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Silver eyes tweaking All-NBA voting processon June 3, 2022 at 4:15 am

SAN FRANCISCO — Commissioner Adam Silver said the NBA is considering switching the voting process for All-NBA selections each season from the current position-based system to one where voters select the 15 best players regardless of position. Silver said it is something he plans to address with the National Basketball Players Association.

“In terms of determinations for All-NBA, I think a fair amount of consideration is going into whether [the media] should just be picking top players than be picking by position,” Silver said at a news conference ahead of Game 1 of the NBA Finals. “I think we are a league that has moved increasingly toward position-less basketball, and the current system may result in some inequities based on the happenstance of what your position is.

“So that is something we’re looking at. It’s something that we will discuss with the Players Association because it has an impact on incentives and players contracts, and it has, you know, deep meaning for their legacy as well. So we will look at those things.”

The topic of whether the ballot should continue to be determined by positions has picked up steam over the past two years, as two centers — Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets and Joel Embiid of the Philadelphia 76ers — finished 1-2 in the league’s voting for its Most Valuable Player award.

But because of the current system, only one of them has the ability to be a first team All-NBA player, while the other — in this case, Embiid both last season and this one — would have to be a second-team selection.

Silver also said there will be more discussions about whether contract bonuses will be tied to media awards voting, but also added that both sides have agreed that it is the best of a series of imperfect options.

“In terms of the ultimate selection process and, to your point that in some cases can have a direct financial impact on a player’s contract, right now we agreed with the Players Association to use those designations to trigger certain bonuses in players’ contracts, frankly because we couldn’t come up with a better way that would feel objective to everyone involved,” Silver said.

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Throughout his roughly 30-minute session with reporters, Silver touched on a number of topics:

o Both the NBA and NBPA have the ability to opt out of the current collective bargaining agreement in December ahead of it expiring next summer. It was a similar situation the last time the deal was up in 2017, with both sides agreeing to a new deal in December 2016 before the opt-out date arrived.

Silver said it was his hope a similar blueprint would be followed this time around, but said it was a bit too early to say that would be the case, given in part his still getting to know the newly appointed executive director of the NBPA, Tamika Tremaglio.

“I think we all know that for any negotiation, seemingly collective bargaining in particular, deadlines are really helpful to get people to push their best offers across the table,” Silver said.

Silver also added that all of the discussions both sides have had over the past two-and-a-half years over everything that’s gone on because of the COVID-19 pandemic has led to them talking more than ever before, which helped increase his belief of a deal being agreed to amicably once again.

o Silver said the idea of a midseason tournament remains on the table, though is not yet finalized, as more discussions with the NBPA are required. In addition, when asked about players dealing with wear-and-tear on their bodies over the course of an 82-game season Silver said he’d potentially be open to discussions of shortening the season — but only if it could be proven to help mitigate injuries.

“As I have said before, what we don’t see is increased numbers of injuries as the season goes on. It’s not as if because of fatigue over the course of a season, you see more injuries,” Silver said. “We do see a connection between actual fatigue, for example, from back-to-backs or three in a row. We think that potentially can lead to more injuries.”

o As he has in the past, Silver shot down the idea of expansion happening in the near-term, though he did again reiterate it is something that the league is going to do again at some point. He went on to say one potential issue is the dilution of talent as a result of expansion.

“Even sort of adding another 30 players or so that are roughly comparable, there still are only so many of the truly top-tier super talents to go around,” Silver said. “That is something on the mind of the other teams as we think about expansion.”

o Silver said the NBA has lost “hundreds of millions” because of its strained relationship with China, and said that is an acceptable cost of doing business when it comes to protecting free speech of the league’s players, coaches and workers.

“We accept that, and I said that at the time when we said we stand behind our players and team executives, their right to free expression, whether about issues in the United States or issues any place in the world, if those are the consequences, that’s what I mean that our values travel with us,” Silver said. “Others, as you know, since then have spoken out about their views around China and other places in the world, and if the consequences are that we’re taken off the air or we lose money, we accept that.”

Silver also said he continues to believe engaging with China is not inconsistent with the league’s values in light of alleged human-rights violations taking place within the country.

o When asked about women being far away from being a head coach, Silver said it remains a work in progress. He said Becky Hammon’s move to the WNBA as coach of the Las Vegas Aces shouldn’t be seen as a negative thing.

