Lawmakers say Amazon reps, including Jeff Bezos, misled or ‘may have lied to Congress’

Lawmakers say Amazon reps, including Jeff Bezos, misled or ‘may have lied to Congress’
Lawmakers say Amazon reps, including Jeff Bezos, misled or ‘may have lied to Congress’
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(NEW YORK) — A bipartisan group of lawmakers is accusing Amazon leadership — including former CEO Jeff Bezos — of misleading or lying to Congress in the wake of reports from media outlets that they say “directly contradicts the sworn testimony and representations” from Amazon about its business practices.

In a letter sent to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy on Monday, lawmakers on the House Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee are asking the e-commerce giant to correct the record and provide “exculpatory evidence” to corroborate prior testimony and statements made to the committee.

The lawmakers reference investigative journalism pieces from Reuters and The Markup that alleged Amazon used data from individual sellers to create similar items and boost its own products in India, and that Amazon places products from its own brand ahead of those from competitors even on the U.S. site.

“At best, this reporting confirms that Amazon’s representatives misled the Committee,” the letter, signed by Reps. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., David N. Cicilline, D-R.I., Ken Buck, R-Colo., Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., and Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., states. “At worst, it demonstrates that they may have lied to Congress in possible violation of federal criminal law.”

“In light of the serious nature of this matter, we are providing you with a final opportunity to provide exculpatory evidence to corroborate the prior testimony and statements on behalf of Amazon to the Committee,” the lawmakers added. “We strongly encourage you to make use of this opportunity to correct the record and provide the Committee with sworn, truthful, and accurate responses to this request as we consider whether a referral of this matter to the Department of Justice for criminal investigation is appropriate.”

An Amazon spokesperson denied the allegations raised in the letter, and called the media articles in question “inaccurate.”

“Amazon and its executives did not mislead the committee, and we have denied and sought to correct the record on the inaccurate media articles in question,” a company spokesperson told ABC News in a statement Monday. “As we have previously stated, we have an internal policy, which goes beyond that of any other retailer’s policy that we’re aware of that prohibits the use of individual seller data to develop Amazon private label products.”

“We investigate any allegations that this policy may have been violated and take appropriate action,” the statement added. “In addition, we design our search experience to feature the items customers will want to purchase, regardless of whether they are offered by Amazon or one of our selling partners.”

The lawmakers, meanwhile, point to the “credible reporting” in Reuters and The Markup. The lawmakers said the claims made in the recent articles are at odds with the July 16, 2019 testimony from Nate Sutton, Amazon’s Associate General Counsel, who told them that Amazon does “not use any seller data for — to compete with them” and that Amazon does not “use any of that specific data in creating our own private brand products.” Moreover, Sutton also testified that Amazon’s search rankings are not designed to favor its own products.

The lawmakers also pointed to a July 29, 2020, testimony from then-CEO Jeff Bezos, who said that Amazon enforces a policy against using seller-specific data to develop competing products, but that Amazon considers seller data from more than a single seller to be “aggregate” for the purpose of this policy. Bezos claimed in response to post-hearing questions that this policy “prohibits the use of anonymized data, if related to a single seller, when making decisions to launch private brand products,” the lawmakers added.

The representatives are asking Amazon to provide a sworn response to clarify the record as to how Amazon uses non-public individual seller data to develop and market its own line of products, as well as a sworn response to clarify how Amazon advantages its own products over products from other sellers in its search rankings. Finally, the lawmakers are seeking all documents and communications relating to its internal inquiry into violations of its Seller Data Protection Policy, as well as documents and responses referred to in the Reuters and Markup reports.

An Amazon spokesperson told the Markup that there is a difference between search results and merchandising placements, but that it does not favor its own brands in the search tool.

“We do not favor our store brand products through search. There is a difference between search results and the placements [the Markup] is referring to – ‘Featured from our brands’ – which are merchandising placements. As [The Markup] notes, these placements are clearly labeled to distinguish them from search results,” a company spokesperson said. “These merchandising placements are optimized for a customer’s experience and are shown based on a variety of signals, starting with relevance to the customer’s shopping query.”

