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Screenings
& Conversations with Creative Minds and Stars
at PayleyFestLA
2025
(Television
Intl Magazine)
The 42nd Annual William
S. Paley Television Festival takes place March 21 -
29, 2025 at the DOLBY THEATRE,
Hollywood. On opening night an array of stars are
scheduled to attend including:
Ben Stiller, Executive Producer
& Director
Dan Erickson, Creator, Writer & Executive
Producer
Adam Scott, "Mark Scout" & Executive
Producer
Patricia Arquette, "Harmony Cobel" &
Executive Producer
Britt Lower, "Helly R."
Zach Cherry, "Dylan George"
Dichen Lachman, "Ms. Casey"
Jen Tullock, "Devon Scout-Hale"
Sarah Bock, "Miss Huang"
Tramell Tillman, "Seth Milchick"
Michael Chernus, "Ricken Hale"
Gwendoline Christie, "Lorne"
Ólafur Darri Ólafsson,
"Drummond"
Cobrai
Thursday, March 22, 2025,
2:00 pm at the Paley Museum
In Person:
Ralph Macchio, "Daniel LaRusso"
& Executive Producer
William Zabka, "Johnny
Lawrence" & Executive Producer
Josh Heald, Executive Producer
& Writer
Jon Hurwitz, Executive Producer
& Writer
Hayden Schlossberg, Executive
Producer & Writer
Xolo Maridueña, "Miguel"
Tanner Buchanan, "Robby"
Mary Mouser, "Samantha"
Jacob Bertrand,
"Hawk"
Gianni Decenzo,
"Demetri"
Ken Barefield, Stunt
Coordinator
Don Lee, Fight
Coordinator
Moderator:
Perri Nemiroff, Senior
Producer, Collider
Agatha All
Along - Disney+ |
Hulu
March 22, 2025 | 7:00 pm
In
Person:
Kathryn Hahn,
"Agatha Harkness"r
Jac
Schaeffer, Creator, Showrunner, Director &
Executive Producer r
Sasheer
Zamata, "Jennifer Kale"
r
Ali Ahn,
"Alice Wu-Gulliver" r
Debra Jo
Rupp, "Mrs. Hart"
Plus
additional participants to be announced.

Matlock
March
23, 2025 | 2:00 pm
The Stars &
Producers of the Riveting New Drama Gather for This
Special Screening & Conversation!
In
Person:
Kathy
Bates, "Madeline 'Matty' Matlock"
Skye P.
Marshall, "Olympia"
Jason
Ritter, "Julian"
David
Del Rio, "Billy"
Leah
Lewis, "Sarah"
Jennie
Snyder Urman, Showrunner & Executive Producer
Kat
Coiro, Director & Executive Producer
Moderator:
r
Eric
Christian Olsen, Executive Producer
The
Handmaid's Tale
March
26, 2025 | 7:30 pm
A Farewell
Salute to the Acclaimed
Hit!
In
Person:
Elisabeth Moss,
"June Osborne," Executive Producer &
Director
Eric
Tuchman, Coshowrunner, Writer & Executive
Producer
Yahlin
Chang, Coshowrunner, Writer & Executive
Producer
Bruce
Miller, Creator, Writer & Executive
Producer
Warren
Littlefield, Executive
Producer
Yvonne
Strahovski, "Serena Joy"
Bradley
Whitford, "Commander Lawrence"
Ann
Dowd, "Aunt Lydia
Clements"
Samira
Wiley, "Moira Strand"
O-T
Fagbenle, "Luke Bankole"
Madeline
Brewer, "Janine Lindo"
Amanda
Brugel, "Rita Blue"
Sam
Jaeger, "Marc Tuello"
Ever
Carradine, "Naomi Putnam"
Moderator:
Stacey
Wilson Hunt, Contributing Editor, The Hollywood
Reporter
An Evening with Seth Rogen and the
Star-Studded Ensemble Cast of Apple TV+'s The
Studio
Thursday, March 27, 2025, 7:00 pm at the Paley
Museum
This exclusive event on at The
Paley Museum features a special preview screening
of an upcoming episode of the Apple TV+ show,
followed by an exciting panel discussion with
cocreator, executive producer, star, writer, and
director Seth Rogen, alongside all-star cast
members Catherine O'Hara, Kathryn Hahn, Ike
Barinholtz, and Chase Sui Wonders.
Hacks
March
28, 2025 | 7:30
pm
The
PaleyFest Favorite Returns with a World Premiere
Screening and Conversation in Advance of Season
Four!
In Person:
Jean Smart,
"Deborah"
Hannah
Einbinder, "Ava"
Paul W.
Downs, "Jimmy," Creator, Showrunner, Executive
Producer, Writer & Director
Carl
Clemons-Hopkins,
"Marcus"
Mark
Indelicato, "Damien"
Megan
Stalter, "Kayla Schaeffer"
Rose
Abdoo, "Josefina"
Lucia
Aniello, Creator, Showrunner, Executive Producer,
Writer & Director
Jen
Statsky, Creator, Showrunner, Executive Producer
& Writer
Poker Face -
Peacock
March
29, 2025 | 2:00 pm
In Advance of
Season Two the Series Makes Its PaleyFest Debut
with Exclusive First Screening of the New Season
and Conversation with the Stars!
In
Person:
Natasha Lyonne,
"Charlie Cale," Executive Producer, Writer &
Director
Rian
Johnson, Creator, Executive Producer, Writer &
Director
Kumail
Nanjiani, Season Two Guest Star
Clea
DuVall, Season One Guest Star & Season Two
Director
Melanie
Lynskey, Season Two Guest Star
GaTa,
Season Two Guest Star
Haley
Joel Osment, Season Two Guest Star
Moderator: Aidy
Bryant
A Special
Salute
Gilmore
Girls, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and
Étoile: The Amy Sherman-Palladino
MultiverseMarch 29, 2025 | 7:00
pm
The
Stars Reunite for This Special Celebration Honoring
Amy Sherman-Palladino!
In Person:
Amy
Sherman-Palladino
Daniel
Palladino
Lauren
Graham, Gilmore Girls
Kelly
Bishop, Gilmore Girls
Rachel
Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Alex
Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Luke
Kirby, Étoile, The Marvelous Mrs.
Maisel
Charlotte
Gainsbourg, Étoile
Lou de
Laâge,
Étoile
The 97th Academy Awards Honoring Movies Released in
2024/
Dolby Theatre, Hollywood, Sunday, March 2,
2025

Adrien Brody, best actor in a leading
role

Sean Baker
made history at Oscars
2025,
becoming
the first person to win four Oscars in the same
year for the same film
"Anora" won big
at the 2025 Oscars, taking home five awards,
including best picture and best
director.
Sean Baker, who
directed, edited, wrote and co-produced "Anora,"
won four Oscars at Sunday's ceremony, tying Walt
Disney's record for the most Academy Awards won by
a single person in one year. By winning all four
awards for the same movie, Baker distinguished
himself from Disney who won for four different
productions at the 1954 Academy Awards ceremony.
Emilia
Pérez" had the most nominations this year
with 13, including for best picture, best director
and multiple acting nominations.
Karla
Sofía Gascón made Oscar history when
she became the first transgender woman to be
nominated in any acting category when she received
a best actress nomination for playing the film's
title role. The award for best actress ultimately
went to Mikey Madison for her title role in
"Anora."
Zoe
Saldaña became the first American of
Dominican Descent to win an Oscar, winning best
supporting actress, one of just two wins for Emilia
Pérez.
Wicked," based
on the hit Broadway musical, and epic period drama
"The Brutalist" both had 10 nominations each, and
were also competing for best picture, best director
among several nomination
Adrian Brody won
his second best actor Oscar for his role as
architect Lászlo Tóth in "The
Brutalist." Brody won his first Oscar for 2002's
"The Pianist" at age 29, when he became the
youngest person to win the award.
Former "Late
Night" and "The Tonight Show" host Conan O'Brien
helmed this year's ceremony. A two time Emmy
recipient, this was O'Brien's first time as master
of ceremonies for the Academy Awards.
Below is the
full list of winners and
nominees:
|
|
|
|
97th
Academy Awards
|
®
|
97th
Academy
|
|
|
|
Best picture
Anora -
WINNER
"The Brutalist"
"A Complete Unknown"
"Conclave"
"Dune: Part Two"
"Emilia Pérez"
"I'm Still Here"
"Nickel Boys"
"The Substance"
"Wicked"
Best actor in a
leading role
Adrien Brody, "The Brutalist" -
WINNER
Timothée Chalamet, "A Complete
Unknown"
Colman Domingo, "Sing Sing"
Ralph Fiennes, "Conclave"
Sebastian Stan, "The
Apprentice"
Best actor in a
supporting role
Yura Borisov,
"Anorar"
Kieran Culkin, "A Real Pain" -
WINNER
Edward Norton, "A Complete Unknown"
Guy Pearce, "The Brutalist"
Jeremy Strong, "The Apprentice"
Best actress in a
leading role
Cynthia Erivo, "Wicked"
Karla Sofía Gascón, "Emilia
Pérez"
Mikey Madison, "Anora" -
WINNER
Demi Moore, "The Substance"
Fernanda Torres, "I'm Still
Here"
Best supporting
actress
Monica Barbaro, "A Complete
Unknown"
Ariana Grande, "Wicked"
Felicity Jones, "The Brutalist"
Isabella Rossellini, "Conclave"
Zoe Saldaña, "Emilia
Pérez"
-
WINNER
Best animated
feature film
"Flow"
- WINNER
"Inside Out 2"
"Memoir of a Snail"
"Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most
Fowl"
"The Wild Robot"
Best animated short
film
"Beautiful Men"
"In the Shadow of the
Cypress"
- WINNER
"Magic
Candies"
"Yuck!"
