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Halsey Is an Executive Producer of Charlie Kaufman’s New Short Film: Watch the Trailer
Music

Halsey Is an Executive Producer of Charlie Kaufman’s New Short Film: Watch the Trailer

by jummy84 August 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Charlie Kaufman’s new short film, How to Shoot a Ghost, just got its first trailer. The 27-minute film is produced by Unmade, a production company that Halsey appears to have co-founded with her manager, Anthony Li, and her fiance, Avan Jogia. Unmade is credited alongside several other producers in the program for Venice Biennale, where the film is premiering. Watch the trailer below, via Variety.

Jessie Buckley and Josef Akiki star in the film, which has a screenplay by Eva H.D. and centers on a pair of outsiders, a translator and photographer, as they materialize in a realm of the afterlife that is also Athens, Greece. Rufus and Martha Wainwright have covered Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day” for the film. Kaufman and Eva H.D. also collaborated on the 2023 short Jackals & Fireflies.

The How to Shoot a Ghost trailer arrives on the same day that Halsey releases an anniversary edition of her debut album, Badlands. She’ll begin the Back to Badlands Tour in October.

August 30, 2025 0 comments
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EKTA KAPOOR'S 30-YEAR JOURNEY CELEBRATED WITH GANPATI BLESSINGS! Producer Visits Lalbaugcha Raja To Mark Milestone In Entertainment Career! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

EKTA KAPOOR’S 30-YEAR JOURNEY CELEBRATED WITH GANPATI BLESSINGS! Producer Visits Lalbaugcha Raja To Mark Milestone In Entertainment Career! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Producer and television pioneer Ekta Kapoor continued her long-standing tradition of visiting Mumbai’s iconic Lalbaugcha Raja during Ganesh Chaturthi. Known for her deep devotion to Lord Ganesha, Kapoor not only welcomes Ganpati Bappa into her home each year but also ensures a special darshan at the famed pandal. Sharing glimpses of her visit on Instagram, she captioned her post with heartfelt devotion: “LALBAUG CHA RAJA!!!! Bhappaaaaaaaaa.” The message touched the hearts of fans who generally connect her remarkable journey to her religious background.

Celebrating a Career Milestone
This year’s tour has particular significance as Kapoor celebrates three decades in show business. Over the last 30 years, she has revolutionized Indian television, pioneered the era of daily soaps, and created one of the most powerful production houses in India. Her 30-year odyssey, experienced through imagination and re-invention, continues to inspire countless generations of viewers.

National Award Honour
After her own celebratory festivities, Kapoor had also achieved a career-defining moment herself with her first National Award for co-producing Kathal. The Netflix satire, celebrated for marrying comedy and social commentary, showed her ability to provide support for pathbreaking and socially relevant content in addition to traditional work.

Exciting Line-Up of Projects
Far from slowing down, Kapoor has a massive slate of projects in the works. These include:
VVAN, a mythological extravaganza starring Sidharth Malhotra and Tamannaah Bhatia, co-produced with TVF. Bhooth Bangla, Priyadarshan’s horror-comedy starring Akshay Kumar.
A re-launch of old drama Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi, bringing back one of Indian television’s most iconic shows to a new generation.

Faith Anchoring Storytelling
For Kapoor, religion and storytelling are inextricably linked. Her yearly round trip to Lalbaugcha Raja is not merely a matter of personal faith but also renewal—a sentiment befitting as she takes the plunge again into another decade of content creation.

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Producer Alain Goldman on His Venice Film 'At Work' and Next Projects
TV & Streaming

Producer Alain Goldman on His Venice Film ‘At Work’ and Next Projects

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Alain Goldman, who produced “La Vie en Rose,” which earned Marion Cotillard an Oscar, and most recently produced ”An Offer and a Spy,” is having a milestone 2025.

After delivering Alain Chabat’s hit Netflix series “Asterix & Obelix: The Big Fight,” Goldman is at the Venice Film Festival with the world premiere of Valerie Donzelli‘s “At Work,” one of the three French movies in competition. He’s also about to kick off filming on two massive projects, Laszlo Nemes‘ (“Son of Saul”) period project “Moulin” and prestige TV series “The Lost Paradise” in Eastern Europe. He’s the doing the latter two with Patrick Wachsberger’s 193 Legendary.

