logo
Documentary About Blackpink's Lisa in Production

Documentary About Blackpink's Lisa in Production

Yahoo2 days ago

A new documentary on pop superstar Lisa is in the works, Sony Music Vision revealed during the company's inaugural content showcase in Los Angeles on Thursday evening.
Produced in partnership with LLOUD CO/RCA Records and Tremolo Productions, the documentary — directed by Sue Kim — follows Lisa for a year in her life as she pursues her solo career away from K-pop supergroup Blackpink. That journey has included the release of her debut album, Alter Ego, which notably landed in the Top 10 of the Billboard 200 and debuted at No. 1 on the top album sales chart. She also performed her first solo set at Coachella as well, and starred in season three of The White Lotus.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
SM Entertainment Artists Celebrate 30 Years With SMTown Live L.A.
Bono Weighs in on Trump-Bruce Springsteen Drama: "There's Only One Boss in America"
Sean "Diddy" Combs' Assistant of 8 Years Accuses Him of Multiple Sexual Assaults During Testimony
Aside from her solo endeavors, Lisa will be heading on tour with Blackpink this summer. However, the documentary promises to 'give fans exclusive access to Lisa with an in-depth look at the artist's groundbreaking career and creative vision outside of the world-renowned group, Blackpink.'
'I really tried to impress upon Lisa how much not just me — but I think the world — wants to see off-stage Lisa,' Kim said during the showcase Thursday after showing select footage of the project to those in the audience. 'She loves to refer to herself as, 'I'm just a normal girl from Thailand.' And when you meet her, she actually is. She's so down to earth. It's quite shocking, and so real and so sincere. But she's very incredibly found herself in this crazy position of being one of the biggest superstars in the world, and even within that world, she's trying to expand out of it.'
Kim hails most recently from A24's The Last of the Sea Women, for which she won a New York Women in Film and TV award after it premiered at the 2024 Toronto Film Festival. She additionally executive produced the Apple TV+ docuseries K-Pop Idols.
Morgan Neville and Caitrin Rogers for Tremolo Productions, and Sue Kim and Courtney Crockett for Salt Water Productions will serve as producers; Alice Kang and Joojong Joe serve as executive producers for LLOUD CO.; and Peter Edge, John Fleckenstein and Camille Yorrick serve as executive producers for RCA Records. Tom Mackay, Krista Wegener and Abby Davis serve as executive producers for Sony Music Vision. The doc is presented and distributed by Sony Music Vision in partnership with RCA Records.
Sony Music Vision's first official showcase, an upfront for the company's upcoming slate, comes as the company has ramped up its content in recent years, as evidenced by recent films like Sly Lives and Luther: Never Too Much. The company showed a teaser for their recently announced Oasis reunion tour concert film Thursday, while Frank Marshall showed footage for his upcoming Barbra Streisand documentary. Baz Luhrmann finished up the showcase talking about his upcoming Elvis concert film, sharing a few minutes of music and footage he's compiled so far.
'I would've thought Elvis would've left my building by now, I've only been on it for seven years,' Luhrmann said, calling back to the 2022 biopic he directed. But his team had uncovered nearly 60 hours of previously lost footage, which helped set the concert film in motion. With the help of technology, Luhrmann said he and his team are looking to 'claw back' some of the sound that was unavailable on the footage they found.
'Elvis Presley in concert, and he will sing and tell his story like never before. He will tell it because what was remarkable is that we found audio of Elvis talking about his life,' Lurhmann said. 'In my mind, it's kind of like you have a dream. Elvis comes, he does a concert, and he sings and tells you his life story.'
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts
Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT
'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Patrick Schwarzenegger's Next Big Flex
Patrick Schwarzenegger's Next Big Flex

