Advertisement
Home Blog Page 1737

Jessica Sula Interview – Going from ‘Skins’ to ‘Recovery Road’

Jessica Sula in Recovery Road
Jessica Sula stars in ‘Recovery Road’ (Photo by Adam Taylor / ABC Family)

Jessica Sula built up a fan following by starring in the British series, Skins, in 2011 and 2012. Now she’s made the leap to American television with a starring role in Freeform’s new dramatic series Recovery Road. The network (formerly known as ABC Family) presented a panel at the Television Critics Association event in Los Angeles, and following the Q&A I had the opportunity to sit down with Sula, along with a few other journalists, to discuss Recovery Road as well as her time on Skins.

The Plot: “Based on the popular young adult novel by Blake Nelson, Recovery Road focuses on Maddie (Sula), a teenage girl dealing with addiction. Maddie has a reputation as a party girl who doesn’t think she has a problem, until she’s confronted one day by her school guidance counselor and is forced to choose between expulsion and rehab. Maddie makes the difficult decision to live with other recovering addicts at a sober living facility while facing the daily pressures of her teenage life.”

Recovery Road premieres on January 25, 2016 at 9pm ET/PT.

Jessica Sula Interview:

How curious were you about what goes on in this world?

Jessica Sula: “I was very curious. We watched a lot of different, strange documentaries on the internet about sober living houses, AA meetings, and different effects of drugs and the way it affects different societies. And then I read a lot of different books. There’s lots of book, and you can go to the 12 Step book store and get different things.”


Did you visit any AA meetings?

Jessica Sula: “I’ve only been to one with my friend, but it was actually an Al-Anon meeting. The thing is AA has been going on since 1935 and it’s something that people don’t even know. It’s still hush-hush, so this is bringing it out in the complete mainstream. You know what I mean? I think it’s a good mainstream show on a topic that, surprisingly, no one really talks about.”

How does it feel to be a part of Recovery Road and out promoting your first American series?

Jessica Sula: “I’m very excited. I think it’s quite overwhelming at the moment. I’ve just been home for four weeks so coming back here and talking about the show is a vast change in reality for me. I would hope that it sends out a positive message and people are more empathetic toward the disease, addiction. It doesn’t become a taboo subject. It’s a family show, a young show, so it reaches out to young people.”

Do you think your fans from Skins will get into Recovery Road?

Jessica Sula: “I think Skins fans will enjoy it. They may miss the content of Skins. It’s just so different. It’s different but it’s similar. It deals with youth culture. We had a lot more liberties. Our network had a lot more liberties than ABC Family, however they are branching out. They are testing the waters. Quite a few things that happen in the episodes, some of the parts you wouldn’t expect.”

How would you describe your character in Recovery Road?

Jessica Sula: “She’s a darker character. Maddie is definitely darker than Skins‘ Grace. She a lot of demons that she needs to go through and battle and recognize. And it was just exciting to be able to portray that.”

Are you able to put that away at the end of the day?

Jessica Sula: “Yes, very much so. I have a great cast for that. You know, there are times when it’s quite overwhelming. But certainly I am able to go home and leave it.”

Has doing this show maybe made you consider your own approach to having a drink or two?

Jessica Sula: “Oh, yeah. You certainly do think. But then I think it’s something that you also know, too. I don’t really have…it’s part of the brain that has an addiction problem. Everybody has a vice, I suppose, and it does make you think about that deeply because it can come in all shapes. Like, ‘What am I really addicted to? What is it that I’m hooked on?’ I still haven’t found that out.”

For those who aren’t familiar with your previous work, what do you want viewers to know about you?

Jessica Sula: “They should know that I’m a gal that is taking it, seriously, each day at a time when it comes to all of this. I do like to have a cup of tea and sit home.”

Do you still live in the UK?

Jessica Sula: “I’m currently moving over here.”

What’s the biggest cultural difference for you?

Jessica Sula: “Well, you see, I was in New York for two and a half years, however I was living on different couches. I was living with different friends and working in different restaurants and auditioning at the same time, but now I am actually able to get an apartment.”

How did that time working in restaurants help you? Did it make you work harder to get acting roles?

Jessica Sula: “It did. I did go from Skins to like then just a big gap and just auditioning. I did an indie called Honeytrap, went from that to a big gap to Recovery Road. The gap was enough for me to actually get some urgency and ambition.”

