Tag: john-legend

  • Steven Spielberg Achieves EGOT Status

    Steven Spielberg arrives at the Oscar Nominee Luncheon held in the International Ballroom at the Beverly Hilton on Monday, February 12, 2024. The 96th Oscars will air on Sunday, March 10, 2024 live on ABC. Credit/Provider: Mike Baker / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Steven Spielberg arrives at the Oscar Nominee Luncheon held in the International Ballroom at the Beverly Hilton on Monday, February 12, 2024. The 96th Oscars will air on Sunday, March 10, 2024 live on ABC. Credit/Provider: Mike Baker / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Preview:

    • Filmmaker Steven Spielberg has achieved EGOT status.
    • He’s now the 21st person to win an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony.
    • Robert Lopez is the only double-EGOT winner.

    You would be forgiven for thinking that he was already there given his career to date, but thanks to a Grammy win as one of the producers on ‘Music by John Williams,’ a tribute to the storied career (and the director’s longtime friend and collaborator), Steven Spielberg has joined the EGOT club.

    For those thinking, “EWhat?” it means those who have won the four major awards, an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony.

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    Spielberg becomes the 21st person to achieve the illustrious status (see more below).

    Related Article: ‘Thunderbolts*’ Wyatt Russell is the Latest Addition to Steven Spielberg’s Mysterious New Event Movie

    Who else has become an EGOT?

    Steven Spielberg in 'Mr. Scorsese,' premiering October 17, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Steven Spielberg in ‘Mr. Scorsese,’ premiering October 17, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    The list of those who have won all four so far? Deep breath: Richard Rodgers, Helen Hayes, Rita Moreno, John Gielgud, Audrey Hepburn, Marvin Hamlisch, Jonathan Tunick, Mel Brooks, Mike Nichols, Whoopi Goldberg, Scott Rudin, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Tim Rice, John Legend, Alan Menken, Jennifer Hudson, Viola Davis, Elton John, Benj Pasek and Justin Paul.

    But despite his many awards, Spielberg has some way to go to compete with ‘Frozen’ co-songwriter Robert Lopez, who has managed to win them all at least twice.

    When will Spielberg’s next movie arrive?

    The director has his latest movie, sci-fi thriller ‘Disclosure Day’, due on June 12 this year.

    Emily Blunt in 'Disclosure Day', directed by Steven Spielberg. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Emily Blunt in ‘Disclosure Day’, directed by Steven Spielberg. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    List of Steven Spielberg Movies:

    Buy Steven Spielberg Movies on Amazon

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  • Sandra Bullock Making ’80s Amazon Series Inspired by Her College Years

    Sandra Bullock Making ’80s Amazon Series Inspired by Her College Years

    Warner Bros.

    Though she’s best known for her scene-stealing work in front of the camera, Sandra Bullock has had plenty of success behind it, too, producing a string of hit films including her star vehicles “Miss Congeniality,” “The Proposal,” and Netflix’s buzzy “Bird Box.” Now, Bullock is set to produce once again, this time on a new project that’s inspired by her own life.

    According to Deadline, the actress is developing a TV series for Amazon that’s loosely based on her experiences in college in North Carolina in the 1980s. The dramedy, set in the world of music and dance, will be co-executive produced by Bullock, alongside fellow A-list Oscar winners John Legend and Akiva Goldsman.

    Here’s a breakdown of the as-yet-untitled series, per Deadline:

    ” … the show is described as a hilarious, boundary-crossing, and often soul-wrenching trek through the oppressive cultural norms of the deep south in the 1980s, where one darkly off-beat young woman defies expectations and sets out in search of love, community, and most importantly, an identity of her own. It’s a fantastical, dance-filled journey, traversing the worlds of drag-culture, mental health, and the AIDS epidemic, all while following a group of young outcasts who band together and dare to be themselves, despite the very real danger they face in doing so. It’s a vivid, fun, gut-punch of a story about letting go of shame and living out loud… and some of it’s even true.”

    Longtime friends Bullock and Goldsman, who previously collaborated on the films “A Time To Kill” and “Practical Magic,” conceived of the idea for the show together. It was created and written by K.C. Perry (“Constance,” “The Originals”).

    Deadline reports that Goldsman specifically sought out Legend to both help develop the series, and shape its unique soundtrack, which will feature an “ambitious fusion of multiple genres of music from the period, including 80’s pop, timeless Southern gospel, and opera.” Based on that unlikely combination, we’re already intrigued.

