Disney princess Rachel Zegler melts down over Trump victory — says president and his voters should 'never know peace'



Disney actress Rachel Zegler said she was "heartbroken" over Donald Trump winning the election and urged her fans not to use Elon Musk's platform X due to his support of the president.

In a series of social media stories on Instagram, the "Snow White" actress said the election results left her "speechless."

"Another four years of hatred, leaning us towards a world I do not want to live in," the 23-year-old opined. "Leaning us towards a world that will be hard to raise my daughter in. leaning us towards a world that will force her to have a baby she doesn't want. leaning us towards a world that is fearful."

On top of admitting she shouldn't be shocked, the actress said she was "heartbroken" for her friends who woke up fearful the morning after the election. She expressed to her fans that she is "here" for them should they need to "cry," "yell," or "hug."

"The left continues to fail us in forging a new path forward. this loss should not have been. and it certainly should not have been by so many votes," she waxed on.

'There is no help, no counsel, in any of them.'

Zegler's tone turned darker as she said she agreed with the sentiment that "more than anything," Trump supporters, voters, and Trump himself should "never know peace."

Adding to the long-held Democratic Party claim that Trump is a threat to democracy, Zegler said there is a "deep, deep sickness" in the United States, proven by the tens of millions of people who voted for Trump.

She also called the number of people who support Trump "terrifying," saying they are subscribing to a "false sense of security, of masculinity, of intelligence, of patriotism, and of humanity."

"There is no help, no counsel, in any of them," Zegler said of Trump supporters. "I could go on. i won't. i feel sad. you probably do, too. f*** this."

The young actress also urged her followers not to use Musk's platform because he "helped get that man elected," accusing those who are on X of "giving [Musk] business."

The New Jersey-born star has frequently rejected backlash for her commentary, attributing it to prejudice related to her ethnicity.

She said in October 2023 that those speaking against her were doing so because she is one of the many "fearless and loud" Latino performers who are "loud about having seats at the tables they deserve to be at."

The same account that posted Zegler's recent anti-Trump rant also noted her recent hyperbolic post describing why she was voting for Vice President Kamala Harris.

"I'm voting for kamala harris because either she or donald trump will be president come january, and if hillary clinton (another deeply flawed candidate) had won in 2016, roe v. wade would be law today and women who are now dead from treatable pregnancy complications would be alive," she claimed.

In addition, she also implied that the Republican ticket believes "trans people and immigrants are the root" of the nation's problems. Zegler also suggested that the National Guard would be unjustly deployed on protesters if Trump wins.

"If [Kamala] loses, i worry i may never vote again."

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Wednesday Western: The top Western social media accounts



Social media has played an interesting role in the revival of Western cinema. I’ve compiled a list of social media accounts dedicated to Westerns.

This article doesn’t include blogs, podcasts, websites, or magazines. I’m currently working on an article for each, so definitely let me know any of these that I need to know about in the comments section, or send me an email.

The following list is by no means comprehensive. And at first glance, it may seem like a random assortment. The accounts vary in audience size, output, and content organization. They employ different media and delivery methods. Some are public; some require you to answer a questionnaire. Each of them is unique.

What unites them is a frontier spirit, a liveliness.

Official John Wayne - Instagram

It's no secret that I'm a huge fan of The Duke.

The official John Wayne Instagram page is probably my favorite Western social media account. The X account is also solid. But the Instagram account is far better.

It delivers the perfect number and flow of posts. And the descriptions, titles, and photos are all flawlessly assembled. I’d be shocked if it weren’t run by social media or marketing/PR professionals.

This is the proper handling of the John Wayne legacy. The people in charge of maintaining it make sure that the Duke’s legacy is truly an experience. All of it is interconnected through John Wayne Enterprises: the John Wayne Museum, the John Wayne Cancer Foundation, the John Wayne Grit Series, among others.

