Selasa, 13 Agustus 2019

Brody Jenner Already Moving On From Kaitlynn with Josie Canseco - TMZ

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https://www.tmz.com/2019/08/13/brody-jenner-moving-on-kaitlynn-carter-josie-canseco-miley-liam/

2019-08-13 08:00:00Z
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Senin, 12 Agustus 2019

The Crown Season 3 Teaser: Olivia Colman Takes the Throne - /FILM

the crown season 3 teaser

Long live the Queen, in her many forms. Olivia Colman takes the throne as Queen Elizabeth II in Netflix’s The Crown season 3, which recasts the entire ensemble to reflect the passage of time. Colman takes over from Claire Foy, who won a Golden Globe and an Emmy for playing the young queen in Netflix’s lavish melodrama series, and dons a familiar dress and sash that longtime viewers will recognize. Watch The Crown season 3 teaser below.

The Crown Season 3 Teaser

Heavy is the head that wears the crown, but luckily Colman has worn quite a few crowns in her career. The Oscar-winning actress recently picked up an Academy Award for playing yet another royal in The Favourite, whose descendent she will now play in season 3 of The Crown. The series intends to chronicle the entire life of Elizabeth II, up to the present day, with each season meant to highlight approximately 10 years. As Colman steps into the role, the show will be more than 20 years into Elizabeth’s reign.

According to THRThe Crown season 3 will cover “the Wilson era,” the 1964-1970 and 1974-1976 terms of Prime Minister Howard Wilson. Camilla Parker Bowles, the current wife of Prince Charles, will be introduced as a character this season, as will Charles’ first wife, the late Princess Diana.

Creator Peter Morgan and the rest of The Crown team made the unexpected decision to recast the entire ensemble with season 3 rather than age up the award-winning cast with make-up. But it was the right choice, Morgan told Variety back when the announcements were first made..”You can’t ask someone to act middle-aged,” Morgan said. “Someone has to bring their own fatigue to it. The feelings we all have as 50-year-olds are different than the feelings we all have as 30-year-olds. That informs everything we do.”

Colman can certainly do that — just look at the withering gaze she gives in this 22-second teaser. While Foy and her clenched jaw will be missed, Colman is proving thus far to be an inspired replacement. In addition to Colman, The Terror’Tobias Menzies will take over the role of Prince Philip, previously played by Matt SmithHelena Bonham Carter steps into Vanessa Kirby‘s shoes as Princess Margaret, and Ben Daniels will play Antony Armstrong-Jones, aka Lord Snowdon, a part originated by Matthew Goode in season 2.

Season 3 of The Crown arrives on Netflix on November 17, 2019.

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https://www.slashfilm.com/the-crown-season-3-teaser/

2019-08-12 14:00:41Z
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Liam Hemsworth breaks silence on Miley Cyrus breakup - Page Six

Liam Hemsworth is mourning the end of his marriage to Miley Cyrus.

The 29-year-old actor has been spending time with brother Chris Hemsworth in Australia as Miley Cyrus has been flaunting a new romance with Brody Jenner‘s ex, Kaitlynn Carter, but he doesn’t appear to be handling the split as well as his ex.

“You don’t understand what it’s like,” Liam told Daily Mail Australia when asked about the split. “I don’t want to talk about it, mate.”

Cyrus, 26, and Hemsworth called it quits after less than one year of marriage. They had been together in an on-again, off-again relationship for about a decade.

Jenner, 35, and Carter, 30, announced their split earlier this month. The couple had an elaborate wedding in Nihi on Sumba in June 2018, but a source close to the duo confirmed to Page Six on Friday that the union wasn’t legal.

Hemsworth and Cyrus were previously engaged to each other in 2012 and called it off a year later. They rekindled their romance in 2015.

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https://pagesix.com/2019/08/12/liam-hemsworth-breaks-silence-on-miley-cyrus-breakup/

2019-08-12 12:27:00Z
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It’s a Woman’s World: The True Heroes of ‘Succession’ - The Ringer

When J. Smith-Cameron recorded an early audition tape for the HBO series Succession, she first read the lines for a dude named Gerry. Gerry was a lawyer-fixer type with Michael Cohen–style duties, mopping up the corporate and personal messes of the impossibly wealthy family behind a global media conglomerate. And, as Smith-Cameron remembers it, Gerry’s run was finite: “only definitely meant to be in episodes 2-6 of Season 1,” she writes in an email from somewhere with bad cell reception up in Canada. “There wasn’t any sign that it was going to be such a rich, ongoing role.”