Forbes

time4 hours ago

  • Forbes

Patrick Schwarzenegger's Next Big Flex

Jet-lagged and hungry, Patrick Schwarzenegger eyes a craft services table stacked with pastries and sandwiches before turning his attention to the Sugarfish sushi delivery on the table in front of him. The 31-year-old actor and entrepreneur has barely had time to catch his breath in the past two months, having traveled to 15 countries to promote his cult HBO series, The White Lotus. 'I always carry bars on me,' he says, reaching into his pocket to pull out two Mosh protein bars, the brand he cofounded in 2021. 'Especially on filming days when you don't know what the snacks are. I always bring my own.' Cody Pickens for Forbes Much like his protein shake–obsessed White Lotus character, Saxon Ratliff, Schwarzenegger watches what he eats. The similarities continue: He also graduated from an elite university with a business degree, comes from a powerful family and is no stranger to wealth. But while Saxon had yet to move beyond the luxe life he inherited from his parents, Schwarzenegger is finally making a name for himself—in business and onscreen. The son of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver, he grew up in a world of the Hollywood and political elite as the child of an actor-turned-billionaire California governor and a broadcast journalist who happens to be a Kennedy. He fell in love with acting early, often visiting his father's movie sets as a boy. 'There were times where I was, like, 'Oh, God, these are big shoes to fill. Should I change my last name and have a stage name?' Those things crossed my mind,' Schwarzenegger admits. 'But ultimately, I'm very proud of my dad and the life that he's given me, and the last name he's built and the brand he's built.' It was his father's penchant for business that Schwarzenegger adopted first. His mother remembers him as a preteen glued to the TV when Shark Tank came on and asking for a few hundred bucks for his birthday to start an E-Trade account and buy Apple stock. In 2008, Schwarzenegger—then 15 years old—interned for film producer John Davis, a large investor in Wetzel's Pretzels, who had just sold his stake (with an investor group) for around $36 million, or 13 times his initial investment. That caught the high schooler's attention, especially when he learned that Elise and Rick Wetzel were founding a new fast-casual pizza venture. Schwarzenegger's parents loaned him around $50,000 to invest in Blaze Pizza, joining investors including LeBron James. Six years later, in 2014, Schwarzenegger opened the first of his two Blaze franchises in his native Los Angeles. Superfinery: Schwarzenegger wore custom Balmain to this year's Met Gala. Dia Disasupil/Getty 'What I got to see were consumers looking for healthier alternatives, vegan topping options, the healthier crust,' he says. 'So I was like, 'I'm going to continue to invest in [other] companies that are doing this.' ' In 2015, nearly eight years after his initial investment, Schwarzenegger (then a senior in college) sold his shares of Blaze for at least $2 million, Forbes estimates. He then paid his parents back for the initial loan and invested in other better-for-you brands, including the hydration powder brand Liquid IV and two prebiotic sodas, Olipop and Poppi, the latter of which sold for $2 billion earlier this year. As his portfolio grew, so did his acting credits. While attending USC, Schwarzenegger started taking acting classes—a weekly commitment he made for the next decade. He landed a few small TV and film roles in those early years, including Grown Ups 2 and the TV series Scream Queens, but nothing felt quite like a big break. When the pandemic brought the film industry to a standstill in 2020, he moved in with his mother, and the two launched Mosh—a protein bar company designed to promote brain health. (Shriver is a longtime advocate for Alzhei­mer's research after witnessing the disease's effects on her late father, Sargent Shriver, who helped found the Peace Corps, Head Start and other Kennedy-era programs.) Mosh contains ingredients such as citicoline, lion's mane mushrooms and omega-3s, which advocates believe improve cognition. '[My mother] is way more of the visionary, and I'm the one that's making her dream come true,' Schwarzenegger says. 'And playing devil's advocate on the business side.' The duo has personally invested nearly $1 million so far growing Mosh. 'It wasn't like some celebrity-backed brand where we raised money or hired an agency,' he says. 'We made the bars with a doctor and formulator; we did everything. But then it was also Covid, when the supply chain was terrible—everything that could have gone wrong went wrong.' Otherwise, their timing was perfect. The burgeoning protein bar industry, which had combined revenue of around $5 billion in 2024, experienced a major resurgence after 2020 when consumers became less limited by Covid policies. Mosh had $4 million in sales in 2022, its first full year. 'He was very deliberate about how we built the company,' Shriver says. 'I wanted to [put the bars in] Target the first year and he said, 'No, we have to build; we have to get to know our consumer.' He's not totally calm in the rest of his life, but in business, he's really calm and knowledgeable.' In 2023, Mosh raised $3 million to support retail expansion in a Series A round led by Arnold Schwarzenegger's longtime financial advisor's investment firm and earned $7 million in revenue. By 2024, Mosh was being sold in Erewhon and Sprouts and ended the year with $12 million in sales. It has yet to turn a profit. Schwarzenegger hadn't abandoned his acting career, but there was a moment early in Mosh's launch when he considered walking away from Hollywood 'if acting didn't take off.' That was, until he booked a role in an HBO Max miniseries starring Colin Firth. He later played a main character in a spin-off of Amazon Prime's show The Boys in 2023 before landing The White Lotus. He left to film Mike White's hit series in Thailand in early 2024, but pulling double duty took a toll on him. 'It was near impossible to try to work on Mosh while filming in Thailand,' Schwarzenegger recalls. 'There were nights that I would have to wake up at 2 or 3 a.m. and have meetings with Sprouts or Kroger on Zoom.' For now, he doesn't plan to leave the company, even though he has already reached his modest first milestone—to grow the business past $10 million in revenue. 'That was my goal, to be the one running the ship to get it there,' he says. 'It's a very different type of business to build from zero to $10 million [versus] $10 million to $100 million. And you need someone that's in the streets every day, all day, to grow it to that next level.' This year, Mosh is on track to book more than $20 million in revenue and is raising money again this summer with the hope of accelerating growth in retail and becoming profitable, says Jeff Gamsey, Mosh's president and COO. Schwarzenegger and Shriver are now looking to expand the brand into Costco and Walmart. In the meantime, life is only getting busier. But for Schwarzenegger, busier is almost always better. 'A few years ago, I had a studio executive tell me that I needed to stop the business stuff, that it was too much having one foot in one area and one foot in another,' he says. 'But I think there's a lot of symmetry between film and business, and understanding that as my brand grows, hopefully [my acting career] grows. At the end of the day, as an actor, you are a business—you are a brand.'

