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Watch Rilo Kiley Revisit Fan Favorite ‘Silver Lining' on ‘Kimmel'

Watch Rilo Kiley Revisit Fan Favorite ‘Silver Lining' on ‘Kimmel'

Yahoo12-05-2025
Rilo Kiley appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live to perform their song 2007 song 'Silver Lining.' The indie band, led by Jenny Lewis, took the late-night show stage for an intimate performance that focused on the music rather than dramatic production, offering a tease of their current tour.
The group, who reunited earlier this year after breaking up in 2011, are releasing their greatest hits album, That's How We Choose to Remember It, today. 'Silver Lining' originally appeared on 2007's Under the Blacklight, the band's final studio LP, and is the opening track on the new compilation.
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Rilo Kiley, comprised of Lewis, Blake Sennett, Pierre De Reeder, and Jason Boesel, recently kicked off their reunion tour, which runs through May and resumes in September. They'll hit their previously-announced festival appearances at Just Like Heaven (May 10) and Kilby Block Party (May 16) along the way.
'It's going to be wonderful for us, like going back to the purest version of yourself, that early '20s place where everything is possible,' Lewis said in a statement. 'You're in a van and Jason's got the map, Pierre is behind the wheel, and I'm on the shitty acoustic guitar on the bench seat working out a new song with Blake. I don't think it's ever been as good as that, when it was just us against the world.'
That's How We Choose to Remember It features 11 songs off the group's four LPs. 'For some people, Rilo Kiley evokes a formative, emotional time in life, when you were maybe grasping for your place in the universe,' Sennett said in a statement. 'We were too.'
De Reeder added, 'Planning this reunion over these past months has been like reconnecting with family. We haven't missed a beat. The stakes are only to have a good time, to revel in this nostalgia. Getting to revisit and celebrate the music from that special time of our lives while experiencing it alongside a lot of people that lived it with us back when, and new folks alike.'
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Trump Is Honoring Kiss' Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons. They've Criticized Him in the Past
Trump Is Honoring Kiss' Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons. They've Criticized Him in the Past

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Is Honoring Kiss' Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons. They've Criticized Him in the Past

Kiss co-founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley — who will be among this year's Kennedy Center Honors recipients after Donald Trump's takeover and populist revamping there — haven't had much to say about the president during his second term. But before that, they were fairly vocal about Trump, with opinions from Simmons, who competed on the Trump-hosted Celebrity Apprentice in 2008, notably shifting over time. (Former guitarist Ace Frehley, for what it's worth, said he was a Trump supporter in 2020.) Here's what Simmons and Stanley had to say over the years about Trump, who's hosting the event himself. Gene Simmons March 2016: Simmons predicts Trump's victory in a Rolling Stone interview, while stopping short of declaring his support. 'He is the truest political animal I've ever seen onstage,' Simmons says. 'He has no speechwriters, no editing, no nothing. He's actually on tape going 'motherfucker.' You cannot turn away… He has said some very vile, unkind things. But don't kid yourself. He speaks off the cuff, and what you see is what you get. And he'll double down. If you ask him about building a wall [between the U.S. and Mexico] he'll say, 'Fuck you, I'm going to make it 10 feet higher, just because you asked me.' He's not there to be your friend…. He's good for the political system.' More from Rolling Stone Kiss, Sylvester Stallone, George Strait, Gloria Gaynor to Receive Kennedy Center Honors Trump's Military Crackdowns Are Only Going to Get Worse Stephen King Compares Donald Trump's Presidency to 'a Horror Story' July 2016: Simmons calls Trump a 'legitimate, upstanding guy' and a 'straight shooter' on CNN, while acknowledging Trump had been 'ungentlemanly' and was 'better and smarter' than some of his worst comments. September 2017: After Kiss turns down an invitation to play Trump's inauguration. Simmons tells The Daily Beast, 'In this polarizing era, it's not a good idea.'September 2017: 'Whether somebody likes it or not, he's the duly-elected president and I think you have to respect the presidency,' Simmons tells Rolling Stone. Asked if he thinks Trump is doing a good job, he replies, 'not yet.' May 2018: Simmons defends some Trump policies, including moving the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem plans to build a border wall. 'The Vatican has a big wall around it for the same reason,' he tells CNBC. 'They want to find out who's coming in there.' July 2019: 'Politics has forever changed,' Trump tells Good Morning Britain. 'Whether you like it or not, this president has changed it.' He describes Trump as 'a New York streetfighter' and says 'Earth has never been in better shape… Unemployment in the United States is the lowest it's been in 50 years.' January 2021: Simmons counters Trump's election fraud claims on his Twitter account, posting: '60 courts in various states and 60 Judges (including Pres Trump appointed Judges) UNANIMOUSLY, and without exception, dismissed ALL allegations of a rigged that Includes Trump appointed US Attorney General Bill Barr!!!'August 2021: Simmons tells Yahoo he strongly supports Covid-19 vaccines and says precautions like masks 'should be a law.' He suggests the Trump Administration bears some blame for the pandemic. 'The gentleman who was in office, the former president, I knew before the political world. It's the same person I knew before; the stripes of a tiger don't change. And the unfortunate thing is that, look, we all lie to some extent, but what happened in the last four years was just beyond anything I ever thought imaginable for people who have lots of power — not just him, but the administration, everybody…. all these QAnon people.' May 2022: 'Look what that gentleman [Trump] did to this country and the polarization — got all the cockroaches to rise to the top,' Simmons tells Spin. 'Once upon a time, you were embarrassed to be publicly racist and out there with conspiracy theories. Now it's all out in the open because he allowed it… I don't think he's a Republican or a Democrat. He's out for himself, any way you can get there. And in the last election, over 70 million people bought it hook, line and sinker.' November 2022: When Bill Maher says that Trump doesn't understand how the U.S. government functions, Simmons says: 'I agree. The person that I saw first coming into power is not the person I saw within a year or two of that… But I changed, the way lots of people changed.' Paul Stanley August 2020: 'REGARDLESS of who you support, it is incendiary & abhorrent for ANY candidate to say 'If I lose, the election is rigged,'' Stanley tweets. 'It's an insult to those who have fought for the free, safe elections we have and dangerously implies that citizens who don't share your views are the enemy.' September 2020: Responding to Trump's Twitter attacks on various targets, Stanley tweets, 'Controversy… Is this what a president should be doing in the morning? Is it presidential? No opinion from me. I'm asking YOU! Tell me.' January 2021: Stanley condemns Trump's call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger asking him to 'find 11,780 votes': 'This is ABHORRENT. A true danger to our democracy. The issue isn't that it WON'T work. It's Mob Boss behavior and politicians putting party over audits, investigations, court rulings & COUNTRY in an effort to overrule the will of American voters.' January 2021: Stanley tweets an unequivocal response the January 6 attack on the capitol: 'These are TERRORISTS. This is armed insurrection. The flames were fanned today & over time by the president & specific senators who CANNOT be allowed now to distance from or denounce what they have directly caused. Know their names. THIS is the result of their deception. Shame.'November 2024: Stanley is conciliatory after Trump's second presidential victory. 'If your candidate lost, it's time to learn from it, accept it and try to understand why,' he tweets. 'There will be no building bridges to those you don't agree with by being condescending, insulting, talking AT them or removing yourself. If your candidate won, it's time to understand that those who don't share your views also believe they are right and love this country as much as you do.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked

