23 Burst results for "Jerry Bruckheimer"

The Big Picture
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Big Picture
"Do we think that he, I mean, I don't know what he's up to. I think he's filming Mission Impossible 8 right now. Like, for real? Yes, for real. He was on Jimmy Kimmel Live last week, and when he appeared, he said he had just come from filming. So I think he's always just coming somewhere from filming 'cause that's entirely dominating his life right now, except for when he goes to the PGAs. So he went to the PGAs. He got this lifetime achievement award. When you suspected that maybe everything everywhere at once wouldn't win, did you think Top Gun: Maverick had a chance to win this award? I thought it was its best chance. Yeah. And it did not win. I think in part because they were giving crews this lifetime achievement award cruise, of course, is a huge producer in the business in addition to being a movie star. He gave a ten minute speech. Tom Cruise doesn't really talk in public very much. Yeah, that's true. And he's been very particular about his appearances. He did do the thing in this speech, Wesley, which I thought was so funny, which is he just told the exact same anecdote about getting cast in taps. He's been telling for the last 12 years. And that was 5 minutes of the speech. And he's so long. He was so specific about every person who worked on taps. He was name dropping Harold Becker's the onion, the onion field, in the anecdote, going on and on about all the different technicians who taught him how the business works and all the agents and producers and studios, and it was this wave of, I slightly performative, humbled gratitude. Everything was a thank you to everyone he had crossed past. Everyone was a thank you and also a slightly chilling. I love you. And we should also note that the cadence of it was really interesting and slightly slower and more somber than you would expect for, well, I guess maybe you would expect it from Tom Cruise at this point, but it's like, it's like he was giving the Bill Pullman Independence Day speech, you know? As opposed to like, thanks so much for all this time and aren't we so lucky to do what we have to do. He's like literally the fate of the world rests on me telling Jerry Bruckheimer that I love him, which is a real thing that happened during the ten minutes speech. Wow. Well, you know, I gotta say, it's probably isn't unearned that he feels this way. Or that he would do this, right? On the one hand, I don't know if I don't know if this is true, and I don't know if it came from one of you two to me, but that there is a moment. Oh, yeah. I know Sean, you were involved. A moment, maybe the Oscar luncheon where Steven Spielberg leans over to his and says, thank you for saving this industry. Yes. That did happen. Yeah. He's a producer. He knows what the stakes are. He knows that what happened to this movie and to him and I guess to us by extension was a miracle? Although I have mixed feelings about how miraculous it actually was to be honest because,

The Big Picture
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Big Picture
"Piano vibes all over it. Where it's just like, oh, that's nice. That's cool. And then you just forget it ever happened. And it feels weird. I think that you are seriously underestimating the power of Austin butler. What does Colin Farrell have to die without an Academy Award? What are we talking about here? I don't think that he does. I like both of these people. I would be happy to see Colin Farrell win an Academy Award. I think he's deserving. I would be happy to see Brendan Fraser when an Academy Award for a performance that I thought was very good in a movie that I didn't like. I think he is also deserving. I just go ahead, Bobby. Colin Farrell's 46, I'm 30 more years than the academy will jump on board. Come on. I will not let him die without an Academy Award. I'm saying it right here on this pot. Ireland will not let Colin Farrell die without an Academy Award. Harrison Ford doesn't have an Academy Award. Whatever. Make another step more Charles out here working with yorgos lanthimos and Sofia Coppola. Tom Cruise is gonna die on screen and they still won't give him an honorary post mortem Academy Award. So you've raised an important question that I neglected to ask earlier. So Tom Cruise was not nominated for best actor. Yeah. Which is not surprising, but it does seem like three months ago it was possible. Will he be at the Academy Awards? I don't know. They really don't like putting him out there in certain environments and as we learned at the Oscars last year, they are now an uncertain environment. I don't know. I wouldn't put him in a room where a slab can happen, you know? Oh, that's a great point. He is nominated for producing Top Gun: Maverick along. Jerry Bruckheimer, who's now an Academy Award nominee, which is just extraordinary. Christopher mcquarrie also nominated for best adapted screenplay along with a handful of other folks who wrote that film. That was one of the big surprises of the morning for me was that that film got in an adapted. Is there any part of you like a small part of you inside the deepest recesses of your heart that says adapted screenplay?

Awards Chatter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"We get rewarded financially and it's also to be rewarded by your peers. People who make movies and care about movies the way we do. So you'd love to be recognized. I mean, it seems pretty unfathomable that in this year, a movie that's as successful and as terrific as tuck on maverick would not, there's now ten best picture categories would be the greatest thing for the Oscars telecast two to have a movie that people actually liked that's nominated. But I guess just with the last minute, just the first thing that comes to your mind about three things. First of all, looking back on the career biggest regret. So I was about more. The years that we didn't make movies those are the years that I regret. Was there one that got away though? I heard maybe Silence of the Lambs was talented Liam's, we had an opportunity to work on to get the book. And I just, at the time, I didn't want to be in that world. It was a very dark world. So we kind of shied away from it. What's the upcoming project of yours that you're most excited about? There's so many. There's not just one. We're finishing a movie for Disney+. Called young woman in the sea, starring Daisy Ridley. It's about the first female to swim in the English Channel in 1926. And her journey is unbelievable, which he had to go through and how she changed athletics for women. She had the biggest parade down Fifth Avenue for an athlete ever, ever. When you see the black and white footage, you won't believe it. Wow. And nobody's ever heard of her. Going back to what I always say about telling stories about people that should be remembered. And finally, will there ever be a day when Jerry Bruckheimer says, I'm retired or are they going to have to cart you out of this office? I mean, someday, when you start stop making movies that people want to see, though, they'll roll out here. It doesn't seem in the near future, but congratulations on the movie. It's so great. And thank you very, very much for taking the time to do this. Thank you for being here. I really appreciate it. Thanks very much for tuning into awards chatter. We really appreciate you taking the time to do that and would really appreciate you taking a minute more to subscribe to our podcast on iTunes or your podcast app. And to leave us a rating as well. If you have any questions, comments or concerns, you can reach me via Twitter at Twitter dot com slash stop fiber. Until next time, thanks for joining us.

