Post Malone took a nasty fall at his St. Louis show on Saturday. During his smash hit “Circles,” the rapper and singer fell through an opening in the Enterprise Center stage, and was visibly in a lot of pain.
The opening in question was a trap door meant for lowering his guitar and moving other equipment.
After the wipeout, Malone was helped up by medics and security personnel, and given treatment backstage. He returned just 15 minutes later to finish the show, and stayed afterwards to sign autographs, despite his injuries.
When he made it back to the stage, Malone addressed the concerned crowd. “I want to thank you for your patience,” he said. “And I’m sorry there was a big-a– hole in the stage.”
The singer added an emotional, “I want to say thank you to everybody for hanging in there, and I want to say thank you everybody,...
The opening in question was a trap door meant for lowering his guitar and moving other equipment.
After the wipeout, Malone was helped up by medics and security personnel, and given treatment backstage. He returned just 15 minutes later to finish the show, and stayed afterwards to sign autographs, despite his injuries.
When he made it back to the stage, Malone addressed the concerned crowd. “I want to thank you for your patience,” he said. “And I’m sorry there was a big-a– hole in the stage.”
The singer added an emotional, “I want to say thank you to everybody for hanging in there, and I want to say thank you everybody,...
- 9/19/2022
- by Ilana Frost
- Uinterview
Post Malone sustained a rib injury in a stage fall Saturday night during his St. Louis show after the rapper accidentally fell into an open trap door.
Midway through the concert, during his performance of “Circles,” Malone unknowingly walked toward where the stage door — used to shuttle equipment to and from the stage — was still open. Malone then partially plunged into the gap, slamming his ribs on the stage and, after a few moments of writhing in pain, called over for medical assistance.
After tending to his wounds backstage for roughly 15 minutes,...
Midway through the concert, during his performance of “Circles,” Malone unknowingly walked toward where the stage door — used to shuttle equipment to and from the stage — was still open. Malone then partially plunged into the gap, slamming his ribs on the stage and, after a few moments of writhing in pain, called over for medical assistance.
After tending to his wounds backstage for roughly 15 minutes,...
- 9/18/2022
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
You’d be forgiven for being surprised that Twelve Carat Toothache is the first studio album in three years for 26-year-old Austin Post. Putting aside the way the pandemic turned time into taffy, the tattoo-studded pop star known as Post Malone kept busy since the release of 2019’s blockbuster Hollywood’s Bleeding, playing a much-beloved Nirvana tribute livestream, appearing in ads for cred-hungry products, and even covering Hootie and the Blowfish to celebrate a quarter-century of Pokémon.
More importantly, his kitchen-sink take on pop, which borrows ideas from the past few decades of music,...
More importantly, his kitchen-sink take on pop, which borrows ideas from the past few decades of music,...
- 6/6/2022
- by Maura Johnston
- Rollingstone.com
While 2022 had been somewhat slow for releases, the month of May truly gave us some big records. Previous Grammy winners like Harry Styles, Bad Bunny, and Kendrick Lamar all released long-awaited albums, while Grammy nominee Jack Harlow also put out his sophomore record. With all these names being big hit-makers on the Grammy’s radar, how will these releases fare come nominations day this fall?
Perhaps the biggest release of the year so far is Styles’s “Harry’s House.” The record debuted with the biggest sales figures of the year so far, moving over 500,000 units in its first week. Styles’s “As It Was” was already a pretty safe contender for Record and Song of the Year, as well as Best Pop Solo Performance, but now the album has solidified its place in the Album of the Year race. What many might wonder, though, is if Styles can go...
Perhaps the biggest release of the year so far is Styles’s “Harry’s House.” The record debuted with the biggest sales figures of the year so far, moving over 500,000 units in its first week. Styles’s “As It Was” was already a pretty safe contender for Record and Song of the Year, as well as Best Pop Solo Performance, but now the album has solidified its place in the Album of the Year race. What many might wonder, though, is if Styles can go...
- 6/2/2022
- by Jaime Rodriguez
- Gold Derby
Victoria Justice (Afterlife of the Party) and Adam Demos (Sex/Life) have signed on to star in an untitled romantic comedy, which Stuart McDonald (Summer Heights High, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend) is directing for Netflix.