Best
cinematography
"The Brutalist" Lol Crawley -
WINNER
"Dune: Part Two"
Emilia Pérez"
"Maria"
"Nosferatu"
Best costume
design
"A Complete Unknown"
"Conclave"
"Gladiator II"
"Nosferatu"
"Wicked," Paul Tazewell
-
WINNER
Best directing
"Anora," Sean Baker
-
WINNER
"The Brutalist," Brady Corbet
"A Complete Unknown," James Mangold
"Emilia Pérez," Jacques Audiard
"The Substance," Coralie Fargeat
"Wicked," Myron Kerstein
Best documentary
feature film
"Black Box Diaries"
"No Other Land"
-
WINNER
"Porcelain War"
"Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat"
"Sugarcane"
Best documentary
short film
"Death by Numbers"
"I Am Ready, Warden"
"Incident"
"Instruments of a Beating Heart"
"The Only Girl in the Orchestra" -
WINNER
|
|
Best film editing
"Anora", Sean Baker
WINNER
"The Brutalist," David Jancso
"Conclave," Nick Emerson
"Emilia Pérez," Juliette
Welfling
Best international
feature film
"I'm Still Here," Brazil
-
WINNER
"The Girl with the Needle,"
Denmark
"Emilia Pérez," France
"The Seed of the Sacred Fig," Germany
- Flow, Latvia
Best makeup and
hairstyling
"A Different Man" Mike Marino, David
Presto and Crystal Jurado
"Emilia Pérez" Julia Floch
Carbonel, Emmanuel Janvier and
Jean-Christophe Spadaccini
"Nosferatu" David White, Traci Loader and
Suzanne "Stokes-Munton"
"The
Substance,"
Pierre-Olivier
Persin, Stéphanie Guillon and
Marilyne Scarselli
WINNER
"Wicked" Frances Hannon, Laura Blount and
Sarah Nuth
Best original
Score
"The Brutalist," Daniel Blumberg
"Conclave," Volker Bertelmann -
WINNER
"Emilia Pérez,"
"Wicked," John Powell and Stephen
Schwartz
"The Wild Robot," Kris Bowers
Best original
song
"El Mal," from Emilia Pérez,"
Music by Clément Ducol and
Camille, Lyric by Clément Ducol,
Camille and Jacques Audiard -
WINNER
"The Journey" from The Six Triple
Eight
"Like A Bird" from "Sing Sing"
"Mi Camino" from "Emilia Pérez"
"Never Too Late" from "Elton John: Never
Too Late"
Best adapted
screenplay
"A Complete Unknown"
"Emilia Perez"
"Conclave" By Peter Straughan-
WINNER
"Nickel Boys"
"Sing Sing"
Best original
screenplay
"Anora" By Sean Baker -
WINNER
"A Real Pain"
"September 5"
"The Brutalist"
"The Substance"
Best production
design
"The Brutalist"
"Conclave"
"Dune: Part Two"
"Nosferatu"
"Wicked"
WINNER
Best live action
short film
"A Lien"
"Anuja"
"I'm Not a Robot" -
WINNER
"The Last Ranger"
"The Man Who Could Not Remain
Silent"
Best sound
"A Complete Unknown"
"Dune: Part Two"
-
WINNER
"Emilia Pérez"
"Wicked"
"The Wild Robot"
Best visual
effects
"Alien: Romulus"
"Better Man"
"Dune: Part Two"
-
WINNER
"Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes"
"Wicked"
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MORE
115-
Past Oscar
No-Shows
Hollywood stars who snubbed
the Academy Awards
There have only been three
people that refused the awards, actors George C.
Scott and Marlon Brandon and screen writer Dudly
Nichols.
Not everyone in Hollywood enjoys the gala event.
Over the years, a handful of Hollywood A-listers
have refused to attend the ceremony, and some
who've sidestepped the show did so when they were
up for awards of their own.
From Katharine Hepburn to
Will Smith, here are Hollywood stars who snubbed
the Oscars.
2016 - Will Smith
and Jada Pinkett Smith called for a boycott of
the Academy Awards ceremony upon learning that the
nominations, for the second year in a row, featured
no actors of color. The actress and her superstar
husband, Will Smith, were soon joined in the
boycott by other Hollywood heavyweights including
Oscar-winning directors Spike Lee and Michael
Moore, while other stars -- including Oscar winners
George Clooney and Lupita Nyong'o -- spoke out in
support.
2003 - Peter O' Toole
- In 2003, Peter O' Toole became the first
actor to ever refuse an honorary Oscar. Maybe he
did so out of pride. The legendary "Lawrence of
Arabia" star, who'd been nominated eight times
throughout his nearly 50-year career and lost every
single time, wrote to the Academy, explaining, "I
am still in the game and might win the lovely
bugger outright. Would the Academy please defer the
honor until I am 80?"
The Academy responded by
telling him stars like Paul Newman and Henry Fonda
were given Honorary Oscars and went on to actually
win one shortly after. O'Toole was sold, and
happily showed up to accept his award.
2002 - Woody
Allen though he's been nominated several times
throughout his decades-long career, has never shown
up to receive an Academy Award, explaining, "I have
no regard for that kind of ceremony. I just don't
think they know what they're doing. When you see
who wins those things -- or who doesn't win them --
you can see how meaningless this Oscar thing
is."
Allen did make one
appearance on the Oscars stage. In 2002, just six
months after the September 11 attacks, the director
presented a montage of films made in his beloved
New York City.
1987 - Paul Newman
was nominated six times from 1961 until 1982,
and although he attended the ceremony many times,
he never took home an award.
Newman was nominated a
seventh time in 1987 for "The Color Of Money." All
bets were on him, but by that point, the actor was
over it, and decided ahead of time he wouldn't
attend the ceremony. "It's like chasing a beautiful
woman for 80 years. Finally, she relents and you
say, 'I'm terribly sorry. I'm tired,'" Newman
explained.
1981 - John Gielgud,
British actor, charmed audiences as the
unflappable, acid-tongued butler Hobson in 1981's
"Arthur," but the actor didn't bother showing up to
the ceremony to accept his award when his name was
called.
Gielgud, who throughout his
eight-decade career nabbed two Oscars, three Tonys,
an Emmy and a Grammy (among other honors) -- once
said of awards shows, "I really detest all the
mutual congratulation baloney and the invidious
comparisons which they evoke.""
1974 - Katharine
Hepburn holds a Hollywood record for being
nominated 12 times and winning four Oscars over her
long career, but she never attended the ceremony to
hear her name called. "As for me, prizes are
nothing," she once said. "My prize is my work."
Hepburn made exactly one appearance at the Academy
Awards in 1974 to present the Irving G. Thalberg
Memorial Award to producer and friend Lawrence
Weingarten. "I'm living proof that a person can
wait 41 years to be unselfish," she quipped.
1973 - Marlon Brando
caused a ruckus when he boycotted the ceremony in
1973 to call attention to Hollywood's
misrepresentation of Native Americans. Brando, who
won Best Actor honors that year for his performance
in "The Godfather," had Native American civil
rights activist Sacheen Littlefeather approach the
podium to decline his award and give a protest
speech on his behalf.
1970 - George C.
Scott was the first actor to refuse to accept
an Oscar. The legendary actor, who was nominated in
1970 for his gripping portrayal of Gen. George S.
Patton in "Patton," telegraphed the Academy months
before the ceremony to let them know he didn't want
the award. On the night of the ceremony, presenter
Goldie Hawn opened the envelope and cried, "Oh my
God! The winner is George C. Scott," but the actor,
true to his word, was home on his farm in upstate
New York.
Scott said of the Oscars,
"The ceremonies are a two-hour meat parade, a
public display with contrived suspense for economic
reasons." Oops!
1960 - Elizabeth
Taylor, screen legend, was a frequent Oscar
nominee, nabbing her first award for her role as a
high-class escort in 1960's "Butterfield 8." Six
years later, Taylor was poised to win again for her
riveting performance opposite husband Richard
Burton, who was also nominated, for "Who's Afraid
of Virginia Woolf?" However, Burton had already
lost four times at the Oscars and would almost
certainly lose again, so both husband and wife
boycotted the ceremony in protest -- though Taylor
made up an excuse about Burton being afraid to fly
back to the states from Paris. Taylor did win again
and never issued a statement thanking the
Academy.
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115-
Past Oscars 'No
Shows'
///
A
Child in Berlin: The Poignant Story of Heidi
Posnien and Her Mother Durig the Fall of
Germany
A Survivor of
Berlin's WWII Atrocities Embodies Childhood
Resilience
OGDEN, Utah, March 15, 2025 -- Heidi Posnien,
now 88, enjoys a peaceful life in a farmhouse
overlooking a lake -- worlds apart from her
childhood in Nazi-occupied Germany, where she and
her mother survived unimaginable circumstances.
Despite the immense hardships she has endured in
her lifetime, including outliving her husband and
children, Posnien chooses gratitude for simple
abundance, freedom and safety.