The company spokesperson added that they look at sales and store data to enhance customer experience, “However, we strictly prohibit our employees from using non-public, seller-specific data to determine which store brand products to launch.”

An Amazon spokesperson told Reuters, meanwhile, that “these allegations are incorrect and unsubstantiated” and that it “does not give preferential treatment to any seller” on its marketplace. In addition, the company reiterated that it displays search results “based on relevance to customers, irrespective of whether such products are private brands offered by sellers or not.”

 

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Director Rob Zombie reveals his Lily & Herman for upcoming ‘The Munsters’ film

Director Rob Zombie reveals his Lily & Herman for upcoming ‘The Munsters’ film
Director Rob Zombie reveals his Lily & Herman for upcoming ‘The Munsters’ film
CBS via Getty Images

Musician and director Rob Zombie has revealed the first cast members of his upcoming The Munsters film.

Sherri Moon Zombie and Jeff Daniel Phillips will be playing Lily and Herman Munster, respectively. Moon, who is Zombie’s wife, has starred in several of the “Dragula” rocker’s films, including the Firefly trilogy, 31 and his Halloween films. Phillips, meanwhile, is also a Zombie regular, but you may know him best as one of the cavemen in those old GEICO commercials.

Additionally, Zombie has announced that Matlock and Lost alum Daniel Roebuck will play Grandpa Munster, aka The Count.

The Munsters, of course, was originally a 1960s TV comedy show depicting a family of lovable monsters. It was briefly rebooted for the 2012 NBC special Mockingbird Lane, but was never picked up for a full series.

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Coldplay plans to stop making studio albums after their 12th

Coldplay plans to stop making studio albums after their 12th
Coldplay plans to stop making studio albums after their 12th
Credit: James Marcus Haney

Coldplay is pulling a Quentin Tarantino.

Just as the Pulp Fiction director has claimed that he’ll retire after 10 films, Chris Martin tells NME that the “Viva la Vida” outfit will stop making studio albums once they hit 12.

“It’s a lot to pour everything into making [albums],” Martin explains. “I love it and it’s amazing, but it’s very intense too.”

He adds, “I feel like because I know that challenge is finite, making this music doesn’t feel difficult, it feels like, ‘This is what we’re supposed to be doing.'”

For what it’s worth, Martin has made declarations like this in the past. In 2014, he told BBC Radio 1 that Coldplay’s then-upcoming seventh album, A Head Full of Dreams, felt like “the completion of something,” comparing it to the seventh and final Harry Potter book. Of course, Coldplay has since followed A Head Full of Dreams with two more albums, though Martin does seem a bit more sure of his plan this time around.

“I don’t think that’s what we’ll do,” Martin tells NME when asked to clarify Coldplay’s 12-album plan. “I know that’s what we’ll do in terms of studio albums.”

Coldplay just dropped their ninth album, Music of the Spheres, last Friday.

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Ken Jeong on his “dream” career, connecting with commercials, and how he defeated Thanos

Ken Jeong on his “dream” career, connecting with commercials, and how he defeated Thanos
Ken Jeong on his “dream” career, connecting with commercials, and how he defeated Thanos
ABC/Tyler Golden

Ken Jeong was a doctor before he pursued a lifelong dream of acting “late in the game,” as he put it to ABC Audio, so the movie star and Masked Singer judge says his Hollywood career never gets old. 

“I remember Sandra Bullock, I did a movie with her….it was way before The Hangover,” he recalled about 2009’s All About Steve. “And they asked her, ‘What was it like working with Ken?’…[A]nd…she said, ‘I say this in a good way…Ken can’t honestly believe that he’s here.'” 

Jeong adds, laughing, “And so…if I can kind of retain that innocence, you know, for the rest of my days, that would be a good day!”

After years pulling all-nighters on his doctor rounds, and more recently reading scripts and taking Zoom meetings, the doctor recently saw a doctor himself, for dry-eye disease. You might have seen him in those commercials for the prescription drug Xiidra.

In spite of the, pardon the pun, dry topic, Jeong doesn’t lose his comic personality in the ads.

