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The Tony Awards touted diversity, but here’s how the ceremony can do even better going forward

The 2022 Tony Awards was billed as one of the most diverse Tony Awards in history. And that’s not totally untrue. The show saw its first nonbinary winner, “Six: The Musical” writer Toby Marlow. Additionally, there were seven plays written by Black playwrights during this Broadway season, a fact that host Ariana DeBose pointed out in her opening number/monologue. She quipped that it was nice to see that “‘The Great White Way’ is becoming more of a nickname as opposed to a how-to guide.”


And this year was absolutely a benchmark year when it comes to Black representation at the Tonys. As someone who is an avid theater fan (the Tonys are to me what the Oscars are to film people), I love watching the beauty and spectacle of the show. But as a Black woman, I am always aware of the conversations around diversity. They’re incredibly important conversations to be having, and while the Tonys used much of DeBose’s opening monologue to proclaim how diverse Broadway currently is, most of the winners didn’t reflect the sudden push for diversity, more specifically, Black creators and performers.

In the categories of Best Play, Best Director of a Play and Best Featured Actress in a Musical, there were multiple Black nominees, including Black women, but all of the winners were white. Not only white, but white people who have already won before and are critically acclaimed. For most of the show, it would be Black nominee multiple times over a category, only to have a white winner. Watching the show unfold became increasingly more frustrating.

After the national protests and conversations about race in 2020, a group of theater performers and other creatives, including Viola Davis, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Sandra Oh, wrote an open letter, “Dear White American Theater.”

“We see you. We have always seen you. We have watched you pretend not to see us,” the letter reads.

“We have watched you program play after play, written, directed, cast, choreographed, designed, acted, dramaturged, and produced by your rosters of white theatermakers for white audiences, while relegating a token, if any, slot for a BIPOC play. We see you.”

““A Strange Loop”(@StrangeLoopBway) by Michael R. Jackson (@TheLivingMJ) bills itself as a “Big, Black & Queer-Ass American Musical.” Days before he and the show each won Tony Awards, Jackson talked to me about the spectacular show he spent 18 years writing https://t.co/vkf5S0MSSt”

One of the biggest issues with diversity on Broadway, at the Tonys or otherwise, is that the people in positions of power are still largely white. Take, for example, the new Broadway musical “A Strange Loop.” It has garnered a lot of buzz since it opened, and it picked up Tonys for Best Book of a Musical and Best Musical. When the show won Best Musical, the award was accepted by its white female producer (Barbara Whitman) along with its Black writer (Michael R. Jackson), despite its performance being presented by Black producers RuPaul Charles and Jennifer Hudson earlier in the broadcast. (Fun fact: Being a producer of the musical scored Hudson an EGOT, making her the second Black woman, and youngest winner overall.)

Clearly, Black producers exist, but they are not the lead producers, and as we know, the lead producers are the ones who become the face of the show in certain aspects. I’m not saying that white producers shouldn’t exist, but to create a more diverse playing field, they should be partnering with BIPOC producers, especially when the show is about a marginalized group. It may not seem like a big deal, but optics really do make it a big deal. It would have been way more impactful to the conversation to see all those Black faces on stage and have a Black person making the speech.

In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter ahead of the Tony’s, steering committee members of the Asian American Performers Action Coalition Christine Toy Johnson and Pun Bandhu talked about diversity on Broadway—the strides that have been made and areas that still fall short. The Asian American Performers Action Coalition is a group of AAPI theater folks who for the last 10 years have worked to increase opportunities for mainly Asian and Asian American creatives, but also to helping BIPOC communities as well.

Bandhu pointed out that over the years, there’s this swinging pendulum when it comes to representation. He refers to it as a “scarcity model,” where only one marginalized group can be having success at any given time. For example, after Lin-Manuel Miranda’s first Broadway hit “In the Heights” opened and won Tonys in 2009, there was a boost in interest surrounding Latino representation. After a show like “The Color Purple,” a boost in telling Black stories. He also added that the amount of diversity on Broadway never “went above 20 percent for marginalized and underrepresented groups from year to year over the course of 10 years.”

