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Sunday, February 28, 2021

Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, Jon Batiste Win Best Original Score at Golden Globes 2021 for Soul - Pitchfork

Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, Jon Batiste Win Best Original Score at Golden Globes 2021 for Soul

They beat out Alexandre Desplat and James Newton Howard for the trophy
Trent Reznor Atticus Ross accepting an award
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross (Photo by Gabriel Bouys/AFP via Getty Images).

Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, and Jon Batiste who composed the score for Soul, have won the Golden Globe for Best Original Score. They were awarded the trophy over Alexandre Desplat (The Midnight Sky), Ludwig Göransson (Tenet), James Newton Howard (News of the World), and the duo of Reznor and Ross (David Fincher’s Mank).

During his acceptance speech, Reznor said it was the first film he’d scored that he could actually show his kids. Last year, Ross and Reznor released their score for the HBO series Watchmen as well as their score for Mank.

Follow along with the rest of Pitchfork’s coverage of this year’s Golden Globes.

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Read the full text of Jane Fonda's powerful speech at the Golden Globes - CNN

But actress Jane Fonda took a different tack when she accepted the prestigious lifetime achievement award at the Golden Globes Sunday night.
Fonda began by exalting storytelling as an art form and praising the work of the actors and directors behind many nominated works this year. She ended by calling for better leadership in Hollywood to make sure everyone's stories are told.
"Stories — they really can change people. But there's a story we've been afraid to see and hear about ourselves in this industry -- a story about which voices we respect and elevate, and which we tune out," Fonda said.
Read her full speech here:

"Thank you all the members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. I'm -- I'm so moved to receive this honor. Thank you.

You know, we are a community of storytellers, aren't we? And in turbulent, crisis-torn times like these, storytelling has always been essential.
You see, stories have a way to ... they can change our hearts and our minds. They can help us see each other in a new light. To have empathy. To recognize that, for all our diversity, we are humans first, right?
You know, I've seen a lot of diversity in my long life and at times I've been challenged to understand some of the people I've met.
But inevitably, if my heart is open, and I look beneath the surface, I feel kinship.
That's why all of the great conduits of perception -- Buddha, Mohammed, Jesus, Laotzi -- all of them spoke to us in stories and poetry and metaphor.
Because the nonlinear, non-cerebral forms that are art speak on a different frequency.
They generate a new energy that can jolt us open and penetrate our defenses so that we can see and hear what we may have been afraid of seeing and hearing.
Just this year, "Nomadland" helped me feel love for the wanderers among us. And "Minari" opened my eyes to the experience of immigrants dealing with the realities of life in a new land.
And "Judas and the Black Messiah," "Small Acts," "US vs. Billie Holiday," "Ma Rainey," "One Night in Miami" and others have deepened my empathy for what being Black has meant.
"Ramy" helped me feel what it means to be Muslim American.
"I May Destroy You" has taught me to consider sexual violence in a whole new way.
The documentary "All In" reminds us how fragile our democracy is and inspires us to fight to preserve it.
And "A Life on Our Planet" shows us how fragile our small blue planet is and inspires us to save it and ourselves.
Stories: They really, they really can change people.
But there's a story we've been afraid to see and hear about ourselves in this industry. A story about which voices we respect and elevate -- and which we tune out.
A story about who's offered a seat at the table and who is kept out of the rooms where decisions are made.
So let's all of us -- including all the groups that decide who gets hired and what gets made and who wins awards -- let's all of us make an effort to expand that tent. So that everyone rises and everyone's story has a chance to be seen and heard.
I mean, doing this simply means acknowledging what's true. Being in step with the emerging diversity that's happening because of all those who marched and fought in the past and those who've picked up the baton today.
After all, art has always been not just in step with history, but has led the way.
So, let's be leaders, OK?
Thank you, thank you so much."

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Meghan Markle dazzles in $4,700 Armani dress for Oprah interview - Page Six

The first look at Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s upcoming tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey has arrived — and for the occasion, the Duchess of Sussex certainly dressed to impress.

For her sit-down with the talk-show icon, a teaser for which aired Sunday night, 39-year-old Markle donned a $4,700 black gown by Armani with a belted waist and foliage embroidery.

Unsurprisingly, her exact style is already sold out, but a similar (albeit embellished) version is still available for the same price.

Along with her signature messy bun, the Duchess accessorized with her favorite suede Aquazzura pumps ($695) and Cartier Love bracelet ($6,550), along with an aquamarine necklace by Pippa Small and blue topaz Birks earrings, both of which are now sold out.

But the real crown jewel of Markle’s ensemble? Her dainty diamond bracelet, believed to be a Cartier heirloom once owned by Princess Diana.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are seen during their interview with Oprah Winfrey airing next month.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are seen during their interview with Oprah Winfrey airing next month.
CBS

Incidentally, 36-year-old Prince Harry’s late mother looks to be a major talking point of the upcoming interview; at one point in the teaser, he tells Winfrey, “My biggest concern was history repeating itself.”

Continues the Duke of Sussex in the clip, “You know, for me, I’m just really relieved and happy to be sitting here talking to you with my wife by my side because I can’t begin to imagine what it must have been like for her going through this process by herself all those years ago. Because it has been unbelievably tough for the two of us but at least we had each other.”

Meghan Markle seen during her upcoming interview with Oprah Winfrey.
Meghan Markle wore Armani for her interview with Oprah Winfrey.
CBS

Winfrey’s CBS interview with the Sussexes, during which the pair will open up about their decision to leave the royal family and move to California, will air in a two-hour exclusive primetime special on Sunday, March 7.

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Tina Fey And Amy Poehler Really Roasted The Hell Out Of The Golden Globes - BuzzFeed News

NBC

Tina Fey in New York City and Amy Poehler in Beverly Hills.

