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Selena Gomez Runs A Bizarre Hair Salon In Her And DJ Snake’s Video For ‘Selfish Love’

DJ Snake had a huge hit on his hands with “Taki Taki,” the 2018 single that went No. 1 in a bunch of countries around the world. He couldn’t have done it without the guests he had on the track: Cardi B, Ozuna, and Selena Gomez. Now he and Gomez have reunited on another new single, “Selfish Love.”

The track continues the trend of Gomez’s recent Spanish-language output, as it features lyrics in both Spanish and English. The pair shared a video for the reggaeton-inspired song, which takes place in an atypical sort of hair salon.

Snake says of the song, “With the whole world being separated from each other, I kept looking and working only on pure good vibes. I wanted to make music for the world and mix all my favorite influences of afro beat, latin music, something that felt grounded and organic. Selena and I had been talking and after ‘Taki Taki,’ we had to give the world another round with fresh summer vibes. Something that made it feel like summer the first time you heard it. ‘Selfish Love’ came very naturally for us and I think it’s the perfect evolution for our history together.”

Watch the “Selfish Love” video above.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Lil Nas X Exposes Tekashi 69 For Sliding In His DMs After Making A Tasteless Gay Joke About Him

“This you?” are two of social media’s most dangerous words. Often deployed when their recipient makes a statement contradicting earlier foul behavior, they can be especially devastating when their subject is a known troll who likes to post outrageous provocations for engagement. Today, Lil Nas X won the gold medal in their use (or he would have if such a thing existed) when he flipped the script on rainbow-haired agitator Tekashi 69 via Twitter.

After 69’s running buddy Akademiks posted a New York headline about China’s new supposed COVID-19 protocols, Tekashi chose to use the moment to disparage Lil Nas with a tasteless, homophobic joke. Tekashi responded to the headline — which reads “China Makes COVID-19 Anal Swabs Mandatory For Foreigners” in a fairly typical attention grab — by commenting “Lil Nas X has entered the chat.”

However, Nas, who plays the social media trolling game as well as Tekashi does — arguably better, considering the outcomes of their respective last two years — had the perfect response. Posting a video of himself dancing to his song “Call Me By Your Name” — titled after the Timothy Chalamet coming-of-age romance about a boy falling in love with his male tutor — Nas superimposed a screenshot of Tekashi’s comment over the video, followed by another screenshot of 69 sliding into his DMs on Instagram.

“Yo,” reads the direct message. “Gonna be in your city soon what you doing lol?” The question is followed by a heart emoji and an upside-down smiley face. We’ll let you draw your own conclusions, but it’s clear that Lil Nas is implying that perhaps this is a case of the pot calling the kettle a certain color. Check out Lil Nas’ reversal of Tekashi’s insult below.

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NBA Top Shot Announced A Series Of NBA All-Star Game Pack Drops

NBA Top Shot has big plans for All-Star Weekend. The digital sports collectable that’s seen a meteoric rise in popularity this NBA season is using the Association’s showcase in Atlanta to drop new packs, including a planned series featuring moments from the All-Star Game itself.

The platform’s big plans started on Wednesday, when NBA Top Shot was used to announce the rosters of the Rising Stars game, which won’t actually take place over the pandemic-limited All-Star Weekend. That announcement also came with news that Top Shot would release a Rising Stars-themed set, with plans to drop that on Saturday, the day before the All-Star Game itself.

“Unveiling the 2021 Stars rosters on NBA Top Shot and dropping a pack that includes hand-picked moments for each of the players was an opportunity to celebrate the league’s young talent during NBA All-Star in a year when scheduling limitations prevented the Rising Stars game from being played,” Adrienne O’Keeffe, NBA associate vice president of Global Partnerships told Dime by email. “It’s just one example of how NBA Top Shot can provide NBA fans with new ways to connect with the league.”

