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Rick Hurst, Cletus Hogg on ‘The Dukes of Hazzard' and father of actor Ryan Hurst, dies at 79

Rick Hurst, Cletus Hogg on ‘The Dukes of Hazzard' and father of actor Ryan Hurst, dies at 79

Actor Rick Hurst, best known as dim-witted Deputy Cletus Hogg on the TV show 'The Dukes of Hazzard,' has died unexpectedly in Los Angeles. He was 79.
'It doesn't seem right that Rick Hurst passed away this afternoon. When something so unexpected happens, it is 'harder to process,' as the current expression goes,' actor and politician Ben Jones, who played Cooter Davenport on 'Hazzard,' wrote Thursday evening on the Facebook page for Cooter's Place, a business themed to the show.
'I just this moment heard about the passing of dear Rick Hurst, a.k.a. Cletus Hogg,' co-star John Schneider, who played Bo Duke on 'Hazzard,' wrote Thursday night on Facebook. 'You were [a] remarkable force for humanity, sanity and comedy my friend. Heaven is a safer and more organized place with you in it. We'll keep the race going and people laughing until we meet again! Love you.'
Hurst had been scheduled for fan meet-and-greet appearances July 3-7 at the Cooter's in Pigeon Forge, Tenn., according to the website for the store and restaurant, which has three locations. Cooter's called off the visit in a Facebook post early Thursday, saying the visit would be rescheduled due to 'unforeseen circumstances.'
Born Jan. 1, 1946, in Houston and raised there, Hurst got started in acting quite early. 'When I was 5 or 6, acting kind of tapped me on the shoulder — literally,' he said on a COVID-era podcast a few years back with pop culture enthusiast Scott Romine. Hurst said he was at a Houston Public Library location with his mom when a man tapped him on the shoulder and asked if he wanted to be in a commercial for the library system. He did the spot, he said, 'and my pay was a chocolate soda.'
After high school in Houston, Hurst studied theater at Tulane University in New Orleans, then got a master's in fine arts from Temple University in Philadelphia. All of his experience was on stage until he moved to Los Angeles. His first TV credit was for 'Sanford and Son' in 1972 and his final credit was for 'B My Guest,' a 2016 TV short.
In addition to working on the first five seasons of 'The Dukes of Hazzard,' which ran from 1979 to 1985, Hurst appeared on myriad shows including 'The Six Million Dollar Man,' 'Little House on the Prairie,' 'MASH,' 'Baretta' and '227' and the miniseries 'From Here to Eternity.'
Hurst said on that podcast that he 'thanked God all the time' for the success of 'The Dukes of Hazzard' and its fandom.
'The stunt guys were the heroes of the show,' he said, 'and all of us in the cast knew that the first star on the show was the General Lee,' the orange 1969 Dodge Charger with a Confederate battle flag emblazoned on top, driven by characters Bo and Luke Duke, the latter played by Tom Wopat.
Hurst was married twice, first to acting coach Candace Kaniecki, mother of actor Ryan Hurst, and then to Shelly Weir, mother of Collin Hurst. Ryan Hurst is best known for his roles as Opie on 'Sons of Anarchy' and Beta on 'The Walking Dead.'
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Director Alex Russell made ‘Lurker' about obsessive fandom. He'd rather not talk about himself
Director Alex Russell made ‘Lurker' about obsessive fandom. He'd rather not talk about himself

Los Angeles Times

time17 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Director Alex Russell made ‘Lurker' about obsessive fandom. He'd rather not talk about himself

