‘Heathers’: An oral history

‘Heathers’: An oral history

‘Heathers’: An oral history | Inside Movies | EW.com

‘Heathers’: An oral history

By Adam Markovitz on Apr 4, 2024 at 12:00PM خليجية @amrkvtz

خليجية


“Do you think there’s ever been another movie like Heathers?” Winona Ryder asks in her tiny, forever-a-kid voice, and then listens quietly. She’s genuinely curious. Your brain races through the obvious choices. Mean Girls, Clueless, Jawbreaker—teen-girl comedies with a drop of caustic in their lip gloss. But in 25 years, no high school movie has ever come close to the bloodthirsty wit and sweet-faced nihilism of Heathers, the 1989 satire about an Ohio high school where suicide becomes a scrunchie-level fad. “I looove this movie—to the point where I talk about it like I’m not even in it,” says Ryder. “If it’s on TV, I watch it. I’ve probably seen it 50 times. Like, I can do it by heart.”
She isn’t the only one who feels that way; fans have turned the box office flop (total gross: $1.1 million) into a cult hit on home video and TV—and even into a tongue-in-cheek musical, now playing Off Broadway. But long before that, a 24-year-old video-store clerk ****d Daniel Waters had a *brilliantly ludicrous idea: “What if Stanley Kubrick made a teen film?”

BEGINNING

In 1986, when John Hughes was giving us teen classics such as Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and Pretty in Pink, Waters began working on what he calls “a Carson McCullers-style novel of a girl who meets the Antichrist as a teenager.” The project morphed into a screenplay about an angsty popular girl, Veronica (Ryder), who starts secretly killing her classmates with the help of a diabolical new kid, J.D. (Christian Slater), and framing the deaths as suicides. The ****** made its way to producer Denise Di Novi (Edward Scissorhands); a fresh-out-of-film-school director, Michael Lehmann; and Ryder, a relatively unknown 15-year-old who had just wrapped Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice.

WINONA RYDER Veronica Sawyer I’ve always held the original ****** of Heathersamong the great literature that I’ve ever read. For me, it’s like, Ezra Pound, Philip Roth, Saul Bellow, and Daniel Waters, you know?
DENISE DI NOVI Producer I had the sense I was reading a masterpiece. I brought it
to the executives at [indie studio] New World, and they were like, “What the hell is this? Are you crazy?”
MICHAEL LEHMANN Director The original ending was that J.D. blew up the high school and they all died, then there was a prom scene in heaven. [New World execs] just said, “No way. We can’t make a satirical movie about teenage suicide in which the people actually kill themselves.”
DANIEL WATERS Writer The teen films of the time, the John Hughes film, were fun. But there’s a whole other wing of the high school they weren’t going into — the dark, Stephen King wing that no**** wanted to look at. And I think Heathers was *******ing. It was the first time a lot of people lost their dark humor virginity. It’s hard to even remember now that going back then, there were so many television shows and ********aries about the horror of teen suicide that just made it so attractive to commit suicide because you got all this love and adulation. Who can resist! It seemed like I was the only one noticing the humor in it. The actual first line I wrote was, “You can’t use that knife, it’s filthy!” when [Veronica and J.D.] are going to stage Heather Duke’s suicide. It took off from that.
Di Novi, Waters, and Lehmann organized an informal read-through of the ****** with Dana Delany as Veronica and a certain soon-to-be screen legend—then just a teenage n*o**** in an acting class—as J.D.
DANIEL WATERS Writer After the reading was over, the pimply faced, blond Brad Pitt came up to me and said, “Hey, man, I know I’m not any****. But for what it’s worth, that was brilliant.”
CASTING

When casting began, Jennifer Connelly and Justine Bateman both rejected the role of Veronica. Ryder was next on the list. But not everyone thought she was a perfect fit.


WATERS
I was like, “The girl from Lucas? She’s just not attractive!” [Laughs.]
RYDER You have to understand, at the time, I didn’t look that different from my character in Beetlejuice. I was very pale. I had blue-black dyed hair. I went to Macy’s at the Beverly Center and had them do a makeover on me.
LEHMANN The first time we shot with her, I turned to the cameraman and said, “This girl is a movie star.”
WATERS You can’t overvalue how much Winona meant to this movie. In my initial drafts, Veronica was much more evil and twisted. I referred to her as a female Travis Bickle from Taxi Driver. And suddenly you’re rewriting with Winona in mind, and Veronica becomes more of an audience surrogate.
RYDER My agent at the time *literally got on her knees and begged me not to do [the movie]. She had her hands together, and she goes, “You will never. Work. Again.” We parted ways later.
DINOVI Winona was so smart. She was fifteen, she turned sixteen on the movie. She was a prodigy. From a very young age, she was an old soul. She really got the words and the imagery. She had watched tons of old movies. She was really sophisticated intellectually. She had the beauty of Veronica. She had the intelligence. She was just the perfect anti-Heather.

