Entertainment
Kandi Burruss is leaving 'Real Housewives of Atlanta' after an 'incredible run'
Kandi Burruss is looking forward to all the blessings manifesting in her life — and that seems to include her departure from “The Real Housewives of Atlanta.”
The reality TV star and songwriter soft-launched her career pivot Sunday while walking the red carpet at the 66th Grammy Awards. She is officially closing the door on her Bravo home, announcing her departure from the show after a 14-season run. The move came as a shock to fans of the franchise and apparently to Bravo frontman Andy Cohen.
“I’m not really keeping up right now,” Burruss told Variety editor Marc Malkin. “I’m not keeping up. I already said it, so I’ll tell you. I decided I’m not coming back this year.
“It’s been 14 seasons, and they allowed us to sit around for a little too long, but during that time I had started working on a lot of other things, and I got some nice big projects coming soon, so I’m super excited about those things,” the Grammy-winning songwriter added.
Burruss, 47, had been a “RHOA” mainstay since debuting on Season 2 in 2009, chronicling the ups and tragic downs of her personal and professional life. But as the series navigates its own rocky transition, she’ll be stepping away — at least for the time being.
The R&B songwriter and Xscape singer explained that she remained with the show for so long because it “feels weird to think not to do it.” So, she said, she decided to take a break and not return for the upcoming season.
Bravo’s Georgia-set edition of its widely popular franchise wrapped its 15th season in September and has indicated that it would change up the cast, leading many to believe it would reboot the show as it did with its “Real Housewives of New York” last year. But the network is reportedly close to announcing the new “Atlanta” cast with some familiar faces slated to return.
Representatives for Bravo declined to comment Monday when reached by The Times.
Cohen, who executive produces “Housewives” and host’s Bravo’s late-night show “Watch What Happens Live” and many a Bravo reunion, gave a glowing review of Burruss’ “incredible run” with the network.
“You think about how much she not only went through on the show but brought to the show,” Cohen said Monday on his SiriusXM show, “Andy Cohen Live.”
“When she came on, she was with [ex-fiancé] A.J. [Jewell]. He, between filming our first season and shooting the reunion, was killed. She lost him. Mama Joyce was disapproving of A.J. in her first season. This was Season 2 of ‘Atlanta.’ It was Kandi’s first season. She also, in those early seasons, did the music and wrote ‘Tardy for the Party,’ which has become, you know, canon. I mean, it’s just iconic to the moment. She fell in love with Todd [Tucker]. … She brought us Mama Joyce. She brought us Bolo, she brought us the dungeon, bedroom Kandi, Don Juan, the Old Lady Gang. I mean, it goes on and on.
“She was always very true to herself. She wanted to be the best. She has been one of my favorite people to work with in my whole time. First, as an exec at Bravo, and then as an EP of ‘The Housewives’ and just, you know, hosting ‘Watch What Happens Live,’” he continued.
“I love how competitive she is. I love how thoughtful and smart she is. She is so strategic. … She always brought her authentic self to whatever she was doing and I’m excited also because she just came into the show with her own, obviously her own name and her career. I mean, she’s got a huge thing.”
Burruss joined the show not as a titular “housewife” but as someone who had already established her own claim to fame as a recording artist and award-winning songwriter, with tunes including Destiny’s Child “Bills, Bills, Bills” and TLC’s Grammy-winning “No Scrubs.” She also worked with heavy-hitters such as Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, Pink and Ariana Grande and starred in and produced a handful of Broadway productions. She’s since appeared in several Bravo spin-off series and competed as Night Angel on Fox’s “The Masked Singer.”
Cohen also cited a 2020 letter Burruss penned to Bravo executives during the network’s racial reckoning that summer. He said she made “really valid and true thoughts” about the way that the network “could be conducting business differently” and how it might be “more inclusive, more positive, more meaningful.” That led to “a great conversation between she and the network.” Bravo ultimately used that as a jumping off point for action items, and Cohen described her as a real partner.
“That’s someone who’s like, ‘We are in this together. We have a long history. This is what I’m seeing that’s going on. This is how it could be better,’ and so I just, if I didn’t respect her and love her before that, man did I after that,” Cohen said. “I thought, ‘Wow, this is very cool. This is very impactful.’ She impacted not only the show, but she impacted the way that we do business behind the scenes and that is powerful, so I just, I think both of us were kind of crying a little bit at the end of the call the other day.”
