
Articles
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1 month ago |
rollingstone.com | Alex Bhattacharji
A s Ike Barinholtz approaches the register at Farm Boy Produce, the cashier regards the 48-year-old comic-actor-writer-director with a gimlet-eyed skepticism, as if he’s a shoplifter or worse. “Are you famous?” For a moment, Barinholtz can only smile, revealing the trademark gap in his teeth. The live wire is at a rare loss for words. Finally, he musters, “Do you think I am?” The question hangs over grocery shopping with Barinholtz.
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Nov 19, 2024 |
instyle.com | Alex Bhattacharji
“Emerald. Yes, yessss, of course emerald.” Jeff Goldblum’s eyes widen and brows raise as he lingers on Oz’s favorite shade of green before ticking through a list he’s jotted down himself. “Olive, sage, lime, mint, avocado, chartreuse, eucalyptus, fern,” Goldblum continues in his signature musical delivery, inflection and meter rising and falling.
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Nov 8, 2024 |
medium.com | Alex Bhattacharji
Alex Bhattacharji·FollowJust now--I recently posted on LinkedIn about a cool branding project (and a great product: the PWHL!) I worked on and teased that there was more to come. The reason is Feature Well Productions, which I started with the great Alex French and Howie Kahn, and which you’ll hear more about in the coming weeks. We will be launching our website (featurewellproductions.com) soon. We are pretty expert at shaping narratives. True story.
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Aug 4, 2024 |
rollingstone.com | Alex Bhattacharji
T he mood in hell was light. All smiles and hugs, Sammy Davis Jr. was in high spirits as he arrived at Paramount Studios in the fall of 1972 to film Poor Devil, a new NBC comedy set in the netherworld. The 46-year-old entertainer surveyed the Hollywood soundstage, where Hades had been reimagined as a corporate office with a side of sitcom camp.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
townandcountrymag.com | Alex Bhattacharji
At the press conference introducing the Charlotte Hornets’ new owners last August, Gabe Plotkin and Rick Schnall strode onto the stage looking like gleeful Roy brothers in an alternate ending of Succession. Onlookers may have thought the investment titans had dunked on the GOAT—and perhaps they had. But in buying a majority stake in the team from Michael Jordan, they made the five-time MVP a vastly more valuable player, paying him $3 billion—an 11-fold return on the $275 million he paid in 2010.
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