But soon Gerry became Gerri, and soon after that Smith-Cameron was cast to play the role in all its potent-subordinate glory. And now, with Succession returning for its second season on Sunday night, she is thriving within the show’s gnarled, lush ecosystem, her character both deeply rooted and in bloom. As one of the most trusted deputies to the ferocious Logan Roy, the Waystar Royco chief, Gerri is the one who gets it done and knows it all and makes it go away. She is still that lawyer-fixer type, with those Michael Cohen–style duties, but she’s also the “fairy godmother” to Logan’s only daughter, Siobhan, and the one to reassure his youngest son, Roman, that a failed rocket launch only blew off a few thumbs (oh, and maybe an arm). She takes conspiratorial backyard-huddle meetings like any worthy operative, but she does so in Uggs.

“Ever since I saw Helen Mirren in Prime Suspect, I’ve wanted to play a middle-aged, super competent professional woman who is nonetheless beset by vulnerable situations which she handles one at a time,” Smith-Cameron says in her email. “In some kind of roundabout way, I have a taste of that with Gerri.” Smith-Cameron is not alone here: Age excepted, you could say roughly the same thing about a number of the women of Succession’s second season, some of them evolving old favorites and some of them new, but all of them toothsome performances of women both in and adjacent to power.

Sarah Snook’s Shiv Roy, the youngest of Logan’s four kids and the only girl, finds herself caught between her extrafamilial success as a political strategist and the temptation to finally assert her place as the smartest one at the Roy family kids’ table. Marcia, the cipher of a stepmom who last season lashed out in savage form at Shiv (“[Logan] made you a playground and you think it’s the whole world”), begins to publicly take stock of the cards she holds. The cast’s splashiest offseason addition, Holly Hunter, will soon join the series as Rhea, the no-bullshit CEO of a respected news operation who has the wry countenance of someone who has seen some shit but also knows exactly how and when to start some herself. (Another Season 2 newcomer, Jeannie Berlin, also exudes this kind of powerful business broad energy, while Cherry Jones straight-up buzzes with WASP sting, a patrician foil to Logan’s patriarch.) Even women with supporting roles on the show and in Succession’s internal universe, like the Waystar Royco media-handler Karolina, or the Connor Roy man-handler Willa, reckon daily with how to manage vulnerabilities—their own, and others’—in order to meet their goals.

In Succession’s first season, half of its credited writers were women—accomplished, trenchant women, from young playwrights to a veteran of British comedic television—and the majority of them have returned this time around. “I appreciate the complexities and the ugliness that they write into the character of Shiv,” says Snook, speaking by phone from Brooklyn last week, “rather than just making her sort of like a paragon of female power.” It is never that simple, after all.

Succession’s Sunday premiere revolved, as the series so often does, around the premise of its title, asking this ongoing question: Who will take over? It featured Logan Roy—that lion-in-cable-knit who in seconds can go from laying low to leaping for the jugular—making two big decisions. The second one was that he wanted to acquire a big ol’ respected legacy publication in order to make family empire Waystar Royco too big to buy, all Blob-like and takeover-proof. The first one, delivered privately to his daughter, Shiv, was that he wanted her to succeed him. “Is this real?” was her disbelieving, and repeated, response.

Snook, who grew up outside Adelaide in Australia, spent a lot of time initially figuring out how to portray someone whose upbringing and environs were both geographically and conceptually foreign to her. (Her research included poring over Lauren Greenfield’s big Generation Wealth coffee table book.) “I’m personally not from wealth,” Snook says. “It’s not something I’m familiar with, and I don’t have friends who are in that sort of lofty, elite category of wealth either. That’s quite an alien thing to me.”

In conversations with showrunner Jesse Armstrong and executive producer Adam McKay, Snook found that even if she couldn’t quite relate to the trappings of wealth, she could envision what its “corrupting influences can do to the foundation of a family,” says Snook, who is the youngest of three sisters. “That’s where I was like, oh, yeah, that’s my entry point.”

