Author: Admin

  • 4 TV & Movie Projects That Have Been Delayed So Long We’ve Almost Given Up Hope (But Not Quite)

    4 TV & Movie Projects That Have Been Delayed So Long We’ve Almost Given Up Hope (But Not Quite)

    We’ve all been here before. Googling every few months or years to see what happened to our favorite project in the making, only to see that it’s stalled again.

    The entertainment industry refers to these never-ending delays as ‘development hell’, and for good reason. Even so, here are four projects we’re just not ready to give up hope on…yet.

    Webtoon

    This Webtoon turned best-selling graphic novel series by New Zealand artist Rachel Smythe, Lore Olympus is a stylistically delicious retelling of Greek Mythology, casting our favorite gods and goddesses as if they were characters on Desperate Housewives. Staying true to the original IP by not skirting around adult content, these characters may sport skin tones that perfectly explain why the Jim Henson Company signed on to adapt the animated TV series, but it’s been over five years since the partnership was originally announced. We know that developing an animated series can require extensive time and effort, so we’ll keep our fingers crossed until this title is available to binge.

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    It’s been fourteen years since Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes sequel, A Game Of Shadows, hit theaters, but that doesn’t mean we’ve lost all hope of seeing Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law share the screen again as the iconic Baker Street duo. We know that when this many talented people are involved in a project, scheduling can be a nightmare, but if there’s any chance we can get Rachel McAdams back as Irene Adler for this third installment, I’d say it’s well worth the wait. The latest update from Law is that a new script draft is in the works, but only time will tell if this project will ever truly come to fruition.

    HBO

    Do we really want to see the third season of this show when we think about how emotional devastating and anxiety inducing it’s bound to be? The answer is up for debate. But knowing what a huge platform the series has been for launching stars like Sydney Sweeney, Hunter Schafer, and Jacob Elordi, it deserves an ending with closure, and maybe some therapy? The 2023 Writer’s Strike, talent schedules, script rewrites and the death of Angus Cloud all impacted the course of the series, but of all the projects we’re rooting for here, this seems the most likely to air, even if HBO confirmed it won’t be before 2026.

    The Secret History Film Adaptation

    The Secret History / Warner Bros. Pictures

    Donna Tartt has been called the Dickens of our generation, and while her 2013 novel, The Goldfinch, was completely butchered by its film adaptation starring Ansel Elgort, we’re still holding out for her other international bestseller, the dark academia thriller The Secret History, to make it to the big screen after being stuck in development hell for over thirty years. Since the book released in 1992, everyone from Joan Didion to Gwyneth Paltrow has tried to get this project off the ground, only to see it stall or fail. Perhaps it’s for the best that Richard, Bunny, Charles, Camilla, Francis, and Henry all remain pristinely protected as we first saw them in our imaginations.



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  • Infinite Machine Olto Electric Scooter

    Infinite Machine’s P1 was praised for its futuristic design and capability. The Olto adopts the same aesthetic with a focus on bike line performance. Its hot-swappable, UL-Certified battery and 2 kW electric motor combine for 40 miles of range, a top speed of 20 mph in the bike lane, and up to 33 mph off-road. A dual-suspension frame provides a comfortable ride, with hide-away pedals for added power, similar foot pegs for a second rider, integrated high and low beams ensure you can see in any condition, as well as integrated turn signals for added safety. A custom control cluster with a 4.3″ LCD display and a dedicated spot for a phone mount help keep you notified on directions and status, and Infinite Machine’s Infinite Security suite plus a dedicated Apple AirTag slot provide peace of mind. Delivering in fall 2025 in silver or black.

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  • 10 Questions With Chaos In The CBD As They Gear Up For Their Stacked Summer Calendar

    1. ⁠Describe your sound in three words.

    Tranquil, balanced, meditative.

    2. So, Chaos In The CBD, what’s the most chaotic thing you’ve ever done?

    Playing the game “Who Can Stay Up the Longest.”

    3. ⁠If you could both save one track from A Deeper Life from a burning building, which one would you both choose and why?

    None of them, I’ll just purchase a new copy of the record. My life is too precious to be running into burning buildings.

    4. What’s one thing you learned about yourselves as producers since producing A Deeper Life?

    Patience.

    5. ⁠Midnight in Peckham is described as your coming of age – it’s midnight in Peckham, where are you going?

    I’m probably in my bedroom building my lil Legos.

    6. ⁠What’s the craziest thing you’ve ever seen behind the decks?

    Someone proposing to their lil sweetie pie while we were playing. That’s a pretty crazy thing to do.

    7. ⁠If you could curate your own festival line-up, aside from yourselves, who are you picking as your top three headliners?

    James Brown, The Isley Brothers, Max B

    8. ⁠What’s one track that always gets people dancing?

    Cheek – Venus (Sunshine People) (DJ Gregory Remix). 

    9. What’s your favourite thing about working with your brother?

    Having your best friend every step of the journey. You are never lonely when you have each other. I couldn’t do this without Beans.

    10. ⁠What’s one city you can’t wait to play A Deeper Life in?