How Zach Cregger Turned a Personal Tragedy Into the Terrifying ‘Weapons'
How Zach Cregger Turned a Personal Tragedy Into the Terrifying ‘Weapons'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How Zach Cregger Turned a Personal Tragedy Into the Terrifying ‘Weapons'

Zach Cregger has a look of horror on his face. He has said something he should not have said. When the writer-director first penned what would become Barbarian, his 2022 Airbnb-set horror movie that turned into a word-of-mouth phenomenon, he was coming off years of work as an actor for hire and a stay in 'director jail,' after making what he termed 'a complete and unmitigated failure.' (That would be the 2009 road-movie comedy Miss March.) 'I had nothing to lose, really,' Cregger says, over Zoom from an apartment in Prague. 'It was: 'I'm just gonna have fun.' That's it. Writing Barbarian, to me, it was [like] a kid coloring with crayons. And then Weapons… ' More from Rolling Stone 'Freakier Friday': Get in Loser, We're Going to the Lohanaissance 'Weapons' Takes Aim at Your Nervous System - and Fires One of Most Disturbing NYC Thrillers of the 1980s Has Been AWOL - Until Now He pauses. 'Weapons was like me vomiting.' Another pause. It's clear Cregger feels like he's just confessed to a venal sin. Dear god, why did he just tell a journalist this? Then the filmmaker behind one of the most anticipated releases of the summer smiles, and his eyes light up. 'And who doesn't want to get a babysitter and go to the movie theater and spend 120 bucks to watch someone vomit?' Cregger is joking, at least about moviegoers rushing multiplexes to see someone metaphorically puke their guts out onscreen. But given the excitement the follow-up script to his sleeper hit generated when it was being shopped around, and the increasingly breathless anticipation around the movie's release on Aug. 8, the sketch-comedian turned filmmaker understands the stakes are higher now. A multi-narrative story starring Julia Garner, Josh Brolin, Benedict Wong, Amy Madigan, and Euphoria's Austin Abrams, Weapons begins with 17 children who wake in the middle of the night, run out of their houses, and mysteriously disappear without a trace. The story becomes increasingly unhinged as the locals try to figure out what happened. It's the sort of ambitious, go-for-broke genre film that suggests Cregger has officially earned the honor of being the Next Big Thing in horror. The hype-generating new film came out of a serious low point in Cregger's life. 'I was working on postproduction on Barbarian when my best friend died very suddenly in a really awful accident,' he says. Cregger is referring to Trevor Moore. The two met at the School of Visual Arts in New York after Cregger had transferred there from Temple University, where he'd been studying film. A mutual friend introduced them, and Cregger and Moore would become co-founders of the sketch group The Whitest Kids U'Know. The troupe's TV show ran for five seasons on Fuse and IFC; Moore, a co-director on Miss March, 'was the engine of the show, and the group.' In an effort to deal with his grief, Cregger begin 'a blitz of writing, over about two weeks or so… I just started, sentence one: 'This is a true story. Half of my hometown, all of these kids bailed.' You know, I'm writing this cold open, and I don't know where the kids went. I'm just like, 'OK, let's go. Let's see if I can solve this. What happened? Who were they? What was left behind? What does it feel like?'' What it felt like, he eventually realized, was channeling a palpable sense of loss that allowed him to process what he was going through in the most outrageous ways possible. But the moment Cregger says this, he once again stops himself. 'Look, like the rest of the world, I don't want to watch another horror movie about grief. That whole horror-as-a-metaphor-for-grief is so fucking played out. I shouldn't even be talking about this, but I can't help myself. I don't care if anybody gets any of that when they watch it. I want them to have fun. If the story rips, none of that matters. 'But I wanted to do something honest,' he continues, 'and I found that as I kept writing, and the more I identified with all of the people I was writing about, the more this became something like an honest diary of my inner shit. It's funny, I was talking to Ari Aster about this, and was like, 'I don't know about the personal stuff.' And he was like, 'The personal stuff is what makes this work. Don't be ashamed of it!' Hearing him say that… it's part of the DNA of Weapons. The town is dealing with a loss. And so was I. It was the biggest direct hit I'd ever taken.' After Cregger had about 70 pages and had sketched out Weapons' main characters — the teacher who had all 17 of the missing kids in her class; her one student who didn't run away; a father searching for his M.I.A. son; a drug-addicted drifter who finds himself in the wrong place and the wrong time — he decamped to his manager's house, located deep in the woods on the East Coast. Cregger knew the ending, and he had diagrammed out various plot points in charts. Then, he said, it was time to figure how to tell the story he wanted to tell. 'There was still this urgency to it,' Cregger says, admitting that the need for an emotional purge took some of the pressure off of following up a hit. 