More stories

  • in

    Netflix Series About Colin Kaepernick Is in the Works From Ava DuVernay

    Colin Kaepernick has yet to be invited back to the National Football League, but Netflix is welcoming him with open arms. The former quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers who sparked a movement when he knelt during the national anthem to protest police brutality and racial inequality has joined forces with the writer-director Ava DuVernay for a six-episode Netflix series. The show, “Colin in Black & White,” will center on the athlete’s teenage years.Michael Starrbury (“When They See Us”) wrote the series and will serve as executive producer alongside DuVernay and Kaepernick, who will narrate the episodes.The show centers on Kaepernick’s life as a Black child growing up in Northern California with a white adopted family and his journey to becoming a professional quarterback.“Too often we see race and Black stories portrayed through a white lens,” Kaepernick said in a statement. “We seek to give new perspective to the differing realities that Black people face. We explore the racial conflicts I faced as an adopted Black man in a white community during my high school years.”The series was conceived in 2019. Starrbury completed the scripts in May.In 2016, Kaepernick started kneeling at the start of N.F.L. games, prompting other athletes in and out of football to do the same. His actions drew the ire of President Trump, who suggested that those who didn’t stand for the national anthem should be fired. Kaepernick opted out of his contract in March 2017 and was not hired by any other team. This prompted the quarterback, who took the 49ers to the 2012 Super Bowl, to file a grievance against the N.F.L., alleging that the 32 teams colluded to keep him out of the league. Kaepernick and the N.F.L. settled the dispute in 2019, yet he remains unsigned.His activism has received renewed attention in the wake of the killing of George Floyd and nationwide protests against police brutality and systemic racism.“With his act of protest, Colin Kaepernick ignited a national conversation about race and justice with far-reaching consequences for football, culture and for him, personally,” DuVernay said in a statement. “Colin’s story has much to say about identity, sports and the enduring spirit of protest and resilience.” More

  • in

    BET Awards Put Black Lives at Center of Socially Distant Show

    Political performances by Public Enemy, DaBaby, Alicia Keys and John Legend, civic-minded speeches by Michelle Obama and Beyoncé, and a series of tributes to George Floyd and Breonna Taylor led a virtual, mostly socially distanced and social justice-themed version of the BET Awards on Sunday, the first major awards show of the pandemic era.The host, Amanda Seales, a comedian, actress and activist, cited “Covid and cops and Karens gone wild” as the reason for an atypical event, but insisted in her opening monologue: “We had to do the awards. We deserve a break. And when I say we, I mean all us black folks.”Nearly every act, appearance, acceptance speech and even advertisement that followed made some reference to the wave of protests against police brutality that spread worldwide after Floyd was killed in Minneapolis on Memorial Day, bringing renewed attention to many other cases of black people who have suffered at the hands of law enforcement or racist violence.[embedded content]The awards show, which was made up of taped performances and speeches because of the virus, aired for the first time on CBS, in addition to BET, following the merger last year of the broadcast giant and Viacom, BET’s parent company. And rather than the lo-fi, at-home performances from couches and kitchens that have become standard television fare during the Covid-19 crisis, BET provided budgets for its far-flung talent to produce remote segments that were often more like mini-music videos than the typically raw and sometimes glitchy live awards-show stagings.Megan Thee Stallion, who won the award for best female hip-hop artist, performed her hit “Savage” — sans Beyoncé, who appears on the remix — in a “Mad Max”-style desert landscape, complete with a black power fist background, while Legend was joined by a choir in an abandoned warehouse for a rendition of his latest tear-jerker, “We Will Never Break.”The show — celebrating its 20th year, along with 40 years of BET as a network — began and ended with gospel music, first featuring Keedron Bryant, a 12-year-old internet sensation whose song “I Just Wanna Live” starts, “I’m a young black man/Doing all that I can.” In a closing number, the mother and daughter combination of Kierra Sheard and Karen Clark Sheard (originally of the Clark Sisters) sang “Something Has to Break.”Earlier, in fiery segments, Public Enemy was joined by Nas, Rapsody, Black Thought, Questlove, YG and Jahi for an updated version of the hip-hop classic “Fight the Power”; Lil Wayne led a rapped tribute to Kobe Bryant; and the North Carolina rapper DaBaby opened his remix of the Billboard No. 1 single “Rockstar” pressed up against asphalt, a police officer’s knee pressed into his neck in an unmistakable reference to the video of Floyd’s death. Later in the song, DaBaby appeared atop a police car, smashing the windshield while surrounded by protesters in T-shirts reading “I Am George Floyd” and “I Am Breonna Taylor.”An epilogue following his performance read, “In loving memory of all the lives lost to racism and police brutality.”Anderson .Paak and Keys also centered their segments around black lives lost, with Keys singing “Perfect Way to Die” on an empty street corner surrounded by the names of victims written in chalk. Roddy Ricch performed “High Fashion” and “The Box” in a Black Lives Matter shirt.Additional tributes included Wayne Brady performing in honor of Little Richard, who died in May, and Jennifer Hudson doing her take on Aretha Franklin’s gospel version of “Young, Gifted and Black,” originally by Nina Simone.The former first lady Michelle Obama presented BET’s humanitarian award to Beyoncé (“To my girl, I just want to say: You inspire me, you inspire all of us,” she said), while the singer — whose new “Lion King”-inspired music film, “Black Is King,” will premiere on Disney Plus on July 31 — used her acceptance speech to thank protesters and encourage them to vote.“We have to vote like our life depends on it,” Beyoncé said, “because it does.” More