You can buy John Wayne cookbooks and a collection of cocktail recipes, coffee, ornamental cups and top-class clothing — all of which will appear in this series in exciting ways.

All of these converge at the Instagram account.

It’s comforting to see a passionate group of people devoted to the upkeep of the Duke’s invaluable legacy.

If all that weren’t good enough, they just launched a collaboration with Broken Bow Country, a friend of the Wednesday Western series, as captured in this profile.

Broken Bow Country: Meet the 17-year-old behind a viral Western clothing brandwww.theblaze.com

In fact, during our interview, we connected on the Duke and our admiration for the official John Wayne account.

Scrolling through this account, it feels like you’re reading a biography of the Duke, told in vignettes and accompanied by pictures, music, and video.

Some of the posts are simply gorgeous. They provide a holistic view of the Duke, a man unlike any other. They offer great commentary on various Wayne films and media appearances. They help you understand who John Wayne was behind the legend, as in this post about his prolific love of chess.

Other times, it’s playful, as with the incredibly creative inclusion of holidays, like this recent celebration of National Sunglasses Day.

The posts hit every emotion as we navigate John Wayne’s love life and comforts and disappointments and truest victories.

And America, you become closer to this great country. Just check out this 4th of July post. And, man, how about this one? Who else deserves to be the biggest movie star of all time?

Just Westerns - YouTube

Just Westerns is an entrepreneurial feat animated by one man’s love for Westerns. He has mastered the possibilities that YouTube offers.

And that narrator’s voice: That’s Marc Reynard, the Englishman in charge of Just Westerns, the unofficial home of Westerns on YouTube.

This dude is undoubtedly one of us.

He examines the genre from creative and at times surprising angles, like this video about the fate of “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly 2.” You read that right: There was supposed to be a sequel.

His videos are smooth, well produced, well crafted, well written, sharp, fun, lovely, informative.

He also does something that I wish we had more of: He hypes upcoming and anticipated Westerns and compiles year-end lists and legitimizes the artistic merit of video games: “20 Best Western Video Games.” He also covers Wednesday Western favorite "Old Henry" (2021)

We need more of all of this. Best of all, you can feel his passion.

My only complaint is that the channel has only 30 videos. I went through them all at a steady clip.

But even this turns out to be further proof that you’re getting content that is authentically wholesome. Marc addresses it in his YouTube bio: “Please bear with me, I am a solo creator without the resources or manpower that larger channels typically have, so I am unfortunately unable to upload as regularly as I like, especially as I am committed to prioritizing quality over quantity.”

Take your time, brother. Personally, I think it's worth the wait.

r/Westerns - Reddit

Reddit can be a nasty place, especially if your politics are anything to the right of Bernie Sanders. And you can’t avoid the ideological slapfests, either. Leftist goons stir it up in every subreddit, constantly, and they’re almost always combative, even in the subreddits devoted to woodwork or kittens.

The Westerns subreddit is a clear exception. It’s a community. It feels like the town square of a dust-ridden Western town.

Check out this thread about “For a Few Dollars More.”

The mixed-media format of Reddit allows for a variety of sources: pictures, movies, trailers, interviews, text-only, even gifs. It might be the most versatile resource on this list.

It’s a great place for recommendations and commentary. Unlike much of the rest of Reddit, which is disproportionately loaded with young white liberal men, there’s an even spread of people of all ages.

These Redditors routinely swap personal stories about the various movies and actors. Some of their stories are poignant and evocative.

Back to the Old Western - Facebook

Facebook is a great place for Western fans. Instagram is too image-centered to accommodate text, and it doesn’t support links. Meanwhile, the microblogging experience of X is limited in its scope and impatient in its daunting pace — the temperament and vibe of Westerns don’t do well in such a frantic environment.

Facebook circumnavigates all of this, finally able to beat all the much lighter apps. For once, it finds an advantage to its cluttered user interface.

