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Emmerdale's Aaron will 'share in hatred' of husband John
TV & Streaming

Emmerdale’s Aaron will ‘share in hatred’ of husband John

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Most recently, it was revealed that he has been keeping Mackenzie Boyd captive, after fans had worried that the character had been killed.

All this time, Aaron has been oblivious to his husband’s true nature, but next week, he will start to grow suspicious, so John will decide to drug him to keep him under control.

Aaron is in danger ITV

As reported by Digital Spy, Aaron star Danny Miller has said that “it’s time” for his character to start to find out the truth, “because a lot of people stop me in the streets and say things like, ‘how are you not spotting the signs?’ like I can’t spot the signs”.

He continued: “But I think love is blind, is what I’ve played for the last six months of watching John crumble under all this spotlight and pressure, and Aaron’s just kind of going, ‘I don’t know what you mean, he’s great! I love him!’

“So, it’s nice that Aaron can finally become one of the viewers, or that of an opinion of the viewers. They get to share in this hatred of John, which is just so strange to say because [John actor] Oliver Farnworth is the nicest man I’ve ever met and I don’t say that lightly! I just love him. He’s just been great.”

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It has been reported that Farnworth will be departing from the soap imminently, and as both Aaron and Robert are starting to get closer to uncovering the truth, the net seems to be tightening around the character.

Emmerdale airs weeknights at 7:30pm on ITV1. Stream on ITVX.

Check out more of our Soaps coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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John Malkovich
TV & Streaming

John Malkovich Joins ‘Bad Monkey’ Season 2

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

John Malkovich has joined Bad Monkey season two.

The Apple TV+ series has cast Malkovich in a series regular role for the upcoming season, which Vince Vaughn stars in and executive produces. It will be based on a new, original story.

Created by Bill Lawrence (Scrubs, Ted Lasso, Shrinking), Bad Monkey is based on Carl Hiaasen’s novel of the same name. “Season one tells the story of Andrew Yancy (Vaughn), who has been bounced from the Miami Police Department and is now a health inspector in the Keys. But after stumbling upon a case that begins with a human arm fished up by tourists, he realizes that if he can prove murder, he’ll be back in. He just needs to get past a trove of Floridian oddballs and one bad monkey,” reads the synopsis.

The Fantastic Four: First Steps actor will play Spencer, the leader of a big criminal organization in South Florida. Bad Monkey‘s season one cast also included L. Scott Caldwell, Rob Delaney, Meredith Hagner, Natalie Martinez, Alex Moffat, Michelle Monaghan, Ronald Peet and Jodie Turner-Smith.

Last year, Lawrence told The Hollywood Reporter about his hopes for the show’s future. “When I pitched it [to Apple], I had a beginning, middle and end of a three-season arc for this character, and for who he would be and where he would get to — and they were really receptive to it. It’s challenging right now to make shows, and especially to pick up your life and go make it. [Vaughn and I] both moved to Florida! It was insane,” Lawrence said. “I think what’s cool, if we were able to do it, is that you have these season-long stories [where] you get caught up in characters’ lives. You see redemption stories, descents into the dark side for other characters, and that story gets told.” 

In addition to Vaughn, Lawrence and his Doozer Productions, Jeff Ingold, Matt Tarses, Liza Katzer and Adam Sztykiel also serve as executive producers.

A release date for season two has not yet been announced.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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John Fogerty to Play CCR Songs on "Legacy" Tour Dates
Music

John Fogerty to Play CCR Songs on “Legacy” Tour Dates

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Earlier this month, John Fogerty revisited his rich, rich past with the release of Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival. Featuring 20 re-recorded CCR classics — including “Fortunate Son,” “Bad Moon Rising,” and “Have You Ever Seen the Rain” — the album is very much about the iconic singer further cementing his place in music history.

But the 80-year-old also isn’t done forging his creative future, and as such, he’ll be bringing Legacy on the road this fall. The down-home fun begins on Halloween in Atlantic City and visits Nashville, Atlanta, Virginia Beach, and Newark, among other cities, before winding down November 14th in Boston. These 11 shows are being touted as “Legacy dates,” and remain separate from previously-announced dates in late September/early October.