You were working in restaurants after you did Skins?

Jessica Sula: “Yes, I was. Everything in England is compact; it’s quite small and nothing is made into something big. Everything’s underwhelming, so I suppose you get used to it. And then coming to America it helped with the accent, two years of me just working and listening to everything.”

Did anyone recognize while you were working in restaurants?

Jessica Sula: “Every once in a blue moon I’d be giving someone drinks and they’d say, ‘Weren’t you that…? I know, you were that girl in Skins.’ I’d be like, ‘Yes.’”

Do you feel closure with Skins? Were you happy with your arc?

Jessica Sula: “You know, I processed it a year after I left and then I felt a complete closure. And now it’s coming back full circle working with Seth on Recovery Road. I do hope the fan base from Skins comes across and watches Recovery Road.”

What was it that allowed you to process it a year later?

Jessica Sula: “I auditioned when I was 15, turned 16 when we started. Everything happened very, very young. I did an open audition and I didn’t expect to get anything. A month later you’re starting filming.”

Did you ever watch the American MTV version?

Jessica Sula: “I did a couple of times but I didn’t have cable so I couldn’t.”

‘Legends of Tomorrow’ Premiere Recap and Review: Pilot, Part One

Legends of Tomorrow Episode 1
Franz Drameh as Jefferson “Jax” Jackson, Victor Garber as Professor Martin Stein, Brandon Routh as Ray Palmer/Atom, Falk Hentschel as Carter Hall/Hawkman and Arthur Darvill as Rip Hunter in ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ (Photo: Jeff Weddell © 2015 The CW Network, LLC)

“In the future none of you are heroes…you’re legends,” says Rip Hunter (Arthur Darvill), a Time Master from the year 2166 who has traveled back to 2016 to recruit a handful of select individuals to stop an immortal warlord from conquering the world in CW’s new comic book-inspired fantasy television series Legends of Tomorrow.

After a failed plea to the Time Masters council to let him intervene and stop Vandal Savage (Casper Crump) from becoming the unstoppable immortal killer who eventually conquers and destroys the world, Rip travels back to 2016 to recruit his team: Ray Palmer aka The Atom (Brandon Routh), Martin Stein and Jefferson Jackson aka Firestorm (Victor Garber & Franz Drameh), Sara Lance aka White Canary (Caity Lotz), Kendra Saunders and Carter Hall aka Hawkgirl & Hawkman (Ciara Renee & Falk Hentschel) and Leonard Snart & Mick Rory aka Captain Cold and Heatwave (Wentworth Miller & Dominic Purcell). After capturing each of them and placing them up on a roof, Rip quickly explains to the dazed and annoyed future eight legends his hard-to-believe plan of using time travel to stop Savage from…you know. He appeals to their egos, informing them they will all become legends if they do this. Rip gives them a few hours to make up their minds, leaving his card with the time and meeting place with Stein should they want to be part of his team.


Atom tells The Arrow (Stephen Amell) about his new adventure and against Oliver’s strong advice not to go he, decides to not pass up saving the future. Sara is encouraged by her sister, The Black Canary, to go and help and is given a special white suit made just for her by The Flash’s good friend, Cisco. Dr. Stein is anxious to have the opportunity to travel in time. but his counterpart Jackson wants no part of it. So, Stein drugs him and kidnaps him so he they won’t be left out of the adventure. Hawkman and Hawkgirl argue like a married couple about going or not but in the end they join the team. Heatwave wants nothing to do with saving the world’s future, reminding Captain Cold they are criminals and enjoy stealing as opposed to working. Cold is able to change Heatwave’s mind by hinting at the major thefts they could pull in history before certain priceless items become well known. Heatwave finally says to Cold, “If you want me I’m in, but I’m nobody’s damn hero.”

So the rag-tag team of eight show up and board Rip’s flying time traveling machine called The Waverider. Once on board Rip introduces the gang to Gideon, the AI that runs the entire ship and only obeys the commands of Rip. (For anyone who watches The Flash, Gideon was first introduced in that show as the creation of a future older Barry Allen.) Rip informs the team that not even Gideon knows the whereabouts of Savage so they need to travel back in time and talk to Aldus Boardman (Peter Francis James), an expert on Vandal Savage who teaches in St. Roch, New Orleans in the year 1975.