Cohen also said that Burruss and the network will be in business together for a long time and that she still has “other things in development, so she is a talent that they’re not gonna want to let go.”
“She is one of the greats. She is one of the greats and I want everybody to know it, so thank you Kandi for your service. I did tell her, I was like, ‘You know, Kandi, you could drop back in in a year or two,’” he added.
Burruss was listening, apparently, and took to Instagram to thank Cohen for his kind words.
“Thank you @bravoandy! I love you! ❤️ 😘” she wrote Monday, re-posting a portion of Cohen’s clip.
Movie Reviews
‘Hoppers’ review: Who can argue with hilarious talking animals?
Just when you think Pixar’s petting-zoo cute new movie “Hoppers” is flagrantly ripping off James Cameron, the characters come clean.
movie review
HOPPERS
Running time: 105 minutes. Rated PG (action/peril, some scary images and mild language). In theaters March 6.
“You guys, this is like ‘Avatar’!,” squeals 19-year-old Mabel (Piper Curda), the studio’s rare college-age heroine.
Shoots back her nutty professor, Dr. Fairfax (Kathy Kajimy): “This is nothing like ‘Avatar!’”
Sorry, Doc, it definitely is. And that’s fine. Placing the smart sci-fi story atop an animated family film feels right for Pixar, which has long fused the technological, the fantastical and the natural into a warm signature blend. Also, come on, “Avatar” is “Dances With Wolves” via “E.T.”
What separates “Hoppers” from the pack of recent Pix flix, which have been wholesome as a church bake sale, is its comic irreverence.
Director Daniel Chong’s original movie is terribly funny, and often in an unfamiliar, warped way for the cerebral and mushy studio. For example, I’ve never witnessed so many speaking characters be killed off in a Pixar movie — and laughed heartily at their offings to boot.
What’s the parallel to Pandora? Mabel, a budding environmental activist, has stumbled on a secret laboratory where her kooky teachers can beam their minds into realistic robot animals in order to study them. They call the devices “hoppers.”
Bold and fiery Mabel — PETA, but palatable — sees an opportunity.
The mayor of Beaverton, Jerry (Jon Hamm), plans to destroy her beloved local pond that’s teeming with wildlife to build an expressway. And the only thing stopping the egomaniacal pol — a more upbeat version of President Business from “The Lego Movie” — is the water’s critters, who have all mysteriously disappeared.
So, Mabel avatars into beaver-bot, and sets off in search of the lost creatures to discover why they’ve left.
From there, the movie written by Jesse Andrews (“Luca”) toys with “Toy Story.” Here’s what mischief fuzzy mammals, birds, reptiles and insects get up to when humans aren’t snooping around. Dance aerobics, it turns out.
Per the usual, “Hoppers” goes deep inside their intricate society. The beasts have a formal political system of antagonistic “Game of Thrones”-like royal houses. The most menacing are the Insect Queen (Meryl Streep — I’d call her a chameleon, but she’s playing a bug), a staunch monarch butterfly and her conniving caterpillar kid (Dave Franco). They’re scheming for power.
Perfectly content with his station is Mabel’s new best furry friend King George (Bobby Moynihan), a gullible beaver who ascended to the throne unexpectedly. He happily enforces “pond rules,” such as, “When you gotta eat, eat.”
That means predators have free rein to nosh on prey, and everybody’s cool with it. Because of bone-dry deliveries, like exhausted office drones, the four-legged cast members are hilarious as they go about their Animal Planet activities.
No surprise — talking lizards, sharks, bears, geese and frogs are the real stars here. They far outshine Mabel, even when she dons beaver attire. Much like a 19-year-old in a job interview, she doesn’t leave much of an impression.
Yes, the teen has a heartfelt motivation: The embattled pond was her late grandma’s favorite place. Mabel promised her that she’d protect it.
But in personality she doesn’t rank as one of Pixar’s most engaging leads, perhaps because she’s past voting age. Mabel is nestled in a nebulous phase between teenage rebellion and adulthood that’s pretty blasé, even if a touch of tension comes from her hiding her Homo sapien identity from her new diminutive pals. When animated, kids make better adventurers, plain and simple.