How do you host an awards show held during a pandemic for films that most people couldn't see in theaters and which completely overlooked nominating a widely acclaimed TV series led by a Black woman?

By absolutely burning the whole damn thing down.

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler — hosting jointly but from New York City and Beverly Hills, respectively — decided to roast the hell out of the Golden Globes on Sunday night, using their opening monologue to lean into the controversies that have dogged the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group of international journalists who hand out the awards and who have a reputation for being, well, star-fuckers.

"The Hollywood Foreign Press Association is made up of around 90 international, no-Black journalists who attend movie junkets each year in search for a better life," said Fey.

The HFPA has in recent days drawn the ire of celebrities for the fact that the group hasn't had a Black member in some 20 years. Stars and Hollywood moguls including Ava DuVernay, Shonda Rhimes, Jennifer Aniston, Sterling K. Brown, Kerry Washington, and Ellen Pompeo have shared messages on social media saying that "Time's Up" for the HFPA to do more in terms of diversity.

The Golden Globes also was scorned this year for ignoring Michaela Coel’s critically acclaimed TV series I May Destroy You, while favoring less well received shows like Emily In Paris after 30 HFPA were flown to Paris by Netflix to visit the show's set, where they were put up in $1,400-a-night hotel rooms and treated "like kings and queens," according to the Los Angeles Times.

"Emily In Paris is nominated for Best TV Series Musical Or Comedy, and I, for one, cannot wait to find out which it is," joked Fey. "French Exit is what I did after watching the first episode of Emily in Paris."

This week, the HFPA pledged to immediately work to bring in more members who are Black or from underrepresented backgrounds. They also said that the issue would be addressed on Sunday's show — and it was.

"Everybody is understandably upset at the HFPA and their choices," Poehler said. "Look, a lot of flashy garbage got nominated, but that happens. That's, like, their thing. But a number of Black actors and Black-led projects were overlooked."

"Look, we all know award shows are stupid," Fey said.

"They're all a scam invented by Big Red Carpet," joked Poehler.

"The point is, even with stupid things, inclusivity is important and there are no Black members of the Hollywood Foreign Press," Fey said. "I realize, HFPA, maybe you guys didn't get the memo because your workplace is a back booth of a French McDonald's, but you gotta change that."

Fey was the subject of some debate in recent months for her work in the movie Soul, which featured Disney Pixar's first Black lead character, but drew criticism because he was quickly transported into the body of a cat.

"Soul is a beautiful Pixar animated movie where a middle aged Black man's soul accidentally gets knocked out of his body and into a cat," said Fey in her opening monologue. "The HFPA really responded to this movie because they do have five cat members."

While a few stars served as presenters at Sunday's show, the nominees all stayed home due to the coronavirus pandemic and winners were promised they would receive their awards in the coming days.

Most nominees still dressed up for the ceremony, wearing dresses and tuxedos, but others, like Billy Murray, opted for a quarantine casual look.

Fey and Poehler also decided to acknowledge the coronavirus-sized elephant in the room: most US theaters have been closed for a year so it's been a little difficult for us viewers to tell the difference between TV and movies.

"It's hard to tell them apart because movie theaters were closed and we watched everything on our phones," Poehler said.

"Now, TV is the one that I watch five hours straight," she added, "but a movie is the one that I don't turn on because it's two hours. I don't want to be in front of my TV for two hours. I want to be in front of the TV for one hour five times."

And much like your Zoom calls this past year, the show featured some embarrassing audio moments.

Unlike the Emmys, Sunday's Globes did feature a live audience for Fey and Poehler to play off of, with a few masked first responders and essential workers invited to sit in the seats normally reserved for big stars.

"We are so grateful for the work that you do," said Fey, "and that you are here so that the celebrities can stay safely at home."

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Oprah Asks Meghan Markle If She Was 'Silenced' In Interview Special Preview - ET Canada

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  1. Oprah Asks Meghan Markle If She Was 'Silenced' In Interview Special Preview  ET Canada
  2. Oprah Tells Pregnant Meghan Markle and Prince Harry 'You've Said Shocking Things Here' in Sit-Down  Yahoo Entertainment
  3. ‘Oprah With Meghan And Harry’: First Promos Tease “Shocking Things” In CBS Interview  Deadline
  4. Americans see Harry led by his wife and Brand Meghan, writes MICHAEL COLE  Express
  5. Prince Harry's interview with James Corden slammed as 'unhelpful'  Yahoo News NZ
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News
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Daniel Kaluuya’s Golden Globes Speech Goes Silent in Glitchy Start: ‘You’re Doing Me Dirty’ - Variety

“You’re doing me dirty, you’re doing me dirty,” actor Daniel Kaluuya quipped at the start of his acceptance speech as the first awards presentation of the 78th Golden Globes got off to a rocky start, when the handoff to the winner’s video feed wound up transitioning to silence.

Laura Dern presented the award for best supporting actor in a motion picture to Kaluuya for his performance in Warner Bros.’ “Judas and the Black Messiah.” But Kaluuya’s audio feed didn’t connect, leaving viewers with only his muted video feed as he began gesticulating and making his acceptance remarks.

“As you can see, we unfortunately have a bad connection,” said Dern apologetically on stage as the feed cut away. “We apologize for that technical problem and send all of our congratulations to Daniel and his Golden Globe win.”

As the transition music swelled, Kaluuya came back into view, with a line everyone who has ever had a glitchy Zoom call has uttered: “Is this on?… Can you hear me now?”

And, like many a person who has done this on Zoom, it turns out Kaluuya’s feed was muted, but quickly rectified, a source tells Variety. In his exasperation, he wagged his finger at the screen and blurted out, “You’re doing me dirty.”