The part of the homicidal *loner J.D. went to Christian *Slater, 19, known for the 1986 drama The **** of the Rose. After Heather Graham turned down Heather Chandler, the school’s teenage dictatrix, that part was offered to Slater’s then girlfriend, 18-year-old Kim Walker.


CHRISTIAN SLATER
J.D. I remember leaving the audition and feeling like, “Oh God, I really blew it.” I threw the ****** in the garbage angrily. I had a big tantrum.
LEHMANN I really wanted to cast Heather Graham [as Heather Chandler], and her parents wouldn’t let her do it. She was 16 or 17. I even talked to Heather’s mother at great length to convince her we weren’t tools of Satan, and she would have nothing of it. I really tried. I mean, I begged her. Heather’s reading was just great. Then the casting director said, “Well, Kim Walker might be good. She doesn’t have a lot of experience, but…”
CARRIE LYNN Martha Dumptruck Kim was beautiful. Flawless. I remember looking at her and being like, “Don’t you ever get a zit, bitch?” [Laughs] She was so sweet.

A veteran of the TV series Little House on the Prairie and Our House, Shannen Doherty, 16, read for Heather Duke, Heather Chandler’s conniving second-in-command.


LEHMANN
When Shannen came in, [our casting directors] pulled me aside and said, “This girl is really good, but she wants Veronica.” And I said, “We’ve already cast Winona.” And they said, “She knows that. She’s willing to read the Heather Duke part, but she just wants you to know that’s not the part she wants.” She was amazing in the reading. I think she actually came in hoping we’d think she was so good that we’d just give her the Veronica role.
WATERS She wanted to be the lead Heather. And Veronica too. And J.D.
SHANNEN DOHERTY Heather Duke I don’t remember that, because I remember Winona was already hired when I got the ******. Originally they wanted me to audition for Heather Chandler. When I read it, I loved Heather Duke. I loved the fact that she started out weak in the group. Bullimic and the dog that you kick. And then she became — their term — a “megabitch.” I loved that. Originally, they wanted me to be blonde. Going blonde would’ve destroyed my hair, so we all settled on me as a redhead.
LEHMANN She had a television career, and she was a really talented actress, but a bit of a handful.
WATERS Shannen’s mother [Rosa] kept throwing Our House in our faces. “Well, you know, Shannen is the star of this TV show.” She was very ambitious.

Lisanne Falk was a megastar child model by age 14. Now she was 23. She kept her age quiet until she was cast as the impressionable Heather McNamara.


LISANNE FALK Heather McNamara
I said I was 18 or 19 in the audition. After I got the part, we had this celebration dinner, and I said
something about how my boyfriend and I were living right down the street from the set. And they’re like, “Your mom’s okay with that?” And I’m like, “You guys know I’m 23, right?” And they all were like, [gasps]! I could just see the panic. [Laughs]

The filmmakers struggled to cast Martha Dunnstock, a.k.a. Martha Dumptruck, the sweet, overweight girl tortured by the Heathers.


LEHMANN
The casting directors brought in actresses who were good-looking but slightly chubby. I said, “No, we need some**** who is really large.” [Carrie] was completely invested in it. She under*stood what it’s like to be teased.
LYNN I was doing standup at the time. That’s how I first met the casting agent. I think most of it was that I looked the part: Where else are you going to find another 400 lb. young person? I think I came out of the womb obese. I had no friends. I was Martha Dumptruck, in real life, growing up in Beverly Hills. And now I’ve got therapy! [Laughs]
WATERS The ending I should’ve fought harder for is where Martha Dumptruck pulls out a knife, stabs Veronica, and says, “F— you, Heather.” And Veronica’s on the ground laughing, with a knife in her stomach, saying, “My ****’s not Heather. My ****’s not Heather.”
FILMING

With a slim $3 million budget, the filmmakers had just 33 shooting days. Much of the film was shot at a high school in L.A.; sets for Veronica’s and Heather McNamara’s *bedrooms were built in the gymnasium.


RYDER
It was pretty much work, work, work. Then I had to go home and go to sleep. I had a tutor. There was no going out at all for me. Maybe there was for Christian a little bit. [Laughs]
LEHMANN Christian was professional, but there were a couple of times when he slept in late and we had to retrieve him. He said he had a sleeping disorder. I could never tell if that was true or if he was just out partying late.
SLATER Sleeping disorder? Maybe. I don’t know if I was ever late or missed any calls. Whatever I had then, I have since recovered. I sleep very well.