The World's Best Hotel Bars—According To A Global Hospitality Expert
The World's Best Hotel Bars—According To A Global Hospitality Expert

Forbes

time12 hours ago

  • Forbes

The World's Best Hotel Bars—According To A Global Hospitality Expert

In a city renowned for outsized personalities, Max Block has carved out his own prominent space as a trusted curator and F+B expert amidst the Los Angeles culinary landscape. The former co-host of the popular podcast/talkshow Table Setting, serves as a liaison for some of the biggest festivals in and around Southern California, including Coachella. Late last year he launched Maison Citrus, an invite-only dining club in the idyllic Hancock Park neighborhood of his hometown. Working in concert with a parade of notable chefs in a cozy, well-appointed dining space, his team has already hosted Hollywood execs from Amazon Studios, A24 and CAA, along with top-tier talent including Pedro Pascal and Joe Jonas. But when he's not busy holding court for A-listers in LA, Block is on the road for as much as half of the year. He is constantly seeking inspiration from every corner of the globe. Often these moments arrive while mingling with fellow hotel guests (or quietly reflecting solo over Pina Coladas) at bars and restaurants in five star resorts from Paris to Parrot Cay. We caught up with Block during a brief moment of downtime in Los Angeles. In a particularly revealing mood, he shared with us a collection of guarded-treasures: wondrous watering holes that would help even the most experienced of jetsetters drool with envy. If you can't find inspiration in these places, he contends, you are unlikely to find it anywhere. Read his recommendations below… I love a great tiki drink and of all the hotel bars I've been lucky to frequent there's something incomparable to being on a beach in Hawaii and sipping through a handful of fruit-forward beverages adorned in fanciful glassware or with umbrellas. The Rosewood's Shipwreck Bar takes the concept to the farthest level – a final boss of a tiki experience. From the Guava Flow to Conrad's Mai Tai, (named after the bars most cherished bartender) every cocktail is crafted expertly. I grew up spending winters at the original Kona Village and there's something perfectly sweet now returning as a (still young) adult able to enjoy the island's unrivaled setting, drink in hand. From the second you step foot on property at Gabriella Khalil's Palm Heights you've already immediately decided that you're moving in for good. The hotel's Coconut Club takes all the best ethos of a beach bar and spins it on its axis. You convene and converse with fellow hotel guests over the blissfully leisurely days spent at the idyllic resort. I could linger, sand between my toes, at The Coconut Club for far too long and just let life cascade away with the perfect Piña Colada in hand. The pulsating energy of Miami meets aperitivo perfection at the hotel's Bellini Bar. The design is everything you want in a quintessential 'hotel bar:' it's inviting, convivial and retains a level of intimacy that you rarely find in the city. It's the perfect place for a quick cocktail before setting out into the bustle of Miami's nightlife; saddle up to the bar and order their namesake drink – created in 1948 by Founder of legendary Harry's Bar, Guiseppe Cipriani. And for a brief moment you get the feeling you could be 5,000 miles away staring into the Mediterranean. Franco's is just fun. It's the ideal blend of rowdy and refined; packed to the gills every time I've had a chance to pop in. Best enjoyed with a group of friends after a day at sea, the winding trek to the bar makes your first drink--of many--that much more well-earned. Lean back, enjoy the salty ocean air while listening to the cacophony of other sartorially inclined visitors' conversations; enjoy one of those 'I'm on vacation, f**k it' Italian cigarettes from a neighboring patron and soak it in. You'll dream of coming back from the moment you leave. Being from Los Angeles, I've always been on the hunt for the charming airs of New York's pinpointed hotel bar culture and sadly have been mostly unimpressed in my years as a legally drinking Angeleno (don't worry not you Tower Bar!). Enter, The Bar at Hotel Bel Air. Nestled off Sunset Blvd. and tucked away at one of the city's most shockingly slept on properties, you're treated to a jewel box of an era long passed. I'm a sucker for a good martini and jazz, and at The Bar at Hotel Bel Air both are delivered in spades. It's the perfect midweek date night and a chance to feel like you're somewhere, anywhere, but in Hollywood. Keep the martini's coming and the jazz playing. A downright good mixology bar at the impeccable Capella Hotel in Sydney makes my list for its effortless charm and timeless glamour. Paying homage to the Victorian era through a novel and contemporary Australian lens, McRae feels like a trapeze between past and present. One of the standout cocktails on a recent visit included a sake and lemon thyme sipper with aniseed, striking a balance of herbaceous and savory cloaked in a far-too-drinkable package. It certainly doesn't damper the mood being surrounded by Simone Hagg's expertly curated art collection spotlighting Australian creatives. There is no hotel bar list without Bar Hemingway. I've had the great pleasure of visiting over the past two decades and it's simply *chefs kiss*. There's a reason why it's on so many lists and it has earned its place among the greats. If you're lucky to get in, take a seat at the bar, preen around to (politely) check out the characters who are your compatriots on this journey and let yourself unwind. The martinis are magic and the atmosphere is palpable. They just rarely let anyone enjoy more than two of them in one sitting. I vow to achieve one day that fabled third martini before retiring to my room.