    No word yet on how many episodes are expected, or a production or release timeframe. Stay tuned.

    [via: Deadline]

  • NBC Reveals 2019 Midseason Premiere Dates

    NBC Reveals 2019 Midseason Premiere Dates

    NBC

    NBC has revealed its premiere schedule for the upcoming 2019 midseason, featuring the return of a critically acclaimed drama and the debut of a newly-minted EGOT inductee.

    First up is “Good Girls,” the buzzy drama starring Christina Hendricks (“Mad Men”), Retta (“Parks and Recreation”), and Mae Whitman (“Parenthood,” “Arrested Development”) as three suburban moms who decide to take back financial control of their lives by robbing a grocery store — and wind up sinking deeper and deeper into criminal activity. Season two of the series will move from Mondays to Sundays, and return to NBC on March 3 at 10 p.m.

    Next is “The Voice,” which will add John Legend to the judging panel for its 16th season. Legend completed his EGOT cycle (a.k.a. winning an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony) back in September, when he snagged a statuette at the Emmys for producing NBC’s live version of “Jesus Christ Superstar.”

    The singer-actor’s relationship with NBC was apparently so positive that he decided to spend even more time on the network. His debut as a full-time coach (he has previously been a mentor) will air on back to back nights: Monday, February 25 and Tuesday, February 26, both at 8 p.m. “The Voice” will then move to Mondays only for several weeks while “Ellen’s Game of Games” takes its Tuesday slot; the singing competition will bring back Tuesday shows on April 23.

    In other NBC midseason scheduling, Jennifer Lopez-led reality series “World of Dance” will premiere its third season on Tuesday, February 6 at 8 p.m. It will then move to its regular slot on Sundays at 8 p.m. on March 3.

    And finally, sophomore sitcom “A.P. Bio,” starring Glenn Howerton and Patton Oswalt, will return to class on Thursday, March 7 at 8:30 p.m.

    We’re already looking forward to lots of TV watching in the new year.

    [via: TVLine]

  • John Legend Will Be a Coach on ‘The Voice’ Season 16

    John Legend Will Be a Coach on ‘The Voice’ Season 16

    NBC

    Newly-minted EGOT club member John Legend is adding yet another title to his impressive resume: “Voice” coach.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Legend will be joining the judging panel on next spring’s 16th season of “The Voice.” He’ll be taking the place of current coach Jennifer Hudson, who will appear on season 15, premiering later this month.

    THR reports that it was Legend’s idea to become a “Voice” coach, and he approached NBC himself with the pitch. The star is fresh off playing the titular role in the network’s live production of “Jesus Christ Superstar,” which won him his last piece of the EGOT puzzle, the Emmy, last Sunday. (That statuette was for his role as producer; he’s also up for an acting Emmy at next week’s primetime awards.)

    “I’m thrilled to join the coaches of ‘The Voice,’” Legend said in a statement. “I’ve been a guest and mentor on the show multiple times and I’m so excited to discover talented singers and help them make the most of their gift. I hope the world is ready for #TeamJL.”

    Legend will join returning coaches Adam Levine, Blake Shelton, and Kelly Clarkson. No word yet on when season 16 will premiere, though it’s expected to bow sometime in early 2019. Season 15 hits the airwaves on September 24.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

  • Creative Arts Emmys 2018: John Legend Earns EGOT (and More Chrissy Teigen ‘Arthur’ Trolling)

    Creative Arts Emmys 2018: John Legend Earns EGOT (and More Chrissy Teigen ‘Arthur’ Trolling)

    Chrissy Teigen/Twitter

    This year’s Creative Arts Emmys had the distinction of crowning not one, not two, but three brand new members of the exclusive EGOT club, with John Legend, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Tim Rice all snagging statuettes on Sunday night to complete their collection. And as usual, Legend’s wife, Chrissy Teigen, couldn’t help but take the opportunity to poke some fun at her husband.

    Legend, Lloyd Webber, and Rice took home the Emmy for Best Live Variety Special for “Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert,” which they co-produced alongside Craig Zadan (the late prolific producer known for his work on “Chicago” and recent Oscars telecasts), Marc Platt, Neil Meron, Mike Jackson, Ty Stiklorius, Alex Rudzinski, and Javier Winnik. But it was the first three who had also previously won a Grammy, an Oscar, and a Tony, making them the 13th, 14th, and 15th members of the EGOT club.

