The Buzz

Wednesday, August 9, 2006 9:50 AM EDT

Mick and the Stones are coming to Louisville
Mick Jagger will strut at the home of the Kentucky Derby when the Rolling Stones perform at the famed Churchill Downs racetrack Sept. 29.

“It's an opportunity we have to bring a legendary rock group to a legendary venue,” Churchill Downs President Steve Sexton said at a news conference Monday.

Seating will be in the grandstand, clubhouse and on the track. A special covering will be placed over the dirt and turf to protect the racing surfaces, Churchill Downs officials said.

The stage will be placed on the infield, facing the grandstand, giving the band an ideal view of the twin spires, sandwiched between luxury boxes.

‘Hannity & Colmes' will have Miller time

Dennis Miller is hardly shy about expressing his conservative political views.

The 52-year-old comedian, who has voiced his support for President Bush and the U.S. invasion of Iraq, will talk politics as a contributor on Fox News' “Hannity & Colmes,” network spokeswoman Dana Klinghoffer told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Miller starts Sept. 13.

He will also provide commentary on the Fox News Web site, Klinghoffer said.

Three years ago, Miller was talked about as a possible Republican senatorial candidate in California.

‘American Idol's'

Daughtry leaves home

Chris Daughtry has left his small hometown of McLeansville for a bigger town and home.

The 26-year-old “American Idol” rocker, who finished fourth on this year's Fox talent competition, has moved to Oak Ridge, a town of about 4,000, which is north of Greensboro. NASCAR driver Kevin Harvick lives nearby.

Daughtry and his wife paid $690,000 for a four-bedroom, 3,782-square-foot home with a swimming pool and putting green on a little more than an acre of land.

McLeansville, also in Guilford County, has one barbershop, one grocery store and no gas stations.

Hey lady, Jerry files suit over ‘The Errand Boy'

Jerry Lewis filed a $2.3 million lawsuit against two entertainment companies, claiming he is owed money over a proposed remake of his 1961 movie, “The Errand Boy.”

The 80-year-old comedian's lawsuit, filed Thursday in Los Angeles Superior Court, names as defendants Spyglass Entertainment Group and Hollywood Pictures Corp.

The lawsuit said Lewis and JAS Productions Inc. entered into an agreement with Hollywood Pictures in 1996 that gave the film company an option to remake “The Errand Boy.”

Lewis was to act in the film and serve as a consultant and executive producer if the option was exercised, the lawsuit said.

- From wire reports

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