“But I’ve said it before, and I should have said earlier, there is no reason that women shouldn’t be head coaches and more of them shouldn’t be assistant coaches in the NBA,” Silver said. “There’s no reason why there shouldn’t be more women officials. We have made progress in both those areas around the league now. There are a lot more female assistants at our teams, but we do have to break through that glass ceiling.”

Silver also said the NBA increasing its number of black coaches to 15 with the hiring of Darvin Ham by the Los Angeles Lakers last month is a product of the league continuing to emphasize the need for diversity.

o When asked whether a positive test for COVID-19 next year would mean a player would be unable to play, Silver said that recommendation would come from medical personnel, and that it was too early to say, adding that the NBA is only a small part of the world in terms of learning how to live with the virus moving forward.

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Silver eyes tweaking All-NBA voting processon June 3, 2022 at 4:15 am Read More »

Scenes from NBA Finals Game 1: Celebs take in Curry’s historic starton June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am

After a wildly entertaining NBA season, we have finally arrived at the NBA Finals. The Golden State Warriors hope to capture their fourth championship since 2015, while the Boston Celtics look to secure their first title since 2008.

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Prior to Game 1, this Celtics squad was new to the Finals, as no one on the Boston roster had played in an NBA Championship game. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Golden State’s 123 games of Finals experience to Boston’s zero games was the largest gap since the Chicago Bulls (134) vs. the Utah Jazz (0) in 1997.

Read More: Why Celtics-Warriors could be an epic series

Given that this is the Finals, Chase Center is rocking for the series opener — including celebrities showing up to take in the action and players donning exceptional pregame fits.

Here’s a look at some of the best sights and sounds from Game 1 in San Francisco:

Klay makes history

It’s a sign of how dangerous the Warriors are from beyond the arc that Klay Thompson passed LeBron James for second on the all-time playoff 3-pointer list in the second quarter … and No. 1 is his teammate Steph Curry.

Jay-Z takes in the action

Musician, Roc Nation Sports founder and noted Brooklyn Nets fan Jay-Z pulled up to the Chase Center for Game 1.

Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Chef Curry cooks

Stephen Curry‘s campaign for a Finals MVP trophy got off to a strong start in the first quarter. His six 3-pointers in the first frame are a Finals record for the most in a quarter.

Los Angeles Lakers legend Magic Johnson couldn’t help but marvel at Curry’s impressive feat.

Ja Morant was also among the stars to note his hot start.

Spike’s in the house

Famed director Spike Lee can usually be spotted courtside at New York Knicks games, but tonight he’s at the Chase Center for Game 1.

Eye-catching outfits

Before the game tipped off, the fashion choices by a few players certainly turned some heads. Take Jayson Tatum for example, as he rocked a multi-patterned suit jacket on the pregame runway. His teammate Jaylen Brown donned a leather coat with some graphic jeans.

Food and drinks

The Warriors went all-out for refreshments at the Chase Center for Game 1. Fans could get chicken waffle cones, souvenir cups for beer or other drinks, Moet & Chandon champagne, black sturgeon caviar and a stone-fruit old fashioned cocktail. There were oyster bars and popcorn bars in some boxes.

Warriors/Chase CenterWarriors/Chase CenterWarriors/Chase Center

Setting the scene

Both squads chose to roll with gold in the series opener.

Boston used the color in complementary fashion by adding a Finals emblem on its jerseys. Meanwhile, Golden State stayed true to its “Gold Blooded” postseason theme with T-shirts.

Read More

Scenes from NBA Finals Game 1: Celebs take in Curry’s historic starton June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am Read More »

‘Hustle’ review: On Netflix, Adam Sandler well-cast in a basketball drama that rings true

Some of our best sports movies feature fictional players and teams, from Roy Hobbs and the New York Knights in “The Natural” to Reggie Dunlop’s Charlestown Chiefs in “Slap Shot” to Phil Elliot playing wide receiver for the North Dallas Bulls in “North Dallas Forty.” Great movies, one and all — but when sports films combine fictional characters with real-life players and coaches, and we don’t have fake teams a la the Miami Sharks (“Any Given Sunday”) or the Western University Dolphins (“Blue Chips”), that verisimilitude often gives the story an extra shot layer of authenticity and immediacy.