    Legend’s new status is of particular note, since he is the first African-American man to claim EGOT status. And at 39, he’s also one of the youngest people ever to earn the honor, following “Frozen” songwriter Robert Lopez, who was also 39 when he snagged his final piece of the EGOT crown (the 2014 Best Original Song Oscar, for “Let It Go”).

    The multi-hyphenate shared his surprise and gratitude on social media, writing on Instagram that he was “amazed to be in such rarefied air.” Teigen’s reaction was more succinct, calling the trio “EGOT GOATS.”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Bnh1l6yhx1M/?utm_source=ig_twitter_share&igshid=1iqswo2nljrz8

    https://twitter.com/chrissyteigen/status/1038962213900304385

    But she saved the best commentary for last: Continuing to troll Legend over his resemblance to the titular aardvark on beloved kids series “Arthur.”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BniRrVpHvXX/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=embed_video_watch_again

    “And I say hey, what a wonderful kind of day,” Teigen captioned a video of Legend adding his Emmy to his already-crowded awards shelf. (For the uninitiated, those are lyrics from the “Arthur” theme song.) No word on whether or not she had to move any of her own awards out of the way, as previously promised.

    Legend may want to do some additional rearranging: He’s up for yet another statuette, for Best Actor in a Limited Series or Movie for “Jesus Christ Superstar,” at next week’s primetime ceremony. That show is slated to air on September 17 on NBC.

  • 12 Actors Dangerously Close to Getting an EGOT

    12 Actors Dangerously Close to Getting an EGOT

     

  • Emmys 2018: John Legend Could EGOT After Nomination

    NBC

    EGOT Watch continues: Following the announcement of the 2018 Emmy Awards nominations on Thursday, there are several new contenders for the elusive entertainment industry honor.

    With a nod for his titular role in NBC live musical “Jesus Christ Superstar,” John Legend now has a chance to EGOT — a.k.a., win an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar, and a Tony. It’s considered one of the most prestigious achievements a performer can attain, and it’s an extremely exclusive club, currently consisting of only 12 members.

    The most recent inductee was “Frozen” songwriter Robert Lopez, who snagged his last statuette, the Oscar, in 2014. Legend already has one of those, along with the G and the T, too. Could he finally add the E to his collection? His wife, Chrissy Teigen, certainly thinks so (and has graciously agreed to clear out some space on the couple’s awards shelf).

    https://twitter.com/chrissyteigen/status/1017442520471515136

    Also joining Legend in the almost-EGOT club are songwriting duo Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, who go by the moniker Pasek and Paul. Their most high-profile EGOT-eligible win so far came in 2017 when they took home several Oscars for “La La Land.” The duo is competing in the songwriting category again at the Emmys, landing a nomination for the original song “In the Market for a Miracle,” which appeared in Fox’s “A Christmas Story Live” (a musical adapted from Pasek and Paul’s own Broadway adaptation of the beloved yuletide film).

    We’ll keep our fingers crossed for some EGOT magic come Emmys night, which is slated for September 17 on NBC.

    [via: Variety]

  • John Legend Loves How ‘Underground’ Depicts a Painful History and the Ability to Overcome

    WGN America's 'Underground' Season Two Premiere Screening At The Smithsonian National Museum Of African American History And CulJohn Legend is starting to make living up to that lofty last name look easy.

    On both the personal and the professional front, Legend has been enjoying the kind of moment pop artists aspire to but can often only dream of. After building a monumental career in a relatively short period of time — with major mile markers including multiple platinum records, numerous Grammys, both a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for Best Original Song for “Selma‘s” “Glory” and a phenomenal mega-hit in the form of “All of Me” — the singer-songwriter has been riding a major wave and adding even more titles — including actor and producer — to his business card.

    The both appeared in and co-wrote and performed the song “Start a Fire” in the acclaimed and wildly popular film “La La Land“; he produced his first major Broadway production, “Jitney,” as well as Netflix‘s Young Barak Obama biopic “Southside With You;” he dropped his sixth album, Darkness and Light; and his high-profile romance with his supermodel/TV host wife Chrissy Teigen remains a “relationship goals” guidepost for many, and they welcomed their first daughter, Luna, into the mix. In just a couple of weeks, he and Ariana Grande‘s newly recorded rendition of “Beauty and the Beast” will appear in Disney’s live action adaption of its animated classic.