This bulk allows users to upload and share every type of content. No limitations. It’s the only platform capable of this, besides Reddit, but I’m not about to equate the megalith Facebook with the niche subreddit.

Besides, Facebook outperforms Reddit anyway. Its Pages function allows for an immersive blogging experience, run by moderators and admins who are passionate about their content and free to run their operation without much interference, right down to the parameters of the group’s privacy.

Back to the old western | Charles Bronson as Chino in classic western film 'The Valdez Horses' in 1973 | Facebookwww.facebook.com

Back to the Old Western is the perfect example of these principles. It is active, with a constant flow of posts, often aggregated from fan pages — the Duke and Sam Elliot, mostly.

The comments sections are fairly quiet, but most of the time people add substance or passion to the movie or actor being celebrated.

Chatter isn’t as important as it is on Reddit. The admins really know their stuff, offering a healthy range of mainstream Westerns, cult classics, and oddities, like this post celebrating Brigitte Bardot and Claudia Cardinale for their roles in “The Legend of Frenchie King” (1971), a wild little movie that will get its Wednesday Western spotlight in due time.

A Word on Westerns - YouTube

BLAZING SADDLES! The fart scene changed my life, says Burton Gilliam A WORD ON WESTERNSwww.youtube.com

I made a point to place Just Westerns higher up than A Word on Westerns, because Just Westerns is the passion project of an ordinary guy who loves Westerns, while A Word on Westerns is a proper television series. An exceedingly good one, with just as much passion and gusto.

It’s a fantastic channel. A Word on Westerns is sort of like a Western-only version of TMC, which is a thrilling reality. That’s the dream.

The channel features entire movies, each with a brief but thorough introduction by Rob Word, a double feature as part of the segment Word’s Wayback.

These are mostly 1930s and 1940s Westerns.

YouTube is an oddity on this list, because so many of the major Western channels exclusively post full movies. What a joy it is to find a rare Western on YouTube. But these channels lack the commentary and artistry that characterize the two YouTube channels I’ve included on this list.

A Word on Westerns blends the rustic ease of the Old West with the hypersonic immediacy of our infinite now. You can also access lectures, speeches, and clever projects like this "Gunsmoke" mash-up.

Smartest of all, it makes good use of the Shorts function on YouTube, will brief clips about various topics, from Robert Mitchum to stories of mutilation.

Western Podcast - X

The Western Podcast X page is small but mighty, with some impressive followers and praise from True West magazine.

Have you seen #HorizonAmericanSaga yet? If so, share your thoughts with us! We'll record a full podcast episode about the film in two weeks when Andrew is back from his vacation in Europe. In the meantime, here's Matt's highly positive take on Kevin Costner's latest Western epic. https://t.co/baVzZE4vPK
— @WesternPodcast (@WesternPodcast) June 28, 2024

It’s an offshoot of the marvelous podcast hosted by our friend Western apostle Andrew Patrick Nelson and the excellent Matthew Chernov, a screenwriter and a journalist with bylines in Variety, Entertainment Weekly, IMBd.com. Yahoo News, and about a hundred other outlets. His insight thrives with the joy of curiosity.

Andrew's Instagram account will keep you up to date with his media appearances and projects, with the occasional infusion of Hair Metal.

These boys are the real deal. Andrew just began his new job as chief curator of Western Spirit, Scottsdale's Museum of the West. Before that, he taught film history. As a professor at the University of Utah, Andrew guided his students through the badlands full of robbers and coyotes, only to unmask the villains hiding behind all their props and plywood scenery.

Why Millennials & Zoomers Should Watch Westerns | Andrew Patrick Nelson | Alignwww.youtube.com

Both of them are impressively smart with a tenderness for beauty, but not at the cost of a good story or a complicated hero.

They take their time with content, even tweets, but this adds to the reverence of their decision-making process. If you haven't taken the dive into their work already, do it.They have a gift for revealing the beautiful, intricate paradoxes of Western movies. They speak with screenwriters, historians, authors, journalists, musicians, directors, costume designers, and more.