Get John Fogerty Tickets Here

Tickets for Fogarty’s “Legacy” tour dates go on sale beginning Wednesday, August 27th via Ticketmaster. Fans can also look for deals or get tickets to sold-out shows via StubHub, where orders are 110% guaranteed through StubHub’s FanProtect program.

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Legacy only came to because, after several decades, Fogerty owns the CCR catalog (more recently acquiring the masters). A press statement called the record a “full-circle moment,” with Fogerty himself saying that the LP is “my way of celebrating that — of playing these songs on my terms, with the people I love.” (Fogerty co-produced the record with his son, Shane Fogerty.) The other people Fogerty “loves” include collaborators Matt Chamberlain, Bob Malone, Bob Glaub and Rob Stone (which may serve as indication of Fogerty’s backing band on the road). Below, check out one song from Legacy, an especially stirring new take on “Bad Moon Rising.”

John Fogerty 2025 Tour Dates:
08/30 — Niagara Falls, ON @ OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino
09/20 — Las Vegas, NV @ 2025 iHeartRadio Music Festival
09/29 — Mexico City, MX @ Auditorio Nacional
10/01 — Higland, CA @ Yaamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel
10/31 — Atlantic City, NJ @ Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena *
11/01 — Salem, VA @ Salem Civic Center *
11/03 — Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium; Nashville, TN *
11/04 — Atlanta, GA @ The Fox Theatre *
11/05 — Durham, NC @ Durham Performing Arts Center *
11/07 — Virginia Beach, VA @ The Dome *
11/08 — Bethlehem, PA @ Wind Creek Event Center *
11/09 — Oxon Hill, MD @ The Theater at MGM National Harbor *
11/12 — Newark, NJ @ New Jersey Performing Arts Center *
11/13 — Uncasville, CT @ Mohegan Sun *
11/14 — Boston, MA @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway *

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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John Williams 'Never Liked Film Music Very Much'
TV & Streaming

John Williams ‘Never Liked Film Music Very Much’

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

John Williams is one of the most prolific film composers of all time, having created some of the most iconic scores of the past 60 years, winning five Oscars and becoming the gold standard of movie musicians. Ironically, though, the 93-year-old maestro recently admitted to his indifference and criticism of film music as a genre, telling a biographer “I never liked film music very much.”

In this Guardian interview with author Tim Grieving about Grieving’s upcoming biography of the composer, Williams broke down the craft that he’s contributed so much to. “Film music, however good it can be – and it usually isn’t, other than maybe an eight-minute stretch here and there,” he said, “I just think the music isn’t there.”

He continued, brushing off the appreciation for film music as the product of “remembering it in some kind of nostalgic way,” before adding, “Just the idea that film music has the same place in the concert hall as the best music in the canon is a mistaken notion, I think.” Furthermore, he criticized most film music as “ephemeral” and “fragmentary and, until somebody reconstructs it, it isn’t anything that we can even consider as a concert piece.”

Williams’ greatest works include the Academy-Award winning scores for “Fiddler On The Roof,” “Jaws,” “Star Wars,” and “Schindler’s List,” and his unmistakable music in “Jurassic Park,” “Indiana Jones,” “Superman,” “Harry Potter,” “Home Alone,” “Saving Private Ryan,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Empire of the Sun” and more. His latest original score for a theatrical film was for “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” in 2023.

Part of the reason that his scores are so remarkable is because they take influence from classical and romantic composers like Johannes Brahms and Pyotr Tchaikovsky. Unsurprisingly, Williams has also composed music apart from the screen, including numerous concert works.

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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John Prine's Early Nashville Years, In His Own Words
Music

John Prine’s Early Nashville Years, In His Own Words

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

John Prine never had a chance to write his own memoir. But in the late 2010s, he’d begun working on one with the author Tom Piazza. After Prine died in 2020 — from complications due to Covid-19 — Piazza revisited the series of trips, encounters and conversations he’d had with the legendary singer-songwriter and began turning them into a book. 

