Biden heads to Capitol Hill to rally Democrats on voting rights

Biden heads to Capitol Hill to rally Democrats on voting rights
Biden heads to Capitol Hill to rally Democrats on voting rights
MELINA MARA/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden headed to Capitol Hill Thursday in an attempt to persuade Democratic lawmakers to back a major change to the Senate’s rules that would allow a pair of voting rights bills to move forward.

The trip amounts to him putting his money where his mouth is, after delivering an impassioned speech Tuesday in which he said there was “no option” except for senators to do away with the filibuster — a rule that requires 60 votes, rather than a simple majority of 50, to advance most legislation — if the bills could not be advanced another way.

“I’ve been having these quiet conversations with members of Congress for the last two months,” he said Tuesday. “I’m tired of being quiet!”

The White House has said that in the wake of his speech in Atlanta — where Biden was joined by Vice President Kamala Harris — Biden and Harris “will be working the phones over the next several days pushing members of the Senate to support voting rights legislation and changes to Senate rules.”

On Thursday, the White House said, Biden will meet with Senate Democrats “to discuss the urgent need to pass legislation to protect the constitutional right to vote” and “again underline that doing so requires changing the rules of the Senate to make the institution work again.”

But Biden faces an uphill battle transforming rhetoric into action. A pair of Democratic senators — Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona — have remained intransigent in their opposition to taking such a step.

Sinema reiterated in a Senate floor speech Thursday, as Biden prepared to head to the Hill, that she would not support changing the rule.

“There’s no need for me to restate my longstanding support for the 60-vote threshold to pass legislation. There’s no need for me to restate its role in protecting our country from wild reversals of federal policy,” Sinema said. “This week’s harried discussions about Senate rules are but a poor substitute for what I believe could have and should have been a thoughtful public debate at any time over the past year.”

“Demands to eliminate this threshold from whichever party holds the fleeting majority amount to a group of people separated on two sides of a canyon, shouting that solution to their colleagues,” she added.

With prospects of passage so uncertain even after his fiery speech, the president is risking his political capital, particularly as he struggles to get another domestic priority — his “Build Back Better” social legislation — through the Senate.

Biden has made clear this week who he thinks would be to blame if he’s unsuccessful: Republicans, who he said Tuesday were choosing the side of standing in the way of advancing civil rights if they block the bills.

And all 50 Republican senators oppose the bills, which Democrats say are needed to create national standards for making voting more accessible and to put a check on new state laws that make it more difficult for members of minority groups and others to cast their ballots.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell appeared visibly angry Wednesday as he blasted Biden’s speech, calling it “profoundly, profoundly unpresidential.” He deemed the remarks a “rant” that “was incoherent, incorrect and beneath his office.”

When asked by ABC News about McConnell’s rebuke, Biden said: “I like Mitch McConnell. He’s a friend.”

Despite Biden’s support for a carveout to the filibuster, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Wednesday that Democrats planned to use existing rules to prevent Republicans from using the filibuster to block debate from starting.

House Democrats are expected to replace an existing piece of legislation — one that would not require a vote for debate to begin — with both the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, allowing them to bypass Republicans’ attempts to block the legislation from debate.

“The Senate will finally debate voting rights legislation, and then every Senator will be faced with a choice of whether or not to pass the legislation to protect our democracy,” Schumer wrote in a memo to the Democratic Caucus Wednesday.

Still, Republicans will have another opportunity to block the bill from passing by filibustering before debate ends. Without changing the rules around the filibuster, the legislation will still require 60 votes to pass.

Biden, a veteran of the Senate and a self-described “institutionalist,” has undergone an evolution in his view of the filibuster during the first year as president.

In an interview in March, Biden told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos that he supports bringing back the “talking filibuster,” a version of the rule that would require a senator to “stand up and command the floor” and “keep talking” in order to hold up legislation.

Biden went further during a CNN town hall in October, noting that he would be open to “fundamentally altering” the filibuster on issues of particular consequence like voting rights.

But Biden’s most definitive comments came in December while speaking with ABC News’ David Muir, saying he would support a carveout to the filibuster in order to pass the voting rights legislation if that was the “only thing” standing in the way.

