JD Vance Laughs Off Boos From DC’s Biggest Elites During Kennedy Center Appearance
He gave a wave and sipped his wine
A Grammy-nominated rapper slammed Black Lives Matter as a "scam" in a tense exchange.
Lil Yachty — born Miles Parks McCollum — is a popular rapper who has been nominated for four Grammy Awards, three Billboard Music Awards, and three MTV Music Awards.
'You probably wouldn't know anything about it because you don't care about black people.'
He recently made an appearance on the "Feeding Starving Celebrities" online cooking show. The series is hosted by Quenlin Blackwell — a massively popular social media influencer with nearly 12 million followers on TikTok, more than three million followers on Instagram, and over 2.5 million subscribers on YouTube.
Blackwell asked Lil Yachty, "You spent $100,000 on a trip to Disney World. How much have you spent on charitable causes this year?"
Lil Yachty laughed and pointed out that "this year has technically just started."
Blackwell then asked how much he gave to charity last year.
He responds, "It's hard to gauge."
The rapper added, "It's just blurry. I've been doing so much."
Blackwell replies, "BLM? Because you want to be so black-powered?"
Lil Yachty quickly fires back, "BLM is a scam."
Blackwell excitingly orders her staff to "clip that" video highlight and send it to "the f***ing news."
"BLM was literally a scam," Lil Yachty explains, then says of Black Lives Matter leaders: "They had bought mansions."
Lil Yachty then bashes Blackwell, "You probably wouldn't know anything about it because you don't care about black people. You don't follow black news."
"I do care about black people. Look at my chocolate," the influencer retorts as she points to her arms.
Lil Yachty shoots back, "It's a disguise."
After an awkward silence, Blackwell then proclaims herself to be the "most pro-black person in this room."
Lil Yachty claims that Blackwell's staff is "all white," to which she argues that her employees are "POC," or "people of color."
A staff member is heard saying, "I'm gay."
The rapper says, "I too have a gay," which shocks Blackwell and compels her to correct him with the progressive term, "A gay? A member of the LGBTQIA+."
A video clip of the exchange went viral on social media and racked up more than one million views on the X social media platform, plus an additional four million views on the original full episode.
Blaze News has extensively covered the questionable spending habits by the leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement.
The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation reportedly took in more than $90 million in 2020.
BLM revealed in 2021, "After our expenses and grant disbursements, we are left with an approximate balance of $60 million."
As Blaze News reported in January 2022, BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors "secretly" purchased a $6 million mansion in Southern California. Regarding the accusations of purchasing lucrative real estate property, Cullors claimed, "What’s happening to me and to our movement is both racist and sexist."
At the same time, the BLM organization purportedly funded the purchase of a mansion that was formerly the Toronto headquarters of the Communist Party of Canada.
In February 2022, the liberal states of California and Washington reportedly ordered the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation to halt all fundraising operations over a lack of financial transparency.
Cullors — a self-described "trained Marxist" — resigned from the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation after questions surrounding the purchase of high-end real estate properties.
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After years of Disney pandering to a woke agenda, the House of Mouse has done something conservative that it hasn't done in nearly 30 years. The surprising decision by the entertainment behemoth will delight Christian parents while driving liberals crazy at the same time.
Pixar's first animated series, "Win or Lose," is about "the intertwined stories of eight different characters as they each prepare for their big championship softball game — the insecure kids, their helicopter parents, even a lovesick umpire."
LGBTQ activist websites were 'uneasy' with a cartoon character praying.
In the series premiere episode, titled “Coach’s Kid,” which aired on Disney+ on Feb. 19, young Laurie is grappling with self-doubt and anxiety while preparing for an upcoming game. To deal with her lack of confidence, Laurie bows her head and folds her hands in prayer to ask God for strength.
“Dear heavenly Father, please give me strength. … I just want to catch a ball or get a hit," Laurie says. "I promise I'll be good, and I, uh, won't do that thing again."