“This isn’t a biography of John Prine, or a chronicle of John’s musical development, a critical assessment, an oral history, or a study of his influence on American culture,” Piazza writes in the book. “What started as a memoir, in his voice, changed, inevitably, into a book about friendship, and loss…a portrait, the best I can deliver, of John, and of our friendship, as he made the most of the final two years of his life.”

That book, Living in the Present with John Prine — out September 9th — is a mix of memoir and reportage about Prine’s life and later years. But the most thrilling sections, written by Piazza in Prine’s own voice, are snippets and previews of what Prine’s never-completed memoir would have been. These chapters of the book are both revelatory for what they reveal about Prine’s early life and heartbreaking in that they reinforce that the complete book he should’ve had the chance to write will never exist. 

But in the chapters that do exist, Prine’s voice jumps off the page. Here, in this exclusive excerpt, Prine discusses some of his earliest experiences in his future hometown of Nashville, including what would end up becoming a fateful meeting with the legendary producer Cowboy Jack Clement.

The first time I came to Nashville, in the early 1970s, my buddy Lee Clayton took me to the Grand Ole Opry and brought me backstage. The Opry was still at the Ryman then, and there was so little room backstage that you bumped into everybody – literally! Ernest Tubb was here, on my right, Roy Acuff on my left. We were standing between the back curtain and the brick wall, and Dolly Parton walked by and all the men had to suck their guts in to let Dolly get by. And I thought, “I’m in hillbilly heaven.” I grew up listening to country radio at my Dad’s feet, and all the people I’d heard on radio were there in front of me. And they were friendly as could be. If you were introduced to them they stopped and said your name back to you – “Great to meet you. What are you doing here? Welcome to Nashville.” It was heaven to me.

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In either late ‘76 or early ’77 I came down from Chicago with a group of songs I had that eventually became Bruised Orange. I had most of the Bruised Orange songs written – “Chain Of Sorrow,” “There She Goes” – I didn’t know my marriage was falling apart, and I had already written a divorce song – “Fish and Whistle,” “Sabu Visits the Twin Cities Alone,” “Iron Ore Betty.” And “That’s The Way The World Goes Around.”

I came to Nashville to meet with a producer named Ray Baker. Ray Baker had produced a record on Moe Bandy that I really loved – “Hank Williams, You Wrote My Life.” It just had a great sound to it. So I’d called up my manager, Al Bunetta, and told him I wanted to work with Ray Baker. That’s what I wanted my next record to sound like. Al set up a meeting, and I came down to Nashville. I got here in the evening, and I was supposed to meet Ray Baker the next day.

That was the night I met Cowboy.

A friend of mine who ran the Atlantic Records office in Nashville met me that evening when I got here, and the first thing he says is, “You gotta meet the Cowboy.” I didn’t know what he was talking about. I always thought Jack Clement was either a hit songwriter, or the name of a publishing company, because I’d seen it so many times on records. My friend said, “He’s both.” I went because my friend insisted. I didn’t have an appointment. He brought me over, introduced me, and left.

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Jack took me to Sperry’s for dinner that first night, and we hung out for the next two days. Me and Jack just hit it off. He took me all around town. We went everywhere. And I never made it to Ray Baker’s. Way up in the next evening I had a plane booked to go home and Jack took me to the airport. Back then, the airport was so small, you could leave your car parked in front and walk in to the gate. Jack walks me to the gate, and we stop for a beer – I had about a half hour before my plane left.

So Jack says to me – we’d been together hanging out for two days and one night – he goes, “So what do you do, John?”

I looked at him. “Jack, I write songs and make records.”

He goes, “Really!”

I said, “Yeah.”

He says, “How many records?”

I said, “I’ve made four records, for Atlantic. I just left them, and I signed with Asylum.”

He goes, “How many records didja sell?”

I said, “I don’t know… maybe sixty, sixty-five thousand.”

He goes, “Really.”

