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L.A.’s radio community pays tribute to Art Laboe, a legend and mentor: ‘End of an era’

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L.A.’s radio community pays tribute to Art Laboe, a legend and mentor: ‘End of an era’

Los Angeles’ music and radio communities are mourning the lack of prolific “Oldies however Goodies” disc jockey Artwork Laboe, who died on Friday.

The Instagram web page for his syndicated present, “The Artwork Laboe Connection,” introduced that the radio legend died at his dwelling in Palm Springsat age 97 after battling pneumonia.

“Artwork Laboe’s legacy will endure as his workforce will proceed to provide his present nightly request and dedication syndicated radio present, The Artwork Laboe Connection,” the Instagram submit mentioned.

Laboe, whose voice stuffed Southern California’s airwaves for greater than 70 years, was identified for being the primary to play rock ‘n’ roll on the West Coast and creating the compilation album “Oldies However Goodies.” He grew to become a beloved determine for generations of followers, notably for Latinos, for his call-in dedication present, which aired first on HOT 92.3 FM after which on KDAY-FM (93.5).

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A memorial for the Los Angeles radio vet shall be introduced later, however figures from L.A.’s native radio stations are already paying tribute on-line.

“RIP to the one and solely #ArtLaboe,” tweeted KCRW DJ Candace Silva-Torres. “The tip of an period. Staying up late, listening to these dedications.”

“Artwork Laboe was probably the greatest DJs and it was a stupendous Sunday custom to take heed to his love songs radio present,” tweeted KCRW host Tyler Boudreaux.

Anthony Valadez, who co-hosts KCRW’s “Morning Turns into Eclectic,” tweeted a photo of Laboe, noting that “nobody might ever do shout-outs like this O.G.”

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KDAY bid farewell to Laboe, calling him “our longtime member of the family.”

“Thanks for all the various years and superb occasions you spent with us right here at 93.5 KDAY!,” the station tweeted.

Romeo Mastin, who co-hosts KDAY’s “Morning Present,” paid tribute to Laboe, his “longtime Buddy and Mentor,” with a video on Instagram. Within the clip, Mastin and Laboe are seen backstage, exchanging radio tales and laughs.

“I Thank You for believing in me, encouraging me and permitting me to be part of your Wonderful Journey,” Mastin wrote in his caption. “We’ve shared so many tales through the years and you’d at all times inform me that ‘I’ve that THING’ That may deliver Pleasure to others and to by no means cease smiling.

“I do know that you’re smiling from Heaven as a result of this Metropolis, the World and everybody that tunes into the @artlaboeconnection LOVES YOU!!! and I’ll be sure that to do my half to proceed your Legacy,” Mastin added.

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Hip-hop station Energy 106 additionally remembered Laboe on Twitter, noting that “his staple Sunday night time present on our sister station @935kday received’t be the identical.”

Additionally remembering Laboe on social media was Amoeba Music. On Twitter, the favored music retailer shared a photograph of one in all Laboe’s “Devoted to You” CDs.

“Relaxation In Peace Artwork Laboe,” said the store’s tweet. “The broadcasting legend, king of dedications, and longtime host of ‘Oldies however Goodies’ has died at age 97.”

Instances employees author Esmeralda Bermudez contributed to this report.

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'Despicable Me 4': Mega Minions bring mega bucks to holiday box office

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'Despicable Me 4': Mega Minions bring mega bucks to holiday box office

Audiences are going bananas for Universal Pictures’ and Illumination’s “Despicable Me 4.”

The latest installment in the popular family film franchise opened to $27 million Wednesday at the domestic box office, according to estimates from a studio source and measurement firm Comscore. That number is expected to rise to roughly $120 million by the end of the Fourth of July weekend.

Other titles vying for moviegoers’ business this holiday stretch are Disney and Pixar’s “Inside Out 2,” which grossed $7.3 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $496.6 million; Paramount Pictures’ “A Quiet Place: Day One,” which scared up $4.4 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $68.6 million; Sony Pictures’ “Bad Boys: Ride or Die,” which earned $1.2 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $169.1 million; and Warner Bros.’ “Horizon: An American Saga Chapter 1,” which made $1.1 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $14.8 million.