 “I think at the end of the day, it really is about it’s about connection,” he notes. “[W]hether one’s an educator or one’s a face model…You know, I think it’s all about…connection with people.”

Jeong calls his career a “dream come true,” and part of that was becoming a small part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Directors Joe and Anthony Russo often add their former Community stars as Easter eggs in their MCU movies, but Jeong jokingly insists his cameo in Avengers: Endgame saved the world.

“If it wasn’t for unspoken security, man, you know, Thanos would have ruled and we would not be back in to where we were today,” he says, chuckling. 

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iDKHOW announces 2022 tour dates

iDKHOW announces 2022 tour dates
iDKHOW announces 2022 tour dates
ABC/Fred Lee

I DONT KNOW HOW BUT THEY FOUND ME has announced a North American tour for 2022.

The outing is set to kick off January 18 in Phoenix, and will conclude February 26 in Dallas. Tickets go on sale this Friday, October 22, at 10 a.m. local time.

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

If you can’t wait until 2022, iDKHOW is also launching a U.S. tour this November.

iDKHOW released their debut album, Razzmatazz, almost exactly a year ago in October 2020. It includes the single “Leave Me Alone,” which hit number one on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay chart.

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Dave Navarro & Billy Idol guitarist Billy Morrison announce return of Above Ground benefit concert

Dave Navarro & Billy Idol guitarist Billy Morrison announce return of Above Ground benefit concert
Dave Navarro & Billy Idol guitarist Billy Morrison announce return of Above Ground benefit concert
Courtesy of Goldenvoice

Dave Navarro of Jane’s Addiction and Billy Idol guitarist Billy Morrison have announced plans for a 2021 edition of their Above Ground benefit concert.

The annual event, which raises money for the MusiCares charity, was previously held in 2018 and 2019, but was put on hold in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It’ll now make its return this year at The Fonda Theatre in Hollywood on December 20.

Along with Navarro and Morrison, the lineup includes Idol and his other guitarist, Steve Stevens; Perry and Etty Lau Farrell; Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins; Slipknot‘s Corey Taylor; and Sugar Ray frontman Mark McGrath.

As with previous years, the Above Ground performers will play songs off two seminal albums. This year’s selections are Lou Reed‘s Transformer and Sex PistolsNever Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols.

You can check out a video of Navarro and Morrison talking about this year’s show at the Above Ground organization’s YouTube channel.

Tickets go on sale to the general public this Friday, October 22, at AXS.com.

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Billy Idol, Sugar Ray’s Mark McGrath among artists set to perform at 2021 Above Ground benefit concert

Billy Idol, Sugar Ray’s Mark McGrath among artists set to perform at 2021 Above Ground benefit concert
Billy Idol, Sugar Ray’s Mark McGrath among artists set to perform at 2021 Above Ground benefit concert
Courtesy of Goldenvoice

Billy Idol and Sugar Ray‘s Mark McGrath are among the performers scheduled to take part in the 2021 edition of their Above Ground benefit concert, an event organized by Dave Navarro of Jane’s Addiction and longtime Idol touring guitarist Billy Morrison.

The annual fundraising show, which supports the MusiCares charity, was previously held in 2018 and 2019, but was put on hold in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It’ll now make its return this year at The Fonda Theatre in Hollywood on December 20.

Along with Idol, McGrath, Navarro and Morrison, the lineup includes Billy idol’s other guitarist, Steve Stevens; Perry and Etty Lau Farrell; Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins; and Slipknot‘s Corey Taylor.

As with previous years, the Above Ground performers will play songs off two seminal albums. This year’s selections are Lou Reed‘s Transformer and Sex PistolsNever Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols.

You can check out a video of Navarro and Morrison talking about this year’s show at the Above Ground organization’s YouTube channel.

Tickets go on sale to the general public this Friday, October 22, at AXS.com.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Why Carrie Underwood calls her duet with Jason Aldean “the perfect fit”

Why Carrie Underwood calls her duet with Jason Aldean “the perfect fit”
Why Carrie Underwood calls her duet with Jason Aldean “the perfect fit”
Connie Chronuk/ABC

Jason Aldean and Carrie Underwood‘s duet, “If I Didn’t Love You,” was years in the making. 