The ship soars up and vanishes in the sky while two young bystanders watch in awe. They are quickly killed, however, by a scary-looking bounty hunter from the future who determined they were not “integral to the timeline.” On arriving at their destination and shaking off some of the side effects of time travel which include nausea, temporary blindness and vertigo, Rip, Hawkman, Hawkgirl, Dr. Stein and Atom leave to go find Boardmen. That leaves Captain Cold, Heatwave, White Canary and Jackson – who’s not happy about being kidnapped and forced to join the adventure against his will – on board the Waverider with Gideon in charge.

When they find Boardman, he indeed knows much about Savage and reveals that Kendra and Carter have a connection with Savage dating back to ancient Egypt. Okay, for anyone who has seen The Flash and Arrow crossover episode this season you already know this part. For those just now joining the CW’s DC universe keep reading this paragraph. Kendra and Carter were lovers in Egypt and Savage consumed with jealousy killed both of them. He prayed to the Hawk god Horus to damn the objects involved for all eternity. Shiera aka Kendra aka Hawkgirl – jeez, so many alias – prayed to the same god to protect she and Carter. This ended up causing them all to be connected to each through time. Radiation from meteorites destroying the palace where they laid dying exposed them to radiation, also bonding them and giving them their powers in reincarnated states. Boardman also reveals that he’s Kendra’s and Carter’s son from the last time they were alive and together which was before World War I.

Back at the Waverider, Sara, Snart, and Rory decide to head out and go have some drinks and fun in 1975 leaving Jackson alone on board the machine with Gideon. At the bar, Sara ends up in a fight with a big hulking jerk. His comrades soon join in, with Snart and Rory joining in backing her up and enjoying a good old roadhouse brawl.

As Boardman is finishing up his story, he tells Rip and the gang how he keeps spotting Savage in famous historical photographs that show he has been involved in every major conflict and global war in history. It’s then that Dr. Stein gets a severe headache and realizes Jackson is in trouble back on board the Waverider. It seems the bounty hunter has found and is attacking the ship, even though it has the ability to camouflage itself with its environment.

Rip, Boardman, Dr. Stein and the rest of the gang head back quickly to the ship and begin fighting the big bounty hunter when Sara, Rory and Snart also pull up to join the fight. Snart says, “We go out for one lousy drink and you guys somehow manage to pick a fight with Boba Fett!” Finally, everyone hops on board after wounding the bounty hunter but not before he delivers a fatal wound to Boardman. Rip orders Gideon to fly the ship out of danger.

Taking the ship into a Time Limbo, Rip sets out to make repairs to the ship while everyone wants answers to who the bounty hunter is and why he’s after them. Turns out the bounty hunter is named Kronos and was sent after Rip who has gone rogue and does not, repeat, does not have the blessing from the Time Master council to change history and stop Vandal Savage from conquering the world. Rip goes onto explain that the real reason he chose them to be part of his team is because they are insignificant to the timeline – yet powerful in their own ways. He believes working together they can stop Savage. Atom picks up on Rip’s extreme determination to end Savage and asks him what Savage did to Rip. Rip finally reveals that Savage brutally murdered his wife and son in the year 2166 along with thousands of other families. With the harsh truth revealed to them, Dr. Stein suggests they take a little time and decide if they want to continue being a team. After getting over their disappointment, the gang decide to stick it out and stop Savage from conquering the world and as a result hopefully change their own unimportant, insignificant lives to being truly legendary. The episode ends with a scene of Savage in Norway in the year 1975 revealing a major warhead and saying, “I’m just trying to make the world a better place one war at a time.”

Legends of Tomorrow Episode One Review:

Action-packed and with decent but not overly impressive special effects, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow is an entertaining spin-off of two stronger, better acted and written television shows. Arthur Darvill is solid as Rip Hunter, the time-traveling expert of the group who has a very personal score to settle with Savage and his family to save. He’s the Dr. Who of this rag-tag team of 2nd and 3rd rate superheroes.

Without a doubt the two best performances are delivered by Victor Garber reprising his role as Dr. Stein – originated on The Flash – and Wentworth Miller reprising his role of major villain Captain Cold, also originated on The Flash. Garber gives the show an emotional depth and a realistic anchor which is needed in a comic-book series about time travel, flying ships, and superheroes which has a lot in common with earlier groundbreaking TV shows including Dr. Who and Time Tunnel. Miller portrays the classic anti-hero who just happens to get all the best lines in the show with a rugged, cynical style that makes him by far the most interesting character of the group.

