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Will Smith channels his post-slap introspection into music on ‘Based on a True Story'

Will Smith channels his post-slap introspection into music on ‘Based on a True Story'

Boston Globe24-03-2025
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'It really is the result of my initial self-examination,' he said. 'Every song is about some part of myself that I discovered or wanted to explore, something I wanted to share. It's the most full musical offering that I've ever created.'
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Smith's new offering features guest appearances from Big Sean, Teyana Taylor, DJ Jazzy Jeff, his son Jaden Smith, Jac Ross and Kanye West's Sunday Service Choir. His album weaves in gospel melodies and messages, but he doesn't call it a full-blown gospel project, despite the success of 'You Can Make It,' which soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Gospel Airplay chart.
Still, Smith let his renewed faith take the lead, steering his creative direction. He plans to release three albums this year, shaping each project into what he calls seasons.
The first season, Rave in the Wasteland, plays out across the 14 tracks of 'Based on True Story' and represents his willingness to learn from life's lessons.
'I've come to some really beautiful answers for myself,' Smith said. 'My perception of God and reality.'
Embracing adversity to fuel creativity
Though Smith, 56, is still a bankable global star, rebuilding trust and momentum has been an uphill battle. He's grappled with harsh realities while trying to move past the backlash from slapping Chris Rock at the Oscars in 2022 and his 10-year ban from the ceremony.
Several entertainers — including Zoë Kravitz, Wanda Sykes and Rob Reiner — criticized Smith's actions. Jim Carrey was particularly vocal, stating that Smith had been " living beyond the bandwidth " and cracked under the pressure.
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When asked about Carrey's 'bandwidth' remark, Smith agreed but reiterated that he needed to step back to gain a deeper understanding of himself and move beyond his own limitations.
'There's a small self that — the small concept of myself - can get to the end of his bandwidth," he said. "And then, if I back up, there's like an infinite space, where my bandwidth is the bandwidth of life itself. It's like trying to not get stuck in having to be only a narrow band of things, to give myself permission to be wider in the truth of who and what I actually am.'
Smith's road to redemption grew tougher when Rock's comedy special reignited the controversy and his wife Jada Pinkett Smith's memoir 'Worthy' put their marriage under fresh scrutiny, sparking headlines and endless social media memes.
Smith said the adversity not only tested him but fueled his creativity.
'There's a certain psychological and emotional fortitude that you cultivate from, leaning into the difficulty, not trying to run away,' said Smith, who added he sought to build 'spiritual confidence' inspired by the resilience of his late grandmother and Nelson Mandela. Along the way, he found Tibetan Buddhist Pema Chödrön's teachings, embracing her mantra of 'leaning into the sharp points.'
These influences became pillars as Smith explored himself more deeply. The way his grandmother, Mandela and Chödrön approached life pushed him to channel his journey back into music.
'It is essentially learning how to accept and celebrate my challenges, recognizing that my challenges and my obstacles and my difficulties are actually divine curriculum,' said Smith, a four-time Grammy winner, who is known for rap classics such as " Summertime,' " Men in Black,' " Gettin' Jiggy Wit It " and " Parents Just Don't Understand.'
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Those tracks had a laid-back feel, but his new album strikes a more serious tone.
'It's what I've been given to learn the truth,' he continued. "There's a way that I'm learning to be with hard times when things arise. It's like 'Good, yes, thank you.' I'm willing to learn these lessons.'
Will Smith: 'Greatest creative run'
Believe it or not, Smith is set to embark on his first-ever headline tour this summer.
He is structuring the shows around different phases of his life and career: One featuring Smith and DJ Jazzy Jeff, another highlighting his film and TV journey and third act he calls the 'new phase, new energy,' where Jeff and others will return to the stage.
Smith will kick off his tour including festivals starting June 25 at the Mawazine festival in Morocco and expected to wrap up early September in Paris. He'll perform his past hits from " Miami " to 'Summertime' along with songs from the new album across England, France and Germany.
As Smith gears up for his tour, he also has several films in pre-production, including 'Fast and Loose,' 'Hancock 2,' 'I Am Legend 2' and 'Planes, Trains and Automobiles," according to IMDb. He's embracing this next phase of his career with renewed energy.
'This is about to be the greatest creative run of my entire career,' he said. 'The things that I'm about to do in music and cinema, and just artistic expression and exploration. It's like, I can't sleep at night. I'm so ready to go.'
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More Than Just A Playlist: These SoCal DJs Are Redefining the Celebration Experience
More Than Just A Playlist: These SoCal DJs Are Redefining the Celebration Experience

Los Angeles Times

time14 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

More Than Just A Playlist: These SoCal DJs Are Redefining the Celebration Experience