Awards Chatter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"Nobody's more talented. Nobody works harder. Nobody cares more. Nobody wants to entertain an audience the way he does. He's laser focused, he's somebody who doesn't suffer fools well. He wants to make sure he's making the best movie and if people aren't helping to make that movie, we got to find people that are. That's what he loves to be on a set. He's been shooting mission for a over a year now, I think. And that's his, he's got a gift, some actors have it. He's got this gift. In the accuracy and his performance, the way he trained all the pilots for three months, but also his ability to emote and show his pain in the scene with iceman with Val Kilmer. That's the magic sauce of the movie. There's another thing that primarily people in the business will notice, which is that at the beginning of the movie, they see produced by not just Jerry Bruckheimer, but Don Simpson Don Simpson has now been gone for 26 years. That's a quite a tribute. What made you decide to include that and what would Don have made of this moment that you and the film franchise that you guys started are enjoying? Look, we started this thing together, you can't make a sequel without putting his name on it. I mean, a lot of the magic of that first one was came out of his brain. His energy, again, we pitched it what happened initially is we developed a script and the powers that paramount at the time didn't want to make it. So we had the script. We loved for the original from the original and they didn't want to make it because there was a TV series that Greg Nelson, I think, was in it. My memory is correct. About the air force and it tanked. So the wisdom was that nobody cares about aviators. They left the studio and Ed ten and comes in. And he says, what do you guys have? And so we have this thing Top Gun, Tony Scott. And he said, okay, come by the House and pitch me the story. So we go up to his house and remember exactly where it was, but so Tony's with us. He just got off a plane from London and he's just sunk. So Ned turns to him. Tell me the story. All Tony was doing with petting his dog. And so Don jumps in and just spun a tail. I don't know if anywhere close to the movie he made, but he certainly dazzled Ned and as we walked out and he said, I don't know if this guy could direct. I know he can pet a dog, so I'm coming on YouTube. Oh man. How about just one other crazy thing? You and now, almost 50 years in filmmaking, right? Have been recognized in a lot of ways. I know there's the star on the Walk of Fame and I think the Anne prince footprints and different NATO national association of theater owner, honors and things like that. One thing that has not yet happened is an Oscar nomination. Is that something that you would mean something to you? Of course, you all always want to be rewarded for your work.

Awards Chatter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"Do you read reviews as a bother you of critics don't get if they're not on the same sort of track as you are with what you're trying to do? I'll tell you, the good reviews are ever good enough and the bad reviews can be devastating. So why bother? Yeah. Just move on. Yeah. But with something like Black Hawk down, I guess, is that what you're ultimately, when you set out to make a movie, if you can make something that appeals to both large numbers of people. And whatever taste makers, is that the ultimate goal? The ultimate goal is to entertain an audience. That's it. In that's what we try to do in our films, try to get people to feel different, transport them from one place to another, make them feel something, give them completion at the end, not always a good eddy, but completion. That's how we approach it. Everything that we do is based around what we feel an audience, even though we don't know what an audience wants, but we want to give them a bang for their buck. Now, just something this is a little random, but I came across a comment of yours prepping for this. Quote, we budget about a $1 million for reshoots and every one of our films close quote. There's sort of an attitude in the business sometimes that reshoots are a sign of trouble. But in fact, you seem to, as that quote suggests, you embrace that they are inevitable in some cases or necessary to make something better. Can you just give that side of the argument why it's worth embracing them? As smart as we think we are, we're not that smart an audience is a lot smarter collectively. We finished Armageddon and we previewed it, and we got these cards back, all these girls sent these cards back and said he never gave her an engagement ring.

Awards Chatter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"So he and I would sit in a meeting at a studio and I'd walk out and see that meeting went great and he said, no, it didn't. Here's what they're going to do. And he was right every time. And mister outside meant that you're the guy who actually puts it into practice. Yeah, I made it happen. Okay. So another thing that was happening as you guys were taking off with your careers was this term that I know it's still follows you everywhere, high concept. What does that where did that begin and as you as you would explain it, what does it actually mean? Because I've read 50 different people's impressions of it. I concept is if you can tell what the movie is about in a sentence, be sure to phrase that's considered high concept. And why was that kind of groundbreaking? Why was that important? Well, it's about advertising. It's about making impressions on people. And if you can capsule wise, your story and very few words puts images in people's minds and excites them, that's a concept they want to go see. It hasn't changed. Can you give me an listeners what the one sentence might have been just so they can imagine this for you have to wake up dawn to get this. But go ahead. Well, those first three. Everybody knows those movies. They know what they're about. What would the high concept have been to explain them to somebody who knew nothing about them? Well, Beverly Hills cop was a cop from Detroit who gets thrown into Beverly Hills and has to deal with a whole different class of society. And disrupts it. Top Gun is an inside look into a fighter pilot's life with Tom Cruise from risky business. Flashdance. A girl who wants to be a ballerina who has to work in a bar and dance in a bar.

Awards Chatter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"The best way to do things kind of absorb information by being around people that are very smart. Just working with Schrader, Michael Mann, again, that shows my ability to understand talent to seek these people out, give them an opportunity and they both going on to have fabulous careers and we've done it over and over again. Totally. So I mentioned the name Don Simpson. I guess for eternity, YouTube will be linked together. How did you two first cross paths? I met him coming in a screening of the harder they come. My ex-wife was a secretary for the head of music at Warner Brothers and a guy named Joe Boyd. And Joe was very close friends with Don Simpson. So Bonnie, my ex-wife introduced me to Don. And that's how we first met. Now at that time done, I know at one point he was the president of production at paramount was he already transitioned at that point into just producing her. He was still in that job. No, he was a publicist. Oh. At Warner Brothers. Okay. And after when I got divorced, he had a big house in Laurel canyon, and one of his roommates had moved out. So I moved in to the house and he was up for a job at paramount. And he borrowed my sport jacket because his room was a mess. He was the kind of guy that would have piles of books, phenomenal vocabulary, study vocabulary books, and it was an avid reader. So he had to step over the books to find his clothes. And he didn't have a clean sport jacket, so I was there and gave him the sport jacket. And he dazzled the people at paramount because of his vocabulary. He's a really, was a brilliant man, and he really could express himself. And he talked about BT barnum. He could really spin a tail. So I guess then that was what led to that time was the beginning of the president production. Period for him there, then he goes solo as a producer there. And it's interesting I've read, I wasn't covering the beat at that time, but eisner katzenberg, Don Steele, that era of paramount. Who decided that you and Don should maybe not just be Friends, but actually work together, I guess, for the first time. Various people take credit for it. But I went to him and after he was just left paramount. And I said, why don't you produce this movie with me and see how it goes? And he said, yeah. And this was flashdance.