‘Wednesday' Shares Character Details for Lady Gaga, Haley Joel Osment Guest Starring Roles in Season 2
‘Wednesday' Shares Character Details for Lady Gaga, Haley Joel Osment Guest Starring Roles in Season 2

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Wednesday' Shares Character Details for Lady Gaga, Haley Joel Osment Guest Starring Roles in Season 2

'Wednesday' Season 2 got a huge spotlight during Netflix's Tudum fan event Saturday, unveiling details for Lady Gaga and Haley Joel Osment's guest star roles in the process. Gaga, who was first reported to join the cast of the Netflix horror comedy in November, will make her debut in Part 2 of Season 2, set for release Sept. 3. Specifics on her role were not immediately revealed. The singer celebrated the announcement with a performance during the event in Los Angeles, performing 'Zombieboy' from her latest album. Netflix also unveiled the first six minutes of Season 2, which revealed Haley Joel Osment's guest starring role as a longtime serial killer who Wednesday tracked down as her summer pastime. The clip showed how a trip to his home ended with Wednesday landing in a precarious situation, until an assist by Thing helped her to safety. Watch the clip below: After 'Wednesday' Season 1 premiered in November 2022, Gaga's 2011 hit 'Bloody Mary' went viral combined with Ortega's dancing as Wednesday from the series on social media. Since then, Ortega said in a red carpet interview that she would love for Gaga to appear in Season 2. The singer honored the delayed success of the song by opening her Coachella headlining set with 'Bloody Mary,' also performing the set in Brazil and Singapore. 'Wednesday' stars Jenna Ortega, Emma Myers, Joy Sunday, Hunter Doohan, Victor Dorobantu, Moosa Mostafa and Georgie Farmer, as well as Catherine Zeta-Jones, Luis Guzmán, Isaac Ordonez and Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo, who have been upped to series regulars. Beyond Gaga and Osment, new additions for Season 2 include Steve Buscemi, Billie Piper, Noah Taylor, Evie Templeton and Owen Painter, who all join as series regulars. 'Wednesday' Season 2 premieres in two parts on August 6 and Sept. 3 on Netflix. The post 'Wednesday' Shares Character Details for Lady Gaga, Haley Joel Osment Guest Starring Roles in Season 2 appeared first on TheWrap.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store