They tell stories. They examine personal reactions to various films. They navigate themes of universality and timelessness within the motion of transcendence, while also exposing the flimsiness of any given cultural era.

Is Stagecoach the best movie ever made? Interview with Andrew Patrick Nelsonwww.youtube.com

They have a gift for discerning the role of Western movies in relation to our unexplained world, differentiating these fictions from their context and influence. But also, more impressively, they succeed in witnessing the presence of our entire universe in one tiny section of cinema history.

Both of them have helped yours truly at many points along our journey so far. They have guided me through the desert more than once.

Kevin Costner and Modern West - X

Kevin Costner & MW (@modernwest) on X

Kevin Costner & MW (@modernwest) on Xx.com

Kevin Costner is this era’s Clint Eastwood. He fights to keep the Western in public view, devoting himself to projects animated by passion, even if his wallet takes a hit. The victory is worth the risk.

He has ushered in a new era for the genre. His success with "Yellowstone" and its Western universe of shows has accelerated the Western’s resurgence. But it’s more than that. We're also witnessing a flourishing of the Western as an ethos, a style, a mode of thought, an approach to life.

So did you realize that Kevin Costner has a country band? Founded in 2007, Kevin Costner and Modern West deliver rowdy songs written for the culturally forgotten people of America. The band's history is tinged with tragedy.

The Kevin Costner and Modern West account is technically the band’s, but it posts tons of Costner content, all hand-picked and polished by a team of social media professionals.

Best Cowboy Movies Forever - Facebook

Best cowboy movies forever | Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, and Van Heflin in "Shane" (1953) | Facebookwww.facebook.com

There are several variations on the “Western” + “Forever” title, but I’m going with Best Cowboy Movies Forever. I enjoy the way the account profiles various actors, like this post about Lee Van Cleef.

It also includes Westerns from every different era. This is important. It’s good to hop around in this way. I’m partial to the 1939-1960 era of the genre, so I can plant myself in that time exclusively if I’m not careful.

The page rarely ventures into the current scene. But this isn’t a problem. It’s important to offer due reverence to the originators.

Old West - Actors, Films, and Legends - Facebook

www.facebook.com

Old West zooms in so that we get a portrait view of an incredible variety of Western actors, films, and legends, like this post devoted to Myron Halle or this homage to Elsa Martinelli. I value any source that prioritizes the lesser-known figures in the genre. Because, as we all know, the Western genre is overflowing with stories, entire generations of actors, producers, directors, screenwriters — you name it — whose fascinating tales deserve to be recounted.

As much as I love the giants of the genre, I derive incredible joy from learning about these forgotten figures.

Passion for Western Movies - Instagram

Passion for Western Movies makes great use of Instagram’s Reels format.

The account does a lot of this kind of multi-movie post, offering a list of movies connected by timeframe or theme.

Passion for Western Movies lives up to its name, able to glide around the history of the Western genre, seemingly without partiality. It also features lesser-known movies, like this post about "The Hunting Party," which features Gene Hackman.

Broken Bow Country - Instagram

I’m a bit biased on this one, because I think Colton is an absolute legend, but Broken Bow Country is perfect for this list.

The Western experience you get is fairly rough around the edges, in a distinctly modern way. But modernity never wins against Broken Bow Country.

It’s unique for many reasons but primarily because, in addition to its Western ethos, it is a clothing retailer and printmaker. No other creator on our list offers this level of art and style.

Then you’ve got the lore, the storytelling that comes with his posts, the war hymns of country-Western rebels and the toll their rebellion often took on their lives.

The past month has been wild for Colton. Early in July, he landed a collaboration with John Wayne Enterprises. The T-shirts are fantastic. In fact, I’m wearing one of them in the cover photo for Wednesday Western.

Then, a gunman on a sloped roof tried to murder former President Donald Trump, who was days away from officially accepting his party’s nomination.