The promising start for “Despicable Me 4” is good news for exhibitors as the 2024 box office appears to be turning a corner thanks to some much-needed breakout hits such as “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” and “Inside Out 2.”

From directing team Chris Renaud and Patrick Delage, “Despicable Me 4” follows the not-so-nefarious Gru (voiced by Steve Carell), his resourceful daughters and his wacky minions on another daring mission to escape from a new nemesis. Rounding out the main voice cast are Kristen Wiig, Miranda Cosgrove, Dana Gaier, Madison Polan, Will Ferrell and Sofía Vergara.

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The animated feature received a lackluster 55% rating on review aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes, but pulled an A grade from audiences polled by CinemaScore — proving that fans still can’t get enough of Carell’s curmudgeonly antihero and his babbling yellow entourage.

Film critic Gary Goldstein was not so generous in his review for the Los Angeles Times, writing that “this latest installment of Illumination’s mega-grossing animated franchise jams in a grab-bag of physical and visual gags and anything-goes action, plus a barrage of narrative dead ends, subplots and characters, as it strains to fill its 90 or so minutes of eye-popping, brain-draining mayhem.”

“Despite a few chuckles, some capable voice work and plenty of splashy color,” he adds, “it proves a largely empty and exhausting ride.”

So what keeps audiences coming back to this critically soured saga?

The Times’ Samantha Masunaga has reported that a perfect storm of organic social media phenomena (calling all #Gentleminions), Facebook mom memes and multigenerational nostalgia has kept the franchise relevant and lucrative over the past 14 years. “Despicable Me” debuted at $56.4 million domestically in 2010, “Despicable Me 2” launched at $83.5 million in 2013 and “Despicable Me 3” opened to $72.4 million in 2017, according to Box Office Mojo.

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“I’ve been 25 to 28 years in the business. I can’t remember something that created that much excitement for the audiences,” Francisco Schlotterbeck, chief executive of theater chain Maya Cinemas, told The Times.

“The other thing I can compare it to is ‘Toy Story.’”

Coming to theaters Friday is the highly anticipated A24 horror flick “MaXXXine,” followed by the wide releases of Goldove Entertainment’s “Lumina,” Neon’s “Longlegs” and Columbia Pictures’ “Fly Me to the Moon” next weekend.

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Movie review: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’

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Movie review: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’
A Quiet Place: Day One. Valley News/Courtesy photo

Bob Garver
Special to Valley News
“A Quiet Place: Day One” made a grave miscalculation with its advertising. Scenes were filmed with the intention of putting them in the trailers, but not the movie. This way, when people saw the movie, they wouldn’t be able to properly anticipate the surprises and story progression. To that end, the advertising succeeded, I was indeed thrown off while watching the movie. But here’s where they didn’t succeed: the scenes shot just for the trailers were terrible, with clumsy dialogue and careless pacing. I was so mad at Hollywood for continuing this series without the creative vision of director John Krasinski, especially when the movie looked like garbage without his input. I only saw this movie out of obligation for the column, and I wouldn’t

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Review: A killer Mia Goth returns in 'MaXXXine,' a flimsy thriller that doesn't deserve her

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Review: A killer Mia Goth returns in 'MaXXXine,' a flimsy thriller that doesn't deserve her

Say hello to Maxine Minx (Mia Goth), the antihero of Ti West’s “MaXXXine,” the third installment in his hastily dispatched “X” trilogy. Last we saw Maxine, in 2022’s “X,” she was speeding away from a late-’70s-set Texas porn-star massacre, leaving a trail of bloody carnage in her wake. It’s now six years later, in 1985 Los Angeles, and Maxine, an industrious starlet and peep-show performer, is determined to transcend her trashy, traumatic origins to become a capital S star of the silver screen, no matter what it takes.