But the anticipation of that drop would have to wait a bit: On Thursday, NBA Top Shot announced it would also have a three-drop series dedicated to players that made Sunday’s All-Star Game. The drop, called Seeing Stars, features 26 Moments from the 2020-21 regular season from players selected to participate in the All-Star Game in Atlanta.

This drop will be a bit different than in the past, though: collectors will be limited to one pack each, but the drop will take place at three different times over a two-day period. The first drop is scheduled for 8 p.m. EST on Thursday, with another drop set for Friday at noon EST and a final set for 8 p.m. EST.

The bad news for anyone not already in the ecosystem: Top Shot is likely to disable new signups before these pack drops, both to limit stress on the website itself but also in an effort to limit the potential for bots to overrun the queue and tip the scales in fairness for these releases. The company has been working in recent weeks to have collectors with multiple accounts combine them as well as ban bots to limit these pack drops to one per collector.

If you’re out of luck this weekend, there’s more All-Star Game packs on the way. O’Keeffe told Dime that another All-Star Game pack is scheduled to drop “later this month” that features moments from the All-Star Game action on Sunday. That means you should expect seeing a lot of the #NBATopShotThis hashtag on Twitter on Sunday night.

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Here Are The NBA Players Skip Bayless Reportedly Now Makes More Money Than

Skip Bayless — a person whose primary job is to get you to quote tweet takes and say “you’re crazy for this one, Skip!” or “No!!!” — makes a whole lot of money. Bayless was considered the face of the Embrace Debate era at ESPN, alongside Stephen A. Smith, which he then parlayed into being the face of FS1’s morning sports programming alongside the wonderful Shannon Sharpe.

The exact dollar sign on Bayless’ deal was about $6 million, but his contract with Fox expired in September and there was no word on what the future would hold. It turns out his future involved more money at the same place, as Andrew Marchand of the New York Post reported that Bayless signed a new four-year deal worth $32 million, even though ESPN apparently wanted to bring him home and have him work with Stephen A. again.

As part of the agreement, Bayless, a professional provocateur, continues to do his daily morning sports debate show on FS1’s “Undisputed” with Shannon Sharpe. Bayless and FS1 are in the early planning stage of a potential second daily show for the afternoons. At this point, Bayless is expected to be a solo act for the program.

That is a lot of money! There is a big conversation to be had about how much Bayless makes, how it is something of an indictment of sports media’s desire to invest in firing off takes than having deep and substantive conversations, and a whole lot of other things. We, instead, are going to attempt to contextualize just how much money this ($8 million a year, to be clear) is by comparing it to some top NBA players’ annual salaries, who similarly make a lot of money, but not as much as Bayless.

Via basketball-reference:

PJ Tucker, $7,969,537
LaMelo Ball, $7,839,960
Seth Curry, $7,813,953
Derrick Rose, $7,682,927
Rajon Rondo, $7,500,000
Jonathan Isaac, $7,362,566
Robin Lopez, $7,300,000
Jaren Jackson Jr., $7,257,360
Trae Young, $6,571,800
Donovan Mitchell, $5,195,501
Bam Adebayo, $5,115,492
Enes Kanter, $5,005,350
Collin Sexton, $4,991,880
Mikal Bridges, $4,359,000
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, $4,141,320
Jarrett Allen, $3,909,902
OG Anunoby, $3,872,215
Tyler Herro, $3,822,240
Kyle Kuzma, $3,562,178
Michael Porter Jr, $3,550,800
Boban Marjanovic, $3,500,000
Austin Rivers, $3,174,603
Donte DiVincenzo, $3,044,160
Alex Caruso, $2,750,000
Marc Gasol, $2,564,753
Carmelo Anthony, $2,564,753
Dwight Howard, $2,564,753
Udonis Haslem, $2,564,753
Jared Dudley, $2,564,753
JJ Barea, $2,564,753
Jeff Green, $2,564,753
Hassan Whiteside, $2,320,004
Keldon Johnson, $2,048,040
Payton Pritchard, $2,035,800
Robert Williams, $2,029,920
Shake Milton, $1,701,593
Monte Morris, $1,663,861
Mitchell Robinson, $1,663,861
Kendrick Nunn, $1,663,861
Duncan Robinson, $1,663,861
Jalen Brunson, $1,663,861
Devonte’ Graham, $1,663,861
Luguentz Dort, $1,517,981
Talen Horton-Tucker, $1,517,981

A handful of them have extensions kicking in starting next season — Mitchell and Adebayo, most prominently — but still, it’s a pretty wild list when you consider what they have to do to be great at their jobs so they don’t get told they suck by someone like Skip.

