Disney will focus on sequels instead of originals, CEO Bob Iger says, because 'they're known' and easier to market

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Disney's CEO Bob Iger said on an earnings call that the studio will lean on its existing library of storylines to create more sequels because they are more well-known and easier to market.

During the quarter two earnings calls for 2024, while Iger said the good films are coming, it doesn't seem that Disney is going to change its tune and start delivering new content.

Instead, what was promised was the continued use of Disney intellectual property that seemingly has lost its edge with fans.

"I've — we've been working hard with the studio to reduce output and focus more on quality. That's particularly true with Marvel," Iger told an investor from Morgan Stanley.

The CEO added that he was working on a path for the company to take, but it would certainly include "more Avengers."

"The team is, I think, one that I have tremendous confidence in. And the IP that we're mining, including all the sequels that we're doing is second to none. So I feel really good about what's coming up," Iger later said.

It is that particular "mining" of its own titles that landed the studio over $600 million in losses in 2023 across just four films. An "Indiana Jones" sequel, a "Haunted Mansion" remake, and "The Marvels" were all existing IP that caused catastrophic failures. Disney's "Wish," while original, still lost over $130 million.

"I just think that right now, given the competition in the overall movie marketplace that actually there's a lot of value in the sequels obviously because they're known and it takes less in terms of marketing."

Iger made multiple mentions of specific sequels including the latest iteration of Planet of the Apes, "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes," as examples of just how spectacular its sequels can be.

"IP at the studio, I've talked a lot about this, as you know. I feel great about the slate coming up, including three of the big movies that we have."

Iger then listed "Planet of the Apes," a sequel to 2015's "Inside Out," which performed exceptionally well in the box office, and the latest "Deadpool" movie that includes a crossover with X-Men costar Hugh Jackman.

The Disney boss also made multiple mentions of an "Alien" sequel.

A 7-minute look at \u2018KINGDOM OF THE PLANET OF THE APES.\u2019\n\n(Via: @Fandango)
— (@)

It was later in the call that Iger specifically noted that the studio was going to "lean on sequels," which included animated films like "Toy Story."

He also boasted a sequel to the animated, Pacific island-based "Moana" movie, which featured Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in 2016, and a CGI "Lion King" spinoff called "Mufasa."

Iger blamed the competitive marketplace for the need to dial back to sequels, which he said have more notoriety and are easier to market.

"I just think that right now, given the competition in the overall movie marketplace that actually there's a lot of value in the sequels obviously because they're known and it takes less in terms of marketing."

"In terms of Marvel specifically, it implies there too, we actually have both ... we mentioned 'Deadpool' this summer, which is a sequel and I talked about 'Avengers' and 'Captain America' is coming out in 2025."

ICYMI: See how one lion rose up to greatness despite his beginnings in this trailer for Mufasa: The Lion King.
— (@)

Still, the CEO claimed there would be a balance with originals, citing Marvel movie "Thunderbolts," which is set for a 2025 release. He noted that a third "Avatar" movie is in the works and that there may be more room to create yet another "Planet of the Apes" movie "pending the success of the [current] film."

After all that, Iger claimed he wouldn't "necessarily lean into the library" but would continue to "look opportunistically at it."

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Karine Jean-Pierre may face 'graceful EXIT' from White House, avoiding ugly optics

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The White House is reportedly searching for avenues to oust beleaguered press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre in the face of her unsatisfactory performance, and Stu Burguiere isn’t surprised.

“The same conversations you’re having about Joe Biden and how he looks mentally incompetent and he maybe has dementia, are the same conversations they’re having behind the scenes in Washington. The issue is they have different loyalties,” Burguiere explains.

“The same thing is going on with Karine Jean-Pierre, because we’ve all had the same conversation here in the regular country, and in Washington, D.C., where basically the question is, like how does she have this job?” he adds.

Now, the New York Post is reporting that there’s been an attempted coup on Jean-Pierre, according to White House insiders.

“De Facto White House communications chief Anita Dunn, 66, the wife of Biden personal attorney Bob Bauer, told colleagues she had decided to call in prominent Democrats to explain to Jean-Pierre, 49, that the time was ripe to move on,” the Post reported.

Burguiere is shocked by one piece of information in that paragraph.

“Who the hell thought Karine Jean-Pierre was 49 years old?” Burguiere asks. “It’s just the fact that she has the intellect of an 18-year-old, and so I can’t believe she’s 49 years old. I’m literally stunned by that.”