In a different scene, Laurie prays, “Please help me be good. I’m gonna train so hard.”
The Christian Post reported, "The scene marks the first time a Disney character is portrayed offering an explicitly Christian prayer since 1996’s 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame' and its song 'God Help the Outcasts,' which includes the lyrics, 'God help the outcasts / Hungry from birth / Show them the mercy / They don’t find on earth / God help my people / We look to You still / God help the outcasts / Or nobody will.'"
WDW News said, "Laurie is the first character to be openly Christian from Disney since the 2007 film 'Bridge to Terabithia,' which featured the children Jesse and Leslie attending church together and discussing religion on their trip home."
LGBTQ activist websites were "uneasy" with a cartoon character praying.
PinkNews claimed, "The introduction of an explicitly Christian character is fairly innocuous on its own standing, but the context surrounding the show — and Disney at large — has left some LGBTQ+ TV lovers a little uneasy."
"While Laurie’s Christian beliefs aren’t depicted as being anti-trans, and Christian characters aren’t incongruous with trans characters — of course, someone can be both religious and transgender — some viewers feel the two conjunctive decisions are indicative of Disney moving back towards a more traditional, conservative worldview," the outlet added.
LGBTQ Nation said, "The opening episode now introduces Laurie, whose first lines depict her praying to the 'heavenly father.'"
The outlet ranted, "Her introduction comes as Donald Trump and the Republican party continue to terrorize the trans community and use Christianity as justification, all the while claiming that Christians are being persecuted by diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts."
The site trashed Disney for "bending to conservative will."
"Win or Lose" originally had a much more progressive agenda.
As Blaze News reported in December 2024, Disney buckled to pressure from conservative parents who called for the removal of a transgender character in the animated children's show.
One of the characters in the show, based on middle-school-aged children, was initially slated to feature a transgender storyline.
Disney cut the scene with the transgender child discussing gender identity.
A spokesperson from Disney said in December 2024, "When it comes to animated content for a younger audience, we recognize that many parents would prefer to discuss certain subjects with their children on their own terms and timeline."
According to the Hollywood Reporter, "The character remains in the show, but a few lines of dialogue that referenced gender identity are being removed. A source close to 'Win or Lose' said the studio made the decision to alter course several months ago."
The character is to be voiced by 18-year-old transgender actor Chanel Stewart.
Liberals launched a petition to have the transgender storyline reinstated, but it only received 8,300 signatures.
As Blaze News reported in November 2023, Disney, which is Pixar’s parent company, warned investors that the company's wokeness presents risks to its "reputation and brands" in its annual financial report with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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Bite first, whine later.
That was the strategy of an anti-Elon Musk protester who assaulted a comedian on camera at a recent demonstration at a Palo Alto, California, Tesla dealership.
'Left wing protestors have added "biting" to their tactics.'
Hundreds of demonstrators were there to protest Elon Musk and his recent cost-cutting rampage via the Department of Government Efficiency.
Also in attendance — with cameras rolling — were YouTubers and comedians Danny Mullen and Leo Dottavio, the former proudly displaying his support for Musk by wearing a DOGE T-shirt.
The mostly peaceful protest — in which mostly elderly protesters brandished signs with slogans like "Honk for democracy," "Stop Musk's power grab," and, naturally, "Fight fascism" — became violent after a masked protester turned his camera on Mullen and dared him to remove his sunglasses.
A second man, likely in his 30s or 40s, approached Mullen and sarcastically pretended to side with him.
"Hey! Sir, we have tiny d***s, and that's why we support this s***!" the man said, while pointing to Mullen's shirt. The man then hit Mullen with a backhand that struck the comedian in the face and knocked his hat off. "You little bitch!" the protester added.
Mullen retaliated by slapping the man in the face, who then moved toward Mullen. As the two engaged, Mullen eventually threw the man to the ground and controlled him.