“”A Strange Loop is a story that centers the queer Black experience in the Broadway space which very well hits a chord when it comes to the creative process and navigating the world while being queer — specifically Black and queer.” @DinoRay
https://t.co/IYqVu0bzwm”

“Thinking that there’s only so much ground that can be given to marginalized groups … leads to this oppression Olympics, a system by which the power structure benefits from having all the marginalized groups competing against each other. What our statistics help to prove is that it’s a larger problem that has to do with centering white narratives and artists at the expense of all else,” Bandhu explained.

While this year was a record year for Black representation on Broadway, that meant that other marginalized racial groups got little to no recognition at all. There were only two Asian nominees this year, for lighting design. And while wins for either of them would have been historic, where is the visible Asian representation?

“I think that there’s been this ongoing myth about [AAPI talent] not existing, which is why we’re not represented,” Johnson told The Hollywood Reporter.

In a 2016 Forbes article, writer Lee Seymour stated that only 12 people of Asian descent have won a Tony—three producers have won more than once. David Henry Hwang was the first—and only—Asian American to win best play, back in 1988.

This is the perfect example of the “scarcity model,” and it feels ridiculous that it’s still a thing in 2022. But again, that leads to my earlier point of having marginalized producers. They will be more diligent about seeking out marginalized creators, actors and others. You have to have equity at the top to have equity at the bottom.

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ESPN’s NBA Halftime Show Remains An Unmitigated Disaster

As halftime arrived for Game 5 of the 2022 NBA Finals, the Golden State Warriors led the Boston Celtics by 12 and there was plenty to talk about, from the Warriors’ defensive brilliance, to the Celtics’ offensive ineptitude, to the adjustments needed from both sides to try and open things up offensively coming out of halftime.

On most sporting events on most networks, the halftime show would provide ample room for the analysts to make points, dive into highlights, and banter about what each team should be trying to do in the second half. However, ESPN’s halftime show for NBA games decidedly does not do that.

Instead, they spend the 15-minute break trying to see how many commercials they can squeeze in. Here is the honest to god breakdown of the halftime “show” viewers were treated to on ABC during Game 5:

  • COMMERCIAL BREAK
  • A 30-second sponsored segment from DraftKings where Mike Greenberg asked Jalen Rose who would be the top third quarter performer
  • COMMERCIAL BREAK
  • Two minutes of discussion of the first half in which Rose, Stephen A. Smith, and Michael Wilbon each got about 30 seconds each to fire off their takes
  • COMMERCIAL BREAK
  • A 15-second bumper of Stephen A. talking over a slow-mo Jayson Tatum video followed by a Meta Quest ad read from Greeny.
  • COMMERCIAL BREAK

At this point, the broadcast returned to courtside for a Wired segment and brief discussion from the broadcast booth about the half before the game resumed. As is oftentimes the case when I am when watching NBA games on ESPN, I was left wondering why they even bother having a halftime show.

For years, ESPN has shuffled the deck on its NBA studio show, trying in vain to make up ground on Turner’s beloved Inside the NBA crew. After the Rachel Nichols fiasco and Paul Pierce’s exit by way of a wild IG live, the network once again made sweeping changes by adding Stephen A. and Wilbon to the desk alongside Rose. Greenberg, a veteran broadcaster who knows how to set up his colleagues as well as anyone in the business, was essentially brought in to play point guard.

However, no combination of names stands a chance of finding success in the current format, in which ESPN and ABC try to extract as much ad revenue as humanly possible out of halftime and then kick it over to SportsCenter after the game in lieu of an actual postgame show.