    Also among the past year’s triumphs was Legend’s first foray into executive producing a television series, WGN’s “Underground,” the warmly received scripted drama chronicling the efforts of several characters attempting to escape slavery in the Antebellum South during the Civil War via the secret Underground Railroad. With “Underground” returning on Mar. 8 for a second season — which introduces historical figures including Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass (the latter played by Legend himself), Legend sat down for a roundtable conversation about the show’s future and that amazing 2016 he enjoyed.

    Being a part of a show like this makes you a student of history. In learning the history of this time period, whats been eye-opening for you?

    John Legend: All kinds of little things. You’re going to learn some things about Harriet Tubman this season that are pretty exciting and interesting. I didn’t know that she was a narcoleptic. She had been hit in the head pretty traumatically when she was young, and the result of that was that she would just fall asleep randomly. And she would see things during that time and use those visions to guide her, some of the time.

    That was an interesting thing I had never heard of, and there are going to be tidbits like that, throughout the season, because we’re basing this on a real life, who was a superhero in American history that meant so much to this movement.

    And you’re taking on the role of Frederick Douglass yourself.

    That was pretty easy. It was one day. It wasn’t a long period of time, where I was immersed in it. I just wanted to deliver in that scene, so we focused on that, but I wouldn’t characterize that as a significant role.

    Did you have trepidation in playing someone of his historic stature?

    There’s some pressure, but it’s not the pressure of having a bunch of video of Frederick Douglass, so I have to sound like Frederick Douglass. No one knows what he sounded like. It was more a photo and his words. That’s not the same pressure as someone who’s a 20th century icon where everyone knows what they sound like, knows what they look like, and knows their mannerisms.

    Can you talk about how emotionally challenging it is to be a part of a project that recreates what many consider the worst aspects of American history?

    I think the power of the show is that it shows the worst, and it shows the potential to overcome that. I think that’s what is the saving grace of the show. Nobody wants to wallow in misery for a five-season series. You want to see how bad things got, but you also want to see the possibility of redemption, of hope, of change, of resistance.

    I think that’s the power of this show is that it shows both the pain and the resistance. It shows the struggle and the accomplishment of reaching your goal. And that’s what makes it fun to make is that it’s not just about how bad things were, it’s about the possibility of changing things. A possibility of resisting it and moving the world.

    With the success of “Hamilton,” one of the byproducts was that people were going back and looking at American history. Does it make you hopeful to think that people that will be watching “Underground” might further explore that particular period in American history?

    I hope so. I hope people watch this show and are inspired to study that era of American history. Not because we want to wallow in the misery or the oppression, but because it’s important.

    When we talk about what’s happening in America now, we talk about the racial divide we still have in America — some of these issues that we’re talking about right now with the police and with race relations, you can’t talk about them if you don’t understand America’s history with race relations, and you can understand America’s history with that unless you understand slavery.

    So whenever we’re thinking about what’s happening in America now, without context of history, then we’re operating with a handicap, because you have to know what happened before for you to understand what’s happening now.

    You have to understand what Hitler did, and what FDR did with the internment camps in Japan, for you to understand why it’s dangerous to hear Donald Trump talking about registering all Muslims, and banning all Muslims. You have to understand history to understand why that’s a slippery slope and why you don’t want to go down there. So without that context, it’s hard for you to understand what’s happening now.

    Do you consider your projects, as a producer, and your music part of your personal activism? Did you always have aspirations of activism?

    I always had aspirations of activism. I always thought that part of the role of an artist was to tell the truth about what’s happening and the change you want to see. I’ve always listened to artists who did that — Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, and Paul Robeson — and who used their platform to fight for justice, so I always thought that’s what part of being an artist was, and I still think that’s what it is, for me.

    That doesn’t mean every song I write is about my activism, but I write about the things I’m interested in, and I’m interested in things I experience myself. I use the success I’ve gained, in some part, to highlight issues I think are of concern and hopefully galvanize people to make change.

    Whats at the top of your list right now?

    There are a lot of things right now. I just don’t want our new president to get us into some stupid war and start a stupid nuclear arms race, or something crazy like that. Those are the big concerns. But then, there’s whether millions of people will lose health care, whether we’ll continue to work towards ending mass incarceration, whether our schools will continue to improve, whether communities that have been left behind will get the help that they need to advance.

    There are so many concerns, and my worry is that Trump will be on the opposite side of all those issues of where he should be and where I would like him to be.

    How are you staying hopeful these days in the face of that?

