Hollywood has-been seeks spotlight with Emmy race war



Progressive actor John Leguizamo isn’t doubling down on woke. He’s tripling down, and he’s putting his money where his mouth is.

The “Carlito’s Way” actor paid cold, hard cash for a full-page New York Times ad (yes, print ads still exist) begging Emmy voters to select minorities when filling out their ballots.

“Please let this be the year we finally embrace change …the year we truly find Equity, and see artists of color represented across not just one category, but ALL categories.”

Little-known fact: Up until now, various awards shows have exclusively nominated white male stars, even in the Best Actress categories.

Right? Wait … that isn’t the case? Weird.

Actors have been delicately stepping away from woke in recent months. Tom Hanks slammed sensitivity readers. Dame Judi Dench mocked trigger warnings. Sharon Stone and Liam Neeson have asked Hollywood to let canceled Oscar winner Kevin Spacey make movies again.

Not Leguizamo. The progressive star is going down with the woke ship.

Warner Bros. puts Fredo in charge

Hollywood bean-counters are all smart and stuff. Why else would they take an unprofitable, 26-year-old movie with little cultural heft and turn it into a franchise?

Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock are in talks to reprise their witchy roles in “Practical Magic.” The 1998 film brought in $68 million globally on a $75 million budget.

Math is hard, but we’re pretty sure Warner Bros. lost a bundle given that theaters keep a percentage of the profits. Why, it’s like the studio hired Fredo to oversee new projects.

“I can handle things! I'm smart! Not like everybody says! Not dumb, I'm smart, and I want respect!”

Batty 'Boys' boss bloviates: 'Go watch something else'

Hollywood is slowly starting to realize that insulting the audience means fewer people watch its products. It explains why recent awards shows toned down the political lectures.

Tell that to Eric Kripke.

He’s the showrunner behind the once mighty Prime Video show “The Boys,” which returns June 13. Kripke acknowledged some fans aren’t pleased with the show’s increasing amount of progressive messaging, which magically has coincided with its creative decline.

And he doesn’t care.

"I clearly have a perspective, and I’m not shy about putting that perspective in the show. Anyone who wants to call the show 'woke' or whatever, that’s OK. Go watch something else. But I’m certainly not going to pull any punches or apologize for what we’re doing.”

Here’s betting more than a few viewers will do just that. Oh, and Kripke announced the dark superhero series will end with Season 5.

Can 'Extinction' distraction save Bill Murray?

Bill Murray is in Hollywood’s doghouse.

The “Saturday Night Live” alum was once a comedy legend who could do no wrong. They even made a movie of his colorful public appearances. Then, he allegedly behaved badly on the set of a film and became professionally radioactive.

He’s still working, but his brand within the industry took a hit with the murky revelations.

Now, the star is joining the Extinction Rebellion movement, which recently interrupted a Broadway show to spread its climate alarmism, in a new production to run this week.

Has Murray taken a stand for the environment over the years? He’s no Jane Fonda. Why now? Coincidence? Damage control? You be the judge.

Ryan Reynolds takes in 'The View' from the cheap seats

Ryan Reynolds suffered a professional black eye when he starred in the superhero dud “Green Lantern.” It stalled his career and crushed any hopes of a new DC Comics-based franchise.

That can’t compare to the professional punishment he endured this week.

The “Deadpool” star sat in “The View’s” studio audience alongside his mum. Even worse? He admitted Mama Reynolds watches “The View” every day and dreamed of being in the show’s audience.

Thoughts and prayers for the A-list star in this troubling time.

Attention, Christian women: Beth Moore has a message for Trump supporters



Founder of Living Proof Ministries Beth Moore has a message for former President Donald Trump’s supporters after the results of the Iowa caucuses.

Trump pulled over 50% of the votes and 20 delegates, which has “sobered” Moore to the realization that “masses of people still hail Trump.”

“He’s what they actually want in a leader. A bully. A verbally abusive, artfully and purposely divisive bully who has all but left the Republican Party unrecognizable,” Moore wrote in a tweet on X.

Moore continued that she could understand voting for Trump in 2020, as “the lesser of two evils.” However, she believes this is “quite another thing.”

Rather than the lesser of two evils, she says, “This is wide-open-eyed, ‘we WANT Trump,’” and that unfortunately, “our candidates are mirrors of ourselves.”

Allie Beth Stuckey can see where she’s coming from, but isn’t quite sure that she agrees with Moore’s analysis.

“To say that people want these aspects of Trump to be verbally abusive, to be a bully, whatever it is, however she describes him, that’s not true,” Stuckey says. Rather, many people see Trump as “someone who is fighting against the system.”