While the duet may have come as a surprise to some, Carrie reveals that she and Jason have been plotting for years to set up a collaboration. While the pair have teamed up for live performances over the years, including a cover of Guns N’ Roses‘ “Paradise City” at the 2010 CMA Fest, this marks their first official studio duet. 

“Jason asked if I would sing ‘If I Didn’t Love You’ with him. I knew I liked the song, and Jason and I have actually been trying to do things together over the years,” Carrie says. “We’ve sang together before, but we’ve never officially recorded anything together. It just kind of felt like this could be our moment.”

Carrie continues: “I felt like it was a little bit of an unexpected duet to other people, but I feel like I always knew at some point I’d probably sing with him officially, and this just seemed like the stars were aligning and it just seemed like it was going to be the perfect fit.”

“If I Didn’t Love You” is nearing the top spot at country radio. The hit duet is featured on Jason’s upcoming album, Macon, set for release on November 12. 

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“Oh No!” Former President Trump has ’til the end of the day to respond to “Electric Avenue” copyright lawsuit

“Oh No!” Former President Trump has ’til the end of the day to respond to “Electric Avenue” copyright lawsuit
“Oh No!” Former President Trump has ’til the end of the day to respond to “Electric Avenue” copyright lawsuit
Tom Curtis/WireImage

Former President Donald Trump famously lived on Fifth Avenue in New York and Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., but he may have to stay away from “Electric Avenue.”

Trump has until the end of the day to respond to a copyright lawsuit brought by Eddy Grant, the British-Guyanese singer/songwriter who wrote and recorded the 1983 hit “Electric Avenue.”

Grant sued over alleged unauthorized use of the song in an animated video created by a third party during the 2020 campaign and posted by former President Trump on his personal Twitter account. The 55-second video endorsed Trump’s reelection and “sought to denigrate the Democratic Party’s 2020 presidential nominee, now-President Joseph R. Biden,” court records said.

Trump unsuccessfully sought to dismiss Grant’s claim, making a fair use argument, but a federal judge in New York would not allow it.

“The defendants concede that the video here is clearly satire, not a parody of Electric Avenue or Grant, and the defendants have offered no justification for their extensive borrowing,” Judge John Koeltl wrote.

The judge later set October 18 as the date the former president’s answer is due.

“Electric Avenue” spent five weeks at #2 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart, and was certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.

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Cuba Gooding Jr. to stand trial in NYC groping cases on February 1

Cuba Gooding Jr. to stand trial in NYC groping cases on February 1
Cuba Gooding Jr. to stand trial in NYC groping cases on February 1
David Dee Delgado/Getty Images

(NOTE CONTENT) ABC News has confirmed that Oscar-winning actor Cuba Gooding Jr. will stand trial in New York City on February 1 in connection with forcible touching and sexual abuse charges. 

A judge set Gooding’s trial date Monday in connection with charges that the actor groped women in Manhattan bars or nightclubs in 2018 and 2019,

In October 2018, Gooding allegedly pinched the buttocks of a woman in the TAO downtown nightclub on 9th Avenue. When confronted, he claimed he had only touched her back.

In June 2019, Gooding allegedly made a sexually suggestive remark to a woman at the Magic Hour Rooftop Bar inside the Moxy Hotel on 7th Avenue. He then put his hand on the woman’s left breast and squeezed it without her consent, court records show. The alleged victim had sat down at the bar where Gooding was with Claudine De NiroRobert De Niro‘s ex-daughter-in-law. Prosecutors said the encounter was caught on video.

Gooding was formally charged with misdemeanor forcible touching at the NYPD’s 25th Precinct in Harlem, New York, in 2019, and later indicted. He subsequently pleaded not guilty to one misdemeanor count each of forcible touching and sexual abuse in the third degree.

Attorneys for the Jerry Maguire star had unsuccessfully sought to dismiss the case.

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