    Shows like “Underground” really help me feel hopeful because you realize that America has been through some terrible times, but the courage and the wherewithal and the organization and the passion of groups like the Underground Railroad and the Abolitionist Movement defied the odds and brought us closer to freedom and justice. That means, to me, that the people still have power. Even when we’re discouraged by current events, we know we have the power to help make change happen.

    How do you feel about television and film producing and acting vs. the musical side of your career?

    Television and film are different. Personally, as a fan, I get more excited about a great television series than a great movie, just because you can immerse yourself in it and binge and follow a story for quite a long period of time, which gives you the opportunity to really dive into the subject, in a way that you can’t really do in a two-hour film.

    As a fan and even as a producer, the idea of a television series and its impact is fun. This story, you could do a movie about it, but there are so many twists and turns, so much suspense, and so many characters you can explore, that it’s exciting to do a multi-season series.

    And music is number one. It’s not even close! Music has been my entrée into producing because a lot of the projects we get involved with, as a film and TV company, have some aspect of music and I get involved in that, as well. And then, acting is something I haven’t prioritized, but if the right things come along, like it did with “La La Land,” then I’ll do it.

    What’s the appeal for you in taking on a new version of “Beauty and the Beast’s” title song, and how do you feel you and Ariana Grande compliment each other dueting on that song?

    It’s such an iconic song, and as a singer, it’s like a great challenge to try to remake a song that people already love quite a bit. Ariana’s a wonderful singer. I felt like we’d make a good team to try to tackle it. So when Disney reached out to me, I agreed to do it.

    Was it special to you when you were growing up?

    I love that song, and I thought the film was great back then. I was a little older by then. What was that, 20 years ago? So I was a teenager. So I wasn’t that young. That song was obviously a really important song, and the film was really important. So as an artist, it’s a bit of a challenge to take on something like that where people already love the original and trying to make your own version that honors the original but is new as well.

    You just opened your first Broadway show, a production of August Wilson’s “Jitney.” Anything else on your bucket list?

    No, not really — not that I can think of right now! I just want to focus on doing what I do as well as I can do it. So for me, when we go on tour this year, I want to put on the best tour that I’ve done. When I made my album last year, I was trying to make the best album I’ve ever made. So that’s the standard I want to hold myself to is trying to make the best content I can make, and focus on quality, and the rest will take care of itself.

    Has being a new father changed the way that you approach music or your production projects?

    I think it gives you some perspective. I think it helps you think about what life means and what you’re trying to do in your life, and what’s important to you, career-wise. Because some things you just cast aside because you’re like, “I don’t have time for all this.” I need to be a good father, and a good husband, and I need to focus on things I really care about in my career, and not do things I don’t really care about, that don’t excite me.

    But also, especially when I was making the album, it made me think more about what legacy means, what history means, what life means, what death means even. I wrote more about that on this album than I ever had before.

  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s ‘La La Land’ Critique Fuels Heated Debates

    Just to be clear, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar liked “La La Land.” A lot. In fact, in his critique for The Hollywood Reporter, he called it “bold, daring and deserving of all its critical and financial success.” However, the NBA legend/culture critic is not joining the cult of “La La Land” — which suffers no criticism of any kind — so he pointed out “a few elements that warrant closer examination” in the Oscar frontrunner, “particularly regarding its portrayal of jazz, romance and people of color.”

    As he added, “In fact, the better a work of art is, the more we must dissect it, because now we’re not just measuring Rotten Tomatoes popularity or boffo box office, we’re assessing its proper place in our cultural canon.”

    Right away, he clarified that his issue is not with the number of black people. He respected writer/director’s Damien Chazelle story choices. But he was disappointed with the use of the white savior trope in relation to the one black main character. That has been discussed before in other “La La Land” reviews, but he also sounded a different note on the romanticizing of the “crash and burn” of relationships. That seems to be getting ignored in the larger debate about the film, but he makes some good points.

    Here’s part of his thoughtful critique:

    WARNING: PLOT SPOILERS AHEAD.

    ON RACE

    Jazz is a uniquely African-American music form born in New Orleans and raised in Harlem during the Harlem Renaissance. Sure, I would have loved to see a film like La La Land years ago starring singer-dancer Gregory Hines, the master of improvisational tap dance whose tapping could sound like a jazz drummer. Having said that, I’m still delighted to see Ryan Gosling play a man (Sebastian) devoted to the artistry of traditional jazz. But I’m also disturbed to see the one major black character, Keith (John Legend), portrayed as the musical sellout who, as Sebastian sees it, has corrupted jazz into a diluted pop pablum.