In the panicky hours that followed, many people succumbed to their emotions, others to their resolve. I won’t pretend to have remained cool.

But Colton did. Following the Trump assassination attempt, he designed a T-shirt honoring one of the most American moments in human history, as Trump rose with his fist in the air. And he donated all of the money to a charity for Corey Comperatore, the man who died shielding his family from one of the gunman’s bullets.

This was a controversial move. He even faced the nasty comments about how the shooter shouldn’t have missed or that the deaths of the victims were “completely deserved.”

He lost a few thousand followers, but he describes it as “inconsequential when you think about the people that it's helping to support.”

In a press release, he said, “This has nothing to do with politics, I was incredibly moved by what happened and I wanted to use my platform to do something that extended beyond the controversy and the arguing.”

Lancer TV Blog - Facebook

Last and certainly not least, Lancer TV Blog on Facebook. It is run by a friend of mine, an avid supporter of Wednesday Western.

Unlike every other entry included on this list, Lancer TV Blog focuses entirely on one show, a show that hardly anyone knows. This reversal in focus is good for a movie lover’s mental sharpness.

I’m working on a deep dive into "Lancer," so I won’t say too much.

Beyond the merits of the show and its cast, "Lancer" is an underdog story still in the middle stages, badgered by uncertainty. Because the show hasn’t had a reboot, despite success throughout its two (long) seasons on CBS. So it’s not an issue of merit; the show deserves a second wind. It would very likely expand its audience.

But none of that matters for the art trapped in the murk of a waiting area, a zone of uncertainty. And the gifted athlete eventually starts to wobble. Filmstock degrades. All technology collapses. Call it the inevitable disintegration of a lively body, in this case a body of art.

Even the most perfect masterpieces eventually crumble. But what if that happens to be your masterpiece? What if it’s your tiny heaven, all tangled up in red tape? Life has enough of this disintegration as it is. Our entertainment needs to be clean, enjoyable, and easily accessible. Or so claims the majority.

Well, thank God for the passionate workers of cultural excavation. They dig and fight. They protect, sustain, and preserve. Without them, life would be less beautiful. Without them, our society would be weaker and tamer and less able to see a way out.

"Lancer" episodes run an hour. This extended run time fundamentally changes the character and depth of a TV show. It’s amazing what an episode can accomplish in one hour that it simply can’t in 30 minutes.

What you’ll find, as you scroll through the posts on the Lancer Facebook page, is purity. This fandom rewards people with a tiny kingdom, a crafted world they can always turn to. That experience should rile up every single person.

There’s a fidelity to their affection that is heartwarming. The Lancer TV Blog connects you to this incredibly pure relation. It’s just there, like sand across the winds of time.

Actress shares the ‘tools’ she uses to navigate Hollywood’s impossible beauty standards



Candace Cameron Bure, best known for playing D.J. Tanner on ABC’s “Full House,” is no stranger to the crushing pressure of Hollywood’s impossible and toxic beauty standards.

Bure is now back in the entertainment industry, and while she loves her “fitness routine” and “being a healthy eater,” she knows where to draw the line.

“There are unrealistic and unhealthy beauty standards in the entertainment industry that I'm sure you had to battle against,” says Allie Beth Stuckey.

“I still do,” Bure admits, citing “the Ozempic craze” as one area she’s currently struggling with.

“I’m like, ‘Should I go on Ozempic?’ … I’m not going to go on Ozempic, but these are the things that cross my mind because the standard is so high and I’m in front of the camera all day,” she continues, adding that “a lot of the pressure comes from [herself].”

Bure is open about her former eating disorder, and while she’s had control over it for “20 years,” she still has to “battle it all the time.”

“I have tools in place that help me,” she says.

Before making a decision, “I'm going to remind myself how I'm going to feel, I'm going to remind myself of every physicality” that might happen — “whether my stomach’s going to feel bloated, whether my eyes and face are going to hurt.”