“At Work,” an adaptation of Franck Courtès’s 2023 novel “A Pied d’oeuvre,” marks Goldman’s first collaboration with Donzelli, an acclaimed French filmmaker best known for the Cesar award-winning “Declaration of War” and “Just the Two of Us.” The film tells the true story of a successful photographer (Bastien Bouillon, recently seen in Cannes’ opening movie “Leave One Day”), who gives up everything to devote himself to writing, and ultimately faces financial hardships and poverty.

“I read this book and was recently struck with it because it says something profound about our vulnerability and the violence of capitalism,” said Goldman, adding that the book’s themes are even more palpable now “for artists and authors who are seeing the value of their work downgraded or threatened by technology.”

“Valerie Donzelli was equally moved by this novel and she gave the story an immense sincerity, but also some fantasy and unpredictability,” said Goldman. “The film could have been a depressing drama but that’s not the case; it’s uplifting, intellectual and cinematic because [Donzelli] directed it.”

The film, co-written by Donzelli and Gilles Marchand, received support from France’s National Film Board (CNC) and the Ile de France region, but Goldman said it’s “likely the smallest budget of the Venice competition.” While he’s best known for producing epic, big-sized movies and TV shows such as “La Vie en Rose,” “HHhH” with Jason Clarke, “An Officer and a Spy” with Jean Dujardin, Martin Scorsese’s “Casino” (as a co-producer), “Babylon AD” with Vin Diesel and “The Spy” with Sacha Baron Cohen, Goldman says he’s always been drawn to social themes due to his own upbringing as the son of Jewish immigrants from Poland. “Social justice has always been important to me,” he says.

Goldman pointed out he’s always had the ambition to work with auteurs who have a vision, but is also conscious of audiences. “I’ve never understood filmmakers who make movies only for themselves, like two-million-euros-therapies,” he quipped.

On working with Donzelli, he said he found her understanding of the book compelling and universal because “she didn’t want to focus too much on the pure economic hardship of the story since ‘Souleymane’s Journey’ [Boris Lojkine’s film that won four Cesar awards this year] has just done it, but rather zoom in on the experience of an artist who sacrifices everything for his craft,” Goldman said.

“At Work” is being represented internationally by Kinology, who is on the ground in Venice, alongside Goldman, Donzelli and the film’s cast.

Next up, Goldman’s companies Pitchipoï Productions and Montmartre Films, which are part of Banijay Group, will be filming Nemes’ “Moulin,” starting on Sept. 15. The movie will mark Nemes’ French-language debut and will star Gilles Lellouche as the French Resistance hero who is captured and tortured by Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie (Lars Eidinger).

Penned by Olivier Demangel (“November”), “Moulin” will be distributed in France by Studio TF1 and has been pre-bought by TF1, Disney+ and HBO. Wachsberger’s 193 Legendary is repping global sales. The project will be Nemes’ follow up to “Orphan” which competes at this year’s Venice.

Goldman says he had long wanted to work with Nemes whose Oscar-winning « Son of Saul » is « one of the films about the Holocaust that gets the closest to the hell that it was, » the producer says. 

“Moulin” is an “immense project that resonates strongly today because it will remind everyone what it means to resist,” Goldman argues. After having shed light on Alfred Dreyfus in “A Soldier and a Spy,” Moulin will also celebrate “one of greatest French heroes,” he says, describing the tone of the film as “very intense.” Rather than a biopic of Moulin, the film revolves around the relationship between Barbie and Moulin.

TF1 Studio came on board and brought a “massive support” to the film whose budget is €14 million, the producer points out.

Goldman is also about to start shooting “Lost Paradise,” an ambitious and highly personal eight-part thriller series written by Yehonatan Indursky (“Shtisel,” “Autonomies”). Directed by Alon Zingman (“Shtisel”), the saga, which will shoot in Yiddish, Hebrew and English, starts off in Lithuania in 1860, charting the lives of Ashkenazi Jews. It stars “Shtisel’s” Michael Aloni.