There are few things more foundational than a good sibling rivalry, particularly when the goal is to get some shine from dad. “The Logan Roy Empire is almost the Oxford Dictionary definition of patriarchy,” Smith-Cameron writes. But Shiv’s character in Season 1 of Succession mostly opted out of the battle for father’s approval waged by her brothers Kendall and Roman. (Her half brother, Connor, was always more interested in ordering Napoleon’s desiccated penis as a historical “curio” than in taking over the family biz.) Some of Shiv’s reluctance was theoretically ideological: One of Waystar Royco’s big enterprises, ATN, is a Fox News–like media outfit, whereas Shiv specializes in the art of political gamesmanship for candidates on the Democratic side. Positional purity has never been the strong suit of the 1 percent, however, so that reason feels like a bit of a front.

To hear both Snook and Succession writer Lucy Prebble tell it, Shiv’s preference for operating from the sidelines has deeper roots. “The thing I’ve always said about Shiv,” says Prebble, speaking by phone from the U.K., “is that I think she’s so competitive that she refuses to compete.” Keeping power at arm’s length and engaging with it from a critical distance is its own kind of power, and in Season 1, Shiv stayed hard to get. You can’t lose, after all, if you don’t play. “She’s spent a long time carefully constructing a life outside of the company in order to protect herself from her dad,” says Snook. The problem is that her father is on to her.

Prebble calls it “slightly heartbreaking” to watch Shiv go against her self-protective instincts and exhibit true vulnerability, and indeed, seeing the cracks in Shiv’s armor begin to develop in the Season 2 premiere is hard to watch. How quickly that trademark “I’m Shiv-fucking-Roy” facade melts, and that buttery voice goes up a half-octave. But it’s also exciting to witness, to get to watch a fascinating, flawed woman on the brink of a major life stress test, and to daydream about the unspooling mess of plot possibilities before her.

Prebble joined the writing staff of Succession with a résumé that already included, among other things, stylized creative plunges into the worlds of both high-level financial corruption and high-class sex work. She wrote a play with the self-explanatory title Enron, which premiered to rave reviews in London in 2009, and from 2007 to 2011 she adapted an anonymous sex worker blog into the television series Secret Diary of a Call Girl. Asked what drew her to write scripts about corporations (another of her plays takes place during a pharmaceutical trial), she says that she finds it strange that more writers aren’t interested in tackling structures and systems, given the influence they have in anyone’s daily life. “Like, to me, the question is: Why is everyone so interested in writing about their personal relationships?” she says. “I’ve always been more of a fan of the novelistic approach of people like David Simon with The Wire, for example, when you’re actually looking at how people and systems interact with each other to produce a certain result.”

All of this was likely part of why Armstrong offered her a spot in his writers’ room, though there was another element that may have inspired Armstrong to keep her in mind: “Jesse and I had been in the same bar the night that Brexit, like, happened,” Prebble says. “Fairly memorable, in a way.” (Armstrong has quite a knack for such encounters: Part of Succession’s origin lore involves the very first table read for the pilot episode taking place on the night Trump was elected.) Prebble’s colleagues on the writing side include Susan Soon He Stanton, another playwright whose work often features complicated families, and Georgia Pritchett, a longtime collaborator of Armstrong’s who has written for programs ranging from Tracy Ullman’s Show to Veep.

”There are virtually no women in comedy writing,” Pritchett told The Telegraph in 2002, “and I don’t know why, because 95 per cent of the time it’s great. It’s lovely being the only woman in a roomful of men. It’s mainly executives that are the problem. I was working on a show with three men and we used to get memos and faxes to ‘Tim, Paul, Simon etc’. And I was always the etc.” Not so with Succession: “Jesse has excellent judgment when it comes to writers,” Smith-Cameron says, “and is obviously happy to collaborate with women.” Having these voices in the writers’ room “does actually make an obvious difference,” Snook says.

It isn’t just the gender composition of the writing team that contributes to Succession’s strong performances, but also the manner in which the entire co-ed team operates. When it comes to sex scenes, for example, Succession has an institutional aversion to “tits and ass,” Prebble says, and to gratuitous couplings that do nothing to advance plot. “Jesse and us, we’re not interested in having people take their clothes off, particularly women,” she says. Though that doesn’t mean that the show doesn’t use sex; far from it. One encounter that takes place midway through the second season (and which developed as writers took note of some naturally evolving chemistry on-set) actually made me gasp in disbelief and delight.