Such is the case with the latest Adam Sandler/Netflix film — wait, come back, this isn’t some throwaway nonsense on the order of “The Ridiculous 6” or “Hubie Halloween,” this is the Adam Sandler we respect and admire, the Adam Sandler of “The Meyerowitz Stories” and “Uncut Gems”! In director Jeremiah Zagar’s savvy basketball drama “Hustle,” Sandler delivers one of his most endearing performances as Stanley Sugarman, a former college hoopster and longtime scout for the Philadelphia 76ers who has been sent on a global mission to find the next Luka Doncic, the next Giannis Antetokounmpo — or face possible extinction.

This is “Trouble With the Curve” meets “The Air Up There” with a dash of “The Blind Side” and it’s set largely in Philly so there are some direct nods to “Rocky” as well, and while “Hustle” breaks no new ground and we can see the plot pivots coming from the last row of Section 315, the basketball sequences are crisp and well-choreographed, the behind-the-scenes machinations feel true to the sport and the myriad of real-life former and current stars adds to that veracity factor.

‘Hustle’

Sandler puts his shambling physicality, low-key intensity and hangdog expression to great use as Stanley, who has been traveling the globe for 30 years and is worn thin by the grind — and thus thrilled when the 76ers’ crusty but beloved owner Rex Merrick (Robert Duvall, how about that) promotes Stanley to assistant coach of the big club. “Feels like I’ve been waiting my whole life to become a coach,” says Stanley as Rex beams with paternal pride.

Uh-oh. If we know anything about the Venerable Character Actor Playbook, if there’s a touching moment early on when the legend gives their blessing to the underdog, we’re due for a memorial service scene and a reversal of fortune for our hero. Sure enough, Rex dies, and his petulant grown son (an underused Ben Foster) assumes control of the team and sends Stanley back on the road, callously telling him he’s going to miss yet another birthday celebration for his daughter. What a cad!

About that family: Queen Latifah has a wonderful and natural presence as Stanley’s wife, Teresa, and Jordan Hull sparkles as their teenage daughter. The domestic scenes with the three of them are sweet and warm and plausible and add to our rooting interest for Stanley as he rolls the dice on an unpolished but clearly talented streetball player from Spain, bringing him back to Philly and putting him up on his own dime after the 76ers take a pass on him.

Here’s where we get into the meshing of real-life basketball figures and fictional characters, with three key characters:

Journeyman NBA veteran Juancho Hernang?mez plays the aforementioned prospect, one Bo Cruz, a physical specimen who possesses all the tools to become a star — if he can control his temper and shake off his past. (Hernang?mez is playing someone with a greater skill set than his own, but he IS an NBA player, so we believe him as a spectacular talent on court, and he has a likable presence as an actor.)Basketballer turned broadcaster Kenny Smith turns in excellent work as Leon Rich, the most powerful agent in the game and a former college teammate of Stanley’s at Temple.Up-and-coming star Anthony Edwards of the Minnesota Timberwolves is fantastic as one Kermit Wilts, a top pro prospect with an enormous ego and a cruel streak who becomes the Apollo Creed to Bo’s Rocky at showcase workouts and the NBA Combine.

“Hustle” features a ton of basketball sequences — but it’s virtually all about the practices and five-on-five scrimmages and playground ball, as we see Bo demonstrating flashes of greatness but also showing signs of wilting under pressure. Does Bo have what it takes? Are we going to get more than one training montage? Will Stanley and Bo forge a bond that goes beyond basketball? What do you think, veteran viewer?

We also get a host of cameos from real-life NBA figures including Shaquille O’Neal, Dirk Nowitzki, Mark Cuban, Trae Young, Mark Jackson, Pat Croce, Tyrese Maxey, Seth Curry, Doc Rivers, Julius Erving and Allen Iverson, among others — and the added treat of seeing playground legends such as Grayson “The Professor” Boucher and Larry “Bone Collector” Williams. Even in its more melodramatic moments, “Hustle” feels like it’s taking place in today’s NBA world. This is Adam Sandler’s love letter to the game, and it is great fun from the opening tip to the final buzzer.