Awards Chatter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"Hi everyone and thank you for tuning in to the 465th episode of The Hollywood Reporter's awards chatter podcast. I'm the host Scott feinberg and my guest today is a producer of film and television who is one of the more fascinating and to some degree polarizing figures in Hollywood and has been for decades. The Guardian has written quote to those of tender sensibilities he is the devil incarnate, the man who helped destroy the movies and an architect of our cultural stupid, but to those who sit in Hollywood's counting houses, he's a man with his finger, plates at squarely on the movie going audiences, collective clitoris. He is money, close quote. Indeed, Playboy called him the most successful producer in history. Variety submitted that he is the only man in the business today to become famous strictly as a producer, and The New York Times said he could well be the most influential producer working today. And with credits including the following films to say nothing of his many hits on TV, it's hard to argue. Flashdance, Beverly Hills cop, Top Gun, bad boys, The Rock, Armageddon, Pearl Harbor, Black Hawk down, the Pirates of the Caribbean and national treasure franchises, and most recently, a sequel 36 years in the making. One of the first movies since the outbreak of COVID to bring people of all ages back to movie theaters in large numbers, Top Gun, maverick, which, 6 months after its release, is still playing in theaters, is 2022s highest grossing film by far with nearly $1.5 billion taken in at box offices around the world. Has received rave reviews. It's at 96% on Rotten Tomatoes and might well Garner a first ever Oscar nomination in the category of best picture for my guest. Jerry Bruckheimer. Over the course of our conversation at his Santa Monica office, the 79 year old and I discussed how advertising led him to producing. His roller coaster partnership from 1982 through 1995 on high concept films with the late Don Simpson a pair of The New York Times called the top producers of the 1980s and the Los Angeles Times described as the kings of commercial cinema, making movies in which style was substance and audiences left the theater buzzing from adrenaline rushes. What led him to bet when others wouldn't on directors like Paul Schrader, Michael Mann and Michael Bay, and on stars, including Johnny Depp, Nicolas Cage, and Tom Cruise, plus much more. And so without further ado, let's go to that conversation.

The Rich Eisen Show
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show
"So they got draft picks. So there wasn't a lot there as good as it was for Vegas. Right. And they were offered bad contracts Ron didn't want to take bad contracts. So he put together a very good competitive team. Unfortunately, the goaltending didn't hold up as well as we wanted to. So we got a great draft, but Manny veneers is fantastic. I'm a Michigan Wolverine. You chose wisely. And we got right now is another fourth, fourth pick, but he was really supposed to go to the first pick. So we're building the team through the draft, which is the way Colorado did it. You know, what four or 5 years ago they had 40 some points. I mean, we had 60. So they're doing it the right way. We just have to have our fans be patient. It's going to happen. And I know that this might be out of the bailiwick here, but do you think the success of this team and that arena might lead to an NBA team going there? We sure hope so. Would you be part of that? Would you want to do that? Who knows? Right. Right. Interesting, because I mean, I know Seattle fans are just nuts for that sort of idea. They're the greatest sports fans out there. They really are. And that's why I was so excited when Tim came to us about Seattle. They're really, really terrific. And they love that they love hockey. They love basketball. They're great football fans. They love all their sports. And so before I let you go, I'm going to take one more run at this. I did mention this to you the first time we met a couple of years ago. I suggested you name your team this. You went kraken, which is great. But you've got a mascot named buoy. And I understand it's Seattle. But that mascot shouldn't be nicknamed grunge, sir, the Seattle Seattle grunge, like I guarantee. That looks like a grunge. I know it's a troll. I get it. I'm trying, let me help you produce is what I'm saying. If I may. Look, I may. I wasn't a part of this. This was for the kids and they got it. They showed us the kids that different NASCAR's and the kids picked this one. Okay. It's working. So it's all good. So I'm now telling kids no. Okay. That's what I that's what I do for a living at home as the best dad ever. Jerry Bruckheimer, thank you for coming in. I would love to have you back any time you want. We barely scratched the surface in the pop culture. There's so much good stuff that we've been involved in. Such a thrill to entertain audiences. And whether it's a movie that I make or a hockey game, it's so great when you see people come together, cheer, laugh, cry. Movies do that to you. Sports does that to you? It's great. No question about it. And again, Top Gun: Maverick is amazing good luck to you in the awards season you deserve all the awards you want for that, sir. Fire country on CBS Fridays at 9 Eastern Time. I look forward to that newest Beverly Hills cop movie on Netflix in the national treasure edge of history, the series is coming to Disney+ in December of my kids and I will we will be locked in on that. Fire countries the highest new rated show. Well, I mean, do you believe it? When was the last time a network said no to you? They'd say it all the time. What's their problem? What the hell's the matter with this industry? Check out again fire country on CBS Fridays at non Eastern Time. JB on Twitter. Thank you for coming in here, sir. Thank you for having me. Anytime my gosh, let's do this again. Jerry Bruckheimer is here. We'll wrap up the show in a

The Rich Eisen Show
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show
"Are just almost a 1 billion 5. Let me talk to you about that Val Kilmer scene as well from Top Gun: Maverick. What were the sensitivities around getting that done and putting it in there? Because of his real life malady. Well, that was something that Tom and Val worked out with the director. It's something that Tom initiated valid initiated. They worked. Which is so great when you work with actors, you have a script, and they get together and say, we're going to do it a different way. We're going to do this way. And Chris mcquarrie, who is a writer and a producer on the show, would come in and rewrite things on the spot. And he's brilliant at doing that. So there was a conversation that Tom did have with Val Kilmer to say. Can you do it? Do you want to do it? I mean, was that an original script? I know I've asked you 5 questions in a year. I'm not sure it was in the original script, but I know that they worked that out together. The four of them really worked it out. I mean, when that scene was over, I looked at my wife and she looked at me and was like, wow, that was real. That was a real life moment right there. I've got Jerry Bruckheimer here on the rich eisen show. Let me talk about, remember the Titans with you. Because that is a beautiful sports movie. It really is. And getting Denzel Washington involved and the sensitivities around that subject matter as well. And what was your reason for taking on that film for yourself? It's a story. It's about people that you're being remembered. That's it. That's about it. It's about stories about this coach and this team and that's why you wanted to take exactly on with that. Remember the Titans is part of your world, no question about that as well as glory road. We had we had the great actor who plays Don Haskins Josh Lucas here telling me about how Don Haskins was on the set for that sort of thing as well. I mean, it's hard to make a movie about people that are alive. And tell their story. And that's the most difficult. And then you've got the Seattle kraken, it's fascinating development right here. The NHL. Actually, I would like to play a tape for you. And then you tell me about this acting because Jerry Bruckheimer is not only a guy who brought so many great movies to the silver screen, but also CSI to the smaller screen and when we, Jerry, we're going to the Super Bowl in Miami. Our show open was a no brainer for us that we played it over and over and over again where I got in the role of horatio Caine and I want you to see if this is as legit. Here we go. This is it. This is me in the role of horatio cane, if you will, channeling my inner Caruso is only I could for the rich ozone show.