As tends to happen when hormone-*addled teens are thrown together in a

high school (real or fictional), alliances began to form.

PATRICK LABYORTEAUX
Ram Sweeney Everyone kind of stayed in their cliques. So I was kind of a jerk jock through the whole shoot. Me and the other guys were sending inappropriate notes to Shannen and the other girls, in character, between takes—sexually inappropriate notes that a high schooler might send. And they sent back something three times grosser. [Laughs]
DOHERTY I just remember thinking Winona was the coolest chick in the world. She dresses cool. She’s beautiful. Very intelligent. Very artsy. It was a little bit of hero worship.
FALK I hung out with Winona. She stayed at my house a lot. Kim Walker was really sweet. I barely knew Christian. He’d always be in his trailer or smoking cigarettes.
DOHERTY Christian was a tiny bit aloof. He definitely was embracing J.D., for sure.
SLATER I got so into working with Winona that I had blinders on to everyone else. It was almost like J.D. didn’t have patience for any of those people, either. I stayed away from Shannen. She seemed to not have any interest in me, so I just kept my distance.
LYNN The only one in the cast who stuck out like a sore thumb was Shannen. It’s like when you get a paper cut, and someone just purposely squeezes a lemon on it. She was the lemon. She was just so bitchy.

Though Slater was dating Walker, his onscreen rapport with Ryder was undeniable. But the actors don’t exactly agree on whether they ended up dating after the shoot.


SLATER
Yeah, yeah. We tried.
RYDER We never went out! He was dating Kim Walker. And I had, like, such a big crush on him.
SLATER It’s one of those early lessons. It’s better to keep things professional than to try to mix them as far as emotions go.
RYDER It’s funny, the last time I watched the movie, I was like, “God, we have really great chemistry!” And I wonder if it was partly to do with the fact that, you know, Iwished I could. There were a couple of times where we tried to go out, but there was always some sort of drama. Nothing happened until after the movie. Then I do remember, like, making out with him a few times after he broke up with Kim.
SLATER You end up at times crossing boundaries and confusing things.
RYDER I felt a real closeness to him. Maybe it was because—I’ll just say it—I was a virgin. I remember getting the talk from my mom: “When you make out with someone, it doesn’t mean they’re your boyfriend.” I was like, “Really?” [Laughs] I was always trying to figure out if we were actually dating, and he would never really answer me. I remember when we were on the college [publicity] tour, he told the audience we were getting married, which of course sent me into this giggling thing. But I remember always thinking, “What’s going on? Like are we…?” And he never really answered me.
SLATER I definitely love her today. She’s a great actress. And that was a unique time for both of us.

The ******’s acidic dialogue was sometimes a challenge for the young cast—*especially Doherty, whose conservative upbringing didn’t mix well with lines about, for example, figurative power-tool intercourse.


WATERS
It’s embarrassing, because I stole a lot of my lines. “What’s your damage” I stole from when I was a camp counselor and one of my little camper girls, Jamie, used to say “What’s your damage?” I just completely stole that from her. And one of my college friends used to say “F— me gently with a crowbar.” And then I realized crowbar sounded too masculine. Chainsaw was more feminine. And apparently “f— me gently” was at one time a common expression in England. This is the evolution of nasty ********. That’s where my friend extrapolated “F— me gently” into “F— me gently with a crowbar.” And then I had to have him killed so I could take credit.
RYDER Shannen had problems with the swearing. There’s a moment when we’re in the hallway and she’s just shown me the petition, and then she walks away and you can notice that I put my hand through my hair but I stop and look at her. She was supposed to say, “F— me gently with a chain saw.” But she refused to say it.
DOHERTY It could’ve been any of the lines. “Why are you pulling my [pauses] d - - -?” I still have a hard time saying that!
RYDER In her defense, she had come off of, like, Little House on the Prairie. That was how she was raised.
DOHERTY It was definitely the first time I had ever, ever spoken like that in my entire life. I was a very ****tered 17-year-old. My mom was on set with me. I definitely had moments where I was blushing through my makeup.
RYDER She got such a bad-girl image later on, and I was always like, “She was such a sweet girl, and she didn’t want to swear!”
FALK Shannen didn’t have much of a sense of humor and she took herself a little seriously. What’s funny is, watching [the film], I do think she did a really good job.
DI NOVI I don’t think [Shannen] at the time quite got what Heathers was, and that actually worked for us. She made that character real.
DOHERTY The first time I saw the movie I was definitely a little bit in shock. It was so dark and so funny, and maybe a little over my head.
FALK People would laugh at things that you didn’t think were that funny. I do remember Shannen just kind of going, like, “You’ve got to be kidding.” She didn’t realize it was a comedy, or maybe know what a dark comedy meant.
RYDER I remember [Shannen] got interviewed 10 years later, and she was trying to say how dark and funny and cool it was. You can’t blame her. She doesn’t want to be remembered as the one who ran out sobbing, “No one told me it was a comedy!”
DOHERTY There might’ve been some tears in the eyes. [Laughs] I was worried *people wouldn’t take it the right way. I was worried about social responsibility and what we were saying. Then I watched it again, and I was like, “Wait, this is really good and cutting-edge.”
RELEASE AND LEGACY

Heathers
hit theaters on March 31, 1989, as New World Pictures was going bankrupt.