"I don't believe in
wallowing in self-pity," Posnien said. "You just go
ahead with life and live life the best you can. And
the more you do for other people, the less you
worry about yourself."
Posnien shared her strikingly
clear memories with professional biographer Rhonda
Lauritzen, recalling in vivid detail the fear and
uncertainty that permeated Nazi-infested Berlin
during World War II; memories of her mother,
Käthe, a rising star in Germany's opera scene;
and her remarkable survival in a bombed-out
apartment during the final weeks of the war. She
lived alone at just 9 years old.
"When we read a story like
Heidi's, it becomes part of us," Lauritzen said.
"We can feel it vicariously. I promise the readers
will not forget this story. It changes us. It
changes our perspective. And it will change you in
ways you don't see coming."
A Child in Berlin is the
remarkable true story of Heidi Posnien, her mother
and their courage in the face of Nazi terror as
told to Lauritzen. Käthe is a mother who must
choose between her conscience and her dreams of
becoming an opera star. She discovers the truth
about what is happening to her Jewish friends
around the time she attends a dinner party presided
by Adolf Hitler himself. She realizes she cannot
remain among Nazi society and makes the
gut-wrenching choice to leave the opera. To support
herself and young Heidi, she joins Berlin's
black-market network and ends up dealing in more
than just food. As others evacuate the capital,
Käthe harbors a secret that anchors them in
the epicenter of danger.
While Käthe becomes ever
more preoccupied with survival, Heidi and a roving
pack of friends make mischief in Berlin's rubble.
The war devolves, and she braves hunger, cold and
feelings of abandonment as she shuttles between
Berlin and the Polish countryside. Heidi's ultimate
test comes when she must survive alone in a
bombed-out apartment during the final weeks of
World War II. Her moxie shows how children are
capable of far more than adults realize.
Heidi Posnien married an
American soldier after the war. She now lives in
Huntsville, Utah. Her story serves as a reminder of
the resilience and strength of the human spirit,
even in the darkest of times. Her firsthand account
of life in Nazi-occupied Berlin offers a unique
perspective on a pivotal moment in world history.
As she nears her 90th birthday, Posnien continues
to share her story in the hopes of educating future
generations about the terrible consequences of war
and the importance of standing up against
tyranny.
"I've been down in the deepest sorrows, but I've
also been on the best of highs too," Posnien said.
"I've eaten this big, beautiful life; I never let
it eat me."
About the
Author
Rhonda Lauritzen is a
professional biographer with multiple published
books and is a regular speaker at international
conferences. She has an MBA from the University of
Utah, served as CEO of her family's business and as
a state college VP. Since she founded Evalogue.Life
in 2016, Lauritzen has been hired to tell the
stories of families, buildings and cities. Her
upcoming books include Creative Insecurity: Lean
Into the Unknown and Unleash Your Inner Misfit,
co-authored with James M. Sweeney. She believes
that when you tell your story, it changes the
ending.
Click
for more tviStory
113- Book "A Child in Berlin: A Poignant Story of
Heidi Posnien and Her Mother During the Fall of
Germany"
///
101-
The Octogenerian - ATAS a glittering
dream
-
By
Syd
Cassyd
Permission was given by Syd Cassyd to Josie Cory,
TVI for publishing.
Hollywood, CA -- The glittering dreams of the world
for a new culture and perhaps world peace through
television and radio turned to ashes when Hitler
used all media to destroy the dreams and bodies of
more than 30 million persons.
When in 1946
seven industryites in communications joined me in
founding the "first generation" of the Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences, we didn't foresee
that in 43 years we would get the recognition that
the "third generation" TV Academy has today,
We
weren't naïve, for since Jan. 6, 1884, the
first TV system had already been patented. For
those 62 years world leaders had already visualized
the impact of the moving image of television on
society. The problems in America was not when, but
who would control the new technology.
Last
week when ABC's former chairman, Leonard Goldenson,
gave the Academy Foundation $1 million the "first
generation,' we founders, knew that we had arrived.
Elton Rule, former ABC president, is president of
the foundation. Delbert Mann, a Burnside Avenue
resident, is a member of the foundation.
From
1949, when ATAS brought forth the Emmy, the "third
generation" Academy, the present one, reorganized
in 1977, owned a little figure worth $1.5 million.
That's the price the network now pay to broadcast
the awards. But over the 43 years of ATAS history
there have been many problems. Though we in ATAS,
in 1949, did not copyright the Emmy, wed did
protect it.
At
lunch last week with Karl Malden and other film
Academy moguls, I heard their problem of
copyrights. Owners of the Oscars wanted to sell
them at auction. But a clause in the contract
provided that the Academy should have first choice
in buying back an unwanted Oscar.
We,
in the TV Academy, back in 1949, had that same
clause for our trophy. But when New York and
Hollywood were fighting over a personnel problem of
aid presidents, employees of the Academy, the
problem of copyright ownership of the Emmy was a
part of a $100 million suit.
Believe
me, if I had known of the million dollar goldmine
which TV brought to our little "first generation"
Academy, I would have hired some of those $100,000
attorneys, too. We could have protected the growth
of ATAS in a more dignified method. We wouldn't
have "three generations."
Watching
all these goings on over 43 years, I had a point of
view. If any power group in this huge organization
wanted me to take sides, they would have to ay. One
president wanted to know who owned the Emmy. Was
there any agreement, etc.? I told them if they
would pay me $2,000 for the history I would hire
someone to write it with me. Lionel Rolfe and Nigey
Lennon obliged. Printing costs were billed to
ATAS.
But
the slick attorneys slipped me a "mickey." That's a
good old New York talk for a pill. They demanded
that I leave my archives about the Academy to them,
when I died. Strangely enough because I was abut to
move, I donated all that material to ATAS/UCLA and
thy picked it up in three van loads. Everything
pertaining to NATAS.
Two
weeks ago, the new resident of ATAS wanted to know
what I did with the $2,000 and the Archives. In the
haste of takeover by the "third generation," no
once know that they had my donation already.
Because
there are three generations of the Academy, each of
the latter two calling themselves the "new"
Academy, undoubtedly when the foundation selects
people for the Hall of Fame, no one will be around
to know that back in 1946, there was a
"founder."
As
Fred Sage, the fine actor in the "Wonder Years"
notes, each generation has their own heroes.
Click
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115-
History Academy of Television Arts and Sciences-
ATAS, a glittering dream by Syd
Cassyd
///
107- Syd Cassyd,
Remembered
Hollywood -
(March 2025)
Syd Cassyd was the Founder of the Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences.
Cassyd worked for the Army
Signal Corps as a film editor under then-Col. Frank
Capra during World War II. After the war, Cassyd
moved to Hollywood, where he worked as an editor
for Box Office magazine, as well as a grip at
Paramount Pictures.
It was at Paramount that he
met and teamed up with Klaus Landsberg, known for,
among other things, pioneering live TV news
coverage. Cassyd and Landsberg worked on an
experimental Los Angeles television station that
would eventually become KTLA-TV Channel 5.
While
at KTLA, Cassyd felt that TV needed an organization
in which people could share their ideas about the
fledgling medium and talk about the future of the
industry. He founded the academy with seven people
who came to the first meeting. By the fifth
meeting, there were 250 members.
Syd
Cassyd founded the Academy of Television Arts &
Sciences in 1946, which has grown into one of the
most influential organizations in the entertainment
industry. In addition to sponsoring the annual Emmy
Awards, which recognize outstanding entertainment
and news achievement in television, the academy has
a variety of outreach and archival programs.
Cassyd
became the fourth president of the Academy in 1950
and over the years held various other positions. In
1991, the Academy's Board of Governors created the
Syd Cassyd Founder's Award in his honor and
presented the first to him.
In
1996, Cassyd received a star on the Hollywood Walk
of Fame.
Cassyd
died February 4, 2000, in Los Angeles, California.
He was 91.
Click
for more tviStory
107--
Syd Cassydy
Remembered
///

Graphic design and illustration
by Azusa Oda.
Original photo of Manzanar, California by Dorothea
Lange, 1942.
World
Premiere of "The Camp" an Opera in English in Two
Acts
About
an American family wrongfully imprisoned in 1942
and
the power of collective resistance to
injustice
Los Angeles - February
1, 2025 -- In 1942, during World War II, 120,000
people of Japanese ancestry, two-thirds of whom
were American citizens, were unjustly incarcerated
in concentration camps within the United States.
Inspired by these events, a new American opera
titled The Camp makes its world premiere, presented
in partnership with the Japanese American Cultural
& Community Center, with four performances from
February 22 to March 2, 2025 at the JACCC Aratani
Theatre in Los Angeles.
Created by librettist
Lionelle Hamanaka, a descendant of camp survivors,
and composer Daniel Kessner, The Camp tells the
moving story of the Shimono family, Japanese
Americans forcibly removed from their suburban home
in Southern California. After Mas, a fisherman and
the head of the household, is arrested by the FBI
on suspicion of espionage, the family is reunited
in a desolate incarceration camp. As the family
struggles to survive the emotional and physical
toll of their wrongful imprisonment, this poignant,
new opera illuminates the remarkable strength of
familial bonds and the power of collective
resistance in the face of injustice.