The series’ biggest problems are struggling to give all nine characters equal time in a 44 minute episode and having them all hunting the villain Vandal Savage who honestly wasn’t that interesting or dynamic a villain when he was introduced in The Flash and Arrow crossover episode in late 2015. In fact, both Captain Cold and Heatwave are far more intriguing and dangerous villains than Savage.

Here’s hoping that Legends of Tomorrow improves on its adventure with stronger writing and better action scenes and becomes an A grade comic-book television series in time.

GRADE: C

Horror Anthology ‘Southbound’ Debuts a Creepy Trailer

Southbound Film Photo

After a successful 2015 festival run, Soundbound‘s set for release both theatrically and on VOD in February. The just-released trailer provides a little taste of the five stories that make up the horror anthology from directors Roxanne Benjamin, David Bruckner, Radio Silence, and Patrick Horvath.


The Plots:

“The Way Out” – Directed by Radio Silence // Written by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin
Bloody and beaten, Mitch and Jack are on the run from a past they can’t escape—and a mysterious creature hunting them from afar.

“Siren” – Directed by Roxanne Benjamin // Written by Roxanne Benjamin & Susan Burke
When The White Tight’s tour van breaks down, lead singer Sadie seems to be the only one wary of the kindness of strangers—especially when they seem to know more about the band’s past than humanly possible…

“Accident” – Directed and Written by David Bruckner
At fault after a brutal car accident, Lucas must do everything in his power to save the life of a woman he doesn’t know.

“Jailbreak” – Directed by Patrick Horvath // Written by Dallas Hallam & Patrick Horvath
Danny has been searching for his sister Jesse for over a decade. When he finally finds her in a bar on the outskirts of hell the reunion isn’t as happy as he’d hoped for, and maybe some people aren’t meant to be found…

“The Way In” – Directed by Radio Silence // Written by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin
When a group of masked men interrupt a family’s last vacation together before daughter Jem goes off to college, all hell breaks loose.

Watch the Southbound trailer:

Oprah Winfrey Stars in ‘Greenleaf’ Scripted Series

Greenleaf TV Series
Merle Dandridge and Keith David in ‘Greenleaf’ (Photo Courtesy of OWN)

Oprah Winfrey is returning to scripted series television with a role in Lionsgate Television’s Greenleaf, a new dramatic series airing on OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network. The series will kick off its 13 episode season one with a two-night event on May, 24, 2016 at 10pm ET/PT and May 25th at 10pm. Greenleaf is written and produced by Craig Wright (Six Feet Under, Lost).


In addition to Winfrey, Greenleaf will star Merle Dandridge, Keith David, Lynn Whitfield, Desiree Ross, Kim Hawthorne, Deborah Joy Winans, and Gregory Alan Williams.

The Greenleaf Plot:

Greenleaf centers on the journey of estranged daughter and disillusioned preacher Grace Greenleaf (Dandridge) who has returned home after 20 years on the occasion of the mysterious death of her sister, Faith. As she reenters the world of Calvary Fellowship World Ministries, the Memphis megachurch run by her powerful parents Bishop James Greenleaf (David) and Lady Mae Greenleaf (Whitfield), it becomes evident that things are not as virtuous as they seem and that the family’s outward display of faith hides sin and misdeeds.

In the season premiere, directed by Clement Virgo (Book of Negroes), Grace and her teenage daughter Sophia (Ross) are warmly welcomed home by Grace’s father, Bishop James Greenleaf, but tensions quickly rise soon thereafter at a family dinner in the Greenleaf mansion. Grace’s mother is cold and hostile; her sister-in-law Kerissa (Hawthorne) questions her about her faith; and sister Charity (Winans) erupts with jealousy at the suggestion that Grace might preach at Calvary.

Later, blues club owner and Grace’s aunt Mavis (Winfrey) discuss the circumstances of Faith’s death and Mavis reveals some shocking information about Grace’s uncle “Mac” (Williams). Mavis is still estranged from the Greenleaf family and it starts to become evident that she intends to use Grace to sow the seeds of its destruction.