Maxine won’t let anything get in the way of her rise after she scores her first mainstream film role in a horror sequel titled “The Puritan II.” It’s her big shot and nothing’s going to stop her: no butchered friends, no city-terrorizing “Night Stalker,” no pesky LAPD detectives and no annoying private eye (Kevin Bacon) on her tail. Maxine, as she often tells herself like a mantra, will not accept a life she does not deserve, and don’t you forget it.

Like “X” and its prequel “Pearl,”, “MaXXXine” offers writer-director-editor West an opportunity for genre play. If “X” was a grimy slasher and “Pearl” was a Technicolor melodrama with ax-killing, “MaXXXine” wears the skin of a sexy, sleazy ’80s erotic thriller. But that proves to be only its aesthetic: There’s neither eroticism nor thrills here, just a cute costume.

All the audio and visual signifiers are there: a great soundtrack of period-appropriate needle drops (including ZZ Top and Ratt), meticulous production and costume design re-creating ’80s Hollywood, lots of stylistic nods to Italy’s leather-gloved giallo films and the filmography of Brian De Palma. But West doesn’t wield these references with any intent, and in fact, there are far too many. The movie is too clever by half, but it’s not even that clever at all.

West bonks us over the head with gestures to film history — a Buster Keaton impersonator threatens Maxine in an alley; Bacon, done up in “Chinatown” drag, chases her on a studio backlot and up the stairs of the house from “Psycho” — but none of these nods adds up to anything meaningful. They’re just increasingly sharp elbow jabs to the ribs. When Maxine stomps Buster’s genitalia, it becomes clear that it’s all just a cheap joke, a cinematic pun engineered for movie nerds but rendered without a lick of suspense or tension.

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Mia Goth, left, and Halsey in the movie “MaXXXine.”

(Justin Lubin / A24)

And what of the murder mystery? The Night Stalker murders thrum in the background, devoid of context, an item to hear about on the nightly news. Maxine’s colleagues do turn up dead, carved with Satanic symbols, but like the ones she left behind in Texas, their deaths are seemingly mere speed bumps on her road to success. It’s not entirely clear why she views the LAPD detectives (Michelle Monaghan and Bobby Cannavale) with hostility, except that they’re making her late for her first day on set of “The Puritan II,” where icy British director Elizabeth Bender (Elizabeth Debicki) delivers to Maxine wordy but ultimately meaningless monologues about the philosophy of art and the industry.

Like these talky speeches, West packs “MaXXXine” with familiar quotes, images and truisms that gesture toward “Hollywood commentary,” but there’s no actual comment. He manages to say nothing at all and is unwilling to indict his leading lady, thereby undercutting her power. Ruthlessly ambitious Maxine is far more interesting when we conceive of her as the villain in this story, not its savior. West indicates her true nature with an opening quote from Bette Davis: “In this business, until you’re known as a monster, you’re not a star.” But he consistently waffles on that premise, depriving Maxine — and “MaXXXine” — of any real bite.

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Only Goth truly understands her character, as she understood Pearl (who she embodied both as an elderly killer and a budding young murderess), and she plays the porn star with a heart of coal like the ferocious, hard-scrabbling striver she is. When Maxine is bad, Goth is very good; unfortunately, West never lets her off the leash. Goth holds “MaXXXine” together through the sheer force of her charisma, despite the bumpy plot, an underwritten character and the plodding, perfunctory kills that arrive like clockwork.

It’s disappointing, because “X” was a fascinating piece about locating one’s own desire and self-actualization through making movies. It was smart and sly, and there was so much promise in this thesis, which was further explored on a character level in “Pearl” and which could have been built upon in “MaXXXine” through the idea of voyeurism in the erotic thriller. But it all becomes hopelessly muddled.

Ultimately, “MaXXXine” is a lot like the set through which she is chased on the studio backlot: a beautiful facade that’s empty behind the walls — all surface, meaningless symbols and not an ounce of substance to be found.

Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

‘MaXXXine’

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Rating: R for strong violence, gore, sexual content, graphic nudity, language and drug use

Running time: 1 hour, 44 minutes

Playing: In wide release Friday, July 5

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