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He Said He Wanted a Revolution. He Tried to Find It in New York

He Said He Wanted a Revolution. He Tried to Find It in New York

Yahoo12-04-2025
A presidential candidate who plays to white grievance is almost assassinated. A Black woman runs for president. A major deportation threat hangs in the air. People take to the streets to protest bombings and genocide. Sounds very much like modern times. Instead, it's the post-Woodstock world of the early Seventies seen in Kevin Macdonald's One to One: John & Yoko, a documentary that dares to take you into one of the most polarizing periods of one of pop culture's most controversial couples. It's the movie you didn't think you'd want that turns out to be one of the few recent Beatles products you'll need.
In the last few years, we've been awash in such Beatles content, some of it momentous, some marginal. One to One isn't as revelatory as Get Back, Peter Jackson's opus about the making of the Let It Be album, but it serves as something of a sequel. Taking in the years 1971 to 1973, it's a whooshing subway ride of a movie about the period when Lennon and Ono left England for downtown New York, leaving behind a lush estate for an apartment in the West Village. The legal dissolution of the Beatles had just begun, and Lennon is heard saying in one of many phone recordings in the film, 'I want to be me now.' And the New York of the dawn of the Seventies was where he wanted to blossom.
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Starting with a recreation of Lennon and Ono's cozy, somewhat messy apartment, which feels more like a home to sloppy college roommates than one of the most famous musicians in the world, One to One is a window into the chaotic intersection of rock stardom, radical-chic politics, and counterculture art. The couple had dabbled in that confluence while they were still in England, shaving off their hair in 1970 and donating the locks to an auction to benefit a house for disabled kids. But they plunged headfirst into it during their time in Greenwich Village. The artistic fruits of that period — the spotty and proudly abrasive Sometime in New York City album — were not very tasty, to extend the metaphor. But the circus that unfolded around them is more entertaining than some of the music they made during that era.
By way of interview recordings and taped phone calls (made by Lennon out of concern that he was being hassled by FBI, the immigration department, or both), One to One gives us a unique look into Lennon and Ono's post-Beatles world. They may now be living in a workaday apartment with a TV set placed just beyond the foot of their bed so they don't have to get up to watch it, but they're still celebrity rock stars with whims and grievances all their own and more than a sense of entitlement. In one call, Ono complains to a friend that Paul, George, and Ringo continue to avoid giving her any props whatsoever ('That's male chauvinism!'). Other calls are hilarious, like when pugnacious manager Allen Klein tries to talk Lennon out of singing a new song, 'Attica' (about the famous prison riot) at a benefit for activist John Sinclair, instead of one of his hits.
In what amounts to a recurring gag, Ono is heard calling associates and demanding they round up thousands of live flies for a gallery exhibit. Those workers, including Lennon's future girlfriend May Pang, are heard scrambling to find the insects in time for the opening. (Spoiler alert: They do, and we see the results.) An entire film of those taped conversations would be an amazing performance art exhibit on its own.
Yes, there's also music. One to One gets its title from a rare concert that Lennon, Ono, and their backup band Elephant's Memory played in New York in 1972. The show was a benefit for Willowbrook, a home for disabled children and adults that allowed its patients to wallow in filth and degradation. (That disgrace was exposed by a young Geraldo Rivera, then a swaggering TV news crusader before he went all Fox News on us; the transformation is still startling to absorb.) Most of the live footage has appeared before, on the posthumous Live in New York City album and home video in the Eighties. But rewatching Lennon's last full concert, and on a big screen, is another experience altogether. Backing Lennon, Elephant's Memory sound tougher and more cohesive than their legend has it. In close-ups of Lennon at the piano, singing 'Mother,' each line of the song about his deceased parent seems to hit him harder than the last. That song, and a snarling version of 'Come Together,' make you realize what a tragedy it was that Lennon, unlike his fellow Fabs, never did a full-on solo tour in his lifetime.
But One to One is as much about its moment in history as it is about John and Yoko. Imitating the barrage of TV news that Lennon and Ono would watch incessantly, Macdonald alternates the timeline of the couple's life with news footage (the shooting of Alabama governor and segregationist George Wallace during a presidential campaign stop, Democratic congresswoman Shirley Chisholm making history as the first Black woman to seek her party's presidential nomination) and frothy, often sexist commercials for cleaning products and cars. The dream of Sixties idealism is over: As Ono tells a friend in a call, 'Flower power didn't work, but so what — we're starting again.'
But it's a flawed reboot, for sure. We listen as Lennon is asked to participate in all manner of benefit concerts, and he and Ono start cavorting with a rebel-yell crowd that includes coarse troubadour David Peel and Yippie co-founder Jerry Rubin, whose love of the spotlight rivals that of any arena rocker. In 1972, Lennon and Rubin hatch an idea for a tour in which ticket sales would go toward bail for wrongly imprisoned political prisoners in this country. The idea is both charitable and a little harebrained, and we listen as they almost get Bob Dylan on board (by way of intermediaries, not Dylan himself). Ono calls notorious Dylanologist A.J. Weberman — seen digging through garbage cans in front of Dylan's Village apartment and finding a very uncool empty container of Clorox — to tell him to back off and stop freaking Dylan out. He agrees, but ultimately Dylan bails and the whole tour falls apart.
Not too long after that fiasco, Lennon and Ono head uptown to the Dakota building on Manhattan's Upper West Side. The move from sooty downtown to more stylishly sooty uptown now feels doubly symbolic. Even they, it seems, had had enough of playing revolutionary with diminishing returns. And given Richard Nixon's 1972 landslide, who can blame them?
The movie has a happy ending of sorts: Lennon overcomes an attempt by the Nixon team to deport him, and baby Sean soon comes into the couple's life. But a chilling hint of the future arrives when Lennon is talking with drummer Jim Keltner about safety concerns connected to that aborted bail-money tour: 'You mean people trying to kill us or something like that?' Lennon says. 'I'm not about to get myself shot.' We all know what came not long after, first for Lennon and now the country. But even in his wildest or most paranoid moments, Lennon probably never fully imagined that the America of 1972 would foreshadow the country more than 50 years later.
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Peacemaker season 2: everything we know so far about the HBO Max show's return (release date, trailer, cast, and plot)
Peacemaker season 2: everything we know so far about the HBO Max show's return (release date, trailer, cast, and plot)