I said, “Yeah.”

He goes, “So what’s your problem?”

I said, “What…?”

He says, “What’s your problem?”

I said, “What do you mean?”

He says, “Exactly. What’s your problem?”

I said, “I ain’t got no problem…”

Courtesy of W. W. Norton & Company, Inc

It’s time to get on the plane. “Jack, it’s great to meet you. Can’t wait to see you again.” And all the way home, I’m going, “What is my problem?” It stuck with me. When I got home I started looking up who Jack Clement was.

I find out Jack had been Sam Phillips’ right-hand man at Sun Records. Jack was the one who was there when Jerry Lee Lewis walked in off the street and sang “Whole Lot of Shakin’ Going On.” Sam Phillips was out of town and Jack called him, said, “You got to get back to Memphis, you won’t believe what I just cut!”

The year before I met him Jack had produced Waylon Jennings’ Dreaming My Dreams record, which was a big game changer for the Outlaw country movement. It was a huge record, and great sounding. Today when I put that record on it sounds brand new. The whole album is incredible, from beginning to end. And they had just reissued Elvis’ first Sun recordings, and I’d never heard all ten recordings that Elvis did at Sun when he first came there. And it was all just like an explosion.

I told Al Bunetta, “I’m sorry; please give Mr. Baker my apologies, but I want to go back down and talk to Jack Clement. I want to sing some of my songs for Jack and see what he thinks.”

I never had a mentor, a musical mentor, except my brother Dave, because he taught me. Jack was the first person I admired like him since my Dad died. The impact that he made on me – it wasn’t just musical. Every time Jack talked to me, he got my total attention. Everybody else might as well have been my English teacher. My attention would be everywhere but on who was talking to me. The mind of a songwriter: I’m not thinking about what I’m doing here; I’m thinking about the next song! When Cowboy would talk he would get my attention. That’s how I knew, you know? It wasn’t just producer-artist relationship; it was more than that.

Cowboy took time to teach me how to not be scared of a microphone in the studio. He knew that I was scared without asking me. He knew that was part of my problem, that that was why I didn’t like listening to myself. Because of how nervous I was. I couldn’t listen to those first albums; I hated my voice. I didn’t know anything about a microphone, didn’t know how to approach it. I was totally scared; I could hear the fear in my voice. Especially that first album. I heard my voice quivering.

He told me, “I’ve seen you perform live, and you know how to connect with those people. Somehow you have to look at that microphone and know that they’re on the other end. That you’re not alone in the studio. The same people you’re playing to live are listening to you in the studio.”

Nobody ever took time to do that with me.

That he was a producer was kinda beside the fact. Cowboy’s business was fun. “We’re in the fun business. If we’re not having fun, we’re not doing our jobs.” That was his motto. “If this is work, why the fuck did we become musicians? To work for a living?” He couldn’t stand musicians that just read music and did it for the money. In that Shakespeare movie there’s one scene where Jack is sitting right here, behind his desk, and Waylon is there, George Jones over here, Johnny Cash, all in one room. You could walk in here any given day of the week and there would be Cowboy and Frank Ifield. Cowboy and Waylon. Cowboy and Johnny Cash.

He’d sit here and leave that window open in the spring and summer, and a squirrel would come and visit him. Jack would leave food here for the squirrel. He had two cats, named Fred and Ginger, and they’d eat ham out of his pocket. He’d keep this piece of ham in his breast pocket and they’d sit on his shoulder and reach down. It was a circus, of sorts. He called it the Cowboy Arms Hotel and Recording Spa. He planned on turning this into a place where when people came from out of town, they’d stay here instead of a hotel. Whoever was recording here would be able to stay here, wake up here, have their breakfast here, and then go right upstairs into the studio.

He also had Jack Clement Recording Studio a few blocks away from here. JCRS was the hottest studio in town. Over half the Number Ones in Nashville in the late sixties were cut there. Jack came up with things like church pews with microphones built into the pew so four women could sit down like they were in church and sing backups and not have any microphones in their faces, just pick them up with indirect mikes. I mean, such a cool place, just down the street.

