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Lizzo Is Fully In Favor Of Starring In ‘The Bodyguard’ Remake Opposite Chris Evans

As you probably know by now, a remake of the 1992 hit film The Bodyguard starring Whitney Houston and Kevin Costner is officially in the works. When the news dropped this week, social media lit up with suggestions as to who should reprise the lead roles. (Variety also reports that duos like Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson as well as Channing Tatum and Cardi B have been suggested.) Anyway, now Lizzo has made her opinion known, posting a TikTok implying that she should star in the movie opposite her crush Chris Evans.

In her TikTok, Lizzo did the “What are we talking about??” meme while pointing to a headline announcing The Bodyguard reimagining. Then, she pointed to a tweet in support of her starring opposite Evans and mouthed slyly, “What are we talkin’ about?”

Lizzo’s well-documented crush on the Avengers star has been a running joke for months. Earlier this year, Lizzo confessed that she drunkenly slid into Evans’ Instagram DMs. The result was a small back-and-forth, as well as a joke from the singer that she was pregnant with Evans’ baby. Back in August, Lizzo added a new layer to the story by explaining what motivated her to try her luck with the Avengers actor in the first place: “There’s just something about that face,” Lizzo said about Evans. “When you come up to a Black woman, you gotta come correct. And when you do come correct, there’s nothing more attractive. So I said, ‘He got game a little bit. I’m single.’”

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BlueBucksClan Pays Homage To ‘Horace Grant’ In A Freewheeling ‘UPROXX Sessions’ Performance

The latest UPROXX Sessions performers are BlueBucksClan, who bring their freewheeling single “Horace Grant” to the studio fresh off their participation in React Like You Know. The LA-based party-rap duo’s breakout hit exemplifies their penchant for peppering their songs with slick sports references. DJ and Jeeezy’s laid-back delivery belies the quick wits that have made them a fast favorite of the West Coast underground scene, while Ten11’s thumping beat ensures that the upbeat “Horace Grant” will remain a fixture of party playlists for the foreseeable future.

Starting out in 2019 after foregoing college scholarships to play football, BlueBucksClan’s fanbase has been steadily growing ever since the release of the duo’s debut mixtape Clan Way in October of that year. The duo’s most recent release is Clan Virus 2, which they dropped in March of this year after partnering with Universal. The tape saw an expansion of the duo’s fun-loving remit, adding appearances from big names like Hit-Boy, Lil Yachty, and Quavo to a guest list that also featured their South LA compatriot and fellow rising star Bino Rideaux (who is also their Out Of The Blue labelmate). While the goal may have been to broaden their appeal, they also stuck closely to their guns, riding their off-kilter flows and gut-busting punchlines to a level of buzz most rap rookies can only dream about.

Watch BlueBucksClan’s UPROXX Sessions performance of “Horace Grant” 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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Julius Randle Talks About The Knicks ‘Family’ And Why Last Season ‘Ended Perfectly’ To Give Him More Motivation

Julius Randle was one of the breakout stars of the 2020-21 season, as the Knicks forward emerged as an All-Star, leading the Knicks to the 4-seed in the East in the process. The playoffs didn’t go as planned for New York, as they were bounced by the Hawks in five games in the first round, but listen to Randle tell it, that was the perfect end to the season.

Given his career trajectory, from once part of a hopeful young Lakers core to a player somewhat adrift, with his ideal role unclear, Randle has an appreciation for the opportunity he’s had in New York to establish himself in a place he’s comfortable and show what he can truly bring to a team. As he prepares for a followup campaign to his Year 7 breakout, Randle spoke with Uproxx over Zoom on behalf of Mobil 1 and their new Behind The Drive campaign about last season, how it fuels his drive for next year, the importance of fit for a player’s success, and how being embraced by New York has been so fulfilling.

Now that you’ve had a couple months, how do you look back on last season and the season you had and the Knicks had as a team?

It was two things. One, just to see hard work pays off, but it was also very motivating and it ended perfectly, in a sense, because it motivated me to want more, to push myself even more, and that’s what I did. So, ultimately, I want to come back a better player, I want our team to come back better, and I feel like that’s what we’re going to do. So, like I said it was two things, it was rewarding but it was also very motivating and I’m excited about that.

You mentioned working this offseason to get better, where has your focus been with your game this offseason as you as you get ready for camp?

For me, I don’t think I have to improve him on like 10 things like every year. I try to improve on a couple things and that’s what I did this offseason. You always have things that you expect in the offseason to yourself. Regardless, and that’s to be in amazing shape coming into camp. So I’m going to do that for sure — I have done that — so I’ll be ready for that. But also, you know there’s other things I feel like I can improve on. Obviously I’m not gonna tell you the secrets, [laughs], I’ll just let you see it. But ultimately, I think I’ll be a much better player and our team will be much better for sure.

