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Melania Trump Has Trashed Stephanie Graham As A ‘Deceitful And Troubled Individual’ Ahead Of Her Tell-All Book’s Release

As Stephanie Grisham‘s new tell-all book, I’ll Take Your Questions Now: What I Saw in the Trump White House, gets ready to hit book shelves on Tuesday, former First Lady Melania Trump has fired off a statement in an attempt to discredit Grisham, who pulled back-to-back duty as the White House communications director and the First Lady’s chief of staff. In the lead-up to the book’s release, excerpts have been revealed that accuse Melania of refusing to help stop the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building as well as a laundry list of petty moves against her husband like asking to be escorted by handsome soldiers and/or secret service agents.

“The author is desperately trying to rehabilitate her tarnished reputation by manipulating and distorting the truth about Mrs. Trump,” Melania’s office wrote on Monday. “Ms. Grisham is a deceitful and troubled individual who doesn’t deserve anyone’s trust.”

However, the former First Lady’s office probably should’ve worked on their timing. By releasing the statement on Monday morning, it gave Grisham the opportunity to respond during a live interview with GMA, which she did. Via Business Insider:

“I expected that. I expect more. This is right out of their playbook: when they don’t like the message, they’re going to destroy the messenger. I know, I was part of doing that sometimes,” Grisham told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos.

“I notice she’s not denying anything fully in the book just yet, I think she knows that I have a lot of receipts to show I’m being fully honest. I expected that, and I’m sure there will be more to come, probably a lawsuit or two or three or four,” Grisham added.

Along with excerpts about Melania’s time as First Lady, Grisham’s book also detailed Jared and Ivanka‘s bumbling attempts to act as “America’s Royal Family” as well as accusations that the former president sexually harrassed Grisham by making comments about her body and calling her to deny that his penis is small and not shaped like a “toadstool” despite what his alleged mistress Stormy Daniels revealed.

(Via Business Insider)

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Emily Ratajkowski Alleges Robin Thicke Groped Her On The ‘Blurred Lines’ Set

In Emily Ratajkowski’s upcoming memoir, the actress/model accuses singer Robin Thicke of groping her on the music video set of his controversial 2013 hit single, “Blurred Lines.” The video, of which two versions were released, one for broadcast and the other “unrated,” features Ratajkowski and other models dancing around Thicke and the song’s co-producer Pharrell Williams with various props. In the broadcast version, the women are scantily clad in short shorts and crop tops, while the “unrated” version has them topless in underwear. Apparently, Thicke took advantage of this situation to make unwanted advances toward the women.

In an excerpt published by The Daily Beast from the memoir, titled My Body, Ratajkowski describes the incident in question. “Suddenly, out of nowhere, I felt the coolness and foreignness of a stranger’s hands cupping my bare breasts from behind,” she writes. “I instinctively moved away, looking back at Robin Thicke.” As noted by Consequence Of Sound, this squares with the video director Diane Martel’s account to The Sunday Times Of London. “I remember the moment that he grabbed her breasts,” she recalled. One in each hand. He was standing behind her as they were both in profile. I screamed in my very aggressive Brooklyn voice, ‘What the f*ck are you doing, that’s it!! The shoot is over!!”

Previously, the song was subject to a lawsuit filed by the family of R&B singer Marvin Gaye, who said that the song blatantly copied Gaye’s 1977 hit “Got To Give It Up.” The Gaye estate won the case, with a judge granting the family $7.4 million in damages for copyright infringement and adding Gaye’s songwriting credits to “Blurred Lines.”

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The 10 Best Kobe Bryant Signature Nikes Of All Time

Kobe Bryant’s signature Nike sneakers don’t seem to carry the same kind of cultural weight as the Air Jordan does outside of your average sneakerhead. If you gift any of your friends a random pair of Air Jordans for Christmas, there is a chance they’ll recognize them as a pair of Jordans, but hand an unsuspecting friend a Kobe Protro IV, and they’ll probably just think you got them a new pair of running shoes.