And then there’s the directive, collaborative, iterative manner in which the entire team operates. The writers are present and participatory in a way that is unusual for typical TV shows. “They’re just perceptive,” says Justine Lupe, who plays Willa, the on-the-payroll girlfriend of the strapping and delusional Connor Roy, who funds her aspiring playwright career in exchange for her agreeing to try to learn to love him. “Like, the chemistry they’re picking up on between characters, that spark. You see them kind of catch that spark and then turn it into a fire, which is a really neat thing to witness.” The characters in Succession may not always be respected by their peers, and they frequently don’t deserve to be; they are selfish and greedy; they cover up high crimes; they are by turns incompetent and cruel. But they are respected by the process, which doesn’t judge. The goal is fidelity, and the result is a group of characters who feel organic and twisted and true.

When Lupe talks about writers catching sparks, she speaks from personal experience. Her audition for the role of Willa involved a breakup scene with Connor, and she spent the first season flipping through each new script to see when it was coming. Instead, it never did, and the writers leaned further into the comedic discomfort of her and Connor’s interactions and the particulars of her kept-woman situation. (When Lupe got the script for a Thanksgiving episode last season in which Roman described her as once being “on that hot-party-girl-who-wouldn’t-look-twice-at-you-slash-hooker borderline,” the description caught her eye. “It’s so specifically perfect,” she says. “It’s like, one sentence that kind of sets up a whole world for the character.”) Succession is a show that features a strong female gaze, that gaze being Willa’s extremely rolled eyes.

Willa sighs heavily at her patron boyfriend from Manhattan to Austerlitz, his New Mexico ranch, the kind of sprawling, remote place that has a way of feeling claustrophobic despite its size. (When she asks how far away the nearest Starbucks is, Connor says, ominously, that he has a Keurig.) At one point, inspired by having read a disturbing article about how people go about breeding thoroughbred horses, Prebble suggested a story line in which Connor tries to convince Willa to have a baby—through a surrogate, so as to preserve her figure. “And Jesse was like, that’s way too far-fetched,” she says.

But in late July, The New York Times ran an article about the accused high-rolling sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein, and one of his chilling goals: “He hoped to seed the human race with his DNA by impregnating women at his vast New Mexico ranch,” the article explained. (This past weekend, Epstein died by suicide in a federal detention facility in New York.)

This tends to happen with Succession, this sort of unexpected free fall into the uncanny valley between the program’s enlightened satire and the dark realities of the world, and while sometimes it’s on purpose, often it’s truly not. You can make credible cases that the Roys are based on the Murdochs, the Redstones, the Mercers, the Kennedys, the Trumps, which tells you less about the Roys than it does about the same-y, dysfunctional selfishness inherent to ultrapowerful families.

The series actually does have a plot point originally sprung from the twisted life of Epstein, Prebble says, but it’s not even Connor: It’s Lester, the lech who ran the corporate cruise lines of Waystar Royco and used his position to proposition girls. In Succession’s world, this illegal and immoral racket is still being covered up, by men and women (Gerri, Shiv) alike. And in the real world, across many industries, women do the same thing every day; Prebble sees it in entertainment all the time. “Women are producers up to a certain level, then it’s only men,” she says. “And then above that level, it’s only men who have a sort of right-hand woman who takes care of stuff for them. In the most sinister world, that looks like Jeffrey Epstein and his fixer woman.”

Logan Roy often has a number of women in the room, and he even sometimes listens to their advice. Gerri is his version of the “right-hand woman who takes care of stuff,” though despite the obvious trust he has in her, Logan still subjects her to his volatile whims: In the Season 2 premiere, he needlessly (and pretty Trumpishly) taunts her, in front of a room of people, with the prospect of getting the Waystar Royco top job. Snook suggests that his reliance on Gerri may actually indicate some level of disregard, given his inclination toward kingly paranoia: “Oh, I’ll keep a person closest who can never really topple me,” Snook says, guessing at Logan’s inner voice, “who can never really take over.”

But Shiv is someone who can take over. Logan isn’t stupid: He knows the goods when he sees them, and his trim adult sons—the impulsive, brooding weenie Kendall and the impulsive, brooding wiseass Roman—ain’t it. Compared with Shiv, or Gerri, or some of the other women still to appear in Season 2, “I think of the sons as a little bit more either incompetent,” Prebble says, “or weak, actually, and cowardly.” Last season’s mano a mano showdown with Kendall had its thrilling moments, but Kendall was forever outmatched by his old man. Roman, bless his heart, is emotionally still a child.

Shiv is a tougher nut, but she still cracks. During a disastrous family retreat to New Mexico in Season 1 that included a famous corporate therapist getting carried off in an ambulance and featured Kendall Roy getting high on crank, a lashing-out Logan set his only daughter in his sights. “You’re scared to compete,” he said. “You’re marrying a man fathoms beneath you because you don’t want to risk being betrayed.” Shiv fled in tears, and Logan was, of course, correct; he didn’t rise from nothing to be a global rainmaker without getting pretty good at figuring out what bruises he could poke along the way.