We are sitting between the 'Miscellaneous Horror' and 'Juvenile Delinquents' sections at CineFile Video, a compact, densely stocked curated video store on the westside of Los Angeles. Surrounded by physical media, I wonder how 'Lurker,' the first feature by writer-director Alex Russell, will eventually be classified here. The shelf across from him holds the DVDs and Blu-rays labeled 'Gay.' The realization prompts him to chuckle. 'That's me,' he says. Arms crossed, Russell, 34, at first seems guarded and resistant to conversation. He admits doing press about his work is still a novel experience for him. Later, as he digs into the making and meaning of his movie, he'll relax and the words will spontaneously flow. Out this Friday, 'Lurker' examines the insidious entanglement between rising British music star Oliver (Archie Madekwe) and the seemingly docile Matthew (Théodore Pellerin), a clothing store employee turned self-styled tour videographer. As Matthew joins Oliver's inner circle, their parasocial bond evolves into a real friendship, until Matthew's desire to belong becomes dangerous. And while at first Oliver rules over a pack of sycophants, the power shifts. 'Everyone has been in a situation where they want a group of people to like them,' Russell says. 'And then sometimes you're on the other side of it, where you're already in and you see someone else wanting to be liked by you.' As someone who went to several different schools growing up, Russell became observant of male relationships and the implicit rules by which they operate. 'I could see how groups of boys, whether it's in high school, a fraternity or a basketball team, start to assemble themselves and create sort of unspoken hierarchies,' Russell says. The music world presented an ideal setting as well. 'Lurker's' mean-boys drama mostly takes place in Los Angeles, where individuals seeking a career in entertainment by any means necessary abound. Russell lived here for the larger part of the last decade, writing the screenplay at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. 'I felt gross about being in L.A. but also hopeful,' Russell says candidly on the realization that he was one of countless others here trying to make it. 'What I like about this place — and I think this is represented in the movie — is that it's full of people who are trying to put themselves out there in some type of way.' Russell knows firsthand what it means to feel exposed in pursuit of a dream. His career writing for TV for award-winning shows like 'Beef' and 'The Bear' only took off after he became vocal and open about his goals. 'There was something liberating about being like, 'I want to be a working screenwriter,' which, of course, there's no greater cliché in L.A.,' he says. 'That felt like the more courageous thing. I was used to this self-doubting, cynical philosophy of: I should keep it to myself if I have dreams that could embarrass me if I don't make them a reality.' Born in Chicago to an immigrant mother and an American father, Russell initially studied engineering, but quietly taught himself screenwriting. He would dissect the scripts of comfort movies like 'Legally Blonde' and 'The Devil Wears Prada' in order to learn structure. 'When you teach yourself something, in a way it's more organic because you're just like: OK, what are the movies I actually know? I'll reverse engineer those,' he says. But as someone with no direct connection to Hollywood, his dream required tryout stints in New York and Atlanta, as well as a lot of crashing with patient friends. 'There are so many couches I have to thank for getting to do the work I do now,' Russell says, laughing but sincere. During those rougher early years, Russell created a pilot for the now defunct Viceland cable network and a short series for Comedy Central's YouTube channel. 'At the time I was looking for anything to grasp onto,' he remembers. It was in L.A. that he landed his first writers' room job on the FX comedy 'Dave,' a meta series centered around rapper Lil Dicky. Russell believes his proximity to the music industry set him apart when the opportunity emerged, outweighing his inexperience. Most of his close friends work in music, including Kenny Beats, who composed Oliver's songs for 'Lurker,' and Zack Fox, who plays a hanger-on in the film and is a DJ in real life. The scenes that show Oliver performing were shot with real crowds during parties at which Fox DJed. 'It was just a huge stroke of luck,' he says. 'I had a bunch of half-hour spec scripts that were set in the music world. It was just good timing that they were looking for someone like that, because on a craft level, I really hadn't found it yet.' 'Lurker' would be an experiment — to discover his own storytelling voice. 'The skill of being in a TV room is: How well can you service the voice of someone else? How can you find the most overlap between yourself and whoever's running the show?' Russell explains. 