But when the audio problem was fixed, the actor launched into his acceptance speech, thanking his family and the HFPA. He cited his respect and admiration for the character he plays in the period drama, the Black Panther Party chairman Fred Hampton who was murdered at the hands of the FBI.

“I gave everything,” said Kaluuya of playing Hampton. “The great Nipsey Hussle says, ‘We are here to give until we are empty,’ and I gave everything. I couldn’t give it to a more noble man — that’s chairman Fred Hampton — and I hope generations after this can see how brilliantly he fought, how brilliantly he spoke and how brilliantly he loved. He taught me about myself, made me grow as a man and I appreciate it with all my heart. And I hope people — there’s a lot of information about how he died, but I hope you people out there will grow and learn about how incredibly he lived. Thank you so much for this honor.”

Later, when Kaluuya spoke to reporters in the virtual backstage area, technical issues also made for a few awkward moments. “It got into the wifi,” Kaluuya joked. He explained that he was frustrated when his audio didn’t work because he wanted to use his moment to draw attention to the legacy of Hampton.

“I wanted to give the recognition to where it’s supposed to be,” he said.

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Golden Globes 2021: Tina Fey, Amy Poehler skewer the group behind the ceremony - NBC News

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, stationed on opposite sides of the country, kicked off the 78th Golden Globe Awards on Sunday with one-liners about the unusual format of the pandemic-era telecast and the renewed scrutiny of the organization behind the show.

"Normally, this room is full of celebrities, but tonight our audience on both coasts is made up of smoking-hot first responders and essential workers," Fey said from the Rainbow Room in New York. "We are so grateful for the work that you do and that you're here, so that the celebrities can stay safely at home."

The coronavirus crisis forced the producers of the Golden Globes to put on a largely virtual telecast, with nominees beamed in from their homes and hotel rooms via Zoom. Poehler, speaking to a small audience of masked guests at the Beverly Hilton in California, jokingly recalled that the ceremony is typically a free-wheeling, champagne-soaked party.

The co-hosts, featured on a split screen, also nodded to the recent criticism of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the small organization of international journalists that votes on nominees and winners — specifically the fact that the group does not have a single Black member.

March 1, 202101:05

"The Hollywood Foreign Press Association is made up of around 90 international, no-Black journalists who attend movie junkets each year in search of a better life," Fey said. "We say around 90, because a couple of them might be ghosts, and it's rumored that the German member is just a sausage that somebody drew a little face on."

In the first 30 minutes of the show, which aired on NBC, three members of the group appeared on stage and pledged to diversify their ranks.

"We recognize we have our own work to do. Just like in film and television, Black representation is vital. We must have Black journalists in our organization," said Helen Hoehne, the association's vice president.

Meher Tatna, the chairman of the board, added: "We must also ensure everyone from all underrepresented communities gets a seat at our table, and we are going to make that happen."

Two entertainment industry luminaries received lifetime achievement honors. Norman Lear, the storied creator of seminal sitcoms such as "All in the Family," was given the Carol Burnett Award, named for the comedian of the same name. Jane Fonda, the trailblazing actor and activist, accepted the Cecil B. DeMille Award.

Jane Fonda speaks at the Golden Globes on Feb. 28, 2021.NBC

In a passionate speech, Fonda paid tribute to the power of movies to foster empathy and called on Hollywood to push for diversity on screen, behind the camera and in board rooms.

The night included a few technical glitches. The first winner of the night — Daniel Kaluuya of "Judas and the Black Messiah" — began to give his acceptance speech with the sound off. The presenter, Laura Dern, apologized to Kaluuya, who won best supporting actor for his turn as slain Black Panthers leader Fred Hampton.

But then Kaluuya's sound came on. He jokingly wagged his finger at the camera and said, "You're doing me dirty!"

This is a developing story. Please refresh for updates.

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January Jones Rewears Her Sexiest Golden Globes Gown 10 Years Later: 'Still (Sorta) Fits' - Yahoo Entertainment

Frank Trapper/Corbis via Getty Images; January Jones/Instagram

The Golden Globes red carpet may look a bit little different this year, but January Jones is celebrating award show day with a fun fashion flashback.

The actress, 43, posted a photo on Instagram on Sunday rewearing one of her sexiest red carpet outfits.

"10yrs later and it still, (sorta), fits," she captioned the photo carousel, featuring one pic of herself smiling and modeling her red Versace dress at home, alongside a photo of herself wearing it on the 2011 Golden Globes red carpet.

Jones made headlines for her bombshell look 10 years ago when she donned the flaming red Versace gown with a plunging neckline and bold cutouts on the side.

RELATED: Golden Globes Make History with Most Nominations for Female Directors in a Single Year

The former Mad Men actress has been nominated for two Golden Globes for her role as Betty Draper. This year, she doesn't have a project that's nominated, but she's still taking part in the festivities.

Jones shared more photos in her Instagram Stories calling the gown her "dream dress."

She also shared a photo wearing the high-fashion design while holding up a pink frosted donut, writing: "Part of the problem. Also I had a child." (Jones' son, Xander Dane, is now 9 years old.)

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January Jones/Instagram

January Jones/Instagram

RELATED: Golden Globe 2021 Nominations: Emily in Paris, Promising Young Woman, Chadwick Boseman and More

Her try-on session inspired her Mad Men co-star (and on-screen daughter) Kiernan Shipka to take part as well.

The 21-year-old actress shared a photo of her and Jones at the 2011 ceremony, and decided to rewear the outfit she donned that night, posing in the velvet babydoll dress with white lace collar while sitting in her backyard.

"hey @januaryjones I heard we're putting on our Golden Globes looks from 10 years ago," Shipka captioned the sweet post.

The 78th Annual Golden Globes Awards are airing live on NBC from 5-8 p.m. PT/8-11 p.m. ET.