“If the only thing standing between getting voting rights legislation passed and not getting passed is the filibuster, I support making the exception of voting rights for the filibuster,” Biden told Muir.

ABC News’ Trish Turner and Allison Pecorin contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

America and Paul Rodgers secure publishing rights deals with Primary Wave

America and Paul Rodgers secure publishing rights deals with Primary Wave
America and Paul Rodgers secure publishing rights deals with Primary Wave
Sergione Infuso/Corbis via Getty Images; Scott Legato/Getty Images

Add America and founding Free/Bad Company frontman Paul Rodgers to the list of artists who have recently sold off all or some of their song publishing rights to the Primary Wave Music company.

Primary Wave announced Wednesday that it had acquired the rights to the music catalogue of America co-founders Gerry Beckley and Dewey Bunnell. The multi-million-dollar deal includes rights to such enduring hits as the chart-topping “A Horse with No Name” and “Sister Golden Hair,” and the top-10 singles “Ventura Highway” and “Tin Man.”

The agreement also includes some name and likeness rights.

“We are pleased that our catalogue is now in the able hands of the good folks at Primary Wave, where the music we have created over the last 50 years will be given new attention and exposure,” says Bunnell.

As for Rodgers, his deal includes Primary Wave acquiring a stake in the Free and Bad Company catalogues, as well as “master recording income streams from both bands.”

Free is best-known for the 1970 smash “All Right Now,” while Bad Company had a string of popular songs during the 1970s that Rodgers wrote or co-wrote, including “Feel Like Makin’ Love,” “Shooting Star” and “Wishing Well.”

Also as part of the deal, Rodgers will create an imprint that will be distributed by the Sun Records label, which Primary Wave acquired in late 2020. Via the imprint, the singer will sign new artists and also curate compilations.

“Given [Primary Wave’s] deep knowledge of my catalogue, joining forces with them seems a natural progression, to ensure that the messages and the music live on for the fans,” Rodgers says of the deal.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Peacemaker’, John Cena’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ spin-off series, drops today on HBO Max

‘Peacemaker’, John Cena’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ spin-off series, drops today on HBO Max
‘Peacemaker’, John Cena’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ spin-off series, drops today on HBO Max
HBO Max

Early Thursday morning, HBO Max debuted the first three episodes of Peacemaker, the series spinning off John Cena‘s clueless vigilante character from writer-director James Gunn‘s The Suicide Squad.

Gunn surprised fans by announcing he was already at work on the show shortly after the movie wrapped. “I think it took him by surprise as well,” admits The Suicide Squad co-star Jennifer Holland, Gunn’s longtime girlfriend, who also made the jump with Cena to Peacemaker. She reprises her role as NSA agent Emilia Harcourt.

Holland explained to ABC Audio that COVID played a big part in the show’s creation. “I mean, it was immediately after we got back from…[The Suicide Squad] shoot that everything kind of started shutting down and all this craziness happened…”

She adds, “During…such a sort of unknown territory that we were in with COVID, not knowing…how long we were going to be experiencing this — it turns out a lot longer than we thought — [Gunn] just instantly started writing something to sort of soothe himself…And I think it was just kind of getting all of his emotions out about what was going on…”

In Peacemaker, Holland’s Harcourt is stuck with working with Cena’s character. Her team, it should be said, has no trouble making fun of him behind his back — and to his face.

“In general, she’s very dry and cold and sarcastic, but, you know, when it comes to Peacemaker, I think she just doesn’t care if she hurts his feelings. She feels that he deserves everything that comes at him at this point.”

“In The Suicide Squad, she was…just there to sort of facilitate the Squad’s mission,” Holland explains. “And so getting to explore the different sides of her training and abilities in the show was an absolute blast.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Why are The Chainsmokers using doppelgängers? Their new teaser video may shed some light

Why are The Chainsmokers using doppelgängers?  Their new teaser video may shed some light
Why are The Chainsmokers using doppelgängers?  Their new teaser video may shed some light
Bryan Steffy/Getty Images for Wynn Las Vegas

The Chainsmokers are back — or, at least that’s what their label wants you to believe.