The magic of Inside the NBA is not just the people — although, that’s the biggest piece of the puzzle — it’s that that they have room to breathe. You are given the opportunity to enjoy them as analysts, personalities, and everything else that comes from being, at the end of the day, a TV show. Kenny Smith’s halftime video breakdown at the big board in Studio J is given more time than anything on the entire ESPN halftime show, and that’s just the second segment of the program. It usually follows Shaq’s own video breakdown, and once Smith’s done, the floor is given to Chuck to rant about whatever he’d like.

Those back-and-forths that lead to the hysterical moments between Chuck and Shaq would be impossible if each were given just 30-45 seconds to talk. The same goes for the insight Kenny can give at the board, not to mention how they can really stretch out and get weird on the postgame show that goes for a full half-hour (or more, sometimes) after the final game ends and lets them dive deep on the topics that interest them. Yes, ESPN has a pregame show, but that is only part of the equation, and with how the network has decided to go in a very personality-driven direction with its NBA coverage, it feels like a gigantic waste of the talents of Rose, Smith, and Wilbon to take away their ability to react to things we just saw happen.

For ESPN to have the league’s biggest property in the Finals and to provide so little during their halftime show is rather pathetic. It’s not the fault of those on set, it is the fault of decision makers at the top who set them up to fail by selling four commercial breaks worth of ad space, plus two sponsored segments that take away any time to even attempt to provide real insight into the game we’re all watching. Until that changes, they stand no chance, and whoever they shuffle into those seats during their next shakeup will see the same results.

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The Guillermo Del Toro ‘Pinocchio’ Is Taking A, Shall We Say, Much Darker Approach Than The Tom Hanks/Robert Zemeckis Version

Hollywood is no stranger to having two competing productions about basically the same thing. There’ve been dueling asteroid movies (Deep Impact vs. Armageddon), dueling animated ant movies (Antz vs. A Bug’s Life), dueling CGI Jungle Book movies (Disney’s The Jungle Book vs. Netflix’s Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle). Now there’s dueling Pinocchio movies. In September, Disney will release Pinocchio, their latest live-action-plus-CGI redo of their animated classic, with Tom Hanks as lovable, white-haired Gepetto. In December, Netflix has their own take on Carlo Collodi’s classic tale, directed by Guillermo del Toro. But del Toro’s version will stand out in at least two ways: It’s all animated, and it sounds really, really, really dark.

The Oscar-winning filmmaker talked to Vanity Fair about what’s in store with his version of the tale of a wooden boy with an ever-growing nose. It was revealed long ago that it would be one of those renegade versions of a classic story, like Maleficent or Pan. But clearly we had no idea how far del Toro would go.

Indeed, this version is set not in a quaint fairy tale past but in Italy between World Wars I and II. Gepetto has a dead son; Pinocchio was carved from a tree that grew over his grave. Jiminy Cricket, now named Sebastian, literally lives inside Pinocchio. And del Toro found something even more disturbing than his trip to Pleasure Island, which may be the most traumatic stretch of any classic Disney animated feature.

“He is recruited into the village military camp, because the fascist official in town thinks if this puppet cannot die, it would make the perfect soldier,” del Toro told VF. Oh, and that official with an “ominous armband” who recruits him? He’s voiced by del Toro regular Ron Perlman.

This all sounds pretty nightmarish, but del Toro has one more optimistic spin on the source. Usually Pinocchio, especially its Paradise Island section, is treated as a warning to kids about the dangers of rebelling against one’s parents. (That’s especially how it is in the 1941 Disney take.) But del Toro wants to avoid that.

“It’s counter to the book, because the book is seeking the domestication of the child’s spirit in a strange way,” he explained. “It’s a book full of great invention, but it’s also in favor of obeying your parents and being ‘a good boy’ and all that. This [movie] is about finding yourself, and finding your way in the world—not just obeying the commandments that are given to you, but figuring out when they are okay or not.”

Del Toro’s Pinocchio — which again is not to be confused with the Pinocchio arriving in September, nor with the recent Italian version featuring Roberto Benigni as Gepetto (which itself is not to be confused with his near-career-killing version from 20 years ago) — is due on Netflix in December. You can watch the teaser in the video above.