Don’t get us wrong, a Kobe branded sneaker will still sell out instantly (or would sell out, as Nike’s contract with Kobe Bryant’s estate has expired), there just isn’t an endless line of celebrities or streetwear brands clamoring to redesign a Kobe VI the way there is a regular rotation of new colorways for the Jordan I, III, IV, V, and beyond week after week.

That’s because Kobe’s signature silhouettes resonate with a different audience entirely: people who, like Kobe himself, live, love, and breathe for the game. The people who strive to live with that Mamba mentality.

I’m not just talking about the people who play at the park every weekend, I’m talking about professional ballplayers. Year after year, Kobe’s sneakers are routinely the most worn sneakers in the NBA. That has less to do with the way they look and more to do with the way they’re constructed.

Unlike the Air Jordans, which were really only worn by Jordan himself and a handful of players, Kobe’s sneakers took things like stability, movement, weight, cushioning, and energy return into mind as key aspects of each design. Every Kobe signature sneaker with Nike attempted to be an improvement on the last in terms of function, and for all its efforts, Kobe’s signature Nikes may go down in history as some of the best basketball sneakers of all time, which is fitting, as they are attached to one of the greatest to ever step on the hardwood.

Let’s run through a few of the most essential Nike Kobe colorways and designs.

Nike Zoom Kobe 1 ’81 Points, 2007

Nike

In a 2006 game against the Toronto Raptors, Kobe rocked his first Nike branded sneaker, the Zoom Kobe 1, and scored a jaw-dropping 81 points in a single game. That feat would forever be immortalized in sneaker history when the following year Nike dropped a Player Exclusive white, black, and purple colorway that matched the design worn by Kobe that night.

A full retail release wouldn’t happen until 2019, but thankfully, players and fans can finally own a pair that commemorates one of Kobe’s career-defining moments.

With its heavy leather construction, the Kobe 1 is a bit of an anomaly in the Kobe signature line as each subsequent pair would shed layers for a more lightweight and responsive fit.

Nike Hyperdunk Marty McFly, 2008

Getty

The Nike Hyperdunk wasn’t technically a Kobe signature sneaker, but if you followed his game, you no doubt recognize this one. No other player embodies the Hyperdunk quite like Kobe, who rocked the sneaker in several games and while representing Team USA at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

In a famous ad for the sneaker, Kobe jumped over a speeding Aston Martin, afterward exclaiming “do not try this at home.” Word. When it was time for a retail release, Kobe showed up at LA retailer UNDEFEATED in a Delorean with a special blue and white colorway inspired by Marty McFly’s futuristic Nike MAG from Back To The Future II.

It’s still the sneaker’s greatest colorway.

Nike Zoom Kobe 4 Chaos Joker, 2009

Nike

As legendary a basketball player Kobe is, his interests extended far beyond the hardwood. For proof of that, look no further than how many of his sneaker colorways paid tribute to tv and movie characters.

2009’s Chaos Joker colorway is one such example. Named in tribute to Heath Ledger’s Oscar-winning turn as the Joker in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight, this sneaker combined metallic shades of silver with Nike’s Abyss and Nightshade colors over a Flywire base and a Lunar Foam midsole.

It manages to look nothing like the Joker, which is quite frankly, a good thing.

Nike Zoom Kobe 5 Bruce Lee, 2010

Nike

One of Kobe’s biggest influences was another master of their respective field, Bruce Lee. In 2010, Kobe and Nike paid tribute to the master of martial arts with this colorway inspired by Lee’s jumpsuit in Enter the Dragon.

Featuring a lightweight build crafted with Nike’s new-at-the-time Flywire technology, the Kobe 5 Bruce Lee featured a foam midsole, Zoom Air cushioning, and a silver-lined Swoosh over a loud yellow and black colorway.

Nike Zoom Kobe 6 — Grinch, 2010

Nike

Quite possibly the most iconic signature sneaker in the whole Kobe lineage, 2010’s Grinch is still highly coveted amongst sneakerheads, and for the first time, the decade-old colorway was re-released in 2020, predictably selling out in minutes. It wasn’t easy an easy pair to cop, but the people who were able to score a fresh pair of Grinches last year realized one of their wildest sneakerhead dreams, and that’s a beautiful thing.