The EDM duo activated their TikTok last week to tease their new music, but fans soon noticed that the Alex Pall and Drew Taggart appearing in the videos were not actually them.  That realization, paired with the group’s nearly three-year hiatus from the music world, caused Chainsmokers-related conspiracy theories to spread on the social media app.  Some fans even wondered if we were witnessing 2022’s version of the 1969 urban legend about Paul McCartney — where some believed the Beatles legend secretly died and was replaced by a trained lookalike.

The Chainsmokers added even more fuel to the fire on Thursday in a brand new video that confirmed Alex and Drew are MIA.  The post, titled “SORRY, THE CHAINSMOKERS ARE BACK,” featured their doppelgängers taking over their lives — from hanging out with their friends, controlling their social media, burning their mountains of cash and, most importantly, making music.

The promo also features people commenting on The Chainsmokers’ new appearance, with one higher up remarking, “We had to replace the original guys because they took two f****** years to make an album.  But nobody knows what they really look like, so, it doesn’t matter.”

The video offers a twist at the end, with the lookalikes realizing being a Chainsmoker is a heavy burden to bear and quit, causing the label to come crawling back to the real Alex and Drew.

The video ends with the real duo celebrating their return and teasing their brand new single, “High,” which is available to pre-save now.  It will be the first single from their upcoming album, which is currently dubbed TCS4.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Spoon announces US tour dates

Spoon announces US tour dates
Spoon announces US tour dates
Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

Spoon has announced a U.S. headlining tour.

The outing begins with a February 8 show in Santa Ana, California, and includes dates sprinkled throughout April, May and June. Tickets go on sale next Friday, January 21.

For the full list of dates and all ticket info, visit SpoontheBand.com.

Spoon will be touring in support of their forthcoming album Lucifer on the Sofa, which drops February 11. The record includes the lead single “The Hardest Cut.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

An offer you can’t refuse: ‘The Godfather’ getting a theatrical re-release for its 50th anniversary

An offer you can’t refuse: ‘The Godfather’ getting a theatrical re-release for its 50th anniversary
An offer you can’t refuse: ‘The Godfather’ getting a theatrical re-release for its 50th anniversary
Paramount Pictures

To commemorate the 50th anniversary of Francis Ford Coppola‘s Oscar-winning epic The Godfather, Paramount Pictures has announced the acclaimed film is headed back to theaters. 

The masterpiece will screen for a limited time exclusively in Dolby Cinema at AMC Theatres in the U.S., as well as in international territories around the world, starting February 25, 2022.

What’s more, all three films in the Godfather saga, “meticulously restored under the direction of Coppola” will debut for the first time on 4K Ultra HD on March 22, 2022, just before The Godfather‘s official 50th birthday on March 24.

“I am very proud of The Godfather, which certainly defined the first third of my creative life,” says Coppola in a statement. “With this 50th anniversary tribute, I’m especially proud Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone is included, as it captures Mario and my original vision in definitively concluding our epic trilogy.”

Coda was Coppola’s 2020 mostly well-received re-edit of 1990’s Godfather III, which debuted to a harsh critical reception.

Coppola adds of the forthcoming 4K release, “It’s also gratifying to celebrate this milestone with Paramount alongside the wonderful fans who’ve loved it for decades, younger generations who still find it relevant today, and those who will discover it for the first time.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Katy Perry pens sweet birthday message to Orlando Bloom: “I thank my lucky stars for you”

Katy Perry pens sweet birthday message to Orlando Bloom: “I thank my lucky stars for you”
Katy Perry pens sweet birthday message to Orlando Bloom: “I thank my lucky stars for you”
Jon Kopaloff/WireImage

Katy Perry didn’t hold back honoring fiancé Orlando Bloom on his birthday when penning a heartfelt message on Thursday.

Taking to Instagram to share a collection of photos and videos that highlighted some of her favorite memories, she declared, “Happiest 45th to the kindest, deepest, most soulful, sexy & strong man I know.”

Among the carousel of memories Katy included are various photos taken during their vacations, a clip of Orlando riding his bicycle around their kitchen as her pup chases him, as well as an adorable video of the Lord of the Rings actor dutifully feeding her a sandwich while she nurses their one-year-old daughter, Daisy Dove.