DI NOVI
It was a nightmare. I paid for the ad in the L.A. Times myself for the *second week. It was $1,800, which to me was like $18,000.
LEHMANN The movie didn’t do a lot of box office, but it did stay in the theaters for a while. It never made a profit.
WATERS I made more money writing a treatment for Parent Trap 3 for the Disney Channel that never happened.
RYDER I didn’t even really know that it didn’t do well, to be honest. I was just so damn excited that it was so good. It just reminds me of a wonderful time in an actor’s life when all that mattered is that you were really good in a movie.
DOHERTY It’s so funny how times are different and how innocent I was at that age. I don’t think it ever dawned on me to track the movie’s business. All I knew is that I went from Heathers to 90210, and then it didn’t even dawn on me until people were like “That’s my favorite movie!” Then you start realizing the impact that it had. Most people still come up to me about 90210 or Charmed. So when people do stop me aboutHeathers, I think I give them extra time because I’m so proud of the movie.
Eventually Heathers built a fan **** on home video and drew interest in follow-ups, including a TV series.
LEHMANN There was a new network called the Fox network that was starting up, and we pitched a Heathers TV show to Peter Chernin.
WATERS He said, “This is a great ******. It’s down to this or Beverly Hills High.” Which, of course, ended up being called 90210. Doherty wins in the end after all!

The movie also paved the way for other high-school-set dark comedies, including 2024’s Mean Girls, directed by Waters’ brother Mark.


LEHMANN
I like Mean Girls. Dan’s brother directed that. I liked it a lot. I don’t know if the movie was offered to me, but they inquired to me about directing it. And I was like, “No, why would I want to do that? I already made that movie!” So I laughed really hard when Mark got it. I think Mean Girls is terrific. It’s not Heathers; it’s Heathers-esque. We were invested in going as dark as we could. That was our sense of humor, and it was the reason for making the movie: to take it to the extremes. Mean Girls isn’t that kind of humor. It’s definitely influenced by Heathers and borrows a lot of stuff from Heathers, but it’s closer to the John Hughes world.

WATERS I think I did elevate the [teen movie] genre, but there came a point where in every high school thing people were talking above their IQ level, and it got a little grating. It’s a weird thing. That’s fine that those movies come from Heathers. But I feel like even back in the day, movies about doctors and lawyers and journalists would be much more nuts and bolts about their job. Now I feel like all movies are high school movies. All TV shows about doctors and lawyers are the high school template put in a job setting. I feel like it’s the one experience everyone knows. There’s almost too much high school stuff going on. The Heathers template has gone into every genre. You can look at any TV show at a law firm and there’s, “Ok, these are the Heathers, this is the Veronica, this is the JD.”

There was also talk of a Heathers sequel.


LEHMANN
There was a long time in which Winona would say she wanted to do a sequel. It just didn’t seem to lend itself to a sequel.
WATERS I did come up with this crazy, cockamamy Heathers 2 where Veronica becomes a page for a senator ****d Heather, played by Meryl Streep. The ending is her assassinating the president and getting away with it — and it’s a good thing.
RYDER First of all, I don’t know what their problem is with not wanting to make a sequel. I mean, I get that it’s a special movie, and the pressure of a sequel, and it’s a moment in time that you can’t recapture. But my theory was: There are Heathers after high school. And there are Kurts and Rams. Dan came up with: It’s Veronica, years later, she’s in Washington. She’s somehow erased her past. And she’s being blackmailed, there’s like men in suits who know about the Westerberg murders. And I’m like, “What if Christian comes in as the Obi-Wan guy and explains to me…” And I remember the First Lady was Meryl Streep. I’m like, “Guys, this is genius!” Every time I [mentioned it to] Michael and Dan and Denise, they would snicker! Like, “Aww, that’s so cute.” I’m like, “Guys, this is genius! This is such a good idea!”
WATERS I told Winona the idea without any more elaboration than I’m giving you, and a year later I hear from her: “So I talked to Meryl. She’s in!” I’m like, “What?!
RYDER I was working with Meryl on The House of the Spirits. I was pitching her the whole thing in the makeup chair one day. She was very sweet about it, and she was like, “Oh, that sounds really great!” But what else are you going to tell a panting 19-year-old? She could’ve been just waiting for me to shut up. [Laughs] You have to understand: We were in rural Portugal living in huts, playing Chilean refugees. There were only dirt roads. I’m like, this looks like those Agnes B ads —you know where they’re in a field and there’s a farmer with like a pitchfork?
FALK If they said they were doing a sequel, I’d say, “Tell me when and where, I’ll be there. No questions asked.”
DOHERTY I would love to see a treatment or ****** about what a sequel would be.
RYDER I was onto [the idea of a sequel] all through my 20s, way through my 30s—when everyone wanted to work with me, when not a lot of people wanted to work with me. I’m 42 now, and Veronica is one of my favorite characters I’ve ever played. I never, everfelt finished with her.