Featuring a bright Volt Green colorway with a translucent outsole, crimson red accents, and a synthetic upper, the Grinch wasn’t the official name given to the shoe by Nike. They called this colorway Green Mamba, in reference to the polyurethane scales that mimicked snakeskin on the shoe’s base and Bryant’s Mamba persona.

But given the sneaker’s holiday release date, and its resemblance to the iconic Dr. Seuss character, the fans saw fit to rename it, and the shoe is more recognizable for it.

Nike Kobe 8 System — What The Kobe, 2013

Nike

What the Kobe indeed. Sure, this design is kind of ridiculous, but what would Kyrie Irving’s kicks look like without Kobe paving the way for athletes to get overly creative in what they put on a signature sneaker? This sneaker was meant as a special holiday 2013 release and its wild electric toned upper is actually a combination of more than 30 previous Kobe 8 releases, so it’s meant as a bit of a celebration of the Kobe 8 System silhouette. The psychedelic upper featured an Electric Orange base used on the right sneaker, and a base of Deep Night on the left, with Volt and Electric Orange Swooshes.

The sneaker continued the trend of applying a snakeskin textured upper to the silhouette and was at the time of its release, the lightest sneaker in the signature Kobe line.

Nike Kobe 9 Elite Low, Moonwalker, 2014

Nike

Kobe liked to pay tribute to other figures operating at the top of their game: Bruce Lee, the Joker (I guess), and in 2014, Michael Jackson. In truth, there is no rhyme or reason for these celebrity-tribute colorways, I’m telling you, Kobe was just wired differently.

This iteration of the low-top Kobe 9 featured a Flyknit upper in a Hyper Grape colorway with a metallic silver Swoosh, a translucent outsole, and lunar graphics on the footbed in reference to Jackson’s career-defining moonwalk.

Nike Kobe 10 Elite Premium HTM Race Car

Nike

Designed by a legendary collective of Nike footwear designers including Hiroshi Fujiwara, Tinker Hatfield, and Mark Parker — a trio dubbed simply “HTM” — the Kobe 10 Elite Premium HTM Race Car features reflective accents over a translucent Swoosh that sits atop a flexible and supportive Flyknit upper dipped in an asymmetric black, green, and red colorway.

Rounding out the design is a translucent icy outsole. It’s without a doubt one of the finest colorways of Kobe designer Eric Avar’s underrated late-period silhouette.

Nike Zoom Kobe 4 Protro — Del Sol, 2019

Nike

A late classic in the Kobe line, the Zoom Kobe Protro Del Sol’s colorway was chosen to mimic the same exact pair Kobe rocked as the Lakers paraded through the streets of L.A. celebrating their 2009 championship win.

Even if Kobe didn’t score his fourth championship ring wearing this pair of sneakers, it would still likely go down as one of the best colorways the Kobe 4 would ever see thanks to its mix of white, black, and gold.

Nike Zoom Kobe 5 Protro Alternate Bruce Lee, 2020

Nike

Dropped as a holiday release last year, the Kobe 5 Protro Alternate Bruce Lee was released alongside a new iteration of the original Bruce Lee 5. The Alternate features the same construction and design as the OG, but with a black and white color scheme.

It’s a controversial take, but I prefer the Alternate over the original. It might not hold the cultural weight of the legendary colorway it was inspired by, but overall, it’s a better design.

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Oscar Isaac And Jessica Chastain’s Real-Life Spouses Are Being Called The MVPs Of ‘Scenes From A Marriage’

In HBO’s Scenes from a Marriage, Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain play a married couple whose relationship begins to crumble over the course of six episodes. Both on the show and in real life, the performers have incredible chemistry, as seen in this viral red carpet moment and during the sex scene in Sunday’s episode. It’s an emotionally and physically vulnerable moment between two fictional characters — and two real-life performers who have known each other since they attended Juilliard together.

“I started out working with Al Pacino and Brad Pitt, so we’re setting the bar pretty high. I always try to work with people who are better than me. Oscar is like that. I can’t be lazy or just show up,” Chastain once said about her A Most Violent Year co-star, who added, “Talent is very hot.” Also hot: literally every photo and video clip of them together.