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First look at Meghan and Harry's astonishing tell-all with Oprah - Page Six

Meghan Markle is poised to say that life in the royal family was “almost unsurvivable” in an astonishing tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey.

The first glimpse of Winfrey’s CBS interview with Markle and husband Prince Harry aired Sunday night during an ad break for “60 Minutes.”

And what the couple tell Winfrey is so sensational that the legendary host says, “You’ve said some pretty shocking things here … wait, hold up, wait a minute.”

Cradling her middle, pregnant Markle — who doesn’t speak in the trailer — looks at the billionaire media mogul as Winfrey asks her, “Were you silent or were you silenced?”

Winfrey adds, “I just want to make it clear to everybody there is no subject that’s off limits.”

In another moment, she says to Markle, “Almost unsurvivable sounds like there was a breaking point.”

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are seen during their interview with Oprah Winfrey airing next month.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are seen during their interview with Oprah Winfrey airing next month.
Joe Pugliese/Harpo Productions

Dressed in a belted Giorgio Armani gown that retails for $4,700, and with her hair pulled away from her face, Markle, 39, is then joined by her 36-year-old husband.

The pair clutches hands as Harry, who has frequently spoken of his heartbreak at the death of his mother Princess Diana — tells Winfrey, “My biggest concern was history repeating itself.”

Speaking further on his mother, who in her famous 1995 BBC interview with Martin Bashir broke her silence on Prince Charles’ affair with Camilla Parker Bowles, Harry makes it clear that he is still agonized over her passing.

He says, “You know, for me, I’m just really relieved and happy to be sitting here talking to you with my wife by my side because I can’t begin to imagine what it must have been like for her going through this process by herself all those years ago.

“Because it has been unbelievably tough for the two of us but at least we had each other.”

Winfrey’s interview has been extended to a two-hour exclusive primetime special to air Sunday, March 7.

The pair will speak on their decision to leave the royal family and move to California with their baby son Archie.

A source told Page Six of the tell-all, “It is in-depth and fascinating.”

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Golden Globes Winners 2021: The Complete List - The New York Times

Here are the winning films, TV shows, actors and production teams at the 2021 Golden Globe Awards.

[Follow live coverage of the 2021 Golden Globes.]

Netflix versus Hulu. Borat versus Alexander Hamilton. The questionable relevance of swanky statuettes versus the obvious urgency of the coronavirus pandemic. Sunday night’s Golden Globe Awards ceremony has a wealth of face-offs.

Here’s a complete list of winners.

Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture, Musical or Comedy

Rosamund Pike, “I Care a Lot”

Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in Any Motion Picture

Daniel Kaluuya, “Judas and the Black Messiah”

Best Screenplay, Motion Picture

Aaron Sorkin, “The Trial of the Chicago 7”

Best Original Score, Motion Picture

Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross and Jon Batiste, “Soul”

Best Original Song, Motion Picture

“Io Sì (Seen),” “The Life Ahead”

Best Motion Picture, Animated

“Soul”

Best Television Series, Musical or Comedy

“Schitt’s Creek”

Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series, Drama

Emma Corrin, “The Crown”

Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series, Musical or Comedy

Catherine O’Hara, “Schitt’s Creek”

Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series, Musical or Comedy

Jason Sudeikis, “Ted Lasso”

Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or a Motion Picture Made for Television

Mark Ruffalo, “I Know This Much is True”

Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Supporting Role

John Boyega, “Small Axe”

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Golden Globes 2021: Maya Rudolph and Amy Poehler lead worst-dressed list - Daily Mail

Nothing funny about those outfits! Comedians Maya Rudolph and Amy Poehler lead worst-dressed stars at semi-virtual Golden Globes - as A-listers show off fashion fails from home and the red carpet

  • The 78th annual Golden Globes are being held amid the ongoing pandemic - and many awards will be presented remotely
  • Some presenters walked a socially-distant red carpet in Los Angeles, while nominees took photos of themselves posing in their gowns at home 
  • While a few hit the fashion nail on the head, others missed the mark completely, including presenters Amy and Tina, as well as comedian Maya, who wore a very over-the-top floral look 
  • Cynthia Erivo turned heads for all the wrong reasons in a structured highlighter-green dress  
  • Best actress nominee Andra Day's Chanel dress looked as though it was made from old fishing nets, while Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist star Jany Levy's hole-ridden gown appeared to have been attacked by moths
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This year's Golden Globes looked very different in light of the ongoing pandemic - but one thing remained constant at the awards ceremony: the plethora of fashion fails being flaunted by celebrities, both on the red carpet and at home throughout the semi-virtual event. 

Returning hosts Amy Poehler and Tina Fey led the sub-par style at this year's ceremony, with both women putting on a very dreary show in lackluster black ensembles that did little to flatter their figures, and appeared entirely effortless for all the wrong reasons. 

Amy, 49, wore a glittering black turtleneck dress with thick opaque tights that made it look more like she was getting ready for a night out at a trashy club rather than an evening at one of Hollywood's most prestigious events. Meanwhile her co-host and best friend Tina, 50, seemed to have dressed to match her pal, wearing a tuxedo-style mini dress - which she chose to pair with some rather tacky fishnet-esque tights. 