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Martin Cruz Smith, best-selling author of ‘Gorky Park,' dies at 82
Martin Cruz Smith, best-selling author of ‘Gorky Park,' dies at 82

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Martin Cruz Smith, best-selling author of ‘Gorky Park,' dies at 82

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up By the time he wrote 'Gorky Park' (1981), Mr. Smith had spent years toiling in obscurity, churning out paperback westerns, thrillers, and suspense novels, most of them written under pseudonyms like Jake Logan and Simon Quinn. There were times, he said, when he could 'only be accurately described as a schlockmeister.' How else to account for novels like 'North to Dakota,' which 'started off,' he remembered, 'with the hero strangling a chimpanzee'? Advertisement In those days, Mr. Smith usually took six to eight weeks to finish a novel. But when he slowed down, as he did with 'Gorky Park,' he wrote with a far more elegant and refined voice, crafting books that were admired for their psychological acuity, literary sophistication, and rich depiction of faraway cultures (Russia's, in particular) that few Americans knew firsthand. Advertisement The culmination of about eight years of work, 'Gorky Park' was acclaimed as a masterpiece of the crime genre, impressing critics with its shrewd and incorruptible protagonist - a Russian Sam Spade - and its carefully drawn portrait of Soviet-era Moscow. The book 'reminds you just how satisfying a smoothly turned thriller can be,' wrote New York Times reviewer Peter Andrews. In The Washington Post, former Moscow correspondent Peter Osnos declared that 'Gorky Park' 'is to ordinary suspense stories what John le Carré is to spy novels. The action is gritty, the plot complicated, the overriding quality is intelligence.' In broad strokes, the novel followed the contours of a classic work of crime fiction. A hard-bitten police investigator, Renko, is enlisted to solve a triple murder, with three mutilated bodies found in Moscow's Gorky Park. The victims were shot at close range and had their finger tips and faces sliced off, concealing their identities. The case took Renko around the world (including to Staten Island), even as Moscow remained the book's gravitational center. For many critics, Mr. Smith's signature achievement was the way he conjured Russian society on the page, writing about apparatchiks and propagandists, the merits of vodka (there are two kinds, 'good and very good'), and the relationship between ordinary street detectives and their counterparts in the KGB. Improbably, Mr. Smith spent no more than two weeks in the country in 1973. (Mr. Smith was denied a visa when he attempted to return.) He spoke no Russian and had no interpreter, although he took voluminous notes and made sketches of the sort of people and places he planned to write about. Advertisement 'More perhaps than any other recent work of American fiction,' Osnos wrote, 'this one conveys a feeling for the Soviet Union, its capital, its moods and its people. … I spent weeks hanging around Soviet courtrooms and in Smith's portrayals, I smell the musty aroma; I can see the faces; I can hear the voices.' The novel won the Gold Dagger, a top honor from the Crime Writers' Association of Britain, and was adapted into a 1983 Hollywood movie starring William Hurt as Renko. 'I thought it was dreadful,' Mr. Smith said of the film. In the Soviet Union, authorities condemned the novel in spite of its heroic Russian protagonist. The book was banned, although it found an audience thanks to dissidents and intellectuals who managed to distribute copies underground. 'Even scientist and academician Andrei Sakharov was a big fan,' said Alex Levin, a Russian émigré who helped Mr. Smith with his research, in a 2005 interview with the Guardian. Mr. Smith, a former journalist, said that he was driven by a desire to find out 'what is happening in the Soviet Union.' His subsequent Renko novels used history as a backdrop, following the detective through the Soviet Union's collapse (in 'Red Square'), the Chechen War ('Stalin's Ghost'), and Russia's invasion of Ukraine ('Hotel Ukraine'). Other installments invoked the Chernobyl nuclear disaster ('Wolves Eat Dogs') and took inspiration from the 2006 assassination of Anna Politkovskaya, a Russian investigative journalist ('Tatiana'). To research the books, Mr. Smith made return trips to Russia, traveled to Ukraine and Cuba, and spent three weeks aboard a Soviet factory ship in the Bering Sea. He was kicked off, he said, after the ship's political officer located his name in a Soviet list of 'foreign agents provocateurs to avoid.' Advertisement Mr. Smith went on to spend what he described as an 'endless' week on an American trawler, 'looking at the fog.' Still, he was happy to be conducting research in-person, later saying: 'There are things you experience that are so basic that people just don't tell you. It's a little bit like people telling you about going to sea - nobody bothers to tell you that it is salty. They always overlook the details.' The second of three children, Martin William Smith was born in Reading, Pa., on Nov. 3, 1942. He adopted his pseudonym, incorporating his maternal grandmother's name, Cruz, after realizing there were a half-dozen other 'Martin Smiths' trying to get published. His father, who came from a Scottish Episcopal family, was a jazz saxophonist and photographer. His mother, a descendant of Pueblo and Yaqui Indians, was a former beauty queen and a nightclub singer, once billed as 'Princess Louisa, the All-American Songbird.' The family moved frequently before settling outside Philadelphia, where his father found a job at the Budd Co., a metal fabricator. Mr. Smith, who was known as Bill, was educated at the nearby Germantown Academy. He was a poor student, in his telling, barely making it in to the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied sociology before failing a statistics paper and switching to creative writing. After graduating in 1964, he spent a few years in journalism, with jobs at the Associated Press, a local television station, and the Philadelphia Daily News. He also had a brief stint editing For Men Only, a New York-based magazine that taught him the importance of brevity. Advertisement 'We wasted no words getting someone through a door; we couldn't fool around with Henry Jamesian language,' he told the Guardian. By 1970, Mr. Smith had started writing novels, including a work of speculative fiction, 'The Indians Won,' that imagined the existence of a Native American state in the center of America. His other books included a series of thrillers about a Vatican hit man who, after dispatching his victims, dutifully goes to confession. After reading a Newsweek article about Soviet forensic scientists working to re-create the faces of murder victims, Mr. Smith began work on 'Gorky Park.' The book was pitched to his publisher as a team-up story, featuring mismatched Soviet and American detectives who work together on a case. But after his trip to Moscow, Mr. Smith decided to focus on the Russian and effectively dropped the American, to his publisher's dismay. He spent years working to buy back the rights to the book, which he later resold to Random House in a reported $1 million deal. In the interim, he was supported by the proceeds from his 1977 novel 'Nightwing,' a supernatural thriller involving vampire bats and Hopi Native American lore. Mr. Smith married one of his college classmates, Emily Arnold, in 1968. 'She was his first reader,' his children said in a statement, 'and his moral touchstone.' In addition to his wife, he leaves three children, Nell Branco, Luisa Smith, and Sam Smith; a brother; and five grandchildren. Mr. Smith was a two-time winner of the Hammett Prize for crime fiction, awarded for his Victorian-era thriller 'Rose' (1996), which he set in the mining country around Wigan, England, and 'Havana Bay' (1999), in which Renko tracks a killer in Cuba. In 2019, he received the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. Advertisement 'By looking at the underworld you see how mainstream society works,' he told the Guardian, discussing his love of crime fiction. 'You can travel through a social fracture and, for a limited amount of time, you can behave differently and ask whatever embarrassing questions you like.'

