Bart Simpson, Nancy Cartwright Alamy; Rodin Eckenroth/Getty

Alamy; Rodin Eckenroth/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Nancy Cartwright, the voiceover actress who plays Bart on The Simpsons, shared her thoughts on AI potentially taking over the role when she ultimately retires

  • Cartwright, 68, has been voicing Bart for over 35 years

  • She recently caught up with PEOPLE exclusively at the show's 800th episode party in Hollywood, Calif.

Nancy Cartwright, the woman who has voicedBart Simpsonfor over 35 years, shared her candid thoughts on how she feels about AI potentially taking over her role some day.

Cartwright, 68, recently spoke to PEOPLE exclusively atThe Simpsons'800th episode party in Hollywood, Calif. During the conversation, she shared that she does not want AI to be used to recreate her voice when she ultimately retires.

"I think I would choose a successor[instead of AI], and I'll tell you why — because AI has no heart and I think that's a missing ingredient," she explained.

Nancy Cartwright at 'The Simpsons' 800 episode party in L.A. on feb. 6, 2026 Alberto E. Rodriguez/Variety via Getty

Alberto E. Rodriguez/Variety via Getty

"[AI] might sound pretty close to Nancy Cartwright, but I got passion," she added. "We're spiritual beings, we can emote passion and uplift people and stuff. And I don't know that a computer can do something like that."

Cartwright also revealed that she initially was supposed to audition for the voice of Lisa when she first tried out for the series in 1987 (at the time it was just intended to run as a weekly short on theTracey Ullman Show), but decided to try out for Bart at the last minute.

"I go in and for the voice of Lisa Simpson, who's the middle child, and I saw it there, and then I saw the picture of Bart — 10-year-old school-hating underachiever and proud of it. And I'm like, 'Wait a minute, that's more interesting.' … So I auditioned and I got it," she recalled.

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"He [series creator Matt Groening] hired me on the spot, but I drove away going, 'It's not even a show. I was degrading it. I was thinking, 'What is this anyway?' And it started airing onThe Tracey Ullman Show.And again, it was just this little hiccup, but that little hiccup started to grow," she continued.

Members of 'The Simpsons' crew: Hank Azaria, Matt Groening, Nancy Cartwright and Dan Castellaneta in 1992 Vinnie Zuffante/Getty

Vinnie Zuffante/Getty

"And we would go in every week to do these records and they were fun and they were funny … Now, I don't think anybody really knew what was going on. We were just making up rules and I'm glad I kept my big fat mouth shut because I feel like I could have told them how to do it, but this wasn't my job. It wasn't my place to do that. And I'm glad I shut up and I kept my job," she said.

Cartwright saidthatSimpsonsfansall over the world know her voice, revealing that she once got recognized while on a train in South America.

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"I'm not kidding. It's like we were on safari and it got recognized by this kid, a 12-year-old kid or something. Oh, I can't get away from it," she said.

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Nancy Cartwright, the Voice of Bart Simpson, Shares Her Candid Thoughts on Being Replaced by AI When She Retires (Exclusive)

Alamy; Rodin Eckenroth/Getty NEED TO KNOW Nancy Cartwright, the voiceover actress who plays Bart on The Simpsons , shared her thoughts o...
How many feet are in 500 miles? Nobody knows, at least Nate Bargatze doesn't at the Daytona 500

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Nate Bargatze considered squeezinga big, dumb jokeinto his command for drivers to start their engines at theDaytona 500.

Associated Press

"At first, I thought about doing like, how many feet are in 500 miles," Bargatze said. "Nobody knows."

Bargatzelaughed when he said the proposed joke, which is a riff on his popular "Washington's Dream" sketches on "Saturday Night Live," fell flat when he tested it Saturday night during a gig in Indianapolis.

"I was going to do another one withJimmie Johnsonbeing older to let the younger drivers know that his left blinker will be on the whole race," Bargatze said. "Then when I got here and talked about it, it's like, I think you just need to do, normal? You have all these hopes and dreams to do something funny."

Bargatze kept it straight in his role as grand marshal for Sunday'sDaytona 500.

"It's going to be insanity," Bargatze said. "It's been a dream to be asked to do this."