'The only silver lining of this whole terrible year was that I was, once again, writing from a pure place. I was like, 'Right, so the best version of this movie is if I can do it in these chapters where I stay loyal to the forced perspective,' you know — to stay hyper-subjective.' To do that, Cregger began to separate the narrative into chapters that filled in the blanks slowly, one character's P.O.V. at a time. (He credits Paul Thomas Anderson's 1999 movie Magnolia as the role model for how he wanted Weapons to play.) And he began to shake the fear of making it personal. He mentions that he strongly identifies with Garner's character, the teacher whose classroom is the only connection among all of the missing kids, and is an alcoholic; Cregger himself has dealt with the disease and has 10 years of sobriety under his belt. He understands the anguish felt by Brolin's character, a father who's attempting to wrap his head around his child being there one moment and inexplicably gone the next. And in writing the section told from the perspective of Alex, the one third-grader who doesn't go missing, Cregger says he tapped directly into his own past. 'That is straight-up, like — I lived that chapter as a kid,' he admits. 'Again, I don't know if people need to know this going in, but… it's very much what it's like to have a parent who's an addict, and the child has to become the caretaker as this sort of foreign thing comes in, and…' The look of horror is back. 'I'll leave it at that.' 'He and I talked about that, yeah,' Brolin says, speaking a few weeks later in a separate interview. 'We're both sober, he talked about his alcoholic dad, I talked about my alcoholic mom. He found those spots in me that inspired me to want to tell the story even more. That was one of the things that struck me about Zach: He was really open about everything right away. From the very first meeting we had, he was willing to really talk about a lot of stuff that's deep in the film. 'What got me before that, though, was just the script,' Brolin adds. 'Look, I didn't know who Zach was, or anything about the bidding war' — more on that in a second — 'or that he'd made this other movie that people loved. I hadn't seen Barbarian at that point. I didn't even know this guy existed. And then to get this script that was so well-designed, so intricately crafted, so beautifully and smartly put together, then have this super-emotional meeting with the guy who was going to make this… I remember seeing The Matrix the week it came out, walking out of the theater, shaking my head like, 'What the fuck?' — and then turning around a buying a ticket and going to see it again immediately. Those kinds of movies don't come around a lot. And I remember meeting him and thinking, 'If this works, this could be one of those movies.'' Much like Cregger did with the script for Barbarian, he started assembling each section in a way that played fast and loose with chronology. Without giving anything away plot-wise, let's just say that what starts out as an elliptical mystery gets extremely crazy by the end. Once Cregger finished his final draft, he was ready to shop the script — and that's when the real craziness began. Word had begun to spread that the guy who'd made Barbarian had a new screenplay that was equally wild, and twice as ambitious. The buzz around it was becoming more and more intense. Several people made extravagant offers, sight unseen. Once potential buyers were finally able to read what Cregger had come up with, an old-fashioned Hollywood bidding war erupted. When he'd been shopping Barbarian, Cregger recalls, the film was roundly rejected by every studio he pitched. This time, he had producers fighting over the chance to be in the Zach Cregger business, to the tune of a $38 million price tag. 'After the dust settled… it was an incredibly difficult, stressful day, for a lot of reasons I don't want to talk about,' he says, referring to the 24-hour period between the Weapons script going out and a deal being struck. 'But it ultimately was a wonderful thing, and it took me a couple of days to kind of even realize that it was real. It was wonderful and overwhelming.' Asked about the rumors that Jordan Peele ended up firing his management when Universal failed to procure the script on behalf of his production company Monkeypaw, Cregger declines to comment: 'Yeah, it's not my story to tell.' (Peele's reps also declined to comment.) And though Weapons' production wasn't without a few hiccups — he lost most of his original cast when the 2023 strike happened; he had to recast the young actor he'd hired to play the remaining student after the original kid experienced a huge growth spurt — Cregger feels like he's ended up with exactly the movie he wanted to make. Early screenings were so positive that Warner Bros. moved the film's release up by six months. The reason Cregger was Zooming from Prague is that he's busy prepping the next Resident Evil film there, with the idea of bringing the franchise back to its video-game roots. ('If I fired up my PS5 right now and showed you the hour count that I put on Resident Evil 4, it would be embarrassing,' he says.) And he's already got another script in the works, 'a big, crazy thing I'm going to do after this that's, I think, the most complex script I've ever written.' 'David Bowie has this quote — I'm going to butcher it,' Cregger says. 'But it's basically the idea that creatively, you should always be wading out into deeper and deeper and deeper waters, and you should never really know if you're going to be able to swim or not. I definitely did that on Weapons. I may be doing that with the new one. But my job is to be honest. And to just to keep swimming.' Cregger exhales, then grins. There's nothing but happiness in his expression now. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Best 'Saturday Night Live' Characters of All Time Denzel Washington's Movies Ranked, From Worst to Best 70 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century Solve the daily Crossword