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Tom Morello Clarifies That He’s ‘Not White’ After Critics Accuse Him Of White Privilege

Rage Against The Machine‘s vocalist Tom Morello has, in the past year, enjoyed dunking on numerous conservatives that have taken issue with the band’s political stances. Morello was once again going viral Wednesday after one listener slammed him for his friendship with problematic right-leaning musician Ted Nugent.

Earlier this week, Morello opened up about his relationship with Nugent in an appearance on The Howard Stern Show. Morello, who has consistently named Trump an “orange-faced demagogue,” is apparently buddy-buddy with Capitol insurrection-defending Nugent. “While we certainly have differences, I consider him a friend,” Morello told Stern.

But one of Morello’s fans wasn’t as nonchalant about the musician’s friendship with Nugent. “Tom Morello’s white man privilege is showing,” they wrote in response to Morello’s kind words about Nugent.

Morello, who is of both Irish and Kenyan descent, didn’t let the comment go unseen. He chose to respond with a succinct reminder: “I’m not white.”

Rage Against The Machine were originally all set for an expansive reunion tour in 2020, officially ending the side project Prophets Of Rage with members of Cypress Hill and Public Enemy. But, like most other plans that were set for 2020, the pandemic stopped the reunion plans in their tracks. Rage Against The Machine have yet to release any more details surrounding a possible reunion tour, but it could be back in the works once venues are able to reopen safely.

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Tayla Parx Gets Over An Ex With Bubble Baths And Baked Goods In Her ‘Sad’ Video

For everyone who has used the pandemic as the chance to take a little time off, know that Tayla Parx is not in that phase. The acclaimed songwriter has recently been focused on her own solo career, dropping her debut album We Need To Talk in spring of 2019, and following that up very quickly with last fall’s Coping Mechanisms. Previous singles off the project include a jumpy acoustic song called “Residue” and the ebullient “Fixerupper”.

Today she’s highlighting a different song from the release, one titled “Sad,” that’s a kiss off to an ex who will be missing out on a lot now that they’re not dating Parx. According to the colorful video, full of bubble baths and a kitchen brimming with baked goods, Tayla herself doesn’t seem to be all that broken up about. But she said that listening to the song now is like looking at a time capsule. “My favorite part about releasing my own music is that it’s a bit of a time capsule into my emotions,” Parx. said “When I listen to ‘Sad’ now it’s so funny that somebody could affect me so much so, that I wrote this quirky song about it. Maybe it wasn’t the healthiest reaction, but it was my own coping mechanism at the time.”

Check out her “Sad” video above, in case you need some help finding coping mechanisms of your own.

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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton Got Trounced By A Cop During A Twitter Beef

You’ve undoubtedly noticed that Texas has been in the headlines lately. That’s an understatement, but of course, the power catastrophe happened first, and in the midst of all that, Ted Cruz departed for a Cancun vacation, and then Ted also inserted himself in the whole situation by beefing with Michael Moore after Texas Governor Greg Abbott announced that he’d roll back COVID-19 restrictions. Now, there’s a new Texas-based controversy brewing that has nothing to do with Ted, but stay tuned because he might hop into this mess, too.