Bargatze's day at Daytona — where he mingled with drivers such as Denny Hamlin — is just the latest dream job for one of the most popular stand-ups currently working. He hosted theEmmy Awards, released threeNetflixspecials and just won a Best Comedy Album Grammy Award for "Your Friend, Nate Bargatze."

His "Big Dumb Eyes World Tour" set a record for biggest one-year gross by a comedy performer in history and has set more than 40 arena attendance records.

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They served as warm-up acts for his first starring role in a movie, "The Breadwinner." Bargatze co-wrote the script for the film he said was influenced by his stand-up and old-school funny, family movies such as "Mr. Mom" and "Home Alone."

"You want it to be broad, the whole family can come," Bargatze said. "It's like what I do with stand-up, you kind of just want everybody to come."

Mandy Moore plays Bargatze's wife in the comedy, which also includes Colin Jost and Will Forte and opens May 29.

"Obviously overwhelming," Bargatze said. "I don't know how to act. Learning that on the fly was a good time."

The 46-year-old Bargatze resumes his stand-up tour this week in Rockford, Illinois, and he's set to host the ABC game show, "The Greatest Average American."

The title seemed fitting when Bargatze was gifted one of only 500 specialty Daytona 500 hats. The hat was numbered 302. Average.

"It's not bragging," Bargatze said. "I'm right in the middle. That's where the average American would be. It's humility. It's how you go."

AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

How many feet are in 500 miles? Nobody knows, at least Nate Bargatze doesn't at the Daytona 500

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Nate Bargatze considered squeezinga big, dumb jokeinto his command for drivers to start their...
Dodgers' unlikely World Series heroes still can't believe what happened

PHOENIX — One was a36-year-old career journeymaninfielder from Venezuela who hadn't produced a hit in more than a month.

USA TODAY Sports

The other a 26-year-old reliever with his fourth team in 11 months who wasn't even on the playoff roster the first three rounds.

Who would have imagined that in a clubhouse full of All-Stars and future Hall of Famers, Miguel Rojas andWill Kleinwould be honest-to-goodnessLos Angeles DodgersWorld Series heroes, still basking three months later from the most glorious moments of their careers?

Rojas, who hit perhaps the most unlikely home run in World Series history, will not only forever be remembered in Dodgers lore for not that ninth-inning Game 7 homer, but also saving the game with a spectacular defensive play in the bottom of the frame.

"I've watched that moment over and over so many times, but it's still hard to believe it happened," Rojas tells USA TODAY Sports. "It's just overwhelming. I've always wanted to have a moment in my career where I feel valuable, especially on the offensive side. And then when you do something like that, you know it's going to be remembered for a long time.

"Probably forever."

Miguel Rojas celebrates his home run in the ninth inning of Game 7.

Klein was working out in Arizona and wasn't even on the Dodgers' postseason roster untilAlex Vesia left the team before the World Seriesto be with his wife after the loss of their newborn daughter. He was summoned in the 15thinning of Game 3, and then pitched four shutout innings in the 6-5, 18-inning victory.

"It's still crazy to think about," Klein says. "I mean, I was hearing from people I went to high school with and old teams. There were people I went to middle school and high school with that didn't even know I was playing baseball. They saw me on TV, and started sending me random stuff."

'No one expected' Miguel Rojas home run

The Dodgers were down to their last two outs, trailing theToronto Blue Jays, 4-3, in the ninth inning of Game 7. Rojas, who hadn't had a hit in an entire month, stepped to the plate facing Blue Jays closer Jeff Hoffman. Rojas worked the count to 3-and-2 when Hoffman tried to fool him with a slider. Rojas belted it over the left field wall and the screaming crowd at the Rogers Centre went dead silent.

The only sound you heard was the Dodger bench and scattered fans screaming in euphoria with Rojas barely able to feel his feet trotting around the bases.

"No one expected Miguel Rojas to hit that home run," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts says. "No one."

Still, it looked like it might be all forgotten when the Blue Jays loaded the bases with one out in the bottom of the ninth. The Dodgers pulled the infield in, and Daulton Varsho hit a bouncer to the right side of Rojas. He snared the ball, but then slipped, and had his momentum carrying him towards second base. Rojas set, and fired home just in the nick of time to nail Isiah Kiner-Falefa at the plate and prevent the winning run.

