tv Dennis Miller One RT May 13, 2020 6:30pm-7:01pm EDT
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what do you know know from like everything party 5 the scream franchise which swept the world and now she's got a new flick out it's going to be on demand it is called castle in the ground by the opioid epidemic in the north america we'll talk to never bought it never campbell right after this sunday mr miller plus one. day folks welcome to dennis miller plus one today we're going to chat with jay jay's old lady never gamble and she's got a new flick out it's called castle in the ground it will be released on may 15th you know never of course from party 5 she's a baby as young as her baby probably and she's best known for starring sidney prescott in the extremely popular slasher film franchise by wes craven 'd and
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scream so never you know when i'm well thank you honey. good i was reading up on today because i saw that name i said wow what a great name of a place to be from in canada and i saw that the captain of the san jose sharks i'm a big hockey fan logan cut your is from there to say you and he were the 2 that i recognized i was well to grow up in that it ground it. was a lovely little town it really is it sounds just close enough to toronto to a big city read don't care if you're completely out of the mix. but you know very granola veterinary university there that's that's wonderful affirming university and good people a lot of artists a lot of musicians and once great place i was both in toronto a lot of butter tarts lot lot for my bottom dollar leonard are right there. the phrase i'm glad i don't have any on this current scheme but i would be overdoing
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those yet devour. this so you know lime i've been talking to people lately about the corn gene and i think you know what everybody knows the travails we're facing now and god god knows my trouser not anything compared to the poor people who are truly afflicted by this wish them well i say my prayers some of them you know for not predisposed to prayers but i do think about the human suffering but i also think at some point i need to talk to people once a month something else because it is it is an onerous cloud over him and he said write down how you will get 0. you know doing ok obviously it was 6 weeks ago it was terrifying you know and for many people even today it's terrifying and i think we're starting to if you can get used to it get used to the concept of wearing a mask and wearing gloves and being diligent keep yourself safe and keeping those
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around us safe as possible and adjusting to my son being in school virtually which is a very strange experience and not working at the moment but having a lot of family time and feeling grateful for at least. you know i feel for those who are alone in their homes and aren't around others. or those who are really struggling which many many are so it's tough it's tough to read the news is tough to think about all of that sometimes i need a break from the news. so we're going to come out of me and that obviously your heart is with. i just don't know if you know like i said i'm starting to get white out it by yet blank out of bought it because i ever commercials about everything and that occasion i think i better go just read a book today and immerse myself from not going to have any perspective on this anyway here i am talking about taking a break off from talking about a lot tell me well listen we've got to another aspect of human life that i'm more of a centralized tablo but the crisis and phil castle in the ground tell me about i think
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it takes place in northern canada right it's about the opioid crisis it does it does yes it takes place in a small town in ontario and. you know it takes a look at the crisis at how small towns are affected how big cities are affected how easily one can be affected by. addiction and can slip into that world i think so many people make the mistake of calling addicks junkies or make the mistake of feeling that it's over there somehow that truthfully it can happen to anybody you know and it's affected over half a 1000000 people have passed away. from opiate addiction in it's very very sad and something it's a very important conversation i know it's not a great conversation it's not something that's it's fairly people i'm sure about
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right now but i think it's important too 'd because if you think about these people who are really not well and have unfortunately succumbed to vulnerabilities and to addiction. it must be a very very scary time for them at the moment where normally would be scary and right at the moment it would be awful. yes the isolation doubled the isolation redux quite frankly lived across the pond for 8 years and i've just met j.j. your hubby who nobody frames a shot like j.j. can i write a citizen of the mills and. so i don't i don't know what you were doing over there were you pursuing acting as hard as you did when you're young when you're a young kid trying to make it in l.a. that's pretty much your day did you go over there a little life or did you go over there to find another chapter of a career you know i.e. i needed a different experience i wasn't necessarily saying good bye to the business i'm an
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artist and wanted to be creative in other ways that i want to experience another culture and a different life and get away from hollywood for a minute and go do theater and experience what that world is over there in london. and just to find my independence to be honest you know my twenty's were wonderful i worked nonstop but they were also grueling and i also i think i got to a place where i was tired of. being dependent on other people's decisions for me and concern myself with what other people felt i should do as a next career step didn't want to constantly thinking about that and wanted to screen something new learn grow as an actor and as an artist and witness other people's work and not just hope just honestly have a different term. and be inspired i don't know if that's your bambino over your shoulder but i do know you have a son and i do know nothing helps one's perspective on life as i have to not think