The Post also reported that “Dunn claimed White House chief of staff Jeff Zients knew about and supported the cloak-and-dagger scheme to push Jean-Pierre out of the West Wing” and that “‘Jeff and Anita were trying to find Karine a graceful exit’ because of the ugly optics of removing her against her will.”

Burguiere calls it like it is.

“This is, of course, another example of the left eating its own,” he says.





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Report: Disney lost over $600 million from just 4 movies in 2023 after year of epic flops

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A stunning report detailed the expenses on Disney films and found that the totals of just four of its big-budget projects lost the company more than half a billion in 2023.

Disney films showed up repeatedly on a list of the biggest bombs of the year, and the amount of money the mouse brand is willing to shell out only for the movies to end up deeply in the red is truly mesmerizing.

The report by Deadline is a real eye opener in terms of the volume of cash that can be evaporated by a studio — even outside of the actual production budget — when a film doesn't live up to expectations.

The outlet reported that typically Disney pumps out the majority of the top 10 most-profitable films in a year due to its Marvel movies, but those figures have largely unraveled due to the losses of Disney+. However, it should be noted that Disney and Marvel movies have suffered from insufferable wokeness and diversity-driven casting, which of course CEO Bob Iger denies.

Topping the list of flops was "The Marvels," a project that checked a lot of boxes for the film studio as a diverse, female-led and directed superhero movie. Unfortunately, the movie's $218 million in revenues was overshadowed by a $270 million production budget along with over $100 million in advertising. It crossed the finish line with an estimated $237 million loss.

Disney was rated the worst movie studio of 2023 by Variety, and it's no wonder given that for the entire year moviegoers were perplexed that the studio seemed unwilling to change its ideological path.

"Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny" was yet another heartache for both the studio and fans of the franchise. With reports of rewrites and reshoots after leaked storylines angered fans, it was hard to imagine the film could turn around the negative hype.

Add on a reported $80 million in post-production costs to de-age Harrison Ford, and it's no surprise the film made the list.

The expenses totaled $300 million in production, $120 million in ads, and another $96 million in residuals, distribution, and overhead. The film lost about $143 million according to Deadline, meaning even showing Indiana Jones with his true face for the film's entirety couldn't have saved it.

Disney's "Wish" suffered terrible reviews and went relatively unnoticed even to Disney's most critical observers.

$300 million in production and advertising easily dwarfed its box office and streaming numbers, leaving the studio with -$131 million.

The animated film about the production company's own legacy wasn't the biggest hit with young girls who likely expected a better storyline for a Disney princess. The report described the movie as reeking of corporate product with nothing magical about it.

Keeping in line with strange movie ideas, Disney's "Haunted Mansion" is the studio's second foray into making a movie based around its theme-park attraction of the same name. While the Eddie Murphy-led 2003 iteration seemingly performed very poorly, it still outshined the 2023 film.

The 2003 flick saw a global box office of $182 million, but 20 years later, the new version could only make $117 million. Against a $150 million production budget, the totals were again not on Disney's side with $117 million in losses.

In total, that left Disney with an estimated $628 million in losses from just four movies. How the company fairs in 2024 is anyone's guess, but it's hard to imagine Mickey can lose that much money without some big-name budgets suffering severe flops in theaters.

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Disney’s New ‘Star Wars’ Shows Push LGBT Insanity On Your Kids

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'Woke Jesus' from Babylon Bee says to turn the other cheek, except for Republicans: 'Feel free to punch them in the face'

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Christian satire outfit the Babylon Bee has released a new video that's bound to get leftists fuming as everyone else laughs: "Woke Jesus."

The clip follows Woke Jesus around the countryside as he delivers well-known commands and truths from the Gospels in a pseudo British accent — but with a left-wing twist.

"Do not be afraid," Woke Jesus gently replies to Martha. "For Lazarus will live again — through this mail-in ballot."

The video opens with Woke Jesus walking on a road as people follow him, and he tells them: "If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn and offer the other also — unless they're a Republican, then you can feel free to punch them in the face."

Boom.

Yes, it would seem Woke Jesus is exactly what leftists dream of and imagine him to be; he supports all their important causes.

Here's his stance on abortion: "Let the children come unto me, and do not hinder them — unless they might be born into poverty, or they might be an inconvenience to your party lifestyle. In that case, feel free to murder them in the womb."

Image source: YouTube screenshot

Wondering how Woke Jesus feels about the transgender agenda? He declares, "Haven't you read that in the beginning, God created them male and female — and gender queer, femboy, trans man, trans woman, Two Spirit ..."