Fashion flop: Golden Globes presenters Amy Poehler and Tina Fey led the worst-dressed celebrities appearing at this year's socially-distanced ceremony in unflattering and lackluster black ensembles
Fashion flop: Golden Globes presenters Amy Poehler and Tina Fey led the worst-dressed celebrities appearing at this year's socially-distanced ceremony in unflattering and lackluster black ensembles

Fashion flop: Golden Globes presenters Amy Poehler and Tina Fey led the worst-dressed celebrities appearing at this year's socially-distanced ceremony in unflattering and lackluster black ensembles 

Garish: Cynthia Erivo's highlighter-green dress was incredibly bright, and the structured shape made it look more like a Halloween costume than a Hollywood gown

Garish: Cynthia Erivo's highlighter-green dress was incredibly bright, and the structured shape made it look more like a Halloween costume than a Hollywood gown 

Easy to spot! The 34-year-old actress and singer's Valentino dress certainly helped her to stand out - although not for the reasons she may have wanted - and her enormous silver platform heels only added to the cartoon quality of the look
Easy to spot! The 34-year-old actress and singer's Valentino dress certainly helped her to stand out - although not for the reasons she may have wanted - and her enormous silver platform heels only added to the cartoon quality of the look

Easy to spot! The 34-year-old actress and singer's Valentino dress certainly helped her to stand out - although not for the reasons she may have wanted - and her enormous silver platform heels only added to the cartoon quality of the look 

Over-the-top: Maya Rudolph's very vibrant floral dress was more eyesore than elegant, and the mid-calf hemline wasn't particularly flattering

Over-the-top: Maya Rudolph's very vibrant floral dress was more eyesore than elegant, and the mid-calf hemline wasn't particularly flattering 

The dress itself was by no means unflattering, however when paired with the tights it took on a rather trashy feel, which was further emphasized by her chunky glittering statement necklace.  

Tina and Amy were not the only comedy stars to miss the style mark on Sunday evening; Maya Rudolph also fell short with her fashion choice - a garish floral-print dress that looked a lot like a Hawaiian shirt, rather than a glamorous Hollywood gown.   

To add insult to injury, the shape of the dress - which fell to her mid-calf - was incredibly unflattering, and left the stunning 48-year-old appear as though she had simply draped a piece of fabric over herself before heading out the door. 

Stealing the sartorial spotlight in all the wrong ways was 34-year-old actress Cynthia Erivo, who was very difficult to miss thanks to her garish neon-green Valentino dress. 

The structured gown featured a figure-hugging bodice and an enormous hoop-style skirt, and left the naturally-beautiful star looking as though she had donned a Halloween costume - an image that was further emphasized by the addition of sky-high silver platform shoes, which she showed off on stage while presenting an award. 

Lady in red: Pre-show host Zuri Hall's look worked wonders when it came to showcasing her enviable figure, but the tiny top teetered on the edge of trashy, and the textured skirt was incredibly distracting

Lady in red: Pre-show host Zuri Hall's look worked wonders when it came to showcasing her enviable figure, but the tiny top teetered on the edge of trashy, and the textured skirt was incredibly distracting 

Too bright? Spike Lee's son Jackson decided to pose in orange-tinted sunglasses on the red carpet, which gave his kimono look something of a comical feel
Too bright? Spike Lee's son Jackson decided to pose in orange-tinted sunglasses on the red carpet, which gave his kimono look something of a comical feel

Too bright? Spike Lee's son Jackson decided to pose in orange-tinted sunglasses on the red carpet, which gave his kimono look something of a comical feel 

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Holy moly: Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist star Jany Levy's Oscar De La Renta dress looked as though it had been attacked by moths thanks so the large holes, while the black ribbon-esque embellishments looked very out of place 

Yo ho ho! Best actress nominee Andra Day's Chanel dress had a very nautical theme - but rather than lending a chic edge, it simply made the design look as though it had been made from an old fishing net

Yo ho ho! Best actress nominee Andra Day's Chanel dress had a very nautical theme - but rather than lending a chic edge, it simply made the design look as though it had been made from an old fishing net 

On the upside... The actress' makeup look was absolutely stunning, but the dress did little to complement her beauty
On the upside... The actress' makeup look was absolutely stunning, but the dress did little to complement her beauty

On the upside... The actress' makeup look was absolutely stunning, but the dress did little to complement her beauty 

Also adding to the fashion flops at the in-person event were pre-show host Zuri Hall and Spike Lee's son Jackson, both of whom turned heads for their rather over-the-top red carpet looks. 

Zuri, 32, showed off her enviable figure in a tiny red boob tube, which was somewhat skimpy for such a prestigious event - and could have done with the addition of some extra fabric, which could easily have been found in her enormous matching skirt. 

The flowing design swamped her bottom half and only served to further emphasize the tininess of her crop top.  

Jackson meanwhile opted to wear a rather dapper suit - but he added a rather ridiculous edge to it by donning a silk kimono over the top, as well as a pair of orange-lensed shades.   

And it wasn't just the stars in attendance at the event who showed off some less-than-impressive ensembles for the evening - the at-home line-up featured just as many sartorial disasters. 

Baring it all: Actress Kiersey Clemons posed in her Golden Globes look at home, rather than on the red carpet, but the professional shoot did little to conceal the very risque slit and cut-out detailing on her dress

Baring it all: Actress Kiersey Clemons posed in her Golden Globes look at home, rather than on the red carpet, but the professional shoot did little to conceal the very risque slit and cut-out detailing on her dress 

What is that? Jared Leto joined the show from home, where he modeled a beige suit with a very strange looking flower in his lapel, which looked as though it was made from skin

What is that? Jared Leto joined the show from home, where he modeled a beige suit with a very strange looking flower in his lapel, which looked as though it was made from skin 

Oh dear: Bridgerton star Nicola Coughlan tried to recreate her character's style for an at-home video shoot - but the puffed-up yellow gown looked nothing short of comical, particularly when paired with the garish pink eyeshadow
Oh dear: Bridgerton star Nicola Coughlan tried to recreate her character's style for an at-home video shoot - but the puffed-up yellow gown looked nothing short of comical, particularly when paired with the garish pink eyeshadow

Oh dear: Bridgerton star Nicola Coughlan tried to recreate her character's style for an at-home video shoot - but the puffed-up yellow gown looked nothing short of comical, particularly when paired with the garish pink eyeshadow 

