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Steve Albini on What Made The Rolling Stones Dummer Charlie Watts So Special
Music

Steve Albini on What Made The Rolling Stones Dummer Charlie Watts So Special

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

My book Backbeats: A History of Rock and Roll in 15 Drummers tells a familiar story from an unfamiliar vantage. Moving from Chicago blues to Phil Spector’s early-1960s confections to the British Invasion, the birth of punk, metal, grunge, and hip-hop, the book tracks the seven-decade story of rock and roll as if drummers were the main characters. 

And why not? Though they aren’t typically as famous as guitarists and singers, drummers have been just as crucial to the creation of this music, possibly even more so. Rock and roll was a rhythmic revolution above all, and who could imagine what it would look like without the Bo Diddley beat (created by drummer Clifton James), the “Be My Baby” intro (played by Hal Blaine), or the thunderous power of John Bonham? 

Charlie Watts embodies this book’s thesis. It’s impossible to imagine the Rolling Stones without him, and he was just as crucial to their sound as Keith Richards’ guitar or Mick Jagger’s singing. In this excerpt I discuss why his blues- and jazz-influenced style was so unique and important to their group’s development.


It’s hard to overstate how difficult it was for young British people to obtain records from American jazz- and bluesmen in the 1950s and ’60s. Figures like Blind Lemon Jefferson, Bukka White, and even Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf were still obscure in the US at the time. It wasn’t until 1958 that Waters and a few other performers came to Britain for a tour, and if you missed those concerts then you had to make do with what you could find in the few specialist record shops, where obsessives like Brian Jones and Keith Richards were your competition for the limited supply. Lonnie Donegan, a crucial figure in the development of UK rock and roll, got his early jazz and blues records by stealing them from the American embassy in London. But the scarcity drove these young men together.

“That scene became the only chance you had to play that music,” Charlie Watts said. “It was a chance to talk about those records.” When Keith Richards and Mick Jagger arrived in London’s burgeoning local blues venues, they found Watts already playing drums a few nights a week with another band while attending art school.

The trio of Jagger, Richards, and Watts played their first gig together in 1962, before Beatlemania. From the start, their tastes ran rougher than the pop-minded Liverpudlians: they made their reputation on Wolf and Muddy covers, and the Stones would never have been caught playing tunes from The Music Man, for instance. But in their early years, Jagger and Richards were relatively focused on traditional British songcraft, especially in their ballads. Original songs like “Ruby Tuesday” and “I Am Waiting,” even “Paint It, Black,” revealed eclectic, exotic tastes and studio approaches.

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Courtesy of Simon and Schuster

The latter became instantly iconic for its sitar melody, but it is also a major drum feature, especially for the time. Watts’s pounding toms set the tone for the thrumming verses, then he leaps into the chorus with a heavy backbeat and massive fills. And as much as Watts is known for demureness, both musically and otherwise, it’s worth noting that his wild playing is all over the band’s mid-1960s singles and hits, from “19th Nervous Breakdown,” which perfects the Who’s jacked-up R & B feel, to the swinging triplet blues “Heart of Stone,” and the power-pop buried gem “Gotta Get Away.” Then there’s “Get Off of My Cloud,” which opens with Watts’s bouncing beat, built on a snare fill. All these songs rely on a strong backbeat more than harmonies or guitar solos, for example. The drums are intrinsic to the arrangement, even in this more traditionally melodic era.

In the defining early Stones anthem “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” Watts’s drum break—performed only on the snare and hi-hat—is a hook to equal Richards’s three-note guitar melody. The song swings on Watts’s snare drum throughout, as he keeps a steady quarter-note pulse. Instead of a traditional backbeat on the two and four, Watts played every note on “Satisfaction,” one-two-three-four. The Rolling Stones were defined by the sound of Charlie Watts’s snare from their first public breakthrough.

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That snare sound is as instantly identifiable as Miles Davis’s muted horn or Eddie Van Halen’s pyrotechnic neck tapping. No one else has a backbeat like Charlie Watts, and it’s the first thing any drummer will say about him. So how did he achieve it? Like any iconic musical voice, he had his physical peculiarities. He played with a “traditional” stick grip, meaning his left stick, which hit the snare, went through his fingers at an angle like a bottom chopstick. Drumming with a traditional grip takes the power away from your elbow or shoulder—they won’t be any help. It has to come from the wrist, in a whip motion, like a viper attack. Charlie Watts held his trunk and head so still, and never played loudly or overexerted himself, but his snare sounds like he was whacking the dust off it, like he’d put in a dollar and never got his cigarettes.