The Rich Eisen Show
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show
"There is a woman who went the distance, who broke ground as the first true influencer by living a remarkable life. Her name, Elizabeth Taylor. I'm Katy Perry, this is the story of the original influencer. This is Elizabeth the first. Elizabeth I, the podcast, wherever you listen. When we're back here on the rich eyes and show terrestrial radio Roku, SiriusXM Odyssey and so much more and for our terrestrial radio audience, we just showed a clip of Miles Teller and Glen Powell, two stars of Top Gun: Maverick, one of my favorite movies of this entire year. And I'm not just saying that because of who's sitting here now on the rich eisen show, the producer of that film and so many other great television and movies that we've been talking about for decades, Jerry Bruckheimer here on the rich eyes that show good to see you, Jerry. Great to be here, rich. Thanks for having me. And I'm not just saying that about Top Gun: Maverick because you're sitting here. But my wife and I went and saw it. And we were walking on air after that movie, because it was exactly what we had hoped it would be. That it really was, I mean, just from the very beginning from the Jerry Bruckheimer lightning strike before anything starts to hearing, Kenny Loggins, danger zone. Danger zone, and then the heat coming off the tarmac, and then Tom Cruise on a motorcycle. You hit pretty much every button I wanted it in the first ten seconds of that movie. What did you make of Top Gun: Maverick? Jerry. It was such a joy to make it. And to be back with Tom Cruise and really fortunate that I made three movies with them. Because he's such a force in a very good way. He demands excellence. He's an amazing actor. He's a better producer than I'll ever be. And he cares about what he does. He's like the Tom Brady. Of our business, because he really, really works so hard. He's there early in the morning. He was there late at night. He works on weekends. He takes care of himself like an athlete. He watches his diet. He works out, he gets to bed early. He's one of those people that really you want to admire because of his dedication to his craft. And he loves making movies. And when you look at Top Gun, his performance is so subtle and so good, you know, sometimes you don't see it because he's so natural and so real. You know, he's not in a drunk scene where he's staying actor so great because he plays a drunk so well. Tom just does everything perfect and it comes off as natural and that's exactly what you want. I thought you went through at the Brady algae because Tom Cruise never ages too. They're very similar. It could be something like that as well. So back in the day for the original Top Gun, he needed convincing, though, to do the role, correct? There are two stories. There's time story and then there's my story kind of conflict. It's been 35 years. So 36 years. Sure. What happened is we gave him a script. We worked on the script with him and we couldn't get him to commit to the movie. So I called the navy, and I said, we have this actor, we'd like to get him in this movie. And they arranged for me to have him fly with the blue angels. So we went down and he went down to Miramar, California. He drove down there in his motorcycle, of course. And he's got this long flowing hair he just finished another picture on his shoulder length there. And this is back in the 85 with much different than it is today. Sure. And so the pilots look at them and say, oh, here comes a hippie. Let's give them a ride. So they spun him and flipped them and thought that he come out of their dizzy and out of his mind. Got out and he said, that was fantastic. He ran to a payphone because there were no cell phones. And he called me up and said, I'm in, I'm doing the movie. But now his story is, he was always doing the movie. He was just torturing us. But I don't know what the truth is. So your plan kind of worked in a way that you got him to do it. He literally is that much of a daredevil, where you just want to get the adrenaline rush going and he was in. I don't know what you've seen the cuts from the clips from Mission Impossible. Oh my God. He's not on a wing. I mean, he's like crazy. It's nuts, what he does. Did you ever tell him that you shouldn't do it or you can't do it? What he does is it's like a step process with him. Every stunt that he does is so well rehearsed. He starts in a very elementary manner, and then he works himself up to the final stunt. Nothing he does, it was without care, calculation, and surrounding himself with great people. And so putting together Top Gun: Maverick, what did you have a concern? I mean, that you were touching sort of hallowed ground here, and that you were basically creating something new when the original had already, it's at a certain status now that you were kind of potentially messing with that that concern you at all. Yes. Absolutely. And concerned Tom, it's a signature movie for him. It really skyrocketed his career. So when Joe Kaczynski was the director of the movie and I flew to Paris, Joe had an idea on how we're going to do the movie, which is exactly what we did. And we pitched E pitch, Tom, the story, and he had a look book where he had photographs so that he put together what he wanted to move to look like. And Tom said, this is really good I like it, but Joe, you got to promise me one thing. If we do this, it has to be real. We have to get everybody up in the jets, and the first movie we put the actors up in jets, and we couldn't use a frame of it. They all threw up. It was a mess. I think there's one shot of Tom in the movie in a real plane. So this time, Tom and Joe designed this program were for three months we had our actors. In first a prop plane, then an aerobatic prop than a jet in an F-18. So they went through this process of dealing with the G forces. So when they actually had to act, they could

The Rich Eisen Show
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show
"Went day by day. He went God spell a couple weeks ago. I thought that was the Pinnacle. The son will come out tomorrow. Bet your bottom dollar. That tomorrow, there'll be sun. Watching that. Oh my gosh. You know, and again, building a Jerry Brock comers coming out here. That was so you couldn't have produced that any better, that in between the awkward silence, you hear the camera clicks go off, like kind of like kind of like crickets when you're out camping and sleeping and trying to get to sleep at night in the crickets. And filling the void. They were so quick with those. I'm convinced that the whole thing was written. Can we do that again? I got to get this one more time. I love it. This is really good. This is really good because let's count how many follow-ups there are. About 5 to one. This is a tenacious performance. This is a tenacious performance by the Patriots media. Everybody. I got to tip the cap here. I mean, because it was very impressive because he's saying, we'll see what happens today. They want to know what it is needs to be seen today in order for their to be a decision made today. And then when it was obvious it wasn't today, then it finished up, but what about tomorrow? Well done. I mean, this is great. And I just need to hear his response because we were too busy laughing about it. I do need to hear, I did not hear his response, because we appropriately were laughing our asses off. All right, one more time, today's Bill Belichick press conference moment. Worthy of a second look, please. Today's Bill Belichick press conference moment. Here we go. Have you named the starting quarterback for this on the end? Yeah, we'll see how it goes here today. People don't know how to get quarterback rotation again. We'll see how it goes today. It's a crickets, right? Is that something that would be, look, we're not doing anything. We haven't practiced. We're going to go out and we're going to see how it goes today. It will see how it goes today. But what do you have to see today? We'll see how it goes today. Bill, do you know what you want to do on Sunday or will they be competing the quarterback competing this week