Isaac and Chastain are giving Emmy-worthy performances on Scenes From a Marriage, but if you asked Twitter, the show’s real MVPs are their spouses. He’s been married to director Elvira Lind since 2017 (her short film starring Isaac, The Letter Room, was nominated for Best Live Action Short Film at the 2021 Oscars), while Chastain got hitched to “Italian hunk” Gian Luca Passi de Preposulo also in 2017. Coincidence? Probably, but I would love an Eli and Peyton-style reaction breakdown of Scenes From a Marriage with their partners. Especially after last night’s episode.

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Adele May Finally Announce A New Album Soon, As Billboards And Online Updates Indicate

For the past few years, there have been rumors of a new Adele album to follow up 2015’s 25. Rumors of new music have been especially prevalent in recent days, with rumors from last week suggesting that Adele plans to release new music this week. Now, that rumor is looking increasingly likely to be true.

Last week, the same billboard started popping in various cities around the world, including London, New York, Dublin, Paris, and Rome, as NME notes. The billboards simply say “30,” which makes sense in light of the titles of Adele’s previous albums: 19, 21, and 25. Furthermore, Adele has also updated her social media pages and website with an aesthetic that’s similar to that of the billboards. Her website currently includes just a link to sign up for a newsletter.

Adele is currently 33 years old, so if her next’s album’s title is 30, that indicates she started writing it in 2018 or early 2019, when she was 30.

It’s been a while since Adele has offered a substantial public comment about her next album. On her 31st birthday in 2019, she wrote on Instagram, “30 tried me so hard but I’m owning it and trying my hardest to lean in to it all. No matter how long we’re here for life is constant and complicated at times. I’ve changed drastically in the last couple years and I’m still changing and that’s okay. […] Bunch of f*cking savages, 30 will be a drum n bass record to spite you.”

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Chewy spotlights the photographers who help pets get adopted

When a pet is admitted to a shelter it can be a traumatizing experience. Many are afraid of their new surroundings and are far from comfortable showing off their unique personalities. The problem is that’s when many of them have their photos taken to appear in online searches.

Chewy, the pet retailer who has dedicated themselves to supporting shelters and rescues throughout the country, recognized the important work of a couple in Tampa, FL who have been taking professional photos of shelter pets to help get them adopted.

“If it’s a photo of a scared animal, most people, subconsciously or even consciously, are going to skip over it,” pet photographer Adam Goldberg says. “They can’t visualize that dog in their home.”

Adam realized the importance of quality shelter photos while working as a social media specialist for the Humane Society of Broward County in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

“The photos were taken top-down so you couldn’t see the size of the pet, and the flash would create these red eyes,” he recalls. “Sometimes [volunteers] would shoot the photos through the chain-link fences.”

That’s why Adam and his wife, Mary, have spent much of their free time over the past five years photographing over 1,200 shelter animals to show off their unique personalities to potential adoptive families. The Goldbergs’ wonderful work was recently profiled by Chewy in the video above entitled, “A Day in the Life of a Shelter Pet Photographer.”

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An Ex-Facebook Employee Detailed How Profit Motivated The Company To Allow Misinformation To Run Wild, Perhaps Sparking The Jan 6th Riots

Former Facebook data scientist Frances Haugen has identified herself as the employee who provided federal investigators with internal research that shows the social media giant is aware of how much its platform spreads “hate and misinformation.” During a detailed interview with 60 Minutes on Sunday, Haugen laid bare how Facebook’s algorithm essentially feeds off of anger and division, which generates highly profitable levels of engagement. More specifically, Haugen claims to have witnessed first-hand how Facebook’s pursuit of profit over civic duty played a part in the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building following Donald Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally.

According to Haugen, Facebook began loosening content restrictions in the aftermath of the 2020 election instead of curtailing the onslaught of conspiracy theories claiming that Trump was the real winner. Via Associated Press:

She said Facebook prematurely turned off safeguards designed to thwart misinformation and rabble rousing after Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump last year, alleging that contributed to the deadly Jan. 6 invasion of the U.S. Capitol.

Post-election, the company dissolved a unit on civic integrity where she had been working, which Haugen said was the moment she realized “I don’t trust that they’re willing to actually invest what needs to be invested to keep Facebook from being dangerous.”