Watts also played a lot of rim shots, where the stick hits the head and the metal hoop around the drum simultaneously. It further sharpens the sound into a crack rather than a thud, and forces additional reverberations from the drum’s shell. Watts’s snare sound was really a mix of sounds—a thwacking snap on the head, the vibration of the air in the drum itself, the click of wood on the rim. Recorded in faux-blues verité style, his backbeats were alive. And like fingerprints, no two were precisely the same.

It shouldn’t surprise any blues fan, but Watts achieved this sound on banged-up vintage equipment, even as the trend for giant, customized sets grew through the 1970s and ’80s—even when he was competing for stage space with Mick Jagger riding on a giant inflatable penis. Gina Schock is the drummer for the Go-Go’s, who opened for the Stones on the Tattoo You tour in 1981. “The drum tech said the rug underneath it was worth more than the kit,” she told me. (She added, in a south Baltimore drawl that she has heroically preserved despite a half century on the West Coast, “Charlie was a perfect gentleman.”)

Moreover, he played his ancient drums quietly. No matter how big the Stones’ crowds got, no matter how enormous the stage show, you’d never see his elbows raise. He played everything at a reasonable, even modest volume, and let microphones capture the nuances of his sound—another jazz technique. If your art depends on developing a unique voice, you don’t seek it by screaming all the time.

I spoke with Steve Albini, the fiercely, iconically independent musician and recording engineer, in February 2024. Known for his unadorned, documentary techniques and specifically for his full-bodied drum sounds, Albini recorded all-time records for the Pixies, Nirvana, Slint, PJ Harvey, Low, and literally hundreds of other bands over three decades, in a schedule that ranged from experimental groups in his actual neighborhood to Robert Plant and Jimmy Page. His artistic philosophy was closer to that of Alan Lomax (or his fellow adopted Chicagoan Leonard Chess) than what we typically think of as a “record producer.” “I like it when a recording is convincingly naturalistic,” he told me. “That’s the most successful basic recording scenario, when it’s a convincing representation of what was happening in the room. The band should be allowed to do whatever the fuck they want to do. I’m here to help.”

I called him to ask about drummers, and he brought up Watts unprompted. “The thing that’s amazing about Charlie Watts is the little rhythmic peculiarities in his playing. It’s almost like his playing is for him alone. He marches right through the song. His natural gait has a loping to it, it’s not boom-boom-boom. There’s a pulse, separate from the tempo, and I love how committed to it he is.”

In the 1970s, Watts started to omit his hi-hat when he played backbeats, which put even more emphasis on the snare. You can hear just how clear it is on “Sway,” “Happy,” “Beast of Burden,” and other masterpieces from this era. “His hi-hat peccadillo, the lift,” Albini described it, “it’s like a hardcore drummer. And it creates a stutter in the rhythm.” He compared Watts to two other masters of rhythmic simplicity, AC/DC’s Phil Rudd and Bun E. Carlos from Cheap Trick, both of whom had such uncluttered styles that their personalities, like Watts’s, shone through in the spaces between their notes. They defined their bands by their unrelenting swing and backbeat. They made themselves elemental to their bands’ personalities.

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Those two hard rockers came well after the Stones, however. Tremendous as they both are (and my goodness, I love Cheap Trick at Budokan, a drastically underrated drum album), Watts never hit hard. He emphasized his backbeat by keeping his playing loose; everything in his entire bodily approach to drums was designed to highlight the snare. His fellow drummers, always his sharpest observers, said as much. “Charlie played even less than me,” Ringo once joked. Stewart Copeland of the Police noted that Watts’s jazz influence meant he “derived power from relaxation. Most rock drummers are trying to kill something; they’re chopping wood. Jazz drummers instead tend to be very loose to get that jazz feel, and he had that quality.”

This essay is adapted from John Lingan’s new book, “Backbeats: A History of Rock and Roll in Fifteen Drummers,” which will be published by Scribner on Nov. 11.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Barton Explains Feeling Cheated by 'Terrifier'
TV & Streaming

Steve Barton Explains Feeling Cheated by ‘Terrifier’

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Actress Catherine Corcoran just took her breach of contract dispute with “Terrifier” director Damien Leone and producer Phil Falcone to a Los Angeles federal court on Sunday. But allegations that the filmmaking duo has been bullying “Terrifier” contributors out of their fair credit and compensation predate Corcoran’s new claim. Several accusers point to disagreements over “Terrifier” merchandising, a critical element in the pending legal case that may jeopardize the future of the lucrative slasher series.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” said an anonymous source who worked at Dread Presents, the in-house movie studio for the horror brand Dread Central, which released the first “Terrifier” in 2018. “Damien’s a strong personality. I have respect for him. He’s nice enough in person, but when it comes to doing business, he’s savage.”

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“I don’t buy the excuse that they’re from New York or New Jersey or whatever,” said another, who also worked at Dread Presents then. Asked about the sexual harassment alleged in the new lawsuit (Falcone is accused by name of photographing Corcoran nude without her consent while she was stuck in a special effects rig), he said, “I’m inclined to believe Catherine. It seems like something Phil could do.” 