"The concentration camps in
the United States in World War II are a tragedy
that Japanese Americans are still working to
overcome and have recent historic relevance to the
12,000 racist attacks against Asian Americans
nationally, as well as recent massive
anti-immigrant threats," shares librettist Lionelle
Hamanaka. "My own parents were in Jerome, but the
incidents in the opera come from different camps-
the arrest of Mr. Shimono, lack of medical care,
food stolen from the kitchen, and conflict between
political views of the inmates- but they hopefully
reveal the humanity that connects us all."
Lionelle's father, character
actor Conrad Yama, appeared in both the original
Broadway casts of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Flower
Drum Song and Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman's
Pacific Overtures, as well as appearing in Frank
Chin's Year of the Dragon and Edward Albee's
Box-Mao-Box.
The Camp is presented in
partnership with the Japanese American Cultural
& Community Center (JACCC) and produced by
Plain Wood Productions and Kessner Music, with
associate producers Helen Ota, Katharine Means, and
Quinn O'Connor.
Click for more tviStory
101-
World
Premiere of "The Camp" Opera in English in Two
Acts
///
101-
Amazon MGM Studios to take creative control of the
007 James Bond
franchise.

Sean
Connery
Daniel
Craigs
February 20, 2025 -- Stirring
waves in the industry when it was announced
Thursday, February 19, that
Amazon MGM Gains Creative
Control of the 007 James Bond Franchise as
producers and custodians of 007, Michael G. Wilson
and Barbara Broccoli, are stepping back.
Amazon MGM Studios, Wilson
and Broccoli have formed a new joint venture to
house the James Bond intellectual property rights.
The three parties will remain co-owners of the
iconic franchise.
The new deal comes after
mounting speculation about the fate of the British
spy, four years after his last 2021 outing in "No
Time to Die," which was also Daniel Craig's final
appearance in the role as 007.
Amazon will now decide which
actor will take over the famous character, but
there is still no time-scale for when that that
will happen or when the next film will be made.
"Since his theatrical
introduction over 60 years ago, James Bond has been
one of the most iconic characters in filmed
entertainment," said Mike Hopkins, head of Prime
Video and Amazon MGM
Studios.
"We are grateful to the late
Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman for bringing
James Bond to movie theatres around the world, and
to Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli for their
unyielding dedication and their role in continuing
the legacy of the franchise that is cherished by
legions of fans worldwide. We are honored to
continue this treasured heritage, and look forward
to ushering in the next phase of the legendary 007
for audiences around the world."
Added Wilson: "With my 007
career spanning nearly 60 incredible years, I am
stepping back from producing the James Bond films
to focus on art and charitable projects. Therefore,
Barbara and I agree, it is time for our trusted
partner, Amazon MGM Studios, to lead James Bond
into the future."
In 2022, Amazon acquired
MGM, including a vast catalog with more than 4,000
films and 17,000 TV shows. Since the MGM
acquisition, Amazon has held rights to distribute
all of the James Bond films, and as a result of
this transaction will have creative control over
future productions.
Click for more tviStory
101- Amazon MGM Studios To Control the 007 James
Bond Franchise
///
Click for more tviStory
101- Amazon MGM Studios To Control the 007 James
Bond Franchise
///
102-
Google lifts a longstanding ban on AI use for
developing weapons and
surveillance
Google changed its
public AI policies it would not develop AI applied
to surveillance or weapons.
Google's parent company
Alphabet, Inc. is lifting a long-standing ban on
artificial intelligence (AI) being used for
developing weapons and surveillance tools is
"incredibly concerning", a leading human rights
group has said.
In
its blog, Alphabet, said democracies should lead in
AI development, guided by what it called "core
values" like freedom, equality and respect for
human rights.
Back in January, the
conflict in Ukraine had shown the technology
"offers serious military advantage on the
battlefield" and as AI becomes more widespread and
sophisticated it would "change the way defense
works, from the back office to the
frontline.
But
as well as debate among AI experts and
professionals over how the powerful new technology
should be governed in broad terms, there is also
controversy around the use of AI on the battlefield
and in surveillance technologies.
Concern
is greatest over the potential for AI-powered
weapons capable of taking lethal action
autonomously.
"Systems that incorporate
artificial intelligence in military targeting have
been used in Ukraine and the Middle East, and
several countries are moving to integrate AI into
their militaries" according to a commons report
into the UK military's use of AI.
"Such efforts raise
questions about the extent to which machines will
be allowed to make military decision -- even
decisions that could kill on a vast scale."
"Don't be Evil"
Originally, long before the current surge of
interest in the ethics of AI, Google's founders,
Sergei Brin and Larry Page, said their motto for
the firm was "don't be evil".
When
the company was restructured under the name
Alphabet Inc. in 2015 the parent company switched
to "Do the right thing."
In
its earnings report the company said it would spend
$75billions on AI projects this year. The majority
of the spending will target technical
infrastructure, including servers, data centers and
applications such as AI-powered search.
Click for more tviStory
102-
Google
lifts a longstanding ban on AI's use for develping
weapons of
surveillance
///
John
Dickerson and Maurice DuBois to anchor CBS Evening
News starting Monday, January 27,
2025.
L-R: John Dickerson, Maurice
DuBois and Margaret Brennan
Nora O'Donnell, longtime CBS
anchor will bid farewell to viewers on January 23,
2025. She will move into an expanded role as a CBS
News senior correspondent focusing on longform
reporting and interviews across CBS and Paramount,
including primetime specials, on "CBS Sunday
Morning," "60 Minutes," Paramount+ and more.
"Norah's new role will give
her the opportunity to contribute across CBS and
Paramount, allowing us to see more of the
groundbreaking stories and interviews that have
been the hallmark of her career. Her superpower
lies in her ability to secure and deliver big
interviews and newsmaking stories that set the news
cycle and capture the cultural zeitgeist.
Nora
O'Donnell
After the presidential
election, award-winning journalists John Dickerson
and Maurice DuBois will anchor the "CBS Evening
News" as the show returns to the CBS Broadcast
Center in New York.
Margaret Brennan, CBS News'
chief foreign affairs correspondent and moderator
of "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," will
regularly lead coverage from Washington, D.C., when
news breaks on the political and foreign affairs
fronts.
Lonnie Quinn is being named chief weathercaster for
the show and will deliver the latest weather
reporting and forecasts from the new AR/VR studio
in New York.
McMahon continued: "With
Norah's decision, we began reimagining and
redesigning the Evening News. The strength of CBS
News has always been in its ensemble of
journalists, both in front of and behind the
camera, and our goal with John, Maurice, Margaret
and Lonnie at the Evening News is to elevate the
best in their fields every night for our viewers.
In addition to this ensemble team, we look forward
to welcoming '60 Minutes' correspondents to file
for the 'CBS Evening News' when they have news to
break; for decades this was routine, so it will be
again."
Lonnie
Quinn, Chief Weathercaster
In addition to "CBS Evening
News" duties, Dickerson will continue anchoring on
CBS News 24/7, CBS News' free national streaming
service, and serving as CBS News' chief political
analyst and senior national correspondent. DuBois
and Quinn will continue to have a regular presence
across WCBS. Brennan will continue as the moderator
of "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" and CBS
News' chief foreign affairs correspondent
contributing across the network.
Click
for more tviStory
107- John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois to anchor
CBS Evening News starting Monday, January 27,
2025
///
NATPE
Global at the Miami Intercontinental, Feb. 3 -
7
Complimentary
pass to return to NATPE Global's Pitch Showcase
2026
NATPE Global brings
together key buyers and decision-makers from the
entire media ecosystem with a concentration across
the key regions of North America, LatAm and Europe.
Spanning development to catalog programming, the
marketplace provides access to distribution
decision-makers from leading connected TV device
manufacturers and MVPDs as well as super-indie,
boutique and independent distributors and
producers.
2025.
The NATPE Global Pitch Showcase is an international
live pitch event. The goal of the program is to aid
in the further development of TV projects in the
scripted programming space. A total of five (5)
projects will be selected to pitch live on stage
directly to network and studio executives and an
audience composed of global TV
executives.
BENEFITS
Selected participants will receive:
Selected projects will have 5 minutes to
pitch live on stage to a curated panel of industry
experts & decision makers
One top project will receive a music prize
(library music) valued at US $10,000 from
Slipstream
Each top project will also receive one (1)
complimentary pass to return to NATPE Global in
2026 (an approximate US $1425 value)
Access to the full NATPE Global program,
including: Keynotes, fireside chats and panel
discussions on current trends in the global media
business; Unprecedented structured networking
opportunities; the natpeXchange delegate platform;
A bustling global marketplace, and of course fun
and fabulous networking events and
parties
ELIGIBILITY
The program is open to mid-level and established
creatives and producers with scripted projects in
development.
Applicants must have no less than three (3)
professional screen credits but may not be owners,
operators or employed by an established media
production, broadcast or digital media company with
more than three (3) full-time employees.
SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
In addition to filling out the online entry form,
entrants must provide the following:
A pitch presentation deck
outlining your content idea
A three-minute video sizzle reel
A resume indicating your work experience and
screen credits
Treatment (.pdf)
Script (.pdf)
Click
for more tviStory
115-
NATPE
Global Pitch
Showcase
///
115-
2025 Sundance Film Festival Wrapps
Up
PARK CITY, Utah -- The
2025 Sundance Film Festival concluded its run with
the announcement of its Festival Favorite Award on
February 2, completing the festival's recognition
of outstanding achievements in independent cinema.
