Lifestyle
Tom Sandoval, Ariana Madix Still Living Under Same Roof Despite Affair
“Vanderpump Guidelines” stars Tom Sandoval and Ariana Madix live beneath the identical roof … regardless of the actual fact everybody is aware of they broke up after she came upon Tom cheated on her with Raquel Leviss.
Sources acquainted with the state of affairs inform TMZ … Tom and Ariana are persevering with to reside of their Valley Village residence once they’re on the town, although they’re now not sleeping in the identical room clearly.
It is not going to be a simple cut up … Tom and Ariana every personal 50 p.c of the house, based on property data, and we’re informed they haven’t sat down to speak about what they will do with it.
It is kinda cringeworthy … they’re generally nonetheless in the home on the identical time. With the palpable anger, it is gotta be tough.
Whereas it seems like a reasonably awkward setup, Tom and Ariana aren’t at all times on the town on the identical time … our sources say she’s up in Seattle filming a Lifetime film for the following few days … and we first reported, Tom took a Southwest flight residence this week to go to household in St. Louis.
The house is 4,453 sq. ft with 5 bedrooms and 5.5 bogs … so there’s sufficient house to create a buffer zone of kinds. Suppose “The Battle of the Roses.”
Raquel stopped by the pad this week … however we had been informed she did not spend the night time and was simply saying bye to Tom earlier than he took off for his hometown. Kinda bizarre, proper?
Tom and Ariana purchased the place again in 2019 for $2,075,000. In the event that they promote, it’s going to be fascinating in the event that they disclose all the drama to potential consumers.
Lifestyle
What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend viewing, listening and gaming
This week, Taylor Swift delivered some tortured poets, Quentin Tarantino changed his mind, and at least one Oscars hangover went on and on and on.
Here’s what NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.
Koreaboo, on Audible
Audible has a romantic fiction podcast called KoreaBoo that is too cute. Shayla is an English expat in Korea and you expect her to do the stereotypical romance thing and fall in love with a K-Pop idol, but she ends up falling for her landlord’s son. It’s incredibly cute and sweet and funny. It’s written by Shenee Howard. The episodes are about half an hour long — super easy, delightful, and so cheery. — Joelle Monique
The Wiz on Broadway
Jeremy Daniel
I am delighted to say that the revival of The Wiz has brought me so much joy. I saw it in previews and it just opened on Broadway. It is a multicultural, multicolored delight. Folks who go to see it will be clamoring for the cast recording album because, more than anything, I think what stuck with me is just the wonderful vocal arrangements and orchestrations from this new version. I think people will really enjoy it. — Soraya Nadia McDonald
Balatro
YouTube
Balatro is a deck building video game, which means it’s basically poker that you play by yourself. You’re dealt this hand, and then you try to build straights and flushes and things of a kind, etc. What makes it addictive is its elegant simplicity: Between hands you get a chance to buy random Jokers and other cards that do different things. And as you go through each run, the amount of points you can get, you have to earn on that hand increase. So, once you don’t make it, that’s it. You start over, your Jokers go away, you start from zero. You keep playing, and playing, and playing, because moments happen when the Jokers you have assembled interact with each other, and when they do, you see the points multiplying exponentially and you feel completely invulnerable. Producer Liz Metzger mentioned this game so I checked it out and when I looked up, it was the next day. — Glen Weldon
More recommendations from the Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter
by Linda Holmes
Don’t miss Elizabeth Blair’s piece for NPR marking the 50th anniversary of Redbone’s “Come And Get Your Love.” It was the first song by an all-Native and Mexican American band to make it into the Billboard Top 10, and she collects some terrific reminiscences. It’s a really good piece both to read and to listen to.
At six million views on YouTube, the dance video of the CDK Company interpreting Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used To Know” is hardly a hidden gem. But the choreography is fascinating, and it’s highly recommended if you’re in the mood for a little mind-blowing movement.
The Hulu series Under The Bridge is based on the true story of a Victoria, B.C. teenager who was killed after going off to meet a bunch of other teenagers. And while that’s a dynamic that’s been explored before (going back at least to River’s Edge), this is also an opportunity for recent devotees of Lily Gladstone to see her play the cop who’s determined to figure out what happened. Riley Keough plays a journalist who grew up in Victoria and has returned to write a book, only to get very much mixed up in the case.
Beth Novey adapted the Pop Culture Happy Hour segment “What’s Making Us Happy” for the Web. If you like these suggestions, consider signing up for our newsletter to get recommendations every week. And listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Lifestyle
Morgan Wallen Breaks Silence on Nashville Arrest, Chair Throwing
Morgan Wallen‘s speaking out about his arrest in Nashville … saying he needed to make some mea culpas before he could put out a statement — and adding, his tour will go on.
The country star — who cops arrested after he allegedly threw a chair off a downtown bar’s roof — posted to X Friday, saying he didn’t wanna speak out on this until he did a few things first … including making good with the people he feels he’s harmed.
I didn’t feel right publicly checking in until I made amends with some folks. I’ve touched base with Nashville law enforcement, my family, and the good people at Chief’s. I’m not proud of my behavior, and I accept responsibility.