Falcone and Leone have denied the allegations in Corcoran’s claim through The Hollywood Reporter. They did not respond to IndieWire’s request for comment on the additional allegations, despite repeated requests to get in contact with Leone, Falcone, and their defense attorney.

The steel book release for ‘Terrifier’ (2016) — sold for $49.99

Dread Central’s parent company, Epic Pictures, acquired Leone’s lo-fi horror film in 2017 ahead of their new label’s official launch the next year. That was at the height of the #MeToo movement, when “Terrifier” was not popular with everyone inside the company, according to four ex-employees who said Dread was mostly run by women then. They were supported by several men at Dread who reportedly “hated” the movie and specifically took issue with its centerpiece kill featuring Corcoran, as IndieWire learned.

“I almost quit my first week at Dread Central Presents because I was like, ‘Well, this is misogynist crap and I don’t like it at all. If that is what this label is going to be, then I’m not the right person for this position,” said one source. As seen in the first “Terrifier,” the brutal murder of Dawn (Corcoran) — stripped naked, hung upside-down, and sawed in half from vagina to face — is widely considered the spark that ignited “Terrifier” mania as we know it today. The moment is so shocking it demands to be talked about, and it created buzz that spread far beyond the film’s world premiere at the 2016 Telluride Horror Show.

“The irony is Steve was right,” said the same ex-Dread Central source. That source still doesn’t like the “Terrifier” movies but acknowledges his former colleague, the brand’s co-founder and the site’s former editor-in-chief Steve Barton, as integral to their success. “It obviously became a huge franchise, and I always give him credit for that. I didn’t see it, and I didn’t want to see it, but he was definitely responsible for that one.”

Last year, Barton — who has gone by “Uncle Creepy” online for years — released a memoir titled “A Comedy of Tragedies.” In it, Barton discusses one of his most complicated achievements: getting the naysayers inside Dread and the wary Epic folks who’d just met them to back “Terrifier.”

“I launched a fucking juggernaut,” Barton told IndieWire in a recent interview. “But I was stupid enough to not get anything in writing. So, that’s my fault.” 

(Left to right): Phil Falcone, ‘Terrifier’ actor Elliot Fullam, Damien Leone, actor Kevin Smith, and Steve Barton at a special ‘Terrifier 2’ screening Barton says he organized

Barton is the first to admit he isn’t owed much here legally, but the seasoned genre vet threw his social media reputation and industry connections he’d spent decades building behind “Terrifier.” He said he never asked Leone and Falcone for money, but helped the indie as it was starting to build word of mouth. A similar argument is being made by Corcoran’s legal team, who say they’ve got a written deal on their client’s side that entitles her to 1 percent of “Terrifier” profits across all revenue generated by the franchise.

“My vision for Dread Central was to give the indie filmmaker as much of a voice as the studio filmmaker and level that playing field,” said Barton, speaking to headwinds that have long plagued “Terrifier.” The 2011 short that inspired the feature franchise was also included in Leone’s 2013 anthology film “All Hallow’s Eve,” which gained a lower level of notoriety for the image of a woman kidnapped by Art the Clown (the role was originated by Mike Giannelli) — then kept alive as her limbs and breasts are hacked off. The words “cunt,” “bitch,” “slut,” and “pig” appeared carved into her bare body.

An established name and face in the genre landscape when it wasn’t clear if Art (now played by David Howard Thornton) could ever find a mainstream audience, Barton championed “Terrifier” loudly for several years. The first film was made on a shoestring budget of just $35,000 and funded by producer Falcone after he worked with Leone on his own directorial debut, titled “Joe’s War” (2015). Leone and Falcone have since gained a reputation in the horror world as a fearsome twosome with several sources describing them as “ride or die” partners who earnestly “love” each other. Some say, to a fault.

“Of all the filmmakers I worked with, I loved all of them except the ‘Terrifier’ guys,” said one of the ex-Dread sources. “They’re the only ones that were completely uncooperative every step of the way.”

“Phil is very much Damien’s shield in a lot of ways,” said Barton. “I don’t say that in a bad way. I say that in a very fatherly way. I think Phil really cares about Damien, and Damien knows Phil feels that way about him. In a lot of ways, Phil is the tail that wags the dog. One of the last things I said to Damien was, ‘I always loved you guys. I always will love you guys, but mark my words, Phil is going to sink this ship.’”