At issue (and as pointed out by Above The Law, Texas Attorney Ken Paxton got his feathers ruffled by the San Antonio chief of police because he declined to allow his deputies to be deputized for ICE in service of the Trump administration. Paxton filed a lawsuit to remove the chief while arguing that the office should have prioritized helping ICE if there was any reason to suspect that detained individuals were undocumented, and now, Houston Police Chief Ace Acevedo is defending his fellow lawman to Paxton.

Acevedo went in hard on Twitter while aiming straight toward Paxton: “How much longer are Texans going to tolerate @KenPaxtonTX shenanigans? Suing police a police chief for difficult operational decisions? I hope the court quickly leaves Paxton in the cold like he did his fellow Texans last week during a historic freeze.”

Paxton responded by stating that the real danger is the “call to let loose illegal aliens in violation of TX law.” He also advised Acevedo to watch his own city’s crime rates.

Acevedo wasn’t ruffled and pointed toward the state’s shortcomings with criminal justice reform. He added that Paxton should “spend more time in the state during times of crisis instead of Utah and Florida.”

Paxton responded by basically accusing Acevedo of being an ineffective leader: “Your idea of reform is letting dangerous felons back on to the streets to reoffend. That’s why murders in Houston are up 44%. Maybe you being the chief of police is the problem.”

That didn’t work out too well for Paxton: “As AG, you should know police chiefs have little to zero to do with who gets out of jail,” Acevedo tweeted. “You know, first hand, I have led the charge against letting violent offenders out on PR and low bond, and as a defendant with pending felony charges, you know how easy it is to get PR bonds.”

No further response from Paxton has been forthcoming. Well, it sure looks like we have a winner.

(Via Above The Law)

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Rucci’s Heartfelt ‘UPROXX Sessions’ Performance Implores You To ‘Believe In Me’

Inglewood native Rucci sums up his relatable mission statement on this week’s installment of UPROXX Sessions, imploring listeners to “Believe In Me” with a performance of his M*dget track sans guest rapper Mozzy. Rucci, a mainstay of LA’s post-G-funk circuit for years now, experienced his first taste of national recognition with the confessional Tako’s Son in 2019, following up with two projects in 2020: an EP, I’m Still Me, and M*dget, a full-length featuring all sorts of California rappers from AllBlack to AzChike to White John.

Rucci joins AzChike, Drakeo The Ruler, and Almighty Suspect as the latest member of this bubbling underground fraternity to grace the UPROXX Sessions stage. He’s also in prime position to receive just as much — if not more — attention, thanks to recent collaborations with well-known West Coast standouts like Mozzy and Vince Staples. With his honest, heartfelt style and plainspoken witticisms, he’s the perfect rep for the latest wave of Los Angeles artists lining up to take the city’s hip-hop into the next decade.

Watch Rucci’s heartfelt performance of “Believe In Me” above.

UPROXX Sessions is Uproxx’s performance show featuring the hottest up-and-coming acts you should keep an eye on. Featuring creative direction from LA promotion collective, Ham On Everything, and taking place on our “bathroom” set designed and painted by Julian Gross, UPROXX Sessions is a showcase of some of our favorite performers, who just might soon be yours, too.

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Frank Grillo Talks Boxing, ‘Boss Level’ And The Importance Of Short, Fun Action Movies

Frank Grillo has become a very busy man in Hollywood, as the 55-year-old actor carved out quite the niche for himself in the world of action movies. Following a run in the MCU as Crossbones and as the lead in The Purge franchise, Grillo partnered with director Joe Carnahan on a production company, War Party Films, with one mission in mind: bring back the short, fun, and relatively cheap to make action movie genre that dominated in the 80s.

The latest from them is Boss Level, starring Grillo, Mel Gibson, and Naomi Watts, and his love of sports and fighting comes in with some of the supporting cast, which includes Rob Gronkowski, Rampage Jackson, and Rashad Evans. Ahead of the movie’s release on Hulu on March 5, Grillo spoke with Uproxx about the long journey to get this movie out, his love of boxing and how it’s guided his career, why sometimes it’s important to make a fun action movie that doesn’t make total sense, playing with Hollywood toys like “Car Shooters,” and discussions for him to return to The Purge.