— morgan wallen (@MorganWallen) April 20, 2024
@MorganWallen
Morgan writes, “I didn’t feel right publicly checking in until I made amends with some folks. I’ve touched base with Nashville law enforcement, my family, and the good people at Chief’s. I’m not proud of my behavior, and I accept responsibility.”
04/07/24
He adds, “I have the utmost respect for the officers working every day to keep us all safe. Regarding my tour, there will be no change.” FWIW, Morgan has a concert scheduled Saturday evening at the Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Mississippi … not to mention Stagecoach next weekend in CA.
EarthCam
04/07/24
As we reported … officers took Wallen into custody back on April 7 and booked him on three felony counts of reckless endangerment and one misdemeanor count of disorderly conduct.
An eyewitness told us Wallen threw the chair — which landed feet from Nashville PD officers — for no real reason … and, pictures of Wallen chatting up a lady at the bar just before the toss showed no indication he’d end up hurling it off a six-story high roof.
Morgan’s kept a low profile since the incident … although, we did see him spending time with his baby mama KT Smith and their son Indigo last weekend — and, all seemed good between them.
Sounds like Wallen’s contrite about the dumb incident … and, he’s ready to move on from it. The question … is the criminal justice system ready to do the same??? Time will tell.
Lifestyle
A new play peers into a band's life, from the inside
Julieta Cervantes/Stereophonic
Stereophonic, a new play on Broadway with music by Arcade Fire’s Will Butler, tracks the volatile creation of a rock and roll album over the course of a year in the 1970s.
The fictional five-member band, on the surface, looks a lot like Fleetwood Mac – it has two couples, one American, one British, and they squabble and break up as they make the record.
But, for the show’s creative team, it is a hyper realistic look at the costs and glories of making art.
“There are iconographic elements that I stole from Fleetwood Mac,” said playwright David Adjmi, “but I also stole from other things.”
He did a lot of research on bands of the 1970s and recording studios of the time and has written the play in a documentary style.
“We’re going to ask you to peek in,” Adjmi said. “And that’s what creates this kind of weird, titillating feeling for the audience and the feeling that you’re getting something really, really intimate.”
The set for Stereophonic is a working recording studio – from the banged-up mixing console to the 24-track tape machine to the big glass windows looking into a soundproof room where the musicians play and listen on their headphones. The vintage equipment is so real that director Daniel Aukin said, “I’ve learned recently that the song ‘Midnight Train to Georgia’ was recorded on it.”
Over the course of three hours, the audience really gets to know the band and the engineers. They see the musicians hanging out, eating junk food, rolling joints, talking about movies, and squabbling.
Adjmi said he began writing Stereophonic at a point when he was feeling discouraged with theater and thought about quitting. The fights the characters are having with each other are the internal fights he was having with himself.
“Why am I doing this?” he said he asked himself. “I shouldn’t be doing this. This is terrible. It’s not worth it. No, it is worth it. It’s beautiful. I wouldn’t trade this for anything.”
Julieta Cervantes/Stereophonic
Turning actors into musicians
Before he had written a word, Adjmi got together in a diner with Will Butler, of the band Arcade Fire, to see if he’d write music for the play. Butler said he got excited as he learned that in the show, the music would be in the process of being created.
“And you’d hear a demo and then you’d hear them mixing in the vocals and you’d hear fragments of it. And the fragments are so compelling, and you want more, but you can’t have more,” he said. “And then, just that initial idea was so rich, I was like, ‘I would love to do this!’”
But in order to pull off Adjmi’s idea, they had to turn actors with some musical ability who could pull off nuanced characters into a believable group of musicians. And that proved complicated.
“It was a long process to find the right balance of people,” said director Daniel Aukin.
“We had to have actors who you would want to cast in a Chekhov play, and we had to have actors who had enough musicality that we could project forward, given support, that they could get to where we needed them to be to pull it off.”
While Chris Stack, cast as the drummer, was already a solid player, the rest of the cast took music lessons before rehearsal, said Will Brill, who plays the band’s bass player.
“I learned to play really badly right before we started rehearsals,” he said. “And, really, I mean, did a lot of catching up during rehearsals. Like, I didn’t play a note before this thing!”
YouTube
Butler said it was a leap of faith, hoping these five actors could become a band. For the first few weeks, much of the rehearsal process was spent in band rehearsals, rather than acting rehearsals. Then, Butler asked the quintet to open for him at a club in Brooklyn.
“And they were great and they learned so much,” he said, “and even just getting to the point where they had to stand on a stage in front of people, before they played a note. Like, that taught them so much of what a being a band is like, that taught them the energy that they’re bringing to the studio.”
The play tracks the band’s process of creating an album for over a year.
Brill said he’s moved by the final scene of the play, which is just the engineer onstage alone, playing with the faders of that vintage recording console.
“There is this glass box above his head that sort of looks like a thought bubble in some way,” said the actor, “and it’s as though the artist is sitting alone at his table and you wonder, like, ‘Did he dream all this? Did it ever exist? Was this David [Adjmi] sitting alone at his table with all of his demons and gods?’ It’s very, very moving to me.”
Jennifer Vanasco edited the audio and digital versions of this story.
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