TERRIFIER, David Howard Thornton, 2016. © Tubi / courtesy Everett Collection
David Howard Thornton in ‘Terrifier’ (2016)Courtesy Everett Collection

Across “Terrifier” (2018), “Terrifier 2” (2022), and “Terrifier 3” (2024), Barton watched as the beloved black-and-white clown became a global phenomenon, but the multi-hyphenate professional was only involved in promoting the first two films. The sequels were released at Cineverse, exploding as eventized theatrical releases that made millions at the box office and firmly established Art as the first serious addition to slasher head canon since “Saw.” Depending on who you ask, Dread either couldn’t stay competitive in the bidding war for “Terrifier 2” — or Leone didn’t want them to.

“We totally fumbled the ball on theatrical,” said an anonymous source integral to the “Terrifier” release at Dread Presents. “We put it out on 10 screens and that was kind of it.” But even foregoing most movie theaters, “Terrifier” wasn’t a flop. It repeatedly sold out as a Blu-ray release (marked at $19.99), and it even merited a steelbook edition (priced at $49.99), both of which bear Corcoran’s image and the controversial sawing scene on the packaging. 

“I can’t remember a single other Dread title that we needed a second [Blu-ray] order of, and we needed several for ‘Terrifier,’” said the same source, who recalled needing all hands on deck to fill physical media orders fast enough. “It’s the only one that we exceeded our 1,000-order minimum — at least several times over. We could not print enough. It became evidently clear that it was going to be huge, probably the biggest release for us.”

The alternate cover for the ‘Terrifier’ (2016) Blu-ray release

Simultaneously, Barton was pushing the film’s reputation hard online. He used the recognizable Dread Central brand and his own media personality to introduce audiences to a new director he thought would be a lifelong friend. Speaking with IndieWire, he recalled feeling responsible for “Terrifier” viewers even as his own position in the franchise’s history became less clear. 

“I made sure that the fan base, they weren’t just on this ride with us,” Barton said. “They were in the fucking car next to us.” 

Egos abound in Hollywood, and with a success as big as “Terrifier,” it’s no surprise that several folks on the distribution side want credit for first recognizing Art the Clown as the icon he would become through the trilogy. (“Terrifier 4” has not yet begun production or landed a distribution deal.) But Barton bet big by walking away from Dread Central in part because of the movie. He got bought out of his 20 percent share in the company and made supporting “Terrifier” his full-time job. 

Per Barton, he packed and shipped “Terrifier” merchandise out of his basement — while playing watchdog for bootleg products on Etsy and routinely interfacing with fans who had questions about available merchandise. He says he also negotiated major convention appearances for Art the Clown as well as inspired his inclusion in video games and at popular horror events, circles where Barton was already well known but Leone and Falcone were not. Barton was not on set for any “Terrifier” production, but his repeat appearances promoting the franchise were eventually cited by Falcone as proof he had overstated his role.

Barton told IndieWire the email from Falcone “firing” him in November 2023 came as a shock. Going beyond what a typical producer might do, the Dread Central co-founder had always seen his efforts to support the lifecycle of the film as a good thing for a low-budget production. He arranged press features, celebrity-backed screenings, and completed a wide range of office PA duties Falcone and Leone might’ve had to hire someone to do otherwise. Never stepping foot on set, Barton says he still endeavored to support the productions in ways that mattered for the art and its bottom line. The week before he was dismissed, Barton said Leone had been showing him test footage for “Terrifier 3.”

“I feel like Dr. Frankenstein being haunted by his monster, and it breaks my heart,” said Barton, who described feeling conflicted every time he sees “Terrifier” in stores or on screen. “I am still living paycheck to paycheck, and it hurts to look at. Even [on Halloween], I have little kids dressed like Art knocking on my door. I get very sad and upset each time I see it. Because it harkens back to the whole, ‘What did I do wrong? I’m a failure. I should be taking better care of my wife and kids…’ thing.”

A poster Barton says was signed by Leone and Falcone, featuring remarks that call Barton a ‘champion’

By most accounts, Barton’s falling out with Leone and Falcone isn’t actionable and was repeatedly short-handed to IndieWire by sources on both sides as “creative differences.” He wasn’t under any kind of formal contract, and, according to Barton, he wrongly assumed he would be taken care of as the franchise grew. The email and text exchanges that severed the relationship between Barton and Leone/Falcone paint very different pictures of his contribution to “Terrifier.” Falcone claimed Barton was taking credit he was never owed, and Leone backed his partner up, saying, “This is between you and Phil.”

Another anonymous source closer to the production characterized the split differently. Per their account, Barton had seriously overstepped and created a dynamic that was doomed to fail. Similar to Corcoran’s complaint, that POV places the burden of asking for “Terrifier” credit on everyone but Leone and Falcone.