Darren Aronofsky serves as executive producer on the series while Goldman is producing with Wachsberger. The latter is also handling sales via 193 Legendary. “Lost Paradise” is backed by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Alcon Media Group and the Gesher Film Fund. It has been commissioned by Canal+ in France.

“Lost Paradise” has been in development for five years, says Goldman, who is a co-author on the series which starts shooting in September in Bucarest in Romania. 

“It aims to tell the story of the Ashkenazi people from the mid-19th century to, I hope, the present day. The first season ends in 1880, just before a pogrom that led to the exodus of a large part of the community, but unfortunately not everyone,” Goldman says, adding that “If everyone had left, they would still be alive today, either in America or Israel.” His hope, he explains, is that the series will become the benchmark fictional work in the history of the Ashkenazi people, like “Fiddler on the Roof” has been for more than half a century. 

The title of the series, “Lost Paradise” is “a little ironic,” he says, “because life was so hard where they lived, but they didn’t lose their desire to remain Jewish in almost an esoteric sense.”

Goldman says the series will also hopefully allow audiences to “visualise what these communities were like and how they threatened no one, and that they became the target of all kinds of violence, as they are today, because suddenly, when the world is not doing very well, we become the answer to the world’s problems.”

Reflecting on the difficulties to finance the series, Goldman says the “very fact that this series exists is a miracle, because it goes so much against the current state of mind, which is quite hostile to Jews in general, and I am very, very happy to have succeeded, with everyone’s help, in making this project a reality.” 

Goldman is also about to see his film “The Incredible Shrinking Man” which he produced with Patrick Wachsberger get released in France by Universal Pictures on Oct. 29. The movie, starring Jean Dujardin, the Oscar-winning actor of “The Artist,” is a modern adaption of Richard Matheson’s science fiction novel.

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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Producer David Brown Indicted in $12 Million Fraud
TV & Streaming

Movie Producer David Brown Indicted in $12 Million Fraud

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Movie producer David Brown was arrested Wednesday on charges that he defrauded business partners out of $12 million by creating fake companies and using investor funds to pay his personal expenses.

Brown, 39, was indicted on 21 counts of wire fraud, money laundering and identity theft. Among other things, he is accused of setting up a company called Hollywood Covid Testing LLC and using it to bill productions for COVID tests that never occurred.

Prosecutors allege that Brown also swindled investors in real estate and film deals, using the money to buy a 2025 Mercedes Benz G-Wagon and a series of Teslas, a house for his mother, as well as to pay his mortgage, install a pool and a Subzero freezer, pay for private school tuition and to put $70,000 into surrogacy services.

He is also accused of diverting $970,263 in investor funds to an entity set up to make a film about Patty Hearst and her kidnapping by the Symbionese Liberation Army – a project that did not come to fruition.

Brown produced “The Fallout,” a 2021 film starring Jenna Ortega that won the grand jury award at South by Southwest. He is also listed as an executive producer on “The Apprentice,” the 2024 film about a young Donald Trump.

Last year, Brown announced the launch of the Screen Company, a production, sales and finance entity.

“I believe in the power of storytelling,” he said at the time. “Our mission is to provide reliable and flexible financing that brings extraordinary stories to life.”

Brown has been repeatedly sued by investors who accuse him of fraud. The Los Angeles Times extensively covered the allegations against him in 2023. Brown denied the allegations to the paper and said they were the result of misunderstandings.

Brown used to live in Sherman Oaks, but has since moved to South Carolina, where he was arrested Wednesday. He made an initial appearance in federal court and will later be arraigned in Los Angeles.

In addition to producing, he has worked as a unit production manager and a production accountant.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Atlanta Rap Producer Turbo on Gunna, Wizkid and Country Music
Music

Atlanta Rap Producer Turbo on Gunna, Wizkid and Country Music

by jummy84 August 24, 2025
written by jummy84

There are a handful of hip-hop producers you can argue have served as architects for the sound of modern rap. Turbo, sometimes known as Turbo the Great, would undoubtedly be on the Mount Rushmore of present-day rap hitmakers. With production credits on some of this generation’s biggest hits — Gunna‘s “Drip Too Hard” and Travis Scott’s “Yosemite” to name a couple — Turbo, real name Chandler A. Great, is among the most prolific producers to come out of Atlanta. He’s furnished the hip-hop Mecca with an endless bag of hits featuring his distinct, melodic take on trap that by now feels like a signature for a whole city.