Last year I think the thing that was obvious was the work you put in on your shooting from the outside. What was the work that went in to that? And then seeing that result in the year that you had shooting from three and from the mid range, what did that mean to you to see that work result in an All-Star appearance and so much success on the floor?

It was just day in and day out improvement on shooting. A lot of reps, a lot of mental focus on it as well and doing things the right way, every day. And that’s a challenge in itself. So, I wasn’t just shooting the ball a lot, I was trying to do things the right way in the same way every day. And I feel like I improved on that and I feel like I’m an even better shooter now, so, I’m excited about that. I think that in the NBA, period, shooting is a premium, but especially at my position and being able to space that floor. So like I said there’s things, shooting was one of the things that I improved on last year. Shooting is a premium. I feel like I was a better shooter, improving my shooting last year, and I felt like I improved on it now. So, excited to continue to do that.

What has being in New York and playing for Thibs this last year shown you about the importance of fit and comfort with a team and a coach? Because you’ve played on a few different teams for a number of different coaches and something seemed to click with this team in particular. What have you learned about the importance of that to your own personal success and having that fit with a group of guys and the coaching staff?

Super important. From top to bottom, honestly, starting with Leon and Wes. Like those guys for me are family. This whole thing is bigger than basketball. And then I established, obviously I had that relationship with Kenny Payne before and him being on the coaching staff. So being comfortable is great and now I’ve established that relationship with Thibs. So, all this stuff is bigger than basketball when the — I guess it is business, but it’s family business and when the person, your boss or whatever it is, cares about you as a person that means something, because you don’t want to let them down. And that’s what it is for me. I’m comfortable here. I enjoy coming to work every day. I enjoy pushing myself with these guys and myself every day, and it’s just a different type of experience that you know you just can’t really explain it, you just got to be in it to experience it and then you will know what I’m talking about for sure.

Yeah. And you have a couple the big additions this year with Kemba [Walker] and Evan Fournier coming in. What are you excited about the most about getting those guys in. welcoming them into that Knicks family, and getting the chance to play with two guys that bring some more dynamic ability to that backcourt?

Yeah, I think those guys fit in perfectly with what we’re trying to do, what we’re building. The biggest thing is, you know those two guys in addition to the rookies and stuff, nobody has an ego. Everybody just wants to give themselves up for the team, help the team improve, and win as many games as possible. And that’s the culture and type of atmosphere that we’re building every day. So those guys fit in perfectly.

You’ve got this partnership with with Mobil 1. How did that come about and how can fans get in on this to win a pair of some custom sneakers?

For me, when I do certain things like this and partnerships like this, it’s very important for it to be authentic to me and who I am and what I’m doing. And that’s exactly what this is with Mobil 1. The big thing is, the name of the campaign is Behind The Drive, and that’s really what it is. Like, what’s behind the drive of Julius Randle. What motivates me as a person, what motivates me as a player. You know what I do on a basketball court, you guys have seen that. I’m going into my eighth year so it’s easy to see who I am as a basketball player, and be able to critique that or praise that or whatever you want to do. But this shows you more who I am off the court. What makes me who I am as a player, as a person, and what motivates me.

One of the big things that we’ve done that was really cool, and it just speaks to the authenticity of the of the campaign and the brand is my man Mache made me these custom one-of-one sneakers, obviously can see the checkered flag for Mobile 1 and stuff like that. But the really cool thing about these shoes is it’s infused with Mobil 1 oil. So it’s just showing you the authenticity of the brand and authenticity of the shoe and just how it relates to me as a player. So you know it’s a one-of-one and it’s really cool because you’re seeing who I am as a player, but fans are able to also you know go on BehindTheDrive.com and they’re able to sign up and have a chance to win some of these shoes as well. So I’m able to interact with fans, and I love doing that. So it’s been a really fun, cool, authentic partnership and I’m just excited to be a part of it and keep it going,

Last thing, you mentioned getting the chance to interact with fans and, Knicks fans have been starved for a long time, and it seems they’ve really embraced you and embraced this team. What has it meant to you to feel that love from New York fans and kind of get to share this ride that you’re on with them?

