‘Man The Airport F*cked Up’: 50 Cent’s Private Jet Grounded Amid Government Shutdown
'Forget about traveling right now!'
Rush Limbaugh. Sean Hannity. Glenn Beck. Charles Krauthammer.
Stephen Colbert?
Oscar-winner George Clooney says running Vice President Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket last year was a Democratic boo-boo.
“The Late Show” host opened up in a new interview with GQ Magazine, the bible for liberal men who practice what Adam Carolla calls the “deep-crease” leg cross. Colbert talked on a range of issues, but one probably caught everyone by surprise.
Turns out he’s pretty conservative. Just ask him.
“People perceive me as this sort of lefty figure. ... I think I’m more conservative than people think. I just happen to be talking about a government in extremis.”
One, that’s funnier than anything Colbert has said in ages. Two, it’s part of an age-old practice where progressives insist they’re more fair ’n’ balanced than conservative yokels even realize.
Three? Show us the “Late Show” monologue that reflects a conservative viewpoint during his 10-year run on the program. We’ll wait ...
Now he tells us.
Oscar winner George Clooney says running Vice President Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket last year was a Democratic boo-boo.
Clooney, starring in the awards season drama “Jay Kelly,” told “CBS News Sunday Morning” that Democrats needed a rigorous primary process to pick a successor to the very healthy, not remotely unwell Joe Biden.
That’s not all, though.
“I think the mistake with it being Kamala is that she had to run against her own record. ... It’s very hard to do if the point of running is to say, ‘I’m not that person.’ It’s hard to do, and so she was given a very tough task. I think it was a mistake, quite honestly.”
Wait ... what’s wrong with the Biden-Harris record? Weren’t we talking about adding a fifth head to Mt. Rushmore for a spell, that of the magnificent Joseph Robinette Biden Jr.? Didn’t Harris’ border czaring save the planet?
It’s almost as if Clooney is lost without a script ...
RELATED: Kamala Harris pushes to lower voting age to 16 — in honor of 'climate anxiety'

Kristin Chenoweth breaks easily, apparently.
The film and Broadway star dared to share a human emotion following the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
"Didn’t always agree but appreciated some perspectives. ... What a heartbreak. His young family. I know where he is now. Heaven. But still."
Right on cue, the far-far-left ghouls savaged her on social media. And instead of telling said ghouls to rhetorically “drop dead,” she quasi-retracted said human emotion on social media.
Now, reflecting on the matter, she shared how close she came to “breaking.”
“It was tough on me, but I’m not going to answer any questions about it because I dealt with it. It nearly broke me, and that’s all I’m going to say. You probably know my heart, so you probably know.”
Handle with care? She deserves the same warning label as that “Christmas Story” leg lamp — fragile ...
This just in — Spike Lee is mad.
The auteur has made being grumpy part of his brand. He’s a New York Knicks fan, so part of that crankiness comes naturally. He’s also constantly complaining about a certain president. And over the years, he’s whined about Hollywood robbing him early and often.
The poor guy has only two golden statuettes.
Now, he’s complaining that his latest film, “Highest 2 Lowest,” got buried by Apple.
The Denzel Washington film came and went in theaters (just 200 screens) in August, jumping quickly to Apple TV. He initially praised Team Apple for supporting the film, acknowledging how the industry was changing and he had to adjust along with it.
He’s had a change of heart.
“I am not happy,” he told the Wall Street Journal about the film’s blink-and-you-miss-it theatrical rollout.
This critic saw “Highest 2 Lowest,” and he’s not happy to have lost two hours of his valuable time ...
You can’t blame Hollywood for dragging our favorite Predator back in front of a camera. The industry just suffered a terrible, no-good month of box office woes, and audiences care more about existing properties than original stories.
Sad, but true.
So another “Predator” movie was, like Thanos, inevitable.
“Predator: Badlands” hits theaters this weekend, but with a twist. The creature that hunted Ah-nold and killed all his military buddies back in 1987 (spoiler alert?) returns, but this time he’s the good guy.
What?
Yup. He and his robot sidekick (Elle Fanning) are the heroes in the new film.