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‘Hustle’ review: On Netflix, Adam Sandler well-cast in a basketball drama that rings true Read More »

Scenes from NBA Finals Game 1: Fancy food and eye-catching fitson June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am

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After a wildly entertaining NBA season, we have finally arrived at the NBA Finals. The Golden State Warriors hope to capture their fourth championship since 2015, while the Boston Celtics look to secure their first title since 2008.

This Celtics squad is new to the Finals, as no one on the Boston roster has played in a championship round entering Thursday night’s Game 1 (9 ET on ABC). According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Golden State’s 123 games of Finals experience to Boston’s zero games is the largest gap since the Chicago Bulls (134) vs. the Utah Jazz (0) in 1997.

Read More: Why Celtics-Warriors could be an epic series

Given that this is the Finals, one can expect a rocking Chase Center for the series opener. There’s also the possibility of celebrities showing up courtside to take in the action and exceptional pregame fits from the players. Plus, fan reactions and maybe even some social media trolling could arise throughout the contest.

Here’s a look at some of the best sights and sounds from Game 1 in San Francisco:

Food and drinks at Game 1

The Warriors went all-out for refreshments at the Chase Center for Game 1. Fans could get chicken waffle cones, souvenir cups for beer or other drinks, Moet and Chandon champagne, black sturgeon caviar, a stonefruit Old Fashioned cocktail, along with oyster bars and popcorn bars in some boxes.

Tom VanHaarenTom VanHaaren

Setting the scene

Both squads chose to roll with gold in the series opener.

Boston used the color in complementary fashion by adding a Finals emblem on its jerseys Meanwhile, Golden State stayed true to its “Gold Blooded” postseason theme with t-shirts.

Read More

Scenes from NBA Finals Game 1: Fancy food and eye-catching fitson June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am Read More »

Cubs’ Alec Mills nearing return, Drew Smyly estimates rehab timeline

Cubs right-hander Alec Mills stopped by Wrigley Field Thursday to check in and throw in front of pitching coach Tommy Hottovy in between rehab starts, as the team searches for answers to their pitching shortage.

Mills, who becomes eligible to return from the 60-day IL (right quadriceps strain) on Monday, is scheduled to make his next rehab start Tuesday with Triple-A Iowa.

“After that, I don’t know,” Mills said.

If all goes well in that outing, the Cubs could use him in the rotation.

In the past week, the Cubs have lost veteran lefties Wade Miley (left shoulder strain) and Drew Smyly (right oblique strain) to the 15-day IL.

Miley threw a bullpen on Thursday, but Smyly’s facing a much longer recovery process.

“The first three, four, five days, they just told me just to rest it and just do treatment on it,” Smyly said Thursday. “But then hopefully, by this road trip, we can start kind of pushing, and just kind of testing it out to see how close we are.”

He doesn’t have a set timeline to return, but his IL stint is expected to be longer than the minimum 15 days. Smyly said he’d dealt with a similar injury in his rookie season, 10 years ago. About four weeks after the injury, he started pitching in games again.

“Hopefully it’s a very similar timeline, where within the next four weeks, I’m going to be close to building back up,” Smyly said.

He was also younger then. Much of Smyly’s rehab process will progress based on how he feels each day. Oblique injuries are infamously finicky.

“According to Dr. [Stephen Gryzlo, the team orthopedist,] if you try to push it and come back too early, you’re just gonna re-injure it,” Smyly said. “It’s not really something you can push through. So he made it pretty clear that we have to just kind of put everything on hold for the time being.”

Mills knows something about unexpectedly long injury recovery. He originally started the season on the 10-day IL with a back injury. But after his first rehab start, he felt tightness in his quad.

“I was just working out after a bullpen, and it just kind of grabbed on me pretty good,” Mills said. “It was something that we thought, maybe it wasn’t as bad as it was at first. And then I tried to throw three or four days later, and it definitely was worse than what we thought. … It’s been a long process.”

Mills re-started his rehab assignment a month later. He’s made three starts with Triple-A Iowa, building up to 3 2/3 innings in his last starts, almost 60 pitches. He hopes to throw about 75 pitches in his next start.

Lou Gehrig day

Major League Baseball celebrated their second annual Lou Gehrig Day on Tuesday, raising ALS awareness and funds for related charities.