How did you get into boxing when you were younger and how has that been a part of your life, really throughout this journey into the acting world?

I got into boxing when I was a little kid. I first got into boxing at the CYO at the church, when I was like 12 or 13 years old. And really liked it, but didn’t like getting punched in the face.

Sure.

And then you know I wrestled in school, and that got me into martial arts. I started doing Muay Thai a bit, and then I got back into boxing about 17 and I never stopped. Look for me boxing, I hate to say this, it’s a terrible cliche, but it really is a metaphor for life. I mean, it really is for me. I box every day. Sometimes I take my boxing trainer on movie sets with me. If I don’t, I find the best boxing trainers through my friends. The good thing about my life now is I have a lot of access. So, you know, boxing to me is as important as breathing.

You mentioned you do martial arts and stuff like that, but why do you always come back to boxing?

I think there’s something about boxing, which to me is like — and Jiu Jitsu for me it was a little bit like this but boxing, much more so — it’s like chess. It’s as intellectual as it is physical. And, you know, it’s also a little bit like golf, one day you get up there you’re throwing up beautiful left hook, and the next day, I’m sparring and I feel like I’m boxing the wrong way. And so that element of constantly trying to perfect is what gets me excited.

It’s interesting you mention that because I golf as well, and I’ve never really thought of the parallels there but it is, because it’s this constant quest of … perfection can never come in either sport, you’re never going to be able to do it, but you get that taste of it that one time and you’re like “I can replicate this.”

You know, I often say to my sons and to younger people, it’s not about achieving perfection. It’s the pursuit of perfection. And that’s where you learn so much about yourself, about life, about other people, and then about what you’re doing, obviously.

And I think there’s a parallel there with making any kind of art, is you’re also doing the same thing, right? When you make a movie, you’re always chasing that perfect take, but like it’s it’s never going to be maybe exactly there but when you get that feeling, it’s kind of the same thing, right?

Absolutely the same. That’s a great analogy and, you know, it’s also the discipline of never giving up, of not quitting, sports or fighting. You know, I box with a lot of Mexicans. They don’t quit. They don’t even like to step backwards. You know so many people that I came up with an acting, at my age, are gone. They never made it because they left. It wasn’t that they weren’t talented, it’s that they didn’t have the wherewithal to stay in it. I think through boxing and martial arts, that discipline has given me the discipline to continue in this career, and it’s … look, I’ve carved out a bit of a niche for myself and it’s worked.

I read an interview you did, I think back in 2016, with one of my colleagues Mike Ryan, where you talked about that. Where you were 50 and you were finally kind of finding this level of fame that you hadn’t been in before. And that doesn’t happen for a lot of guys, but it is that discipline, that willing to grind for 20 years to get to this point, right?

Exactly. And you know it’s sweet. Victory is sweet when you’re old, and you’re like, “Wow, this happened.” By the way, I don’t even know if what I’m professing is bullshit. It’s like, maybe what I’m saying is wrong. Maybe you should quit and go do something else. You know what I mean, like, “I actually was right!” for once.

Even this movie here with Boss Level having gone through some delays in the studio change and all of that. What is it like finally getting to see this come out after the labor of love that you’ve had to put into this to finally get to see this coming out on Hulu next month?

Yeah, I mean, to me, it could not have had a better ending. Given the circumstances that we’ve been in over the last year — this is a movie we tried to make nine, ten years ago, and then we thought, aw, we can’t get a break. Then finally we did make the movie and it went from 43 days to 27 days we had to make it. So we’re like, we can’t get a break. And then we sometimes didn’t have enough money to finish something, and, we can’t get a break. And then COVID happens and we lose our distribution, we can’t get a break right?!