  • in

    Alison Brie 'Truly Sorry' for Voicing Asian American Character in 'BoJack Horseman'

    WENN/Netflix

    Just days after Kristen Bell and Jenny Slate stepped down from ‘Central Park’ and ‘Big Mouth’, the actress behind Diane Nguyen’s voice claims to ‘have learned a lot from them.’
    Jun 29, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Alison Brie regrets voicing a Vietnamese-American character in cult animated show “BoJack Horseman”.
    Just days after Kristen Bell and Jenny Slate announced they were stepping down from cartoon hits “Central Park” and “Big Mouth” due to the fact they are voicing black characters, Brie has voiced her concerns about portraying an Asian.
    “In hindsight, I wish that I didn’t voice the character of Diane Nguyen,” she writes on Instagram. “I now understand that people of color, should always voice people of color. We missed a great opportunity to represent the Vietnamese-American community accurately and respectfully, and for that I am truly sorry. I applaud all those who stepped away from their voiceover roles in recent days. I have learned a lot from them.”

    “BoJack Horseman” creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg recently responded to concerns about Brie’s character on the show, stating: “We should have hired a Vietnamese writer, and a Vietnamese actress to play Diane – or if not that, changed the character to match who we did hire.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    City Girls’ Yung Miami Dressing Up to the Nines for Ex Jai Wiggins’ Funeral

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Josh Gad Wraps Up His Fundraiser Series With 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' Reunion

    The ‘Frozen’ actor is reuniting Matthew Broderick and his ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ co-star Alan Ruck more than three decades after the teen comedy movie came out.
    Jun 29, 2020
    AceShowbiz – “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” stars Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck have been brought together virtually by Josh Gad for the final episode in his online cast reunion series.
    The “Frozen” actor has been entertaining fans in coronavirus isolation with his Reunited Apart digital show, on which he’s hosted chats with stars from “The Lord of the Rings”, “The Goonies”, “Splash”, “Back to the Future”, and “Ghostbusters”.
    The YouTube show is set to conclude on Sunday, June 28, 2020, and to wrap it all up, he’s reconnected the leads of the hit 1986 teen comedy.
    In a promotional teaser for U.S. breakfast show “Today”, onscreen best friends Broderick and Ruck try to recall the last time they saw one another in person when they crossed paths in New York City.
    [embedded content]
    “It’s been a while… It was like 15 years ago this fall (autumn),” Ruck admitted.
    Tune into the get-together at 12 P.M. (ET) on Sunday here.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Actress Molly Conlin Robbed at Knifepoint in Scary Home Invasion