Marilyn Manson to Guest Star on ‘Salem’ Season Three

Marilyn Manson
Marilyn Manson (Photo © Richard Chavez)

Filming has just begun on season three of WGN America’s Salem in Shreveport, LA, and the network announced Marilyn Manson will be part of the cast of the new season in a special guest starring role. Manson’s been involved in the series from the beginning, collaborating on the show’s title track, “Cupid Carries a Gun,” with composer Tyler Bates. This season he’ll step in front of the camera to play Thomas Dinley, a “barber and surgeon who is the go-to man in Salem, from a shave and a haircut to being leeched, bled, sliced open or sewn up.”


Salem is written by the show’s creators Brannon Braga and Adam Simon. The cast includes Janet Montgomery as Mary Sibley, Shane West as Captain John Alden, Seth Gabel as Cotton Mather, Ashley Madekwe as Tituba, Tamzin Merchant as Anne Hale, Elise Eberle as Mercy Lewis, Iddo Goldberg as Isaac Walton, Joe Doyle as Baron Sebastian Marburg, and Oliver Bell as Mary’s son.

The Salem Season Three Plot:

Continuing its bloody, sexy and fantastical reimagining of Colonial America, Salem‘s third season dawns with the triumph of the witches’ plan to remake the New World by bringing the devil to earth and making Salem his capital. But the devil is a liar, and instead of a New World free from murderous Puritan hypocrisy, his own plan will bring nothing but death and slavery with the ultimate aim of leading humanity to destroy itself. And there’s only one person on earth who can beat the devil — the very witch that birthed him, his mother, Mary Sibley. The only problem is – she’s dead. Or is she?

Interviews with Janet Montgomery / Shane West / Adam Simon and Brannon Braga

‘Term Life’ Offers a New Poster and Trailer with Vince Vaughn and Hailee Steinfeld

Term Life Poster

Vince Vaughn (True Detective) plays dad to Hailee Steinfeld (Pitch Perfect 2) in the action film Term Life from director Peter Billingsley (best known as Ralphie in A Christmas Story). The official trailer’s arrived along with a new poster that features Vaughn, sporting an unusual and distracting hairstyle, and Steinfeld apparently in a very dangerous situation.

The cast also includes Bill Paxton, Jonathan Banks, Mike Epps, Jon Favreau, Jordi Molla, Shea Whigham, William Levy, Taraji P. Henson, Annabeth Gish, Terrence Howard, and Cain Velasquez.

Term Life will be available on VOD and digital download on March 1, 2016, followed by a theatrical release on April 8, 2016.

The Plot: Everyone wants Nick (Vince Vaughn) dead. A desperate man, Nick takes out a life insurance policy on himself, payable to his estranged daughter (Hailee Steinfeld). But the policy doesn’t take effect for 21 days and he might not live that long.

Watch the Term Life trailer:

First Single from ‘Santana IV’ Coming in February

Santana IV Cover ArtSantana IV marks the first time the quintet of Carlos Santana (guitar, vocals), Gregg Rolie (keyboards, lead vocals), Neal Schon (guitar, vocals), Michael Carabello (percussion) and Michael Shrieve (drums) have recorded together since 1971’s Santana III. The upcoming album will be released on April 15, 2016 and today it was announced the first single off of the new Santana album will be “Anywhere You Want to Go,” set to drop on February 5th.

“Anywhere You Want to Go” was written by Gregg Rolie and is described as a “sexy, body-shaking winner and an unmistakable tip of the hat to the inescapable cha-cha/Latin jazz charms of ‘Oye Como Va.'”

The album will include 16 new songs, with Ronald Isley of The Isley Brothers guesting on two tracks. Karl Perazzo (percussion) and Benny Rietveld (bass) are also featured on Santana IV.

Discussing the new album, Santana said, “It was magical. We didn’t have to try to force the vibe – it was immense. From there, we then needed to come up with a balance of songs and jams that people would immediately identify as Santana.”

Ronald Isley (The Isley Brothers) is a special guest on two tracks: “Love Makes the World Go Round” and “Freedom in Your Mind.” His vocals highlight the feverishly impassioned Latin-rock workout “Love Makes the World Go Round” and the hard-edged and funky “Freedom in Your Mind.” Guitar fans expecting fireworks from Santana and Schon will cherish Santana IV from front to back. “All Aboard” is a no-holds-barred guitar jam of the highest order, as is the slinky, soulful metal cruncher “Caminando,” which explodes with tectonic axe force. And on the unabashedly British blues-tinged “Shake It,” the two go toe to toe on not one but two extended solo runs that will have lovers of unhinged fretboard work rejoicing.

