Entertainment
Joan Cusack’s Cowgirl Jesse Takes the Lead

For this longtime fan, the Toy Story franchise, Pixar’s all-ages assault on funny bones and heartstrings, peaked with its magical second and third entries. But unlike many series that keep going long after the creative well has run dry, milking the cash cow until it goes belly up, this all-access pass to the hidden world of sentient toys has consistently delivered on its promise of wit, inventiveness, adventure and emotional depth. Even the underperformer of the stable, 2022’s origin-story spinoff, Lightyear, had its retro charms.
Directed for the first time by series creator and regular co-writer Andrew Stanton, Toy Story 5 comes an astonishing 31 years after the original and does the enduring franchise proud. The movie’s captivating sweetness is hard to resist, showering its love on a pint-sized human character so out of step with her kid contemporaries she has difficulty making friends. Turning around the lonely life of 8-year-old Bonnie (voiced by Scarlett Spears) becomes an urgent mission for the toys.
Perhaps the key gain is that this scenario puts Jessie — national treasure Joan Cusack, returning to features after a quiet stretch of semi-retirement and bringing warmth, plucky spirit and tender vulnerability to her voiceover work — in charge. Bonnie is now the third-generation owner of Jessie and the red-headed cowgirl generally takes on a prominent role in the child’s elaborate play fantasies, like the celebrant of a wedding sabotaged by a poisoning plot. But Jessie is stymied by a harsh truth before she even comes up with a plan.
While attempting, by invisible means, to nudge the twin boys who live next door to include Bonnie in their games, Jessie discovers that the neighbors are too glued to their devices to pay her any attention.
Conferring with some abandoned toys — bitter and traumatized, dreading their fate in a landfill graveyard — Jessie is bluntly informed that “the age of toys is over.” She scrambles up onto a rooftop, where her eyes are opened by the sight of children through bedroom windows all over town, their faces lit by the glow of their screens. “Extinction! Not again!” wails fretful dinosaur Rex (series stalwart Wallace Shawn) when Jessie shares the grim forecast.
The situation gets even worse once Bonnie’s concerned parents try to connect their daughter with friends by buying her a Lilypad, a child-appropriate smart tablet in frog-like casing, voiced with slappably perky self-satisfaction by Greta Lee. The personalized screen instantly becomes Bonnie’s whole world, with Jessie and the gang left in a heap on the floor. But the cowgirl refuses to believe Bonnie’s new tech fixation is more than just a phase.
While Bonnie is learning that online friendships don’t always translate neatly to real-world playdates, the screenplay by Stanton and co-director Kenna Harris cooks up a way to get Jessie across town to the farmhouse where her original owner Emily once lived. The melancholy reminder that she was donated when Emily outgrew her sets off an anxious spiral in Jessie.
Having gone from Emily to Andy — who gave her to Bonnie when he went off to college at the end of Toy Story 3, a movie that absolutely wrecked me — Jessie despairs at the possibility of another abandonment: “I can’t do this again. I can’t love another kid just to find out I never mattered.”
This is a prime example of the Pixar canon’s ability to weave real feeling into the scenario, without sacrificing humor or derring-do. The enchanting woodsy and pastoral backgrounds when the action moves from the residential suburbs to the rural outskirts add to that poignancy, as do the dulcet tones of Randy Newman’s score.
Jessie learns that Blaze (Mykal-Michelle Harris), a young girl not much older than Bonnie, lives with her family at the farm. But the discovery of a shed full of discarded toys hits hard. These range from a bendy pizza slice with sunglasses (a voice cameo by Bad Bunny) to three tech gadgets left behind each time Blaze moved on to the next shiny new device.
The most opinionated of these rejects is Smarty Pants, a basic toilet-training tech tool given an amusingly snarky attitude by Conan O’Brien. In exchange for Jessie’s help powering them up with new batteries, Smarty Pants, GPS-equipped toy hippo Atlas (Craig Robinson) and toy camera Snappy (Shelby Rabara) provide a crucial assist. They help Jessie see that despite Blaze’s susceptibility to the allure of the latest gizmo, she’s still creative and silly and present in her world in a way that too many other kids aren’t — rarely looking up from their devices or even talking as opposed to typing.