Guess what. Now, we’re partnering with Hulu. Hulu buys the movie. They’re distributing the movie all over the United States and North America. They’re putting billboards up, they’re doing great advertising. Because of COVID, there are no more movie theaters. We’re gonna have more eyes on this movie than we would ever have had. So guess what, we did get a break. But if you give up along that way, this movie could have been in the trash bin somewhere. I don’t know, right? It could have just as easily fallen apart, but [Joe] Carnahan and I did not quit. We knew we had something that was watchable, you know? And it turned out like the movie gods were on our side from the beginning.

Something that I really enjoyed, I think this is gonna be really good from the streaming aspect. Because when I’m looking for something to watch, I don’t often have two and a half hours for like a Tenet, or whatever. Like if I’m trying to watch a movie at 9 p.m on a weeknight, I don’t want something that’s ending at midnight. And I love these action movies that are in that 90 to 100 minute window. They’re fun, they’re to the point. Is that something that y’all were going for with this?

Yeah. So we started our company with a movie called Wheelman, which is basically me in a car for 88 minutes. It’s nonstop from beginning to end. And it was a big hit for Netflix. It was our first movie we made as our company, War Party. And that’s when the light went off. And our mission statement is to make these kind of movies, elevated action genre, and make them for a reasonable budget. And just put people at rest for 80-90 minutes, so we’re … you know in Tenet, I was watching Tenet, brilliant movie, but I got lost! I’m like, you know what, I don’t want to think this much! It’s too much! I want something a little mindless.

Right and there’s sometimes you just want that. Like it’s one of the reasons you go back and you watch the same sitcom that you’ve watched before. It’s kind of the same idea.

How many times would Die Hard come on, that you watch from where it is, man? It’s because I can sit back, I could stop thinking, and it entertains me.

When you’re putting a movie like that together obviously you have things that you have to kind of tell the audience but you also have to trust your audience to get what you’re doing, right? Because you’re gonna tell the story, you’re gonna give them snippets of like, for five minutes we’re gonna explain the Osiris thing, but you don’t need 40 minutes of storytelling necessarily.

No and, you know, look it’s over the top in every aspect. In the storytelling aspect, in the action aspect, it’s all over the top by design. It’s supposed to be that right and and you got to — the audience, from the minute you see me, you got to suspend disbelief. You just have to. You just gotta get on the roller coaster, and you gotta know, as dangerous as it looks, you’re going to be able to get back to this place and get off the roller coaster. I mean, that’s what this movie is. I’m gonna sit down. I’m gonna watch it. It’s not going to make sense in places, I’m gonna laugh, and maybe I’ll even cry a little bit, and then I’ll get off of it. You know what I mean? That’s what this is.

I don’t think this is really a spoiler, but you die a lot in this movie.

Yeah.

Many times.

Many times.

Was there a favorite one to shoot, a favorite death in the movie that like you particularly enjoyed? Because I know there’s a couple for me.

Yeah, a lot of them were fun but when I got harpooned [laughs], I was like wow we’re really pulling out all the stops here. But Joe Carnahan is a maniac, so.

I like how y’all steered into some of the absurd and also, there would be times where you think you’re gonna get to this place and then you run your car into a concrete wall.

Right. [laughs]

Like I appreciated that. I really do.

How about, you know when the car went flying over the fence? So, there was actually an apparatus in the movie business called a Car Shooter, and you put it in this apparatus —

Like a Hot Wheels.

Yeah and as soon as we saw it, we were like, we got to use this! This is amazing! [laughs]

You’re just like finding toys to play with. That’s awesome. It’s a fun movie, it’s one that you can just kind of like pop in and watch in 90 minutes. You mentioned this has been the mission statement. Was there a point where you, you realize like there’s a there’s a niche for these movies and we can really kind of tap into this and carve out this space for ourselves?

Yeah, that’s a great question and and without knowing — a lot of people don’t know a lot about the business – big studios, they’re in the theatrical film business. So your film has to be theatrical. In other words, they want to spend a lot of money. They do. And our mission statement is to make movies under $20 million, but that looked like they’re $50 million. And there’s not a lot of people doing it. And so, what we learned is, as we became more successful with each film, people were coming to us and saying, “do you want to be in business?” Like, people that are very established because, like, “we’re not in this business, but we want to be in this business, do you want to work with us? Do you want to produce this with us? Do you want to make this for us?”