Fluffed up: Rosamund Pike also opted for a poofy gown while celebrating the Globes at home - bizarrely choosing to pair the very feminine style with clunky combat boots, which made for an awkward overall look

Fluffed up: Rosamund Pike also opted for a poofy gown while celebrating the Globes at home - bizarrely choosing to pair the very feminine style with clunky combat boots, which made for an awkward overall look 

Woah: Keke Palmer left absolutely nothing to the imagination in a crop top and tiny hotpants - which may have been fine for dancing around her living room, but were inappropriate for a glittering awards show
Woah: Keke Palmer left absolutely nothing to the imagination in a crop top and tiny hotpants - which may have been fine for dancing around her living room, but were inappropriate for a glittering awards show

Woah: Keke Palmer left absolutely nothing to the imagination in a crop top and tiny hotpants - which may have been fine for dancing around her living room, but were inappropriate for a glittering awards show 

Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist star Jany Levy's Oscar De La Renta dress looked as though it had been attacked by moths thanks to the large holes that covered the design, which also featured some rather bizarre black ribbon embellishments that could well have been tied on in a last minute effort to improve the look.  

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Lawyer Seeks Sexual Abuse Investigation Against T.I. and Tiny - Rolling Stone

A lawyer representing nearly a dozen people is calling for a sexual abuse investigation against rapper T.I. and his wife Tameka “Tiny” Harris.

In a letter sent to state and federal authorities in Georgia and California, lawyer Tyrone A. Blackburn, who is representing the 11 “victimized” people, alleged “sexual abuse, forced ingestion of illegal narcotics, kidnapping, terroristic threats and false imprisonment” against the rapper (birth name Clifford Harris) and his wife spanning from 2005 to 2018, the New York Times reports.

Five of the victims cited in the letters claimed they were raped or sexually assaulted by the couple. One of the women, a military veteran, says she was drugged by the couple after meeting them at a club; she was later taken to their hotel room — experiencing the effects of the alleged drugging — where she claimed Tiny bathed her and T.I., and the three then engaged in sex, during which the woman vomited.

“The next thing she remembers was waking up naked on the couch, with a towel thrown over her, with a very sore vagina,” the letter states. Friends of the woman corroborated her story to the Times.

In a statement to Rolling Stone, the couple’s lawyer Steve Sadow said, “Clifford (T.I.) and Tameka Harris deny in the strongest possible terms these unsubstantiated and baseless allegations. We are confident that if these claims are thoroughly and fairly investigated, no charges will be forthcoming. These allegations are nothing more than the continuation of a sordid shakedown campaign that began on social media. The Harrises implore everyone not to be taken in by these obvious attempts to manipulate the press and misuse the justice system.”

After multiple women shared their accusations of sexual abuse against T.I. and Tiny on social media — including Sabrina Peterson, who in January accused T.I. of putting a gun to her head in an Instagram post. She then used her account to share statements from over 30 women who claimed they had been drugged, coerced or forced into sex, and trafficked by the Harrises — production was halted on the fourth season of the couple’s VH1. reality show T.I. and Tiny: Friends and Family Hustle. Blackburn told the Times that none of his clients were among the women who alleged sexual abuse on social media.

 A spokesperson for MTV Entertainment said, “We are aware of the allegations, and while they are not connected to our show, we have reached out to T.I. and Tameka Harris, as well as local and state officials. Given the serious nature of the allegations, we have decided to suspend production in order to gather more information.”

T.I.’s spokesperson said in a statement, “Mr. and Mrs. Harris want to be on record and more importantly want the public to know they emphatically deny in the strongest way possible the egregiously appalling allegations being made against them by Sabrina Peterson. The Harrises have had difficulty with this woman for well over a decade. They are taking this matter very seriously, and if these allegations don’t end, they will take appropriate legal action.”

T.I. himself addressed the allegations in a January 29th eight-minute video posted on Instagram. “We vehemently deny ALL these disgusting, anonymous allegations,” the rapper wrote, saying that while “women who have been victimized deserve to be heard… however, evil has no gender. People with evil intentions have no gender. A threat comes in all shapes and sizes. I would never treat a woman the same way I would treat a threat.”

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Golden Globes Live Updates: The Latest From the Show - The New York Times

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

Mark Ruffalo is getting family-bombed during his acceptance speech, momentarily validating the noticeably ragged production value of this broadcast.

Best Actor | Limited Series

Mark Ruffalo

Wins best actor in a limited series for “I Know This Much Is True.”

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

Are ... we going to hear more later in the night from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association? Did they bring out three of their officers to say that their solution to having more representation in the organization is ... we’re working on it?

Best Animated Movie

“Soul”

Wins best animated movie.

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

It is truly impossible to tell if all these audio glitches are part of the actual program or just the usual level of chaos.

Best Actress | Musical or Comedy Series

Catherine O’Hara

Wins best actress in a musical or comedy series for “Schitt’s Creek.”

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

Seems appropriate to have Christian Slater on a night when the unofficial theme is “Pump Up the Volume.”

Feb. 28, 2021, 8:22 p.m. ET
Gary Oldman in “Mank.”
Netflix

Mank,” David Fincher’s black-and-white tale of Old Hollywood, is nominated for six trophies at tonight’s Golden Globes, the most of any film. It has been available for viewing on Netflix since Dec. 4.

Seen it yet?

That’s OK. Neither have a lot of people in Hollywood.

What about “The Father,” about the devastation of dementia? It is a contender for best drama and three other prizes. Or perhaps “The Mauritanian,” set at Guantánamo and vying for two Globes in acting categories? Or the twice-nominated “Judas and the Black Messiah,” about Black political radicals in the 1960s? It actually received a national release in theaters (about 1,900 of the operating ones) this month.