Haugen will be testifying in front of Congress this week, which will almost certainly be a circus as social media has been a playground for conspiracy minded politicians like Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, and Matt Gaetz, just to name a few. However, Haugen’s finds shouldn’t be surprising to anyone who understands the basics of content engagement, which requires a level of civic responsibility when you have the massive reach that Facebook currently enjoys.

“No one at Facebook is malevolent,” Haugen said. “But the incentives are misaligned, right? Like, Facebook makes more money when you consume more content. People enjoy engaging with things that elicit an emotional reaction. And the more anger that they get exposed to, the more they interact and the more they consume.”

(Via 60 Minutes, Associated Press)

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All The Best New Music From This Week That You Need To Hear

Keeping up with new music can be exhausting, even impossible. From the weekly album releases to standalone singles dropping on a daily basis, the amount of music is so vast it’s easy for something to slip through the cracks. Even following along with the Uproxx recommendations on a daily basis can be a lot to ask, so every Monday we’re offering up this rundown of the best new music this week.

This week saw a pair of very different collaborations: Wale and J. Cole, as well as Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett. Yeah, it was a great week for new music. Check out the highlights below.

For more music recommendations, check out our Listen To This section, as well as our Indie Mixtape and Pop Life newsletters.

Wale — “Poke It Out” Feat. J. Cole

A couple weeks ago was a big week for J. Cole collaborations and he continued that trend last week, too. A few days ago, he reunited with Wale on “Poke It Out,” which interpolates the beat from J. Dilla’s 1999 single “Vibrant Thing.” While the pair deliver updated lyrics here, they honor the original track by keeping the themes similar to those of the original.

Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett — “I’ve Got You Under My Skin”

“I’ve Got You Under My Skin” is one of the most enduring classics of the 1930s, so it was a natural inclusion on Love For Sale, the second and final collaborative album between Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett that was released last week. On the jaunty rendition of the track, Gaga and Bennett go back and forth like the unparalleled vocal pair they are, showing how much both singers still have left in their respective tanks.

Skylar Grey — “Last One Standing” Feat. Polo G, Mozzy, and Eminem

Eminem and Skylar Grey go together like… well, Eminem and Skylar Grey are actually an established and beloved enough team to be their own “peanut butter and jelly”-like cliché comparison. The pair linked up yet again last week on Grey’s triumphant single “Last One Standing,” which also features contributions from Polo G and Mozzy.

Meek Mill — “On My Soul”

After a few years of waiting, Meek Mill fans got to eat last week when he dropped his latest album, Expensive Pain. Alongside the album’s release, he dropped videos for a couple of its highlights, including “On My Soul,” which Uproxx’s Wongo Okon describes as “a song laced with the rapper’s Auto-Tuned vocals that delivering brief stories about life’s hardships with the promise that these anecdotes are nothing but the truth.”

Megan Thee Stallion, Maluma, and Rock Mafia — “Crazy Family”

Before providing an Austin City Limits highlight with a surprise Miley Cyrus appearance, Megan Thee Stallion had another collaboration, linking up with Maluma and Rock Mafia on “Crazy Family.” It’s a song for the animated family feature The Addams Family 2, yes, but that doesn’t mean anybody involved dumbs down what they’re good at, instead bringing their best for the fun, colorful track.

Grimes — “Love”

Grimes’ latest song, “Love,” is more diaristic than most, a claim further boosted by the fact that she only shared it on social media and not on streaming music platforms. The two-minute was written, as she says, “in response to all the privacy invasion, bad press, online hate and harassment by paparazzis I’ve experienced this week.” She opens the synth-driven tune, “It f*cking sucks to be awake / Oh Lord I pray my soul to take / nobody understands because / everything they hate / is everything I love.”

Kali Uchis — “Fue Mejor” Feat. SZA

Uchis’ 2020 album Sin Miedo (Del Amor Y Otros Demonios) has enjoyed some renewed interest as of late thanks to some of its songs blowing up on TikTok. To capitalize on the moment, Uchis dropped a new version of album highlight “Fue Mejor,” this time featuring fresh contributions from SZA. Taking PartyNextDoor’s place, SZA achieves a personal first on the song: singing in Spanish.