    Wait just a minute!

    The white guy wants to preserve the black roots of jazz while the black guy is the sellout? This could be a deliberate ironic twist, but if it is, it’s a distasteful one for African-Americans. One legitimate complaint that marginalized people (women, people of color, Muslims, the LGBT community, etc.) have had about Hollywood in the past is that when they were portrayed, it was done in a negative way. The ditzy blonde, the Muslim terrorist, the gay predator are all familiar stereotypes from years of TV and movies. So much has been done in recent years to overcome those debasing images, but we still have to be careful. It’s not that a black man can’t be the sellout or the drug dealer, it’s just that they shouldn’t be if they’re the only prominent black character in the story. Whether it’s intentional or unintentional, that sends a bigoted message rippling through our society.

    ON ROMANCE

    I’m equally interested in how the film portrays romance, because pop culture (movies, TV, books, music) is the major source of information about romantic relationships for our youth. That’s where they learn about what to look for in a mate, what a relationship should look like, how to treat each other. […] The problem comes when we romanticize the crash and burn. Then the drama of the breakup seems more fulfilling than the prospect of actual romance, which can then seem mundane in the long run. Now a continual series of melodramatic breakups makes a person seem more tragically edgy and becomes justification for why they can’t find real love. […]

    That’s where the romanticizing comes in. The whole childish doomed-romance genre celebrates personal achievement with only an obligatory sad nod toward the consequences. Mia also sings this about her aunt: “She lives in her liquor / And died with a flicker / I’ll always remember the flame.” Sure, you’ll remember the flame because you’re too blinded by your own ambition to see the real moral: She died with a flicker because she was an alcoholic burnout! Even Sebastian wonders about how accurately he sees things in “City of Stars”: “City of stars / There’s so much that I can’t see.” Starlight romanticizes whatever it illuminates. […] As Mr. Antolini says in The Catcher in the Rye: “The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.” Had Mia and Sebastian chosen to live humbly, they might have had their success — or not — and been happy together.

    Obama Honors 21 Americans With Presidential Medal Of FreedomKareem (who has been on screen a few times himself, from “Airplane!” to “The Stand”) reiterated that he found the characters and movie delightful and he knows he’ll watch it again and again over the years. “But every time I do, along with the immense joy, I’ll have a tiny nagging feeling of, ‘What if?’”

    However, perhaps because his review was headlined “Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: How ‘La La Land’ Misleads on Race, Romance and Jazz,” and his “bigoted message” comment was given prominence, the comments are quite defensive. There are already nearly 400 comments, after the post has only been up a few hours, and they mostly focus on the race angle, skipping everything else, and asking why everything has to be about skin color. This is what happens not only when you challenge “La La Land” — even when you say you liked it (just like the “SNL” sketch) — but also when anyone brings up race, even in the context of a positive review. No wonder we can’t all just get along!

    “La La Land” tied for the most-ever Oscar nominations with 14. It will surely pick up a few trophies when the show airs live Sunday, Feb. 26 on ABC.

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  • Sing Along With the Trailer for ‘Carpool Karaoke: The Series’

    carpool kararoke, carpool karaoke: the series, apple music

    Apple Music’s upcoming Carpool Karaoke spinoff series has dropped its first full trailer, and if it’s possible, the show looks like it may be even more fun than its late night inspiration.

    The series features 16 celeb pairings, some likely (Late Late Show” segment — celebs drive around L.A. singing along to hit songs — though there’s an added dimension of fan interaction, with stars also heading into places like grocery stores and bars to encourage others to join them in their musical adventures. The definition of “car” is pretty loose, too, with one singalong taking place in a helicopter.

    In one major tweak, “Late Late Show” host James Corden is largely absent from the proceedings (aside from an appearance in an episode with Will Smith), similar to how Spike’s “Lip Sync Battle,” a spinoff from the wildly popular “Tonight Show” segment, is Jimmy Fallon-free. But based on what we’ve seen from this trailer so far, it doesn’t look like the celebs need much direction from the host, belting and bantering with ease. (Legend’s quip about old white women mistaking him for Pharrell is pretty hilarious, as is a tipsy Blake Shelton’s inability to say the word “carpool.”)

    There’s no official premiere date for “Carpool Karaoke: The Series” yet, though Apple Music teases it’s “coming soon.”