Mullen is an experienced jiujitsu practitioner and therefore was able to calmly hold the man against the ground. However, during the scuffle, the protester allegedly bit Mullen in the chest, with Mullen showcasing the wound on his Instagram page.
"Left wing protestors have added 'biting' to their tactics," Mullen wrote alongside the photos.
As the pair grappled, the man claimed he only hit Mullen's hat despite the footage proving otherwise. Other protesters defended the aggressive male by saying Mullen was actually the one who started the exchange.
"I felt like I was in bizarro world," Dottavio told Blaze News. "It's as clear as day that my friend Danny was assaulted by this man first, then defended himself, but people clearly wanted to say the opposite and paint him as the bad guy."
Dottavio added, "It felt like I was around a bunch of lying children."
Protests at Telsa showrooms have recently popped up in cities like New York, Boston, San Francisco, and Tucson, Arizona, in response to Musk's campaign to curb federal spending. According to the Washington Post, protests have been organized at at least 90 Tesla locations as of March 4.
Several middle-aged women continued to verbally assault Mullen even after he let the aggressive protester back to his feet. One woman yelled, "F*** you!" at him, and another told him to "get the f*** out of here."
Mullen could not help but return fire with his own quips, asking why the other protesters were mad at him despite him defending himself and winning the exchange.
"In your America, do losers get credit?" Mullen asked. "That's the problem. That's what DOGE is trying to counteract," he jokingly concluded.
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The big winner from Sunday night's Academy Awards ceremony was independent movie "Anora."
It's about "a young sex worker from Brooklyn," who "gets her chance at a Cinderella story when she meets and impulsively marries the son of an oligarch. Once the news reaches Russia, her fairytale is threatened as the parents set out for New York to get the marriage annulled," the Internet Movie Database says.
'Most of Hollywood is trite and banal, but this is wicked.'
The Washington Post noted that “Anora” is "in no way a celebration of the title character’s line of work — Ani (Madison) is a stripper at a Manhattan men’s club who negotiates a week of 'companionship' with the spoiled son (Mark Eydelshteyn) of a Russian oligarch — but in no way does it condemn her, either."
On Sunday night, "Anora" took home five golden statues out of six nominations.
The movie's creator, Sean Baker, won four Oscars for Film Editing, Original Screenplay, Directing, and Best Picture (as one of the movie's producers). Its star Mikey Madison — a first-time nominee — got the surprise nod for Best Actress.
But arguably what stands out most were the acceptance speeches from Baker and Madison, both of whom gave big shout-outs to the "sex worker community."
“I want to thank the sex worker community," Baker told the Academy Awards audience during his speech for his Original Screenplay win. "They have shared their stories. They have shared life experience with me over the years. My deepest respect. Thank you. I share this with you."
Madison during her Oscars speech gave the crowd a near mirror-image of Baker's address: "I also just want to again recognize and honor the sex worker community. I will continue to support and be an ally. All of the incredible people, the women that I’ve had the privilege of meeting from that community has been one of the highlights of this ... entire incredible experience.”
Variety added that during Madison's acceptance speech at the earlier British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards, she offered similar words: "I do want to just take a moment to recognize the sex worker community. I just want to say that I see you. You deserve respect and human decency. I will always be a friend and ally.”
What's more, the Associated Press said after Baker collected his fourth Oscar, he declared backstage that sex work “has an incredible, unfair stigma applied to it” and offered that it should be decriminalized.
As you might guess, not everyone is on board with lionizing the "sex worker community." Here's a smattering of pushback under an ABC News X post about Madison's speech:
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Once in a generation, America faces a great moral question that can only be answered by Hollywood.
For example, in the 1980s, liberals were all about AIDS, so Hollywood eventually took up that great cause and gave us the gay Forrest Gump in the movie "Philadelphia" (1993), in which Tom Hanks, the Jimmy Stewart of his day, the beloved actor of 1980s comedies like "Splash," "Turner & Hooch," and "Big," made an entire generation of liberals gay.