Most recently, Turbo lent production work on Gunna’s new album, The Last Wun, which debuted at the top of the hip-hop charts last week, as well as Offset‘s new album, Kiari, which dropped Friday. In the past year, he’s formed a budding creative relationship with Wizkid, whom he plans to feature on his upcoming album. As a producer, Turbo is most adept at creating cinematic beats capable of engulfing you in a world of his own creation.

The Grammy-winning producer is currently working on a solo record featuring a smattering of artists that listeners expecting familiar Atlanta rap staples might find surprising. In addition to flirting with more Afrobeats-influenced sounds, Turbo says he’s been collaborating with a handful of country artists and writers ever since his work on “Whisky Whisky” with Moneybagg Yo and Morgan Wallen last year. The still-untitled album doesn’t have an official release date yet, but Turbo says fans can expect a body of work that offers a full display of his creative passions. Turbo spoke with Rolling Stone about his relationship with Gunna, working with Offset, and why this next album is going to feel like a movie.

What’s the story behind your upcoming solo album?
I mean, it’s been going on. I think my sound has been so distinct over the years. I think it’s time for me to put out my own project with a bunch of different artists, some of the guys that people don’t know me for, and to just expand my sound, put my flagpole into the ground of this music thing that we’re doing.

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You’ve produced for some of the biggest names, especially in the Atlanta scene, but who are some of the more unexpected names that you’ve been working with?
Wizkid. We’ve been doing a lot of stuff with Wizkid lately. Some fire all the way, completely different. Not even for him. I don’t even think it’s Afro. It’s its own thing, its own genre. So I’m excited about that. Wyclef, been doing some stuff with Wyclef lately. Who else? Of course Gunna, Swae Lee, Don Toliver, a bunch of people.

How did you and Wizkid connect?
Through Gunna, actually. When he, I guess he moved to LA. I don’t know. He was just in LA for a month, and him and Gunna connected and we all got into the studio just feeling each other out and just seeing what we could come up with. But I realized him and his guys were so cool. They just like us. So we started hanging out together and just started doing our own music, and I had a bunch of experimental beats that I really couldn’t play for anybody else just in my catalog. I played him something, and just from his reaction, I think he was just surprised that I had this type of music just sitting on the drive. And from that point, it was like two weeks we was going to the studio every day and he’s like, “No, play me this, play me this. No, I don’t want to hear anything Afro. Play me your stuff.” And he’s just super creative and we just caught a vibe.

What do you think the kind of bridge is between that culture and what you guys got going on?
I think it’s all the same. I think we’re just now starting to figure out that it’s all the same, all the way down to our mannerisms and what we do inside the studio. I met some of his friends and it seemed like I knew those guys for forever, and we were sitting there talking in a little group just in the studio, outside of the studio room for hours just talking about where he’s from in Nigeria and where we are from, and I didn’t know that he lived in Atlanta for a long period of time. So just connecting on all that type of stuff. And I think we both just realized that we’re very similar in culture and just in musical taste. And then from that point on, it’s just meeting your brother and doing music.

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Thinking about where you guys come from in Atlanta, you’ve been in the scene for so long now. How do you think the city’s sound has evolved since you first started?
I think it’s completely changed, especially with some of the stuff that I’m hearing now that’s coming from the younger guys. It’s really energetic. And I think in the beginning, especially when I came in, it was just a different type of sound just coming from how we grew up or just the Atlanta trap era. We still kind of had that embedded in our sound when we first started. Now I hear some of the newer guys and it’s super energetic, super festively, crazy drums. It’s just exciting.