Still, the public connection between Barton and “Terrifier” persists to this day. Even having sold off all of his favorite collectibles — partly from financial need but also out of hurt — in an event he called a “Terri-Fire Sale,” Barton says he still gets tagged endlessly in posts about the killer clown. The same anonymous source said that they weren’t surprised allegations of wrongdoing had surfaced regarding the making and marketing of the film, emphasizing that inexperienced productions often make mistakes as they become more successful.

Barton’s story bears a striking resemblance to the narrative outlined in Corcoran’s legal claim and suggests the franchise was enjoying demonstrable success at a time that could be critical to determining if and how much she is owed. It’s also just the start of a string of similar stories, many from “Terrifier” fans like Barton who have raised the alarm on their own business deals with Leone and Falcone.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Martin, Alison Brown Perform 'Let's Get Out of Here' on 'Fallon'
Music

Steve Martin, Alison Brown Perform ‘Let’s Get Out of Here’ on ‘Fallon’

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The duo recently released a collaborative bluegrass album, Safe, Sensible and Sane

Steve Martin and Alison Brown appeared on The Tonight Show to showcase their instrumental bluegrass track “Let’s Get Out of Here.” Martin and Brown performed the rousing song on banjo with the help of several other live musicians, including two strings players.

“Let’s Get Out of Here” is the closing track on Martin and Brown’s recent LP, Safe, Sensible and Sane, which dropped earlier this month. The album marks the musicians’ first collaborative release, and includes appearances from Jackson Browne, Vince Gill, the Indigo Girls, Tim O’Brien, Jason Mraz, and Della Mae. It was tracked live at Compass Sound Studio in Nashville.

“With the banjo, there are so many styles you can work with, but Alison and I both have an ear for its more melodic, melancholy aspect,” Martin explained in a statement about the album. “We got together and played music for days, and ended up making a record where our entire banjo histories coalesce.”

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“We didn’t start off by saying, ‘Let’s make an album,’” Brown added. “We were just having a good time writing songs, and at some point we realized we’d written enough to gather them all together and put a bow on it. There was a joy and ease and sense of fun to the whole process, and now hopefully everyone who listens will share that joy.”

Martin recorded the album in the midst of filming his hit TV series, Only Murders in the Building. The fifth season of the show premiered on Sept. 9. Hulu recently announced that the series will head overseas to London to film its sixth season. Martin’s co-star Selena Gomez celebrated the news with a post on Instagram featuring a photo of her with Martin and Martin Short. “We are eternally grateful we can bring any of you any sort of joy,” she wrote. “My deepest gratitude from Steve, Marty and myself.”

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Ghost Hunters Steve Gonsalves’ Scariest Paranormal Moment
Celebrity News

Ghost Hunters Steve Gonsalves’ Scariest Paranormal Moment

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The one where Courteney Cox shares a ghost story.

The Friends star told Howard Stern she had a delivery man ring her doorbell and inform her of an unexpected guest.

“I answered it, got my package and he said, ‘Do you know this house is haunted?’” Courteney said on a 2022 episode of his SiriusXM show. “And I go, ‘Really? Why?’ He goes, ‘Because there’s someone standing behind you.’ And I thought, ‘Oh s–t.’”

This wasn’t her only spooky experience, however. Courteney also recalled a scare she had in London. 

“I’d just gotten there,” the Scream alum added. “So yeah, I was a little jet-lagged but I wasn’t sleeping. I was sitting there, I closed my eyes to try to sleep and all of a sudden I saw these really scary faces—like old faces. I was like, ‘OK, stop, stop, you gotta stop.’ And then all of a sudden I was like, ‘Mom? Dad? Auntie Em?’ I don’t know. I just kept seeing all these weird things.”

After also seeing lights and a plant move, Courteney alerted her longtime love Johnny McDaid.

“I was like, ‘Johnny! Wake up! I’m seeing spirits!'” the actress added. “And he had all these waves around him too. And he goes, ‘Courteney, you’re asleep.’ I said, ‘No, I just woke you up! How can I be asleep?’ He’s like, ‘Well, I’m asleep. There are no ghosts.’ I did see them for sure.”

Ultimately, Courteney warded them off with a request.

“I said, ‘Thanks for visiting last night. That was fun. Do not come back tonight cause I have to sleep,'” she said. “And I didn’t see them again.”