The ominous theme here is beware the machine, or as Woody (Tom Hanks) puts it with sad resignation: “Toys are for play. Tech is for everything.” Any parent who has ever endured a tantrum when screen time is cut off will feel the sting of those words.
Luckily, Jessie is no quitter, especially once she becomes convinced Bonnie and Blaze will hit it off. She calls Woody for backup, despite him having passed on his sheriff’s badge to her in Toy Story 4. Now paunchy and balding, he’s still a resourceful quick thinker, not to mention newly fashion-forward in a red poncho that earns some eyerolls. Jessie also gets help from a squad of 50 Hi-Tech Edition Buzz Lightyears (Tim Allen), who come with their own hotspots and drone capabilities.
Of course it’s great to see the return of these core Toy Story characters, though the separate plot thread tracing the upgraded Buzz toys to a wrecked shipping container where they struggle out of their boxes feels like something from a different action-adventure movie. Stanton and Harris arguably take too long integrating the Buzz brigade into Jessie’s quest, but once all the toys start working together for a common goal, their collective can-do spirit proves stirring.
The same goes for the insanely catchy Taylor Swift song, “I Knew It, I Knew You,” co-written with regular collaborator Jack Antonoff, on the end credits.
Ultimately, the movie works because it has heart and conviction in the belief that tech toys are not innately bad. They can also serve to bring joy. As the latest model Buzz says: “Our mission on this planet is to make a child happy.” Even Lilypad is given her redemption. But the filmmakers also bring home the point that children need physical interaction and communication with other kids to help them develop and grow, a useful message that’s easy to endorse.
Entertainment
Corey Feldman hospitalized after in-flight medical emergency
LOS ANGELES — “Stand by Me” actor Corey Feldman has been hospitalized after experiencing a medical emergency on a cross-country flight to Los Angeles.
The 54-year-old former child star was met by paramedics after landing at Los Angeles International Airport on June 15, his publicist confirmed to USA TODAY on Monday night. He was admitted to a hospital and is “resting” overnight while awaiting MRI results.
USA TODAY reached out to the Los Angeles Fire Department for more information. TMZ was first to report the news.
Before his hospitalization, the “Goonies” actor posted photos from his Midwest travels on June 15. The prior day, he’d appeared at the “Stand by Me” 40th anniversary tour stop at The Chicago Theatre alongside Jerry O’Connell and Wil Wheaton.
“We have this instant connection and it’s there. The camaraderie is there; the jokes are there. We have so much fun,” Feldman told People magazine in an interview published in March.
“But there’s this looming thing hanging over us,” he added, referring to late costar River Phoenix and director Rob Reiner, who was killed alongside his wife, Michele Reiner, in their home in December.
“The movie is called ‘Stand By Me,’ and there’s four of us,” Feldman said. “We can’t stand by River, because he’s not here. Now with Rob missing too — I’m sorry, I’m going to get a little emotional — but I was so hoping that he would be able to join us for this.”
Entertainment
Grammys add 5 new categories, including 1st Asian pop award
The 2027 Grammy Awards will include five new categories, including best Asian pop music performance, which will recognize artistic excellence in Asian pop music performances originating from or widely recognized within Asian markets, including K-pop, J-pop and C-pop recordings that feature meaningful use of one or more Asian languages.
The four additional categories announced Tuesday by the Recording Academy include best Latin song, best traditional pop vocal performance, best R & B collaboration or duo/group performance and best traditional folk album.
The 69th Grammy Awards will air live on ABC, Disney+ and Hulu on Feb. 7, 2027.
“2027 is going to be an amazing year for the Grammy Awards, and one that reflects the extraordinary growth we’re seeing across music,” Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. said in a statement. “The changes advanced by our Academy members speak to the breadth of today’s music industry and the many genres, crafts and creators shaping it.”
According to the Recording Academy, the best Asian pop music performance category was created to recognize the breadth of Asian pop music and its growing impact across the global music landscape.
The new best Latin song category creates a dedicated space within the Latin field to honor songwriting, while best traditional pop vocal performance recognizes recordings that do not fit within contemporary pop categories.
The addition of best traditional folk album also creates a separate category for traditional folk recordings.
As a result, best folk album has been renamed best contemporary folk album.
Similarly, best R & B performance will now be known as best solo R & B performance following the creation of the new collaboration category.