The film written by Elizabeth Hackett and Hilary Galanoy centers on a hard-driving LA wine-company exec who travels to an Australian sheep station to land a major client. There, she ends up working as a ranch hand and sparking with a rugged local.
Robyn Snyder, Deborah Evans, Deborah Glover, and Tracey Vieira are producing the pic, which will be shot on location in Queensland, Australia.
Tracey Robertson is exec producing with Nathan Mayfield, Elizabeth Hackett, Hilary Galanoy and Fernando Szew.
Production and post-production will be supported by the Queensland Government through Screen Queensland’s Production Attraction Strategy. The film will create around 120 jobs for Queenslanders.
“This new Netflix film is the latest...
The film written by Elizabeth Hackett and Hilary Galanoy centers on a hard-driving LA wine-company exec who travels to an Australian sheep station to land a major client. There, she ends up working as a ranch hand and sparking with a rugged local.
Robyn Snyder, Deborah Evans, Deborah Glover, and Tracey Vieira are producing the pic, which will be shot on location in Queensland, Australia.
Tracey Robertson is exec producing with Nathan Mayfield, Elizabeth Hackett, Hilary Galanoy and Fernando Szew.
Production and post-production will be supported by the Queensland Government through Screen Queensland’s Production Attraction Strategy. The film will create around 120 jobs for Queenslanders.
“This new Netflix film is the latest...
- 8/11/2021
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Victoria Justice and Adam Demos are teaming up for a new Netflix romcom, set to film on location in Queensland, Australia.
In the film, Justice stars as a hard-driving L.A. wine-company exec who, in order to land a major client, travels to an Australian sheep station where she ends up working as a ranch hand and sparking with a rugged local.
The as-yet-untitled movie will be directed by Stuart McDonald, from a script by Elizabeth Hackett and Hilary Galanoy, who previously worked with Demos on 2019’s “Falling Inn Love,” which also starred Christina Milian.
The project is produced by Robyn Snyder, Deborah Evans, Deborah Glover and Tracey Vieira. Tracey Robertson, Nathan Mayfield, Hackett, Galanoy and Fernando Szew serve as executive producers.
Both Justice and Demos have a history with the streamer, as Justice is next set to star in the Netflix movie “Afterlife of the Party” and Demos starred in the steamy drama “Sex/Life.
In the film, Justice stars as a hard-driving L.A. wine-company exec who, in order to land a major client, travels to an Australian sheep station where she ends up working as a ranch hand and sparking with a rugged local.
The as-yet-untitled movie will be directed by Stuart McDonald, from a script by Elizabeth Hackett and Hilary Galanoy, who previously worked with Demos on 2019’s “Falling Inn Love,” which also starred Christina Milian.
The project is produced by Robyn Snyder, Deborah Evans, Deborah Glover and Tracey Vieira. Tracey Robertson, Nathan Mayfield, Hackett, Galanoy and Fernando Szew serve as executive producers.
Both Justice and Demos have a history with the streamer, as Justice is next set to star in the Netflix movie “Afterlife of the Party” and Demos starred in the steamy drama “Sex/Life.
- 8/11/2021
- by Angelique Jackson
- Variety Film + TV
There are timely films and then there’s foreshadowing. Back in 2015, Kane Guglielmi partnered with writer John Ratchford to develop a script about a man who contracts a deadly virus and is put under quarantine by the authorities to stop him from spreading disease. The film was called “Cooped Up,” a lighthearted comedy.
Charles Cottier, who was making his feature film debut, plays wrestler Jake Ridge, who is cooped up in quarantine after coming into contact with a potentially fatal virus. He’s forced to isolate and has frequent temperature checks when nurse Emily (Kathryn Beck) visits him.
Guglielmi, an-editor-turned-director turned post-production supervisor, released the film in Australia back in 2016 but couldn’t get it released anywhere else — until coronavirus forced people around the world into quarantine. Suddenly, the comedy became relevant and Crackle bought the film, which can now be streamed on its platform.
It’s like you foreshadowed this whole coronavirus.
