Eagles made famous on their 1972 self-titled debut. The No Other tracks “From A Silver Phial” and “Silver Raven” are available now,...
- 9/10/2019
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
’90s nostalgia is in full swing and horror fans are loving it. Many people are revisiting movies they grew up with, while others are discovering those same titles for the first time. And it’s not only cinematic terror that has everyone talking.
Over the past couple of years, the interest in retro books has been on the rise. Combined with ’90s sentimentality, teen horror fiction from the decade has become a special niche for collectors, many of whom are part of Instagram’s enthusiastic community of “bookstagrammers.”
A large portion of the teen horror titles released during the ’90s are now available in e-book format, but the original editions with their colorful covers and witty taglines are the ones we look for while perusing the shelves of used bookstores.
Here at Daily Dead, during a series of seasonal posts, I’m going to be sharing books from my own collection,...
Over the past couple of years, the interest in retro books has been on the rise. Combined with ’90s sentimentality, teen horror fiction from the decade has become a special niche for collectors, many of whom are part of Instagram’s enthusiastic community of “bookstagrammers.”
A large portion of the teen horror titles released during the ’90s are now available in e-book format, but the original editions with their colorful covers and witty taglines are the ones we look for while perusing the shelves of used bookstores.
Here at Daily Dead, during a series of seasonal posts, I’m going to be sharing books from my own collection,...
- 7/12/2019
- by Bryce Gibson
- DailyDead
The Kissing Booth took over Netflix last year with an addictive storm of teen rom-com drama, complete with an angsty reformed bad boy played by newcomer Jacob Elordi. The Netflix original, which seems to be Gen Z's stab at John Hughes's body of work, gained a bit of cult-level momentum. The dramedy came out in mid-May, and instantly had fans clamoring for a second movie . . . pronto. Thankfully Netflix has answered the call and announced in February 2019 that a sequel is officially on the way.
So, how is a sequel feasible, story-wise? Let's take a look at the movie's ending and the source material, Beth Reekles's young adult novel of the same name.
The movie itself has an open-ended conclusion. After dropping off Noah at the airport, Elle ponders over whether or not things will work out between them once he goes to college. This ending calls for a follow-up...
So, how is a sequel feasible, story-wise? Let's take a look at the movie's ending and the source material, Beth Reekles's young adult novel of the same name.
The movie itself has an open-ended conclusion. After dropping off Noah at the airport, Elle ponders over whether or not things will work out between them once he goes to college. This ending calls for a follow-up...
- 2/18/2019
- by Stacey Nguyen
- Popsugar.com
“People have always given me trouble for going to clubs, so why don’t I just open my own?” Lindsay Lohan muses mid-photo shoot in the first promo for her upcoming MTV reality series. (Sorry, docuseries!) As for the accuracy of her hypothesis, all will be revealed when Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club premieres Tuesday, Jan. 8 at 8/7c.
The unscripted series follows Lohan to Mykonos, Greece, as she opens her new club, named Lindsay Lohan’s Beach House. (Let’s pause for a moment to acknowledge that the club is referred to as a “Beach House,” but the show is referred to as Beach Club.
The unscripted series follows Lohan to Mykonos, Greece, as she opens her new club, named Lindsay Lohan’s Beach House. (Let’s pause for a moment to acknowledge that the club is referred to as a “Beach House,” but the show is referred to as Beach Club.
- 12/3/2018
- TVLine.com
Dream-pop purveyors Beach House have unveiled new song, “Alien.” An outtake from their 7 recording sessions, it was previously available on tour only and is now being released as a limited edition B-side to 7 track “Lose Your Smile” on “slime green vinyl”.
In the song’s accompanying video directed by San Charoenchai, a kaleidoscope of black-and-white undulating patterns enhances the hypnotic vibe of “Alien.” “Sorry, sometimes, I get carried away,” Victoria Legrand gauzily sings over glistening melodies. The tune culminates in luscious vocal round-robin layers as Legrand and Alex Scally’s...
In the song’s accompanying video directed by San Charoenchai, a kaleidoscope of black-and-white undulating patterns enhances the hypnotic vibe of “Alien.” “Sorry, sometimes, I get carried away,” Victoria Legrand gauzily sings over glistening melodies. The tune culminates in luscious vocal round-robin layers as Legrand and Alex Scally’s...
- 10/23/2018
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Beach House envision a surreal landscape in their new “Drunk in La” video. The song appears on their latest album, 7.
Directed by Spacemen 3’s Sonic Boom, who also collaborated on Beach House’s 7, the new psychedelic clip features morphing images of wavy houses and melting galloping horses. Streets and trees also transform, resembling cell-like structures all to the soundtrack of their dreamy “Drunk in La.”
“We were out having dinner and Pete [Kember, Sonic Boom] mentioned an idea for a video where the viewer is always looking up from the ground,” the duo said in a statement.
Directed by Spacemen 3’s Sonic Boom, who also collaborated on Beach House’s 7, the new psychedelic clip features morphing images of wavy houses and melting galloping horses. Streets and trees also transform, resembling cell-like structures all to the soundtrack of their dreamy “Drunk in La.”
“We were out having dinner and Pete [Kember, Sonic Boom] mentioned an idea for a video where the viewer is always looking up from the ground,” the duo said in a statement.