As a person who is self-aware enough to know that when she feels too strongly or loves too deeply she can no longer feel in control, Shiv has built up some pretty sturdy defense mechanisms. (Sometimes she even uses them to attack: poor Tom, being accosted by demands for an open marriage on his wedding night!) But Logan knows all the codes to disarm them; he has a grip on his daughter’s Achilles’s heel even as he looks her in the eye and tells her that he wants her running Waystar Royco.

Logan’s announcement in the Season 2 premiere that he wants to buy another news business sets up the soon-to-come arrival of one of the most anticipated characters this season, Holly Hunter’s bright-eyed, deadpan arrival as a rival media CEO. The writers had Hunter in mind when they fleshed out her character, Rhea, during brainstorm sessions, but not in any realistic sense; her name was more of an aspirational placeholder, recognizable shorthand for “woman with stones.” It was a happy shock when Hunter signed on to the project for real.

“I was sitting there in the trailer with Holly Hunter,” says Lupe, “being like, I’m not trying to fangirl out, but I’ve got to say, like, I can’t believe you’re there, and I’m here!” It stands to reason that the show’s vivid and realistic treatment of women was not lost on a performer like Hunter—or like Berlin, or Annabelle Dexter-Jones, or Cherry Jones, whose upcoming performance as the head of an old-money family is a real masterpiece. And as more and meatier roles for women crop up in Succession, there’s an auxiliary benefit: All the scenes in which these “powerhouses,” as Lupe calls her coworkers, bounce off one another. They antagonize and negotiate; they gossip and giggle; they threaten and love. And in the show’s second season, they increasingly do all of this sans men, often outnumbering—and outranking—the guys who are so desperately clinging to the power they have left.

These newcomers enter an already-established universe, a Narnia on Benzos and ketamine. But back when Smith-Cameron auditioned, Gerry was still a man and she was left a little bit in the dark. “I didn’t have the scripts,” she remembers, “just these isolated scenes.” So without much to work with, she relied on her feminine instincts to fill in the blanks. “And right away I thought: This woman thinks Roman and Kendall are rather ridiculous, and actually kind of disgusting.” And lo, Gerri—and the fully realized world of Succession—was born.

Disclosure: HBO is an initial investor in The Ringer.

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https://www.theringer.com/tv/2019/8/12/20799176/succession-season-2-women-shiv-gerri

2019-08-12 10:20:00Z
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Liam Hemsworth Reportedly Speaks Out on Miley Cyrus Split: "You Don't Understand What It's Like" - Cosmopolitan

  • Liam Hemsworth has reportedly broken his silence after his split from Miley Cyrus.
  • Miley and Liam got married last December, and Miley was recently seen hooking up with Brody Jenner's ex Kaitlynn Carter in Italy.

    Liam Hemsworth has reportedly spoken out in the wake of the pretty shocking news that he and Miley Cyrus are breaking up after just months of marriage. The Daily Mail reports that they caught up with Liam while he was walking around Byron Bay (where his brother Chris Hemsworth lives), and he told them "You don't understand what it's like. I don't want to talk about it mate."

    The outlet also has exclusive pictures of the run-in, which are honestly a huge bummer due to Liam looking pretty damn sad. Reminder: news of the actor's split with Miley broke on Saturday night, with her rep confirming to People:

    “Liam and Miley have agreed to separate at this time. Ever-evolving, changing as partners and individuals, they have decided this is what’s best while they both focus on themselves and careers. They still remain dedicated parents to all of their animals they share while lovingly taking this time apart. Please respect their process and privacy.”

    Shortly before the news was announced, Miley was seen kissing Brody Jenner's ex-wife Kaitlynn Carter in Italy. Miley has since hit Instagram to vaguely speak out about the split, saying "change is inevitable," and also got into a low-key feud with Brody due to him joking about holding hands with Liam on the beach.

    Honestly, it's all kinda a mess!

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    https://www.cosmopolitan.com/entertainment/celebs/a28673734/liam-hemsworth-response-miley-cyrus-split/

    2019-08-12 10:31:00Z
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    Bill Cosby's appeal of his sex-crime conviction set for crucial hearing - USA TODAY

    Bill Cosby's effort to erase his conviction for sexual assault goes before a Pennsylvania appellate panel Monday for a hearing expected to focus on whether the trial judge made prejudicial errors or properly allowed testimony about Cosby's "decades-long pattern" of sexual misconduct. 