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Cillian Murphy is a Teacher of Troubled Students in 'Steve' Trailer #2
Hollywood

Cillian Murphy is a Teacher of Troubled Students in ‘Steve’ Trailer #2

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Cillian Murphy is a Teacher of Troubled Students in ‘Steve’ Trailer #2

by Alex Billington
October 3, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You’re not alone, Shy… That’s the whole point.” Netflix has debuted one more final official trailer for the film titled Steve, from the same Belgian filmmaker, Tim Mielants, behind Cillian’s last film Small Things Like These. Steve is now playing on Netflix as of today (view it here) – after premiering at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival last month to mostly positive reviews. The film follows the headteacher Steve battling for his reform college’s survival while managing his mental health & other challenges. Concurrently, the troubled student Shy navigates his violent tendencies and fragility, torn between his past and his future prospects. Cillian Murphy stars as the titular teacher Steve, with a cast including Tracey Ullman, Jay Lycurgo, Simbi Ajikawo, Emily Watson, Douggie McMeekin, Youssef Kerkour, Luke Ayres, Joshua J Parker, Araloyin Oshunremi, Tut Nyuot, Tom Moya, Ahmed Ismail, Joshua Barry, and others. The film features music by Ben Salisbury & Geoff Barrow. Adapted from Max Porter’s book “Shy”: a story “about guilt, rage, imagination, & boyhood, about being lost in the dark and learning you’re not alone.” This is a much better trailer and really makes me want to watch this. A compassionate, honest film. Worth a look.

Here’s the second official trailer (+ poster) for Tim Mielants’ film Steve, direct from Netflix’s YouTube:

Steve Trailer Poster

Steve Trailer Poster

You can rewatch the first official trailer for Tim Mielants’ Steve movie right here for even more footage.

Set in the mid-90s, Steve is a reimagining of Max Porter’s bestseller Shy. The film follows a pivotal day in the life of headteacher Steve (Academy Award winner Cillian Murphy) and his students at a last-chance reform school amidst a world that has forsaken them. As Steve fights to protect the school’s integrity and impending closure, we witness him grappling with his own mental health. In parallel to Steve’s struggles, we meet Shy (Jay Lycurgo), a troubled teen caught between his past and what lies ahead as he tries to reconcile his inner fragility with his impulse for self-destruction and violence. Steve is directed by Belgian filmmaker Tim Mielants, director of the films Patrick Will, and Small Things Like These previously, plus short films & TV work including episode of “Legion”, “Tales from the Loop” and “The Responder” recently. The screenplay is written by Max Porter, adapted from his own bestselling novel titled “Shy”. It’s produced by Alan Moloney, Cillian Murphy, and Tina Pawlik. This will premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Netflix will then debut Meilants’ Steve film opening in select US theaters on September 19th, 2025, then streaming on Netflix starting October 3rd coming up this fall. Look any good? Who wants to watch?

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October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Meet Eve Jobs, Steve Jobs' daughter whose stunning Milan Fashion Week look wowed the internet
Lifestyle

Meet Eve Jobs, Steve Jobs’ daughter whose stunning Milan Fashion Week look wowed the internet

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Eve Jobs, the youngest daughter of late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, has once more drawn the internet’s spotlight. Her recent Instagram post from Milan, taken while attending the Bottega Veneta show, quickly went viral on internet, with fans praising her elegant presence and impeccable style.

Eve Jobs charmed the internet after attending the Bottega Veneta show in Milan, where her stylish Instagram post quickly went viral among fans.(Instagram/evejobs)

(Also read: Steve Jobs’ daughter Eve shares first pic from dreamy British wedding: ‘Most magical week’)

The post, accompanied by the caption, “Milan with Bottega!! What a wonderful show”, drew widespread appreciation from her followers.

Take a look here at the post:

Who is Eve Jobs?

Born in 1998, Eve is the youngest of Steve Jobs’ three children with Laurene Powell Jobs. She has two elder siblings, Erin and Reed, and a half-sibling, Lisa. While she has largely maintained a private profile, she has occasionally stepped into the spotlight for her achievements in sport, academia, and fashion.

Eve is an accomplished equestrian who made headlines in 2018 after winning the CSI 3 Grand Prix with a prize of 130,000 dollars.

Education and career

A graduate of Stanford University, Eve completed her degree in Science, Technology, and Society in 2021. She first gained public attention in 2020 when she featured in a Glossier campaign alongside Sydney Sweeney and Naomi Smalls.

Her modelling career has since flourished. She signed with DNA Model Management, the same agency representing Emily Ratajkowski and Kaia Gerber. Eve has fronted campaigns for Louis Vuitton and Enfants Riches Déprimés, and made her runway debut at the Paris Fashion Week.