Courtney Barnett — “Write A List Of Things To Look Forward To”

While making her upcoming album Things Take Time, Take Time, Courtney Barnett found herself in a rut. A friend came in clutch with the recommendation that Barnett “write a list of things to look forward to,” and that’s just what Barnett did. She did it in song form, though, yielding a track that optimistically highlights some of life’s positives.

Burna Boy — “Want It All” Feat. Polo G

Burna Boy is a shining light in afropop and he made a new friend in hip-hop last week by securing one of his biggest collaborations yet, recruiting Polo G to feature on “Want It All.” For Burna, this one has been a long time coming, as he noted, “I’ve been watching him for some time, and I just knew this had to get done, but it had to get done in the perfect way where the whole world gets to feel the reality of both of us.”

Phoebe Bridgers — “That Funny Feeling”

On her current tour, Phoebe Bridgers has taken to covering a Bo Burnham song from his comedy special Inside: “That Funny Feeling,” the song from the special that sounds most like it could be a Bridgers song. Now, it sort of officially is, as she has shared a studio recording of the cover, which runs for nearly 7 minutes and has a comedic voice that’s a natural extension of Bridgers’ personality.

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

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Billie Eilish Is Headlining Glastonbury, Making Her The Youngest Solo Artist To Ever Do So

Billie Eilish has firmly earned her place as a top-tier pop star over the past few years. Over the course of her career, Eilish has broken records upon records, and now she has another one to add to her trophy case: Next year, she will become the youngest solo artist to headline Glastonbury. Eilish is 19 years old now, but when her festival performance takes place on June 24, she will be 20.

Festival organizers shared the news on social media today, noting, “We are very excited to confirm that @billieeilish will headline the Pyramid Stage on the Friday night at Glastonbury 2022, to become the Festival’s youngest ever solo headliner. This will be her first UK festival headline performance.”

Eilish celebrated the news by sharing a selfie of herself wearing a Glastonbury hoodie, also writing on the Instagram Story, “2022.” Glastonbury organizer Emily Eavis shared that photo and wrote on Instagram, “We couldn’t be happier to announce that the wondrous @billieeilish is headlining the Pyramid on the Friday at next year’s Glastonbury Festival, becoming the youngest solo headliner in our history. This feels like the perfect way for us to return and I cannot wait!”

Revisit our recent ranking of every Eilish song here.

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Ray Liotta On The Big Surprise He Has For You In ‘The Many Saints Of Newark’

The last time I interviewed Ray Liotta was nine years ago when he was promoting Killing Them Softly (a great, deliberately paced movie that, at the time, confused viewers expecting something a little more action-packed). At the time Liotta seemed very conscious of the “slower” times in his career, going as far to cite his “up and down career.” I got the feeling Liotta was hoping for big things from Killing Them Softly, which did okay at the box office and its critical praise keeps growing.

But, now, nine years later, Liotta’s career is in a different place. He’s still coming off the glow of his scene-stealing turn as a boisterous divorce attorney in Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Story and now has a key role* in the long-awaited prequel to The Sopranos, The Many Saints of Newark. Liotta was approached to pay Ralphie Cifaretto on the series but turned it down. So, now, Liotta finally joins The Sopranos universe. (It’s at this point we will get into some spoilers for The Many Saints of Newark so if you want to go in fresh, come back after you watch the movie, which you can do right now either at a movie theater or on HBO Max.)

*Key role is somewhat misleading, as Liotta plays two roles in the film. His advertised role is that of Dickie Moltisanti’s father, “Hollywood Dick” Moltisanti (aka Christopher Moltisanti’s grandfather), a loudmouth braggart who wears out his welcome with others in his presence pretty quickly. Liotta also plays Hollywood Dick’s twin brother, Sal, a more stoic figure who Dickie (Alessandro Nivola) visits in prison for life advice. And that advice is basically, hey, nitwit, you’re influence going to ruin this kid Tony Soprano’s life.