While Woke Jesus' voice fades out, and another scene takes over, hilariously the video intermittently returns to Woke Jesus as he keeps rattling off endless, ridiculous, multiple genders: "Bigender, nonbinary, demi-boi, omni-gender, pan-gender, xeno-gender, someone who identifies as a large ornate building."

Think Woke Jesus buys into that "love your enemies" stuff? Think again.

"You have heard that it was said, 'Hate your enemies,' but I say to you, this is correct," Woke Jesus says before turning to a familiar visual aid. "And here's a handy little chart to help you understand who your enemy is based on Marxist intersectionality theory."

Image source: YouTube screenshot

'Be less white'

The biggest satirical takedown may be the send-up of the rich young ruler approaching Jesus and asking him, "What must I do to be saved?"

We're used to the Gospel accounts that indicate Jesus tells him to sell all his possessions, give to the poor, and then to "follow me."

Not Woke Jesus.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

To be saved, Woke Jesus tells the man to "be less white."

The narrator then notes that "the man went away sad, for he was very white." Ouch!

You'd think Woke Jesus would at least possess the compassion to raise his friend Lazarus from the dead, but when Martha approaches him in tears and says, "My Lord, if you had been here, my brother Lazarus would not have died," Woke Jesus has something else in mind.

"Do not be afraid," Woke Jesus gently replies to Martha. "For Lazarus will live again — through this mail-in ballot."

Image source: YouTube screenshot

The Woke Jesus hits just keep on coming:

  • "I'm the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the father — except by reducing their carbon footprint and getting vaccinated 12 times, like me."
  • "Cancel your enemies, curse those who bless you, and burn down the whole country if you don't get your way."

Woke Jesus goes on to endorse the "pretty sweet" leftist tactic of "wealth redistribution" as well as a "new health care bill that will force you to buy insurance. Because I — I'm a good person." His answer to the evils of capitalism? An "eat the rich!" chant.

Check it out:

Woke Jesusyoutu.be

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Blaze News original: 'The war against the dumb': Comedian Sam Tripoli says cancel culture was never real

Blaze News original: 'The war against the dumb': Comedian Sam Tripoli says cancel culture was never real

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Comedian Sam Tripoli says there is absolutely no reason to think about what is best for the government until the government starts thinking what is best for its own people.

His longtime skepticism of the government not only has earned him a following, but that following has turned into more credibility, as time has only proven that the world of politics isn't all sunshine and roses. See COVID-19 lockdowns, presidential elections, and social media censorship.

Fans of both comedy and podcasts will recognize Tripoli from his work that literally dates back to the beginning of podcasting itself. The early days of "The Joe Rogan Experience" featured Tripoli working alongside podcasting pioneers like Rogan, Ari Shaffir, and Brian Redban.

Now, with a multitude of podcasts, there aren't many topics Tripoli isn't willing to speak on. In fact, it's exactly that attitude that has resulted in the comedian's consistent social media shadow bans and a recent string of walkouts at his shows.

Even with free speech making leaps and bounds with the likes of Shane Gillis and Dave Chappelle constantly pushing the envelope on a grand stage, there are still a few forbidden topics, according to Tripoli.

"There's 'dangerous,' and then there's 'dangerous, dangerous,'" Tripoli told Blaze News. "That's what will get you censored on YouTube, or even on Twitter ... and a lot of that is the true history of America."

"Foreign influences on our politicians, blackmail, these types of topics. Things aren't getting worse, they're just getting more obvious. These are the dangerous conversations that people are afraid to have. Most people don't want to hear about it, either. That would be my answer: the true history of where we find ourselves right now."

In the same vein and with a TikTok ban looming, Tripoli said that it's important to remember that allowing the government to set a precedent about banning any speech or entity is going to come back to haunt Americans.

"In 2024 we honestly should not give a s*** about what's best for the government, nor what the government thinks is best; that's my opinion. If you start to be okay with the government doing things against people you don't like, violating laws and amendments and social contracts ... just know that that will be used against you," Tripoli warned.

"There will be a time where people might want to take to the streets because they don't like something the government's doing and because you've created a precedence in which you're okay with the government doing things against people you don't like, then [those things] will be used against you," he added.

The Californian said he is "very conscious" about how hypocritical positions could be turned on himself, which has led him to be very selective about siding with the government.

As an example of how hypocritical the masses can be, Tripoli pointed to advocates of the phrase "my body, my choice."