Two innings later – and after Yoshinobu Yamamto's 2 ⅔ shutout innings in relief on no days' rest – the Dodgers were back-to-back World Series champions with Yamamoto winning the World Series MVP.

With the Dodgers all gathering for the first time since their World Series parade, everyone still is talking about Rojas and Klein's heroics.

"(Rojas) is one of the best teammates I ever had, and just one of the best people in baseball," says third baseman Max Muncy, who delivered an eighth-inning homer in Game 7 then made his own big defensive play. "So, for something like that to happen to him, after all of the work he out in and the mentality he had about certain situations, it was so well deserved.

"It was like how the game was rewarding him for how he handled his role last year."

Rojas, who didn't even play the first five games of the World Series, and was informed only a text message from manager Dave Roberts that he was starting Game 6 in Toronto, never complained about his role. Sure, he wanted to play more, but once Mookie Betts shifted from right field to shortstop, he did everything possible to help Betts improve so dramatically defensively that Betts became a Gold Glove finalist.

And in one glorious moment, it was Rojas who went from an understudy to an Academy Award winning performance, getting congratulatory messages from the likes of Hall of Famer Derek Jeter, Don Mattingly, and the scout who signed him out of Venezuela.

"That's why I felt so great after it happened, not just because I hit a home run that tied the game," Rojas says, "but seeing the reaction of the people that I really care about. It was so cool. And everybody in the media had something good to say about me.

"The biggest compliment for me is that a guy like me, in front of the whole team, Doc [Roberts] told them that the game honors me because I did things the right way. I'll remember those words forever. That makes me feel like after the 20 years that I've been in professional baseball, I've been doing something good."

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Rojas, who plans to retire after the season and stay with the Dodgers in player development with hopes one day of being a manager, still has strangers stopping him and thanking him for his home run. He has had more autograph requests during the winter than he's had in his entire life.

Yet, the question no one asks is which play meant to  him, the game-tying home run or the game-saving play in the bottom of the ninth inning that forced the game into extra innings.

"The home run is going to be something that people will remember forever because you're two outs away from being done," Rojas says. "But the play, I mean that's the hardest play I ever made because it's do-or-die to not only win the game but lose your season. If I don't make the play, the home run and everything is kind of our of the window.

"So, it's really tough to put it into context because if I don't hit the home run, I don't make the play, and then if I don't make the play, the homer doesn't count. I'm just so proud I was able to come through when it counted."

Feb. 13: New York Yankees Feb. 13: Los Angeles Dodgers Feb. 13: Detroit Tigers Feb. 13: Milwaukee Brewers Feb. 10: Atlanta Braves Feb. 10: San Francisco Giants Feb. 10: Chicago White Sox Feb. 10: Arizona Diamondbacks Feb. 11: Toronto Blue Jays Feb. 11: Philadelphia Phillies Feb. 11: Los Angeles Angels Feb. 11: Athletics Feb. 11: New York Mets Feb. 11: Chicago CUbs Feb. 12: Chicago CUbs Feb. 12: New York Yankees Feb 12, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets infielder Bo Bichette (19) warms-up during spring training. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images Feb. 12: Seattle Mariners Feb. 12: Pittsburgh Pirates

MLB spring training 2026: Sunshine, good vibes in Arizona and Florida

Will Klein: 'No one knows who I am'

Klein was working out at the Dodgers' spring-training complex in Phoenix when he got the emergency call to join the team in Toronto. Klein, who had spent most of the season pitching in Triple-A, threw a grueling 72 pitches across four innings in Game 3, the most he had thrown since he was at Eastern Illinois, and became an overnight hero.

He was congratulated by legendary Dodger Sandy Koufax, who shook his hand after the game.

"I didn't think most people," Klein says, "even knew who I was."

So now that he's a World Series hero, do people recognize him now wherever he goes?

"I heard people say that everybody would know me now," Klein says, "but it hasn't really changed. My wife and I went to Disneyland and Universal Studios, and maybe like two people recognized me. We'll walk around Pasadena and LA, and no one knows who I am."