He had to sell it in the early seventies, because he made a movie called Dear Dead Delilah. It was kinda like one of those Bette Davis horror movies – What Ever Happened To Baby Jane? – it was kinda like that. With Agnes Moorehead. Jack directed it. He had never been in a movie, let alone directed one. About halfway through the movie the backers dropped out, and Jack made the fatal decision to back his own movie. He was making millions off of JCRS. But he had to sell the place at the height of its popularity to pay for the movie. I saw the movie once – I fell asleep twenty-five minutes into it. He finished it, and also paid for the distribution! Not just the production. Everybody dropped out on him. He was stubborn, and he was crazy. People warned him about other things like that, and he would always just go ahead.

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But his instincts with music were always dead on. Johnny Cash called him up himself, about “Ring of Fire.” A different producer had cut the song. He said “Cowboy, I had a dream last night I heard mariachi horns on my new single, and I can’t get my producer to put ‘em on there.” Jack said, “I can do it.” So Jack put the mariachi horns on “Ring of Fire,” which was the hook. That’s what sold the song.

Excerpted from Living in the Present with John Prine. Copyright © 2025 by Tom Piazza. Used with permission of the author. All rights reserved.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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John Amos' Children Prepare Legal Battle Over Actor's Estate
Music

John Amos’ Children Prepare Legal Battle Over Actor’s Estate

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

John Amos‘ daughter has taken legal action against her brother with accusations of mistreating their father, which ultimately resulted in his death. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Shannon Amos is suing Kelly Christopher Amos (K.C.) for elder abuse, fraud, and wrongful death. John Amos’ former caretaker Belinda Foster, close associate Eugene Brummett, and his production banner, Step and One Half Productions, are also named in the pending litigation.

The outlet reported Shannon Amos claimed K.C. manipulated John Amos into signing multiple legal documents that gave him control of the estate, all while ignoring the actor’s failing health. Allegedly, K.C. began to keep John away from others in 2019 and impersonated him in text messages and email conversations.

“This calculated and cruel isolation was explicitly designed to render John Amos entirely dependent on K.C. Amos for all of his personal, financial, and critical medical decisions,” exclaimed the filing. Brummet and Foster are accused of assisting K.C. in his alleged fraudulent behavior.

Granddaughter Quiera Williams, honoree actor John Amos, his daughter Shannon Amos, and son K.C. Amos arrive at the 1st Annual “A Celebration of Heroes” Power Heroes Gala at the Four Seasons Hotel on December 3, 2008 in Los Angeles, California.

Brian To/FilmMagic

“What K.C. Amos, Belinda Foster, and Eugene Brummett did in the last years of my father’s life is unfathomable, cruel, and beyond my comprehension,” said Shannon Amos in a statement to THR.

The Good Times actor died in August 2024, although the news was not revealed to the public until October of that year. Shannon claimed to have learned of his death on social media, 45 days after his passing. A statement from Foster alleged that John Amos wanted to delay his death announcement as his final wish, specifically so that his daughter did not “turn his death and interment into a circus.” 

“At the time of his death, John was concerned that Shannon might turn his death and interment into a circus as she had done with other aspects of his life… It was John who requested the delay in announcing his death to Shannon and the rest of the world,” claimed Foster.

John Amos speaking

John Amos attends the Althea screening and panel discussion at One Time Warner Center on October 5, 2015 in New York City.

Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Time Warner Inc.

John Amos was cremated in the days following his death. Shannon has refused to rule out foul play, although the 84-year-old’s cause of death was listed as congestive heart failure. No autopsy was performed.

In June 2023, Shannon claimed John Amos to be a victim of “elder abuse and financial exploitation.” The actor reportedly refuted the allegations. The next month, K.C. Amos was taken into custody after allegedly sending threats to his sister, including images of guns, videos of him shooting the firearms, and claims of gang affiliation.

VIBE has reached out to a rep for John Amos for a statement regarding Shannon Amos’s lawsuit.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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