The Academy also announced several changes to its voting and eligibility rules ahead of the 69th Grammy Awards.
A new opt-in voting option called Ballot Plus will allow eligible voting members with expertise across multiple genres to vote in up to 15 peer-related categories based on their verified professional credits.
Eligibility requirements for best new artist have been revised to provide greater flexibility, increasing the maximum number of times an artist may be submitted from three to four.
In another notable change, the percentage of new recordings required for an album to qualify for Grammy consideration has been lowered from 75% to 66%, a move the Academy said better reflects how albums are released in today’s music industry.
The Academy also expanded recognition for songwriters and composers.
Going forward, songwriters and composers of new material on winning albums in most genre album categories will receive Grammy statuettes and achievement certificates, bringing their recognition in line with producers and engineers.
In addition, internet-only releases will now be eligible for consideration in the best album notes and best historical album categories if supporting materials are included with the commercial download.
The Walt Disney Co. is the parent company of ABC News.
Entertainment
Sean Combs 2028 prison release date moved up
Sean “Diddy” Combs has had his release date moved once again amid his 50-month federal prison sentence.
The rap music mogul, who is behind bars at New Jersey’s FCI Fort Dix after a jury found him guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution in a federal case last July, is now set for release on Feb. 23, 2028. Combs was previously set to be freed on April 25, 2028.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons declined to comment on the reason for the change, noting it does “not discuss the conditions of confinement for any individual, including release plans.” However, the bureau cited general reasons a release date would be moved up, including for “good conduct time,” time credits from approved programs and activities and credit for time served before sentencing.
USA TODAY has reached out to FCI Fort Dix and Combs’ lawyer for comment.
Combs’ release date has been moved up at least twice in the last few months. A change to his release date in November saw the date pushed back to June 2028, days after Combs’ representative denied a report that claimed the Bad Boy Records founder had created and consumed alcohol in prison.
In a letter to the judge ahead of his original sentencing, Combs said he got sober “for the first time in 25 years,” has been attending therapy and started a mentorship program for his fellow inmates.
His legal team is also still trying to appeal his conviction, after a bombshell trial in which he was convicted on charges related to the transportation of two former girlfriends – Casandra “Cassie” Ventura Fine and the anonymous “Jane” – as well as sex workers for the intent of prostitution.
Combs, who has denied all allegations of sexual misconduct, is still facing upwards of 70 civil lawsuits across the country, including one most recently filed on June 9, from a former child actor.
Contributing: Anna Kaufman, Edward Segarra and KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY
Entertainment
Why Film and TV Production Is Fleeing Los Angeles
“Baywatch” was a staple of low-budget, first-run syndication in the 1990s, as natural to Los Angeles as David Hasselhoff’s chest hair and as defining of the city in that era as the O.J. trial and the Sunset Strip.
By the time it ended its run in 1999, it had become too costly to produce at a profit.
But the show’s red trunks and swimsuits returned to L.A. lifeguard towers in March of this year. Like an endangered pelican reintroduced to its native habitat, the Fox reboot was hailed as a triumph for the industry’s hometown, which is suffering through a long slide in production activity. Gov. Gavin Newsom bragged that the show was back “where it belongs,” at a cost to the state of $21 million.
Soon, however, the producers ran into obstacles. Officials from the county Beaches and Harbors Department and the California Coastal Commission told them they couldn’t park their trucks overnight, light fires or drive on the sand.
“We’re a lifeguard show,” “Baywatch” co-creator Greg Bonann remembers saying. “What do you mean we can’t drive a truck on the beach?”
Suddenly the show was at risk of becoming the wrong kind of symbol: this one, a victim of California’s tangle of regulations. No one in power — not Newsom or L.A. Mayor Karen Bass — wanted to read the headline about “Baywatch” bailing out of Los Angeles. When elected leaders were summoned to the Fox lot to smooth things over, the show held all the leverage. “After a while, you have to sit down with the right people and say, ‘Guys, do we want to have this show here or not?’” Bonann says.
Los Angeles has been the world’s entertainment capital for 100 years and still has an unmatched concentration of talent and infrastructure. But in an age of globalization, with easy international travel and communication, the city is losing its edge.
