Tag Archives: jackie-gleason

XXXTentacion Wins Big At The 2018 BET Hip Hop Awards But It Looks Like Vic Mensa Couldn’t Have Cared Less…

Splash News/Getty Did Vic Mensa Diss XXXTentacion At The 2018 BET Hip Hop Awards? News of XXXTentacion ‘s death shocked music fans across the nation back in June. The troubled Florida musician was reportedly attempting to leave the Riva Motorsports motorcycle dealership when he was blocked from exiting, robbed, and gunned down in the driver’s seat of his own car. Now, in a posthumous honor, XXXTentacion won “Best New Hip Hop Artist” during the BET Hip Hop Awards. The show was taped this past Saturday, October 6, at The Fillmore Miami Beach at Jackie Gleason Theater in Florida and his mom, lawyer, and former manager accepted the award on his behalf. I love you forever @xxxtentacion !!! Best New Hip Hop Gone 2 Soon. Love u pic.twitter.com/msFpnQ1DNx — sincerely, tokyo (@madeintyo) October 7, 2018 Beating out Lil Baby , Rich The Kid , BlocBoy JB and Juice WRLD , XXXTentacion’s win was met with applause from the audience. Per the clip above, MadeinTYO tweeted the viral moment with the message “I love you forever @xxxtentacion !!! Best New Hip Hop Gone 2 Soon. Love u.” In other news concerning the late musician , rumor is XXXTentacion was dissed by Chicago rapper Vic Mensa  at some point during the show, this according to South Florida’s DJ Scheme , who was in attendance for the taping. “Fu** Vic Mensa,” he tweeted plain as day. “When y’all hear Vic Mensa’s fu**ing freestyle at the BET awards y’all are going to be fu**ing disgusted. @VicMensa SUCK MY DI**.” He went on to tweet, “Yo bro how u gone say ‘Your favorite rapper is an abuser’ and then follow it with a line saying ‘some sh** X some sh** so I won’t live long’ u can deny it but everyone who was there heard that sh**.” Vic isn’t denying the diss, nor is he backing down: #believewomen https://t.co/ySE0Vmzpvt — vino valentino (@VicMensa) October 8, 2018 so if i say something honest about another public person im a clout chaser? FOH — vino valentino (@VicMensa) October 8, 2018 In 2016, XXXTentacion was charged with domestic battery by strangulation, aggravated battery of a pregnant woman, false imprisonment, and witness-tampering, just one of many violent cases naming the young star. Get details on his victim’s testimony here  and hit the flip to see all of DJ Scheme’s tweets concerning Vic Mensa. The 2018 BET Hip Hop Awards will air on October 16 at 8 p.m. ET.

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XXXTentacion Wins Big At The 2018 BET Hip Hop Awards But It Looks Like Vic Mensa Couldn’t Have Cared Less…

Sweeter Than A Plate Of Yams… Playboi Carti Drops Dainty Dance Moves And Dazzles For Magazine Cover

(Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET) Playboi Carti Has Some Interesting Dance Moves Where is Blac Chyna? Last week Playboi Carti took to Instagram to reveal he’s currently in album mode. We’re not sure if he’s taking a break for the holidays or simply testing out his dance moves on a break BUT this rather sassy footage hit the net today. He’s definitely at ease with himself riiiiight? Hit the flip to see the photos from Carti’s other recent accomplishment.

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Sweeter Than A Plate Of Yams… Playboi Carti Drops Dainty Dance Moves And Dazzles For Magazine Cover