Ex-ESPN host nails network's obsession with Stephen A. Smith and Pat McAfee
Ex-ESPN host nails network's obsession with Stephen A. Smith and Pat McAfee

USA Today

timea day ago

  • USA Today

Ex-ESPN host nails network's obsession with Stephen A. Smith and Pat McAfee

Tune into your bog-standard sports broadcast on ESPN these days, and chances are that you'll probably hear one of the network's two preferred personalities (read: hot take loudmouths) booming through their microphone. I'm talking, of course, about Stephen A. Smith, who plays card games on his phone when he's supposed to be doing his ostensible job and who seemingly can't finish a sequence on television without berating someone, and about Pat McAfee, the guy who picks needless public fights with musicians and who reportedly amplifies dangerous false rumors about young people with seemingly zero accountability. It doesn't matter if you're watching a draft, a playoff game, or a (mostly) wholesome home run derby: ESPN will ensure you're likely hearing at least one of these men's voices, whether they fit into the setting or not. And for no good reason, really. Sports fans have grown frustrated with ESPN's insistence on shoving two of its biggest names down their throats. This, while failing to highlight some of its more thoughtful talent, like Mina Kimes, Andraya Carter, Don Van Natta Jr., and Seth Wickersham, to name a few. It's not as if the four-letter network is lacking in witty, insightful, and measured personalities. It's just that people like Smith and McAfee tend to lazily drown them out in the worst way. After McAfee, who is mostly known for talking football, weirdly appeared during the 2025 Home Run Derby, former ESPN host Trey Wingo chimed in on his old employer's insistence on using McAfee and Smith everywhere possible. To put it lightly, Wingo agreed with the criticisms and, after his past experiences on the job, lamented what the network has become recently: If this is how Wingo feels about ESPN's fixation with Smith and McAfee, it's probably safe to say he's not the only former or current ESPN employee who feels this way. Unfortunately, it seems like the network will continue pushing full steam ahead with Smith and McAfee yelling at us, er, I mean, analyzing whatever they've been assigned to.

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