The Rich Eisen Show
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show
"We're saying I can't wait for it to start and that's the way I started. That's how excited we are to have Jerry Bruckheimer the legendary TV and film producer here in studio. He's also the co owner of currently the tide for third place team in the Pacific division of the National Hockey League, the Seattle Crockett. What's cracking? Yeah. We've been excited about him coming in for a while. Well, I mean, look, with all due respect to Joe burrow and Kurt Warner, having been our previous guest this show, they didn't produce Armageddon. I mean, seriously, let me just read to you our conundrum of having to pick and choose what to ask him about. Here's the list of his notable films as a producer, American gigolo. How about them apples? I'm looking for not just because you're an American gigolo, but be you're a vet for that. Flashdance, Beverly Hills cop Top Gun, Beverly Hills cop two days of thunder crimson tide bad boys, dangerous minds, The Rock, conair, Armageddon. I mean, enemy of the state, a gone in 60 seconds. Remember the Titans Pearl Harbor Black Hawk down, Pirates of the Caribbean. National treasure glory road. Gone baby gone. And Top Gun: Maverick most recently, right? By the way, CSI that CSI series, he's in a producer on the CSI series. So essentially every good movie that's ever been made. Correct. Exactly. Wow, he's a producer of the amazing race. Why not? Of course. Unbelievable. Yeah, let's go. Fire country is his new show on CBS. When he pitches to CBS, an automatic does he have to? Probably not. No, they just consider the order. Does he hold up four fingers like an intentional walk? He gets first base. Is that what it is? They just say, what is it, Jerry? And they just give

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"What's the deal with Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani, opposite tractors or cynical moves to boost their careers? You know, no, I was close to these two for a season and a half coach in football. And I coach Gwen's son and our Gavin rossdale was there as well. On the other side of the field, most of the time, but Gwen was always the good mom. And Blake came to the games, and man, they were stone cold in love. Like they couldn't stop touching each other and look at each other and they like high school kids. Must be terrible for Gavin rossdale to look across the field and see that. But I know the kids all love Blake. He doesn't have that dark energy Gavin has. And the first Daven has that background of dating a guy for a long time and trying to act like he didn't know. It's a famous story about an English an English person that he dated that was kind of a trans character. Forget the name right now, but it's got a dark history with rock and roll. You know, and Blake is not that way. Blake is a down home. Southern rock guy. You know, he likes to do his thing and drink his beer and have a back barbecue. I don't see there being anything cynical about it. It just really Gwen needed a breath of fresh air and, you know, sometimes marriages just get stale and I'm not saying I think they look good together. I think they're a little weird together. But I think this will last the test of time for a long time. I don't think once the fan will be alone again. I think Blake stays with her. Yeah, I

Direct from Hollywood
Tom Cruise Shares What Pushed Him to 'Top Gun' Reboot
"Tom cruise is set to fly once again in the upcoming. Top gun maverick. The sequel to his hit from nineteen eighty six. When you think of the original topgun. Tom is clearly the first actor that comes to mind. But the second is val kilmer who played his nemesis partner. Tom kaczynski and even though val unfortunately lost the ability to speak to a health battle in two thousand fourteen. It was tom himself. Who insisted there was no sequel without vow producer. Jerry bruckheimer tells people. Tom said we have to have him back. Tom was the driving force. We all wanted him. But tom was adamant that if he's going to make another top gun foul had to be in it. He's such a fine actor and such a good individual he goes on to say we had such a good time on the first one and wanted to bring some of the gang back together again. It was really emotional. Experience for all of us was a long time getting there but we did top gun. Maverick was actually just pushed back. Four months that will hit theaters may twenty seventh of twenty twenty two

Bollywood is For Lovers
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Bollywood is For Lovers
"Maybe like hollywood sensibilities. From what i understand what i think but i think they just like they know how to pull off a twist. They're not exactly. Never leaning taylor. But i think there are a bit more active like their movies are a lot more repulsive than maybe astro. Sometimes yeah yeah again. Like full of unexpected twists. I from what i've seen. So i definitely raise movies. I i'm interested in exploring that they're like jerry bruckheimer. Maybe i'm interested in exploring that suggestion from rejection about doing an episode recommend down but i would happily do it. Yeah so overall yeah. I guess we haven't heard about his performance too much. It's very good. He really knows how to like. Bring that intensity to is psycho like fills so good interest. Like i'm gonna go murder this photographer now or i'm going to murder this girl who's a friend of shit. He's like no no big deal. I'm just completely impassive in cold..