Besides, Klein says laughing, it's not like he's Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza of Indiana University. Klein, born and raised in Indiana, is a diehard Hoosiers fan and says he may have celebrated the school's football national championship harder than he did the Dodgers' World Series win.

"I mean, to be the losingest team ever in college football history before that, and then win it all," Klein says, "it's something I'll remember forever. I remember going to games when Wisconsin would beat us like82 to 20, and losing to teams like North Texas and Ball State, so it's been a long ride.

"I can't even imagine how many kids are going to be born in Indiana now named Fernando."

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) prays before Game 7. Shohei Ohtani (17) warms up before Game 7. Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer (31) warms up before Game 7.

2025 World Series: All the best moments from Dodgers vs. Blue Jays Game 7

While Rojas will be retiring after the 2026 season, Klein is hoping his World Series performance will kick-start his career. Hey, if you can throw four shutout innings in a World Series game, you're sure not going to be fazed by a regular season relief appearance against the San Francisco Giants.

"It's easy to look at it like that," Klein says, "but that doesn't mean I'm going to automatically pitch well this year. I've still got to go out and put the work in each day, and use that confidence. But I can't get lazy and think, 'Oh, I'm going to be great just because I did that in one game of the World Series.'"

It's the same with the Dodgers, Roberts says. They had a bullseye on their back then, and they'll have it now.

The Dodgers can't simply throw $400 million worth of talent on the field each night and expect to automatically win. They have to move forward and focus on 2026 if they have a chance to make history, but still, no matter what transpires, those memories of that glorious 2025 World Series will live forever.

"Man, when I think about it," Roberts says, "it still blows my mind. Who would ever have thought that Miggy would hit that home run? Who could have ever thought that Will Klein was going to throw four scoreless innings in a World Series?

"But you have to have stuff like that go right for you."

No matter who steps up as the hero.

Follow Nightengale on X:@Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Dodgers' unlikely World Series heroes still have champions in awe

Dodgers' unlikely World Series heroes still can't believe what happened

PHOENIX — One was a36-year-old career journeymaninfielder from Venezuela who hadn't produced a hit in more than a mo...
NBA's effort to stop tanking is 'not working,' Adam Silver says

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — NBA commissioner Adam Silver wondered out loud Saturday if a moral code in pro sports has been decisively crossed as more and more teams are blatantly losing games — the hatedpractice of "tanking."

NBC Universal Adam Silver. (Soeren Stache / dpa / picture alliance via Getty Images file)

Silver conceded that the league is still struggling for solutions to punish teams that lose intentionally for long-term gain.

"I think there was a more classical view of that in the old days, where it was just sort of an understanding among partners about terms of behavior," Silver told reporters at theIntuit Dome, home of the Los Angeles Clippers and site of Sunday's NBA All-Star Game.

The NBA's annual draft allows the worst teams to have the first chance at picking the best young, amateur talent in hopes of boosting those clubs' sad fortunes. With losing equating to better draft position, teams have learned that if they're not in playoff contention, bottoming out could be the best path to restocking talent.

The 2026 NBA draft class is recognized as the best in recent years, with multiple names at the top of the board that could alter a team's future.

The practice of "tanking" is getting worse, Silver said.

"I think what we're seeing is a modern analytics, where it's so clear that the incentives are misaligned," he said.

The league this weekfined the Utah Jazz $500,000for "conduct detrimental to the league," in connection with the team sitting star players in the fourth quarters of consecutive games.

"The league is 80-years-old. It's time to take a fresh look at this and to see whether that's an antiquated way," Silver said. "We got to look at some fresh thinking here. We're doing, what we're seeing right now, is not working. There's no question about it."

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"Are we seeing behavior that is worse this year than we've seen in recent memory?" Silver added. "Yes is my view."

Jazz ownerRyan Smith sarcasticallyresponded to the NBA in a statement: "agree to disagree."

Smith also pointed out that one of the games, in which the Jazz were accused of trying to lose, was won by Utah.

"We won the game in Miami and got fined?" Smith said. "That makes sense."

The NBA has tried disincentivize intentional losing by determining draft order via a weighted draft, so losing the most games doesn't automatically result in the first pick.

Silver said, though, that he's not entirely sure that teams with the worst records are necessarily the most needy.