Yeah, it’s been amazing. Being able to feel that love, you know this fanbase is not just, I would say, the biggest in basketball, but it’s one of the biggest fan bases in sports, period. There’s a lot of New York fans in New York and the country and the world. So being able to put on the blue and orange and experience that love, experience the passion of the fans is truly amazing. These guys, they live and die by the Knicks and they really have a certain level of expectation, win or lose, how you’re supposed to play the game of basketball, how you approach it, what you’re supposed to do. And I feel like when our team, us being unselfish, us coming in playing hard and giving our best and playing full of energy every night. That’s just a brand of basketball that the city can relate to. So, it’s really fun to be able to experience that love. It’s really fun to be able just to be a part of that and there’s no better jersey to put on every night than the Knicks.

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A New Book Details How Patrick Dempsey ‘Terrorizing The Set’ Of ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Led To His Departure From The Show

While Patrick Dempsey might have charmed countless fans with his portrayal of heartthrob neurosurgeon Derek Shepherd during his eleven season run on the popular medical drama Grey’s Anatomy, apparently his behavior off-screen was anything but “McDreamy.” According to Entertainment Weekly editor-at-large Lynette Rice’s How to Save a Life — an upcoming unauthorized book recounting the history of Grey’s Anatomy through a series of interviews with the show’s cast and crew — the final months of Dempsey’s career on the show were tumultuous, to say the least.

In an exclusive story for The Hollywood Reporter, Rice shared excerpts from the interviews she conducted for How to Save a Life, including several regarding the actor’s behavior on set. While quite a few cast members had things to say about Dempsey — including the actor himself — executive producer James D. Parriott’s comments were perhaps the most shocking, and shed some light on why McDreamy was ultimately kicked off the show.

“Shonda needed an OG to come in as sort of a showrunner for fourteen episodes. There were HR issues. It wasn’t sexual in any way. He sort of was terrorizing the set. Some cast members had all sorts of PTSD with him. He had this hold on the set where he knew he could stop production and scare people. The network and studio came down and we had sessions with them. I think he was just done with the show. He didn’t like the inconvenience of coming in every day and working. He and Shonda were at each other’s throats.”

While Grey’s Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes didn’t offer any quote on the matter herself — though she did speak about Dempsey’s departure somewhat evasively in 2015 (“It wasn’t easy or fun. It’s never easy or fun. We’ve been working really hard for a long time together. We’re family. Those choices and those decisions are never easy for any of us”) — writer Jeannine Renshaw agreed with Parriott’s comments regarding Dempsey on-set antics, adding his complaining often time upset co-star Ellen Pompeo and his behavior was “like a kid.”

“He’s so high energy and would go, ‘What’s happening next?’ He literally goes out of his skin, sitting and waiting. He wants to be out driving his race car or doing something fun. He’s the kid in class who wants to go to recess.”

When Dempsey was asked about his final days on Grey’s Anatomy, the actor told Rice that appearing on the show for eleven years and maintaining its rigorous schedule — especially as a father — was “challenging.” Dempsey then added he didn’t want to leave the show or turn it down because “it’s remarkable to be a working actor, and then on top of that to be on a show that’s visible. And then on top of that to be on a phenomenal show that’s known around the world, and play a character who is beloved around the world.” However, he ultimately lost the choice when — according to Renshaw — Rhimes told the studio they had to choose between either Dempsey or her to stay on the project.

If you’re interested in hearing more about Dempsey’s time on the show, additional interview excerpts have been shared over on The Hollywood Reporter. How to Save a Life, the unauthorized oral history of Grey’s Anatomy, hit shelves on September 21.

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Lil Nas X Used To Smoke So Much Weed He Had Pneumonia For An Entire Month Without Knowing It

Lil Nas X is just hours away from the release of his anticipated debut album, Montero, which is slated to feature some vulnerable lyrics about his upbringing. Ahead of the album’s release, the musician sat down with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe to discuss the LP and just how far he’s come from his “Old Town Road” days.

Lil Nas X and Lowe’s conversation turned to his early college days, when he first found that music gave him an outlet to discover his purpose. At the time, Lil Nas X was coping with feelings of extreme anxiety, which he tried to ignore. But there was also a time where he was coping by smoking excessive amounts of weed. In fact, he would smoke so much that he even had pneumonia for an entire month without knowing it.

Replying to Lowe’s inquiry about substances, Lil Nas X said he used to smoke weed several times a day:

“I’d smoke like seven times a day. I was smoking so much that I had pneumonia and I didn’t realize it for like an entire month. They were like, ‘Oh, you really have to stop smoking right now.’ There was literally liquid in my lungs. It was crazy.”

Watch Lil Nas X’s full interview with Lowe above.

Montero is out 9/17 via Columbia. Pre-order it here.