    There is a lot riding on this hearing for Cosby: Under Pennsylvania law, the only guaranteed appeal venue for a defendant is with the Pennsylvania Superior Court in the state capital of Harrisburg.

    The hearing will be before a three-judge panel and it could be short: Typically, each side gets about 15 minutes to make its case – but that counts the questions the judges may ask. Interruptions can be expected, shortening even more the time each side has to argue.

    Cosby, 82, will be represented by his appellate team, Kristen Weisenburger and Barbara Zemlock, according to his spokesman, Andrew Wyatt.

    The Commonwealth, specifically Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele, will be represented by Robert Falin, chief of the district attorney's appellate unit.

    The judges will not issue a decision that day, and there is no telling when they will. 

    If the decision goes against Cosby – meaning the three-count guilty verdict and the three-to-10 year sentence is affirmed – then Cosby stays in his prison cell near Philadelphia and his lawyers can try to persuade the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to hear his appeal.

    But the high court doesn't have to take the case and there is no guarantee it will.

    The stakes also are high for the prosecution side, which includes #MeToo movement and anti-rape activists, who hailed Cosby's conviction as retribution for the five-dozen other women who have accused him of sexual misconduct dating back to the mid-1960s. The Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN) filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting the conviction. 

    The Cosby case is frequently referred to as the first celebrity trial of the #MeToo era: Although his first trial in June 2017 took place before the movement surged in November 2017, his second trial took place nearly a year later.  

    But in fact, so far Cosby is the only celebrity convicted post-MeToo: the New York sexual assault case against fallen Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein is still pending, as are four sets of sex-crime charges in three states against R&B star R. Kelly. And the Massachusetts groping case against Oscar winner Kevin Spacey collapsed last month. 

    The Cosby appeal, however, will focus on something more nuts-and-bolts legalistic, one that comes up in scores of non-celebrity criminal cases: Was his trial in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, conducted properly or were there mistakes that produced an unfair result that should be overturned?

    To recap: Cosby was convicted in April 2018 (his first trial ended in a hung jury) of three counts of drugging and molesting former Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. He was sentenced in September and has been locked up in a state prison ever since, despite repeated efforts to be released while his case is on appeal. 

    Cosby says his encounters with Constand and with other accusers were consensual. 

    His appellate brief features a litany of alleged errors by trial Judge Steven O'Neill, who also presided over his first trial. Perhaps the most important: O'Neill allowed five other accusers to testify about separate and uncharged crimes they say Cosby committed against them in the past, to establish a pattern of "prior bad acts" to bolster Constand's accusations.

    O'Neill, who allowed only one such accuser to testify at the first trial, also filed a brief with the appellate court in which he argued, through case law and precedent, that none of the "errors" Cosby alleged were actually errors. In an earlier opinion, he wrote that he allowed the five other accusers to testify because their accounts had "chilling similarities" that pointed to a "signature" crime. 

    Prior-bad-acts witnesses could be increasingly crucial in other sex-crime cases and in other states where they are allowed, as long as their probative value outweighs their prejudicial effect.

    Cosby's lawyers quote case law in arguing that such testimony was "extraordinarily prejudicial," to the point that it "predisposed" jurors to believe he was guilty, thus effectively stripping him of the presumption of innocence. 

    In the Commonwealth's appellate brief, prosecutors echoed O'Neill's argument that such testimony is permissible under Pennsylvania law when it demonstrates a "signature" crime.

    "There was no coincidence here. To the contrary, defendant's drug-facilitated sexual assault of Constand was the culmination of a decades-long pattern of behavior evidenced by his prior bad acts towards the five witnesses sufficiently 'distinctive and so nearly identical as to become the signature of the same perpetrator,' " the prosecutors wrote, quoting from case law on the issue. 

    Cosby's appeal also raises other issues about his trial, such as his argument that he should never have been prosecuted because of a binding agreement with a previous district attorney in 2005 that he would never be charged in the Constand case because of insufficient evidence.

    He argues that O'Neill should have recused himself from the Constand case because his supposed "political feud" with former district attorney Bruce Castor meant O'Neill was "biased" against Castor when he testified as a defense witness at a pretrial hearing.