Seen any of them?

Well, I don’t know what to tell you. Pretend like you have at least heard of a couple.

In a year when almost all of the nominated films have bypassed theaters because of the pandemic, the Globes — the biggest-tent awards show there is, given its dual focus on film and television — may feel rather small. Nominees have struggled to get noticed. For many people, including some in Hollywood, it is hard to care about little golden thingamabobs at a time when the coronavirus is still killing roughly 2,000 Americans on most days.

“The stakes have never been lower,” Tina Fey, returning to host the ceremony with Amy Poehler, has been saying in deadpan Globe ads.

Margaret Lyons headshot

 

Margaret Lyons TV critic

That’s one of the weird parts about the TV side of the Globes; it’s out of sync with the Emmys. So some shows nominated already had their final or only eligible Emmys last year (“Schitt’s,” “Unorthodox”) but some new shows won't be eligible until this coming fall (“Ted Lasso”).

Best Supporting Actor | Series or Limited Series

John Boyega

Wins best supporting actor in a series or limited series for “Small Axe.”

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

“Do I just talk automatically?” Boyega asks. Even he seems a little stunned to have unseated “Schitt’s Creek,” I think.

Margaret Lyons headshot

 

Margaret Lyons TV critic

I was just wondering what they were doing for the physical statues, and the answer is “just sending them later.” Easier than what the Emmys did, I guess?

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

I’ll have whatever Bill Murray was having.

Margaret Lyons headshot

 

Margaret Lyons TV critic

Nice to see generic Zoom shortcomings affect us all.

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

We didn’t get the initial audio from Kaluuya’s acceptance speech, and that didn’t bode well.

Kyle Buchanan headshot

 

Kyle Buchanan The Projectionist

Daniel Kaluuya chewing gum on mute ... legendary.

Best Supporting Actor

Daniel Kaluuya

Wins best supporting actor for “Judas and the Black Messiah.”

Margaret Lyons headshot

 

Margaret Lyons TV critic

Fey closes the monologue with “Could this whole night have been an email?” We’ll see!

Feb. 28, 2021, 8:10 p.m. ET
Tina Fey and Amy Poehler at the 78th Golden Globe Awards on Sunday.
NBC

Let the show begin! The Golden Globes just got underway, and Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are back as the hosts, but, in an early reminder of how much the pandemic has changed this year’s ceremony, they are not in the same room, or even on the same coast.

Poehler is back at the Beverly Hilton, the traditional site of the Globes. But Fey is on the other side of the country at the swanky Rainbow Room in New York. The pair wasted little time before firing off the first zingers of the night — and also establishing their locations.

“I’m Tina Fey, coming to you from the beautiful Rainbow Room in New York City, where indoor dining and outdoor muggings are back,” Fey said.

“Yes, and I am Amy Poehler here at the Beverly Hilton, District 7, New Angeles, and this is the 78th annual hunger games,” Poehler said.

“Golden Globes,” Fey corrected her.

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

The Globes are missing one of their most distinctive elements: the well-fed and slightly soused celebrity guests laughing in person at all the hosts’ jokes. Fey had a decent line about “The Queen’s Gambit,” which she described as “whatever James Corden was up to in ‘The Prom,’ I guess.” But seeing Corden smile wanly over Zoom in reaction didn’t have quite the same effect.

Kyle Buchanan headshot

 

Kyle Buchanan The Projectionist

Tina Fey briefly addresses the controversy about Globes diversity, tucking “no black journalists” into a longer joke about what exactly the Hollywood Foreign Press Association is.

Dave Itzkoff headshot

 

Dave Itzkoff Culture reporter

This is not the Golden Globes show of years past, that's for sure. The room — rooms — are quieter and the hosts' entrances are more muted. It's clever to see how they're using split-screen to make it seem as if Amy Poehler (at the Beverly Hilton) and Tina Fey (at the Rainbow Room) are somehow side-by-side. Fey says she's in New York “where indoor dining and outdoor muggings are back”; Poehler says she's hailing from “District 7, New Angeles, and this is the 78th annual Hunger Games.”

Feb. 28, 2021, 7:41 p.m. ET
The Golden Globes looked different before the pandemic, when the ballroom of the Beverly Hilton would be packed with celebrities, as it was in 2010 when Ricky Gervais was the host. 
Vince Bucci/NBC, via Getty Images

Because of the pandemic, the stars are far-flung this year, and the live audience for the Golden Globes is being made up of select front-line workers. We asked our reporter Cara Buckley, who formerly covered awards season, what the scene inside the Beverly Hilton is normally like. Here’s what she told us:

Being inside the ballroom at the Beverly Hilton is like going to celebrity zoo.

The famous people sit at tables toward the front near the stage, and people of diminishing importance are seated further toward the back. When the cameras are on, no one is supposed to mill around or be standing in the front area, but during commercial breaks, it’s like a stampede — people from hinterland tables basically gallop toward the stage area to fawn over celebrities until members of the production staff herd them out again when the show comes back on.

That’s part of the reason the Globes are more fun than the Academy Awards — people can actually move around, and go grab food and drinks, instead of being poured into Spanx and gowns and stuck in their seats for hours on end at the Oscars.

The Globes have a reputation for being quite boozy — celebrities are greeted with flutes of champagne the moment they step on the red carpet — but that bawdiness has diminished over the years as the television audience grew: It’s hard for anyone to cut loose knowing that there’s something like 18 million viewers watching them live. But off-camera and certainly at the afterparties, there’s dancing, imbibing, clandestine smoking and a sense of relief that the first big show of awards season is in the rearview mirror.

Feb. 28, 2021, 7:24 p.m. ET
Laverne Cox during a preshow segment on Sunday.
E!

Forget the Zoom shirt; welcome to the Zoom evening gown. Also the Zoom tux.