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Peacemaker season 2: everything we know so far about the HBO Max show's return (release date, trailer, cast, and plot)

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Peacemaker season 2: key information - Releasing worldwide on August 21- Comprises eight episodes- First trailer unveiled in May- Main cast all set to return- Will also feature new and established characters in the rebooted DCU- Plot synopsis revealed- Addresses season 1's canonicity in the DCU- Third season hasn't been greenlit yet Get your dancing shoes on, because Peacemaker season 2 is just over a month away from being released. The John Cena-starring comic book TV series will launch worldwide on August 21, so you've still got time to learn more about the hit HBO Max show's return. Indeed, this ultimate guide to all things Peacemaker will walk you through its sophomore season. You'll find more information on its first trailer, confirmed cast, story specifics, and potential impact on James Gunn and Peter Safran's rebooted DC Universe (DCU). Full spoilers follow for Peacemaker season 1. Possible spoilers are also discussed for its follow-up. Peacemaker season 2's release date was confirmed in April and it'll launch on HBO Max in nations where the streaming service is available on Thursday, August 21. It should air on Sky and Now TV in the UK, too. This release date is in line with what Casey Bloys, HBO's TV chief, told journalists last November 2024, when he teased that the release window for Peacemaker season 2 would likely launch in August 2025. Peacemaker season 2's first trailer was released publicly in May and there's quite a bit it revealed about this season's plot. Namely, that the titular metahuman will be hunted down by Rick Flag Sr – remember, Peacemaker killed Rick Flag Jr in 2021's The Suicide Squad movie – and, by way of a larger and/or multiversal Quantum Unfolding Chamber, cross over in the DCU from the now-defunct DC Extended Universe (DCEU). The official trailer's arrival came six months after season 2's first footage was revealed by way of a 2025 HBO Max sizzle reel video. With DC Studios holding a panel for Peacemaker 2 at San Diego Comic-Con 2025, I fully expect a new trailer to drop around July 26/27, too. Full spoilers follow for Peacemaker season 1. Here's who you'll see in Peacemaker season 2: John Cena as Christopher Smith/Peacemaker Danielle Brooks as Leota Adebayo Freddie Stroma as Adrian Chase/Vigilante Jennifer Holland as Emilia Harcourt Steve Agee as John Economos Nhut Le as Judomaster Robert Patrick as Auggie Smith/White Dragon Viola Davis as Amanda Waller Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr. Tim Meadows as Langston Fleury Sol Rodriguez as Sasha Bordeaux Michael B. Rooker as Red St. Wild David Denman as TBC Isabela Merced as Kendra Saunders/Hawkgirl Nathan Fillion as Guy Gardner/Green Lantern Sean Gunn as Maxwell Lord Chukwudi Iwuji's Clemson Murn/Ik Nobe Llok, who died in season 1 episode 7, notwithstanding, the fist eight actors are all reprising their role from the series' debut season. That's in spite of Patrick's Auggie Smith also perishing last season, but he's likely returning as a ghost who, as the season 1 finale indicated, will continue to haunt his son. On the newcomer front, the headline news is Grillo – best known for playing Brock 'Crossbones' Rumlow in the Captain America movies – will appear as Flag Sr. Grillo voiced the character's animated form in season 1 of R-rated TV series Creature Commandos, which launched on HBO Max last December and was the DCU's first project. 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He redeemed himself somewhat by helping to put a stop to the Butterflies in season 1 – so much so that, as the DCU Chapter One show's first trailer reveals, he'll even try and join the DCU's Justice Gang, which we'll first see in 2025's Superman. It seems, though, that it'll take more than one world-saving mission to remove the 'anti' part of his anti-hero facade. "He's basically interviewing for membership in the group," Gunn said to EW, "But, they just mock him the entire time, so he's not taken seriously. He's still considered a punchline among all of the other metahumans, so he's starting the season in a bad place. As are all of our heroes, all of the 11th Street kids – well, everybody but Vigilante, who just always seems to be okay with everything." 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Lena Dunham responds to criticism of lack of diversity on ‘Girls'
Lena Dunham responds to criticism of lack of diversity on ‘Girls'