"It's not clear to me, for example, that the 30th (best) performing team is that much measurably worse than the 22nd (best) performing team, particularly if you have incentive to perform poorly to get a better draft pick," he said. "So it's a bit of a conundrum."

The practice is so ingrained in NBA culture that even suggestions to fight it seem hard to come by. Populartalk show host Colin Cowherd, who is paid to have opinions, threw up his arms recently on the topic and said his only suggestion was for Silver to channel his more-confrontationalpredecessor David Sternand yell at losing teams.

"I don't know what you do with tanking, they've been doing it forever. But they did it a lot less with David Stern," Cowherd said last week. "People feared David Stern."

NBA's effort to stop tanking is 'not working,' Adam Silver says

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — NBA commissioner Adam Silver wondered out loud Saturday if a moral code in pro sports has been decis...
Bill Belichick, UNC pick up another QB: Taron Dickens transfers from Western Carolina

The University of North Carolina picked up former Western Carolina quarterback Taron Dickens out of the transfer portal, according toOn3's Pete Nakos.

Yahoo Sports CHATTANOOGA, TN - NOVEMBER 01: Western Carolina Catamounts quarterback Taron Dickens (5) points to a receiver as he rolls out of the pocket during the game between the Chattanooga Mocs and the Western Carolina Catamounts on November 01, 2025 at Finley stadium in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (Photo by Charles Mitchell/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Dickens spent three seasons at Western Carolina, where he threw for 3,508 yards, 38 touchdowns and 2 interceptions last season, with a 74.2% completion percentage. He also had 321 rushing yards and a touchdown.

Dickens threw for a total of 5,063 yards, 51 touchdowns, 5 interceptions and a 74% completion percentage in his three seasons at WVU.

Dickens is the third quarterback that the Tar Heels have added, following the signings of Billy Edwards Jr. from Wisconsin and Miles O'Neill from Texas A&M.

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Edwards played 34 snaps in two games at the University of Wisconsin after injuring his knee in the season opener. He spent his first three years at the University of Maryland, where he threw for 2,881 yards, 15 touchdowns and 9 interceptions in 2024. Edwards signed with Wake Forest and redshirted out of high school.

O'Neill saw limited action during his first two years behind Texas A&M quarterback Marcel Reed. The Tar Heels also signed freshman quarterback Travis Burgess.

In Bill Belichick's first year in Chapel Hill, the team went 4-8 overall and 2-6 in the ACC. North Carolina ranked second-to-last in the ACC in passing and receiving yards and ranked last in total yards and first downs converted.

Gio Lopez started most of the year at quarterback. Lopez threw for 1,747 yards, 10 touchdowns and 5 interceptions. After the season, Lopez transferred to Wake Forest. Former North Carolina quarterbacks Max Johnson (Georgia Southern) and Bryce Baker (Virginia Tech) also transferred to other schools.

Bill Belichick, UNC pick up another QB: Taron Dickens transfers from Western Carolina

The University of North Carolina picked up former Western Carolina quarterback Taron Dickens out of the transfer portal,...
The 10 best music documentaries on HBO Max: Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, and more

HBO Max (2); Dave Hogan/Courtesy of Getty/HBO

Entertainment Weekly Omara Portuondo in 'Buena Vista Social Club,' Bob Dylan in 'Don't Look Back,' Tina Turner in 'Tina' HBO Max (2); Dave Hogan/Courtesy of Getty/HBO

If you want to go behind the music,HBO Maxis singing your song.

There's something inherently personal about appreciating music, so it's only natural to want to learn more about the artists behind the songs stuck in our heads. HBO Max is a particularly rich seam for documentaries about 20th century legends in the rock and R&B realm, but there are pockets of Latin jazz and folk, too. (Not so much when it comes to Western classical. Fans of J.S. Bach, it's time to activate your Kanopy account.)

Entertainment Weeklyhas narrowed down the 10 bestmusic documentariesstreaming on HBO Max that'll get your toes tapping — and teach you a thing or two about the voices you thought you knew so well.

