Los Angeles
Howard Stern on David Letterman June 8, 2009 Part Two
Comedy, David Letterman, Howard Stern, Jimmy Kimmel, Late-Night Television, Los AngelesHoward Stern on David Letterman June 8, 2009 Part Two
Vodpod videos no longer available.
more about “Howard Stern on David Letterman June …“, posted with vodpod
Howard Stern on David Letterman June 8, 2009
Comedy, David Letterman, Howard Stern, Jimmy Kimmel, Late-Night Television, Los AngelesJackson Browne – Somebody's Baby Live
Jackson Browne, Los Angeles, Rock and Roll, YoutubeKNBC Anchor Paul Moyer Leaves Door Open
Hollywood, KNBC, Los Angeles, Media, paul Moyer, Venice Beach
LOS ANGELES TIMES
His departure from the station doesn’t necessarily mean the end of his news career, he says.
By Greg Braxton
April 27, 2009
Veteran news anchor Paul Moyer may be done with KNBC-TV Channel 4, but he may not be finished with local news.
“I’m officially retired from Channel 4, but that doesn’t mean I’m officially retired from the news business forever,” Moyer told The Times on Friday. “I can’t predict what will happen in the future. I’m not closing the door, but there’s nothing out there at the moment.”
While on vacation early this month, Moyer unexpectedly announced he was retiring from KNBC after 22 years but would return for a short time before selecting a final broadcast date. However, station News Director Robert Long told staffers Friday that Moyer had “decided to make the transition from vacation to retirement a seamless one, and he will not be returning to our air to say goodbye.”
“I just didn’t feel there was anything to gain by going back and working for another few weeks,” said Moyer. “I hope that people understand why I’m not going back. I get very uncomfortable with big formal goodbyes.”
Moyer is considered one of the last of a breed of well-paid and highly promoted local news anchors. His departure follows speculation that his salary, estimated at more than $3 million a year, had been too costly for the station in a time of declining revenue and viewership industrywide.
The newscaster said he has been moved by viewers who have expressed their sense of loss about his departure. “What really touches me is they thank me for being there,” he said. “I really feel like I have a relationship with the people of Southern California. I feel connected to them. I will really miss that.”
For now, Moyer said his focus will be on his family and his children: “I’ve got two kids, 16 and 19, and they need their dad. Now they’ve got him, full time.”
Wise Up
Cruise, Frogs, Los Angeles, Macy, Magnolia, Mann, Moore, Obama, P.T. Anderson, Robards, Seymour Hoffman, TullycastBatman Surfing
Comic Books, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Music, Music Scoring, Musician, Television, VideoNeal Hefti dies at 85; former big band trumpeter, arranger and composer
By Dennis McLellan
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 15, 2008
Neal Hefti, a former big band trumpeter, arranger and composer who worked with Count Basie and Woody Herman and later composed the memorable themes for the movie “The Odd Couple” and the campy hit TV series “Batman,” has died. He was 85.
Hefti died Saturday at his home in Toluca Lake, said his son, Paul. He did not know the cause of death, but said his father had been in good health.
“Everybody in the music business loved Neal Hefti,” radio and television personality Gary Owens, a longtime friend, told The Times on Tuesday.
“He was one of the really great arrangers and composers of all time,” Owens said. “He worked with all those guys — Charlie Spivak, Harry James, Woody Herman — and he made arrangements that were just spectacular.”
Described as “one of the most influential big band arrangers of the 1940s and ’50s” in “The Encyclopedia of Popular Music,” Hefti turned his attention to composing for film and television in the 1960s.
Among his credits as a film composer are “Sex and the Single Girl,” “Harlow” (one of his most famous tunes, “Girl Talk,” came out of the score), “How to Murder Your Wife,” “Boeing Boeing,” “Duel at Diablo,” “Barefoot in the Park,” “A New Leaf,” “Last of the Red Hot Lovers” and “The Odd Couple,” whose theme he reprised for the 1970s TV series.
Hefti also gained wide notice for composing the energetic title theme for “Batman,” the over-the-top 1966-68 superhero series that became an overnight sensation.
It was, Hefti later said, the hardest piece of music he ever wrote.
“I tore up a lot of paper,” he told Jon Burlingame, author of “TV’s Biggest Hits,” a 1996 book on television themes. “It did not come easy to me. . . . I just sweated over that thing, more so than any other single piece of music I ever wrote. I was never satisfied with it.”
“Batman,” he said, “was not a comedy. This was about unreal people. Batman and Robin were both very, very serious. The bad guys would be chasing them, and they would come to a stop at a red light, you know. They wouldn’t break the law even to save their own lives. So there was a grimness and a self-righteousness about all this.”
Hefti said it took him “the better part of a month” to come up with the theme.
“I was almost going to call them and say, I can’t do it,” he said. “But I never walk out on projects, so I sort of forced myself to finish.”