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does away with self-absorbed shit. i just love the look of my child i love playing with him i also love the fact that it got me off the catholic what he hears of it in the pit the brash women from the heels and got me of the great absolutely that is that is not me i am i had you have 2 sons though i have a 7 year old boring me and we adopted a young boy 2 years ago he's 2 now and it's been our love being a mother there's nothing he has you know there's nothing like being a parent. and to do hand yourself over to something greater than yourself there's nothing better and more humbling than that. has the big one with the little lot had to and surely bring a tear to your eye when you see around of act of kindness from what your big kiss with your little kid since especially when the little ones trying to wallop move the head and he still has to. he's amazing and has been you know last year
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when caspian was 2 he started asking for a sibling he started asking for a baby brother so cast in his honest response well though i always wanted to adopt a child he's almost responsible for us bringing rayner into our lives and there have been together their honestly each other's favorite people they really adore each other and i think it's a nice age gap there a 5 year age gap so fast you really need the big brother and show him the ropes and rainer is awesome and whole areas and tough and. they go little monsters sometimes and he's fantastic and and yet they're hilarious to watch together it's wonderful. that's such a groovy name for a kid and i do like the 5 year difference because even the best intentions get when all of a sudden there's a new tiny human in a house within or the year of the 2 years starts to think hey oh he wondered why did i do wrong how did i get out of the yep it's yes. absolutely every ounce of
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roumanian all of those stages are becoming stages in the magic as well and so many amazing you know and i'm very very grateful to have that certainly at this time as well they make us laugh every day. don't you think when i think about your kids i think about caspian were one of those kids who got into commercials younger what will happen to party 5 now when i was a dancer actually i was i started dancing at 6 i was that the national school of canada time i was 9 and i you know it was not hard about lay with the national can a young age and then my 1st job i got when i was 15 and the opera. in it was the original canadian cast in toronto so that was a real coup proving it was an amazing experience i did a 100 shows in 2 years and danced my little bit off and who loved it. that was really my beginning and from that you know i started doing commercials while i was
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doing phantom the acting really wasn't something i necessarily was working toward my my father was a drama teacher my mother had dinner theater my grandparents in holland had a theatre company my to remember those are actors but i really was going to be the dancer. but i you know i had a lot of injuries so it was a natural transition for me and i was very grateful to find something else creative that i could the passion. i started as it into under shows yeah 800 shows in 2 years makes natalie portman in black swan look like a lay up all that i can that and then i had to tell you carving out and you musta been on point or in pleo for like 6 to. 7 regulars. they had me they had a nickname for me because i had sort of long gangly legs and these long pretty iffy and they called me bambi on my because i was like sort of an awkward deer on point . but sat so they called me up but i loved it i love i'm gets i was minimal i mean
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he's 10 years younger than the rest of the cast their rooms like big sisters and brothers to me and there's a welcome some of our fans and he was such a phenomenon. so i was very lucky it was sort of the beginning of music with the. during qantas it was a really big deal at the time so yeah there's very i don't want to jump in here and recommend something to you but i recently and maybe you've seen it as a former dancer there is a brilliant document documentary about a woman named 10 a kill look clear and she in the flick mid for middle late fifty's you have to see or know if it will blow your mind she was perfect she served as balanchine and jerome robbins as muse and in a 10 to 15 year period she was the most gorgeous live but at bloody young dancer and then something something happens i don't want to tell you but you have to watch this documentary called the afternoon of the flom you know absolutely break your heart and i think i'd watch it tonight if i were you because i think we are even
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know each other i think you probably say thank you for recommending that because honestly it's dad's fat and it absolutely stole my heart oh no james incidents thank you yeah you know it really i mean dance was was i was an athlete and you know against us are incredible athletes and artists of i made a movie years ago that robert altman directed called the company and i got to go back and answer. them and it was so it was such an amazing experience to to retrain and get back into the end and it's been really nice since that film to see an awareness that people have started have about the dance world there really is so much now with reality with a lot of reality t.v. shows and dance and i think that's helped a lot but there's much more respect for dancers a month i'm happy to see that because they deserve so much act so many acar ellison in an overly in an overly frenetic world to watch a ballet and i'm hardly an educated person on ballet but to note the stillness. you
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know to me it's it's a beautiful escape for somebody who doesn't even know all the techniques and all that i can just alleges and think what a rest of what a rest of endeavor that is. so analytic on that in there that is so athletic on the in the same moment we're talking to nev campbell i'm probably gushing a little but she seems like a day and we're talking about her new movie new film castle in the ground which will be released on may 15th we come back we'll talk about boy you know you talk to young people who get the explosion of fame i'm sure it's it's the rupee is thing in another way i can't even imagine to get that famous and that young also talk about screen wes craven all that right after this would never gamble on dennis miller plus one.