Thinking back about that time that you were coming up, it seems like a lot of people are also revisiting that 2010s Futuristic Atlanta sound.
Yeah. I don’t think it could ever be recreated, bro. It could never be recreated. It was just such a time all the way down to how we talked, how we dressed, Mohawks, having Mohawks with the design on the side of your head. It was a real lifestyle thing that bled into the music, so I can appreciate it and it’s nostalgic, but I think it’ll just never feel the same because it was just something that was new, it was fresh, it was Atlanta. This was our life. So I mean, I see it, but you know.

Speaking of the 2010s, do you remember how you and Gunna first connected?
Yeah. We’re from the same neighborhood, so we were always brushing shoulders because we always had mutual friends, or we went to the same clubs when we were kids. It was this club called The Palace on Old National that Gunna and his best friend Nechie used to go to every single Friday and Saturday. So even if I missed a couple of weekends, whenever I would come, I would see them and they would be doing what they was doing and I’d be doing what I was doing. But we always had mutual friends, so it was never like a, “Hey, Turbo, this is Gunna. Gunna, this is Turbo.” It was just like, Hey, what’s up? Whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop. And it kind of bled from there.

What’s it been like seeing his progression from those early tapes to this most recent record, The Last Wun?
Watching it firsthand is, how can I say it? I don’t know. I don’t even know if it’s a word to be able to describe it, because Gunna, I seen Gunna when he was full-blown in the street, and he always loved to rap, but he was full-blown in the street. So now to see where he’s at now, it’s almost kind of crazy to view, I guess. You know what I mean? And comparing it to what we used to talk about and what I used to see him do when we first got kind of clicked up to now it’s like a complete 180, completely, from mind to body, to I’m scared to go and get a Dunkin’ Donuts in front of him. You know what I’m saying? Because he like, “Man, what you doing? You eating donuts? We got to go to the gym.” You know what I mean?

But it is cool, because he’s holding everybody around him accountable for just health and wealth and just the future. So I would just say it’s a complete 180 from when we first met, and I think that’s the same thing with just how he’s approaching his music and how we all approaching the music is just thinking big, thinking superstar to a whole nother level where we just didn’t have that level of thinking in the beginning.

What do you think attracts you the most as a producer these days when it comes to the types of sounds that you’re interested in?
Something that’s just standing out, something that’s personal to whatever artist’s style or my style. I try my best to stay out of the box completely, or even if I get into the studio with an artist and they say, “Oh, I want something that sounds like Gunna.” You know what I mean? It’s like I immediately get turned off. So when I’m looking or when I’m working with newer artists, the things that stand out to me is if these people have their own style or if they’re confident in what they’re doing, and almost teaching me something that I might not know.

That’s been very exciting, or I get excited when I come across those type of kids that’s just unapologetic, they’re they self. They don’t give a fuck about a Turbo or whoever. It’s like, this is my sound and this is what I like, and I can just learn something from them and then create something even bigger. That’s really what I’ve been looking for. That’s what I get excited about. And I haven’t ran across it much in the musical space, more so in a fashion space, but that’s kind of what I’d be looking for, bro.

Gunna and Turbo

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How do you approach the creative process? Do you start with a melody, or how does it work for you?
I start with a color really. You know what I mean? I honestly start with a color, and a lot of times what helps me find that color is whatever mood I’m in or whatever mood that whatever artist that I’m working with is in. And then I try to work backwards, because for me, with music, I see it in colors in an oddly type of way. It’s more so my music speaks to my senses more than it does to my ears solely. So that’s kind of like my process. And sometimes I’ll start with the drums. I remember being in the studio one night, had an hour left in the session, and was not really inspired that night. I just seen like a dark brown color in my mind, almost like a Cactus Jack type or beef and broccoli type of brown.

And I started with the drums, just crazy bass, 808, crazy sounding drums, and from that point, kept building and put a couple chords on top of it, and it was done. And that was the process for that night. And I think that song ended up being “Swing My Way” for Offset. So it’s like sometimes it starts with the melody, sometimes it starts with the drums, sometimes it starts with just a metronome. I’m just open to whatever my mind and my spirit is telling me at the time.