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Can whole articles from magazines be put here without any legal issues? I hope so because this one is great!
I loved this article, not only because it’s about one of my favorite movies ever but for how much they everyone hated Shannen Doherty.


A Brief History of Harvey Weinstein’s Oscar Campaign Shenanigans

A Brief History of Harvey Weinstein’s Oscar Campaign Shenanigans

خليجية
Harvey Weinstein, the co-founder of Miramax and the current co-chairman of the Weinstein Company, pioneered the modern Oscar campaign. Through a mix of big schmoozy events, whisper campaigns, and old-school cold-calling, Weinstein has developed a reputation over the last 25 years for getting award nominations. The results speak for themselves, with his films having secured more than 300 Academy Award nominations to date. So, with the latest Oscar Campaign season in full force, we thought we’d look back at the many tricks and schemes Weinstein — the man who once got Shakespeare in Love enough votes to beat Saving Private Ryan for Best Picture — has deployed to rack up all those nominations.


1990
My Left Foot was Harvey’s first big Oscar campaign. Weinstein talked about the experience in Peter Biskind’s book Down and Dirty Pictures: “In those days, the studios had a lock on the Oscars, because none of the indies campaigned aggressively. The only thing that we did to change the rules was, rather than just sitting it out and getting beat because some**** has more money, more power, more influence, we ran a guerrilla campaign.” This meant putting on meet-and-greet events where Academy members could meet Miramax film talent. Weinstein even convinced director Jim Sheridan and producer Noel Pearson to move to Los Angeles from Ireland, so they could more easily attend such gatherings.

— Believing that you could win an Oscar by a single vote, Weinstein went to great lengths to make sure Academy members saw his movies. In Down and Dirty Pictures, former publicist Mark Urman discussed how this was achieved: “[They] set up screenings at the Motion Picture Retirement Home, because Academy members live there, even if they’re on life support. They find out where people holiday in the period between Christmas and New Year’s, and if it’s Aspen, they have screenings in Aspen. If it’s in Hawaii, they have screenings in Hawaii. They actually called people at home.” It’s a process Harvey has continued ever since.


— He had Best Actor nominee for My Left Foot Daniel Day-Lewis testify in the Senate for the Disability Act.

1997

— When Sling Blade came out, Billy Bob Thornton was virtually unknown, so Harvey Weinstein launched an aggressive Campaign to educate academy members. That year, the New York Times published an account of this tactic as experienced by one Academy voter:

To hear some members of the academy tell it, Miramax called both early and often. John Ericson, a retired actor who lives in Santa Fe, N.M., said he was called several times recently by a representative from the studio. In the first call, this person asked Mr. Ericson if he had received Sling Blade and urged him to watch it.

A few days later, the representative called back to gauge Mr. Ericson’s reaction. The caller also promoted the performance of Billy Bob Thornton, a relative newcomer who wrote, directed and starred in this film about a man who is released from a hospital for the criminally insane 25 years after he murdered his mother and her lover.

‘He said: "Didn’t you think he was wonderful? I hope it will be something worthy of a nomination,"’ Mr. Ericson recalled.

As it happens, Miramax’s one-on-one lobbying proved successful. Mr. Ericson wound up nominating Mr. Thornton for best actor, even though he had, before then, never heard of Sling Blade and originally assumed it was a Sylvester Stallone movie.

Nor did Miramax’s wooing of Mr. Ericson end there. Knowing that there are a handful of other academy members in Santa Fe, Miramax scheduled a screening for academy members there in early February. Mr. Ericson and others were able to see Marvin’s Room, Sling Blade and the Woody Allen comedy Everyone Says I Love You on the big screen at their local cinema.