- 9/11/2018
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
In today’s film news roundup, Sony is developing a movie about superhero Faith Herbert, Stack House Productions moves forward with two projects and Orion dates Taylor Schilling horror-thriller “The Prodigy.”
Projects Launched
Sony Pictures is developing a movie version of “Faith,” based on the Valiant Comics series of the same name with Neal Moritz, Toby Jaffe and Dan Mintz attached to produce for Sony Pictures.
The studio has hired “Escape Room” writer Maria Melnik to write the script. The “Faith” comics are centered on Faith Herbert, a geeky teen obsessed with comics and science fiction, in addition to having the power of flight and telekinesis. Created by writer Jim Shooter and David Lapham, she is a member of the Harbinger Renegades and first appeared in 1992.
Sony and Valiant began collaborating in 2015 on developing a “Bloodshot” movie, based on the Valiant character. The studio signed Toby Kebbell this week to...
Projects Launched
Sony Pictures is developing a movie version of “Faith,” based on the Valiant Comics series of the same name with Neal Moritz, Toby Jaffe and Dan Mintz attached to produce for Sony Pictures.
The studio has hired “Escape Room” writer Maria Melnik to write the script. The “Faith” comics are centered on Faith Herbert, a geeky teen obsessed with comics and science fiction, in addition to having the power of flight and telekinesis. Created by writer Jim Shooter and David Lapham, she is a member of the Harbinger Renegades and first appeared in 1992.
Sony and Valiant began collaborating in 2015 on developing a “Bloodshot” movie, based on the Valiant character. The studio signed Toby Kebbell this week to...
- 6/29/2018
- by Dave McNary
- Variety Film + TV
A seemingly tranquil beach retreat is taking a terrifying turn for a young heroine, as a seemingly charismatic man from her mother’s history may actually be returning from the past to ruin her future. Willa Fitzgerald’s protagonist in the upcoming thriller, ‘Beach House,’ is determined to find out why Murray Bartlett’s possible antagonist is reentering […]
The post Willa Fitzgerald Suspects Murray Bartlett of a Horrible Crime in Beach House Exclusive Clip appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Willa Fitzgerald Suspects Murray Bartlett of a Horrible Crime in Beach House Exclusive Clip appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 6/19/2018
- by Karen Benardello
- ShockYa
The unsettling trailer for the new thriller Beach House has been released. Starring Willa Fitzgerald (MTV's Scream TV series), Murray Bartlett, Orlagh Cassidy, and Tom Hammond, the film follows Emma, a young adult whose beach vacation is interrupted by someone from her mother's past. Beach House has also secured worldwide distribution with Archstone Distribution, who plans to release the film in the Us on June 22nd:
Press Release: Los Angeles, CA (May 22, 2018) – Archstone Distribution has acquired worldwide rights to the new thriller film Beach House, which was directed and co-written by Jason Saltiel. Co-written and produced by Matt Simon, and executive produced by Ben Barenholtz, Beach House stars Willa Fitzgerald, Murray Bartlett, Orlagh Cassidy, and Tom Hammond. Andrew van den Houten of 79th & Broadway Entertainment is also executive producing and handling sales. The film is set to be released in theaters nationwide on June 22nd.
The film follows...
Press Release: Los Angeles, CA (May 22, 2018) – Archstone Distribution has acquired worldwide rights to the new thriller film Beach House, which was directed and co-written by Jason Saltiel. Co-written and produced by Matt Simon, and executive produced by Ben Barenholtz, Beach House stars Willa Fitzgerald, Murray Bartlett, Orlagh Cassidy, and Tom Hammond. Andrew van den Houten of 79th & Broadway Entertainment is also executive producing and handling sales. The film is set to be released in theaters nationwide on June 22nd.
The film follows...
- 6/4/2018
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Archstone Distribution has acquired worldwide rights to Jason Saltiel’s new thriller Beach House starring Willa Fitzgerald (Scream: The TV Series) and Murray Bartlett (Iron Fist). The film is set to be released in theaters this June and on multiple VOD platforms later in the summer. And today we have the film’s poster for your viewing […]
The post MTV Scream Star Heads to Beach House appeared first on Dread Central.
The post MTV Scream Star Heads to Beach House appeared first on Dread Central.
- 5/24/2018
- by Mike Sprague
- DreadCentral.com
On their two 2015 albums “Depression Cherry” and “Thank Your Lucky Stars,” Baltimore-spawned duo Beach House had crafted their strain of dreampop to such perfection that it felt like there were few stones left to unturn. The duo felt that as well — they said of this album, “We wanted to rethink old methods and shed some self-imposed limitations” — and their seventh full-length represents less a change of style than of mood. While their impressionist synth haze and Victoria Legrand’s breathy vocals remain at the forefront, “7” is darker, cloudier, crankier and more turbulent than most of what they’ve done before.
It’s almost the inverse of the transformation that most musical artists try to make, which is to graft a new musical style or element onto their usual template in an effort to seem contemporary (has anyone not heard enough trap beats on pop songs yet?). The album starts off...
It’s almost the inverse of the transformation that most musical artists try to make, which is to graft a new musical style or element onto their usual template in an effort to seem contemporary (has anyone not heard enough trap beats on pop songs yet?). The album starts off...
- 5/11/2018
- by Jem Aswad
- Variety Film + TV
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