Buena Vista Social Club(1999)

Ibrahim Ferrer in 'Buena Vista Social Club' HBO Max

Wim Wenders' tag-along with Ry Cooder to make recordings with aging giants of traditional Cuban music was a revelation for so many viewers unaware of the art form. On its surface, this is a "making of" movie with musicians hanging out in the studio; but it doubles as an exploration of Cuban culture, observing its decaying architecture and hot nights with old-timers at the beach swapping stories while playing dominoes.

The film climaxes with a triumphant visit by the musicians,some in their 90s, to New York's Carnegie Hall. The project's success launched a series of secondary albums (and copycats) and a hit Broadway musical.

Don't Look Back(1967)

Bob Dylan in 'Don't Look Back' HBO Max

Rarely do you get to see mythmaking happen before your own eyes. WithDon't Look Back, D.A. Pennebaker, one of the architects of "direct cinema," deployed a new handheld 16mm camera and portable Nagra audio recorder to pretty much invent the modern music documentary. It didn't hurt that his subject was Bob Dylan in 1965, the leading light of the folk revivalism scene on the cusp of embracing electric instruments.

Most of the film followsDylan and his entourage(including Joan Baez) on a tour of England, trading wits with journalists and getting hammered at a notorious hotel party that involves someone (who? whoooo? we'll never know) throwing a glass out a window. No one ever wore sunglasses better.

George Harrison: Living in the Material World(2011)

George Harrison in 'Living in the Material World' (in this case, a pool) Apple Corps Limited/Courtesy of HBO

Apple Corps Limited/Courtesy of HBO

Everyone has hobbies. Some knit, some play backgammon, and some (like Martin Scorsese) make documentaries about people that interest them.George Harrison: Living in the Material Worldfocuses on the most enigmatic Beatle. This two-part investigation begins with Harrison's early days in Liverpool through his Fab Four years, including sojourns to India that radically changed the aims (and style) of the counterculture in Europe and North America.

Harrison'spost-Beatles careerwas the coolest of anyone's (no disrespect to Paul's "Silly Love Songs"): releasing the triple-album masterpieceAll Things Must Pass, organizing some of the first global benefit concerts, and becoming a successful film producer. The Traveling Wilburys albums weren't so bad, either. And Scorsese approaches it all through the lens of Harrison's humble humanism.

Gimme Shelter(1970)

Mick Jagger in 'Gimme Shelter' HBO Max

This is the only film on this list that doubles as crime-scene reporting. For many, the concept of "The Sixties" as a doe-eyed exploration of peace and harmonyended at California's Altamont Speedway, where a free festival headlined by the Rolling Stones was hastily assembled in a quixotic attempt to replicate Woodstock's lightning-in-a-bottle.

The film is framed by band members looking at footage — first of their triumphant concerts at Madison Square Garden, a visit to Muscle Shoals, Ala., then the tragedy at Altamont. The Stones took the stage as tensions rose between fans and drunken Hells Angels, leading to a fateful skirmish that marked the end of an era.

It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley(2025)

Jeff Buckley in 'It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley' Merri Cyr./Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

Merri Cyr./Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

It's Never Over, Jeff Buckleyshows how the great singer-songwriter, who only released one completed studio albumbefore he died in a freak accidentin 1997, was hardwired to express himself through song. Though he barely knew his absentee father Tim Buckley (who also died young), the specter of that similarly genre-defying artist was always in his life.

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Alternately embracing and dodging comparisons, the younger Buckley rode the wave of notoriety in the downtown Manhattan scene, securing a recording contract and an army of dedicated followers. It didn't hurt that he was handsome as hell, but the sudden thrust onto magazine covers (balanced by only modest sales) sent him into a tailspin. Though poised for a remarkable second act, cruel fate intervened.

Listening to Kenny G(2021)

Kenny G in 'Listening to Kenny G' HBO Max

Kenny G knows people think he's a joke, and he's laughing all the way to the bank. Somehow this dopey guy who makes music for people who don't ever think about music secured himself adecades-long career. Director Penny Lane interviews jazz critics who howl at his wretchedness, then balances it with fans who simply don't care. What is "good art," anyway?

By and large, Kenny comes off as a nice guy, if not a smidge obnoxious. But wouldn't you be a little defensive if everyone had publicly mocked your work? Above all, this doc is an examination of the mercurial nature of taste and individuality. And it may even get you to listen to some Kenny G.