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Lena Dunham responds to criticism of lack of diversity on ‘Girls'

Lena Dunham knows 'Girls' has its flaws. The actress and producer, 39, addressed the lack of diversity on her hit HBO series in a new interview with The Independent. 'I think one of the profound issues around 'Girls' was that there was so little real estate for women in television [then] that if you had a show called 'Girls,' which is such a monolithic name, it sounds like it's describing all the girls in all the places,' Dunham explained. 6 Lena Dunham in 'Girls.' AP 'And so if it's not reflecting a multitude of experiences, I understand how that would be really disappointing to people,' she added. Dunham was the mastermind behind 'Girls,' which followed a group of four young women (played by Dunham, Allison Williams, Jemima Kirke and Zosia Mamet) who live in New York. The series, which starred mostly white actors, ran from 2012 to 2017. 6 Jemima Kirke, Zosia Mamet, Allison Williams, Lena Dunham in 'Girls.' Dunham told The Independent that she 'liked the conversation around 'Girls'' because it was important to have, and now she's used those lessons on her new Netflix series, 'Too Much,' that has a more diverse cast. 'The thing I have really come to believe is that one of the most important things is not just diversity in front of the camera, but it's diversity behind the camera,' Dunham said. 6 Lena Dunham attends 'Storytellers: Lena Dunham with Michelle Buteau' at the 2025 Tribeca Festival. Getty Images for Tribeca Festival 'As a producer, one of my goals is to bring a lot of different voices into a position where they can tell their story,' she shared. Dunham previously defended 'Girls' from its critics the year it came out. 6 Lena Dunham in 'Girls.' HBO 'I am a half-Jew, half-WASP, and I wrote two Jews and two WASPs,' she told NPR's 'Fresh Air' in 2012. 'Something I wanted to avoid was tokenism in casting.' She continued: 'If I had one of the four girls — if, for example, she was African American, I feel like, not that the experience of an African American girl and a white girl are drastically different, but there has to be specificity to that experience [that] I wasn't able to speak to.' 6 Allison Williams, Lena Dunham in 'Girls.' In a recent interview with The Times, Dunham spoke about how she took an 'international break' from acting after 'Girls' ended. 'I didn't really understand how to distinguish between what was and wasn't necessary for the public. I felt confused about how I was supposed to respond,' she recalled. 'I thought if I explain properly who I am, or give a glimpse of who I am, people are going to have a different perception of me, that we would be friends. But no one cares — and that's fine.' 6 Lena Dunham attends the 'Too Much' UK screening in London on June 23. Getty Images 'I always joke that I need a T-shirt that says, 'I survived New York media in 2012 and all I got was this lousy T-shirt,'' Dunham joked, adding, 'And all I got was this lousy PTSD.'