Stuckey also notes that Trump accomplished a peaceful presidency sans war, a booming economy, and overturned Roe v. Wade.

“Assuming the worst motives of the people who are voting for him, you’re indicting millions of Americans who you are saying all support a bully because they themselves are bullies or love bullies,” Stuckey says, “That’s just not true.”


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Outrage mob turns on Jimmy Kimmel after he usurps Quinta Brunson's Emmy Award acceptance



Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel is being accused of using his "white privilege" to upstage Quinta Brunson at the Emmy Awards ceremony.

What happened?

While Brunson, creator and lead actress of ABC's hit show "Abbott Elementary," was accepting her award for best Writing for a Comedy Series, Kimmel acted out a skit in which Brunson was forced to step over his body.

When it was time to present the award, Will Arnett dragged Kimmel's body onto the stage and joked about Kimmel having drunk too many "skinny margaritas." But Kimmel never got up, and Brunson was forced to give her acceptance speech while standing over his body.

To her credit, Brunson remained professional throughout, gave a touching speech, and then left the stage.

Writing for a Comedy Series: 74th Emmy Awards www.youtube.com

The antics, however, did not go over well.

In fact, fans, especially black fans, saw the incident as yet another instance of a white man stealing the spotlight from the accomplishments of black women.

  • "If #QuintaBrunson stepping over #JimmyKimmel who literally laid in her spotlight on the day she won an Emmy isn’t a metaphor for what it means to be a [women of color] in a white mans world I don’t know what is," Boston University professor Heba Gowayed said.
  • "Jimmy Kimmel should have left the stage during Quinta’s speech. Highly disrespectful," HuffPost editor Philip Lewis said.
  • "Jimmy Kimmel owes Quinta an apology but the messed up part is every image of her accepting her award has his a** in it.White men really are insufferable," Candice Marie Benbow said.
  • "To me, what Jimmy Kimmel did is worst than Will Smith," one person said.
  • "Where’s Will Smith when you need him?" another person reacted.
  • "Just a reminder of how Jimmy Kimmel doesn’t seem to be able to let Black folks shine in really important moments," April Reign said.
  • "I don’t know of a better example of invasive white male privilege than Jimmy Kimmel laying in the middle of Quinta Brunson’s #Emmys2022 speech. He had no business/right to take up space in the way that he did," another person said.
  • "Caucasity is centering your unfunny self and joke as someone wins their first Emmy Award. Jimmy Kimmel ol’ by golly whillickers face a** owes Quinta an apology. Foolishness," Luvvie Ajayi said.
  • "I really don't know how to define white, male privilege more clearly than Jimmy Kimmel not getting out of the way of Quinta Brunson's moment," another person said.

What did Brunson say later?

After the awards ceremony, Brunson was asked about Kimmel's controversial skit. She responded with total grace.

"I know Jimmy Kimmel, and I don’t know, I felt like the bit didn’t bother me that much. I don’t know what the internet thinks," she said. "I know him. Jimmy gave me my first big late-night spot and was one of the first people to see ‘Abbott.' He Instagram messaged me that he saw this comedy and thought it was one of the greatest comedies of all time and he was so excited it was going to be on ABC."

"So in that moment I think I was just really happy that it was Jimmy up there. I kind of consider him one of the comedy godfathers," she continued.

"Tomorrow maybe I’ll be mad at him. I’m going to be on his show on Wednesday, so I might punch him in the face," she quipped. "I don’t know. We'll see what happens."

\u201cQuinta Brunson addressed Jimmy Kimmel laying on stage during her #Emmys acceptance speech: "I felt like the bit didn\u2019t bother me that much...Tomorrow maybe I\u2019ll be mad at him. I\u2019m going to be on his show on Wednesday, so I might punch him in the face." https://t.co/Bm8Bfhyi0k\u201d
— Variety (@Variety) 1663039869

Stacey Abrams receives Emmy nomination for playing herself in 1-minute voiceover spot on 'Black-ish'



Receiving an Emmy Award nomination has apparently never been easier. One needs only to be a darling of the liberal media who does something on television that can feasibly be deemed a "performance."

Case in point: Former Democratic candidate for Georgia governor, Stacey Abrams, who on Tuesday was nominated for "Outstanding Character Voiceover Performance" ahead of the 2021 awards show.

What was the "outstanding performance" that garnered her consideration?

She appeared for all of one minute and seven seconds in an animated election special of the ABC sitcom, "Black-ish," playing herself while magnifying the importance of mail-in and early voting.

In the episode, which aired in October, one month before the 2020 presidential election, Abrams helps "Dre," played by Anthony Anderson, get the wheels rolling at the start of his congressional run.