Luther: Never Too Much(2024)

Luther Vandross in 'Luther: Never Too Much' HBO Max

This look at "love doctor" Luther Vandross is a celebration of his great career and a sad look at how culture wasn't ready to accept him for who he was. As a closeted gay man who shed and gained weight in the public eye, the spotlight often took a toll on his mental and physical health, making him an unfortunate punchline.

For those who knew him, and those who packed theaters to see him, he was atitan of romantic R&Band a great professional.Never Too Muchbalances personal stories with examples of his remarkable musical output, including early years singing and arranging on David Bowie's ode to Philly Soul,Young Americans.

Monterey Pop(1968)

Jimi Hendrix in 'Monterey Pop' HBO Max

AfterDon't Look Back, D.A. Pennebaker continued to cover the contemporary music scene, capturing 1967's Monterey International Pop Festival. In a time before YouTube (to say nothing of MTV), footage of stars like Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, and Simon & Garfunkel were harder to come by, soevery captured momentbecame precious. Most memorable inMonterey Popis Jimi Hendrix setting his guitar ablaze (not a euphemism) and the Who smashing their instruments.

Also groundbreaking was the way Pennebaker shot Otis Redding's performance, using flashes from stage lights (previously considered a filmmaking "error") as something of a dance partner and in-camera editing technique. Perhaps most important was including the audience, offering fashion tips for everyone watching in theaters.

One to One: John & Yoko(2024)

Yoko Ono and John Lennon in 'One to One' Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

You'd assume we don't need another John Lennon documentary, butOne to One: John & Yokois much more than a typical biography. It focuses on 18 monthsin the couple's lifewhen they lived in an unglamorous Manhattan apartment while involving themselves in major political and artistic affairs. Despite great wealth, they lived simply, watched a lot of television, and recorded many of their phone calls so they could one day get used in a project like this.

The film is a collage of the time and place — a city and culture undergoing tumultuous change. It concludes with one of Lennon's few post-1966 concert appearances, a benefit concert for a school for the disabled inspired by a news report from, of all people, Geraldo Rivera.

Tina(2021)

Tina Turner in 'Tina' Courtesy of HBO

Courtesy of HBO

If ever anyone deserved a victory lap, it was Tina Turner. This film, released only a couple of years before her death, is a comprehensive reflection of her difficult life, which ultimately ended with her finding solace in Switzerland with a good man by her side.

This isn't just a documentary about a gifted performer, but a condemnation of institutional sexism and racism that dominated mass medianot too long ago. Bravely, Turnerfaces her biographyone last time to show that demons from the past can be overcome. There's also some incredible concert footage to boot.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

The 10 best music documentaries on HBO Max: Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, and more

HBO Max (2); Dave Hogan/Courtesy of Getty/HBO If you want to go behind the music,HBO Maxis singing your song...
NBA's marquee event now all about the league's issues

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Two minutes before NBA commissioner Adam Silver was scheduled to address the media in an upstairs room at Intuit Dome, his deputy, Mark Tatum, cheerfully shook hands with reporters before taking his seat in the front row.

That the league's second-in-command was eagerly anticipating Silver's words, much like the other occupants in the room, was poignant. Given the most prominent talking points that have dominated league discourse lately — the tanking epidemic, sports betting issues and alleged cap circumvention — have become so prevalent, the build-up to Silver's news conference was seismic.

However, following the duration ofSilver's availability— he spoke for around 30 minutes — there were far more questions as a result of his answers (or lack thereof).

The first question posed to the commissioner, and the most detailed response Silver gave, was about the issue of tanking. This makes sense, given how quickly the league office acted in response to recent misbehavior from the Utah Jazz and Indiana Pacers. Both organizations were fined; $500,000 to the Jazz and $100,000 to the Pacers for actions detrimental to the core values of the NBA. Utah's modus operandi was far more egregious than Indiana's — sitting its two best players for entire fourth quarters in separate close games is worse than holding someone out under the guise of rest, but neither should be tolerated.

"Are we seeing behavior that is worse this year than we've seen in recent memory?" Silver asked Saturday. "Yes, it is my view. Which was what led to those fines, and not just those fines but to my statement that we're going to be looking more closely at the totality of all the circumstances this season in terms of teams' behavior, and very intentionally wanted teams to be on notice."

