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Hollywood's Most Threatening Blog
It’s not that Finke doesn’t have her own favorites—many in Hollywood complain that she indeed has several, some in very high places, who influence her coverage. But that hardly means Bart is in a position to call names.
The fact is Variety—like the Los Angeles Times (which has also taken an increasing number of shots at Finke lately)—too often lags behind the news. How is it possible, to pick just two easy examples, that both well-staffed institutions missed the Silverman-to-NBC story and the Chernin-is-out story? Perhaps, as they claim, they’re handicapped by their desire to verify information before slapping it up on the web. But maintaining a high journalistic standard hardly explains the type of anemic coverage too-often found, or not found, on the pages of either Variety or the Times. Bart’s attack—indeed the whole whiny Variety package—sounds too much like the enraged cry of an old-media dinosaur trying to defend what’s left of its terrain.
Whatever Finke may have to say about Variety, Bart did a lot to damage himself in one of the closing paragraphs of his column. He allows that he admires Finke’s energy and dedication while bemoaning “her dissing of fellow news gatherers, her personal vendettas and her use of intimidation.” And then he continues: “She once attended Miss Hewitt's classes in New York, which taught upscale girls how to be warm and cuddly. I'd like her to take a warm-and-cuddly refresher course.”
If that line doesn’t show how profoundly Bart just doesn’t get it, it’s hard to imagine what would.
Kim Masters is the host of The Business, public radio's weekly show about the business of show business. She is also the author of The Keys to the Kingdom: The Rise of Michael Eisner and the Fall of Everybody Else.








smdunne
It was unfortunate that Natasha Richardson's death was reported erroneously, but understandable. I knew through friends that she was brain dead and could not be resuscitated quite early on I think, Tuesday, of that awful week.
I had gathered as much before it was confirmed by friends, because due to cabin pressure changes, if there had been any hope of recovery she couldn't have flown.
The acting community is really very small and the news flew, and brain dead became deceased. No malice was intended, it was testament to the inordinate number of people who loved and admired Natasha Richardson that the news traveled so fast, so quickly.
People felt such anguish, that rather than give people false hope that she might recover, friends delivered the truth, even though it had not been confirmed by Natasha's family or the press.
Please, let's not add insult to injury by turning this into some kind of cause celebre. Natasha was adored, and people were and still are devastated. It makes little difference which day of the week she left us. All that matters is that she is gone and cannot be replaced.
alex02139
Once interesting Variety and the Hollywood Reporter have become the rag where press releases go to be reprinted. Since the corporate takeovers of both papers, the wall between advertising and editorial has crumbled, so that both Variety and Hollywood Reporter are boring, useless except for the raw data in charts, and even that is available online elsewhere.
No wonder a blogger has filled the vacuum
Shibboleth2008
I am a regular source for Nikki but I never, ever call the Variety newsroom for one reason and one reason only: I know that Nikki will print the truth, however ugly it may be, whereas Variety will not print anything that might make the studios/networks look bad since Variety's lifeblood is advertising from those companies. There is a place for Variety and it does break neutral/positive news but for the real scoop it's Nikki since she's in a position to run it and Variety isn't.
finderj
Ooooh, more he-said-she-said oiut of Hollywood. Just what we all need!
magicspin
Tho I'm not a regular source for Nikki, I'd always come to her first with my breaking tags, no bout a doubt it. With her incredibly low VIQ (Vested Interest Quotient), where else ya gonna go? (Not Seattle's proud daily anymore, given the Intelligencer's bold entertainment business coverage went & got them bankrupt now, didn't it?). Nice of Kim to keep us up-to-date on what's churning up the Hollywood Execs' poor tummies. Perhaps Mr Bart & Co should look into spending more of their hatchet budget on volcano monitoring, or something...
Love & Hugs to all our Readers.
ps. Sorry to the SI crew - was just being playful there. We don't want to see you go... Us Aussies aren't born with a balanced perspective on what's generally regarded as being humorous.
Granite
At the time of her death Natasha Richardson did not have a publicist which left the door open for a lot of speculation and the use of unreliable and conflicting sources.
scough
smdunne must be VERY important because he?she? knows people who know people who know people who know it's a bad idea to put brain dead people in planes.
fishface42
"Maintaining journalistic standards" in the gossip business is a laff and a half. After watching HBO's "Winchell" and reading further about his MO, it is clear that Walter Winchell set the bar high for yellow journalism in the 1940's. The rest are swimming in his wake.
jaguarxjs
Wow, I so don't care.
ScreenRights
There is a story published today in VARIETY : WGA Levies Suit Gets Messy, in which the journalist Dave McNary relates what happened yesterday at a hearing in Los Angeles Superior Court on the lawsuits against the Writers Guild, Screen Actors Guild and Directors Guild.
It is a story written by a journalist based not on sources but on his attendance at the court hearing.
When the L.A.WEEKLY commissioned, from former L.A. TIMES journalist and author of FATAL SUBTRACTION and THE LAST MOGUL Dennis McDougal, a story on so-called foreign levies, Nikki Finke, who writes a column for the WEEKLY, went to the editor warning that if I were McDougal's source she better kill the story.
McDougal has certainly proven over the years that he can take care of himself.
What real journalist would go to the extreme Finke did, to harm another journalist, and to suppress the publication of a story?
Consider that the story, which impacts on every writer, lyricist, performer, director, composer, and other creatives in the business Finke covers, is a story that Finke has never gone near.
And that the lawyer, who filed all three foreign levies lawsuits, against the Screen Actors Guild, Directors Guild, and Writers Guild, is Finke's own lawyer, representing her in her own private lawsuits.
In attempting to get the story killed, more than embarrassing herself,Ms. Masters, did Finke not disgrace herself?
Eric Hughes
smdunne
scough - I'm not remotely important. My spouse is though, as a grossly underpaid and overworked Emergency Room physician in a public hospital, and is in a position to make informed comments on a situation like Natasha Richardson's. Your comment was ugly and ignorant. The only reason I commented was to ask that she not be used as some kind of media event. I hope that you will now crawl back into whatever sorry little hole you crawled out of.
NikkiFinke
To Eric Hughes:
Someone gave you very incorrect information. You can check with LA Weekly Deputy Editor Jill Stewart and former Deputy Editor Joe Donnelly. Yes, I was asked by the editors if it was OK with me that Dennis McDougal write about the WGA. I said yes. I have known Dennis since we both worked at the LA Times, and I consider him an excellent reporter. And I never once mentioned you. I completely stayed out of the story because I knew Dennis had it covered.
ScreenRights
I just had a conversation with Nikki Finke who provided me with information that I had been incorrectly informed about events preceding the publication of the LA Weekly story.
I want to thank her for so quickly contacting me so that I can provide this timely correction.
Eric Hughes
Thank you.
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