Dre Gets Campaign Help from Stacey Abrams and Desus & Mero - black-ish youtu.be

Abrams, who failed in her bid for governor in 2018, has since taken up efforts to expand voting through third-party registration and is credited by many on the left for flipping Georgia blue during the 2020 election.

One of her groups, the New Georgia Project, came under investigation last year for "repeatedly and aggressively" seeking to register "ineligible, out-of-state, or deceased voters" before the state's Jan. 5 Senate runoffs.

Not surprisingly, news of Abrams' nomination was celebrated by those in progressive media circles.

In a Fast Company report on her nomination, Christopher Zara wrote, "When she's not saving democracy, writing a best-selling novel, or running her fintech startup, Stacey Abrams is apparently very busy doing cartoon voiceovers, and now her efforts have garnered her a nomination for television's highest honor."

Film director Liz Garbus wrote, "Give her ALL the things!"

Abrams thanked "Black-ish" in a tweet for "lifting up the rights of voters at such a critical time" and for "letting [her] appear such a fantastic show."

Thank you for lifting up the rights of voters at such a critical time (and letting me appear such a fantastic show… https://t.co/GpfLOza7Ma

— Stacey Abrams (@staceyabrams) 1626194981.0

Abrams is set to face off against Jessica Walter ("Archer"), Maya Rudolph ("Big Mouth"), Julie Andrews ("Bridgerton"), Tituss Burgess ("Central Park"), Stanley Tucci ("Central Park"), and Seth MacFarlane ("Family Guy") for the award.

Though this is Abrams' first Emmy Award nomination, it's not the first time that she has been considered for an entertainment award.

Earlier this year, a documentary co-produced by Abrams, "All In: The Fight for Democracy," was shortlisted for an Academy Award in the documentary feature category.

The 73rd Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony will be held Sept. 19 in downtown Los Angeles.

Andrew Cuomo Absolutely Deserves An Emmy Award

Cuomo is America's greatest governor on television, and its worst in real life.

The 2020 Emmy Awards pandered to the left and garnered the lowest TV audience ever



The 2020 Emmy Awards aired on Sunday, but you probably missed it.

According to culture and entertainment site Vulture, this year's awards ceremony became by far the least-watched in Nielsen ratings history. Just 6.1 million viewers tuned in to watch the once-popular TV awards event, which is 13% fewer than the previous low mark set the year before, when 7 million people watched.

Apparently, celebrities accepting awards over video as late-night host Jimmy Kimmel operated alone in an empty Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, wasn't intriguing enough for people to tune in.

Vulture blamed the low viewership on COVID-19 and "unprecedented sports competition," including Sunday Night Football — which isn't exactly new — and NBA playoff coverage.

But awards show viewership has been on a steady decline for years, as Hollywood show hosts and honorees have consistently alienated audiences by pandering to the left and attacking conservatives during the ceremonies.

The 2020 Emmy Awards were no different in this regard.

Pandering to the left

During his opening monologue, Kimmel took a swipe at President Donald Trump and his supporters, congratulating himself and the Emmys for choosing not to have a live audience amid the coronavirus pandemic, in contrast to rallies recently held by the president.

"Of course we don't have an audience; this isn't a MAGA rally, it's the Emmys. Instead of the live audience, we took a page from baseball tonight and we filled the seats with cardboard cutouts of the nominees," Kimmel said.

We put the “mono” in monologue at the 2020 #Emmys... @TelevisionAcad @ABCNetwork @BatemanJason https://t.co/Wtajk450SK
— Jimmy Kimmel (@Jimmy Kimmel)1600650526.0

Then later in the show, actor Anthony Anderson, star of the sitcom "Black-ish," awkwardly led Kimmel in chanting "Black Lives Matter!" on stage.

"Louder, Jimmy!" Anderson hollered at Kimmel during the rehearsed bit. "Say it so that my kids can hear it!"

TheBlaze's Dave Urbanski noted that there was, curiously, no mention of the fact that Kimmel was recently forced to take a leave of absence from "Jimmy Kimmel Live" after a controversial video of him in blackface resurfaced.

.@AnthonyAnderson was looking forward to the blackest #Emmys ever… #BlackLivesMatter https://t.co/HFcTp1OfHR
— Jimmy Kimmel (@Jimmy Kimmel)1600656253.0

The show also spoofed the ongoing controversies surround the postal service and mail-in voting with a rehearsed exchange between Kimmel and a peculiar — and obviously Russian — mail carrier.

Jimmy Kimmel's Odd New Mailman at the Emmys youtu.be

Anything else?

Though not watched by many, the awards show was praised for its diversity of nominees and winners. Deadline reported that black and LGBTQ nominees experienced a marked uptick in this year's ceremony.