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Trump Has Boarded The Paranoia Train And Believes The Upcoming Rally For Jan. 6th Rioters Is ‘A Setup’ To Make Him Look Bad

Echoing concerns from other Republicans, Donald Trump has been distancing himself from this weekend’s “Justice for J6” rally because he believes the event is a “setup.” Despite enthusiastically defending the insurrectionists who attacked the U.S. Capitol building following his “Stop the Steal” rally on January 6, the former president is steering clear of this Saturday’s event that’s being in thrown in support of jailed rioters.

Capitol Police have already beefed up security ahead of the rally, and even the most diehard Trump supporters in Congress are not attending. As for Trump, he plans to go golfing to avoid getting snared in what he believes is an orchestrated event to make him look bad, according to The New York Times:

Mr. Trump, aides said, has little interest in engaging with the protest and has no plans to be anywhere near Washington on Saturday. Instead, his schedule includes a golf tournament at his Bedminster, N.J., club before he heads back down to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, according to people familiar with his schedule.

Mr. Trump views the planned protest as a setup that the news media will use against him regardless of the outcome, according to people familiar with his thinking.

Unsurprisingly, Trump’s thoughts align exactly with his close friend and advisor, Roger Stone, who recently told Russia Today that he doesn’t “know a single person in the MAGA movement who’s going.”

Obviously, the “setup” talking point is an attempt to get ahead of the fact that the rally is the work of real Trump supporters and has a very good chance of going south like the Jan. 6 attack. Case in point, Stone said “if there’s a single armed protester there, they’ll be working for the federal government.” You know, because everyday Trump supporters would never carry a gun. They barely even like the things.

(Via The New York Times)

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Harvard psychologists have been studying what it takes to raise ‘good’ kids. Here are 6 tips.

This article originally appeared on 06.16.15


A lot of parents are tired of being told how technology is screwing up their kids.

Moms and dads of the digital age are well aware of the growing competition for their children’s attention, and they’re bombarded at each turn of the page or click of the mouse with both cutting-edge ideas and newfound worries for raising great kids.


Cartoon by Sara Zimmerman/Unearthed Comics.

But beneath the madness of modernity, the basics of raising a moral child haven’t really changed.

Parents want their kids to achieve their goals and find happiness, but Harvard researchers believe that doesn’t have to come at the expense of kindness and empathy. They say a few tried-and-true strategies remain the best ways to mold your kids into the morally upstanding and goals-oriented humans you want them to be. Here are six practical tips:

1) Hang out with your kids.

Image by Cade Martin/Public Domain Images.

This is, like, the foundation of it all. Spend regular time with your kids, ask them open-ended questions about themselves, about the world and how they see it, and actively listen to their responses. Not only will you learn all sorts of things that make your child unique, you’ll also be demonstrating to them how to show care and concern for another person.

2) If it matters, say it out loud.

Image by Steven Bennett/Wikimedia Commons.

According to the researchers, “Even though most parents and caretakers say that their children being caring is a top priority, often children aren’t hearing that message.” So be sure to say it with them. And so they know it’s something they need to keep up with, check in with teachers, coaches, and others who work with your kids on how they’re doing with teamwork, collaboration, and being a generally nice person.

3) Show your child how to “work it out.”

Image by susieq3c/Flickr.

Walk them through decision-making processes that take into consideration people who could be affected. For example, if your child wants to quit a sport or other activity, encourage them to identify the source of the problem and consider their commitment to the team. Then help them figure out if quitting does, in fact, fix the problem.

4) Make helpfulness and gratitude routine.

Image by David D/Flickr.

The researchers write, “Studies show that people who engage in the habit of expressing gratitude are more likely to be helpful, generous, compassionate, and forgiving — and they’re also more likely to be happy and healthy.” So it’s good for parents to hold the line on chores, asking kids to help their siblings, and giving thanks throughout the day. And when it comes to rewarding “good” behavior, the researchers recommend that parents “only praise uncommon acts of kindness.”

5) Check your child’s destructive emotions.

Image by Thomas Ricker/Flickr.

“The ability to care for others is overwhelmed by anger, shame, envy, or other negative feelings,” say the researchers. Helping kids name and process those emotions, then guiding them toward safe conflict resolution, will go a long way toward keeping them focused on being a caring individual. It’s also important to set clear and reasonable boundaries that they’ll understand are out of love and concern for their safety.

6) Show your kids the bigger picture.

Image by debowcyfoto/Pixabay.

“Almost all children empathize with and care about a small circle of families and friends,” say the researchers. The trick is getting them to care about people who are socially, culturally, and even geographically outside their circles. You can do this by coaching them to be good listeners, by encouraging them to put themselves in other people’s shoes, and by practicing empathy using teachable moments in news and entertainment.