"The right-to-choose people, how they believe in body autonomy except for when it comes to vaccinations ... well, now they have no ground to stand on and nobody takes anything they say serious because they completely threw everyone who didn't want to get the vaccinations under the bus," he recalled.

This comes down to needing to be incredibly thoughtful when deciding whether to comprise your morals and your constitution, Tripoli said.

'Cancel culture was never real'

"Nobody has any balls in Hollywood," Tripoli said in response to cancel culture. Comedians are still afraid to color outside the lines in California, the comic explained, because one wrong move or independent thought can result in a comedy club canceling your set.

"It's so hard to get a gig in L.A. that you need 10 green lights to get a gig, and all it takes is one red light and you don't get the gig."

"Are comics still getting canceled?" he asked rhetorically. It's not that simple. The comedian described cancellations as a mirage of sorts, ideas designed to seem like there is widespread outrage among the masses that must be addressed.

"What you'd always hear from the left is that is cancel culture wasn't real. In a weird way it's true. It was just an Astroturf movement by the giant corporations through fascism with the government to control speech. So what they did was they get a couple blue-haired bots on Twitter and on Instagram to be like 'this guy said meanie stuff,' and before we could have a debate on it, corporations would come in and cancel the person, giving the Illusion that these blue hairs were very, very powerful."

"The cancel culture was never real, but the real effects of it is the social contagion of everyone being afraid of getting canceled, and what we've done is weaponized stupid people," Tripoli detailed.

This "war against the dumb" means comedians are no longer allowed to be provocative because "stupid people can't digest sarcasm," Tripoli said. He added that no longer are people laughing at themselves, nor are filmmakers allowed to push provocative art.

Not since the turn of the century has there been a real movement of producers and directors who wanted to force certain subjects in front of audiences, not since since Hollywood "gutted out all the outlaws and brought in all the rich kids" to teach new generations to be "safe."

"Is cancel culture dead?" he asked. Dead in the sense that corporations realized that they were costing themselves so much money that not even "funny money" can fix it, he answered.

At the same time, the "social contagion" has followed Tripoli, as he currently in the midst of a battle over a viral pronoun joke.

"Two weeks in a row ... people got upset with the words I've used and walked out," the comedian remembered. A video of the viral joke showed Tripoli asking an audience member his pronouns, to which the man replied "they/them."

Tripoli then said that his own pronouns needed to be respected and adhered to, which he described as "real/n***a."

"If we're going to play make believe, let's play make believe," the comedian added.

the way my jaw dropped to the floor
— (@)

Has the propaganda always been there?

"I don't believe anyone in Washington, D.C., gives a f*** about the children, and they are actually fine with indoctrinating the children. They're just upset when [social media] is indoctrinating them with the wrong information," Tripoli said about the TikTok ban.

"Why haven't they created children's-only phones or adult-only phones? Well, because they want to get to you early. It's indoctrination."

The inability to reach the masses is becoming a real issue in Hollywood, the comedian revealed. "They're freaking out." Not being able to infect people with "cultural Marxism" because attention spans and ratings have gone down has taken a bite out of control for the powers that be, he remarked.

It wasn't always this way. Tripoli explained that the entertainment industry used to have such a tight grip on propaganda that it could play both sides.

"I grew up with metal and '70s rock and roll, which was very much deep in satanism and raging against the church, which we were sold on that was like this kind of oppressive, hating gays, pedophile network. In reality we don't realize that the same people pushing satanism are the same people telling us about the church."

Now at 51, Tripoli said he has become more spiritual and that all roads of research have led to him becoming a religious person.

"Here I am in my 50s more religious than I've ever been through this spiritual growth I've had over the last couple years."

There's a strong push "to indoctrinate you," Tripoli said, adding that everything we are seeing "on campuses, at protests" isn't authentic, and people need to be wary about that.

Find all of Tripoli's podcasts and appearances at SamTripoli.com.

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'I thought I was a good person': Actor Adrian Grenier explains why he left 'shady' Hollywood for his own farm in Texas

'I thought I was a good person': Actor Adrian Grenier explains why he left 'shady' Hollywood for his own farm in Texas

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Actor Adrian Grenier revealed that he left Hollywood for a life in his own farming community in Texas after years of a "hedonistic" lifestyle.

The former "Entourage" star sat down with Jordan Peterson for an honest conversation about his life as a self-indulgent actor that eventually led him astray.