(Also read: Steve Jobs’ daughter is getting married! Who is Eve Jobs? What’s her net worth)

A new chapter

Beyond her professional accomplishments, Eve’s personal life has also drawn attention. In July 2025, she married British Olympian Harry Charles, a celebrated equestrian. The wedding took place on 26 July at St Michael and All Angels Church in Great Tew, Cotswolds.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Photojournalist Biopic Doc 'Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere' Trailer
Hollywood

Photojournalist Biopic Doc ‘Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere’ Trailer

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Photojournalist Biopic Doc ‘Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 28, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I’ve always enjoyed being a fly on the wall – wait for that moment when there’s something in someone eye’s” Abramorama has unveiled an official trailer for a documentary film titled Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere, a fascinating biopic look at the life of a photographed named Steve Schapiro. It’s playing at the Newport Beach Film Festival soon before it opens in theaters in November this fall. Another great photography doc that covers tons of major history! Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere honors the legendary photographer’s remarkable career, his unparalleled ability to capture defining moments in history, and his unique fortune to be present at key moments of social change, revealing his deep empathy and unwavering commitment to documenting the human experience. Over six decades, Schapiro bore witness to some of the most significant social and cultural moments in modern American history. Shot shortly before his passing (in early 2022) by filmmaker Maura Smith, the film is a loving tribute to a man who was the quintessential “fly on the wall,” waiting for moments to unfold & then capturing them with a naturalism and skill that’s nothing short of dazzling. A real master – his work is incredible. Glad he has been immortalized in this film.

Official trailer (+ poster) for Maura Smith’s doc Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere, from YouTube:

Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere Trailer

Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere Poster

Witness the fascinating story of a photographer and photojournalist’s entire career in his own gentle and humble words. Steve Schapiro is famous for documenting the Civil Rights Movement and providing America with iconic images to magnify the voices of James Baldwin, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and John Lewis among others. His stories are remarkable not because they’re his alone, but because of the selfless dedication to public service he pursued in his own distinctive way. Schapiro also took some of the most classic photographs of Andy Warhol, Muhammed Ali, David Bowie, Ray Charles, Barbra Streisand, The Godfather, Taxi Driver, Bill Evans, Cannonball Adderley, and more. Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere is directed by indie doc filmmaker Maura Smith, director of the doc film Towing previously, plus a few other docs. Produced by Theophilus Donoghue and Dick Hansen. This is premiering at the 2025 Newport Beach Film Festival this fall. Abramorama opens the Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere doc in select US theaters starting November 14th, 2025 coming up. For more info, visit the film’s official site. Anyone interested?

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September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Martin forced to cancel comedy tour dates after contracting Covid
Celebrity News

Steve Martin forced to cancel comedy tour dates after contracting Covid

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

by Feeds-Bang |

21 September 2025

Steve Martin has been forced to cancel two dates of his comedy tour after contracting Covid hours before he was due on stage.

Steve Martin has been forced to cancel two dates of his comedy tour after contracting Covid hours before he was due on stage

The comedian, 80, and his long-time collaborator Martin Short, 75, had been scheduled to perform in Virginia Beach and Richmond over the weekend as part of their The Dukes of Funnytown! tour but Steve announced the cancellations in an Instagram post.

He said online: “Dear Virginia Beach and Richmond. Sadly, I have come down with Covid. I can’t possibly do the shows that you deserve.

“So Marty and I must cancel tonight and tomorrow.

“But we will return under better circumstances.”

The post was accompanied by a photo of a dog wearing Mickey Mouse ears.

Hours later, Steve shared another image – a test strip showing a positive Covid result alongside a negative flu result – with the caption: “Hey! No flu!”

Ticket holders will receive refunds for the cancelled performances, according to promoters.

Fans sent well wishes in the comments of Steve’s posts.

One wrote: “I hope you feel better very soon, Steve. Take extra care of you.”

Another said: “Please come back when you feel better. I’ve wanted to see you in person for over 40 years.”

Steve and Martin are next due to appear in Florida on 4 October – a rescheduled date from January, when Martin himself tested positive for Covid.

The tour is expected to continue with stops in Las Vegas, Boston, Pittsburgh and Austin, before concluding in Cleveland in April 2026.

Steve and Martin attended the Emmy Awards last Sunday with their Only Murders in the Building co-star Selena Gomez.

Now in its fifth season, the Hulu series continues to release weekly episodes.

The show received seven nominations at this year’s ceremony, including an acting nod for Martin, but did not win any awards.

Since its debut, it has been nominated 56 times, winning seven trophies.

The comedy features Steve, Martin and Selena as New York neighbours Charles-Haden Savage, Oliver Putnam and Mabel Mora – all amateur sleuths drawn into a succession of grisly murder investigations.

Season five introduces new guest stars Renée Zellweger, Keegan-Michael Key, Christoph Waltz and Logan Lerman.

The first three episodes premiered on 9 September, with subsequent instalments released every Tuesday.




September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Harvey Says He Quit Standup Because of Cancel Culture
Music

Steve Harvey Says He Quit Standup Because of Cancel Culture

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

In a development that hopefully won’t be included in his forthcoming biopic, actor-comedian Steve Harvey has admitted that he retired from stand-up due to “cancel culture.” We sure it wasn’t all those flubs on stage, Mr. Harvey?