'That can start to feel like: I would like to know if I have my own tone, if I have my own way of doing things.' To find his way into the story, particularly its darker edges of obsession, Russell looked to Damien Chazelle's 'Whiplash' and Dan Gilroy's 'Nightcrawler' as references. Additionally, 'Almost Famous,' Cameron Crowe's mostly autobiographical film about a teenager interviewing a rock band, seemed the closest to his sensibility. 'This kid gets to do this big Rolling Stone article on one of his favorite bands and there are these moments where it feels like he's in the band and that's really his dream,' Russell says. 'At the end of the movie it's like: Was that all just for the story he was writing? Or will they talk to him again? And then they do. It's a wholesome version of the movie that mine isn't.' In 'Lurker,' conversely, the worst label someone in Oliver's orbit can receive is that of being a 'fanboy.' The term carries an intensely pejorative connotation in the group and speaks to the imbalance of power between the singer and his fawning entourage. 'A fan is fundamentally an outsider,' Russell says. 'What does it mean to admit that you're a fan? It's to acknowledge that there's them and us. You are the watcher of whatever you're a fan of and they have your attention. Matthew is trying to bridge that gap. He wants to appear as a peer.' The fact that 'other directors weren't exactly dying to direct' his screenplay, Russell says, coupled with his producers' encouragement, convinced him to get behind the camera. 'I didn't really know what that entailed,' he admits. 'I really didn't think I had certain leadership qualities to rally a bunch of people. I didn't see myself that way.' But knowing the motivations of his characters armed him. Russell could determine which potential collaborators interpreted his writing as he envisioned it. For example, he agreed with cinematographer Patrick Scola that shooting on 16mm film would add realism to a story taking place in a realm of artificiality. In casting Pellerin, a Quebecois actor seen in 'Never Rarely Sometimes Always,' the filmmaker found a performer with the ability to exhibit ambiguous intentions, not a one-note villain. Though he's always plotting to stay in Oliver's good graces, Matthew has a deep need for validation. When he gets a taste of the status being around Oliver grants him, he refuses to let it go. 'You could see him living and dying on each of these social interactions,' Russell says. 'You could tell he wants to say and do the right thing. There's a sweetness to him. We didn't want this to be so icy that you automatically disliked this guy and you're shaking your head the whole time. You want to feel like there's someone in there who just wants to belong.' Russell finds the proliferation of a social media mindset unsettling, especially the darker side of attention-seeking trolls. 'Part of why this movie exists is to instill a little bit of shame,' he says with a dark laugh. 'That's not something we should be bragging about.' On top of those digital-age preoccupations, Russell sought to indict the petty jealousies that exist among men — a subject, he thinks, that remains taboo. 'There are a lot of movies about women being jealous of each other, but there aren't a lot about men,' he says. Near the end of 'Lurker,' a surprising encounter between Oliver and Matthew illustrates the complexity of their misconnection, a delicate balance that showcases Russell's talent for mining originality from situations that could have played out more conventionally. 'In that moment, the tension is built up so that either it's going to turn sexual finally or turn violent finally,' the filmmaker says. 'That's what the audience is thinking, but then it's this mystery third thing. And I just love it because it genuinely surprises people.' But regardless of where a viewer is coming from, 'Lurker' taps into something utterly relatable. 'So many people look to movies because they feel like outsiders,' Russell says. 'Everyone has some relationship to being an outsider and being an insider. It's not black and white. That's what this movie wants to get into. Those things can shift, the gravitational pull is not anchored.' Much less of an outsider now (he's even won an Emmy for 'Beef'), Russell has found his peers. He and James Sweeney, another queer director, have become close. Sweeney's film 'Twinless,' out Sept. 5, follows the brotherly friendship between two young men that's threatened by a secret. Both 'Lurker' and 'Twinless' premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January. Russell is amused at the similarities between their films. 'In a city like this, everyone is thirsty for community or feeling like a part of some group,' Russell says. 'And the truth of L.A. is that people make up groups. And if you make up your own group, then you get to choose the members.'