“Thank you for being a constant compass, an unwavering anchor and bringing joi de vivre into every room you walk in.  You are the love and light of my life,” the “Smile” singer continued. “I thank my lucky stars for you and our darling dd.”

Orlando and Katy got engaged on Valentine’s Day in 2019 but have yet to tie the knot after the pandemic forced them to postpone their wedding plans.  The private couple have yet to announce a new date.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

“Here’s to taking the quest”: Maren Morris announces her third album, ‘Humble Quest’

“Here’s to taking the quest”: Maren Morris announces her third album, ‘Humble Quest’
“Here’s to taking the quest”: Maren Morris announces her third album, ‘Humble Quest’
ABC

Maren Morris sent a big announcement fans’ way on Thursday morning: Her third album, called Humble Quest, is due out March 25.

The singer shared the news on social media, along with a personal letter that reflected on how the COVID-19 pandemic — and becoming a mom to her son, Hayes — shaped her new project.

“For the first time in many years, I was not in control,” Maren writes. “I wasn’t in control of the fate of my career, or of taking care of all my people without the promise of touring, or even of my body ‘snapping back’ after giving birth to my first child. Each day, my control descended into quiet, unmeasured chaos inside the same four walls.”

She began to think about the meaning of the word “humble,” the singer continues, and she started wondering whether or not that word applied to her. As it turned out, there were many things that “humbled” her in recent years: The pandemic, the death of her friend and producer busbee, her evolving relationship with her husband Ryan Hurd and her transition into parenthood.

“Am I humble enough now? Maybe. Or maybe I still haven’t found it yet,” Maren concludes. “…But here’s to taking the quest to find out…”

In addition to announcing the project and some of the themes behind it, Maren shared the full track list of the 11-song collection. It includes the title track of Humble Quest, plus lead single “Circles Around This Town,” which Maren dropped earlier this month.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Listen to new Korn song, “Forgotten”

Listen to new Korn song, “Forgotten”
Listen to new Korn song, “Forgotten”
Keith Griner/Getty Images

Korn has premiered a new song called “Forgotten.”

The track, which is available now for digital download, is the second cut to be released from Korn’s upcoming album Requiem, following lead single “Start the Healing.”

Requiem, Korn’s 14th studio album, will be released February 4. It’s the follow-up to 2019’s The Nothing.

Korn will launch a headlining tour in support of Requiem March 4 in Springfield, Missouri. Before that, they’ll play a batch of dates with System of a Down beginning January 31 in Phoenix.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ex-Blue Öyster Cult drummer Albert Bouchard playing special show focusing on recent concept albums

Ex-Blue Öyster Cult drummer Albert Bouchard playing special show focusing on recent concept albums
Ex-Blue Öyster Cult drummer Albert Bouchard playing special show focusing on recent concept albums
Albert Bouchard and Joe Bouchard; ABC Audio

Former Blue Öyster Cult drummer Albert Bouchard will be playing a special concert celebrating his two recent solo concept albums — 2020’s Re Imaginos and 2021’s Imaginos II Bombs over Germany — this Saturday, January 15, in Fall River, Massachusetts.

The show will feature Bouchard and his backing group — called the Imaginos Band — performing Re Imaginos in its entirety, as well as selections from Imaginos II and various classic songs from Blue Öyster Cult’s catalog.

The concert at Narrows Center for the Arts will mark the first time Bouchard performs many of the songs from the Imaginos saga live with a full group of musicians.

The Imaginos Band lineup includes Albert’s brother, Joe Bouchard — who was Blue Öyster Cult’s longtime bassist — as well as veteran guitarist/singer Mike Fornatale, who has played with latter-day versions of such 1960s group’s as The Left Banke, Moby Grape and The Monks.

As previously reported, Re Imaginos was an updated version of the 1988 Blue Öyster Cult concept album, Imaginos, which was based on the writings and poems of late Blue Öyster Cult manager, producer and songwriter Sandy Pearlman. The album was about an alien conspiracy that comes to fruition during the late 1800s and early 1900s, through the actions of an evil character.

The Imaginos II album continued the story, and Albert plans to record a third installment of the saga.

Bouchard recently released a vinyl version of Imaginos II that’s available at Merchbucket.com on black, black-and-red and black-and-white vinyl.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.