If the Golden Globes red carpet wasn’t exactly the red carpet we were used to, nor was it the dressed-down stars-in-their-jammies-pretending-to-be-just-like-us reveal that marked the celebrity-packed fund-raisers of the pandemic past. Instead, the first of the big award shows of 2021 gave us the hitherto before unimagined … home red carpet.

Turns out you can only keep the Hollywood-fashion industrial complex down for so long. But this time, the sight of stars in their finery in their social isolation seemed less like a mercenary marketing play (though there’s obviously still some of that) than a refusal to wallow and an understanding of the value of vicarious escapism.

As Laverne Cox said during the preshow segment as she posed in what she called “a standing Zoom” — the better to show off her frock — “we should have a moment.” And if not now, when? So she, and the rest of the nominees and presenters, proceeded to provide one.

Elle Fanning beamed in to show off a mint green silk charmeuse Gucci frock with elaborate diamanté straps, worn “to walk from the kitchen to the living room,” because — well, “why not?” Josh Charles showed off his Loewe-meets-Edward Scissorhands tux lapels from his hotel in London, flapping them at the camera with aplomb. Amanda Seyfried posed in a hallway wearing crimson floor-length Oscar de la Renta with a built-in stole of fabric flowers draped around her shoulders.

And thus the human desire to get dressed up was the first winner of the night.

Feb. 28, 2021, 7:01 p.m. ET

Matt Stevens and

The red carpet at the 2020 Golden Globes.
Valerie Macon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the group that puts on the Golden Globes, has long been widely viewed as colorful, if not necessarily journalistically productive. But this year, in the run-up to the awards, a recently filed lawsuit, a review of financial records and a series of interviews all put the organization under an unusual amount of outside scrutiny.

Courting the favors of the group’s members — there are only 87 — has become a ritualized Tinseltown pursuit. A Golden Globe nomination, and certainly a win, is a publicity boon that can boost careers, jack up box office earnings and foreshadow an Academy Award. So studios, production companies, strategists and publicists feverishly chase members’ votes.

Celebrities send them handwritten holiday cards. Studios put them up at five-star hotels. Champagne, pricey wine, signed art, cashmere blankets, slippers, record players, cakes, headphones and speakers have arrived at their doorsteps, recipients say.

In 2018, NBC agreed to pay $60 million a year for broadcast rights, about triple the previous licensing fee. In the tax year ending in June 2019, the tax-exempt nonprofit was sitting on about $55 million in cash, donated about $5 million to assorted causes and paid more than $3 million in salaries and other compensation to members and staff. (Being on the association’s TV Viewing Committee, for instance, paid members $3,465 a month, internal reports showed.)

A recent investigation by The Los Angeles Times found, among other things, that the group has no Black members — a problem the group subsequently acknowledged and vowed to remediate.

Some of the renewed attention came in the wake of a lawsuit brought by Kjersti Flaa, a Norwegian reporter who has thrice been denied admittance to the group, who alleged that the association acted as a monopoly, hogging prized interviews.

A judge threw out the majority of the lawsuit filed against the association, but the plaintiff has amended it and refiled. Gregory Goeckner, the organization’s chief operating officer and general counsel, described the allegations in the suit as “salacious.” And he said the association only remunerates members when they do extra work.

Meanwhile, the Golden Globes go on.

“It’s a big-tent network television show, and as such, invaluable to film campaigns hoping to contend for Oscar nominations and wins,” said Tony Angellotti, a publicist who runs awards campaigns, in an email. “And the H.F.P.A. track record for identifying worthy films is indisputable. That’s not nothing.”

Feb. 28, 2021, 7:01 p.m. ET
Sacha Baron Cohen in a scene from “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.”
Amazon Studios

The Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which puts on the Golden Globes, likes to bestow its trophies on films that already have plenty of Oscar momentum, but the small size of the group — around 90 eccentric journalists who vote — leaves every category open to a shock winner.

Then there’s the fact that the H.F.P.A. is also under fire after a raft of recent articles exposed double-dealing practices and an insular membership. There are no Black voters, and that may explain the absence of any of the acclaimed Black-led ensembles like “Da 5 Bloods” and “One Night in Miami” from the best drama nominations.

Will voters respond to the controversies by picking a diverse set of worthy winners, or will the usual Globes anarchy prevail? We asked our awards expert, Kyle Buchanan, and he said he expected a bit of both. Here’s what else he predicted:

— “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” could sweep the comedy categories, with Sacha Baron Cohen and Maria Bakalova, the movie’s breakout star, getting acting trophies as well as the film itself taking home best motion picture, comedy.

— The drama races are tougher to call. “The Trial of the Chicago 7” and “Nomadland” will battle it out for best motion picture, drama, with the edge going to the courtroom tale. For best actress in a drama, Carey Mulligan (“Promising Young Woman”) may pull out the victory over Frances McDormand (“Nomadland”).

— But when it comes to best actor in a drama, Chadwick Boseman, nominated for his final performance, in “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” is as close to a lock as there is. He’s the front-runner for the Oscars, too.

Feb. 28, 2021, 7:01 p.m. ET
 Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are the hosts of this year’s ceremony.
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

When the 78th annual Golden Globes are handed out on Sunday, they will be the first major awards show of the season, coming nearly two months after we would typically find out the best picture winner.

The ceremony begins at 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific. The network broadcasting the ceremony, NBC, has a preshow; with Jane Lynch and Susan Kelechi Watson as hosts, it starts at 7 p.m. Eastern, 4 p.m. Pacific.

On television, NBC is the official broadcaster. Online, if you have a cable login, you can watch via NBC.com/live. Depending on where you live, there’s also Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, AT&T TV Now, YouTube TV or FuboTV, which all require subscriptions, though many are offering free trials.

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