The study concludes with a short pep talk for all the parents out there:

“Raising a caring, respectful, ethical child is and always has been hard work. But it’s something all of us can do. And no work is more important or ultimately more rewarding.”

Watch the Washington Post’s wrap-up of the study below:

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Jon Stewart Has Addressed The ‘Pushback’ After He Appeared To Go All-In On The ‘Lab Leak’ Theory To A Skeptical Stephen Colbert

Jon Stewart’s preparing for the Sept. 30 launch of his every-other-week Apple TV+ show, and this means that he’s doing the interview rounds, including a talk with The Hollywood Reporter about various things like why he left The Daily Show. This was a wide-ranging interview that also touched upon the ruckus that spawned from Stewart’s June visit to The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, which was really, uh, something. That is to say, Stewart appeared to go all-in on the controversial “lab leak” theory (while noting that COVID may have originated in a Wuhan lab and somehow escaped) as Colbert maintained a skeptical stance.

“I believe we owe a great debt of gratitude to science,” Stewart previously told Colbert. “Science has in many ways helped ease the suffering of this pandemic… which was more than likely caused by science.” Stewart then, almost spookily, while noting, “The Wuhan novel respiratory coronavirus lab,” he declared. “The disease is the same name as the lab. That’s just a little too weird!” Of course, the fallout was notable, and no one really knew whether or not Stewart — who is one of the most gifted satirists to have ever graced TV screens — was serious or joking, especially when he stood up and addressed the camera like some dude who sleeps with a tin-foil blanket:

“I have been alone so long. And when I realized that the laboratory was having the same name — first name and last name — of the evil that had been plaguing us, I thought to myself… that’s f*cked up.”

Many waited to see if Stewart would clarify his stance, and that happened during the THR interview in response to a comment about whether Colbert was nervous about his remarks. Stewart noted that he was “a little surprised” at the response to his monologue:

“I don’t think he was nervous. It’s not like he doesn’t know what I’m going to say. Listen, how it got to be that if it was a scientific accident, it’s conservative, and if it came from a wet market, it’s liberal, I don’t know — I’m just not sure how that got politicized. But it was an inelegant way to get to a bit that I’ve done for years, which is our good-intentioned brilliance will more than likely be our demise. The bit is about the last words that man ever utters, which are, ‘Hey, it worked.’ I guess I was a little surprised at the pushback.

Naturally, yes, there was pushback, but I guess this is confirmation that Stewart wasn’t intentionally dropping a match and running away from the fire. Yet the lab-leak theory has been viewed as a fringe conspiracy theory, even as outlets including Washington Post have noted some element of credibility (while the New York Times pointed toward a lack of causative evidence). In response to Stewart’s monologue, right-wingers like Ted Cruz and Ben Shapiro celebrated, so, yep, there’s gonna be pushback when those guys get happy.

Apple TV+’s The Problem With Jon Stewart debuts on September 30.

(Via The Hollywood Reporter)

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Antoine Fuqua And Jake Gyllenhaal Explain How On Earth They Pulled Off Making ‘The Guilty’

The more you listen to how Antoine Fuqua and Jake Gyllenhaal talk about how they pulled off making The Guilty, last October, during one of the surges of Covid, before vaccines, and with not many other productions making movies … it’s basically a miracle this movie exists. How difficult was this production? Antoine Fuqua had been exposed to someone who had tested positive for Covid-19, which means he had to quarantine. And this quarantine would last throughout the entire allotted shooting dates. So Antoine Fuqua directed the movie from a private truck and gave directions virtually. When I asked Fuqua what the most difficult aspect of shooting this film was, not joking, he just says, with a sigh, “Everything.”

In The Guilty (which just premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival), Jake Gyllenhaal plays Joe Baylor, an LAPD cop who has been reassigned to a 911 desk taking calls because of an unspecified incident that he will be in court for the next day. The film takes place almost entirely at a desk, as we witness a series of phone calls as Gyllenhaal’s Joe Baylor tries to solve a mystery of a kidnapped woman, while all along the specter of whatever it was Joe Baylor did comes more and more into light.

I spoke to both Fuqua and Gyllenhaal over zoom (at one point our cat decided to say hello to the both of them) about how on Earth they managed to pull this movie off. And why, for the both of them, it was important to dig into some issues that parallel some recent real life events.

You started filming last October or November. Is that right?

Jake Gyllenhaal: October, yeah.

So this is one of the first things to get going again?

Antoine Fuqua: Yeah, it was right at the height of Covid. At the peak.