1998

— With two Best Picture nominees, Life Is Beautiful and Shakespeare in Love, Weinstein pulled out all the stops. As Nikki Finke reported in New Yorkat the time: "Miramax pays a fleet of ultraveteran Hollywood publicists (who also happen to be Academy members) — including Warren Cowan, Dick Guttman, Gerry Pam, and Murray Weissman — not to generate press coverage but to schmooze their prominent Academy colleagues."


Life Is Beautiful star and director Roberto Benigni took advantage of the publicity push, in particular. In Down and Dirty Pictures, Urman recalled: "Benigni moved into L.A. for a month during the peak of the voting period, and every night some**** was having a party for him. Roberto made a lot of friends, and it won him an acting Oscar."


— After the Oscar nominations were announced, Miramax funded a "Welcome to America" party for John Madden, Shakespeare‘s British director; Academy members, including director Sidney Lumet, screenwriter-director Jay Presson Allen, and screenwriter David Newman, attended it. As Finke pointed out, this should’ve been held in violation of a 1997 Academy rule barring studios from hosting events for their nominees to which Academy members are invited. So how did Weinstein get around it? By explaining, "I’m sorry there were three Academy members present, but it was a press event, and you have to have celebrities at a press event to get the press there."


— Weinstein spent a record amount of money to secure a Shakespeare upset over the heavy favorite Saving Private Ryan. Finke: "True independents might spend up to $250,000 on an Oscar campaign; the majors, $2 million. Miramax is estimated by competitors to have spent at least $5 million on its Campaign for Shakespeare." Jeffrey Katzenberg, head of DreamWorks, the studio behind Saving, admitted to the New York Times that Weinstein’s spending made them spend more just to compete.

2001

— Weinstein was able to secure a Best Picture nomination for the unlikelyChocolat with, as USA Today put it at the time, "such eyebrow-raising moves as a newspaper ad in which Jesse Jackson and Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League praised the film."

2002

— With their In the Bedroom going up against favorite A Beautiful Mind, Miramax reportedly perpetrated a "smear Campaign unprecedented in the History of the Academy Awards for its viciousness." According to Down and Dirty Pictures, this involved pointing a Los Angeles Times writer to a Matt Drudge piece about how A Beautiful Mind omitted the parts of the original biography relating to John Nash’s alleged homosexuality. Then after ballots went out, news came out of "Jew-bashing passages" from the book.

2003

—Weinstein was involved with four of the five Best Picture nominees: Gangs of New York, Chicago, The Hours, and The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers(on which he and his brother are credited as producers). Despite all these horses in the same race, Weinstein throws all of his weight behind getting Martin Scorsese his first Oscar for Best Director. As Biskind writes in Down and Dirty Pictures, "[Weinstein] had [Scorsese] putting in appearances and gratefully accepting tacky awards at every rubber chicken dinner between Los Feliz and Santa Monica."

— Writing for New York, Anne Thompson explained how extreme the campaign was: "Is Gangs of New York too violent? Surround Martin Scorsese at a Women in Film lunch at Spago with Oscar nominees Diane Ladd, Sharon Stone, Winona Ryder, and Juliette Lewis. Is Scorsese too much of a Hollywood outsider? Bring him to L.A. and have producer Irwin Winkler (New York, New York) throw him a Golden Globes party full of local writers and directors. Is Scorsese producing a blues concert at Radio City Music Hall? Make sure his **** is plastered across the marquee. Are actors protesting that they can’t use their sag membership cards to get into movies for free? Take over the Beverly Hills Music Hall, book Chicago and Gangs, and welcome all card-carrying members."

— Weinstein got former Academy president and director of The Sound of Music Robert Wise to write an op-ed praising Scorsese and Gangs of New York. Miramax in turn used that op-ed in ads for the movie with the headline reading, "Two time Academy Award winner Robert Wise declares Scorsese deserves the Oscar for Gangs of New York." It was later revealed that a Miramax publicist actually wrote it and had the 88-year-old Wise sign it. (This resulted in the Academy banning ads that include quotes from Academy members.)

— Biskind writes that after The Pianist won Best Picture at the BAFTAs, Miramax panicked. A Miramax publicist called The Pianist director Roman Polanski a "rapist" and "child molester." Then an almost 30-year-old deposition from Polanski’s victim appeared on the Smoking Gun ***site. It’s hard to say whether Miramax unearthed the ********, but, according to Biskind, Miramax did have their people fan the flames.

2004

— Taking advantage of a loophole stemming from a recent rule change, Miramax’s City of God received four Oscar nominations despite failing to be nominated when it was originally eligible for the Best Foreign Film category at the 2024 Oscars. Weinstein told Entertainment Weekly, ”We made a conscious decision to keep this movie in theaters for 54 weeks.” Miramax rereleased the film three times.