Do you have interests more broadly in arts and visual art or fashion or anything like that?
Yeah. Hell yeah. Visual arts, architecture all the way down to, I guess you could say landscaping. You know what I’m saying? Oddly enough, when people yards or their flowers are decorated in a certain way, I kind of pull from all of those type of visual things. As I’m getting older, I’m starting to have a love for just architecture and just seeing different buildings or the history of different things, and I haven’t all the way figured out how it bleeds into my music. Some way, somehow, I just find a way to do it. But I kind of have to get into that zone. I haven’t figured out how to put it to you in words.

Even thinking about some of your production, there’s sort of a cinematic quality to it as well.
Yeah. Yep. I mean, it’s just kind of what comes. Like I said, I get into a zone. I can’t really explain it. If you ever get a chance to just see me work, it’s like when I catch an idea, I get completely focused on that idea, and it’s almost, it’s so many things that’s just pouring into my mind and I’m trying to figure out how to do it, how to put it into my music. I can’t explain it, but it is something similar to what you’re saying. Just like I might see something, or I always have, like those guys on YouTube that make castles out of mud and shit. I’ll have that playing in the studio and just watch them and just make a soundtrack for that, I guess. And sometimes it’s cinematic, sometimes it’s just ghetto and it’s raw, but it is Turbo’s music.

In addition to the new Gunna project, you have some stuff on this new Offset record. What was the process working with him like?
With Offset, it was a challenge in the beginning because I think we weren’t used to working with each other, and I like to move stuff around in the Pro Tools session. Like if he raps one way, I might go and put what he thought was a hook into a verse and what he thought was a verse into a hook. And he wasn’t loving that at first, and we would kind of bump heads on what was the song and what wasn’t the song, or whatever. But I think after Swing My Way came out and him being so confident about that song and then me seeing what it did from the visual to how his fans reacted to it, we started to communicate way better just about music and just personally. So it was that, you know what I mean?

We had to kind of, I’ve worked with him before, but I haven’t worked with him now on the solo stuff. So we almost had to relearn each other. And honestly, the relationship is way better than before. It’s way closer. So we got a lot of stuff in the vault. I think I got two or three on this next album, and he’s dropping. Cool.

How important is that for you and the artist to build a genuine relationship?
It’s super important for me because that’s where all my success came from. A lot of the people that I have huge songs with were my friends, and we spend time together outside of the studio, or we spend a lot of time in the studio just talking about life and whatever, however, and that as a producer helps me to make the soundtrack for their life that they’re finna tour with or get synced to a movie or be able to do all of these radio shows with. It just kind of helps me understand it a little bit better. So I try to get to know whoever I’m working with before we start working together, because then it’ll last longer and it won’t be just cookie cutter.

Who are some of the artists you’ve worked with in the past that you’ve been able to build that with?
Moneybagg Yo. We just had “Whiskey Whiskey” come out with him and Morgan Wallen, that did really well, went gold in a month. That was super surprising to me. But it was one of those type of relationships where he’s from Memphis, I’m from Atlanta, but we usually connect through a mutual friend in L.A. a lot together. We’ll spend hours talking. We was just talking about mutual funds the other day, you know what I mean? And investing. And I was teaching him about some of the stuff that I do as far as with my investments or my brokerage accounts, and finding different ways to just pull from the resources we already have. And it’s like, I don’t know, man. It’s a real genuine conversation, a real genuine friend at that point. It’s not really about just send me some beats or whatever. So that’s the first person that pops into mind outside of somebody like Gunna. But yeah, Bagg for sure. Shout out to him.

Memphis is interesting with the country sound that they’ve got going right now
Yeah, I had a few country records come out in 2024, and that was my first introduction to working with country artists or really just the writer world that they got going on over there. But I was really thankful to be able to catch one with Morgan and for it to kind of be a crossover between a hip-hop and a country, and people actually resonated to it. So yeah, Nashville is different, but I love Nashville.

Have you been working with country artists lately?
Yeah, a lot of country writers. I had a song come out with Charlieonnafriday in 2024 called “When It Rains,” and that was a good song. That was something that was full country. I’ve worked with Breland and his writers a lot. We got a bunch of just crazy shit in the stash. And then I did a lot of stuff with Charlie Handsome for Post and Morgan, stuff that just hasn’t come out yet.