    And Cosby also challenged O'Neill's decision to allow his testimony from a 2005 deposition to be introduced at the trials, in which Cosby acknowledged acquiring quaaludes in the 1970s to give to other women before sex.

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    https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/celebrities/2019/08/12/bill-cosbys-appeal-his-sex-crime-conviction-crucial-hearing/1958562001/

    2019-08-12 10:00:00Z
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    Minggu, 11 Agustus 2019

    ‘Hobbs & Shaw’ Pumps Up $333M Global; ‘Toy Story 4’ Nears $1B WW; Tarantino’s ‘Hollywood’ Stars In Russia – International Box Office - Deadline

    Refresh for latest…: Universal’s Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw put another $60.8M in the tank during its second frame at the international box office. The Dwayne Johnson/Jason Statham-starrer pumped up its overseas cume to $224.1M in 66 markets through Sunday, and global to $332.6M. The drop in markets that opened last weekend was a solid 43%.

    Overall, H&S is tracking in line with Fast & Furious 6 and about 40% off of Furious 7 and The Fate Of The Furious. By way of comparison, although it was coming off a record opening during Easter 2017, the latter film dipped by 60% in its second offshore frame.

    H&S added five new markets this session, which are tracking about 30% ahead of Mission: Impossible – Fallout combined. Despite a big holiday travel weekend, France was the best opener at $6.9M for No. 1. The UK is currently the lead H&S hub at $15.6M with a good 40% drop from the debut.

    Still to come on the David Leitch-helmed Hobbs & Shaw are Korea on August 14 and China on August 23. In the latter, juggernaut animated title Ne Zha did an estimated $68M this session to score the No. 1 slot at the international box office for the weekend. The local estimated gross is $512M with Maoyan predicting a $671M finish. If that holds, Ne Zha would overtake Avengers: Endgame to become the No. 2 movie of the year in the Middle Kingdom.

    The Lion King, meanwhile, has now surpassed Beauty And The Beast as the highest-grossing Disney live-action release of all time with $1.335B globally. It is the No. 12 film ever on the overall worldwide chart and the No. 2 release of 2019 domestically ($473.1M), internationally ($861.5M) and globally.

    The studio’s Toy Story 4 is nearing the $1B global threshold with a cume through Sunday of $990M. It opens in Germany this week and also has Scandinavia to come. TS4 has become the No. 8 animated movie ever worldwide.

    Once Upon A Time In Hollywood
    A handful of new titles made staggered debuts overseas this weekend, including Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood which scored a $7.7M No. 1 opening in Russia. The Sony/Bona title is Tarantino’s biggest launch of all time in the market, tripling Django Unchained. Rollout continues through the next several weeks.

    CBS Films’ Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark began spinning its tale in 30 overseas markets including a mix of South East Asia, Latin America and Europe, for $4M. Taiwan led play with $600K. Next weekend adds another 12 hubs including Mexico.

    Paramount’s Dora And The Lost City Of Gold traveled to its first 11 markets for a $2.5M start that was led by Russia’s $878K. Rollout will continue through October.

    Also new, Disney/Fox’s The Art Of Racing In The Rain padded into 12 markets for $1.1M, led by Brazil at $300K. This one also rolls out throughout the next few months.

    Breakdowns on the films above and more are being updated below.

    NEW
    ONCE UPON A TIME… IN HOLLYWOOD

    Sony/Bona’s Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood crossed the $100M mark domestically this weekend as offshore rollout begins. Russia is the first overseas major to debut and did so in a big way with a $7.7M No. 1 start. This is the best opening of all time for director Quentin Tarantino, doing three times Django Unchained as well as 22% above Sony’s Spectre and 154% over Leonardo DiCaprio-starrer The Wolf Of Wall Street.

    Hollywood world premiered to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival in May and the rest of France gets its first look at the movie beginning this Wednesday (and with a national holiday on Thursday). Coverage on the film is wide here where Tarantino excels. Also on deck this week are the UK, Australia, Brazil, Germany and Spain. Later in the month will see Mexico and Japan, followed by Italy and Korea in September. It is expected that OUATIH will get a China date, although this has not yet been confirmed.

    HOLDOVERS/EXPANSIONS
    FAST & FURIOUS PRESENTS: HOBBS & SHAW

    After rocking its debut last session, Universal’s spinoff dropped by 43% for a $60.8M sophomore frame in 66 markets. The international total is now $224.1M with $332.6M worldwide. The film is tracking in line with Fast & Furious 6 and, as expected, is running behind the last two movies in the main franchise. There is open play ahead, and China on deck for August 23. The series of films, as well as Johnson and Statham, are powerhouses in the market where the duo traveled last week.