“Hoppers” continues Pixar’s run of humble, charming originals (“Luca,” “Elio”) in between billion-dollar-grossing, idea-starved sequels (“Inside Out 2,” probably “Toy Story 5”). The Disney-owned studio’s days of irrepressible innovation and unmatched imagination are well behind it. No one’s awed by anything anymore. “Coco,” almost 10 years ago, was their last new property to wow on the scale of peak Pixar.
Look, the new movie is likable and has a brain, heart and ample laughs. That’s more than I can say for most family fare. “A Minecraft Movie” made me wanna hop right out of the theater.
Entertainment
Ulysses Jenkins, Los Angeles artist and pioneer of Black experimental video, dies at 79
Ulysses Jenkins, the pioneering Los Angeles-born video artist whose avant-garde compositions embodied Black experimentalism, has died. He was 79.
Jenkins’ death was confirmed by his alma mater Otis College, where he studied under renowned painter and printmaker Charles White in the late 1970s and returned as an instructor years later. The Los Angeles art and design school shared a statement from the Charles White Archive, which said, “Jenkins had a profound impact on contemporary art and media practices.”
“A trailblazing figure in Black experimental video, he was widely recognized for works that used image, sound, and cultural iconography to examine representation, race, gender, ritual, history, and power,” the statement said.
A self-proclaimed “griot,” Jenkins throughout his decades-spanning career maintained an art practice grounded in the tradition of those West African oral historians who came before him. Through archival documentaries like “The Nomadics” and surrealist murals like “1848: Bandaide,” he leveraged alternative media to challenge Eurocentric representations of Black Americans in popular culture.
He was both an artist and a storyteller who sought to “reassert the history and the culture,” he told The Times in 2022. That year, the Hammer Museum presented Jenkins’ first major retrospective, “Ulysses Jenkins: Without Your Interpretation.”
“Early video art was about the problems with the media that we are still having today: the notions of truth,” Jenkins said. “To that extent, early video art was a construct that was anti-media … a critical analysis of the media that we were viewing every night.”
Born in 1946 to Los Angeles transplants from the South, Jenkins was ambivalent about the city, which offered his parents some refuge from the blatant systemic racism they encountered in their hometowns, but housed an entertainment industry that had long perpetuated anti-Black sentiment.
“What Hollywood represents, especially in my work, is the classic plantation mentality,” Jenkins told The Times in 1986. “Although people aren’t necessarily enslaved by it, people enslave themselves to it because they’re told how fantastic it is to help manifest these illusions for a corporate sponsor.”
Jenkins, who participated in a group of artists committed to spontaneous action called Studio Z, was naturally drawn to video art over Hollywood filmmaking. “I can address any issue and I don’t have to wait for [the studios’] big OK. I thought this was a land of freedom, and video allows me that freedom and opportunity that I can create for myself and at least feel that part of being an American,” he said.
Jenkins went on to deconstruct Hollywood’s vision of the Black diaspora in experimental video compositions including “Mass of Images,” which incorporates clips from D.W. Griffith’s notoriously racist “The Birth of a Nation,” and “Two-Tone Transfer,” which depicts, in Jenkins’ words, a “dreamscape in which the dreamer awakens to a visitation of three minstrels who tell the story of the development of African American stereotypes in the American entertainment industry.”
Jenkins’ legacy is not only artistic but institutional, with the luminary having held teaching appointments at UCSD and UCI, where he co-founded the digital filmmaking minor with fellow Southern California-based artists Bruce Yonemoto and Bryan Jackson.
As artist and educator Suzanne Lacy penned in her social media tribute to Jenkins, which showed him speaking to students at REDCAT in L.A., “he has been an important part of our histories here in Southern California as video and performance artists evolved their practices.”
Movie Reviews
Review | Hoppers: Pixar’s new animation is a hilarious, heartfelt animal Avatar
4/5 stars
Bounding into cinemas just in time for spring, the latest Pixar animation is a pleasingly charming tale of man vs nature, with a bit of crazy robot tech thrown in.
The star of Hoppers is Mabel Tanaka (voiced by Piper Curda), a young animal-lover leading a one-girl protest over a freeway being built through the tranquil countryside near her hometown of Beaverton.
Because the freeway is the pet project of the town’s popular mayor, Jerry (Jon Hamm), who is vying for re-election, Mabel’s protests fall on deaf ears.
Everything changes when she stumbles upon top-secret research by her biology professor, Dr Sam Fairfax (Kathy Najimy), that allows for the human consciousness to be linked to robotic animals. This lets users get up close and personal with other species.
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