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with good reason public discourse is focused on addressing and finally each containing the coby $1000.00 pandemic now the focus is on devastated economies we're in a recession will it mean if into a depression will the recovery be you d. or an l. . divided the in here will. or operation in. some of the wealthier neighborhoods it's been far more contained in the numbers are much lower than some of the more a neighborhood. star city. we think we're working with can source
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outside of the state is there just sort of saw like anything out of this. is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe. high salacious community. are you going the right way or are you being that. direct. what is true what is faith. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the depths. or remain in the shallowness.
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it was. because i was going to you're going to. have. hey folks welcome back to done as miller plus one all right. now you're in good health i think it's called welfare is a gulf well you got it. there is a long way from tipperary and it's a long way from 12th. the way tell me how that happens how does that long mozy happen. so i as i said i've done phantom and then i done some television in canada i've done a series there and i've done the odd job here and there are. and when i was 18 a girl friend of mine who had been in high school with it got out to los angeles and
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she called me and said he should come out and the producers of a movie the week i had done in toronto said why don't you come out room find an agent and a manager i was so convinced i was going to be a dancer at that time i really didn't was not convinced that acting was going to be the thing for me i was really ringback so dedicated my heart really was in the dance world but i flew out and i have to know and 2 weeks after that they were quick. so i couldn't get in a door i couldn't meet any managers and couldn't meet any agents but i say to my girlfriends and a woman who was staying with the producers who told me to come out so i was just at any age and see i decided to be a manager i understand you're looking to find representation while you look would you let me send you out on some things or name was arlene forest areas and certainly she sent me out on to things and i was party of 5. yeah what's one of the regarding my now i feel like it's either that for people or they spent 10 years really you know waiter hanging and really working hard to get there and then they
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finally get there but it's an either or it seems like and i was i was one of the oars i was very lucky very very lucky and grateful that happen that quickly for me . you could have come out 2 weeks prior to that been on point on stand in north ridge when the big quake hit and they were asked questions or wobble but as it was just perfect. yes exactly exactly huge fame even for a grounded person to speak in mind boggling in a way because not only are you enjoying it like all humans do are there it also think you might enjoy those 2 boats or what the hell you know tell me tell me but when it happens. well you know obviously it was wonderful and exciting. and i was happy to be working and i was grateful to be on a show that was great writer isn't great you know i was very very lucky to be a part of part of
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a party of 5. it's funny i was naive i kind of you know you go to pilot season and you get a pilot and it gets picked up and it goes 6 years that's just what happens right i really didn't know differently but i was working i was you know i think honestly it was my my dedication to dance and sort of a workhorse mentality that you have to have as a dancer that kept me grounded and kept me understanding that you know this is my job i get up at 5 am i go to work i work 1517 hours a day which is what we did at that time especially when you should have no home at that time which took a lot longer than digital does now. they also had a concept that every character of party of 5 there are we every scene had to have at least one or 2 of the lead characters so it wasn't like your typical ensemble where you'd have a lot of time off we really didn't so that was 10 months a year those hours and i was doing films on my hiatus and very very lucky to get the jobs i wanted to make sure that i was in get something i would be known for something other than just the show i didn't want to see serious 6 years go by and
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not be seen as anything else but it meant that i were to nonstop and maybe that was my saving grace was the fact that i didn't party i didn't and you know i just was not a part of the hollywood scene that i had never really looked to that and not thought about being a famous actor i thought i was going to be a chorus dancer who got up at so many a morning or is that on the floor lying on the floor warming up to piano and dancing all day and bloody feet mat you know making no money and never being famous that was what i was going to do so. it was quite overwhelming i had not prepared myself not that you can prepare yourself for it but i am not prepared myself in any way and maybe that's a good thing yeah you sounds like you have if you have staged it correctly did you feel a bit of guilt as you moved further away from the dance because i know when that's in your hard drive geez i don't know success in another field you have to follow it but did you feel a bit of guilt. it was honestly it was about 10 years