What’s funny is, before this interview, I was told we were not allowed to talk about Liotta’s role as Sal as to keep the surprise intact. Well, it turns out Liotta has a mind of his own and, frankly, I could tell he was kind of tired of not talking about Sal because he’s obviously pretty pleased with how that character turned out. What I didn’t know was Liotta was not supposed to play both roles. As he explains, another actor was supposed to play Sal but demanded too much money, so David Chase and director Alan Taylor asked Liotta if he’d like two roles in the film.

As Hollywood Dick, you look like you’re having the time of your life in this movie. How was Hollywood Dick described to you once you kind of got the idea that you were going to be doing it? Was it on the page or was this you?

I did a lot of homework with the show. I made it deeper than maybe just the lines on a page. But that’s what I try to do with all of them. And it was pretty much, it was all written. You don’t go up to David Chase and say, “Can we change this? Can you change that?” He’s just not that type. Or do you really need to? He writes what he wants you to be.

You just seem very into this role.

Well also, I mean, sometimes when you’re playing maniacs like this, there is a common thread through it all. And usually, it’s an intensity. I mean, between me and you, a lot of gangsters are like little boys, “Who you looking at? You looking at me? Fuck you.” you know? Like that’s what happens on the playground. Well, I mean, not as a put-down, they’re easily offended.

That’s kind of a put-down, but it’s not wrong.

Yeah. But if you put it in the paper, then you better watch out because I’m going to say you said it.

We both might be in some trouble.

There’s nothing wrong being sensitive about things. It’s how they go about it.

Sure.

But, whatever, that’s a business I don’t know anything about.

When you met with David Chase, was there any mention of trying to get you for Ralphie? As in, “glad you finally came around.”

No, not with this one or the other one. He came up to talk to me about a part that he hadn’t, I forgot what season it was, but Joe Pantoliano-

I think that’s season three.

That’s what I heard, three. And you know, it just didn’t feel right for me to do at the time. And Joe won an Emmy for it! But I always, I still left it, wanting to work with him. So when this came along, they didn’t even see me. They didn’t even request me. They didn’t have anything. I said, you know what, I really think I want to be a part of this. I don’t care how big the part is. I want to get at least a chance to work with David Chase. So I flew myself out to New York — I live in LA — I flew myself out here, put myself up, and had a lunch with David Chase and Alan, the director. And it just was a good little two or three hour lunch. And at the end of it, they say would you like to play Hollywood Dick? “Yeah. Yeah. That’s why I’m here. I wanted to work with you.”

Do you think there’s a chance you had to reach out to them because they had flirted with you before? Like if you invite a friend to a party and they keep saying now, you stop inviting them?

No. It was only once…

But didn’t they think about you for Tony, but they didn’t actually come to you? Do I have that right?

No. That’s not a true story.

Oh, it’s not? Okay.

I never heard that. I’ve never been approached. My agent never said, what do you think? I don’t know where that came from, but no, that’s not true at all.

With the Ralphie, you said it just didn’t feel right. How long is that process to get to the point where you decide this is not right?

It’s just something that didn’t feel right. Whether it took, two days, one day, 20 minutes or half an hour. I don’t remember per se. I just knew that it wasn’t something… I think was because I didn’t want to just keep going to a series at that time.

Oh, I see.

And I also didn’t feel like I was right for it. I mean, I’m sure they did, or else they wouldn’t have asked. Well, the point being is, so I came down here to talk to David and Alan, and it worked out. And then if you didn’t know – then I don’t know what it was when we started, or if it was something that was coming up – but then they asked if I would play his brother, too. What, really? How would we do that? Would I use prosthetics? We going to do this, we’ll do little things here or there? It was just kind of like, “trust me.” And that’s a great thing about David. He has thought everything out through and through. And it’s his sensibilities that it would work. And I like to think that it worked.

It definitely works. Oh, that’s interesting. So it wasn’t at the same initial meeting? It was only later they asked you to also play Sal?

I think we were auditioning some parts of that. Somebody was negotiating for it. I just heard that from a third party. I don’t know. So I don’t know how true it is. And the person kept asking for more money, more money, more money. To David, or anybody, if they keep asking, we can play the game. A little of a negotiation. But at the end of the day, from what they were saying, it’s like enough already. You obviously don’t want to do it, or else you would do it for X amount. And so I think that person turning it down was good for me to do it. Just like me turning down the Ralphie role, that Joe Pantoliano did. That worked out.