At Wrigley Field, I AM ALS cofounder Brian Wallach and Team Gleason co-founder Steve Gleason were joined by their families to throw out ceremonial first pitches. The 50/50 raffle, with a $20,000 guaranteed jackpot Thursday, pledged half of the jackpot to ALS charities.

Cubs broadcaster Jon Sciambi is on the board of Project Main St., a charity created in honor of one of his close friends, Tim Sheehy, who lost his life to ALS. Project Main St. partnered with Obvious Shirts to create “END ALS 4 LOU” shirts in team colors for clubs across the league, which could be spotted on players and coaches during pregame warmups.

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Cubs’ Alec Mills nearing return, Drew Smyly estimates rehab timeline Read More »

Champagne and caviar, chicken and waffles, among food options for Game 1on June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am

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After a wildly entertaining NBA season, we have finally arrived at the NBA Finals. The Golden State Warriors hope to capture their fourth championship since 2015, while the Boston Celtics look to secure their first title since 2008.

This Celtics squad is new to the Finals, as no one on the Boston roster has played in a championship round entering Thursday night’s Game 1 (9 ET on ABC). According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Golden State’s 123 games of Finals experience to Boston’s zero games is the largest gap since the Chicago Bulls (134) vs. the Utah Jazz (0) in 1997.

Read More: Why Celtics-Warriors could be an epic series

Given that this is the Finals, one can expect a rocking Chase Center for the series opener. There’s also the possibility of celebrities showing up courtside to take in the action and exceptional pregame fits from the players. Plus, fan reactions and maybe even some social media trolling could arise throughout the contest.

Here’s a look at some of the best sights and sounds from Game 1 in San Francisco:

Food and drinks at Game 1

The Warriors went all-out for refreshments at the Chase Center for Game 1. Fans could get chicken waffle cones, souvenir cups for beer or other drinks, Moet and Chandon champagne, black sturgeon caviar, a stonefruit Old Fashioned cocktail, along with oyster bars and popcorn bars in some boxes.

Tom VanHaarenTom VanHaaren

Setting the scene

Both squads chose to roll with gold in the series opener.

Boston used the color in complementary fashion by adding a Finals emblem on its jerseys Meanwhile, Golden State stayed true to its “Gold Blooded” postseason theme with t-shirts.

Read More

Champagne and caviar, chicken and waffles, among food options for Game 1on June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am Read More »

Warriors’ Iguodala, Porter, Payton available for G1on June 3, 2022 at 12:56 am

SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden State Warriors will have Andre Iguodala, Otto Porter Jr. and Gary Payton II available for Game 1 of the NBA Finals against the Boston Celtics on Thursday night.

Iguodala has not played this postseason after missing 30 of the last 36 regular-season games because of leg and neck injuries. Porter missed the last game and a half of the Western Conference finals against the Dallas Mavericks due to left foot soreness. And Payton has been out since breaking his elbow on a controversial foul by the Memphis GrizzliesDillon Brooks in Game 2 of the second round of the playoffs.

“We did a little bit of scrimmaging yesterday, and all three guys felt good this morning,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said ahead of the Finals opener. “We’ll see how it plays out. I think a lot of our decisions, especially here in Game 1, you’ve got to feel how the game is going, try to decide what combinations we need out there. But it’s great to have all three guys back, and I think all three can contribute for sure.”

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Draymond Green has talked about Payton’s ability to provide the Warriors with another hard-nosed defender once he is back. Porter has provided valuable contributions throughout the postseason, and teammates have talked about Iguodala’s invaluable observations and advice from the sidelines.

“He’s the same Andre,” Stephen Curry said. “He’s just in a different capacity where he knows he can help us, since he’s had a tough go with the injuries. If he’s not available on the court, he’s been amazing at just being a voice, a presence for the young guys, not just in the locker room, during practice, but obviously you’ve seen him up and demonstrative during games on the sidelines.

“He’s always been like that, but obviously when you’re playing you’re a little bit more focused on what you have to do in-between the lines. But he’s also such a great guy and great leader that he’s aware of if he’s not out there, he can still have an impact.”