Grenier explained that from the outset, he wasn't too keen on reaching a high level of fame early in his career.

"I could be a lot more famous than I am today, but I just I always rejected — there's something that I just didn't trust in Hollywood. I was always like, it seems shady, it seemed shady, and so I resisted," he told Peterson in the interview.

The actor achieved success early in his career, starring in movies like "Drive Me Crazy" and "The Devil Wears Prada" that earned him "a little bit of clout in Hollywood," but he mostly rejected a launch into stardom.

Grenier said that he was spending time in Mexico when his agent gave him an ultimatum: He needed to return to Hollywood or find new representation. That warning caused him to come back to the U.S. to audition for "Entourage."

This was essentially replicated in the television series and was one of many ways in which Grenier's real life was reflected in his character.

"It was more fun to blur the lines, because you start to acquiesce to people's wanting you to be the character," the actor told Peterson.

Grenier admitted that his wife had left him once before because of his lifestyle.

"I really just wanted pleasure, I was hedonistic, I was seeking the next hit," the 47-year-old explained. "I was open and poly, and liberal, and I thought I was a good person. I really did."

"She dumped me," he said of his now-wife, Jordan Roemmele. "In no uncertain terms [she] said, 'You are the worst.' She gave me a list; she was thorough. She was nice enough to give me a list. ... 'Take a look at how you're drinking, about how you're using sex, take take a look at all these things, see ya, lose my number.'"

Grenier recalled feeling like there had been a "glitch in the matrix."

"For a second I was like what, there was something off. How is it that this girl, she was young, here I am the the powerful, rich, famous person, who is justified in everything I'm doing because I also do charity, and she's leaving me?"

"I could give her everything, access, we could fly, we do everything. Go around the world, anything. And she's leaving me? That was weird, but I was like, 'All right, I'll find another girl, not a problem.' But it stayed with me and because I loved her and respected her so much."

A strikingly similar scenario played out in the final season of "Entourage." In the eighth season, Grenier's character, Vincent Chase, is enamored by a journalist who interviews him and writes an article critical of his sexual escapades and lack of serious relationships.

The character then goes to extraordinary lengths to prove to the woman that he is a good person. The two eventually leave to get married in the finale of the series.

In real life, Grenier said he spent a year and a half reconnecting with the future mother of his child.

An Honest Conversation About Hollywood | @adriangrenier
— (@)

The actor said he spent most of his time split between his native New York City and Hollywood but has given up both lifestyles to live on his own land near Austin, Texas.

Grenier said he spent approximately a year living in a 50-square-foot camper on a small piece of land and created a community garden.

"I was just digging in the soil and planting and digging and working, meditating, and cooking in an open fire. I grew a beard, and then the pandemic hit, and I was like 'perfect,' I'm already solo in isolation; it didn't affect me at all."

From that point, Grenier later reconnected with the woman he referred to as the love of his life and decided buy a large plot of land. A YouTube channel called Earth Speed is secondary to the work he has done on his plot.

Farming, cultivating, and otherwise tending to his vast property, Grenier has invited others to live on the land while he continues to learn about how to create a self-sustaining environment.

This story is similarly reflected in the movie "Goodbye World," where the characters are forced to live off the grid in the countryside after a terror attack leaves society in the dark.

"I'm certainly definitely still an apprentice of the land," Grenier remarked. He noted that farmers and growers are eager to pass down their knowledge and encourages anyone interested in the topics to take them up.

"I'm just trying to keep things alive and learning about the snakes and how to wrangle them, and not try and kill everything that scares me, but try and move against it and be brave in those moments, and fail and still keep at it."

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'I just can't!' Maher and Seinfeld say it's not worth it to 'go nuts again' if Trump wins in 2024

'I just can't!' Maher and Seinfeld say it's not worth it to 'go nuts again' if Trump wins in 2024

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Bill Maher explained to Jerry Seinfeld that he doesn't plan on having a meltdown over a 2024 presidential victory for Donald Trump, saying he is taking a different approach to life and that includes his reactions to Trump.

Maher spent a decent chunk of his conversation with Seinfeld about having a more nonchalant attitude toward politics and being more appreciative of life, citing having rich friends who are constantly complaining.

"When I'm at dinner with people and they're like 'the world's ending,' look around you you dumbass, we're at this f***ing awesome restaurant, they're bringing you this food, this dinner is going to cost you $700," Maher told Seinfeld.

"You're not even going to f***ing blink at paying the check, shut the f*** up about how terrible things [are]," he added.