“Carlos and I feel more connected than ever,” said Schon. “We get super-aggressive when we play, but also melodic and poetic. We have an incredible dialog with each other on our guitars.”

“When you can go back and break new ground with joy and determination – and some whoop-ass energy – it gets you going,” added Santana. “I think we achieved something very rare. This music was screaming to come out of us. It wasn’t about nostalgia. It was about passion.”

‘Viking’s Adds Toronto Blue Jay’s Josh Donaldson

Josh Donaldson
Toronto Blue Jay and American League MVP Josh Donaldson. (Photo credit: Toronto Blue Jays / CNW Group / HISTORY)

Josh Donaldson’s apparently a huge Vikings fan and has been growing out his beard and hair to achieve a hairstyle inspired by Ragnar, played by Travis Fimmel. Donaldson recently took to Twitter to show off his new look which will fit right in on the set when he guest stars in History’s Vikings season four. Donaldson, the third baseman of the Toronto Blue Jays and American League MVP, will have a speaking role in the fourth season of the popular series, according to the network.

Donaldson will soon be visiting Ireland to join the cast and shoot his part in an upcoming episode. Donaldson will be playing Hoskuld, described as a “Viking warrior of great skill.” His episode will air later this season.

Vikings season four will premiere on Thursday, February 18, 2016 at 10pm ET/PT. The series stars Travis Fimmel, Katheryn Winnick, Clive Standen, Gustaf Skarsgard, Alexander Ludwig, Alyssa Sutherland, and Ben Robson.

The Vikings Plot:

In the upcoming season of Vikings, betrayal is everywhere as the powers begin to shift. Following the Vikings’ successful raid of Paris in season three, Ragnar is the most feared and respected leader in the Western World. However, his victory is short-lived as he is surrounded by those who seek his undoing.

Exclusive Interview: Sammy Hagar on ‘Rock n’ Roll Road Trip’

Sammy Hagar
Sammy Hagar (Photo Credit: Arthur Rosato)

Sammy Hagar has a new TV show on AXS. In Rock n’ Roll Road Trip, Hagar visits famous spots of rock n’ roll history. At each one, he speaks with another musician and plays with them. It turns out every rock star’s favorite drummer was John Bonham.

Hagar himself has had a storied solo career and sang with Van Halen and other bands. He attended an AXS party for the Television Critics Association, where we got to talk to him about the show and his music career. Rock n’ Roll Road Trip airs Sundays at 9PM on AXS.

Sammy Hagar Interview:

When you do the performance with the other bands in Rock n’ Roll Road Trip, do you have time to rehearse?

Sammy Hagar: “No, we get in and play. You know how in TV there’s always a hurry up and wait moment. When they’re setting up the camera angles, so far, we just start running through it. I’m saying, ‘Hey, that’s B-roll.’ We took it. That was it. With Bob Weir, we did about two or three more, but I like the spontaneity. I don’t want it to be great. I like Live at Darrell’s House, I did that show and it’s live. Maybe one or two takes, a couple mistakes, it’s good enough, let’s keep going. I think there’s something to that.”

Is jumping in with an established artist like that an abbreviated version of joining a new band? I’m sure it was more in-depth when you joined Van Halen but is there any comparison?

Sammy Hagar: “You know what, that’s interesting. Yeah, I’d absolutely say that. The first time I went down to play with the guys in Van Halen, I met ‘em a couple times but we weren’t really friends. I walked in there and there’s Ed, Al and Mikey. It’s a little uncomfortable. ‘What do you guys wanna play?’ ‘I don’t know, what do you wanna play?’ ‘I don’t know, what do you wanna play?’ It’s like that. So it is like that. With Tommy [Lee], I played with him a few times in Cabo, but it’s the same thing. Everybody’s nervous and nervous is edgy and edge is good I think for TV and music.”

What has talking to artists taught you about music?

Sammy Hagar: “Ooh, okay, something very deep. I realize now that most famous rock stars in rock n’ roll, in music I’ve been playing my whole life, have had some kind of personal problems growing up. Either some form of abuse or some kind of trouble or been burdened by something in their lives, and it makes them want to be stars. Other than that, they’re just normal f***ers that worked their asses off to learn how to play an instrument. Some of us got lucky and some of us didn’t. It’s a very interesting philosophy that I feel in these last few months, not from doing this show, but that’s just part of it. I really believe that. All these injured rock stars, they’re all injured.”