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What’s it like translating what you do, coming from the rap world, and working in that environment?
I think it’s more so like I’m adding value by my frequencies. They kind of have a way that they do things, but me coming from my world, it’s like we have a way of doing our own things. So I can honestly say I kind of was bringing frequency to those rooms, whether it was lower frequencies, because that’s what I’m used to in the hip-hop world, or just a certain sound that this person might’ve not have been thinking of because they’re so used to doing acoustic guitar or just real drums instead of programmed drums. Just that type of input. But honestly, I think it was more of a learning experience for me than anything else. I was learning how they do things and how people, they have the writers and the writers come up with the records, and just their process. That’s something completely different from the hip-hop world.

When you think about your project, what do you think about when you structure an album for yourself?
You know how some of the best movies in the world started from a book? I kind of want to put that into the perspective of my album. You know Turbo as the producer, but you don’t really know Turbo as or, okay, well, I’ll say you’ll know Turbo as the hip-hop producer or the trap producer, but you don’t know Turbo’s real broad span of music, because I haven’t done it with any of those type of artists yet. So with my album, I kind of want to open the listeners and all of my fans’ ears to how broad my music discography and just my mind goes with music and not just hip-hop trap rap. So that’s really my goal, to paint the picture. I feel like me and the stuff that I did from the Babys and the Gunnas and the Thugs and the YSL stuff was just the start. That was my book. And even still, that was a great fucking book, if you’re a book reader, you know what I mean? But everybody’s not a book reader. You’ll have to see the movie. And my album is basically the movie.

August 24, 2025 0 comments
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Coolie producer approaches Madras HC to challenge Rajinikanth film's A certificate from CBFC for ‘celebrating violence’
Bollywood

Coolie producer approaches Madras HC to challenge Rajinikanth film’s A certificate from CBFC for ‘celebrating violence’

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Updated on: Aug 20, 2025 02:33 pm IST

After watching Lokesh Kanagaraj’s Rajinikanth-starrer Coolie, many were surprised why the film was awarded an A certificate.

The producer of Coolie, Sun TV Network Limited’s Sun Pictures, has approached the Madras High Court to challenge the A certificate granted to the Rajinikanth film by the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC). A report by The Hindu states that the producer was ‘shocked’ upon receiving an email from the certification board that their film ‘celebrated violence’.

Coolie is directed by Lokesh Kanagaraj and stars Rajinikanth in the lead role.

Coolie producer approaches HC over A certificate

The A certificate given to Coolie meant that people under 18 could not watch the film in theatres. The production firm filed a civil miscellaneous appeal against the CBFC’s decision. It was pointed out that anyone who applies for a film certification can appeal before the tribunal within 30 days. Coolie was released in theatres on 14 August with an A certificate, and the film’s producers chose to release it before challenging the certification.

In the grounds of appeal, Sun Pictures had said that it produced Coolie to celebrate Rajinikanth completing 50 years in cinema and that the film had become a ‘mega blockbuster’. However, when they applied for the CBFC certification on 28 July, they claimed that they received a response on 31 July that the movie was ‘celebrating violence’ and would hence be given an A certificate. A revising committee also issued an A certificate for the film on 4 August.

Sun Pictures also questioned the CBFC for giving a U/A certificate for movies like Yash-starrer KGF and Vijay-starrer Beast, as those films had more violence than Coolie did.

About Coolie

Lokesh Kanagaraj’s Coolie stars Rajinikanth, Nagarjuna, Soubin Shahir, Shruti Haasan, Rachita Ram, Sathyaraj, Upendra and Aamir Khan. The film tells the story of Deva (Rajinikanth), who is looking for answers after the sudden death of his friend Rajasekhar (Sathyaraj). Numerous people on social media wondered why Coolie had gotten an A certificate, given that it didn’t have more violence than any other commercial cinema.

News / Entertainment / Tamil Cinema / Coolie producer approaches Madras HC to challenge Rajinikanth film’s A certificate from CBFC for ‘celebrating violence’

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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