The festival, which presented 94 feature-length and
episodic works and 57 short films
--
selected from 15,775 submissions
--
wrapped up its celebrations in Park City, Salt Lake
City, and online.
"The past 11 days of the Festival have been a
meaningful opportunity to connect as a community in
support of independent storytelling," said Amanda
Kelso, Acting CEO, Sundance Institute. "We look
forward to being reunited with audiences, artists,
industry, and press next January for another
edition of the Festival."
The Festival Favorite Award, determined by audience
votes, was presented to "Come See Me in the Good
Light" (U.S.A.), directed by Ryan White. The
documentary follows two poets facing an incurable
cancer diagnosis, exploring their unexpectedly
funny and poignant journey through love, life, and
mortality.
"Throughout the Festival we saw audiences moved by
Andrea Gibson's and Megan Falley's journeys in
"Come See Me in the Good Light." Festival goers
embraced the humor and heartbreak of this intimate
documentary directed by Ryan White, as it speaks to
art and love and reminds us what it means to be
alive as we face mortality," noted Kim Yutani,
Sundance Film Festival Director of
Programming.
Festival Favorite Runners-Up
The top five runners-up for the 2025 Festival
Favorite Award were:
1. "Deaf President Now!"
(U.S.A.)
2. "The Alabama Solution" (U.S.A.)
3. "The Ballad of Wallis Island" (U.K.)
4. "Andre is an Idiot" (U.S.A.)
5. "Prime Minister" (U.S.A.)
"Sundance was founded with
the belief that storytelling can bring us
together," reflected Amanda Kelso. "These works
spoke to our commitment to fostering empathy,
understanding, and a more vibrant, inclusive
society through storytelling, and it was an honor
to celebrate them together as a
community."
The festival's highest honors, the Grand Jury
Prizes, were awarded to:
U.S. Dramatic Competition: "Atropia" (Director and
Screenwriter: Hailey Gates)
U.S. Documentary
Competition: "Seeds" (Director and Producer:
Brittany Shyne)
World Cinema Dramatic
Competition: "Sabar Bonda (Cactus Pears)" (Director
and Screenwriter: Rohan Parashuram Kanawade)
World Cinema Documentary
Competition: "Cutting Through Rocks" (Directors and
Producers: Sara Khaki, Mohammadreza
Eyni)
Multiple Award Winners
Three films received double honors
at the festival:
"DJ Ahmet" won the Audience Award for World Cinema
Dramatic Competition and a World Cinema Dramatic
Special Jury Award for Creative Vision
"Twinless" secured the Audience Award for U.S.
Dramatic Competition and a U.S. Dramatic Special
Jury Award for Acting (Dylan O'Brien)
"André is an Idiot" claimed the Audience
Award for U.S. Documentary Competition and the
Jonathan Oppenheim Editing Award.
The Sundance Institute also
announced the dates for the 2026 Sundance Film
Festival, which will take place in person in Park
City and Salt Lake City, Utah, from January
22&endash;February 1, 2026.
Click
for more tviStory
115-
2025
Sundance Film Festival
Awards
///
115-
The
Storytelling We Need - Sundance Filmfestival Jan.
23 - Feb 2,
2025
Each year,
the
Sundance
Film Festival team
watches and discusses thousands of submissions from
around the world to shape the annual program for
the upcoming Festival. It's an opportunity to
reflect on this moment in independent film, marvel
at the immense volume of work produced by some of
the world's most talented storytellers, and
discover a group of artists as we look to the
future.
Having just surveyed the
state of filmmaking worldwide, we can confidently
say that, despite a brutal climate for film
financing and upheaval in the distribution
landscape, fiercely independent artists continue to
create boldly and with originality. The
determination, resilience, and boundless creativity
of these filmmakers underscores the urgency of
Sundance Institute's core mission: to support
artists and ensure that storytellers everywhere can
sustain themselves through their work, and connect
them with audiences.
Through the Sundance Labs,
artist granting, fellowships, intensives, and the
Festival, the Sundance Institute provided support
to a diverse community of nearly 1,500 artists. Of
those who voluntarily shared their backgrounds, 64
percent are artists of color, 55 percent are women,
41 percent identify as LGBTQIA, 6 percent as
transgender, and 8 percent have a disability. The
voices and perspectives of these artists have never
been more essential.
Click
for more tviStory
115- The Storytelling at Sundance Film
Festival
///
Emilia
Pérez raked in the most Oscar nominations,
followed by The Brutalist and
Wicked.
Earl
Gibson III; Joe Maher; Steve Granitz; Andrw H.
Walker; Neil Mockford; Amy Sussman/Getty
Images
The announcement of the 2025
Academy Awards nominees, originally set for Friday,
Jan. 17, was delayed twice amid the Los Angeles
wildfires, which have left at least 28 people dead
with more than 14,000 structures destroyed and
nearly 40,000 acres burned.
As the fires raged across
Los Angeles on Jan. 8, the day voting for this
year's nominees opened, the Film Academy extended
the voting window through Jan. 14 with a plan to
announce this year's nominees on Jan. 19. But as
the devastation caused by the fires continued to
unfold the following week, on Jan. 13, the Academy
again extended the nominations voting window until
Jan. 17 and set Jan. 23 as the date for this year's
announcement.
The Academy has also donated
$1 million to the Motion Picture & Television
Fund's wildfire relief efforts, including $250,000
that it would've spent on the Oscar nominees
luncheon on Feb. 10, which has been canceled. The
Academy plans to move forward with this year's
Oscars but revealed that the ceremony will also
"honor Los Angeles."
Full
List of Oscar
Noominations
|
|
|
96th
Academy Awards
|
®
|
97th
Academy
|
|
|
Best picture
Anora
The Brutalist
A Complete Unknown
Conclave
Dune: Part Two
Emilia Pérez
I'm Still Here
Nickel Boys
The Substance
Wicked
Performance by an
actor in a leading role
Adrien Brody, The Brutalist
Timothée Chalamet, A Complete
Unknown
Colman Domingo, Sing Sing
Ralph Fiennes, Conclave
Sebastian Stan, The Apprentice
Performance by an
actor in a supporting role
Yura Borisov, Anora
Kieran Culkin, A Real Pain
Edward Norton, A Complete Unknown
Guy Pearce, The Brutalist
Jeremy Strong, The Apprentice
Performance by an
actress in a leading role
Cynthia Erivo, Wicked
Karla Sofía Gascón, Emilia
Pérez
Mikey Madison, Anora
Demi Moore, The Substance
Fernanda Torres, I'm Still Here
Performance by an
actress in a supporting role
Monica Barbaro, A Complete Unknown
Ariana Grande, Wicked
Felicity Jones, The Brutalist
Isabella Rossellini, Conclave
Zoe Saldaña, Emilia
Pérez
Sponsor Message
Best animated
feature film
Flow
Inside Out 2
Memoir of a Snail
Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most
Fowl
The Wild Robot
Best animated short film
Beautiful Men
In the Shadow of the Cypress
Magic Candies
Yuck!
Achievement in
cinematography
The Brutalist
Dune: Part Two
Emilia Pérez
Maria
Nosferatu
Achievement in
costume design
A Complete Unknown
Conclave
Gladiator II
Nosferatu
Wicked
Achievement in
directing
Anora, Sean Baker
The Brutalist, Brady Corbet
A Complete Unknown, James Mangold
Emilia Pérez, Jacques Audiard
The Substance, Coralie FargeatWicked,
Myron Kerstein
Best documentary
feature film
Black Box Diaries
No Other Land
Porcelain War
Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat
Sugarcane
|
|
Best documentary
short film
Death by Numbers
I Am Ready, Warden
Incident
Instruments of a Beating Heart
The Only Girl in the Orchestra
Achievement in film
editing
Anora, Sean Baker
The Brutalist, David Jancso
Conclave, Nick Emerson
Emilia Pérez, Juliette
Welfling
Best international
feature film
I'm Still Here, Brazil
The Girl with the Needle, Denmark
Emilia Pérez, France
The Seed of the Sacred Fig, Germany
Flow, Latvia
Achievement in
makeup and hairstyling
A Different Man, Mike Marino, David
Presto and Crystal Jurado
Emilia Pérez, Julia Floch Carbonel,
Emmanuel Janvier and Jean-Christophe
Spadaccini
Nosferatu, David White, Traci Loader and
Suzanne Stokes-Munton
The Substance, Pierre-Olivier Persin,
Stéphanie Guillon and Marilyne
Scarselli
Wicked, Frances Hannon, Laura Blount and
Sarah Nuth
Original Score
The Brutalist, Daniel Blumberg
Conclave, Volker Bertelmann
Emilia Pérez, Clément Ducol
and Camille
Wicked, John Powell and Stephen
Schwartz
The Wild Robot, Kris Bowers
Original Song
"El Mal" from Emilia Pérez
"The Journey" from The Six Triple
Eight
"Like A Bird" from Sing Sing
"Mi Camino" from Emilia Pérez
"Never Too Late" from Elton John: Never
Too Late
Achievement in
production design
The Brutalist
Conclave
Dune: Part Two
Nosferatu
Wicked
Best live action
short film
A Lien
Anuja
I'm Not a Robot
The Last Ranger
The Man Who Could Not Remain
Silent
Achievement in
sound
A Complete Unknown
Dune: Part Two
Emilia Pérez
Wicked
The Wild Robot
Achievement in
visual effects
Alien: Romulus
Better Man
Dune: Part Two
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes
Wicked
Writing (Adapted
Screenplay)
A Complete Unknown, Screenplay by
James Mangold
and Jay Cocks
|
|
The 2025 Oscar nominations
proved the clout of grownup talents, and the
grownup audience, in the art and business of
film.