Everything costs more in L.A., starting with labor, due to the high cost of living and elaborate union agreements. Other states and countries have developed crew bases of their own, are more solicitous of producers’ needs and offer more generous incentives. Producers are also under pressure from the audience to deliver ever more spectacular experiences. Creating a premium product — at a price — often means going overseas.
These trends have been underway for 20 or 30 years. But since the end of the streaming bubble in 2022, America has lost 73,000 production jobs — two-thirds of them in Los Angeles — bringing the issue of foreign competition to a rapid boil.
In the chaotic race for L.A. mayor, the candidates have clashed over who lost Hollywood. At a debate in May, Councilmember Nithya Raman accused Bass of failing to cut red tape. “That’s what happened in ‘Baywatch,’” she said. “The city and county weren’t talking to each other.” Spencer Pratt, the reality star who conceded last week, bemoaned the sorry state of California’s incentive program: “Even Massachusetts has better tax credits than Hollywood.”
The contenders for governor are also battling to show that they can revive the industry with the right package of incentives. Newsom doubled the state program to $750 million in 2025. Everyone seems to agree it should be more — maybe a lot more — and that it should cover above-the-line salaries for actors, writers and producers.
“In my understanding, California’s rebate is one of the least beneficial for anybody who is financing motion pictures and television,” says Charles Roven, co-founder of Atlas Entertainment and producer of “Oppenheimer” and “Wonder Woman.” “It’s capped and it has no above-the-line.”
But the state can do only so much to compete with the 81 countries that have embraced filming as an economic development tool. The U.K. alone spent $2.2 billion on film and TV subsidies in 2024, and national incentives are often stacked on top of local rebates.
California “went into this knife fight without a weapon, and now folks are bringing guns,” says Xavier Becerra, the Democratic gubernatorial candidate who is the favorite to succeed Newsom.
As she runs for reelection, Bass has to walk a fine line between projecting confidence in the city’s ability to retain production and lobbying for more federal help for Hollywood. “I don’t feel like we’re going to lose our industry,” Bass says, noting that studios and networks are still grappling with the business changes wrought by the streaming revolution. “When all of that settles, I feel confident that we can maintain our industry.”
Once a pipe dream, the idea of a federal film subsidy now seems like a real possibility.
“In order to save this industry in America, we need to be competitive with tax credits,” says Sen. Adam Schiff, the California Democrat who is working on introducing an incentive bill in Congress. “We have a lot of our influence around the world as a result of American film and TV. We don’t want to lose that soft power.”
Advocates warn that unless the U.S. responds to foreign subsidies, Hollywood is at risk of becoming Detroit, which has bled jobs as automakers pursued low-wage labor and generous incentives in other states and abroad.
“This is supposed to be the film capital of the world,” said Noelle Stehman, a co-founder of the grassroots group Stay in L.A., at a rally for Raman’s campaign. “It should be the cheapest and easiest place to film. In fact, it is the most cumbersome and the most expensive. That cannot continue. If we don’t do something quickly, this is going to become the next Detroit.”
Mike Miller, vice president of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, was raised in Cleveland. He also sees a parallel. “I watched the demise of steel and rubber and automotive manufacturing as I grew up,” he says. “This is identical in many ways. We have an undeclared trade war that our government is standing by and watching happen.”
For every show like “Baywatch” that shoots in Los Angeles, there’s another reboot that doesn’t. “The Rockford Files,” the 1970s drama about a hard-boiled L.A. detective, will return to NBC next January. It’s still set in L.A., but it’s filming outside Atlanta. “Little House on the Prairie,” another mainstay of the 1970s NBC lineup, was originally filmed in Simi Valley. The version coming to Netflix in July was shot in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Canada offers a 16% labor credit on top of Manitoba’s 30% incentive — though that was only part of the reason to go there. Produced by CBS Studios, “Little House on the Prairie” also benefits from lower costs, a favorable exchange rate and available soundstages. Though not in America, Winnipeg also was a better fit creatively, with panoramic vistas that resemble the show’s Midwest setting.
When the Michael Landon version was made, L.A. was the obvious choice. But it’s no longer the default. With bigger screens at home, TV looks more and more like film and has the costs to match. Going abroad can make the difference between the show existing and not.