(Via Vanity Fair)

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Snoop Dogg, Chaka Khan, Madlib, And A Third Day Were All Added To The Blue Note Jazz Festival In Napa

The brand new Blue Note Jazz Festival in Napa Valley was already sporting one of the more unreal music festival lineups of the summer. With Robert Glasper as the artist-in-residence and Dave Chappelle hosting the festivities, the slate of performers features Erykah Badu; Yasiin Bey and Talib Kweli performing as Black Star; Thundercat and Maurice Brown, joined by Anderson .Paak; Flying Lotus and The Soul Rebels, joined by GZA and Kweli; and Maxwell. Not bad right?

But this was merely the two-day slate, as the Blue Note Jazz Fest has now added a third day and a ton of new big-time acts. The most significant addition is easily Snoop Dogg, who’ll be performing a set alongside Dinner Party, the Uproxx-favorite project consisting of Glasper, 9th Wonder, Terrace Martin, and Kamasi Washington. Also added to the lineup are R&B and soul legend Chaka Khan, hip-hop production mastermind Madlib, Chris Dave & The Drumheadz, pianist Kiefer with Moonchild’s Amber Navran, and more.

Suffice it to say, a great thing just got even better. The festival will be going down from July 29 to July 31 at the Charles Krug Winery in St. Helena, CA. This is in the heart of Napa Valley’s wine country and all in all is a stellar addition to the summer festival circuit.

Check out the daily lineups below and get your single-day tickets here.

Blue Note Jazz Festivall
Blue Note Festival
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The Klay Thompson Impersonator Got Banned From Chase Center For Going On The Floor And Shooting Around

You might remember Big Daws, the YouTube personality who became popular among basketball fans for bearing a striking resemblance to Klay Thompson. Daws, whose real name is Dawson Gurley, would throw on a full Thompson Warriors get up, go to games, and get on camera because he looks exactly like Golden State’s star wing.

Prior to Monday night’s Game 5, Daws tweeted out that he attempted to attend the game but, instead, got a lifetime ban from Chase Center.

Daws went on to explain exactly what happened. Prior to the game, while all decked out in his Fake Klay attire, Daws made it through five levels of security, got onto the floor at Chase Center, and started to shoot around. There’s also video of him getting shots up.

We’ll get the obvious out of the way and say he has a nice jumper. Anyway, Daws tweeted out a letter that he received from the Warriors that stated he is “banned, indefinitely, from attending any future NBA, WNBA, G League, or 2K League games, or any concert and or event held at Chase Center.” There are also threats that the team might pursue criminal trespass charges.

All of that said, Daws did tweet that because he got a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, it’s absolutely worth the punishment that came his way.

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Bill Burr Has Asked Gun Owners ‘Twice’ For A Solution To School Shootings: ‘I’m Waiting Here Patiently’

Bill Burr is trying his best to work with gun owners on a solution to school shootings, but they’re not making it easy on him. After initially mocking “conservative snowflakes” who got worked up about a recent set of jokes he made about Kyle Rittenhouse — There’s “really f*cking sensitive people on both sides,” he concluded. — Burr revealed on the latest episode of his podcast that he genuinely wants to find an answer to school shooting’s that’s “not take away your guns and your amendment rights, so everybody’s happy.” In fact, the comedian made it a point to say he’s not “against gun nuts.”

However, Burr said he’s now offered the floor “twice” to gun owners, and he’s not hearing anything back, which is getting kind of frustrating. Via Mediaite:

So when you’re done cleaning your f*cking rifle there, I would love to hear from you. And I’m not being a c*nt either. I’m actually I’m legitimately asking. Because there’s got there’s got to be a way. There’s got to be a way to stop these things and then let a certain portion of the American public that wants to own those guns, still be able to go out in their backyard and f*cking shoot, you know? I don’t know, 860 empty f*cking beer cans, whatever the f*ck you do with that thing.