Harvey’s comments came during a recent episode of The Pivot Podcast (via Complex). He explained that he saw a significant shift in comedy coming down the cultural pipeline, and dropping stand-up was a necessary reaction to the forthcoming upheaval.

“You remember, I said change is inevitable. You got to react or participate,” Harvey said. “So my participation was to get away from it because the cancel culture started becoming everywhere. Comedy is too hard to do right now. And all you got to do is look now the way the cancel culture works.”

Harvey added that, despite the lucrative nature of his stand-up career, he ultimately chose to step away after more than 30 years on the road. “That’s why I left stand-up in 2012, 2015 — one of them,” he said. “I had so many shows and had built such a catalog of work that I was making money, but I had to let something go. If I toured on the weekends, I wouldn’t even have a family.”

Related Video

This isn’t the first time Harvey has rallied against cancel culture. During a 2022 panel appearance for the Television Critics Association, Harvey said that “no standup [comedian] alive that is sponsor-driven can say anything he wants to,” citing the likes of Chris Rock, Kevin Hart, and D.L. Hughley. At the time, Consequence pointed out that, despite significant backlash for transphobic remarks, the similarly seasoned Dave Chappelle still performed at Netflix’s L.A.-based comedy fest. But then poking holes in these kind of “arguments” isn’t really the point.

No, what Harvey and other denouncers “cancel culture” are really talking about is a kind of artistic/comedic stagnation. These comedians want to be allowed to say what they want and whenever they want, and to counter their claims is somehow an attack on them and free speech itself. Fortunately, not every comic agrees with Harvey and his ilk. In a 2021 appearance on the Joe Budden Podcast, Katt Williams said that “Cancellation doesn’t have its own culture,” and that a lot of this ongoing discourse is really about minority groups policing themselves/their culture. He added that it’s a comedian’s job to adapt to ever-shifting social norms, explaining, “Nobody likes the speed limit, but it’s necessary.” And, of course, Anthony Jeselnik has made regular rants against these “anti-accountability” comedians during his own sets.

Harvey’s latest comments came at a time when comedians are actually being cancelled due to the democracy-busting actions of President Donald Trump. In July, the Late Show with Stephen Colbert was axed due to “financial reasons”; though some critics believe the Trump Administration leveraged a Skydance-Paramount deal to silence the outspoken Colbert. Meanwhile, Jimmy Kimmel Live! was recently suspended (and potentially pulled from the air outright ) after his (mostly innocuous) comments surrounding the recent assassination of alt-right activist Charlie Kirk. And with Trump making thinly-veiled gestures toward the shows of both Jimmy Fallon and Seth Myers, it seems like comedians actually trying to do good work are facing unintended consequences. But I guess comedy’s truly dead if you can no longer make, like, the same dumb jokes about pick-up lines.

Check out Harvey’s Pivot appearance below. The cancel culture comments begin near the 37-minute mark.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Martin Cancels Comedy Shows After Contracting COVID
TV & Streaming

Steve Martin Cancels Comedy Shows After Contracting COVID

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Steve Martin has canceled two comedy tour stops over the weekend after contracting COVID, the Only Murders in the Building star shared on Instagram. He and co-star Martin Short were set to continue The Dukes of Funnytown! Tour.

“Dear Virginia Beach and Richmond. Sadly, I have come down with Covid. I can’t possibly do the shows that you deserve. So Marty and I must cancel tonight & tomorrow. But we will return under better circumstances.😔,” Martin wrote on Instagram yesterday alongside a photo of his pup looking weary.

In a separate joke post later, Martin shared an image of his COVID test results, saying, “Hey! No flu!”

Related Stories

Victor Garber (center) as Jesus, surrounded by Martin Short, Gilda Radner, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin and more in 1972 Toronto 'Godspell' production.

The comedic duo and longtime collaborators’ next stop will be at the Seminole Hard Rock Live in Florida Oct. 4, a rescheduled date from Jan. 11. Additional tour dates will occur in such locales as Las Vegas, Boston, Pittsburgh and Austin, concluding with a final stop in Cleveland in late April 2026.

Martin and Short were recently at the Emmys this past Sunday, after which they attended The Walt Disney Company’s Emmys bash, where they were pictured alongside Disney Entertainment co-chairman Dana Walden.

This is now the second time one of the veteran comics’ contraction of COVID has forced a tour cancellation or rescheduling. Earlier this year, it was Short who contracted COVID after attending the star-studded weekend-long celebration that was SNL50. “Maya [Rudolph] had Covid. Marty has Covid. I wonder why? The SNL 50th Covid curse is real,” Martin wrote on Instagram in February. As a result, The Dukes of Funnytown! moved its Tennessee and North Carolina stops to mid-October.

Martin and Short can currently be seen starring opposite Selena Gomez in Only Murders, the fifth season of which is currently releasing on Hulu weekly.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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