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP
"P.m. Eastern, and it is always were brought to you by our friends a good year. Helping you discover the road ahead. Goodyear more driven man. I spent more time Look around. Good year, and my career is you know you got to ride in the blimp. I did get to ride to bloom. We just carry no, it zit wasn't for me. I I don't know how you are with heights, but for me Well, I don't want my mind flying. It's like surfing. It's like surfing. You know, you're just You're a lot of thing. I grew up surfing. I know what circuit you tell right? The blimps like surfing. You would love it because that thing is puttering along so smooth, Right? 15 Miles an hour and you're just doing laps around the stadium. It was Notre Dame Louisville at Louisville. Was the Labor Day weekend. And it was interesting because when you're riding that thing It kind of would do this rise and yeah, and I ask the pilot I came with a girl become a blimp. I well, he was amazing it his name was I looking at? His name was off the charts like Archibald or something. No, no, it No. It sounded like his name. It was like, you know, it was like sterling hero or so, Yeah, he sounded like a marble hero. And he explained to us, he said. You know this thing rides with the air and he goes and there's this pocket of air above the stadium, and we're just kind of riding over just like a wave like he's the one that used the surfing really did it, Z You're just cruising now. I'll say this. Morning. I'm talking about this little show a lot. The only only thing about the blimp is we're told Tom Brady drinking 500 gallons water, whatever it is every week. You can't do that. There's a very specific like dietary list like you could. You could do number one on the bloom. Yeah, can't do number two. Well, that probably makes sense, right? But even for us We couldn't really didn't awards were wired to our chairs. We had hairpieces microphones on so yet announced a I got to the bathroom. And you know the one guy start unhooking yet everything but it was. It was great, but it was. What was cool is you could hear it so quiet. You could hear the stadium like we're above the stable. We could hear the band's withers a big play. We hear the crowd. Like when we had crowds. Yeah, that was. Yeah. Well, that was the season opener of 2019 Springs, a leak. I don't. I don't know the answer to that. And I didn't have you didn't ask while you're up in the air. You know, I rode. Ah flew the Thunderbirds last February. Daytona. No, that's a little different in the blood. I would imagine so, but it was But it was up in position because I thought No, and are all in fact I was one of one of the great prides of my life is that I did not throw up. I did not pass out and we were doing. We were tricked out. When's the new top gun movie coming out? I don't know. I'm tired of all these delays. You know, I interview Jerry Bruckheimer. Okay, because last year was the 30th anniversary days. A donor and I did a whole big oral history. I talked to everybody but Cruz. I told the crew that I thought the Cruz and Trump California's four years ago I used a couple of it, but I talked to Brooke home or on the phone, Coolest dude ever and he says to me, I go. Is there ever a chance? You just did Bad boys. Three. You know, top gun Maverick was in post production, I said. Is there ever a chance that we could get the days of thunder, too? And he does, he said. Just Playing his day he goes well, he said. You know, he said, it's all about Tom's schedule. And he said, You know, Tom right now shooting another mission. Impossible. And I go. Yeah, he goes and then he's going to go up on the space station. Go. What did you just.

Cars That Matter
"jerry bruckheimer" Discussed on Cars That Matter
"They had to do so much of the work themselves. You got these cars from essentially like a junkyard or like someone who just had the car rotting in their backyard and it doesn't even have an engine they just love cars and they wanted to restore it so they're putting themselves out there in a sense like this is what i did. What are you guys. Thanks so it is very nerve wracking and even though you make it to concord like that you still want to get the rib and you still want to. Well i think jay points at out there. He's on the torque show during the event and they were broadcasting and someone said well it's not just about the trophy and he's like well. It's not but it is. You're there you want your name called. You're there and it's for other reasons but at the same time it is a competition no question about it as an emmy winner yourself. You certainly understand competition. Yeah i don't do my work for emmys and stuff. But there's a competitiveness to help drive a little bit. We saw that with one of the young guys who was the subject to your film. I'm not going to spoil anything for the listeners. But he's left there standing sort of over and over again man. That was super cool. But it sucks. It was super cool though and the any words of advice for a guy like that. Or how did that make you feel my heart sunk forum. I was actually standing there. Well it happened. I actually thought he was going to win personally. Just because just the way it was going. I was there when the judges were there and it like it went really well. I thought he might place but my heart sinks for him in a lot of ways we were with these characters a lot and i even did a lot of pre pro with him before we went out. It wasn't like we just showed up and started meeting. Then i talked to the characters. Usually that i'm following quite a bit in advance and we have a lot of long conversations about their story. What i know going into this. That i can talk about. Did you pick the characters in the cars or did you get some tips. Actually audrain helped us a lot. I reached out with my producer brett and we wanted to find people who have interesting stories. We either want to people who had really cool cars or people who had very interesting stories. Because i kind of want to intertwine all of that and donald actually on trained health a lot with finding those characters especially the kid with the corvair boy. What a story that was. I love his lion thought. A corvair to concord. He's got that father son thing that's really cool. The one thing. I like about this one a lot is i got to know these characters a lot and i still actually stay in touch with a lot of them. Still pretty cool to have this experience with them. That's the one thing. I like about doing documentaries. It's real. I have nothing against narratives done narratives in the past. But it's cool with these because this is your life you're experiencing it with them and weird. You definitely touch on something. That is i think. Key to the success. Of your films. John if i can be so presumptuous. As to sort of encapsulated this way fiction writer has all the latitude in the world to invent things to create a narrative. Tell a story that nearly knows no bounds and you can go as far and wide as you want a writer or in this case a documentary filmmaker that author that filmmaker has to work harder. Because you're working with facts and you're working with maybe in some cases the residual scraps of history. And that's what really has drawn me into your films so with that let's talk Pa motor sport man because that is where my adrenaline really started getting pumping man days of thunder of course was the predictably a simpson bruckheimer crews success. I mean how could it not be. Those guys are all showmen and they do what they do. And that's all great and it's all fiction and it's all three parts truth and seven parts smoke but tell us about your movie a movie about a movie. The golden hour. I love that one. We're turning that right now into a full documentary for fox. That's air speedway's for the five hundred now but we made a short film. Initially it was about a half hour. We made it four. There's a show called race hub on fox sports that covers nascar and they wanted to do that. We ended up getting so much great content on that. I was reaching out to a lot. People kinda swing for the fences and then everyone kept saying yes for interviews and then they saw the final product. I've got twice as much so we're in the process attorney not do a full film but i love that movie because i loved that film as a kid one of the things. That kinda got me into racing. It came out when i was born. But i got into that film because it was getting reared on. Tv all the time. That was a semi introduction. And ask are for me. So i was gung ho about it but i made this with jeff schaffer. Nagai made the class with when we were going into it. We're always trying to find what something that people can connect with. and so we were doing all the interviews. We're gonna jerry bruckheimer hans zimmer. All these people in keep bringing a tony scott. So i started looking at tony story. He tragically passed away. Maybe like ten years ago and he was a visionary behind the whole thing that bring days of thunder to what days of thunder ended up becoming. That's right and so we still told the funds stories of days of thunder and how they made it but we wanted to weave in a human story in there too and so we interviewed his wife. His wife actually lives in north carolina. Half the time because she's from here initially so it worked out great so for a lot of these interviews. During covid we were doing zoom interviews in the now have a camera crew that we would hire. That would go and beyond having a discussion like this. But they'd be looking into the. Can't i'll be like okay. Look into the camera when you respond and we do it that way but this one was great. Because i could actually go in either mask on because we weren't traveling at the time and it worked because we were able to tie in this heartfelt tony tribute into the film because it was really his vision. We've entitled the golden hour because that was someone talked about like tony. Love gold now or shot explain to our listeners. What golden hour. If you're not a photographer filmmaker told now is the best. When it comes to filming it happens twice a day. it's when the sun's rising sunsetting and it just creates this really nice light. They'll more photography looks of may get envelopes. Whatever there is a person a car landscape that just makes it glow it just creates this slight magical settings where the unicorns come out in the knight in shining armor rides over the top of the hill tony topgun to and he starts the movie like that also backed kind of what we're talking about. I wanted to put tony's touch in the film what then tell the actual story of how it was made from all these different moving parts living to is everyone talked about how it just chaos making it. This is before you have the technology you have now where it's like. Oh we need to fill in the race. We'll just go to the track. Well it's empty will put fans in there and it'll look pretty real in nineteen eighty nine. When they were filming can do that so they actually had to be there when crowds were there. It was packed in still blown away by that. Because if you watch a lot of films from the eighties that was a really from a cinematic standpoint. I thought it was just a next level fell even to this day. That opening sequence. That opens sequence. Inspired me a lot. And tony's opening sequences have inspired me a lot of my other work. If you see some of the nascar videos. I do even before this film. I would go sunrise shots and all that because that films me just. It's this calm before the storm that he created that so cool even in best in class. I did a little bit of that before. I knew i was doing this. Because the little bit of tony scott rubbed off on me. When i was a kid. I love topgun days of thunder. All films turns and tied all those kinds of movies that have these golden hour shots and it creates that magical thing. I wanted to make sure that that was portrayed in the documentary a little bit and we have that even in the full one as well. That films sounded crazy. They'd have very limited time to make it and you just hear from all these different people were running out of time. We had to push the deadline. It was mind blowing and it was cool to even how people got involved. in it. hans. Zimmer was involved in days of thunder which a lot of people didn't know i knew it just goes. I was a fan of the film. But i'm a huge hans zimmer fan and hearing how he got involved in it was cool to interview him in here. He went down there and he was just supposed to visit. But then jerry. Tony convinced him to be a part of the film. And tom was like you. Gotta be in this it next thing you know the subject. You're has a way of drawing you in another one of your films through me. Considerably ernhart versus gordon and boy. That was quite a story. And you talk about exploring all these kind of class and generational contrast i mean. It.