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Warriors’ Iguodala, Porter, Payton available for G1on June 3, 2022 at 12:56 am Read More »

‘It Came from Outer Space’ musical, inspired by cult classic film

Before there was “Alien,” before there was “Star Trek,” before there was “Star Wars,” there was “It Came from Outer Space.” The 1953 sci-fi film may look cheesy by today’s standards but that, and its Ray Bradbury pedigree, has only added to its status as a cult classic.

Now Joe Kinosian and Kellen Blair, the musical theater team behind the hit show “Murder for Two,” have met the challenge of transforming the film, which was based on a Bradbury story, into a stage musical.

Yes, Kinosian (book and music) and Blair (book and lyrics) have been spending a lot of time thinking about aliens. “It Came From Outer Space” is a flying saucer tale that examines society’s fear of outsiders. When a spaceship crashes by accident into the Arizona desert, the aliens inside are benevolent and mean no harm, but the small-minded citizens of Sand Rock feel otherwise and form a posse to hunt them down.

Because of the pandemic, the musical’s opening was extended and extended and extended, says Kinosian. Originally it was to open in the fall of 2020 but was pushed to winter 2021, then summer 2021.

That long wait ends in late June when the musical makes its world premiere at Chicago Shakespeare Theater under the direction of Laura Braza. The Sand Rock couple determined to help save the aliens — scientist John Putnam and schoolteacher Ellen Fields — are portrayed by Christopher Kale Jones and Jaye Ladymore. The remaining cast — Jonathan Butler-Duplessis, Veronica Garza, Alex Goodrich and Sharriese Hamilton — each portray multiple characters, both human and alien.

Blair says in 2016 they had the opportunity to look through the Universal Pictures catalog to “see if anything jumped out at us for adaptation.” Around the same time, they saw “It Came from Outer Space” in all its 3-D glory on the big screen at New York’s Film Forum movie theater.

“It was a blast,” Blair recalls. “We walked away thinking there were hokey elements, but it was the height of the 2016 presidential campaign and a lot of the subject matter, particularly what Bradbury brought to the table, felt familiar and ahead of its time in terms of being a story about the fear of otherness.”

While the project was thrown off course over the past two years, the duo along with editor Daniel Schloss got creative last summer with a virtual film mockumentary, “We Are Out There,” which introducedthe events that occurred in the town of Sand Rock and starred Chicago actors.

The side project gave them a good jump start on casting and the chance to work on the music and orchestrations. Kinosian admits at the beginning, it took him awhile to find his way into the music.

“How do you do a sci-fi musical without relying on the hokiest go-to options,” Kinosian asks. “We’re all familiar with that eerie theremin sci-fi sound. It’s a minefield of cliches and limited imagination.”

Kinosian says since the musical is set in the ’50s, the golden age of musicals, he wanted to include that type of “reassuring sound.” And since the story takes place in the “wide open spaces and endless desert of the West,” he was also listening to a lot of Aaron Copland for inspiration.

But with the music representing the aliens, he says it can be anything you want: “In creating that, I was thinking along the lines of Laurie Anderson’s music, simplified, repetitive with meaningful changes, a multi-layered tapestry of both organic and electronic sounds.”

Kinosian (from Milwaukee) and Blair (from Seattle) met at the BMI Musical Theatre Workshop in 2008 (“It’s basically speed dating for musical theater writers,” Blair says with a laugh.) It was here where they teamed up to create the Jeff Award-winning musical “Murder for Two,” which premiered at Chicago Shakespeare in 2011 and went on to a successful Off Broadway run.

The amiable duo agrees the first draft of “It Came from Outer Space” was the best first draft they’ve ever written.

“I don’t expect this to ever happen again,” Kinosian says, laughing. “The movie just provided a solid foundation for it all to come together.”

“I think it was kind of a perfect piece for us because ‘Murder for Two’ is escapist and we like writing comedies, we want to always write musical comedies,” adds Blair. “But this was an opportunity to give a much needed bit of substance to what is otherwise a kind of silly and fun sci-fi thing. It allowed us to mature a little bit while still remaining somewhat immature.”

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‘It Came from Outer Space’ musical, inspired by cult classic film Read More »

Meet the Celtics fan who has already put his NBA Finals prediction in ink on his armon June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am

The Boston Celtics are back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 2010, facing the Golden State Warriors. But long before Thursday’s Game 1 (9 p.m. ET on ESPN), one fan decided to get a tattoo celebrating something that he felt was just a matter of time: Boston Celtics, 2022 world champions.