“I was bulimic for a long time, so I remind myself of the things that feel awful and the consequences of it,” she says, adding that this method “snaps [her] back to reality.”

As for exercise, Bure focuses on “[feeling] strong and healthy,” allowing “all of those endorphins” to help “clear [her] mind.”

“My fitness journey is really for my emotional health,” she says.

She also looks to her Christian faith to guide her through those internal battles.

“I have an ongoing dialogue with God, and so, my prayer life is pretty strong,” she tells Allie. “If I pull the Holy Spirit into my mind and I'm constantly praying and asking God to renew my mind, it helps.”

To hear about how Candace handles the pressure to look perfect on social media and the inevitability of aging, watch the clip below.


Want more from Allie Beth Stuckey?

To enjoy more of Allie’s upbeat and in-depth coverage of culture, news, and theology from a Christian, conservative perspective, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

Candace Cameron Bure, aka ‘Full House’s’ DJ Tanner, talks faith, acting, motherhood, and more



Some know her as D.J. Tanner from “Full House,” others as “the queen of Christmas” from several beloved Hallmark films.

“But her real name is Candace Cameron Bure,” says Allie Beth Stuckey, adding that the actress “has been a light in the darkness of the media industry for a very long time” and has made “an incredible impact for the kingdom of God.”

On this episode of “Relatable,” Candace joins Allie to “share all kinds of wisdom and insight and even some fun stories and facts about herself and her life.”

Despite being an outspoken Christian, Bure “[wasn’t] raised in a Christian home” due to the fact that her father “didn’t want religion brought into the home.” However, her mother “was a believer,” and when a marital crisis struck their family, help came in the form of church.

“We started going to church for the first time, and I was sitting in the church and heard a sermon one day, and I really didn't know what it all meant. I just heard if you want Jesus in your heart to be the Lord and Savior over your life, then say this prayer and ask Him into your heart. And so at 12 years old, I did that, and that's when I became a Christian,” Candace tells Allie, adding that it wasn’t until her mid-20s after having her first baby that she “understood the gospel message for the first time” and began having “a relationship with God.”

However, long before she was introduced to Jesus, Candace was already deep into her acting career, which launched when she was just 5 years old. Filming “Full House” took up the majority of her time until the series ended in 1995 when she was 18 years old.

Then, a new chapter of her life began that involved her marriage to professional hockey player Valeri Bure, three children by the age of 25, and the dawn of a new acting career after a 10-year hiatus.

To hear more of the fascinating details of Bure’s life and her take on motherhood, navigating the impossible beauty standards of Hollywood, and the reality of being an outspoken Christian in an industry hostile to God, check out the episode below.


Want more from Allie Beth Stuckey?

To enjoy more of Allie’s upbeat and in-depth coverage of culture, news, and theology from a Christian, conservative perspective, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

FACT CHECK: Did The Sun Cover A Ukrainian Porn Actress Announcing Her Presidential Run?

There is no evidence that The Sun published this video or that the porn star made this statement.

'F*** them one and all': Actress proclaims her hatred for all Republicans in vitriolic, profanity-laced tweet



Actress Ellen Barkin issued a vitriolic tweet on Monday in which she declared her hatred for all Republicans.

She prefaced the brief belligerent declaration by apologizing for her comments and profanity, before promptly proceeding to spew invective.

"I'm sorry to have to say this. I'm sorry for my language. But. I f[*****] hate these motherf*[****] Republicans. Every last one. F*[**] them one and all," Barkin tweeted.

\u201cI\u2019m sorry to have to say this. I\u2019m sorry for my language. But.\n\nI fuckin hate these motherf*king Republicans. Every last one. F*ck them one and all.\u201d
— Ellen Barkin (@Ellen Barkin) 1684800559

Her hostile post has attracted significant attention, earning more than 4,000 retweets, over 12,000 replies, and more than 31,000 likes so far.