Len Berman and Michael Riedel in the Morning
Sordid details of Johnny Depp's private life made public
"I'm fascinated by this because I do think at one point. He was a very, very good actor Johnny Depp. And now his entire life has just fallen apart. What has happened to this man? Is it Is it booze and drugs? Well, it's losing throat. It's also though, in the view of Hollywood, and this time the Hollywood reporter, which is kind of the you know, the newspaper that covers the doings out there has a devastating story in this week, which basically says that he has become radioactive. You might recall it. Obviously back in the summer time. There was this lawsuit where he was suing a newspaper in the UK for saying that he was a wife beater. And in this trial, it was revealed just dozens of emails and horrible behavior that frankly backed up, but the you know what his ex wife and with the newspaper said, and the judge agreed not only to the judge agree that the newspaper that could script called him a wife beater. But they essentially prohibited to him from appealing this case. Meanwhile, he assuming his ex wife, Amber, heard in a court in Virginia that suits about to begin in January. A lot of the same stuff. That was found to be un supportable in the UK trial, so he's seen in Hollywood is just being insanely vengeful. Not to mention a drunk, a drug use or incredibly profligate spending millions upon millions of dollars and in this world now With me to, um, the idea of any Hollywood studio hiring a man who's been labeled a wife beater seems completely implausible. He had a small movie that was supposed to come out last month. At a film festival in Poland. He didn't turn up. The movie was withdrawn. He has a project that he was gonna be doing. Jerry Bruckheimer, huge Hollywood producer on the life of Harry Houdini. He apparently has been dropped from that. And this is a guy who you know has a lot of things and needs a lot of money. As you know his spending his ethics so without these kinds of did paydays God knows what's going to happen to stand still love him, probably. But the fact of the matter is Hollywood will not hire him. So their love is going to have to go back into the catalog and look at old movies. But I don't think anybody's gonna hire him for anything. New. So literally, Larry, Let me ask you when you were the editor of People magazine Back in the day when Johnny Depp was riding high, Did you Did your reporters pick up stuff about bad behavior? Craziness? Did you have any concerns about where that career was headed back when you have good things about him? Let me split that question into Yes. To the first part of the question. No to the second. Yes, we heard about the bad behavior. Look, he didn't make a secret of it right? He was in a rock band. He dressed like Keith Richards. He kind of he played Hunter Thompson. You know, he epically did a lot of drug this was all known about it. It was part of his charm in some degree crazy enough as it may seem, like all things in moderation that makes him charming. And look, we made him the sexy man. I think twice While I was the editor of the magazine, he was someone who then and arguably still might have a lot of appeal. But at a certain point, you know, when you're pushing 60 and you start and you continue to act like this, it's not charming and again when you look at what was accounted in that trial in the UK not only just the text messages using filthy text messages about his wife, written tip Hollywood agents and other colleagues. But the kind of litany of behavior throwing glasses, the bleeding the fights the cutting the screaming, You know, I counted to buy a lot of people, including people who worked for him. Quite frankly, it's impossible to deny. That this guy's personal life is a mess. Now. We don't watch him in movies, you know, thinking about his personal life, but in this world that we live in now it's increasingly difficult to separate that behavior from what appears on strings. Turning our

Rush Limbaugh
A National Treasure Disney Plus series is in development
"Disney plus bringing back national treasure a new series based on the film is in the works for the streaming platform producer Jerry Bruckheimer has confirmed that a TV series featuring a younger cast being developed a third movie is also being made but Nicolas Cage Diane Kruger and Justin Bartha haven't yet been confirmed for the third

Big Boy
‘National Treasure’ TV Series In Works At Disney+
"Disney plus is bringing back national treasure a new series based on the film is in the works for the streaming platform producer Jerry Bruckheimer has confirmed that a TV series featuring a younger cast is being developed the third installment of national treasure is also being