"On the acting side, there were more than 30 people of color nominated, while actors who have openly identified as members of the LGBTQ+ community took in nearly a dozen nominations. On the hosting side, six people of color were nominated while seven people who identified as LGBTQ+ received nods," the outlet noted.

'We set a record': Emmys host Jimmy Kimmel pokes fun at all-time low viewership

Emmys host Jimmy Kimmel downplayed record-low viewership for the awards show that aired Sunday night.

Actor Anthony Anderson starts 'Black Lives Matter' chant with Jimmy Kimmel during Emmys: 'Louder'

Actor and comedian Anthony Anderson delivered a pro-Black Lives Matter speech during the Emmys, including starting a chant.

Social media shreds Jimmy Kimmel for joking about ICE deporting John Oliver during Emmy Awards



Social media castigated comedian and TV host Jimmy Kimmel on Sunday night following remarks he made about calling ICE on a fellow talk show host during the 72nd Primetime Emmy Awards.

The awards show was held virtually, and the nominees — dressed in typically ostentatious awards ceremony garb — livestreamed themselves from their homes in a production that resembled a vast conference call.

What did Kimmel say?

Kimmel, following news that he lost the Emmy for Outstanding Variety Talk Series to British TV host John Oliver, made a joke about calling Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Oliver.

Oliver's show — which is broadcast on HBO — has won the award for the last five years.

As highlighted by the Daily Mail, Kimmel quipped, "Congratulations again to John Oliver. I will be reporting him to ICE."

In response, social media said that Kimmel was guilty of using "white privilege" in making such an off-handed remark.

The great David @Letterman hitchhikes to the #Emmys! https://t.co/nkvp11TyvB
— Jimmy Kimmel (@Jimmy Kimmel)1600653124.0

What was the response?

A bevy of social media users took to their respective channels to condemn Kimmel for the remark.

One user wrote, "The amount of white privilege it took for jimmy kimmel to get up on stage at a nationally televised event and make a joke about ice and not have one tell him that it isn't okay, is absolutely astonishing to me."

Another added, "[I] don't think Kimmel is all that funny. Particularly when he jokes about ICE and the systemic terror that they cause, or any of his other highly weird jokes."

"My dad was deported," another user wrote. "He was literally placed on a plane with two federal agents. He was in chains. He was dropped off at Heathrow Airport and that's it."

Another user complained, "I didn't know that it was needed, but @jimmykimmel making a joke about calling #ICE on @iamjohnoliver is not only poor taste, but completely out of touch w/ everything happening right now."

"Happy Hispanic Heritage Month from the #Emmy's where the only Latinx representation we got was Count von Count ft. Lin Manuel [and] America Ferrara presenting an award and Jimmy Kimmel's tasteless and hurtful ICE joke," another user said.

Another added, "[J]immy kimmel should be kicked off the show for making an ice joke."

Kimmel has yet to respond to the ensuing controversy at the time of this reporting.

Of note, Oliver became an American citizen in December.

Anything else?

In June, Kimmel admitted to benefiting from white privilege.

During a monologue on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" the longtime TV host said that he understood the damage caused by the notion of white privilege and said that he and other white people shouldn't be offering insight on the police killing of George Floyd, who died the last week in May.

"Over the past week, I've been hearing, I've been reading very thoughtful posts and words from very smart people, some of whom say white people shouldn't be talking right now, they should be listening. And I get that," he said during the monologue. "And I don't disagree with that. But I'm the only one here and it's a talk show. So, I want to share what I've been thinking about and trying to sort through."

“I know that a lot of white people bristle when they hear the word 'privilege,' as in 'white privilege,' because there are millions of white people who didn't grow up with money, or a good education, or a solid family background, or maybe even a family at all," he said. "So when they hear the word 'privilege,' they go, 'What privilege? ... You hear the phrase 'white privilege' and it's easy to get defensive. The first time I heard it, I did. To me, white privilege was what Donald Trump had, a wealthy father and a silver spoon in his mouth. It wasn't what I grew up with, so I rejected it because I didn't understand what white privilege meant. But I think I do now. I think I at least understand some of it."

He added that white people don't often have to deal with "negative assumptions being made about us based on the color of our skin."

"It rarely happens, if ever, whereas black people experience that every day. And please don't tell me you don't ever make assumptions based on the color of their skin, because I just don't believe it," he insisted. "We all do. I know I have. I'm embarrassed to say it, but I have."

He concluded, "I read something last night that I think makes a lot of sense. It's this: 'White privilege doesn't mean your life hasn't been hard. It just means the color of your skin isn't one of the things that makes it harder.' Wherever you stand, I don't see how you can argue with that."

Jimmy Kimmel on Protests, Trump's Bible Photo Op & White Privilegewww.youtube.com