Why is John Bonham everyone’s favorite drummer?

Sammy Hagar: “Because he was the f***ing baddest, man. That’s why. It’s so funny you say that because it’s true. Every person, every drummer I’ve ever asked. The only guy that probably wouldn’t say it would be Neil Peart. I know he’s more of a jazz kind of guy, but all these other guys. Well, Ginger Baker never respected him either. Ginger Baker’s one of my other favorite drummers. They all pick John. You know, he had a foot on him where when he hit that foot, there’s the one. It would BOOM, cha, cha. BOOM. Musicians like that because most drummers don’t do that.”

What are your favorite rock n’ roll spots?

Sammy Hagar: “Cabo San Lucas. When we did Cabo it was great because I’m so hooked in there so it was my show, about me showing the world Cabo. So that was fun. I’ve been to every city in the world practically so to me it’s not a thrill to go to just any city. If I had my choice to do a tour again, I would do a coast tour. It would have to have a beach. I’d go right around the coast of America. So anybody that I can meet that’s on the coast, like do Tom Petty in Florida, I’ll stay near the coast, near the ocean.”

Everyone knows “I Can’t Drive 55” and “Red.” What songs are you especially gratified when fans single them out?

Sammy Hagar: “‘Eagles Fly,’ ‘Give To Live,’ ‘Right Now,’ the Van Halen song. Uplifting things like that. Those were my favorite things, when I came up with a chorus like, ‘Riiiight now’ I just knew that you could walk in any stadium in the world and everyone’s going to sing it. That’s gratifying to me.”

What did you think of using it in the Pepsi commercial?

Sammy Hagar: “They gave us a million dollars. Back in those days it was a lot of money for nothing. We were afraid to do it, that we were going to get ridiculed. I said, “Bullsh*t. That’s crazy. It’s public domain. Once you write a great song, if somebody wants to use it, they should be able to use it and you get paid for it.”

When you first heard “Dreams” with the whole band, was it special?

Sammy Hagar: “It was completely magical. I’d never sang in that register in my life. I didn’t know I could sing like that. I never had tried. I just thought no, you don’t try to sing like that. When I heard Eddie’s part and I started singing it, that’s the way I sing it. When I hear it now I sound like I’m on f***ing helium. I just remember Ronnie Montrose, who never gave me compliments, him and I never got along very well obviously, but when that song came out, he called me and said, ‘Hagar, you motherf***er, how the f*** did you do that?’ And I said I don’t know. I have to do it every night now though.”

Do a lot of people tell you stories about getting speeding tickets when “I Can’t Drive 55” is playing?

Sammy Hagar: “Sarah Palin was a classic one that happened a few years back when she was running for VP. She got pulled over and she told the cop, ‘I was listening to Sammy Hagar ‘I Can’t Drive 55,’ and got a ticket anyway.”

Was she actually listening to it, because I know someone who was and got a ticket.

Sammy Hagar: “A lot of people did too. I don’t know if she was or not but I love the story.”




New ‘London Has Fallen’ Poster with Gerard Butler

London Has Fallen Poster

Gramercy Pictures has unveiled the final theatrical poster for the action thriller London Has Fallen, the sequel to 2013’s Olympus Has Fallen. The new poster features Gerard Butler upfront and center, surrounded by Morgan Freeman, Aaron Eckhart, and Angela Bassett. Directed by Babak Najafi, the cast also includes Alon Moni Aboutboul, Robert Forster, Jackie Earle Haley, Melissa Leo, Radha Mitchell, Sean O’Bryan, Charlotte Riley, and Waleed Zuaiter. London Has Fallen opens on March 4, 2016.


The London Has Fallen Plot: The visceral intensity springs from a timely premise: after the British Prime Minister passes away, his funeral becomes a target of a terrorist organization to destroy some of the world’s most powerful leaders, devastate the British capital, and unleash a terrifying vision of the future. The only hope of stopping it rests on the shoulders of the President of the United States (Aaron Eckhart) and his formidable Secret Service head (Gerard Butler), and an English MI-6 agent (Charlotte Riley) who rightly trusts no one. Morgan Freeman also stars as the Vice President of the United States.

Trending