Now, therealproblem with tanking, at least from the vantage point of one writer, is it's the lone arena where 29 other teams can't share in the winnings. At least not initially. (Lottery picks don't always pan out, and sometimes the late firsts and early seconds become the mainstays.) But don't worry, there's no proposal of a quick fix to what's going on, although I'm sure you'veread or heard a plethora of ideas this week alone. All I'm suggesting is Silverhadto do something. For what it's worth, he honestly didn't even want to dignify the mere word of "tanking," but it's reached a point of no return.

There's an answer that lies somewhere in the middle of the ongoing epidemic; not completely punishing teams for losing, but not rewarding the seemingly cunning ones that try to game the system. Sometimes, you're the Sacramento Kings, which goes hand in hand with parity and purgatory. How much better are the Chicago Bulls set up for their future than, say, the Brooklyn Nets? The Clippers and Hornets are both 26-29 heading into the All-Star break — would you consider them to be on equal footing?

"Part of the problem is if you step back," Silver said, "the fundamental theory behind a draft is to help your worst-performing teams restock and be able to compete, and by the way, yes, we want parity, but parity of opportunity. … My sense is, talking to GMs and coaches around the league, that there's probably even more parity than is reflected in our records. That goes to the incentive issue. It's not clear to me, for example, that the 30th performing team is that much measurably worse than the 22nd performing team, particularly if you have incentive to perform poorly to get a better draft pick. It's a bit of a conundrum."

So where does it end? The Jazz aren't going to suddenly turn over a new leaf and be competitive the rest of the way. Half a million isn't enough to deter or prevent future behavior — Utah has clearly shown it's fine with throwing away money. Vince Williams Jr., who arrived at the deadline, played seven minutes in a 135-119 loss to Portland this week — he's owed $2.3 million. (The Jazz are only on the hook for a prorated amount, but you get the point.) How do you also govern the other teams that could potentially fall under the same umbrella? Silver needs to move quickly before tanking takes on a life of its own, especially considering the talent of incoming players in a few months.

On the topic of expansion, Silver essentially confirmed, then tried to reverse his words about the possibilities of Las Vegas and Seattle being the NBA's next destinations.

"My sense is at the March Board of Governors meetings, we'll be having further discussions around an expansion process," Silver said. "We won't be voting at the March meeting, but we will likely come out of those meetings ready, prepared to take a next step in terms of potentially talking to interested parties. No, it doesn't have to be a two-team expansion. Frankly, it doesn't have to be any number of teams."

Hmm, sure? There are a number of hoops to jump through before arriving at City X and/or Y as expansion teams, but kicking the can down the road by saying you'll make a decision on making a decision in a few months is not as clear as one may think.

In the case of Kawhi Leonard, Clippers owner Steve Ballmer and alleged cap circumvention, Silver conceded judiciary control to the Wachtell Lipton firm, the NBA's go-to litigation arm. Ballmer and the Clippers are alleged to have orchestrated a $28 million endorsement deal — an absurd amount of money, enough to seriously threaten the integrity of the league. Maybe it's not as outlandish as former referee Tim Donaghy's scandal (Wachtell Lipton took around a year to finalize its investigation in that matter, according to The Athletic), but the league doesn't need this to drag on for nearly the same length of time. The backlash, not only from fans and media, but the other 29 owners could be seismic.

"I'm not involved day-to-day in the investigation," Silver said. "I think, as I've said before, it's enormously complex. You have a company in bankruptcy. You have thousands of documents, multiple witnesses that have been needed to be interviewed. Our charge to the Wachtell law firm is to do the work and then come back and make recommendations to the league office, and that's where things now stand."

All-Star Weekend, in its purest form, is supposed to be a celebration of the good parts of the NBA — the inclusivity, the opportunity and the excellence. An uplifting view of the state of the league. Instead, we're reminded of the economic and moral perils of basketball at the highest level, and head into the break with a slew of unsolved problems.

NBA's marquee event now all about the league's issues

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Two minutes before NBA commissioner Adam Silver was scheduled to address the media in an upstairs ro...

 

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