A huge Celtics fan, Jack Bienvenue, 18, of Wellfleet, Massachusetts, got a tattoo of a championship banner his team hasn’t even won yet. Asked about how he decided to get the ink, Bienvenue points to the bounce back the Celtics had over the second half of the season.

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“It was March 21st, the exact day. We were on a winning streak of 10 games I guess. We were rolling a bit,” Bienvenue said. “It seemed like we were finally getting the pieces together. We were finally putting the puzzle together, and I thought it seemed like (a title) was destined to happen. That this team would make a historical run to the finals, which they have, and just gotta finish the job. We got four more to win.”

Bienvenue’s friends were shocked at the ink on his left arm.

“Everyone was like, …’this guy is crazy,” Bienvenue said. “Of course, I thought it was a little crazy myself. It was definitely a shock to most of my friends.

“It was kind of a spontaneous idea, too. I didn’t even have the whole thing planned out. I was already thinking about doing something for a Boston tattoo. I knew this artist and I wanted to do it, then a just called him and said ‘I had a great idea for a tattoo, I’ll be right there after school. So I drove there. It didn’t even take me a little to convince him to put it in my arm.”

Golden State is the favorite to win the series.

It will be only the second time the Warriors and Celtics have met in the NBA Finals. The last time was the 1964 finals when Golden State was called the San Francisco Warriors and led by Wilt Chamberlain. On the other side, Boston was led by Bill Russell and coming off five titles in a row. The Celtics won that series, 4-1.

The Boston Celtics and Golden State Warriors are set to meet with the NBA championship on the line. You can catch all the action on ABC and the ESPN app.

Game 1: Thursday, 9 p.m. ET at GS
Game 2: Sunday, 8 p.m. ET at GS
Game 3: Wednesday, 9 p.m. ET at BOS
Game 4: June 10, 9 p.m. ET at BOS
Game 5: June 13, 9 p.m. ET at GS*
Game 6: June 16, 9 p.m. ET at BOS*
Game 7: June 19, 8 p.m. ET at GS*

*If necessary

Bienvenue, of course, believes that the Celtics will win this season, but not easily.

“I’ll say Celtics in 7 (games). It’s not going any less than 6 games,” he said. “It’s going to be a very fun series to watch, very competitive. Steph Curry wants to keep his legacy and Jason Tatum wants to kind of get his to start. It will be a battle for sure.”

Lucas Cunha contributed to this report.

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Meet the Celtics fan who has already put his NBA Finals prediction in ink on his armon June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am Read More »

Champagne and caviar, chicken and waffles, among food options for Game 1on June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am

1 Related

After a wildly entertaining NBA season, we have finally arrived at the NBA Finals. The Golden State Warriors hope to capture their fourth championship since 2015, while the Boston Celtics look to secure their first title since 2008.

This Celtics squad is new to the Finals, as no one on the Boston roster has played in a championship round entering Thursday night’s Game 1 (9 ET on ABC). According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Golden State’s 123 games of Finals experience to Boston’s zero games is the largest gap since the Chicago Bulls (134) vs. the Utah Jazz (0) in 1997.

Read More: Why Celtics-Warriors could be an epic series

Given that this is the Finals, one can expect a rocking Chase Center for the series opener. There’s also the possibility of celebrities showing up courtside to take in the action and exceptional pregame fits from the players. Plus, fan reactions and maybe even some social media trolling could arise throughout the contest.

Here’s a look at some of the best sights and sounds from Game 1 in San Francisco:

Food and drinks at Game 1

The Warriors went all-out for refreshments at the Chase Center for Game 1. Fans could get chicken waffle cones, souvenir cups for beer or other drinks, Moet and Chandon champagne, black sturgeon caviar, a stonefruit Old Fashioned cocktail, along with oyster bars and popcorn bars in some boxes.

Tom VanHaarenTom VanHaaren

Setting the scene

Both squads chose to roll with gold in the series opener.

Boston used the color in complementary fashion by adding a Finals emblem on its jerseys Meanwhile, Golden State stayed true to its “Gold Blooded” postseason theme with t-shirts.

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Champagne and caviar, chicken and waffles, among food options for Game 1on June 3, 2022 at 12:43 am Read More »