By A Texas Reader
thursday, march 20, 2025 at 09:25:33 p.m. edt
"dallas rapepr [sic] Yella Beezy charged in mo3's murder, accused of hiring hitman"
https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/dallas-rapepr-yella-beezy-arrested-mo3s-murder-hitman/3797540/
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3 comments:
Another win/win. Great story to end the day with.
--GRA
Here's hoping for a death penalty, even if it means waiting decades before I can finally post a zinger about the closing scene of "Old Yella".
But some small pleasures are immediate. Paragraph six begins:
"Federal prosecutors also brought charges against both White and Brown."
"SNOW bLACK" MANAGES $16 MILLION,LONG WAY TO GO TO MAKE A PROFIT;DE NIRO'S AND BARRY LEVINSON'S "THE ALTO KNIGHTS"
ATTRACTS NO ONE.
(variety)Disney‘s “Snow White” is the fairest of them all on box office charts. The musical earned $16 million across Friday and preview screenings from 4,200 venues. It’s enough of a start to put “Snow White,” which stars Rachel Zegler and Gal Gadot, on track to land within projections for an opening weekend north of $45 million.
That would mark the second-biggest debut of the year behind fellow Disney release “Captain America: Brave New World.” But like that Marvel Cinematic Universe entry, “Snow White” is budgeted like a four-quadrant tentpole and needs to play like one. The Marc Webb-directed fairy tale carries a massive production cost north of $250 million, meaning it faces a steep climb to profitability.
Meanwhile, Warner Bros. will hope to forget about it after opening the mafia drama “The Alto Knights,” a crime period piece that sees Robert De Niro playing two identical (yet biologically unrelated) gang leaders in New York. The film got whacked with a meagre $1.17 million across Friday and previews, playing in 2,651 theaters.
Like fellow Warner release “Mickey 17,” which misfired in its opening just two weeks ago, “The Alto Knights” is a star-driven, original R-rated drama from a filmmaker with awards history (here, in director Barry Levinson). Unlike “Mickey 17,” which can’t draw a big enough audience to justify its nine-digit budget, “Alto Knights” is a more measured affair, with a $45 million production cost. But also unlike “Mickey 17,” “Alto Knights” simply isn’t drawing much of anyone at all.
GRA:Years ago,I'd give the De Niro flick a go at the movie theater,based on the mafia theme,Levinson and De Niro. Maybe if it sticks around a few days(not sure if it's in Grand Rapids yet),I'll try it out.
--GRA
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