Dave Scott, hip-hop choreographer, is dead at 52
Dave Scott, hip-hop choreographer, is dead at 52

Boston Globe

time3 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Dave Scott, hip-hop choreographer, is dead at 52

Mr. Scott was anything but a professional. He learned much of what he knew by decoding the moves from Michael Jackson videos and early hip-hop films such as 'Breakin'' (1984). It didn't matter. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'I learned the choreography in two days,' he was quoted as saying in a 2013 article in The New York Post. 'I left school and finished the tour.' Advertisement So much for hoops; Mr. Scott's direction was set. He went on to work as a choreographer for more than 20 films and television shows. His breakout effort was 'You Got Served' (2004), which follows the dance-battle odyssey of a crew of Black teenagers from Los Angeles. Mr. Scott, shown in 2015, started his choreography career by adding moves while part of a group of touring hip-hop dancers. Paul A. Hebert/Paul A. Hebert/Invision/AP The climactic showdown at an MTV dance contest pits them against a posse of white dancers from nearby Orange County with regionally appropriate spiky surf-punk hairstyles. Playing herself as a judge, the hip-hop star Lil' Kim advises the Los Angeles crew, 'Get grimy and dirty -- straight street.' Advertisement That they do. Their performances recalled 'the muscular ballet style pioneered by Gene Kelly and Jerome Robbins,' Dave Kehr wrote in a review in The New York Times, 'except that the pirouettes in this film are more likely to be performed by dancers spinning on their heads than on their toes.' The film, which featured R&B singer Omarion and future 'Family Feud' host Steve Harvey, grossed more than $40 million and broke new ground artistically, Mr. Scott told the Post: 'It was the first time on film you were seeing a mix of B-boys and choreographed dancing in a battle mode.' He also brought his talents to 'Stomp the Yard' (2007), which featured music heavyweights Chris Brown and Ne-Yo and followed the story of a street dancer from Los Angeles (Columbus Short) as he hoofs his way through the fraternity scene at a historically Black college in Atlanta called, yes, Truth University. Among his other notable projects were 'Step Up 2: The Streets' (2008), about a teenage dancer (Briana Evigan) trying to balance her troubled youth with life at an elite arts school, and the 3D dance film 'Battle of the Year' (2013), which also featured him as a dancer, about an American B-boy team going for victory at the international competition of the same name. David Lee Scott Jr. was born Aug. 15, 1972, in Los Angeles, the eldest of four children of David Lee Scott Sr., a plumber, and Evelyn (Rader) Scott. He graduated from Compton High School in 1990. Growing up in the city in South Central Los Angeles made famous by N.W.A.'s landmark 1989 gangster rap album 'Straight Outta Compton' came with clear challenges. Advertisement 'There are gangs and violence there,' he said in a 2008 interview with the site 'I come from a family with a few gang members.' But, he said, 'I think being from the hood strengthens your mind and you have to determine the direction that you want to go in life.' Growing up, he never thought of dancing as a career option. 'Back in the day when we started breaking,' he said, 'it was fun and nobody was like, 'I want to do this for a living.'' His thoughts had turned toward choreography even when dancing for Rob Base. 'I just started adding pieces of choreography to the tour,' he said in a 2008 interview with 'But, really, I have always been, from the time I started to dance, more of a creator, a choreographer.' Along the way, he worked on tours with rapper Bow Wow (then known as Lil' Bow Wow), R&B star Brian McKnight, and others, served as a guest choreographer on ABC's 'Dancing With the Stars' and as a choreographer on 17 episodes of Fox reality show 'So You Think You Can Dance.' He also formed boy band B2K, featuring Omarion, and worked with another, Mindless Behavior. In addition to his son Neko, Mr. Scott leaves his fiancée, Natalie Casanova; his parents; another son, Cy; two sisters, Antoinette Scott-Mays and Tamesha Scott; a daughter, Jasmine Scott; and a granddaughter. Although he said he had never taken so much as a dance lesson, Mr. Scott took his craft seriously. 'A lot of people feel like they can get up off their couch and just do hip-hop,' he told 'But in actuality, if you don't know the basics, where it came from, then you're stuck. You gotta know the core before you can groove it out.' Advertisement This article originally appeared in

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