I’m curious, would the movie be any different if that wasn’t happening?

Antoine Fuqua: I don’t even know if I would have been directing it.

Wait, really?

Antoine Fuqua: It was just weird. Jake developed this script. He’s a friend, obviously, and he called me one day, I think it was early in the morning. I was going to train, workout. And Jake called me and out of the blue, he goes, “I’ve got this script!” And he was really passionate about it and I could hear it in his voice. And he goes, “Can you read it?” And he said, “Will you make it in five days?” I was like, “There’s no way, but I’m going to read anyway because it’s you.” And I read it, it just struck me. And there was sort of like a moment in time where I had space because of Covid. We didn’t know how we were going to do it because nobody was making movies at that time because of Covid. We weren’t sure how we were going to actually pull it off. I’m not sure I would have made it.

Jake, is that true? Would he not be doing it? Would you have not done this movie if it wasn’t for circumstances?

Jake Gyllenhaal: I mean, like in every film, there are different circumstances bring the people together. I mean, but yeah, I think in a way, this film: there were not many films at the time being developed that were contained and safe and possible to make in this way. In terms of how it was going to be made or developed? Yeah, I think it was made in that space and safely because there was one character. And, potentially, if I had sent it to Antoine maybe, at a different time, he would have said, “Let’s open it up. Let’s see what it feels like there.”

But the quality of the movie, the reason why we both wanted to make the movie, wasn’t just because of the technical parts. It allowed us to play with people’s perceptions and misjudgments and projections on other people, because you don’t see those other characters. It actually spoke very clearly to more of the political and social things that we had been going through in that time that we experienced the summer before, and all these questions that we had all had and the discussions that were coming up. And so it was this merging of a lot of things all at once. I don’t know… I would say, for me, what I was always moved by in the story was that you never saw the other characters, but you always heard them.

Which affected me, because the mind creates the images. It’s that thing people always say about movies, your mind will create more horrifying things than some of the stuff you show. And a lot of what we have to learn is through the reactions on your face. And that seems challenging for you?

Jake Gyllenhaal: Yes and no. I mean, the fun part about it is if you’re in a detective story, which this is, and you know as an actor the end of that detective story, you can deflect based on how you respond. But most of all, with this, Antoine assembled this incredible group of actors. So every time they got on the phone, it was all shot live. I was basically responding to the way they were acting. And all I had to do was really listen. I knew the audience was going to hear the call. I was just sometimes thinking how boring that movie would have been if we are never hearing the calls, just watching my face. I’m sure there were some camera operators after our 20-minute long takes who weren’t listening to the scene and they’re just like, “Oh, my God, this is boring.”

That’s a very different movie. You’re just saying, “What?” And then no other dialogue.

Jake Gyllenhaal: You might see that at the Whitney. That might be at the Whitney, you know? Like you could stop in for a second and sit down for 30 seconds and be like, “Interesting piece.” And then walk out. But I think that this is really about the other people’s performances and 70 percent of my performance is their performance.

So was there always a plan after Southpaw for you two to get back together and do something? Because I don’t know how that works. You work with a lot of directors. After you finish are you like, “Yep, I want to do another one.”

Jake Gyllenhaal: [Laughs] It definitely doesn’t work that way. Not with everybody.

See, I never believe an actor loves a director until I see them do something else. Once they do another movie together, I’m like, okay, I buy it now.

Jake Gyllenhaal: It’s more about a director loving an actor, that is the actual secret. I mean, I guess Antoine must love me. We finished that movie and we had such a special experience making that film. And it was like we just sort of mind-melded. And so we just have spent a number of years trying to find material together. I don’t know if you feel this way, Antoine, but some of it was also like, all right, let’s just quit fucking around. Like, let’s just do this one. It was always, “let’s shoot this in a short period of time.” Our high standards were sort of like, let’s go. We needed to tell a story. We wanted to work together. And we just went. That happened, too, right? I mean, I don’t want to speak for you…

Antoine Fuqua: I do love Jake.

We’d have quite a scoop here if you said, “I do not like this guy.”

Antoine Fuqua: In fact, I was the one who wanted, years ago, I wanted to meet Jake. And we met years ago, we sat down and then Southpaw came around. And so Jake was somebody, for me, I always targeted “the one to work with.” I thought he was just an incredible actor – and an interesting guy when I met him. And I always felt with Jake … I personally felt like people didn’t really know Jake. You know what I mean?

But I think, Jake, I think that’s on purpose. I don’t think you want people knowing everything about you.