These changes are accelerating. In the 2000s, “Scrubs” filmed for nine years at an abandoned hospital in the San Fernando Valley. The reboot is made in British Columbia, with producers shuttling north to keep tabs on the set. “It is an absolute creative bummer to me that I’m shooting that show in Vancouver,” says creator Bill Lawrence. “It was a shock to my system. I wasn’t prepared for a show that existed, first and foremost, here to be cost prohibitive here.”
The economics can be even harder for features. “Beetlejuice,” released in 1987, was filmed in L.A.; the 2024 sequel was made in the U.K. “The Social Network,” from 2010, was shot in L.A. (and on location in Boston, Baltimore and the U.K.); “The Social Reckoning,” due out in October, was made in Vancouver. “Spaceballs,” from 1988, shot in L.A. “Spaceballs 2” is shooting in Australia. ”The studios want you to make everything for less money,” says Brian Grazer, whose Imagine Entertainment is producing the latter sequel. “You’re forced to go out of the country to make it for less money.”
U.S. states that once poached California’s production jobs are now falling behind as well. Georgia, which grew exponentially in the 2010s, is down nearly 50% from its peak in 2022, despite an uncapped incentive that includes above-the-line costs. “Avengers: Endgame” was made in Atlanta in 2017. The new “Avengers” films are being made in London.
The U.K. incentive not only covers up-front salaries for actors, writers, directors and producers — for those with a U.K. partner, it also covers back-end pay, a deal that is almost unique in the world and hard for studios to pass up.
“I call it the gift that keeps on giving,” says Roven, who shot two films in the U.K. last year. “If the project that you’re doing actually starts to make money, that rebate percentage is paid back to the company when they pay profit participants.”
Independent filmmakers have to watch every penny, and for them the math is nearly impossible to ignore. Brady Corbet’s 2024 drama “The Brutalist” takes place in Pennsylvania and was filmed in Hungary. His next movie, “The Origin of the World,” is set in California and will be shot in Portugal and South Africa.
“It’s much cheaper making films elsewhere than it is here,” says producer David Kaplan, whose company, Kaplan Morrison, makes Corbet’s films. “To pull off a film that looks like it costs multiple times what it actually does, you have to go somewhere where you get that financial trade-off.”
Indie producers can make things more cheaply in the U.S. if they shoot nonunion. “Obsession,” the breakout horror hit, was filmed in Los Angeles for just $750,000. But with fewer domestic productions overall, IATSE has been working harder to “flip” the nonunion ones, which drives up the cost.
“The films I grew up making, for $500,000 or $1 million, the unions are really interested in having those be signatory projects,” Kaplan says.
IATSE jurisdiction extends only to North America, part of the reason projects go to Europe. Employers also pay much less for healthcare abroad.
“I love working with unions. They serve a great purpose,” says John Hadity, a production finance consultant. “But there are rules, minimums, all that stuff. Labor doesn’t work that way in other countries. In Europe and the U.K., there’s a lot more flexibility.”
“The Gray House,” the Prime Video series set during the Civil War, was shot in Romania. “If we could have shot it in and around where it took place in Richmond, Virginia, at anywhere close to the same budget, we would have stayed in America,” says producer Lori McCreary, a past president of the Producers Guild of America. “It was two-thirds, or less, the cost.”
In Romania, she wasn’t required to hire cable pullers and other crew that would be mandated in the U.S. “Those are all very good jobs for Americans that I’m not able to provide when I’m shooting something overseas,” McCreary says. “I would much rather put all of these people to work in America.”
On May 4, 2025, President Trump threatened to impose a 100% tariff on foreign-made films. Likely both illegal and impossible, this idea was nevertheless taken in Hollywood as an encouraging sign. At least he recognized the problem.
Schiff circulated draft legislation that would create a 15% federal credit for labor costs, roughly equivalent to Canada’s incentive. The Motion Picture Association pushed for 20%, plus 5% bonuses for filming in a disaster area or an enterprise zone. (Due to the fires, all of L.A. County would qualify.) As in other countries, the federal credit would stack on top of state incentives.
Plenty of Democrats are on board, but to get anywhere, the proposal needs bipartisan support. Rep. Brian Jack, a Republican from suburban Atlanta, is said to be willing to cosponsor the bill in the House. But other Republicans appear to be waiting for a thumbs-up from the White House.