"You're so enlightened and stuff," BlazeTV host Chad Prather tweeted in response to Barkin's comments.

"I'm so sad to hear you talk this way. I love your past work, but a comment like the one you made is so hateful and over the top that I can no longer be a fan," someone else tweeted.

"Welcome to the inclusive, welcoming and love everyone movement," another person quipped.

"Such reasoned and compelling intellectual discourse. Sure to really help. Way to go," someone else wrote.

"I have no clue who you are, but you don’t seem very nice," another person remarked.

"I'm sorry to have to say this, but I can do it without using foul language. The feeling is mutual. I loathe these liberals. All of them," someone else wrote.

Ironically, the tweet Barkin currently has pinned to the top of her Twitter account speaks about love. "'Without love there can be no justice.' 'Without justice there can be no love.'...bell hooks," the tweet reads.

\u201c\u201cWithout love there can be no justice.\u201d\n\u201cWithout justice there can be no love.\u201d...bell hooks\u201d
— Ellen Barkin (@Ellen Barkin) 1592691496

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'My husband and I are heartbroken': Actress and singer says that she 'performed on stage for 2000 people while having a miscarriage'



Actress and singer Laura Benanti, a Tony Award winner, revealed that she recently performed while experiencing a miscarriage.

Benanti noted that she was aware of the miscarriage prior to the performance.

"On Monday April 3rd, I performed on stage for 2000 people while having a miscarriage. I knew it was happening. It started slowly the night before. If it had been our first loss, or even our second, I likely wouldn’t have been able to go on. But unfortunately, I am not a stranger to the pain and emptiness of losing a pregnancy. It is a path I have walked before, hand in hand with my husband," she wrote in an Instagram post.

"But this time we walked it alongside some of the kindest, most loving humans I will ever have the honor to share space with. Thank you to everyone in that audience for the grace your presence allowed. For lifting me out of my grief for that Holy hour. Thank you to my band for holding me, unconditionally, in your hearts, and to the crew for working so hard to make me as comfortable as possible. Thank you to my friends and fellow performers for rallying around me and so graciously accommodating my changing needs," Benanti wrote.

"My husband and I are heartbroken but we will move through this together as we, and so many others, have done before. I share all of this, not to garner sympathy or attention, but to remind the many people and families who have and will suffer in this way that there is no shame in this kind of loss. That you are not alone. And to remind myself as well," Benanti said.

The woman and her husband, Patrick Brown, have two children, including one who was born through a surrogate last year.

"Patrick and I are so grateful for the family that we have, and the miracle of our two little girls. One carried by me and one carried by an angel-on-earth," Benati wrote.

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Famed Broadway actress Patti LuPone goes on foul-mouthed tirade against woman who wore mask under her nose



Famed Broadway actress Patti LuPone went on a foul-mouthed rant directed at an audience member during a post show Q&A session because she was not properly wearing a mask.

LuPone, who was answering questions with the rest of the cast after a performance of her musical, "Company," was filmed berating a female theatergoer who had not covered her nose with her mask.

“Put your mask over your nose. That’s why you’re in the theater. That is the rule. If you don’t want to follow the rule, get the f*** out!” LuPone screamed at this person.

without further ado\u2026 ms. patti luponepic.twitter.com/rEBB7nfXQ2
— hen (@hen) 1652272870
The audience cheered and applauded as she ranted and raved at the mask offender.
“I'm serious! Who do you think you are that you do not respect the people sitting around you?” LuPone demanded.
The ticket-purchasing audience member shot back, "I pay your salary!"
"You pay my salary? Bulls**t. Chris Harper pays my salary," LuPone retorted, name-dropping the show's producer.
"Who do you think you are?!" LuPone shrieked.
"I'm a patron. A person!" the audience member said.
"Just put your mask over your nose!" LuPone commanded before the discussion's moderator changed the subject.
The Tony and Grammy award-winning Broadway actress has a well-earned reputation for a bad temper and confrontational personality. The New York Post recounts how in 2009, she stopped a production of "Gypsy" mid-show to yell at a photographer. And once in 2015, she interrupted a performance of "Shows for Days" to snatch the cellphone out of the hands of a texting audience member.