    Auckland.

    Photography courtesy of Chaos In The CBD.

    @chaosinthecbd_



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  • ECB’s Lagarde says 2% inflation target in reach

    ECB’s Lagarde says 2% inflation target in reach

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  • Inspiring Quotes From Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys

    In 1965, while the rest of his band was on tour, Brian Wilson, a founding member of the Beach Boys, who died this week at age 82, challenged himself to stay home and create a masterpiece. The results of that challenge, Pet Sounds, has become one of the most revered and influential works of pop music.

    “Without Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper never would have happened,” recalled longtime Beatles’ producer George Martin in Rolling Stone. “Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds.”

    Paul McCartney agrees, saying, “I’ve often played Pet Sounds and cried.”

    In 2017, I became infatuated with Pet Sounds, and I have to admit — that’s a little weird. I’m old enough to have seen the Ramones perform live, but I’m not that old. To me, The Beach Boys was music that just kind of always existed in the background. Something my parents tapped their fingers to on the steering wheel when we were stuck in traffic. Not something that I loved or hated, something that was always there.

    But lately, I’ve been giving a lot of thought to things that seem to have always existed — cellphones, Batman, America — and here’s the thing, they didn’t! Someone, or a group of people, created these things out of thin air. They had an idea and got to work.

    I’m no music critic, but listening to songs such as “God Only Knows” and “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” with fresh ears, I couldn’t stop thinking, “What made him even think of doing that?” There are not many top hits before or after “Sloop John B” with lyrics about eating all of a shipmate’s corn that I can think of, can you? You start to understand why the “genius” word gets thrown in Brian Wilson’s direction, and why it sticks.

    I jumped at the chance to see Brian Wilson in the fall of 2017, alongside Beach Boys co-founder Al Jardine and a tremendous backing band, play the entirety of the groundbreaking album track by track at Radio City Music Hall. (Additional Pet Sounds: The Final Performances Tour dates can be found here.) Hearing these songs live — more than 50 years after the guy sitting at the piano first heard them in his head — was incredible and inspiring. I left the theater not sure that in my lifetime I’ll be able to create something that remains relevant and groundbreaking for half a century, but certain that I am not going to stop trying.

    Here are some quotes from Brian Wilson about creativity and the drive to succeed, pulled from great interviews he’s done with Jason Fine for Rolling Stone and Alison Beard for Harvard Business Review.

    “I’m success-oriented. You have to program yourself to be successful. Kick ass at life.”

    Wilson talks to engineers and other on-lookers while recording Pet Sounds in 1966 in Los Angeles.

    “I still believe in that message — working hard is the way to go. I live by it.”

    Brian Wilson and Al Jardine perform Pet Sounds at the Pantages Theatre on May 26, 2017, in Los Angeles.

    “If you stick with it, things work out in the end. Not always, but sometimes.”

    The Beach Boys pose during a portrait session at Pacific Ocean Park on March 10, 1966 in Los Angeles. Left to right are Dennis Wilson, Carl Wilson, Bruce Johnston, Mike Love, Al Jardine and Brian Wilson.

    “The park helps keep me straight. I show up feeling bad, and I leave feeling good. It blows the bad stuff right out of my brains.”

    Rolling Stone profile, as featured on Brian Wilson’s official Instagram page.

    “Fifty years later, I’m doing a world tour, playing [Pet Sounds] live, and seeing and hearing the audience respond. That makes me very proud. That record brought and continues to bring love to the world, which was my intent when I wrote the music.”

    Drumhead for the 2017 tour.

    “Sometimes things happen, and sometimes they don’t, but you can’t force it. It’s frustrating, but I keep at it.”

    Brian Wilson’s career retrospective Playback: The Brian Wilson Anthology is now available on CD, vinyl and digital.

    “Some people are leaders, and everyone contributes in different ways. The Beach Boys were a family — three brothers, a cousin and a friend — which gave us a cohesiveness. But I think the key to our success was respecting one another’s ideas and opinions.”

    Carl Wilson, Bruce Johnston, Brian Wilson and Al Jardine sing around a piano in the recording studio circa 1966.

    “I’m getting older but I don’t give a goddamn. I can still sing my ass off.”

    Singer and mastermind Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys directs from the control room while recording the album Pet Sounds in 1966 in Los Angeles.

    “I wanted to be a center fielder for the Yankees. That was my ambition, but I got sidetracked into the music business.”

    “To succeed in life, you have to put a little muscle into it — mind muscle.”

    Brian Wilson at the San Diego Civic Theatre on May 24, 2017, in San Diego, Calif.

    In 1965, while the rest of his band was on tour, Brian Wilson, a founding member of the Beach Boys, who died this week at age 82, challenged himself to stay home and create a masterpiece. The results of that challenge, Pet Sounds, has become one of the most revered and influential works of pop music.

    “Without Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper never would have happened,” recalled longtime Beatles’ producer George Martin in Rolling Stone. “Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds.”

    Paul McCartney agrees, saying, “I’ve often played Pet Sounds and cried.”

    The rest of this article is locked.

    Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.



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