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood
In a changing climate, how can tech help us survive?
"This marketplace podcast is brought to you by. Indeed, are you hiring with? Indeed, you can post job in minutes set up screener questions than zero in on your shortlist. Qualified candidates using an online dashboard get started today and indeed dot com slash marketplace. That's indeed dot com slash marketplace. And Beilin ovo your systems are managed your devices secured and your company's data is protected why? Because IT is what you do. And because being a difference maker is who you are to learn more about the ways Lenovo is making a difference for not professionals Villanova dot com slash M B powered by Intel core, I seven processors. In a changing climate. How can tech help us survive? It's a new series for marketplace. Tech demystifying the digital economy. I'm Ali would. Vimal change is here this week. We're launching ongoing coverage of how tech can help us adapt to it in a series. We're calling how we survive the change is evident in increasingly extreme weather all over the globe. A UN report last week said a million plant and animal species are on the verge of extinction. And warming is speeding that up and the UN's intergovernmental panel on climate change, the IPC said last year that our current rate of warming will cause fifty four trillion dollars in damages and that its effects will be increasingly deadly climate. Scientists say the trajectory is clear, I could write six more IPC assessments. They're all going to say the same thing. William Collins is a climate scientist at the Lawrence, Berkeley, National Laboratory, who has authored several such reports they're leading an very straight law. And and that's the reason why the scientists are eager to stop writing reports and start diving into creating solutions. So. Far much of the investment around climate change has been related to mitigation or slowing carbon emissions and reducing temperature rise that is not going away. But Collins and others are now talking much more seriously about adaptation, the data engineering and the technology to keep surviving in a changed climate. You can look sure people all day long about what they should do. I really wanna pivot from twenty people what they should do to showing them what they can do about a year ago Collins founded the environmental resilience exceleron or to start researching solutions for adapting to climate change. One of its first projects is taking a city block in Oakland and installing solar panels and grey water technologies charging stations for electric vehicles and seeing how that makes the area self sufficient in an increasingly uncertain environment for private investors climate adaptation is both an opportunity and an imperative Jayco is managing director of the private equity firm light Smith group, I and four. We need to recognize the climate change is a humanitarian disaster. So before we get to the how awesome is it to make money off of this part of the discussion, you know, let's just pause for moment. And recognize that this is a bad bad problem. Choas farm as one of the very few focus specifically on investing and adaptation technology. He says governments alone can't afford all the solutions that will need private money will have to fund companies to build new technologies or help transfer existing tech to cities and countries that need it. But he says we don't have all the answers yet part of the challenge here has been when most people try to imagine what adaptation means they think of giant sea walls around Manhattan or putting domes over cities or some kind of futuristic Jerry bruckheimer scenario, where nowhere near some of that technology. And in fact, co says the first step in adapting to climate change is what he calls climate intelligence understanding the scope of the problem predicting, it's impa-. Tacts and getting everyone to use the same data. So tomorrow on the show. We'll look at one intelligence gathering effort happening at the global level with a visit to NASA. I'm Ali would. And that's marketplace tech. And now for some related links. There is of course, so much to say about this topic. And honestly, our coverage is probably going to evolve along with the conversation. So first of all here's some of the nuts and bolts about how this series will work for the rest of the week. We're going to talk about the data gathering efforts the money some of the early tech. And why talking about climate adaptation is a little bit controversial after that. We'll have a story every two weeks at least until the fall. But obviously, this isn't a topic that is going away and over on our website. Marketplace tech dot org. We've got a little bit of a reading list to get you started MIT technology reviews. Latest issue is all about climate change mitigation and at station. It's got a ton of good information intact and one huge aspect of this conversation is one of our favorite topics on this show, the uneven distribution of technology, a WBU our story out of Boston last week talks about fears of. Quote, green gentrification as that city works to become more resilient to flooding and sea level rise late last month. The Environmental Protection Agency put out one hundred fifty page document telling local communities to start planning. Now for the fact that natural disasters across the country are going to get a lot worse. And that is a rare admission of the effects of climate change from the current US administration. In fact, last week, the intergovernmental Arctic Council, which is made up of eight Arctic countries and regional groups, including the United States couldn't reach a consensus after its latest meeting, reportedly because the US delegation didn't want its priorities statement to include language about climate change. I'm Ali would. And that's marketplace tech. This is APN. Over the past few months you've been hearing divided decade our year long project covering the great recession, and it's ongoing impact. As a nonprofit news organization. We believe this kind of in depth. Reporting is essential to help people understand the economic forces that affect our lives to support this important work. Please go to marketplace dot org to become a marketplace investor with a donation of five dollars or more. Thank you. This. Marketplace podcast is brought to you by Sabi cloud storage, thinking about moving your data storage to the cloud who saw the enterprise class cloud storage at a fifth of the price of Amazon S three and up to six times faster with no hidden fees for egress or API requests who saw these low cost high speed fully secure storage blows away the competition, including Google and Microsoft distribution starts here. Do the math for yourself and start a free trial. It was Sabi dot com.

News, Traffic and Weather
Washington, Jerry Rubin and Morgan discussed on News, Traffic and Weather
"The effort man accused of setting explosives to government agencies will not enter a plea in court tomorrow as planned instead a judge order tan fan to undergo mental competency exam is accused of sending more than a dozen suspicious packages to military bases and other government buildings in the washington dc area a woman who worked as a trainer for the humboldt broncos team has died that brings the death toll of last week's devastating bus crash involving the junior hockey team to sixteen people the family of twenty five year old the dana lebron's says she died in the hospital today from those injuries the team was on its way to a playoff game when the bus collided with a semi trailer at an intersection in saskatchewan by september seattle could officially be granted a national hockey league team and if all goes well work will start on renovating keyarena this october today newly announced team president todd lightly he says he believes it will all come together we've got to be ready definitely it's not a date that you can move the part would be dropped the fans will be the stands we'd better be ready to go the former ceo of the seahawks joins majority owner david bonderman and co owner hollywood producer jerry bruckheimer the hope is for hockey fans to be rolling up two ticket booths at keyarena by the year twenty twenty so morgan any hints on a name for seattle sake team a lot of names being floated out there from the crack into a tribute to seattle's early hockey franchise the metropolitans but when we actually ask jerry bruckheimer about it we didn't get a lot of clues now the will help us david i think have the final decision so i'll just be know part of it thanks jerry rubin names out there include the sock is the totems and the emeralds coming up a desperate search ends it a strange location the mystery that took a washington woman into a missile silo plus a local dog owners warning to other families what she says her dog found in a park that nearly killed it at talk about a red hot real estate market the burned out home that's sparking a mind boggling bidding war you won't believe.