Hefti’s “musical solution to a combined dramatic and comedic problem,” Burlingame wrote in his book, “was perfect: bass guitar, low brass and percussion to create a driving rhythm, while an eight-voice chorus sings ‘Batman!’ in harmony with the trumpets. It was part serious, part silly: just like the series.”
Hefti’s “Batman” tune became a Top 40 hit — for both the Hefti and the Marketts’ versions — and won a 1966 Grammy Award for best instrumental theme.
The son of a traveling salesman, Hefti was born Oct. 29, 1922, in Hastings, Neb. He began playing the trumpet at age 11.
His family was poor, and in high school he started playing in local bands during summer vacation to help his family financially.
Hefti began writing arrangements in high school for local bands, and some of his arrangements also were used by the Earl Hines band.
In 1941, two days before his high school graduation, Hefti was asked to tour with the Dick Barry band, which had lost some of its musicians to the military.
The short-lived job ended in New Jersey. But other band jobs followed, including playing with the Bob Astor, Charlie Barnet, Bobby Byrne, Horace Heidt and Charlie Spivak bands.
Hefti, who was classified 4-F during World War II after being hit by a car in New York and breaking his pelvis, joined Woody Herman’s band in 1944.
He did the arrangements for many of the Herman band’s popular recordings, including composing and arranging “The Good Earth” and “Wild Root.” He also co-arranged, with Ralph Burns, “Caldonia.”
In 1945, Hefti married the Herman band’s lead female vocalist, Frances Wayne. They remained married until her death in 1978.
Hefti formed his own band in 1951, with his wife as lead vocalist. But after two years of touring, he returned to arranging and studio work.
As a composer and arranger for Basie in the 1950s, Hefti composed numerous tunes that were featured on various Basie albums.
That included the Grammy Award-winning album “Basie,” which Hefti produced. Known as “Atomic Basie” because of the atomic explosion pictured on the cover, the album featured 11 songs composed and arranged by Hefti, including “Splanky,” “Kid From Red Bank” and “Lil’ Darlin,” which Hefti wrote for his daughter.
“If it weren’t for Neal Hefti,” legendary trumpeter Miles Davis said in a 1955 interview, “the Basie band wouldn’t sound as good as it does.”
As head of A&R (Artists and Repertoire) at Reprise in the early ’60s, Hefti arranged and conducted “Sinatra and Basie: A Historical Musical First” and “Sinatra and Swingin’ Brass.”
Hefti retired in 1976.
In addition to his son Paul, a music composer, Hefti is survived by a brother, Joe; a sister, Pat Wacha; and three grandchildren.
Services will be private.
Instead of flowers, Paul Hefti suggests that donations be made to Boys Town, P.O. Box 145-Memorial, Boys Town, NE 68010, or to the American Cancer Society, P.O. Box 22718, Oklahoma City, OK 73123. Both Hefti’s wife and daughter, Dr. Marguerita Hefti, died of cancer.
Bill Maher | February 1 2008
9/11, Bin Laden, Blogs, Broadcatching, Film and Video, Hillary Clinton, Hollywood, Iraq, Los Angeles, McCain, Obama, Oil, Producers, Religion, Tullycast, Video, WritersThis week Bill welcomes columnist Clarence Page, Congressman Darrell Issa, N.O.W. President Kim Gandy and Real Time reporter Matt Taibbi
TULLYCAST
Actor Brad Renfro Found Dead In Los Angeles
Brad_Renfro, Los Angeles, The_Client
LOS ANGELES (AP)
— Actor Brad Renfro, whose career began promisingly with a childhood
role in “The Client” but rapidly faded as he struggled with drugs and
alcohol, was found dead Tuesday in his home. He was 25.
Actor Brad Renfro served 10 days in jail in 2006 after pleading guilty to attempted possession of heroin.
Paramedics pronounced him dead at 9 a.m., said Craig Harvey, chief
investigator for the Los Angeles County coroner’s office. The cause of
death was not immediately determined, Harvey said, but an autopsy could
be conducted as early as Wednesday.
Renfro had reportedly been drinking with friends the evening before his death, Harvey said.
Renfro’s lawyer, Richard Kaplan, said he did not know whether the death was connected to any problems with addiction.
“He was working hard on his sobriety,” Kaplan said. “He was doing well. He was a nice person.”
The actor served 10 days in jail in May 2006 after pleading no contest
to driving while intoxicated and guilty to attempted possession of
heroin.
The latter charge stemmed from his arrest in Los
Angeles’ Skid Row area, when he attempted to buy heroin from an
undercover officer in 2005.
For several years he was better known for that drug bust and the resulting criminal case than for acting.
After one court appearance, he talked to reporters about drug
rehabilitation, saying he was “tired of paying the consequences” for
drinking and drug use and eager to get clean.
A native of
Knoxville, Tennessee, Renfro’s film career began when he was 12, acting
opposite Susan Sarandon and Tommy Lee Jones in “The Client.” His other
credits include “Sleepers,” “Deuces Wild,” “Apt Pupil” and “The Jacket.”
Powered by ScribeFire.