What’s next, a story making us care about Cruella de Vil and why she became the monster we saw in “101 Dalmatians”? Or a story sharing how the Wicked Witch of the West was actually just a misunderstood gal who suffered bullying in her peer group?
Oh, wait.
A co-star from "The Cosby Show" says there should be nuance when talking about Bill Cosby's career.
Cosby's iconic family sitcom aired from September 1984 to April 1992 and is frequently mentioned among the greatest shows of all time, including in TV Guide's top 50 shows list of 2002.
With Cosby since being accused of a plethora of sex crimes, networks pulled his show from the air and seemingly kept it off following an overturned conviction and release from prison in 2021.
Now, one of his former castmates is saying it's time to separate Cosby's personal life from his creative works.
'Black people pushed through the door, and now we're getting all colors.'
Appearing on an episode of actor Jamie Kennedy's "Hate to Break It to Ya" podcast, a former child actor and Disney star came to the defense of the 88-year-old's show, on which she starred.
"Separate the creator from the creation," Raven-Symoné said. The actress played Olivia Kendall on "The Cosby Show."
"That's just where I live because the creation changed America, changed television," she said of Cosby's family-oriented program.
The 39-year-old, whose full name is Raven-Symoné Christina Pearman-Maday, has had a long and successful career appearing in countless sitcoms, while shining as a young adult in the Disney kid classic "That's So Raven," which had 100 episodes in the mid-2000s.
At the same time, Symoné did not excuse Cosby's alleged crimes on the podcast.
RELATED: Disney star gives bizarre take on Florida's parental rights bill: 'Should be a Don't Say Straight bill' 
After host Kennedy noted how many black people Cosby had provided jobs to, Symoné jumped in:
"He also has been accused of some horrific things," she added, before reiterating, "And that does not excuse, but that's his personal [life]. So personally, keep that there, and then business-wise, know what he did there as well. Like you said, both can live, and I think our culture is right to — don't do wrong. Don't do wrong personally. You just can't do wrong."
Kennedy and Symoné went back and forth on how great diversity is, with Symoné saying "thank goodness" to the idea of diversity being "protected" in the entertainment industry.
"Black people pushed through the door, and now we're getting all colors, all types, all backgrounds, and it's protected — thank goodness — now. So, it's mandatory in a way," she explained.
Kennedy agreed that diversity is a strength, pulling from his own experience living near "the hood" in Philadelphia.

The former "View" pundit has never been shy about broadcasting her opinions.
Before the 2016 election, Symoné said she would leave the country if Donald Trump became president.
"I'm going to move to Canada with my entire family. I already have my ticket," she said to then-cohost Whoopi Goldberg.
In 2022, she colloquially called for a "Don't Say Straight" bill to be drafted in Florida in response to a law that Democrats dubbed the "Don't Say Gay" bill. The term was born out of a misunderstanding of Florida law that barred teachers in the state from teaching about gender and sexuality with certain age groups.
Symoné is a lesbian and hosts a podcast with her wife, Miranda Maday. This is where Symoné reflected on commentary she made in 2014 when she said she was sick of being labeled.
"I don't want to be labeled gay," she said at the time, per ABC News. "I want to be labeled a human who loves humans."
She added, "I'm tired of being labeled — I'm an American. I'm not an African-American. I'm an American."
Symoné clarified in 2024 that she obviously knows where her ancestry lies and said that people had accused her of not considering herself black.
"When I am in another country, they don't say, 'Hey, look at that African-American over there.' They say, 'That's an American,' plain and simple."
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The New York Times recently profiled Scott Jacqmein, an actor from Dallas who sold his likeness to TikTok for $750 and a free trip to the Bay Area. He hasn’t landed any TV shows, movies, or commercials, but his AI-generated likeness has — a virtual version of Jacqmein is now “acting” in countless ads on TikTok. As the Times put it, Jacqmein “fields one or two texts a week from acquaintances and friends who are pretty sure they have seen him pitching a peculiar range of businesses on TikTok.”