Smokey and the Bandit at 35: A Case for the Genius of Hal Needham

As part of their 100th anniversary, Universal Studios has just released a commemorative Blu-Ray edition of Smokey and the Bandit . Today, the 35-year old Burt Reynolds vehicle is mostly remembered for Reynolds’ good ol’ boy schtick, Jackie Gleason’s mugging and first-time director Hal Needham’s stuntwork. Unfortunately, while Needham’s contributions to Smokey are probably the most essential, he remains the least renowned of that bunch. But thanks to the behind the scenes featurette included on Universal’s new release, laypeople and stuntwork junkies alike can get a good idea of why Smokey and the Bandit belongs to Hal Needham. Apart from co-writing the film’s screenplay, Needham, the best paid American stuntman to date, also played a big part in casting Smokey and the Bandit (Reynolds, in archival interview footage, compares the film to “Chinese food” and “sex”). After working with Reynolds on Gator , Needham showed the leading man the script for Smokey . Reynolds, who put Needham up in his house for twelve years after Needham divorced his first wife, immediately scoffed at the crude screenplay but quickly succumbed to Needham’s charms. The same was true of an initially skeptical Gleason. According to Needham, the cocky pitch that he won Gleason over with went something like this: “‘I’m going to direct it, I love your work, and I think it’s a funny, funny part for you.’ He says, ‘I’ll do it.’ That’s all there was to it.” Needham’s utterly charming take-no-prisoners attitude also won over co-star and singer Jerry Reed. Reed apparently banged out East Bound and Down , the film’s iconic theme song, overnight. When he played it for Needham, he nervously offered to change it if it wasn’t satisfactory. “‘You change one word, one note and I’ll choke ya,'” Needham recalls jocularly threatening. Still, the car chases and crashes that Needham choreographed are undoubtedly the best reason why the man was and remains such a memorable presence. “By the time we got to the last shot, we barely had a car runnin’,” Needham recalls. He specifically remembers that the Trans-Am used during the film’s iconic bridge jump scene was a wreck after it landed on the other side of the bridge. But that devil-may-care attitude is why everyone wanted to work with Needham, a man that broke his back twice and is still walking. In the featurette, Needham describes a stunt where a cop car vaults onto the back of a flat-bed truck. For the first take, the car overshot the truck but that didn’t phase the stunt driver. “He just stuck it back in gear,” Needham said, “went back to his start position and said, ‘Ok, Hal, ready for take two.’ So we did take two and we got it.” Simon Abrams is a NY-based freelance film critic whose work has been featured in outlets like The Village Voice , Time Out New York , Vulture and Esquire . Additionally, some people like his writing, which he collects at Extended Cut .

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Smokey and the Bandit at 35: A Case for the Genius of Hal Needham

AP Revises Reporting on Government Pressure to Rush GM’s Planned IPO; Why?

Unplanned but necessary “improvements,” or induced corrections? I’ll report; readers can decide. My early afternoon post at my home blog dealt with Government/General Motors’ profitability and CEO Ed Whitacre’s “coincidental” step-down from his CEO position. That post originally noted two things that seemed problematic in the Associated Press’s reporting about the company’s plans for an initial public offering this year (the IPO is problematic thanks to Obamanomics , but that’s not the topic here). In the  AP’s original report (since revised, which is why it’s saved here at my web host for future reference, fair use and discussion purposes), reporters Tom Krisher and Dee-Ann Durbin, with assistance from Dan Strumpf, reported the following two items in supposedly relaying the results of a discussions with “Scott Sweet, senior managing partner of IPO Boutique in Tampa, Florida, which advises investors on IPOs,” Whitacre, and unnamed government officials (bold is mine): Several recent IPOs have been postponed because of concerns that they won’t get a high enough share price, he said. He also said the Obama administration is pressuring GM to sell prematurely to influence the November congressional elections. Last week, Whitacre said the elections are not being considered, and the government has repeatedly said GM is in charge of the sale timing. My original reactions to the two items in my original post were as follows: (to the assertion about government pressure to sell prematurely) “The AP’s quoted expert also dropped a bombshell — apparently without qualification — that may not survive future AP revisions.” (to the possibly contradictory assertions about who’s controlling the IPO’s timing) “(Whitacre) saying that GM ‘is in charge of the sale timing’ is NOT the same as saying ‘we’re not trying to influence the timing.’” Amazingly, the 4:51 p.m report by the same three reporters, with additional help from Ken Thomas (also saved at my web host , for the same reasons as above), revised — perhaps more accurate terms might be “cleaned up” or “covered the tracks of” — the wire service’s earlier report thusly (bolds are mine): Sweet said the Obama administration may be pressuring GM to sell prematurely to influence the November congressional elections and make the government’s controversial investment look smart. Whitacre and the government have both said GM is in charge of the timing of the IPO. So Sweet went from an unqualified affirmative assertion concerning government interference to a “maybe.” Oh, and now GM and the government are magically saying the same thing about who’s in charge of the IPO’s timing, even though it seems that they weren’t before. As legendary Yankee broadcaster Mel Allen might have said , “How ’bout that!” Or, given the last name of the statement-changing subject matter expert involved, it might be the late Jackie Gleason’s “How Sweet it is!” I’ll leave it to readers to decide whether AP’s version 1 or version 2 is more accurate, and whether version 2 might have been influenced by yours truly’s critique of version 1. If it’s the latter, I would like to formally welcome the AP reporters involved to the self-correcting (or is it track-covering?) mechanism known as the blogosphere. Say hi to Tom Curley & Co. for me, will ya? And while you’re at it, ask him how his war against bloggers, search engines , and the online world in general is going. If it’s the former, readers and commenters are free to speculate on what instigated the changes. Geez, I didn’t even cross-post my initial effort at NewsBusters. But this one has been. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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AP Revises Reporting on Government Pressure to Rush GM’s Planned IPO; Why?