“We’ve been working very hard to get an affirmative statement out of the president that he’s open to Congress looking at a federal incentive,” says Scott Karol, who is working on the issue with Jon Voight, one of Trump’s “Hollywood ambassadors.” “We think that will open up the floodgates, and you’ll see a caucus of bipartisan politicians that will come out in support of this.”
Trump has embraced state support for farming, coal mining and advanced manufacturing, and the U.S. subsidizes other industries as well.
“Hollywood is not asking for special treatment,” Rep. Laura Friedman, D-Burbank, said at a hearing in March. “This is something that is standard in the United States across industries that we have determined that we care about.”
For now, no bill has been introduced. As of June 4, Schiff says his Republican colleagues are waiting on “smoke signals from the White House.” Supporters hope that if Democrats take control of Congress, the push for a federal incentive could be a rare area of cooperation next year.
“This is good for the economy,” says actor Zachary Levi, who voted for Trump. “This is not a handout. We want to be able to lead the world in telling great stories, and I think the president does too.”
Federal intervention cannot come fast enough in Los Angeles, where the post-peak era has rippled across the local economy. Crews are out of work, but so are white-collar executives and those who work in ancillary businesses.
“I’m down 50%,” says Corri Levelle, CEO of Sandy Rose Floral in North Hollywood, which supplies silk and fresh flowers to film sets. “We’ve had ups and downs in business, but it’s gone on too long. We can’t survive.”
This spring, chef Michael Cimarusti announced the closure of Connie & Ted’s in West Hollywood, one of a wave of restaurants to shut down following the 2023 writers and actors strikes.
“We had a lot of crew folks that were regulars who simply were not able to afford to dine out the way they used to,” Cimarusti says.
Filming in L.A. has become sort of a cause du jour, like freeing Tibet or avoiding fur. At this year’s TV upfronts in New York, one presenter after another announced that a new show would be filming in L.A., winning applause each time.
ProdPro tallied 81 film and TV projects in California in the first quarter of 2026 — down from the prior year but still a lot more than anywhere else in the U.S. According to FilmLA, the regional permit office, Hollywood remains the world’s largest production hub — even if it sure doesn’t feel like it to the creative community.
Studios will spend what it takes to shoot in Southern California when they’re working with A-list stars who demand top talent and extremely skilled crews. The showbiz farce “The Studio” was sold to Apple with the understanding that it would only work if it was shot in L.A., says James Weaver, president of Seth Rogen’s Point Grey Pictures, which produces the series with Lionsgate.
“The show is really about people yelling and screaming at each other in beautiful places,” he says. “That was an important part of the ethos of the show. Apple knew that when they said they would make it.”
Shooting in L.A. means working on a tighter production schedule. But “The Studio” snagged a $13 million tax credit for Season 2, which eases some of the budget pressure and may help extend its run.
Showrunner Lawrence, who is making ABC’s “Scrubs” revival for Disney in Vancouver, is also producing four shows with Warner Bros. Television in L.A. “I’m very lucky in that I try to shoot everything in Los Angeles,” Lawrence says. “I just think it’s really important to maintain this place as the hub of the television industry.”
Stars like Harrison Ford on “Shrinking” or Kathy Bates on “Matlock” can demand that a show be made here. And with state incentives, the math can work. California allots nearly $50 million per season to Lawrence’s shows alone.
Still, it’s not as though costs are going down. In the current round of union negotiations, the studios are hiking their health contributions considerably, making the U.S. even less competitive with countries that provide national healthcare.
It’s very hard to get around that. Miller of IATSE argues that labor shouldn’t be forced into a global race to the bottom. “We can’t turn the entertainment industry into a minimum-wage job with no benefits just so we can compete with Bulgaria,” he says. “Our federal government has to acknowledge that and has to step up.”
Bonann agrees. “It’s not like our labor here in L.A. is overpaid — they’re fairly paid,” he says. “If cost is the only factor, then every single production will eventually leave. You’ll lose something much bigger in the process.”
Despite higher costs, Hollywood still makes movies and TV shows, and Detroit still makes cars, trucks and SUVs — though with fewer people.