Nine out of 20 nominations
in the acting categories went to actors over 50
(compared to eight last year), and Demi Moore, 62,
Adrien Brody, 51, Edward Norton, 55, Isabella
Rossellini, 72, Ralph Fiennes, 62, Colman Domingo,
55, and Fernanda Torres, 59, show it's never too
late to be at the top of your career. Several are
receiving their first Oscar nominations at grownup
ages, a salubrious trend in recent years, as Jamie
Lee Curtis, 66, Brendan Fraser, 56, and Michelle
Yeoh, 62, have shown.
Click
for more tviStory
115-
Emilia
Pérez raked in the most Oscar nominations,
followed by The Brutalist and
Wicked.
Oscars.org
///
SAG-AFTRA
Donates $1 Million to SAG-AFTRA Foundation for Fire
Relief
LOS ANGELES - (Jan. 11,
2025) -- SAG-AFTRA announced that it is making a $1
million donation to the SAG-AFTRA Foundation to
assist members experiencing hardship caused by the
Los Angeles fires.
Since the fires broke out,
the union has temporarily closed its office in Los
Angeles for safety's sake, with staff working to
support members remotely, and it has kept members
informed and connected to emergency
resources.
"I
want to thank and recognize our broadcast
journalist members who are out every day amid
flames, smoke and fiery embers battling to bring
this important news to the world. The destruction
caused by these blazes, the loss of life and homes,
has been gut-wrenching to experience, and of course
our hearts go out to all affected. But we knew we
could do more; we hope this pledge helps relieve
suffering and assists those impacted in putting
their lives back together after this calamity. I
have personally been affected by the fires and I
feel deeply for others who are experiencing this
tragedy. These are particularly stressful times.
Stress compromises the immune system so we must be
mindful of taking measures to support our health,"
said SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher.
"The
very essence of a labor union is solidarity: that
we all work to elevate each other during times of
stability, and we're there for each other in times
of crisis. The devastation is hard to fathom, even
for those of us living in it. We're so fortunate to
have the SAG-AFTRA Foundation as a resource and a
place our members can turn to in times of need. If
you have been fortunate to have been spared direct
impact from this disaster, please help out in any
way you can, whether by volunteer service, helping
others in need, or donating to relief funds like
the SAG-AFTRA Foundation's Disaster Relief Fund,"
said SAG-AFTRA National Executive Director &
Chief Negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland.
SAG-AFTRA
and the SAG-AFTRA Foundation have provided
resources and support to members whenever and
wherever in the nation disaster has struck, from
the flooding in New York due to Superstorm Sandy to
the hurricanes in the Southeast and
beyond.
Click
for more tviStory
101- SAG-AFTRA Donates $1 Million to the SAG-AFTRA
Foundation for Fire
Relief
///
115-
Join NFMLA for Counter-Ageism Cinema on Jan 17th
&
18th
NewFilmmakers Los
Angeles (NFMLA) hosts its January Monthly Film
Festival, spotlighting fighting ageism with
InFocus: Counter-Ageism program, along with a
selection of short film highlights from its ongoing
program, as well as Xaque Gruber's debut feature
Sallywood.
NFMLA Workshop | No Budget
Production 101 with Bri Castellini
Friday, January 17, 2025 , 1:00
PM - 2:30 PM PT Join for a virtual
workshop/conversation with educator and filmmaker
Bri Castellini about filmmaking on a budget! Being
thrifty doesn't mean losing out on your vision.
This course is all about being smart about where to
deploy your budget, how to pick your battles, and
ways to stretch your funding creatively so you're
led by inspiration rather than by fear. Included: a
film budgeting template, a shot listing template,
and tons of related free readings and podcasts for
further learning.
For more information about this workshop and other
events, please visit New
Film MakersLA.com
///

Emilia Pérez and Shögun win big at
Golden Globe Awards -
See
Complete Winners' List
|
BEST MOTION PICTURE
-- DRAMA
THE BRUTALIST (A24) -
WINNER
BEST MOTION PICTURE
-- ANIMATED
FLOW (Sideshow / Janus Films) -
WINNER
BEST MOTION PICTURE
-- NON-ENGLISH LANGUAGE
EMILIA PÉREZ (Netflix) - FRANCE
- WINNER
|
|
BEST PERFORMANCE BY
A FEMALE ACTOR IN A TELEVISION SERIES --
MUSICAL OR COMEDY
JEAN SMART (HACKS) -
WINNER
BEST PERFORMANCE BY
A MALE ACTOR IN A TELEVISION SERIES --
MUSICAL OR COMEDY
JEREMY ALLEN WHITE (THE BEAR) -
WINNER
|
Click
for More
Complete
Winners' List
Click
for More
Golden
Globe
///
115-
Hollywood Party of the Year at the Golden Globe
Awards
The 82nd annual Golden
Globes® will take place on Sunday, January 5,
2025, at The Beverly Hilton Hotel. The Golden
Globes®, often referred to as "Hollywood's
Party of the Year®," is the largest awards show
in the world to celebrate the best of both film and
television. Stars from across Hollywood will
converge in Los Angeles, where the best in movies
and television will be honored for their work.
The Annual Golden Globes
will air live on Sunday, Jan. 5, at 5 p.m. PT/8
p.m. ET on CBS, streaming live on Paramount+
.
Selena Gomez has earned two
Golden Globe nominations this year for her work in
the film "Emilia Pérez" and her starring
role in the ongoing comedy series "Only Murders in
the Building."
Emilia Pérez and The
Bear (again) are set to be the stars of the
evening. Wicked has indeed won the hearts of
Hollywood, The Substance earned a nomination as...
a comedy. And Selena Gomez is nominated on both the
film and TV side, for her work in Emilia
Pérez and Only Murders in the Building,
respectively.
The Bear has once again
received five nominations, dominating the TV
category. Notable snubs this year include Mike
Faist and Josh O'Connor being left behind in the
Challengers wave (Zendaya and the film both
received nominations), as well as Saoirse Ronan for
her work in both Blitz and The Outrun -- two awards
season contenders.
The Golden Globes divide
Best Picture nominees into four categories: Drama,
Comedy or Musical, Animated and Non-English
Language. Plus, last year's new category, Cinematic
and Box Office Achievement, returns for
2025.
The 2025 Golden Globe Cinematic
and Box Office Achievement nominees are:
Alien:
Romulus - Stream on Hulu.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice - Stream on
Disney+
Deadpool & Wolverine - Stream on
Disney+
Dune: Part Two - Stream on Max.
Gladiator II - See it in theaters.
Inside Out 2 - Stream on Disney+
Twisters - Stream it on Peacock.
Wicked - See it in theaters
Click
for more tviStory
115-
Hollywood
Party of the Year at the Golden Globe
Awards
Click for more
Golden
Globes
///
Former
President Jimmy Carter, died at age
100
ATLANTA, Dec. 29,
2024 -- James Earl Carter Jr.
(October 1, 1924 -- December 29, 2024) was an
American politician and humanitarian who served as
the 39th president of the United States. Carter
will repose in state at the Carter Presidential
Center in Atlanta until Jan. 7 for mourners to pay
their respects. His state funeral will be held on
National Day of Mourning, January 9, 2025 at
Washington National Cathedral.
Rosalyn Carter precedet him in death on November
19, 2023.
///
113-
'CONFESSIONS OF A CEO,' FEATURING RFK JR., HITS
THEATERS IN JANUARY
Deepak Chopra, Blue Zones' Dan Buettner, Tom Gegax
Sound Populist
Alarm
Los Angeles, Jan. 1,12, 2025
-- Climate change, growing wealth inequality, and a
tainted food system are pushing humanity to the
brink. The new documentary "Confessions of a CEO:
My Life in an Out-of-Balance World" challenges
corporate America to take responsibility for its
role -- and its power to reform.
Featuring Robert F. Kennedy
Jr., Deepak Chopra, and Blue Zones founder Dan
Buettner, the film is a bare-knuckled corporate
critique told through the powerful true story of
Tom Gegax, a once-toxic CEO who evolves from a
profits-over-people, philandering executive going
through cancer, divorce, and near-bankruptcy to a
populist messenger.
Distributed by Virgil Films
("I Am Chris Farley"), "Confessions of a CEO" will
premiere in select theaters this January, followed
by a digital release on February 11 on platforms
including Amazon Prime Video and Apple TV.
"Corporations are driven by
high profits, annual revenues, and shareholder
value," says Kennedy, a nominee to run the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, in the
film's trailer. "They don't care about the land,
the water, the people, the richness of life. You
shouldn't be able to make money by poisoning public
waterways and by poisoning the air."
The documentary explores the
profoundly good and bad impacts of corporate
America &emdash; a source of jobs and innovation as
well as fountains of greed, corruption, and
pollution. Drawing from his life, Gegax highlights
the dangerous shift to prioritizing profits over
people, exemplified by the stark rise in the
CEO-to-average worker pay disparity.