Antoine Fuqua: Well not knowing him, we can’t know Jake. But as an actor, for example, Southpaw was one of those things where I remember I thought Jake would just be amazing if he would do this movie. And they were like, “Yeah, Jake? You sure? Jake’s a handsome guy. He’s kind of good-looking.” I said, “No, there’s something about Jake.” And I sat down with him before this. He’s got some other things going on in him. And physically, when you meet him… You know, you’ve met Jake? So he’s an athlete, really.

That is true. I have met him. I remember the first time I interviewed Jake, I think it was for Enemy, and you are more imposing in person than you probably think you’re going to be.

Antoine Fuqua: Yeah! He’s something, you know? But anyway, so I love Jake. We’ve been trying to find something to do together after Southpaw. And this one came around and I think Jake, you’re right. It was more like: this makes sense. This makes sense for where we are in the world. Makes sense creatively. Let’s not fuck around and just try to do it safely and quickly.

Well, that’s why I was curious, because it makes sense why it was so contained because of the situation. But at the same time, it really works that way. And if not for Covid if the movie would be opened up more to see what we are hearing?

Antoine Fuqua: We had lots of conversations about this. In fact, I had designed a few other shots. What we said was, let’s look at the movie first before we go shoot anything else. Just the performance and the story. And then I had a list of things I wanted to get, and I shot a couple of things, and me and Jake talked one day and we were like, “Let’s not doing anything else.” You know, let’s not open it up anymore. Anything more than that, as you said, it would have been a different movie.

It is such a different movie for you. It’s mostly Jake on the phone with people. I’m wondering if there’s any point where you just like, “I hope this is working.”

Antoine Fuqua: For me, it worked knowing Jake was going to play the role. I mean, it’s like Training Day for me really. That’s exactly it. If you look at Training Day, it’s Ethan Hawke and Denzel Washington in the car a lot.

Yeah. I just rewatched that. This is true.

Antoine Fuqua: It’s all about those two! And I remember sitting there making that movie, sitting on an apple box and just fascinated with the sparring and acting. I wouldn’t yell “cut” sometimes. It was just crazy. I was drawn in completely. And I realized that that’s really what I love. That’s what I love. And so when I read the script, I had the same feeling to watch Jake do this. Had the same feeling. I was just watching, in my van, on my monitor. It was just me alone in my van, in the dark, watching Jake. And I knew, for me at least, it was going to work because of Jake. Because of his ability.

You mentioned the actual actors were on the phone with you. I didn’t know if that was dubbed in later or whatever. But I assume when you’re talking to Ethan Hawke he’s legitimately on the phone, nowhere near the set.

Jake Gyllenhaal: He was in New York. And Paul Dano was in Australia. Peter Sarsgaard was in New York and Riley Keough was in LA. I mean, it did help, except there were also tremendous technical difficulties, you know? All the actors were on a Zoom, so, it naturally creates a rhythm for you that you wouldn’t create. And acting is all about rhythm. It was shave a quarter of a second, or push a quarter of a second on either side. So you’d have to develop something in your mind where you started your line a quarter of a second after. It was like you were living in a world of partial gravity. That’s how it felt. It’s like, you kept trying to get on the ground, just walk forward. That’s how it felt sometimes. Even though the actors were there and alive and I could listen. When I need to have an exchange with them, it became a very difficult thing for us to work out. I mean, it took us five or six days to figure that situation out, even. I mean, it was a really interesting experience, technically.

You both mentioned the other subtext of this movie, and how it reflects with a lot of stuff we saw last year. How important was that to both of you? Police violence is not the main part of the story, but it’s always lurking in the back…

Antoine Fuqua: We talked about it. Myself and Jake talked about it quite a bit. When I first read it and I called him back about it, we just kind of started really having a deep conversation about what we cared about as human beings, you know? And we both just wanted to make a story about human beings. And the background, which is fantastic because people paint their own picture, but the background politics and everything else is layered in it. It’s really because of what’s happening in real-time in our world, right? If you just look at what’s happening in our world, and then you watch this picture, it starts to paint the picture for you.

Right…

Antoine Fuqua: We never say it, right? We never say it. We never say what nationality. We never say who’s who or what’s what. But the audience creates it here because it’s true. It is the truth. That’s what’s happening. Right? There’s mental illness. There’s judgment. There’s a lot of anger, passion, frustration. We’re all confined because of Covid in a space. So you know what I mean? A lot of stuff, the audience is actually feeling because we’re actually experiencing it.

Also, I guess what helps fill it in is the fact that, in the movie… sorry about that, our cat just jumped in my lap…

Jake Gyllenhaal: Awwww.