A few years ago, a film like 'Nickel Boys' would have been a shoo-in. Back in the year of Our Floyd 2020, this kind of stuff brought liberals to their knees — literally.
Everyone knew this was their moral duty, their path to progress, because Denzel Washington, the symbol of morality in lots of movies of that time, became gay with Tom Hanks. Black and white were reconciled, and America’s racial strife was over. It was all about civil rights. Everyone accordingly won Oscars, including Bruce Springsteen, for “Streets of Philadelphia:” The Boss also turned gay. That entire era was one big "South Park" episode.
What’s harder to figure out is who gets the last laugh.
After a generation of struggle, the oh-so-serious liberals were on top. In 2015, the Obergefell decision turned America into the gay marriage capital of the world, the San Francisco of the solar system, if you will, repealing every constitutional amendment about marriage in every state, about 31 of them. The majority lost, the Constitution lost, everyone was re-educated.
Hollywood and the media had never been more powerful. Or so we thought.
Ten years on, however, it seems that the price liberals paid for those victories was losing the American audience. As far as the 2025 Oscars are concerned, it’s still one big "South Park" episode, but nobody's tuning in.
Perhaps precisely for that reason, Hollywood has become even more strident in its progressive tastemaking. Competing for Best Picture this year are two titans of transgender triumphalism: "Conclave" and "Emilia Perez." We haven't seen such hype since Jake Paul faced off against Iron Mike.
How to decide which deserves the honor more? Is it "Emilia Perez" — a musical about a Hitler-loving Mexican cartel gangster who loses his testicles in order to find himself? Or is it "Conclave," in which Muslims bomb the Vatican in order to pave the way for the first pope with ovaries? Truly this is a matter only the most sophisticated of cineastes are equipped to judge.
These fantasies about "transing" such redoubts of toxic masculinity as the Catholic Church (the magisterium is decidedly hetero, even if its guardians sometimes aren't) and the global drug trade reveal the impressive ambition that led liberals in the Obama and Biden years to try to turn Afghanistan into a feminist utopia.
But this sweeping vision of empire does not preclude a focus on more local matters. Should the pope be transgender, pre- or post-op, hermaphroditic, or intersex? "Conclave" presents us with this bewildering variety of options for self-identification, revealing the true freedom that 21st-century left-wing thought can achieve!
Trans womanhood is now the height of Hollywood glamor. What next — a trans Madam President? Talk about Oscar bait! And the story writes itself. Or rather, Twitter trolls already wrote it, with their speculations that Michelle Obama started out as "Big Mike."
Somehow the great right-wing digital brain predicted the future, as it so often does. There's a name for this heuristic: The funniest timeline wins.
But Hollywood is now stuck with a contest between oppressed groups that don’t have much in common beyond this: They ferociously reject most Americans. Obviously, they cannot all win, and they cannot all get enough attention to justify their moral demands in either urgency or intensity. But can they all lose?
I’ve focused on the two transgender movies so far, but if you look at the rest of the Best Picture nominees, there is, of course, also the mandatory movie about racism, civil rights, the 1960s, and unjust imprisonment of talented, scholarly young black men.
A few years ago, a film like "Nickel Boys" would have been a shoo-in. Back in the year of Our Floyd 2020 (when the Colson Whitehead novel "Nickel Boys" is based on won the Pulitzer), this kind of stuff brought liberals to their knees — literally.
But now? Nobody's seen it, and the liberal press can barely be bothered to praise it. Can you blame them? Trans is clearly the front-running Current Thing, so why risk dissent? In 2024, liberals seemed to make all the wrong choices when it came to which narratives to push, and so it is only natural that they'd start to doubt their instincts a little.
The rest of the list features at least four different varieties of feminism. "Anora" reinvents the rom-com as the crazy, audacious adventure of a lady of negotiable affections who walks all over a sensitive male figure who is the son of a Russian oligarch, so hijinks ensue. Heroic “sex work” might be a new possibility for the 21st-century liberal!
