In 2019, Austin Butler heard Baz Luhrmann was making a movie about Elvis Presley. The actor put all meetings and other auditions on hold to focus on #Elvis: “I knew that the only way that I could do it was if I gave it everything that I had.” latimes.com/entertainment-…
While preparing for the role, Butler tried performing “Love Me Tender,” but it didn't feel right. He thought of his late mother, how he and Presley shared that grief, and sang “Unchained Melody.”
Butler's tape impressed Baz Luhrmann: “It didn't feel like an audition. It felt like a spycam.”
Butler went through several months of Elvis workshops, acting and singing in character, before he won the role. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Butler also got an unsolicited boost from Denzel Washington, his "Iceman Cometh" co-star on Broadway, who cold-called #Elvis director Baz Luhrmann to recommend Butler for the job. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Living and breathing all things Elvis, Butler devoured interviews, documentaries and YouTube videos, even practicing his laugh for hours on solo beach walks in Australia. His goal: “How do you take Elvis... and find out who he really was as a man?” latimes.com/entertainment-…
Butler put his life on pause and spent what ended up being two years pouring everything into #Elvis: "Sometimes that’s unhealthy... I just I knew that this was what I needed to give myself to.” latimes.com/entertainment-…
After production resumed following COVID delays, Butler worked with co-star Tom Hanks, who plays Elvis' longtime manager Col. Tom Parker, by typewriting letters back and forth with Hanks in character. latimes.com/entertainment-…
"Elvis" depicts how the young Presley was influenced by gospel, blues and Black culture from an early age, as well as his friendship with B.B. King. “We don’t have Elvis without Black music and Black culture and Black spirituals,” says Butler. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Butler recalls meeting Priscilla Presley for the first time, before #Elvis started filming: “It dawned on me that these are the same eyes that looked into Elvis’, that he loved her so much and she loved him so much. All of that just hit me like a flood.” latimes.com/entertainment-…
Priscilla Presley was “nervous” to see how the film would depict Elvis. But Butler's "mesmerizing" performance “was more than I ever expected," she told the Times: “He became Elvis.” latimes.com/entertainment-…
After #Elvis ended production, Butler told British GQ he was briefly hospitalized before moving onto his next project: “I thought I might sink into a major depression when I finish[ed] this because suddenly the only thing I have done, now I don’t have." latimes.com/entertainment-…
Butler says he learned “to turn up the volume of my own intuition” from Presley.
Next up: a role in the #Dune sequel, and someday, getting behind the camera. "I love filmmaking. I don’t know what else I would do with my life." latimes.com/entertainment-…
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For decades, the Stauffer Chemical Co. disposed of thousands of tons of industrial waste near its factory grounds along Richmond’s southeast shoreline.
But the barbed-wire-ringed Richmond site wasn’t Stauffer’s only dumping ground.
Warning signs along the Richmond, Calif., site’s perimeter attempt to discourage trespassers from breaching the locked gates, where soil testing has detected cancer-causing gamma radiation more than 60 times higher than background levels in some places.
In the last two decades, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control has overseen the investigation into the extent of contamination, revealing elevated radioactivity underground and at the surface. latimes.com/environment/st…
South Korea currently recycles close to 100% of its food waste, a remarkable jump from just 2.6% in 1996.
So, how did the nation's composting system become a model for the world?
Let's take a journey!
Thread ⬇️
The food waste that ends up at Nanji Sewage Treatment Center starts out in a translucent yellow bag, which South Koreans have been required to use for throwing out their uneaten food since 2013. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
By purchasing them, which are priced at around 70 cents per liter and sold at any convenience or grocery store, residents effectively pay a tax on the food that they are throwing away. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
The decision to fire Tucker Carlson came straight from Fox Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch, according to people familiar with the situation who were not authorized to comment. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Murdoch is said to be concerned over Carlson’s coverage of the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the Capitol, where the host has promoted the conspiracy theory that it was provoked by government agents. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Tucker Carlson has called Ray Epps — a Texas man who participated in the storming of the Capitol but did not enter the building — an FBI plant, without any evidence. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Tucker Carlson is leaving Fox News. The network announced the departure of its top rated and most provocative conservative host Monday with no explanation. His last show was Friday. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Tucker Carlson's departure from Fox News comes nearly one month after a Fox News producer filed a discrimination lawsuit against the network, Carlson and other producers, alleging that the network is rife with sexist, misogynistic and abusive behavior. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Fox News last week reached a $787.5-million settlement with Dominion Voting Systems to resolve a defamation lawsuit. Dominion accused Fox of knowingly making false claims related to the 2020 election. latimes.com/entertainment-…
The junta, which would go on to rule South Korea as a dictatorship for the next eight years, sent about 3,000 elite paratroopers — including Choi Byung-moon — to crush demonstrations.
For 10 days straight, the commandos went on a campaign of terror.
At least 165 people were killed – including, Choi suspected, a young girl he handed off to fellow soldiers following a bloody minibus attack. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Affluent communities with little low-income housing have been among those most targeted by state legislators who have strengthened half-century-old laws requiring cities to plan for growth.
In the past, Coronado only had to set aside land for 50 homes to meet state requirements. But this time, it is responsible for 912, 70% of which should be affordable to low- and middle-income residents. latimes.com/homeless-housi…
The allocation derives from a complex formula based on projected population increases and proximity to jobs and mass transit, among other factors. The law doesn’t mandate that cities build or approve new housing, just that they zone for it. latimes.com/homeless-housi…