Charles Cottier, who was making his feature film debut, plays wrestler Jake Ridge, who is cooped up in quarantine after coming into contact with a potentially fatal virus. He’s forced to isolate and has frequent temperature checks when nurse Emily (Kathryn Beck) visits him.
Guglielmi, an-editor-turned-director turned post-production supervisor, released the film in Australia back in 2016 but couldn’t get it released anywhere else — until coronavirus forced people around the world into quarantine. Suddenly, the comedy became relevant and Crackle bought the film, which can now be streamed on its platform.
It’s like you foreshadowed this whole coronavirus.
- 6/24/2020
- by Jazz Tangcay
- Variety Film + TV
Australian filmmaker Kane Guglielmi is likely the first person to shoot a film about a person forced into quarantine after contracting coronavirus — and he did it four years ago. And no one is more surprised to see real life mirroring the events of his first feature, “Cooped Up.”
“At first, when it first started happening, a few people contacted me, saying, ‘Your movie is starting to look at a lot like real life,'” Guglielmi told TheWrap. “This was prior to everyone being forced into their homes. A week or two later, the penny dropped, and I thought, this is seriously identical to my film.”
And the real-world connections helped the film to belatedly land a U.S. distribution deal with Crackle Plus — where it begins streaming on May 14 — something that didn’t seem possible four years ago. When he first tried to line up a U.S. release, he said,...
“At first, when it first started happening, a few people contacted me, saying, ‘Your movie is starting to look at a lot like real life,'” Guglielmi told TheWrap. “This was prior to everyone being forced into their homes. A week or two later, the penny dropped, and I thought, this is seriously identical to my film.”
And the real-world connections helped the film to belatedly land a U.S. distribution deal with Crackle Plus — where it begins streaming on May 14 — something that didn’t seem possible four years ago. When he first tried to line up a U.S. release, he said,...
- 5/8/2020
- by Beatrice Verhoeven
- The Wrap
‘Cooped Up.’
Kane Guglielmi’s prophetic, 2016 quarantine-set romantic comedy Cooped Up is enjoying a second life – and sparking controversy.
Charles Cottier stars as Jake, a bitter, semi-professional wrestler who is forced to stay in his childhood home for 21 days after coming into contact with a potentially fatal virus.
Jake’s only connection to the outside world is medic Emily (Kathryn Beck), who checks on his symptoms each day. The cast includes the ubiquitous Stephen Peacocke and Adam Demos.
It screened on 10 Peach on May 1 and will premiere in the Us on Ott service Crackle Plus on May 14.
However Network 10 removed the opening 3-second dedication to Kane’s brother, who took his own life when he was a kid. The dedication card was placed at the end of the credits but in some regions the credits weren’t even played.
The director protested strongly, telling the network: “To think that such a significant person,...
Kane Guglielmi’s prophetic, 2016 quarantine-set romantic comedy Cooped Up is enjoying a second life – and sparking controversy.
Charles Cottier stars as Jake, a bitter, semi-professional wrestler who is forced to stay in his childhood home for 21 days after coming into contact with a potentially fatal virus.
Jake’s only connection to the outside world is medic Emily (Kathryn Beck), who checks on his symptoms each day. The cast includes the ubiquitous Stephen Peacocke and Adam Demos.
It screened on 10 Peach on May 1 and will premiere in the Us on Ott service Crackle Plus on May 14.
However Network 10 removed the opening 3-second dedication to Kane’s brother, who took his own life when he was a kid. The dedication card was placed at the end of the credits but in some regions the credits weren’t even played.
The director protested strongly, telling the network: “To think that such a significant person,...
- 5/7/2020
- by The IF Team
- IF.com.au
Crackle Plus has acquired “Cooped Up,” a film produced in 2016 about a man quarantined with coronavirus, and will release it on May 14, it was announced on Thursday.
Produced and directed by Kane Guglielmi, “Cooped Up” follows Jake (played by Charles Cottier), who came into contact with a potentially fatal coronavirus and is forced to isolate in his childhood home for 21 days. His only connection to the outside world is the female medic who comes to check on his symptoms every day.
The film also stars Kathryn Beck (“Neighbours”), Adam Demos (“UnREAL”) and Stephen Peacocke (“Home and Away”).