"For too long I was Exhibit
A for the toxic corporate greed that's suffocating
Americans' quality of life and damaging the health
of our planet," Gegax says. "Then I flipped the
script to 'people over profits,' and I'm imploring
corporate America to do the same."
Virgil Films, known for
"Super Size Me," "Forks Over Knives," and
"Restrepo," will handle all aspects of the film's
release, including theatrical, video-on-demand,
streaming platforms, and television
licensing.
About "Confessions of a CEO"
Tom Gegax is an entrepreneur and cofounder of Tires
Plus Stores, where his strategic vision expanded
the company from three Minneapolis gas stations to
150 locations and one of the largest independent
tire retailers in America. Gegax's innovative
customer service and operational efficiency drove
the success of the company, now owned by
Bridgestone. His life took a transformative turn
when he faced up to philandering, cancer, divorce,
and near-bankruptcy. The journey led Gegax to
become a populist messenger and mentor to major
American influencers. His "Confessions of a CEO"
advocates for corporate reform and conscientious
capitalism. See the trailer for "Confessions of a
CEO."
///

115-
Keynotes at CES
2025
CES is the most powerful
tech event in the world &endash; the proving ground
for breakthrough technologies and global
innovators. Owned and produced by the Consumer
Technology Association (CTA)®, CES features
every aspect of the tech sector. CES 2025 takes
place Jan. 7-10, 2025, in Las Vegas.
Linda Yaccarino, CEO of X
Corp, to Keynote CES 2025
The Consumer Technology Association (CTA)®
welcomes Linda Yaccarino, CEO, X Corp, the world's
largest online news and social networking site, as
a keynote speaker at CES® 2025. Yaccarino will
join Emmy Award-winning investigative journalist
Catherine Herridge in a keynote conversation on
Tuesday, January 7, at 1:30 PM in the Palazzo
Ballroom at the Venetian.
A transformative leader and visionary, Yaccarino is
making waves as CEO of X Corp, where she is at the
forefront of defining the future of digital
communication. Under her leadership, X evolved into
a dynamic platform fostering global conversations
and innovative solutions for brands, creators, and
communities alike.
"X is the global newsroom in your pocket. It's the
only real place for free dialogue between
everyone&endash;the public and the powerful," said
Yaccarino. "CES is the perfect place to share how
we're completely reshaping the entire
ecosystem."
"Linda's career exemplifies the spirit of CES--
innovation, resilience, and vision," said Gary
Shapiro, CEO, CTA. "Her leadership and
contributions to the media and tech world makes her
uniquely suited to inspire and challenge our
audience to think boldly about the future."
"Linda is a trailblazer and her keynote at CES 2025
will undoubtedly spark meaningful conversations
about the evolving landscape of content creation,
social platforms, and how technology empowers
creators and communities to thrive," said Kinsey
Fabrizio, President, CTA.
The keynote will be streamed on Live.CES.Tech, X,
Facebook, YouTube, and LinkedIn.
Click
for more tviStory
115-
Keynotes at CES
2025
Click
for more CES
Tech
///
107- About
author, Adria Manary
Adams
Adria
Manary Adams is the author of several books
including the bestseller, MOMMY MAGIC. Most
importantly, she is mom to four amazing children
and Mimi to six grandsons.
She is presently working on
a book about her Uncle Elwin, about whom she heard
stories throughout her childhood and wrote about in
college.
The working title is
Never Stand Still, which she feels
incorporates her uncle's genius mind as well as his
ability to always move forward, especially after
the many career disappointments that he
experienced.
Adria now lives in sunny San
Diego, with her husband Gene and their little fur
babies, who are also her inspiration in writing a
new children's book entitled, Bubbly Bliss and
Bouncing Banjo Find a Home.
THEY
TOLD HIM TO BE
QUIET
- by Adria Manary Adams
When the government tells you to be
quiet, alarm signals should go off in your brain.
Only a chosen few know the full extent of its
power, and my uncle, Elwin Laurence Peterson,
regrettably found out the hard way.
During World War II, he worked
at the Washington D.C. Navy Yard in the optics and
machine shop. While there, he received several
awards for his contributions to the war effort. One
concern that he became acutely aware of, was the
difficulty that all facets of the military were
experiencing in communications. Methods of
transmitting vital information to and from ships,
submarines, airplanes and troops on the ground had
become increasingly problematic since the Germans
were intercepting and/or scrambling our signals. In
exploring the situation, Elwin realized that
varying the frequencies on which the messages were
sent would disable the enemy from capturing our
communications. Since frequency variation was a
prominent component of a television system that he
had conceived of in the late 1920's, and patented
in 1928, he suggested that the government use this
significant piece of his "Transmitting System and
Apparatus," patent number 1,747,791.
He
absolutely believed that this method would provide
clear, secured and unencumbered communication in
military operations, thus saving many American
soldiers.
After explaining how FM would
benefit the Navy to the manager of his department,
his
suggestion made its way up the ranks. In
handwritten notes written by my uncle in 1945, he
states:
"I was interviewed several times
by various officers and engineers. At one of these
interviews, a man who worked for Edwin Armstrong
was in attendance. He had been called in because of
his claim that Armstrong (now a Major in the Signal
Corps), had been working on variations of
wavelengths since 1931. At that point I informed
the officers that I was well aware of his efforts,
because I had demonstrated my version to Mr.
Armstrong back in
Elwin Laurence Peterson
1929 and again in 1930, when
Bell Telephone and the Postal Telegraph Company had
requested his opinion of my invention."
What Mr. Peterson did not
mention in this meeting was that after seeing these
demonstrations, Edwin Armstrong later used what he
saw to further his efforts in transmission
technology, which eventually helped him to become
who many refer to as the "Father of Radio". If
Armstrong was to be given this title, then Elwin
Peterson should have been credited for being the
"Grandfather of Radio". (The Armstrong patent was
filed in 1933. Peterson's patent was submitted in
1928, five years earlier, and finalized in 1930,
three years before Mr. Armstrong's.)
Click
for more tviStory
110--
Elwin Laurence Peterson
-
THEY TOLD HIM TO BE
QUIET
///
114-
Richard Parsons, Former Warner Bros Chairman, Dies
at 76
NEW YORK - (Decembr 26,
2024) -- Richard Parsons, who presided over Time
Warner as CEO from 2002-2007 as the media
conglomerate was recovering from the epic fail of
the AOL merger and who later became interim
chairman of CBS to right its ship following the
resignation of Leslie Moonves, died Thursday in
Manhattan after a long illness. He was 76.
Parsons' longtime friend
Ronald S. Lauder, a member with Parsons of the
Estée Lauder board, told the New York Times
today that Parsons died of bone cancer.
Parsons, an astute but soft
spoken and genial presence, was born in 1948 and
grew up in Ozone Park, Queens, the son of an
electrical technician and a homemaker and one of
five children. He attended the University of Hawaii
and got his law degree at Union University Albany
School of Law.
P One of nation's most
powerful Black executives, he also served in both
state and federal politics under New York Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller, and presidents Gerald R. Ford,
George W. Bush and Barack Obama. In 2008, Parsons
was a member of the then president-elect Obama's
Economic Transition Team and later served as a
member of Obama's Council on Jobs and
Competitiveness.
Parsons
took the helm of the company then called AOL Time
Warner in 2002, replacing the late Gerald Levin as
CEO. Faced with economic and culture-clash fallout
from what is widely considered one of the worst
mergers in corporate history, he removed the AOL
from the company's name and, dramatically, from
atop its former Columbus Circle headquarters the
Time Warner Center in 2003.
Parson had joined Time
Warner as president in 1995 and voted for the
merger, inked by Levin just as the dotcom boom
crested and broadband was set to displace dial-up
services like AOL. He faced massive losses and
furious investors and getting the business back on
track included fending off corporate raider Carl
Icahn, who was pushing for the company to split up,
among other measures. Parsons reached an agreement
with the activist investor, known for his recent
unsuccessful shots to scale the board of Disney. In
2009, Time Warner spun out AOL as a separately
stand-alone company.
Parsons handed the Time
Warner reins to then-COO Jeff Bewkes, who led the
pared down company, which also sold its stories
music and magazine divisions, through to its
subsequent sale to AT&T.
After Time Warner, Parsons
was named chairman of Citigroup in the aftermath of
the 2008 financial crisis, and then became interim
CEO of the Los Angeles Clippers in 2014 amid the
scandal around then-owner Donald Sterling forced
Sterling to resign and sell the team.
Click
for more tviStory
114-
Richard
Parsons, Former Warner Bros Chairman, Dies at
76
///
Screenings
& Conversations with Creative Minds and Stars
at PayleyFestLA
2025
Past
Oscar
No-Shows
Amazon
MGM Studios to take creative control of the 007
James Bond
franchise
"A
Child in Berlin" during the Fall of
Germany
List
of Oscar
Winners
Amazon
MGM Studios to take creative control of the 007
James Bond
franchise
World
Premiere of "The Camp" an Opera in English in Two
Acts
NATPE
Global spanning weeks Feb 3 -
7
Emilia
Pérez raked in the most Oscar nominations,
followed by The Brutalist and
Wicked
The
Storytelling We Need - Sundance Filmfestival Jan.
23 - Feb
2
101-SAG-AFTRA
Donates $1 Million to SAG-AFTRA Foundation for Fire
Relief
John
Dickerson and Maurice DuBois to anchor CBS Evening
News
after
Nora O'Donnell's farewell Jan.