And so we’re like, wait a minute we accidentally stumbled on something, because this whole genre that was big in the 80s, it’s gone. And I have a partner in Joe Carnahan that is brilliant at making them. He did the movie Smoking Aces and A-Team, and he knows how to execute this at a reasonable budget. That’s when people aren’t used to anymore.

What are things that you’re looking for in the future. Do you have ideas for kind of where you can continue to take this and expand it? Would you be interested in maybe expanding this into like the sport genre and fight movies?

You know absolutely we consider the sports genre, which I think is very tricky. I don’t see a lot of good sports movies.

No, it’s hard to do right.

My buddy Gavin O’Connor made Warrior and also made Miracle, which I thought was amazing film. But we’re now in the process of, we have we just finished a movie called Cop Shop that Joe Carnahan directed that stars Gerard Butler and myself. So we just finished that, so we have that coming out after Boss Level. But now we’re like, now we’re looking at what to do and how to expand what we do, into maybe, the sport genre, and even some horror. If we can find some cool horror, and we can do it right. Like I did the a bunch of those Purge movies, we made those for 9 million bucks.

And those were also in that same vein of fun, 90-100 minutes movies. I remember they came out — I go to NBA Summer League in Las Vegas each year — and I remember Anarchy and Election Year both came out while we were there. We would go to the theater like in the middle of the day because we were tired of watching shitty basketball and we were also tired of losing money, and like the matinee price in Vegas like $5.25 so a bunch of us would just go and watch the Purge movies.

I love it! I mean, again, you know what it is. You sit there, it starts immediately, and it doesn’t end until the credits come on. And it’s like, wait a minute, that was great. Okay, I’m good. Me and James DeMonaco, we’re talking about Purge 6. Because he wasn’t involved in the last two, he just was producing on ’em. And we’re thinking about bringing my character back for Purge 6 and doing a whole kind of Avengers: Endgame-ish thing in the Purge world.

Oh! Well, I’ll be there, trust me.

[laughs] I love it.

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‘Coming 2 America’ Is A Rare Comedy Sequel That Does Justice To The Original, With Oscar-Worthy Costume Design As The Cherry On Top

Virtually no one does good comedy sequels, especially decades after the fact. Super Troopers, Zoolander, Dumb and Dumber, Ghostbusters, Bill & Ted (sorry) — all tried to get their respective bands back together, and all turned in, to varying degrees, uneven rehashes of old jokes. Of all the people to finally get it right, who would’ve expected it to be Eddie Murphy, the guy who seemingly spent an entire decade doing bad kids movies?

Maybe it helps that Coming To America (1988) wasn’t the world’s funniest movie. Mostly it was charming, didn’t have the reek of desperation that comes from trying too hard, and was funny enough when it had to be. Murphy doesn’t get enough credit for his choice to play Prince Akeem believably. Murphy played an African prince, where virtually anyone else in his situation then and now would have played him as famous-comedian-comedically-playing-African-Prince. Murphy wisely played it straight, letting the humor come naturally from the situations Akeem was in. The funniest part of Eddie Murphy getting hit with an entire vanilla shake was him not reacting to it. Meanwhile, playing all the side characters in heavy make-up gave Murphy an outlet for his inner ham and channeled that energy where it best served the story.

In that way, Coming To America felt a little like a Muppet movie — two sort of straight men on an odyssey through a fantastical world full of wonder and puppets (or at least, actors in so much makeup that they might as well be puppets). Muppet puppeteer Frank Oz even gets a shout-out in the airport scene, when the PA pages “Frank Oznowicz.”