Before this interview, they told me not to bring Sal up.

Because I still don’t know if… there was some interview I was going to do last night…

Right, with Alan Sepinwall for that SAG screening. He texted me yesterday wondering if you’d talk about it and I assumed since people had just seen the movie it was a different situation…

Totally. But the thing is, he told everybody to put their cell phones away and nobody listens to that. But the Warner Bros. person here said, “No, now it’s cool for us. Go ahead and do it.” So I said, all right. And we just sent a little bit about it and he didn’t talk a whole deal about it. It was out there. And that was it. So when is this article coming out?

We’ll wait until the movie comes out. I don’t want to spoil it for anyone either. I would rather people experience the way I did.

Totally, totally. And that’s why I’m hoping you’ll respect that. And then we’ll have some more stuff to do later.

I re-read that interview we did for Killing Them Softly. You kept mentioning the slower period in your career. That is definitely over. But why do you think that was?

It’s a numbers game, I guess. I waited, I tried to make the best selections of movies that were coming my way. Sometimes they worked, sometimes they didn’t. But I still, luckily, I still kept working. It wasn’t at the caliber that I wanted it to be at. And I’m competitive. And I just believe that it could happen again. And maybe this little period is in a different way, and I’m a different person. But when you’ve been doing this for 40 years, there’s going to be good. There’s going to be bad. And hopefully that will carry on.

And you’re in Cocaine Bear. I don’t know if you know this, but it’s already getting a lot of attention on the internet. People are very excited for Cocaine Bear.

Oh my gosh, just the title alone!

You started filming this right?

Yeah. They’ve been doing it for about a month. I just was there a few days ago. I’m going to go back tonight. Yeah, it’s really an interesting, different story. And it definitely resonates with me. What are you doing? Like, Cocaine Bear! What is that? Just the title alone.

Yeah, you don’t have to sell anyone on a movie called Cocaine Bear.

Exactly!

When they came to you for Cocaine Bear, or however that worked, where you like, well yeah of course I’m going to do a movie called Cocaine Bear if you offer it to me.

Something like that. At first, I said, man, I don’t know about this. It’s only like a couple of scenes and I didn’t want to be in that rut like I was before. You know, it’s like a couple of things in a studio movie that’s about a cocaine snort and blow. I like Elizabeth Banks. I’ve worked with her in a movie before, but we didn’t have any scenes. And sometimes you’ve got to say, we just came off the pandemic, which for a whole year there’s no income coming in. But, again, this wasn’t a money decision. This was hopefully their decision.

Over the pandemic, I obviously re-watched Goodfellas more than once. But I also re-watched My Blue Heaven. Have you seen that movie? It’s basically a sequel to Goodfellas with Steve Martin playing Henry.

Literally, that’s what the movie was about?

Yes, because Nora Ephron was married to Nicholas Pileggi, who wrote Goodfellas. They did a lot of research together, so she basically made My Blue Heaven based on what happens to Henry Hill after Goodfellas.

Really? I did not know that, nor have I seen it. So I’ll put that on my list.

Yeah, you should. Rick Moranis is in it. It’s a great movie.

That’s funny.

Last time we spoke you said you’ve never seen Field of Dreams because at the time your mom was sick and it was a tough time in your life. Did you get to watch the Field of Dreams game this summer?

The game? Yeah! I thought it was great. And just the weightiness of guys playing baseball? To them or somebody who dedicates their life to that sport. I’m really about your connection with your parent and a parent’s connection with their kid. And I didn’t know that it resonated, I didn’t know. I thought they were going to do it on the field that we used.

Yeah, I did too. I didn’t even know they made a different field.

Even I hit a home run!

No offense to your baseball talents, but I guess that’s why they couldn’t do it on that field.

I think they knew well and good. And the guy that probably owned the house and the field and the corn, where we shot, they just moved some more corn away. Yeah, they put up that field. I just thought it was beautiful. The way they did it, how they walked out. It was a Field of Dream, or two.

You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.