Maher continued his attempts to brush off the negativity throughout the "Club Random" podcast, and that continued with his attitude toward Trump.

"Health certainly can rear its ugly head and there's lots of poisons everywhere, and lots of terrible things, and Trump could do this and democracy and blah blah blah nuclear war, but for the moment you know ... I'm not going to lose my nervous system about Trump again," Maher said.

"If he ends the world he's going to end the world, I'm not going to f***ing go nuts again if he wins another term, I just can't!"

"I hope you have that wherewithal," Seinfeld responded.

"Well, what are you going to do?" Maher then asked.

"I don't know. I'm trying to stay right there," Seinfeld replied back, implying he also would like to remain calm.

In his @ClubRandom_ chat with Jerry Seinfeld, @billmaher mocks elite friends who act like the world is ending, pledges "I'm not gonna lose my nervous system about Trump again, I'm not gonna go nuts if he wins another term, I just can't." *Language Warning*
— (@)

Explaining that the mental turmoil over another election wasn't worth it, Maher asked, "What are you going to do? Get anxious like a millennial?"

"Right, exactly," Seinfeld said.

"That generation, especially the Z generation," Maher went on, before Seinfeld interjected with a disgusted scoff.

The pair laughed off their disdain for the younger generations and concluded that with the right parental guidance, there is indeed hope for their children navigating the world. Seinfeld likened being a parent to being a manager or an overseer, offering guidance when needed but overall allowing children to be left to their own devices.

Seinfeld mostly declined to participate in any political discussions on the show, despite a few assertions by Maher regarding Trump and Biden.

While discussing their age, Maher remarked how Seinfeld still looks "generically middle aged" and doesn't "read old, like Biden."

"Biden reads old and Trump reads crazy, but not old. He reads just reads differently."

"Pretty much, well he's got a lot of makeup on, and the hair color and all that crap," Seinfeld added.

"I always say he's like KISS, he puts on the face paint and the wig and it's always 1976," Maher joked.

Even though "climate change is probably going to get us at some point," Maher continued, "it hasn't yet."

"We walked out here today we weren't like, evaporated by the rays of the sun," and people should be thankful for living in the "most f***ing amazing times," the comedian added.

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Tom Brady tells Jeff Ross to 'never say that s*** again' after a joke about the owner of the New England Patriots

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Future NFL Hall of Famer Tom Brady agreed to be the punchline on Netflix's "The Greatest Roast of All Time," but it appears there was one joke that Brady could not let slide.

After Jeff Ross — otherwise known as the "Roastmaster General" — appeared on stage to roast the former quarterback, there was one joke he said that seemed to rub Brady the wrong way.

Ross' joke centered around Brady being selected by the New England Patriots in the sixth round of the NFL draft, ultimately being the 199th overall pick.

Ross joked: “So Tom became a Patriot and moved up to New England, and on the first day of training camp, that scrawny rookie famously walked into the owner Robert Kraft‘s office and said, ‘I’m the best decision your organization has ever made. Would you like a massage?'”

— (@)

While the audience reacted to the joke, the camera suddenly cut to Brady, who moved around in his seat, seemingly uncomfortable. Meanwhile, Ross turned to Kraft, who was stationed in the audience, and blew him kisses.

Ross mentioned how he loved Kraft before Brady can be seen approaching Ross and whispering in his ear: "Never say that s*** again."

Ross heeded Brady's request and pointed out that Kraft was "having fun" during the roast.

The joke carried weight because, in 2019, Kraft and others were charged with solicitation as part of an anti-sex trafficking investigation into a number of Florida massage parlors, according to Deadline Hollywood.

Prosecutors ultimately dropped a misdemeanor charge against the Patriots owner after courts would not allow the use of video footage from secret cameras installed by police inside the parlors to be used.

"Although there was probable cause to make an arrest, the evidence cannot prove all legally required elements of the crime alleged and is insufficient to support a criminal prosecution," according to a court filing by the office of Palm Beach State Attorney Dave Aronberg, per NBC News.

The special was hosted by comedian Kevin Hart. Other jokes featured in the show had to do with Spygate and deflated footballs.

Other roasters who were in attendance at the event were Bert Kreischer, Tom Segura, Nikki Glaser, Andrew Schulz, Tony Hinchcliffe, and Sam Jay.

Former wide receivers Randy Moss and Julian Edelman, quarterback Drew Bledsoe, and tight end Rob Gronkowski were also there to roast their friend.

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