While he’s still waiting for an answer from “gun nuts,” Burr continued his “Both Sides” rant by saying it wouldn’t hurt if liberals tried enjoying guns every once in a while.

“Maybe more liberals need to go to a gun range, and find the fun side of a gun. Right?” Burr said. “And then they’re into guns, too, and then maybe we could all just sit down and stop fucking typing capital letters at each other. I don’t know.”

(Via Mediaite)

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Giveon Shares Tour Dates Ahead Of His Debut Album, ‘Give Or Take’

Long Beach crooner Giveon had a breakout 2021 that culminated in a well-attended late afternoon performance at Coachella earlier this year. Earlier this month, the “Heartbreak Anniversary” singer announced the release date for his debut album, Give Or Take, and today, he shared the dates for his upcoming tour in support of the album. Tickets go on sale at 10 am local time on June 17. You can grab those and pre-save the album here.

8/16 – Philadelphia, PA @ The Metropolitan Opera House
8/17 – New Haven, CT @ College Street Music Hall
8/19 – New York, NY @ Radio City Music Hall
8/21 – Brooklyn, NY @ Kings Theatre
8/23 – Boston, MA @ House of Blues
8/26 – Richmond, VA @ The National
8/27 – Norfolk, VA @ The Norva
8/28 – Charlotte, NC @ The Fillmore
8/30 – Atlanta, GA @ Coca-Cola Roxy
8/31 – Raleigh, NC @ The Ritz
9/2 – Orlando, FL @ House of Blues
9/3 – Miami, FL @ The Oasis
9/4 – St. Petersburg, FL @ Jannus Live
9/6 – New Orleans, LA @ Orpheum Theater
9/8 – Houston, TX @ 713 Music Hall
9/9 – Austin, TX @ Stubb’s Waller Creek Amphitheatre
9/10 – Dallas, TX – The Factory
9/12 – Tempe, AZ @ Marquee Theatre
9/13 – Las Vegas, NV @ House of Blues
9/15 – Los Angeles, CA @ Hollywood Forever Cemetery
9/16 – Los Angeles, CA – Primavera Sound **Festival Date
9/18 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
9/20 – Portland, OR @ Roseland Theater
9/21 – Seattle , WA- The Paramount Theatre
9/22 – Vancouver, BC @ Malkin Bowl
9/24 – Salt Lake City, UT @ The Union Event Center
9/25 – Denver, CO- The Mission Ballroom
9/27 – Minneapolis, MN @ The Fillmore
9/29 – Kansas City, MO @ Arvest Bank Theatre At The Midland
9/30 – Saint Louis, MO @ The Pageant
10/2 – Chicago, IL @ Aragon Ballroom
10/4 – Detroit, MI @ The Masonic Theater
10/5 – Cleveland, OH @ Agora Theater
10/7 – Indianapolis, IN @ Egyptian Room At Old National Centre
10/9 – Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music Works
10/11 – Columbus, OH @ Kemba Live!
10/12 – Pittsburgh , PA- Stage AE
10/14 – Washington, DC @ The Anthem
10/16 – Montreal, QC @ MTELUS
10/19 – Toronto, ON @ HISTORY

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LCD Soundsystem, Rosalía, And Porter Robinson Are Headlining Miami’s Diverse III Points Fest

For the ninth year, III Points Festival will descend upon the Mana Wynwood Convention Center in Miami’s Wynwood Arts & Entertainment District, for a diverse representation of both the sound of Miami and the world. The two-day music festival has steadily grown to feature even more big-name acts and 2022’s edition of III Points has easily the most striking lineup, featuring headliners in LCD Soundsystem, Rosalía, and Porter Robinson.