Coming 2 America, this 30+-years-late sequel directed by Craig Brewer (Hustle And Flow) captures that same fantastical odyssey quality beautifully. It’s as much a musical costume party extravaganza as it is movie. It didn’t always make me laugh (though I laughed plenty) but it always made me smile. Above all, everyone seems to be having fun, and not in a needy way. Even when it’s not laugh-out-loud funny Coming 2 America is still fun to look at. I’m not exaggerating when I say that costume designer Ruth E. Carter deserves an (other) Oscar.

In this update, Prince Akeem (Murphy) is living happily in his kingdom of Zamunda, though he has one big problem: his father (played again by the thankfully-still-alive James Earl Jones) is on his deathbed and Akeem, who has sired three daughters, doesn’t have a male heir. Luckily, as related to us by a snaggle-toothed, hilariously outfitted witch doctor played by Arsenio Hall (seriously, this costume is a perfect sight gag and would be worth the price of admission alone, if there was one), it turns out that Akeem sired a bastard child on his original sojourn to Queens — Lavelle Junson, played by Jermaine Fowler, an underachieving 30-year-old who scalps tickets outside Madison Square Garden.

With that, Prince Akeem has to travel to America, bring back his bastard heir and his bastard’s mother and uncle, played by Leslie Jones and Tracy Morgan, and hopefully get his line of succession sorted. All this so he can neutralize a potential geopolitical conflict with his restive neighbors in the kingdom of Nextdooria, led by General Izzi. A charming-but-scary Idi Amin-inspired warlord type played by a perfectly cast Wesley Snipes, General Izzi enters every room with choreographed dance routines and a herald announcing his fanciful self-given titles (Amin famously went by “His Excellency, President for Life, Field Marshal Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, VC, DSO, MC, Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of the Seas and Conqueror of the British Empire in Africa in General and Uganda in Particular.”).

Every scene seems to incorporate elaborate, comedic song and dance routines like this and they’re always a joy to watch. Ruth E. Carter won her last Oscar for Black Panther, and both that movie and this one draw heavily on this thoroughly enchanting idea of a mythical, modern yet pre-colonial Africa where beautiful, vividly-attired Black people live sumptuously alongside unspoiled natural wonders, like elephants, zebras, leafy green trees, rolling plains, and roaring rivers. This gloriously realized conception of advanced African abundance is an emphatic rejection of the usual Western view of Africa, as a place defined by scarcity and poverty and lack. Carter outfits her Zamundan princesses in brilliantly colored dresses combining nature-inspired patterns with brand logos like Fila and Puma. It’s smart, hip, and, well, kind of believable. Above all Zamunda is a place you’d want to visit.

This is an idea only hinted at in the original Coming To America, but it fits with it perfectly. After all, what was Zamunda if not a pre-Wakanda Wakanda? Watching the original nowadays, it’s striking how much it feels like a showcase for uncompromisingly Black humor, with observational characters like the horny preacher and the garrulous barbers, who were probably sort of in-jokes to Black people, that didn’t try to translate them to or define them through, the lens of white audiences. That was rare then and nearly as rare now.

It’s always better when you don’t try to explain the joke too much. The passion of the delivery and specificity of the writing are what make it translate, regardless of whether you have a real Randy Watson or Miss Black Awareness Pageant in your own life. (Similarly but in reverse, I imagine Kyle Mooney’s series of Inside SoCal sketches work even if you don’t know the real-life version of all those characters from going to college in San Diego like I do).

It’s true, I do sort of miss the foul-mouthed, nudity-infused R-rated aspects of the original, which were a nice squeeze of lemon against the story’s natural fairytale sweetness. There’s a gender-swapped version of the Royal Bathers scene in this PG-13 sequel that absolutely would’ve benefited from going whole hog and hanging some dong. Bang a gong… hang some dong… get it on…

But overall, there’s very little to complain about in Coming 2 America, a worthy sequel that does justice to the original without trying to recreate everything about it. It’s a winning, maximalist musical extravaganza.

‘Coming 2 America’ hits Amazon Prime this Friday, March 5th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. You can access his archive of reviews here.