Now, Jacqmein “has regrets.” But why? He consented to sell his likeness. His image isn’t being used illegally. He wanted to act, and now — at least digitally — he’s acting. His regrets seem less about ethics and more about economics.
The more perfect the imitation, the greater the lie. What people crave isn’t flawless illusion — it’s authenticity.
Times reporter Sapna Maheshwari suggests as much. Her story centers on the lack of royalties and legal protections for people like Jacqmein.
She also raises moral concerns, citing examples where digital avatars were used to promote objectionable products or deliver offensive messages. In one case, Jacqmein’s AI double pitched a “male performance supplement.” In another, a TikTok employee allegedly unleashed AI avatars reciting passages from Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.” TikTok removed the tool that made the videos possible after CNN brought the story to light.
These incidents blur into a larger problem — the same one raised by deepfakes. In recent months, digital impostors have mimicked public figures from Bishop Robert Barron to the pope. The Vatican itself has had to denounce fake homilies generated in the likeness of Leo XIV. Such fabrications can mislead, defame, or humiliate.
But the deepest problem with digital avatars isn’t that they deceive. It’s that they aren’t real.
Even if Jacqmein were paid handsomely and religious figures embraced synthetic preaching as legitimate evangelism, something about the whole enterprise would remain wrong. Selling one’s likeness is a transaction of the soul. It’s unsettling because it treats what’s uniquely human — voice, gesture, and presence — as property to be cloned and sold.
When a person licenses his “digital twin,” he doesn’t just part with data. He commodifies identity itself. The actor’s expressions, tone, and mannerisms become a bundle of intellectual property. Someone else owns them now.
That’s why audiences instinctively recoil at watching AI puppets masquerade and mimic people. Even if the illusion is technically impressive, it feels hollow. A digital replica can’t evoke the same moral or emotional response as a real human being.
This isn’t a new theme in art or philosophy. In a classic “Simpsons” episode, Bart sells his soul to his pal Milhouse for $5 and soon feels hollow, haunted by nightmares, convinced he’s lost something essential. The joke carries a metaphysical truth: When we surrender what defines us as human — even symbolically — we suffer a real loss.
For those who believe in an immortal soul, as Jesuit philosopher Robert Spitzer argues in “Science at the Doorstep to God,” this loss is more than psychological. To sell one’s likeness is to treat the image of the divine within as a market commodity. The transaction might seem trivial — a harmless digital contract — but the symbolism runs deep.
Oscar Wilde captured this inversion of morality in “The Picture of Dorian Gray.” His protagonist stays eternally young while his portrait, the mirror of his soul, decays. In our digital age, the roles are reversed: The AI avatar remains young and flawless while the human model ages, forgotten and spiritually diminished.
Jacqmein can’t destroy his portrait. It’s contractually owned by someone else. If he wants to stop his digital self from hawking supplements or energy drinks, he’ll need lawyers — and he’ll probably lose. He’s condemned to watch his AI double enjoy a flourishing career while he struggles to pay rent. The scenario reads like a lost episode of “Black Mirror” — a man trapped in a parody of his own success. (In fact, “The Waldo Moment” and “Hang the DJ” come close to this.)
RELATED:Cybernetics promised a merger of human and computer. Then why do we feel so out of the loop?

The conventional answer to this dilemma is regulation: copyright reforms, consent standards, watermarking requirements. But the real solution begins with refusal. Actors shouldn’t sell their avatars. Consumers shouldn’t support platforms that replace people with synthetic ghosts.
If TikTok and other media giants populate their feeds with digital clones, users should boycott them and demand “fair-trade human content.” Just as conscientious shoppers insist on buying ethically sourced goods, viewers should insist on art and advertising made by living, breathing humans.
Tech evangelists argue that AI avatars will soon become indistinguishable from the people they’re modeled on. But that misses the point. The more perfect the imitation, the greater the lie. What people crave isn’t flawless illusion — it’s authenticity. They want to see imperfection, effort, and presence. They want to see life.
If we surrender that, we’ll lose something far more valuable than any acting career or TikTok deal. We’ll lose the very thing that makes us human.
This Year’s Run of SHUTDOWN THEATER Is Officially CANCELED! | Ep 1145