Also prominently featured on the bill are globally-minded decorated artists like South Africa’s Black Coffee, England’s James Blake, Japanese native Joji, and Australia’s Flume and Fisher. All in all, there are over 150 artists performing from around the world. Other lineup highlights include Chris Lake, Orbital, Polo & Pan, Bob Moses, Busta Rhymes, Freddie Gibbs, A.G. Cook, Tycho, The Marías, Kenny Beats, La Femme, Homeshake, Artbat, Loco Dice, Shygirl, Erika De Casier, Sama’ Abdulhadi, Yellow Days, Jacuzzi Boys, Andy Stott, Jacques Greene, Pink Siifu, John Summit, and more. There will also be a performance from the new supergroup of Miami stars Trick Daddy, Trina, and Uncle Luke known as III 0 5.

Check out the lineup poster below and get tickets to the 9th edition of III Points Music & Arts Festival starting this Friday, June 17 at
1 pm EST here.

III Points 2022
iii Points Lineup

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

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50 Cent Wants You To Vacation With Him In Malta With Fat Joe, Trina, And More

As the music festival space has filled up over the past couple of years, audiences may find themselves wondering what separates each new event from the ones before it. After all, there are only so many commercially viable acts, venues, and location-specific experiences that can be Frankensteined together. What little there is to recommend one fest over another often comes down to how the latter informs the rest. Knowing this, 50 Cent has pulled out all the stops for his own foray into the festival space, teaming up with Pollen for the Green Light Gang getaway experience in Malta.

pollen 50 cent malta
Pollen

That’s right: Malta. The trip bills itself as more than just a music festival, although it certainly has that component, offering a four-day trip from September 22-26 with a plethora of activities for participants to indulge in besides the concerts. While the musical performances will certainly appeal to a certain kind of hip-hop fan with appearances by Akon, DJ Premier, Fat Joe, Jeremih, Remy Ma, and Trina, there will also be boat cruises, nightclubs, and a champagne brunch throughout the 20 participating resorts. 50 will also hold an outdoor cinema screening of Power, which would certainly be a different way to take in that particular entertainment offering.

There’s more information on Pollen’s website.

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‘The Simpsons’ Fans Are Learning That They Might Have Been Misinterpreting A Classic Joke For Years

The beauty of The Simpsons, especially in the early seasons (when you’ve been on for 33 seasons and counting, season nine counts as “early”), is that you is that you can watch an episode 10 times, and not get a joke until the 11th viewing. Or in the case of “Bart Gets Famous,” until the joke is interpreted by one of the show’s writers on Twitter.

In the season five episode, Principal Skinner and Mrs. Krabappel call the Simpsons household after Bart goes missing during a field trip to the Springfield Box Factory. Marge is seen running down the stairs in a towel to pick up the phone, but she doesn’t make it in time, so they call Homer at the power plant instead. He’s also in a towel, and upon answering the phone, he says, “You’ll have to speak up, I’m wearing a towel.”

I always thought of Homer’s response as a brilliantly stupid non-sequitur, but that might not be the case. “I’m proud to say I’ve loved this joke and possibly misinterpreted it for nearly 30 years now,” The Simpsons writer Josh Weinstein (who would later serve as co-showrunner with fast food expert Bill Oakley) tweeted. “For 25 years, I assumed (and loved it) that it was just a non-sequitur but then someone explained it’s what people with long hair say when they have a towel over their wet hair (and ears) after a shower when they answer the phone. Makes 100% sense but also make me like joke less.”

To quote a one-dimensional character with a silly catch-phrase, ay caramba!

Weinstein’s original understanding of the joke — that it’s a non-sequitur from a character written like a “big, talking dog” — might not be wrong, though. “Don’t let people ruin it for you. It’s the silly joke you think it is,” writer Mike Scully tweeted. Weinstein wondered if he pitched the joke, to which Scully replied, “I want to say yes because it sounds like me, but not sure. Could’ve been David Cohen and my contribution was laughing.”

If your interpretation of Homer’s towel line ends up being wrong, just say, “I didn’t do it.”

(Via Twitter/@Joshstrangehill)