Also Read: Seth Meyers Rips 'Sadistic' Trump for His Lack of Empathy for Coronavirus Victims (Video)
“Cooped Up” was produced in Australia in 2016, four years before the Covid-19 pandemic would hit the world. Guglielmi came up with the idea due to financial constraints, but he wanted to make an original yet affordable feature film.
Produced and directed by Kane Guglielmi, “Cooped Up” follows Jake (played by Charles Cottier), who came into contact with a potentially fatal coronavirus and is forced to isolate in his childhood home for 21 days. His only connection to the outside world is the female medic who comes to check on his symptoms every day.
The film also stars Kathryn Beck (“Neighbours”), Adam Demos (“UnREAL”) and Stephen Peacocke (“Home and Away”).
Also Read: Seth Meyers Rips 'Sadistic' Trump for His Lack of Empathy for Coronavirus Victims (Video)
“Cooped Up” was produced in Australia in 2016, four years before the Covid-19 pandemic would hit the world. Guglielmi came up with the idea due to financial constraints, but he wanted to make an original yet affordable feature film.
- 5/7/2020
- by Beatrice Verhoeven
- The Wrap
Exclusive: Crackle Plus has picked up timely Oz rom-com Cooped Up, about life and love under coronavirus, quarantine and Ppe. The funny thing is, the movie was made in 2016.
The prophetic film follows a bitter semi-professional wrestler who, after coming into contact with a deadly coronavirus, is quarantined to his family home for 21 days, with his only connection to the outside world being the female medic who checks on his symptoms daily.
Charles Cottier (Home and Away), Kathryn Beck (Neighbours), Adam Demos (unREAL) and Stephen Peacocke (Home And Away) star in the feature which is written and directed by Oz filmmaker Kane Guglielmi. John Ratchford also scripted.
In a further twist of fate, Guglielmi, who sold his own home in Sydney to fund the film, is himself currently under quarantine in Italy, which has been one of the worst impacted countries by the current coronavirus pandemic.
Guglielmi said, “When I made Cooped Up,...
The prophetic film follows a bitter semi-professional wrestler who, after coming into contact with a deadly coronavirus, is quarantined to his family home for 21 days, with his only connection to the outside world being the female medic who checks on his symptoms daily.
Charles Cottier (Home and Away), Kathryn Beck (Neighbours), Adam Demos (unREAL) and Stephen Peacocke (Home And Away) star in the feature which is written and directed by Oz filmmaker Kane Guglielmi. John Ratchford also scripted.
In a further twist of fate, Guglielmi, who sold his own home in Sydney to fund the film, is himself currently under quarantine in Italy, which has been one of the worst impacted countries by the current coronavirus pandemic.
Guglielmi said, “When I made Cooped Up,...
- 5/7/2020
- by Andreas Wiseman
- Deadline Film + TV
After directing TV episodes and shorts, Kane Guglielmi is so keen to make his first feature he is selling his house to finance the production.
Due to shoot in February, Cooped Up is a black comedy about a bitter professional wrestler named Jake Ridge who comes into contact with a potentially fatal virus while wrestling in Sydney.
He.s forced to spend 21 days in isolation in his childhood home. His only link to the outside world is Dr. Emily Mundy, an expert in emerging viruses who abhors violence and can't comprehend how a man could make a living pretending to fight.
Charles Cottier (Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries, Home and Away, Please Like Me) is attached to play Jake. The casting of Emily and other roles is yet to be finalised.
The screenplay is by UK-based Australian John Ratchford. Guglielmi, who has directed episodes of Home and Away, will direct and...
Due to shoot in February, Cooped Up is a black comedy about a bitter professional wrestler named Jake Ridge who comes into contact with a potentially fatal virus while wrestling in Sydney.
He.s forced to spend 21 days in isolation in his childhood home. His only link to the outside world is Dr. Emily Mundy, an expert in emerging viruses who abhors violence and can't comprehend how a man could make a living pretending to fight.
Charles Cottier (Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries, Home and Away, Please Like Me) is attached to play Jake. The casting of Emily and other roles is yet to be finalised.
The screenplay is by UK-based Australian John Ratchford. Guglielmi, who has directed episodes of Home and Away, will direct and...
- 11/2/2015
- by Don Groves
- IF.com.au
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