'The Pitt' showrunner introduces new doctor and teases Dr. Langdon's return in season 2 first look (exclusive)
'The Pitt' showrunner introduces new doctor and teases Dr. Langdon's return in season 2 first look (exclusive)

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'The Pitt' showrunner introduces new doctor and teases Dr. Langdon's return in season 2 first look (exclusive)

Sepideh Moafi arrives as Dr. Al-Hashimi, an attending who will have some "tension" with Dr. Robby in season 2. A new doctor is clocking into The Pitt — and so is a disgraced one. The Emmy-nominated medical drama's sophomore season — again taking place over the course of one 15-hour shift in the emergency department — takes place on July 4th, 10 months after the events of the season 1 finale. Showrunner R. Scott Gemmill tells Entertainment Weekly that timeline was chosen specifically to bring back Dr. Frank Langdon (Patrick Ball); the season will take place over the course of his first day back after completing rehab. (For those who might need a quick refresher: Langdon was caught stealing medication from the hospital, leading to a blow-out fight with Noah Wyle's Dr. Robby and the revelation of a drug addiction). "It was really driven by wanting to have the Langdon character back and knowing how much time he would've had to spend in rehab and going through his recovery process," Gemmill explains. "We knew it had to be about 10 months, [which] took us into the summer. We played Labor Day, essentially, for the first season, so we decide to play this on the 4th of July." Gemmill acknowledges that most of the other doctors will be well aware of Langdon's drug problem by now — "gossip seems to travel faster than the internet" — but there are some new characters that won't know the extent of what happened. It'll be the first time Langdon and Robby cross paths since their dramatic fallout in season 1. "Let's just say there's a lot of history that has to be resolved between them before they can get back to any kind of normalcy," Gemmill says. One such new character is Dr. Al-Hashimi, played by Black Bird and Generation Q: The L Word star Sepideh Moafi, an attending who arrives at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center from the VA Hospital, where she previously worked with Dr. Mel King (Taylor Dearden) and Dr. Samira Mohan (Supriya Ganesh). "She's gonna be someone who's very progressive in her approach to medicine and believes in the modernization of the medical field," Gemmill says. "And Robby's a little bit more old school and there'll be a little bit of, let's just say, tension as they try and figure out how to work together." He adds, "Robby has a very specific way of how he likes to run his emergency department, and Dr. Al-Hashimi has her own specific ways of how she likes to run an emergency department, and they're not necessarily cohesive." As Robby navigates these tense relationships new and old, he'll also be navigating his mental health, which Gemmill says is the "big through-line of episode 1." According to Gemmill, season 2 is really about Robby "coming to terms" with the post-traumatic stress disorder he picked up during COVID. "One of the things that Robbie has a habit of is, he's very good at telling people what to do, but not necessarily great at taking his own advice," Gemmill says. "He has to come to terms with setting an example, I think, for those who he works with so that he can't tell people to get help and to seek help if he's not doing it himself. So, you know, I think it's a journey of self-discovery for him as well in terms of his own mental health." Robby's journey includes a plan to take some time off, but it might not be so straightforward, Gemmill teases. "There's some questions whether he'll really do it or not, because it's not in his nature to step away from the work." The Pitt season 2 debuts in January 2026. Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly

Hundreds of historic tall ships arrive in Amsterdam for maritime festival
Hundreds of historic tall ships arrive in Amsterdam for maritime festival

New York Post

timea day ago

  • New York Post

Hundreds of historic tall ships arrive in Amsterdam for maritime festival

AMSTERDAM (AP) — Crowds packed vantage points along a major canal Wednesday to watch a flotilla of hundreds of historic ships sail into Amsterdam at the start of a five-day festival celebrating the Dutch capital's maritime history. Ships from all over the world, many with their masts and rigging decorated with flags, left the North Sea coastal town of IJmuiden to begin their hours-long journey up the North Sea Canal and into Amsterdam's IJ waterway for SAIL 2025, the first edition in a decade. A puff of orange smoke erupted into the sky, and ships' horns sounded as the replica three-masted clipper Stad Amsterdam passed through a lock to mark the official start of the event. Advertisement 6 Crowds packed vantage points along a major canal on Wednesday to watch a flotilla of hundreds of historic ships sail into Amsterdam at the start of a five-day festival. Hollandse Hoogte/Shutterstock 6 The festival is to celebrate the Dutch capital's maritime history. AP 6 Orange smoke signals the start of the parade of hundreds of tall ships sailing into the Dutch capital's harbor. AP Each ship is greeted with two cannon shots and its country's national anthem as it enters the harbor. Advertisement Hundreds of smaller boats with onlookers packed the waterways to sail alongside the visiting vessels. The event, which draws hundreds of thousands of visitors, is held every five years. The 2020 edition was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Advertisement 6 The barkentine Antigua passes as hundreds of tall ships sailed into the Dutch capital's harbor for the 10th edition of SAIL. AP 6 Ships from all over the world, many with their masts and rigging decorated with flags, left the North Sea coastal town of IJmuiden to begin their hours-long journey up the North Sea Canal and into Amsterdam's IJ waterway for SAIL 2025, according to reports. AP 6 The ships will remain in Amsterdam, many open for visitors, through the weekend. AP Wednesday's parade culminates in an evening fireworks display. Advertisement The ships will remain in Amsterdam, many open for visitors, through the weekend. The first event was first held in 1975 to celebrate Amsterdam's 700th anniversary, and this year's edition coincides with the city's 750th birthday.

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