Watch Jerry Seinfeld put DEI advocate to shame in 30 seconds



When a certain “asexual white weirdo,” in the words of Dave Rubin, made his way onto Jerry Seinfeld’s show, he was quick to point out the surplus of “white males” on the host’s other talk show, “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.”

But all it took was 30 seconds and a few quippy sentences for Jerry to put the BuzzFeed interviewer, Peter Lauria, to shame.

“I have noticed that most of the guests are mostly white males. Of 22 episodes …” Lauria began before Jerry cut him off.

“Yeah, let’s get into that,” Seinfeld interjected, as the audience howled with laughter.

“Take a look over here, Peter,” he continued, gesturing to the audience. “What do you see? A lot of whities!”

“But I…” Peter restarted, but he was cut off again.

“Oh, this really pisses me off. People think it’s the census or something. This has got to represent the actual pie chart of America? Who cares?” Jerry fired back. “It’s just funny. Funny is the world that I live in. You’re funny, I’m interested; you’re not funny, I’m not interested.”

“I have no interest in gender or race or anything like that, but everyone else [is] calculating: Is this the exact right mix? ... To me, it’s anti-comedy,” he concluded.

While the conversation was mostly light-hearted and comical, Jerry does make an excellent point about the total rejection of meritocracy in our society.

“Jerry’s answer there is absolutely right,” says Dave, “and we have seen wokeness destroy comedy, which is why there are very few funny movies any more or funny TV shows.”

To watch Jerry Seinfeld effectively silence a virtue-signaling lefty, watch the clip below.


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Michael J. Fox details hellish nature of Parkinson's and hope for the future in powerful CBS interview

Michael J. Fox details hellish nature of Parkinson's and hope for the future in powerful CBS interview



Michael J. Fox directly addressed his own mortality and the "hell" of Parkinson's disease in a powerful, much-anticipated interview with Jane Pauley on "CBS Sunday Morning."
"It's banging on the door. It's getting harder. It's getting tougher. Every day gets tougher, but that's the way it is," 61-year-old Michael J. Fox said of life with the progressive, degenerative disease.

"Who do I see about that?" he added, his trademark quick wit and humor fully engaged.

Fox was diagnosed with Parkinson's when he was 29. He has been battling the condition for three decades.

"There’s not many of us that have this disease for 30 years. It sucks. It sucks having Parkinson’s. For some families, it’s a nightmare. It’s a living hell. You have to deal with realities that are beyond most people’s understanding."

For some, the interview may be tough to watch. Fox held nothing back. He was frank and direct about the physical challenges he faces as the nerves in his body slowly die. A clip showing him falling as he's walking along a sidewalk adds visual punctuation to his commentary in the sit-down with Pauley.

Fox described having broken multiple bones, including bones in his elbow, his hand, his face, and both arms.

He explained that falling, which is what caused him to break his hand, is a "big killer" for Parkinson's patients, as is aspirating food and developing pneumonia.

Throughout the interview, Fox was in near-perpetual motion, slightly slumped in his chair.

"All these subtle ways it gets ya'. You don't die from Parkinson's, you die with Parkinson's," Fox said.

"I'm not gonna be 80. I'm not gonna be 80."

On a decidedly positive note, Fox and Pauley discussed a breakthrough in Parkinson's research. A biomarker for the disease has been identified, which could mean people getting diagnosed and treated more quickly.

"This changes everything," Fox said.

The Michael J. Fox Foundation has raised $1.5 billion for research. The foundation announced the findings April 13.

Fox will debut "Still" May 12 on Apple TV+. The film, which is about Fox's life, will incorporate "documentary, archival and scripted elements," according to a description provided in the trailer.

"The film will chronicle Fox’s personal and professional triumphs and travails and will explore what happens when an incurable optimist confronts an incurable disease."

Watch the official trailer for Michael J. Fox's "Still" below.



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Hunter Biden finally admits laptop at center of scandal 'absolutely' could belong to him



Hunter Biden has finally admitted the the laptop at the center of a damning New York Post report could potentially belong to him, CBS News reports.

In 2020, the Post reported on a bevy of emails from a laptop said to belong to President Joe Biden's son. Many of the emails raised questions about the then-presidential candidate's purported ties to Ukrainian business ventures including Burisma. One message in particular appeared to show Hunter setting up his father with an introduction to a top Ukrainian business executive.

What are the details?

In separate interviews on "CBS This Morning" and "CBS Sunday Morning," President Joe Biden's son said that the MacBook Pro that was left at a Delaware computer repair store in 2019 could "absolutely" be his.

He appeared on the CBS shows to promote his new memoir, "Beautiful Things," which is due for an April 6 release.

"I really don't know what the answer is, that's the truthful answer" he told correspondent Tracy Smith when she pressed whether the laptop belonged to him. "I have no idea."

When asked if the laptop could potentially belong to him, he responded, "Absolutely. ... Certainly, there could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked, it could be that it was Russian intelligence. It could be that it was stolen from me."

The laptop was dropped off at a Wilmington-area computer shop in 2019. The person or persons who turned the laptop over to the computer repair shop never picked the computer up.

What else?

Elsewhere during the interview, Hunter detailed his substance addictions and revealed information about an intimate family intervention that took place during the 2020 presidential race.

During the intervention, he said, he stormed out of the family's Delaware home and attempted to leave.

Hunter said that his father chased him down the driveway in tears and buried him in a bear hug.

"I tried to go to my car, and my girls literally blocked the door to my car and said, 'Dad, Dad, please, you can't. No. No,'" he recalled. "He grabbed me in a hug. He grabbed me, gave me a bear hug, and he said, and just cried and said, 'I don't know what to do. I don't know what to do. Please.'"

Hunter said that despite the emotional appeals of his family, he was focused on just one thing: taking "another hit."

"It's the only thing I could think, literally," he recalled. "That's how powerful [addiction is]. ... I don't know of a force more powerful than my family's love except addiction."

Smith's interview with the president's son will air on "CBS Sunday Morning" on Sunday at 9 a.m. His interview with "CBS This Morning" co-host Anthony Mason is set to air on Monday at 7 a.m. ET.

Hunter Biden: "For real, I don't know" if laptop at center of controversy is authenticwww.youtube.com