“It’s oversold that the auto industry left Michigan,” says James Hohman, director of fiscal policy at the Mackinac Center for Fiscal Policy. “Michigan is the top-producing auto state, and it’s not especially close either.”
That’s because Michigan decided to keep the auto industry, providing billions in subsidies over the last 25 years. The federal government has stepped in, too, seeing auto jobs as vital to the U.S. economy. In that sense, Hollywood isn’t becoming Detroit so much as emulating it.
Back in the late 1980s, “Baywatch” was birthed in part from Bonann’s personal experience working as a Los Angeles County lifeguard. He remains partial to his hometown, but he’s also a businessman. Over the years, he has lensed “Baywatch”-related projects in Hawaii and Georgia, and he considered doing the reboot in Australia or South Africa. Both had the requisite ingredients — beaches and incentives — and both are cheaper places to shoot. But in the end he chose L.A.
“You have to really want to shoot in L.A.,” he says. “It costs more money, but you have to find a way to make that work. This show belongs here.”
After Bonann’s meetings with public officials earlier this year, the show has faced no parking and permitting issues. The actors can drive on the beach. Without even asking, the show got a 20% discount on its city parking fees.
“I just saw the first cut,” he says. “I cannot imagine having produced an episode of TV this good anywhere else in the world.”
Entertainment
No, Zac Brown, Your UFC Anthem Wasn’t ‘Patriotic’
This past Sunday, Zac Brown delivered one of country music’s most beloved refrains: It’s not political, it’s patriotic.
He also performed the national anthem.
Brown sang “The Star-Spangled Banner” at the cage fights held on the South Lawn of the White House, standing honorably on an American flag-themed Monster Energy drink logo, beneath the glow of a massive UFC claw in a suit that was lightly giving cartoon detective at Donald Trump’s birthday bash. If you want to memorialize the event, you can purchase the official patriotic t-shirt (imported).
“This is patriotism, not politics for me,” Brown told the Pat McAfee Show in an interview about appearing at the match. “I mean, fuck all the division. I don’t believe in that. I love this country. I love all the people that have sacrificed so that I can live my American dream.” Brown was on the show to combat some criticism he’d received for signing on to appear at the event — a night that unfolded in an extremely non-apolitical way when heavyweight fighter Josh Hokit capped his win by yelling “Michelle Obama is a man” to the crowd. Whether or not you try to preemptively excuse yourself by declaring it’s about “patriotism,” anything Trump does is inherently political. Of course it ended with its winner hollering a ridiculous, unpatriotic statement about the only Black First Lady in history.
For country artists, it’s one of the oldest tricks in the try-to-keep-as-many-fans-as-possible playbook. Many before Brown have lobbed the “it’s not political, it’s patriotic” packaging when doing anything but: Jason Aldean’s racially coded “Try That in a Small Town,” Toby Keith’s jingoistic “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American),” Darryl Worley’s “Have You Forgotten.” Musicians aren’t obligated to do anything political as part of the job, and plenty of audiences appreciate when artists don’t preach partisan points of view. But doing something divisive and trying to explain it away with “patriotism” is, to many, a step too far.
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“I’m ashamed,” says Michael Trotter Jr. of the War and Treaty, a veteran of the Iraq war who endured live combat. “I take great pride in being able to say that I served this country and served it well. So, I am ashamed that people would hide behind the term ‘patriotism.’ I’m ashamed that grown men would use a sporting event to throw a jab at a former First Lady, who represented the very grounds the event was on with class, dignity, and beauty. I’m ashamed that my colleagues participated in it. But the truth of the matter is there’s nothing patriotic about what we just saw.”
To be fair, Brown has used his platform to direct resources and support to military families and veterans with his Camp Southern Ground organization. Because of that, the “Chicken Fried” singer likely knows where patriotism ends and politics begins — and where Trump’s machismo 80th birthday party might fall on that scale.
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Trotter, meanwhile, is launching an organization called iVet Cares with his wife Tanya, to support veterans, and says he wants more country artists to stop posturing and start listening about what being patriotic actually means. “I think most artists think that throwing money at a thing is enough, but it’s more important to listen to veterans, listens to soldiers and sailors and Marines, and really learn what they truly need. And then go lobbying, go to congress and get involved,” he says. “Artists need to stop being artists, and start being humans.”
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