Speaking about the incident, she told Playbill, "We work hard on stage to create a world that is being totally destroyed by a few rude, self-absorbed and inconsiderate audience members who are controlled by their phones.”

LuPone is also an outspoken leftist. She made controversial remarks about Republican Senator Lindsey Graham in 2019, suggesting that the South Carolina lawmaker was a closeted gay man.

"Lindsey Graham you are a disgrace. On a personal note, why don't you just bite the bullet and come out. You might just come to your senses," she tweeted.

In another controversial tweet, she mocked Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, calling him a "national disgrace" and approvingly referred to how Paul's neighbor viciously assaulted him in November 2017, breaking several bones and putting him in the hospital.

"Rand Paul, do us all a big favor. Don't set foot in NYC. You too are a National disgrace. Maybe your neighbor had a point?" she tweeted.

Actress Betty White Was Also A Game Show Icon

Betty White served as perhaps the greatest game show panelist, earning the moniker, 'The First Lady of Game Shows.'

Conservative actress Kristy Swanson asks for prayer, says she's hospitalized with COVID-related pneumonia. And prominent leftists just can't hide their hate.



If nothing else, leftists are pretty much a lock for giving voice to their hatred whenever a conservative isn't doing so well.

We saw their viciousness after radio icon Rush Limbaugh announced he had cancer in February 2020 — and then again after he died a year later. There are many examples; it's as if lack of compassion for those with whom they disagree is embedded in leftists' physiological makeup or something.

So if you're a well-known conservative who's fallen ill and leftists find out, don't expect much in the way of encouragement — your best hope is not catching wind of too much of their mockery, or you might feel worse.

What now?

We're seeing it again now that conservative actress Kristy Swanson tweeted a prayer request Monday saying she's hospitalized and on oxygen due to pneumonia from COVID-19:

🙏🏼 Prayers for me please. Yesterday I took an ambulance ride to the hospital. I’m still here with pneumonia, I’m on… https://t.co/DgMNTLGYqF

— Kristy Swanson (@KristySwansonXO) 1635778657.0

"I'm in good spirits and in great hands," the 51-year-old added.

What did prominent leftists have to say?

Swanson — known the world over for her her starring role in the original "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" movie — received her share of well wishes, but like flies on a birthday cake, prominent leftists were all over her tweet and spewing hate and mockery per usual:

  • First up is author Brian O'Sullivan: "Anti-vaxxers like Kristy Swanson always praise doctors/nurses when committed to the hospital. I'm not buying it for once [sic] second. If they really gave a s**t about them, they'd have got the vaccine in the first place."
  • Then we have this reaction from Occupy Democrats executive editor Grant Stern: "Praying for Kristy Swanson to recover from her ignorance of science, and Covid."
  • "Anti-Vaxxer Kristy Swanson is in the hospital with Covid. I'm making lasagna for dinner," tweeted Yesha Callahan, a screenwriter and former deputy editor at the Root.
  • "Kristy Swanson has Covid, and it's the first time in 37 years producers and actors are reaching out to her to see how she is," writer and artist Tony Posnanski tweeted. (And not to give Posnanski too much attention, but when Limbaugh died he compared the late radio host to Hitler. The things some leftists do for brownshirt points, eh?)
  • "Notorious MAGA and Anti Vaxxer Kristy Swanson is in the hospital with COVID-related pneumonia. She is in the hospital because of her ignorance and selfishness. PERIOD!" New York City-based activist Tom D'Angora tweeted. "My heart goes out to the hospital staff."
  • "Kristy Swanson has been terrible for a really long time," writer Tara Dublin tweeted, along with a "karma" hashtag.