24
Join
NFMLA for Counter-Ageism Cinema on Jan 17th &
18th
Keynotes
at CES 2025, Jan. 7 -
10
Emilia
Pérez and Shögun win big at 2025 Golden
Globe
Awards
Former
President James Carter, died at
100
82nd
Golden Globe will honor the best in film &
television
'Confessions
of a CEO,' Featuring RFK
JR.
Ohio
State will face Oregon at the Rose Bowl
game
Laurence
Peterson,
THEY TOLD HIM TO BE
QUIET
Richard
Parsons, Former Warner Bros Chairman, Dies at
76
WIRELESS
LEGACY
WarnerBros
NBStory.htm
Proclamation
by Wallace G.
Wilkinson,
former Governor of
Kentucky
1992
proclaimed Nathan Beverly Stubblefield year and
Murray
Kentucky, Birthplace of
Radio
Nathan
B. Stubblefield's patented the wireless telephone
in
1908
May
will mark the 115th Anniversary of
the
Wireless Telephone
Patent
Nathan
B. Stubblefield, the Man History
Overheard
Who
are the SMART Inventors of Radio
WiTel?
Scott
Bryan Stubblefield great-grand son of
inventor,
Nathan B. Stubblefield died Sept. 18,
2022
Nathan
Stubblefield Speaks -
YouTube
102- Proof
of Connection 1902 when voice was introduced to
wireless transmission - Wi-Fi
1902
106- Proclamation by Wallace G. Wilkinson, former
Governor of
Kentucky
1992
proclaimed Nathan Beverly Stubblefield year and
Murray, Kentucky 'Birthplace of
radio'
STUBBLEFIELD-MAIN
Acknowledgments-02
Thanks-Gerry
ThanksGovWilkinson
PROCLAMATION
Acknowledgment-03
NBSwiTEL04
NBSwiTEL05GOV
NBSwiTEL06
Wireless
Telephone inventor Nathan
Stubblefield
Click Stubblefield Speaks - YouTube-
30Min
115th
Anniversary of the N.B. Stubblefield's Wireless
Telephone
Patent
1908
0512 - PATENT GRANTED: Stubblefield's U.S. Patent,
Number 887,357, All Purpose Wireless Telephone,
Filed April 5, 1907, Granted May 12, 1908. / Click
MORE STORY TO GO DIRECTLY TO U.S. Patent Office -
(Patent Expires May 12, 1925) CLICK ANY IMAGE TO
VIEW PATENT
Click
for More-
Nathan
be Stubblefield
Nathan
B. Stubblefield's Wireless Telephone
Patent
Nathan
B.
Stubblefield
Click
for more-
Ground
Battery
Trivia:
What other
event occurred in 1902, the year of Stubblefields's
public demonstration in 1902.
A: The founding of J.C.
Penney stores by James Cash.
///

102-
Nathan B. Stubblefield, the Man History
Overheard
By Harvey
Geller
In Life's current Bicentennial issue, radio
checks in, at #86 on the hot "100 Events That
Shaped America," 19 buttons behind Bell's
telephone. Erroneously, Life lists Guglielmo
Marcon's dots and dashes as the first wireless
broadcast, a fable echoed by the World Almanac and
Encyclopedia Britannica. It's a forgivable
mumpsimus, since the evidence offered on the
following pages has not, until now, appeared in any
national publication.
The birth of broadcasting is a bizarre soap opera
saga, a lacrymal legend of mystery, machination,
ephemeral enshrinement, decline, disillusionment
and disaster. It's denouncement dissolves six miles
north of Murray, Kentucky, in a two-room shanty
constructed of pine and cornstalks, where radio's
uncelebrated architect is discovered 48 hours after
his death, his records scattered, his equipment
destroyed, his brain partly eaten by rats. Even
local radio fails to mention his demise. He is
Nathan Beverly Stubblefield, the man history
over-heard and then overlooked.
Click
for Full Story
Published
in Warner Bros.
Circular
Click
for More tviStory
102-s90- Nathan B. Stubbblefield, the Man History
Overheard
Who
are the SMART Inventors of
Radio-WITEL
1890-2017 -
®©
1908
0512 - PATENT GRANTED: Stubblefield's U.S. Patent,
Number 887,357, All Purpose Wireless Telephone,
Filed April 5, 1907, Granted May 12, 1908. / Click
MORE STORY TO GO DIRECTLY TO U.S. Patent Office -
(Patent Expires May 12, 1925) CLICK ANY IMAGE TO
VIEW PATENT
SMART90
SMART90 stands for Stubblefield Nathan,
Marconi Guglielmo, Ambrose Fleming,
Reginald Fessenden, Tesla Nicola,
DeForest Lee, Armstrong Edwin Howard,
Alexanderson Ernst Fredrik Werner,
Farnsworth Philo,
SMART-DAAF
Boys,
Vol I, 'The Inventors of Radio &
Televison & The Life Style of Nathan B.
Stubblefield," by Troy Cory-Stubblefield and
Josie Cory, Library of Congress Number 93060451.
(ISBN) 1-883644-003, pgs.
580.
Copyright
© 1993
SMART-DAAF stands for
Stubblefield,
Marconi, Ambrose, Reginald
Fessenden, Tesla, DeForest,
Armstrong, Alexanderson,
Farnsworth
///
Click for
More
Smart-Daaf
Boys
Book
NBS100
After the Telecommunication Act of 1996 and the
prior establishment of the world wide
web by
Tim Berners-Lee, Television International
Magazine went online in the mid-90s as
TVIMAGAZINE.COM under the distribution arm of
SMART90.COM. (
CLICK
FOR MORE TVI
History)
SMART
- DAFF Boys

Stubblefield
Marconi
Ambrose
Fleming
Reginald
Fessenden
Tesla
DeForest
Armstrong
Alexanderson
Farnsworth
Smartdaafboys/
(The inventors of the
Signals and Frequencies that put the Pizzazz in the
Electromagnetic Radio
Wave)
///
101-Vine
Street Video Center
Troy
Cory
Show
Ambros
Seelos

Troy
Cory
Show-VINE
ST.
Troy
Cory
Show-CHINA
02QUARTER

Pasadena
Show Case House 1990- the Cory
Estate

115-
The 26th Shanghai TV Festival with focus on story's
quality &
energy
On the morning of August 5,
the meeting of judges for Magnolia Award of the
26th Shanghai TV Festival (STVF) was held,
including Chinese judges for Dramas, Documentaries
and Animations.
Click
for More tviStory
115-s90- 26th Shanghai
TVFestival
Click
for
more
STVF.
Troy
Cory Performs at the 1988 Shanghai TV Festival
(STVF)
Troy
Cory- Shanghai TV Festival concert
program
///
101-
Troy Cory, First American to perform on Stage in
China,
PRC
101-
Cory's Road to
China;
Troy Cory was among the first international
entertainers and the first American entertainer to
perform in the People's Republic of China,
beginning in 1988. In itself a notable
culture-historical feat, in view of China's closed
door policies of the late 70s and well into the
80s. The PRC's administrative climate in comparison
is much less restrictive now and China's open door
policy enables many entertainers to introduce
themselves to the populace Chinese
audiences.
Click
for
MoreChina
More
TroyCory
TroyCoryShow
Shanghai
TV Festival
Troy Cory & The Brook
Sisters


Click
for "Goodtimes"
Bejing,
China
^
+
101-
Cory Meets Jiang Zemin, former President
PRC
Back in the 80s, as a goodwill
ambassador representing the U.S.A., Troy Cory and
his back-up dancers and singers, "The Brooke
Sisters," were the first entertainers from the
United States to appear in a full staged program in
the People's Republic of China during the Shanghai
TV Festival, and televised on China's National
Television (CCTV), viewed by over 300 million
people.
It was
there Cory met Jiang Zemin, then mayor of Shanghai,
and who later became the 5th President of the
People's Republic of
China.
The '88
Shanghai Concert was the beginnings of Troy's
concert tours in China for the next two decades.
The concerts, just to name a few, included the
following cities: Shanghai, Beijing, Anshan,
Harbin, Fuzhou and and
Tsingtao (Qingdao)
///
114- Ron
Rice, Hawaiian Tropic founder in 2004 accompanied
the Troy Cory Show on a concert tour through China.
-
Rice
died May 19, 2022 at the age of 81 in Daytona
Beach,
Florida
He grew up in the mountains of North Carolina, and
fell in love with the beaches of Florida on a
childhood visit. He made his home in Daytona Beach,
where he worked as a high school chemistry teacher
and part-time lifeguard.
It was at his part-time job that Rice was inspired
by seeing people all over the beach using
Coppertone suntan lotion. He became determined to
create a unique competitor, using his chemistry
knowledge to experiment with a suntan lotion
formula, scented with coconut and fruit.
He famously mixed his first formula in a garbage
can, bottling it at home in his garage with a $500
loan from his father to launch his business. He
named it Hawaiian Tropic to evoke an exotic beach
locale.
His experiment was a hit making him a
multi-millionaire, with his Hawaiian Tropic suncare
brand creating sales of $110 million per year.
Ricewith his Hawaiian Tropic brand became known for
sponsoring beauty pageants and NASCAR racecars.
In 2004 he accompanied Troy Cory to a concert tour
through China.
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