Jimmy Kimmel says he obtained citizenship in Italy amid Trump presidency
Jimmy Kimmel says he obtained citizenship in Italy amid Trump presidency

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

Jimmy Kimmel says he obtained citizenship in Italy amid Trump presidency

Jimmy Kimmel said he obtained Italian citizenship in a move seemingly motivated by the United States' current political climate under President Donald Trump. The late-night host revealed the news during an appearance on comedian Sarah Silverman's podcast, "The Sarah Silverman Podcast," on Aug. 7. "A lot of people I know are thinking about where they can get citizenship," Silverman said. Kimmel replied, "I did get Italian citizenship." The "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" host has long been an adversary of the president's policies. Trump, for his part, has openly criticized Kimmel's career over the years. USA TODAY has reached out to Kimmel's reps for comment. Kimmel says 'what's going on' is 'unbelievable' Kimmel didn't specifically cite Trump's presidency for his new Italian citizenship, but he and Silverman did allude to the current state of American politics. "What's going on is as bad as you thought it was going to be," Kimmel said, to which Silverman replied, "Way worse." "It's so much worse. It's just unbelievable," Kimmel said. "Like I feel like it's probably even worse than he would like it to be." Silverman added, "Every once in a while I'll Google Trump regrets or MAGA regrets." The comedians went on to elaborate on the political climate, with Kimmel mentioning Joe Rogan and other Trump supporters who have questioned the administration's policies. Kimmel is latest comedian to consider overseas move If Kimmel opts to move abroad, he wouldn't be the first comedian to do so amid Trump's presidency. Rosie O'Donnell, who notably has a long-standing feud with the president, moved to Ireland in January as Trump entered office. She said in a TikTok video in March that she is relieved not to be "singled out by the President of the United States." "I feel healthier (and) I'm sleeping better without the stress and anxiety over what was happening politically in the country," O'Donnell said. Similarly, Ellen DeGeneres and wife Portia de Rossi also headed across the pond in 2024 and haven't been back to the United States since. "We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, '(Trump) got in,'" DeGeneres said during an event in South West England on July 20. "And we're like, 'We're staying here.'" Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached at

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