2009

— When front-runner Slumdog Millionaire was hit suddenly with negative press implying that its filmmakers had exploited the movie’s Indian child actors, people assumed Weinstein was behind it. His response: “What can I say? When you’re Billy the Kid and people around you die of natural causes, everyone thinks you shot them.”

— After pushing very hard to have the The Reader released before the end of year (to a point that so frustrated Scott Rudin that he took his **** off the film) so that it would be eligible for award season, Weinstein mounted a targeted attack focusing on, as EW explains, "the Academy’s aging Jewish population," by screening the film at "Jewish cultural hot spots as the Skirball Center in Los Angeles and the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan." Also, he courted endorsements from the Anti-Defamation League as well as Nobel laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel.

2010

— Weinstein, who was pushing Inglourious Basterds at the time, was rumored to have been involved in an anti–Hurt Locker whisper campaign, attacking the film’s realism. Soldiers came forward, calling the film’s portrayal of war inaccurate.

2011

— With his The King’s Speech up against rival Rudin’s The Social Network, Weinstein went particularly hard on event-throwing. There was a post-nomination party hosted by Ridley Scott, Jennifer Lopez, and Mick Jagger; a star-studded party hosted by Arianna Huffington; a screening attended by the media elite, like Rupert Murdoch and Katie Couric; and much more.

— Leading up to the Academy Awards, Weinstein created a stir over editing the original film to make a PG-13 version that would appeal to a wide audience. Some suspect it was ultimately a PR stunt to get the film more attention.

2012

— Weinstein held an academy screening of The Artist hosted by two of Charlie Chaplin’s granddaughters.

— The Weinstein Company sent a for-your-consideration e-mail to The Hollywood Reporter‘s subscribers. It included a quote from critic Thelma Adams: "It’s been TWENTY-NINE YEARS SINCE MERYL STREEP WON AN Oscar and she certainly deserves to win for her performance in The Iron Lady!" This should’ve been against the rules, because for-your-considerations aren’t allowed to reference past awards. Weinstein, however, found a loophole by sending it through a third party.

2013

As we reported last year, Weinstein secretly hired Obama’s deputy Campaign manager to help with the Campaign for The Silver Linings Playbook.

— On the last day of Oscar voting, Weinstein issued a press release saying that David O. Russell will be working with Jennifer Lawrence again on The Ends of the Earth. Russell was quoted as saying about Lawrence: "She is the most dedicated person I know. She is devoted to her family, and they have been the true inspiration for her … Her acting is effortless, and she always makes it look easy." The thing is, as The Hollywood Reporter wrote, Russell had not, in fact, signed on to direct the project. Knowing the news would make its way around, it was allegedly a last-minute attempt by Weinstein to draw attention from voters.

Harvey Weinstein’s Oscar Campaign History — Vulture

Comedian Hannibal Buress Called Out Bill Cosby’s Rape History on Stage

Comedian Hannibal Buress Called Out Bill Cosby’s Rape History on Stage

Thanks to The Cosby Show, Fat Albert and standup, Bill Cosby has become one of today’s most beloved public figures. Of course, mixed up in his celebrated entertainment career are over a dozen instances where Cosby allegedly drugged and raped various women — but that’s the part that most people would rather not talk about. Too bad for them, though, because Hannibal Buress is talking about it anyway.

Buress ( 30 Rock, Broad City) was recorded dropping this bold and beautiful bit during a set at the Trocadero in Philadelphia late last week:

"And it’s even worse because Bill Cosby has the fucking smuggest old black man public persona that I hate. Pull your pants up, black people. I was on TV in the ’80s. I can talk down to you because I had a successful sitcom. Yeah, but you raped women, Bill Cosby. So, brings you down a couple notches. I don’t curse on stage. Well, yeah, you’re a rapist, so, I’ll take you sayin’ lots of motherfuckers on Bill Cosby: Himself if you weren’t a rapist. …I want to just at least make it weird for you to watch Cosby Show reruns. …I’ve done this bit on stage, and people don’t believe. People think I’m making it up. …That shit is upsetting. If you didn’t know about it, trust me. You leave here and google ‘Bill Cosby rape.’ It’s not funny. That shit has more results than Hannibal Buress."

The bit’s not only a solid call-out of Cosby’s hypocrisy, it’s also brave. Buress is a Comedian with a sitcom in the works and fans (like Chris Rock and Louis CK) in high places, but nothing gets people quite as angry and defensive as going after their entertainment heroes and exposing — or reminding us of — their gross and sometimes criminal pasts (see Woody Allen and Michael Jackson for more examples).

Buress takes his job as a Comedian seriously and nothing is more important to the profession than being outspoken and honest to yourself — two qualities he managed to perfectly em**** in his fearless (and, more importantly, accurate) Cosby musings.