    As for this current session, France led with $6.9M at 809 sites for a No. 1 start in line with Mission: Impossible – Fallout. Italy was also new at $2.6M from 411, at No. 1 and on par with Fallout.

    The best holdover hub was the UK where the gross is now $15.6M after a 40% drop. Europe saw some of the lead holds overall. Rounding out the Top 5 cumes behind the UK are Russia ($14M), Japan ($13.9M), India ($13.8M) and Mexico ($13M).

    Korea bows on Wednesday.

    THE LION KING

    'The Lion King'
    Disney’s The Lion King continues to roar overseas with a $51.4M 5th weekend. That takes the offshore cume to $861.5M and global to $1,334.6M. This frame brought Japan to the pride with a No. 2 start of $9.3M to set it up nicely for the local Obon holiday.

    Overall, the drop from last weekend for the big cat was just 40%. The European region fell by just 31% with strong holds in several markets including Sweden (+5%), Netherlands (-11%), UK (-15%), Germany (-25%), France (-37%), Israel (-42%) and Spain (-43%). The estimated regional cume is now $400M, making The Lion King the 3rd highest grossing Disney-branded live action film ever in Europe. The UK, Germany and Netherlands were among No. 1 holds in the session.

    The Asia Pacific cume is now an estimated $287M, led by China’s $120M; the movie has received an extension there. Within APAC, strong holds included Singapore (-9%), Taiwan (-26%) and Australia (-35%).

    As for Latin America, the total there is now $174M with continuing No. 1s in Brazil, Peru, Argentina and Venezuela. In Brazil, Peru and Colombia, TLK is the 3rd highest grossing film ever. It is also the 5th highest grossing film in Mexico.

    The Top 5 markets are China ($120M), UK ($73.9M), France ($61.4M), Brazil ($60.4M) and Mexico ($49M). Still to come is Italy on August 21.

    THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 2

    Illumination/Universal’s sequel purred for another $15.4M in 49 markets this session, taking offshore kibbles to $221.2M and global to $377.8M. Mexico had a good start of $5.1M from 906 locations to come in 18% ahead of Zootopia. Also new was Spain with $2.45M from 403 and in line with Ralph Breaks The Internet.

    Holds were good in France (-27%/$7.3M cume), Japan (-24%/$10.8M cume), Germany (-20%/$17.9M cume) Netherlands (+5%/$5M cume).

    TOY STORY 4

    Toy Story 4
    Forky and pals are getting ever closer to the $1B worldwide mark, coming out of this weekend with $990M accumulated at the global box office. That’s after a $9.7M international frame in 36 markets for a $570.4M overseas tally so far. There are still markets to come including Germany and Scandinavia.

    The weekend dipped by just 27%, even rising by 20% in the UK where TS4 has become the No. 2 animated title of all time (overall it is No. 8 globally) with a local total of $73.8M. In Latin America, TS4 is the No. 1 animated release ever with a regional $196M.

    In the Top 5, the UK is followed by Mexico ($71.8M), Japan ($71.1M), Brazil ($32.4M) and China ($29.1M).

    MISC UPDATED CUMES/NOTABLE

    Spider-Man: Far From Home (SNY): $5.3M intl weekend (67 markets); $726M intl cume ($1.09B global)
    Aladdin (DIS): $2.8M intl weekend (25 markets); $682.5M intl cume ($1,035.3M global)
    *Dora And The Lost City Of Gold (PAR): $2.5M intl weekend (11 markets); $2.5M intl cume ($19.5M global)
    Crawl (PAR): $2.3M intl weekend (28 markets); $20.6M intl cume ($58.7M global)
    Yesterday (UNI): $1.9M intl weekend (26 markets); $54.4M intl cume ($124.9M global)
    Padre No Hay Mas Que Uno (SNY): $1.3M intl weekend (Spain only); $5.1M Spain cume
    *The Art Of Racing In The Rain (DIS/FOX): $1.1M intl weekend (12 markets); $1.1M intl cume ($9.2M global)
    (*Denotes New)

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    https://deadline.com/2019/08/fast-and-furious-presents-hobbs-shaw-the-lion-king-toy-story-4-once-upon-a-time-in-hollywood-china-global-international-box-office-1202665985/

    2019-08-11 17:11:00Z
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