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before i even listen to classical music. it would make me so sad i couldn't go see down and distance so much. it was really a conscious choice it was like a natural progression because i had suffered so many injuries i could've i could keep slogging but it was really challenging for me it's really hard on my body. and it would have been it would have been a very difficult career. so it made it it made sense that it was hard you know getting to make the company with creating that project was my way of saying goodbye to it and it's no great sense that i can see dance i can celebrate and i can listen to classical music in this they don't but it is funny when you choose something at such a young age as you know and you're so hardwired for that which you have to be as a dancer to be a good quality to answer. yeah it was it was a difficult difficult to let go of. boy what a beautiful closure altman maybe unknowingly gifted us that you could circle back
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around punctuated and and find on the other side of that that you could cozy up to it again and not be so heartbroken in a way absolutely absolutely you know it took me i created some it took me 8 years to get it off the ground and convince him to do it and you know the reason that i wanted him was he sorry was so great at creating worlds you know. that was what bob was best at was not making a star not hearing any one person and be the story or be the heroine but have it be a world that you are immersed in and i really wanted it be an acknowledgement to a dance company and soften the dance world and not have it be some star platform for myself or any leads that in the film. it was i was so lucky to have that experience and it was a magical experience you know the crew had never seen dance before the dancers had never been in a movie before bob was like a kid in a candy store he just loved it he loved what amazing artists that are you know
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because he never sold out so for him yet such respect for dancers it was really one of those magical experiences certainly one of the best songs finances of my life but we're talking and never campbell and coming out on demand on may 15th is castle ground it'll be released on may 15th so look for that we've been going back and we're talking about party of 5 obviously that was the 1st big way station for her and then all i had this talk with jamie lee who's a friend of mine about this is the scream queen thing and she always says she had so much fun doing that i you know i mean i don't think it's for the long run you've got to move on from it but what are your memories of doing scream what are your memories of craven. so listen i was so you know people will say to me did you choose why why did you choose to be a screenplay you know go searching for the internet i honestly had no i don't we ever see one horror movie in my life it happened to be the 2nd movie i ever got
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happened to be my 1st lead in a in a movie and it happened to be massive and happy heart film so it wasn't a conscious choice it was again one of those sort of. meant to be things i guess and i wrote i mean respray then was a gem he really was an incredible man he knew how to make those films really well he knew how to entertain people. he knew how to have fun he knew how to direct and tell a story in a way that people come back to him back to back to are and they're such they're such cult films. you know i there was a moment in my career where i was worried that they were so big that that would be all i was known for and there certainly was a longer time where all i was getting was horrified arms and that was frustrating and that was also part of my going to london was just needing to exit for a minute so i could sort of change things up for myself
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a bit. but i am so grateful for those films i really am and i know the audiences love them now. and i love them it's fun we're having a conversation about the 5th right now they just came to me a month ago so i mean who knows in the end. but i you know it could be fun to do again if we can all come to an understanding of each other about how it should be i have been nervous about wes not being a part of it you know because the past i've been nervous. the people involved seem so respectful of his work and and really want to honor that so it's possible we could make another good one we'll see. so there you go i know there's a lot of fans out there thinking about that screen maybe down the road and no listen i am i'm not a practicing buddhist but i always feel like when people put something nice out into the universe when you talk about these prominent times when you arrive 2 weeks after northridge and get that part and you know i always think well there's
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something something welcoming about a person and i think you welcome those things and you probably can't say that because it's sides but you have such a sweet presence i always think the universe looks around for people they want to work with in some regard and i certainly think you have a nice by bracing about kiddo oh he's such a kind q i feel very very sorry j.j. hang on not tell j.j. i'm not flirting i'm being nice you can see you are oh he's downstairs a scary one cigarette. break i wish you good luck with this film once again it's video on demand it's a castle in the ground and it will be really starting may 15th go forth and prosper young never campbell good to be chernenko thank you so much. later gator all right that's enough camel to spin dennis miller plus why thank you folks.
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live from the world headquarters of our t. america in our nation's capital this is the news with rick sanchez and hello again everybody i'm rick sanchez it's time to look now at something that's very important to all of us recovery numbers how our adjusting how we're getting out of the situation both by the way at the macro level and at the micro level in other words what is wall street getting and what is the average worker getting look whether you're a carpenter in berlin a plumber in new delhi or a house painter in detroit this is going to affect you so let's go over to the wall
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