Comedian Hannibal Buress Called Out Bill Cosby’s Rape History on Stage

من تبادلني Modren arab history لربيع 2024

من تبادلني Modren arab history لربيع 2016
اخبار قطر الدوحة المقهى القطري
السلام عليكم

بنات ضروري الي حابه تبادلني انا ماخذه مقرر
modren arab history عند ناصر أحمد الاحد والثلاثا
من 2 لين 3 وعشرين

ابي الصبح عند أحمد جلال الي مسجله عنده وحابه تبادلني لانها تعارض مع مادة لازم اخذهم مع بعض الكورس الجاي 😥

ESPN Re-Visits Corey Johnson’s history making coming out

ESPN Re-Visits Corey Johnson’s history making coming out

ESPN revisits Corey Johnson’s history-making coming out – Outsports

ESPN revisits Corey Johnson’s history-making coming out

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Corey Johnson is now a New York City Council member – Facebook

TJ Quinn and Bob Ley revisit the 1999 coming out of Corey Johnson, who was the first high school football captain we know of to come out as gay to his team.

This Sunday ESPN’s Outside The Lines will revisit the story of Corey Johnson, the high school football captain in Massachusetts who came out to his team in 1999 and who came out publicly in 2000. They position Johnson’s story as a turning point for gay sports, and it was: Johnson’s public coming out was ****d the No. 6 most important moment for LGBT sports on Outsports 2024 list. The Outside The Lines piece shares insights about Johnson’s story I didn’t even realize, including the doubt and fears of many of his teammates who seemingly came around and fully supported him. Johnson is now a member of the New York City Council.

ESPN also talked with a coach at Johnson’s high school who came out shortly after Johnson made his public statements.

After they broadcast T.J. Quinn’s segment on Johnson, Bob Ley will chat with LGBT activist and educator Jeff Perrotti, youth pastor and former NFL player Eddie Williams, and me.

https://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=espn:10840675

The most Craptastic house in the history of houses, now on sale for $862,000

The most Craptastic house in the history of houses, now on sale for $862,000

(post put together from several articles so may seem disjointed)

Midwestern castle built by Indianapolis pimp-turned-construction magnate drops asking price to 2,000 from $2.2million

The recent price-slashing of the famous "pimp house," or "dolphin mansion" on Indianapolis’ Northeastside has generated some interest among potential buyers.
Tiff Atkinson has had the listing of the home at 4923 Kessler Boulevard E. Drive [Indianapolis IN] since March 31.

The house is five garden-variety ranch houses cobbled together by former pimp Jerry "Mr. Big" Hostetler. He created a giant campus-o-fun, with balconies, spiral staircases, wet bars, a grotto with a hot tub, a ballroom, a swimming pool, dolphin statuary and on and on.

"One cannot even begin to describe" the place, said Atkinson, who then tried to describe it: "Lots of architectural design, very private, two or three parking garages."

But it is no hot property. In February, 2024 seller Chad Folkening, an Indiana-born, Florida-based tech entrepreneur, put the house for sale at $2.2 million. In December 2024, the price came down to $1,295,000. Last week, it was lowered further, to $862,000.

Starting from a three-bedroom ranch house, where he lived in the ’60s, for a short time with a wife and infant daughter, Hostetler gradually bought up his neighbors’ houses and combined them.

By the time his creditors closed in on the place, Hostetler was up to some 23,000 square feet.

After the foreclosure he landed in a small ranch house on East 80th Street, which he immediately began expanding, adding his signature balconies, an eight-car garage, and so on.

Hostetler converted its original garage to a party room set off by a very large, very round window, giving it the feel of an aquarium.

In the backyard he built a new garage, one capable of holding eight cars (Hostetler at one point drove an Excalibur; he told people he bought it off Neil Diamond, and knowing Hostetler, he may have).

He built a second story above the huge garage and ordered the addition painted gray, but one day the work just stopped. "Whether they were out of paint, or out of pay, I don’t know," said Kirklin.

He built another equally large, two-story structure adjacent to the garage and tacked it on to the ranch house. Its standout features are its enormous, carved, wooden doors that look like they came from an ancient Buddhist temple, and knowing Hostetler, they may have.

And then there were all those balconies, none of them with railings. "Apparently, Jerry didn’t like railings," said Kirklin. "It was pretty clear from the start Jerry had his own ideas about architecture."

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original owner, Jerry Hostetler

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More craptasticism:

2 ‘serious buyers’ looking at notorious Kessler mansion
At his death ‘Mr. Big’ left northside home in shambles
Gaudy Midwestern castle built of five ranch homes cobbled together by Indianapolis pimp-turned-construction magnate now priced to move at justÂ*$862,000 | Daily Mail Online