But in the movie the media is very interested in talking to him. So that tells me this is something very serious with a lot of repercussions.

Jake Gyllenhaal: You know, I think we all speak our truth. In some cases, there will be consequences. The consequence in most cases of expressing the truth is freedom of a certain kind, maybe not earthly freedom, but definitely spiritual freedom. And you end up healing a system when you do that. And we talked about that a lot. And I think that it was important to make a movie that brought up all these things as well as was incredibly entertaining because I think the discussion is necessary. He’s a very morally complex person caught in a very complicated and disturbing system that does not allow either him or all the people in that system much help.

Right. It’s like, maybe I shouldn’t be rooting for him?

Jake Gyllenhaal: Yeah! He starts off and it’s just, the room is filled with toxicity. The way he’s speaking to people in dire circumstances from the jump. Someone’s saying, “I took drugs.” He’s like, well, it’s your fault, isn’t it? It’s like, well, that’s not the concern here.

We touched on this earlier but you two started filming a movie when not many movies were filming. You mentioned it was difficult, what was the most difficult thing?

Antoine Fuqua: Everything.

Ah.

Antoine Fuqua: Literally everything. How are we going to do that at the height of Covid, where it’s really life or death for some people? That was first. Then we had to put it into action, which meant everything was done in pieces. Who can be on the side, who can’t, wearing booties, plastic… We had to wear the mask and the plastic shields and gloves. I mean, it was really like a movie. And then once we figured all that out, we were about a few days away from filming… someone close to me tested positive. I was negative, but I’d have to quarantine, which was literally the full time of our shoot. It was 11 days, right? So now me and Jake were looking at each other like: It’s not going to happen unless we figure out a plan.

And we came up with a van. This high-tech van that’s normally used for still photography, but it had monitors and speakers like a jet. And we were like maybe this could work. And when we first tested it from my home in the courtyard, it didn’t work. So it was horrible. Then we figured out that maybe we should just hardline the van outside the studio, rent a line, and see if it worked that way. That worked. It was like, great, okay, so I’m in the van like Austin Powers. I’ve got a button, no one should come near me. I got a couple of Navy seals, literally outside of my van, making sure no one comes anywhere near. Then I had to come up with another system to communicate with me and Jake: communicate off walkie-talkies, cell phones, FaceTimes. So, literally, we were figuring it out as we were going.

This sounds like a miracle that this movie even exists.

Antoine Fuqua: Yeah. All of it … Again, all of these things, I think, influence the movie and what you see. Because we were really working urgently, cautiously, to get the best movie and make sure everybody made money and went home safe. That’s what we were trying to do.

‘The Guilty’ will begin streaming via Netflix on October 1st after playing in limited theaters a few days prior. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Grant Hill Explained What He’s Looking For As He Prepares To Hire USA Basketball’s Next Men’s Coach

Once the Olympics concluded, Jerry Colangelo and Gregg Popovich’s tenures as director and head coach of USA Basketball’s men’s national team came to an end as well. Colangelo, who took over in 2005, has been replaced by Grant Hill, who will bring the perspective of being a former USA Basketball player to the role as he looks to guide the program to continued success.

His first major task will be finding a coach to replace Popovich, who had a rough start with the World Cup in 2019 but guided the men’s squad to their fourth consecutive gold medal this summer in Tokyo. There are a number of names that have been connected as a possible replacement, and Hill will look to hire a new coach before the upcoming NBA season. As for what he’ll be looking for in a coach, he sat down recently with Marc J. Spears of The Undefeated and explained what will go into his selection process.

“Someone who understands and has a healthy respect for the international game. The dynamics are a bit different in that environment than they are in the NBA regular season. You’re going to be dealing with some tough love of players, and being able to mentor them. That’ll check the boxes, if you will.

“Someone who can manage a locker room, who understands the international play, obviously can coach, and understands this isn’t over. Spending the last year just really studying the international game, it’s different. It’s a different game than our game, and understanding that and respecting that is vitally important and not just for the staff but for the players as well.”

Spears notes that the expectation is for an NBA coach with USA Basketball experience to be the selection, with Steve Kerr, Doc Rivers, Nate McMillan, Monty Williams, Tom Thibodeau, and Erik Spoelstra all fitting that criteria — as well as Jeff Van Gundy, who coached the men’s squad in Olympic qualifying tournaments to get them to Tokyo.

Hill mentions the differences in the international game on a number of occasions in the interview, and it’s clear that when he discusses the USA hoops job with potential coaches, he’ll be focusing a lot on their plan for how to get NBA stars quickly in rhythm despite those differences and the challenges that come with them.