    Related Posts More

  • in

    ‘Perry Mason’ Season 1, Episode 2: In the Trenches

    Season 1, Episode 2: ‘Chapter Two’The flashbacks occur at intervals throughout the episode. They take us to the trenches of World War I — still without its even more savage sequel by the time “Perry Mason” takes place — where our title character is an American military officer, leading his men in a charge over the top. In the chaos of the no man’s land, the charge breaks down. Those who’ve survived German machine guns and flame throwers now must contend with a huge wave of enemy troops mounting a counterattack … and the lethal poison gas clearing their way.As Perry flees, ordering his men before him, he sees that some are too badly wounded and maimed to move. Unwilling to let them suffer or leave them at the mercy of the gas, he takes his handgun and shoots them to death himself, one after another. When one of them begs — whether for death or a reprieve from it isn’t entirely clear — Mason murmurs, “Forgive me,” and pulls the trigger.If it accomplished nothing else, this week’s episode of “Perry Mason” established why the private detective seems so perpetually ground down. With memories like that playing in your head every time you take a cigarette break, wouldn’t you look and feel exhausted? Moreover, it accounts for his dishonorable discharge from the military — and, according to his wealthy backer Herman Baggerly, his bloody nickname: “The Butcher of Monfalcone.”Even for a private eye, a career for which an unsavory reputation kind of comes with the territory, it’s a lot of weight to bear.But Perry is now on a different kind of mission than the one he was on in the trenches: Clearing his client Matthew Dodson of the kidnapping of his own infant. Suspicion falls on Mr. Dodson when District Attorney Maynard Barnes (Stephen Root, who, as always, seems to be having the time of his life) uncovers a secret of Dodson’s own: He’s Baggerly’s son from a one-night stand, back before the magnate found Jesus. Suddenly it makes sense why someone would try to extort a grocer for $100,000 — and who is in a better position to do so than the man who knows best that Baggerly would pay on his grandson’s behalf?The story, of course, stinks, and only partially because the murderous Sergeant Ennis (Andrew Howard), who killed the kidnappers himself, is on board with Dodson’s arrest. For one thing, Dodson has an alibi, though not the sort that would necessarily hold up in court: He was out gambling that night, and there are eyewitnesses to that effect; the witness who placed Dodson at the scene of the murder of the accomplices was coached by Ennis and his partner, Detective Holcomb (Eric Lange). The two men also tamper with the findings of a beat cop, Paul Drake (Chris Chalk), a black officer forced to change his observant report on a blood trail at the scene to fit his white superiors’ preferences.Perry, meanwhile, is poking at loose ends of his own. His suspicion falls on Mrs. Dodson rather than on her husband when he learns from a nosy neighbor that she spends hours on the phone when her husband’s away. A little skulduggery with the phone company after tailing the bereaved mother lands him in hot water with Della Street, the legal secretary for their mutual employer, E.B. Jonathan. But it also leads him to a house were he finds a dead body, its head blown to gory, 1980s-horror-movie mush by a shotgun … and a cache of love letters from Mrs. Dodson.Now an alternate theory of the crime develops, thanks in no small part to Perry’s distaste for Mrs. Dodson’s cheating ways. It now seems likely that her lover, George Gammon, helped set up the kidnapping after finding out from the missis that her husband had a rich dad, and that the baby’s death was a horrible accident. (It’s implied, but not stated outright, that the killer stitched the child’s eyes open as a macabre way to indicate a wish that the boy was still alive.)Everything comes to a head at the baby’s lavish funeral service, held before an audience of Los Angeles luminaries — should the mayor get an aisle seat, or should it be reserved for Clark Gable? — at the temple of the evangelical preacher Sister Alice. As played by Tatiana Maslany, Alice is not at all what I expected her to be: She seems to be a true believer rather than an obviously hypocritical mountebank, and her style of speaking is down to earth as well as passionate. A lot of characters of this sort are so flagrantly unappealing that it’s impossible to sympathize with anyone who follows them; Sister Alice (whose business affairs are run by her mother, played by Lili Taylor) is a more convincing shepherd of her flock.That said, she sure throws a monkey wrench in the political feasibility of any attempt to strike a plea deal when she delivers a fire and brimstone sermon about the need to execute whomever killed the Dodsons’ baby. (“Blessed be the hangman,” she thunders in an inversion of Christ’s Beatitudes). In a pair of private moments, she also seems to “hear” a baby crying, though whether these are memories or reveries is unclear.In the end, Perry’s suspicions win the day, somewhat to his own chagrin. Mrs. Dodson is arrested as her baby’s coffin is loaded into a hearse on its way to burial, in full view of all the gathered mourners and bigwigs and news media. Turns out Mason and Jonathan ratted Emily out regarding the love letters, and the cops inferred that she and her dead lover, George, were in cahoots on the kidnapping.But when push comes to shove, Perry backs down off his righteous rage against her: “Infidelity isn’t murder,” he says, repeating what his colleagues had already told him multiple times.In a closing musical montage, Della delivers a blanket to Emily Dodson in jail. Officer Banks returns to the scene of the crime and discovers half a set of false teeth in the alley below the rooftop where the blood trail ran cold — the other half of which is lodged in the “suicidal” George Gammon’s mouth, indicating the body was moved. And Perry, his memories still consumed by his wartime trauma, is drawn to a singer on a street corner (Tunde Adebimpe, vocalist for the art-rock band TV on the Radio), performing the Washington Phillips gospel song “Lift Him Up That’s All.”It’s a note of uplift that seems almost ironic. Mason has spent this episode wrestling with his wartime demons and with witnessing Emily Dodson in the throes of absolute grief — first when he brings her news of the death of her lover, then when she is pulled away from her baby’s coffin during her arrest. It’s too much misery for a song or a cigarette to salve. A whodunit with a severe emotional palette commensurate with the tragedy and atrocity uncovered by the investigator? That’s a rare and valuable thing we’ve uncovered.From the case files:If you’re not familiar with Adebimpe’s work with TV on the Radio, might I suggest “Province,” the band’s duet with David Bowie?After her hang-’em-high sermon, Sister Alice exchanges a pointed, prolonged glance with Perry. Her mother, Birdy, asks her, “What was that?” about the sermon; I’m wondering the same thing about the stare-down.“We do what we don’t like when there’s a greater good to be served,” E.B. tells Perry after they draw the heat off Mr. Dodson by blaming his wife. “You more than anyone should know that.” This apparent reference to Mason’s wartime mercy killings indicates that his boss is somewhat less troubled by Perry’s past than Perry is. More