"The Substance" — by far the cleverest of these gynocentric delights — takes aim at Hollywood's dependence on plastic surgery via the body horror of displaying Demi Moore's naturally aged 60-something naked body. Here the future is indeed female — but only for those females ruthless enough to seize it from their physical inferiors.
"Wicked" adds some unasked-for black-girl magic to "The Wizard of Oz." The strain of convincing audiences that they wanted this led to the creepiest media campaign in award season memory — spots in which co-stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande fawned over each other like a pair of praying mantises.
Then there's the good, old-fashioned trauma feminism of "I'm Still Here." The only foreign film nominated for Best Picture, "I'm Still Here" is a reminder of the liberal maxim that every time a man is murdered, the real problem is who suffers because of this. A Brazilian politician is abducted by a military junta — and it's based on a true story? By all means, let's focus on his wife's ordeal. Sheer female persisting has never been so cinematic.
It's worth noting that behind the camera here is Brazilian director Walter Salles, a billionaire heir of a banking empire best known for making an adoring Che Guevara biopic 20 years ago. A good reminder that Hamas is only the latest terrorist group liberals adore in the form of kitschy art; a good reminder, too, that behind their sentimentality lies brutality.
Rounding out the competition is a classic crowd-pleasing Holocaust movie. In "The Brutalist," the protagonist survives the brutality of the camps only to inflict it — in architectural form — on America.
So much for the serious contenders in this year's oppression Olympics. The other two contenders are worth mentioning only for their artistic merit.
James Mangold's Bob Dylan biopic, "A Complete Unknown," is better than all the others put together, as is Denis Villeneuve's "Dune" sequel. Both are forms of 1960s nostalgia, and both show us, in nascent form, the forces that got us radical feminism and gender ideology and the like: the frenzied, middle-class quest for an authentic "identity" to give them a leg up in the endless competition for the spotlight.
Both those movies also star the same actor, Timothee Chalamet, the Leonardo DiCaprio of this generation, a favorite of women, a heartthrob who treats them like a combination of all-you-can-eat buffet and harem. He seems to be the only actor allowed in Hollywood to be sort of cool or even a little on the heroic side. But of course, even when he’s leading a jihad, the last word has to go to the woman who is dissatisfied with him and chooses atheism over marriage. It’s 2025.
This spring, I will welcome my firstborn.
As I approach this new chapter, profound excitement and, yes, anxious anticipation are constant companions. I keep reflecting on what it means to be unbreakable — not in a literal sense, as life reminds us of our fragility, but in spirit, values, and connection.
This reflection is deeply personal, not only because of fatherhood but also because of my role in "The Unbreakable Boy," a film that has challenged and reshaped my understanding of strength, family, resilience — and faith.
The story follows Austin (aka AuzMan!), a boy with autism and brittle bone disease. Physically, he is incredibly fragile, yet his spirit is anything but. His unwavering joy and boundless enthusiasm starkly contrast with a world that often feels heavy with division, fear, and cynicism. What struck me most while portraying Austin’s father was how his son's unyielding optimism forced him — and me — to re-evaluate what truly matters.
We live in an era when outrage often overshadows optimism and headlines focus on what divides rather than what unites. Behind this noise, these truths remain: the power of family, the importance of faith, and the resilience of the human spirit — cornerstones of what matters most in life, at least to me, though I suspect for you, too.
For years, I held in my truth out of fear and trauma. Today, I unapologetically speak up about issues that matter to me, from questioning institutional systems to advocating for personal freedom, mental health, and accountability.
Now, with a child on the way, fatherhood has already taught me that the most revolutionary act one can commit today is to love deeply, to show up for your family, and to hold to values that withstand the tests of time and adversity.
One in 36 children in the U.S. is diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. Families navigating these challenges face medical complexities, societal misconceptions, and systemic hurdles. And yet, amid these struggles are stories of profound joy, connection, and triumph — stories like Austin's. Stories from which we have everything to learn.
What makes Austin’s story remarkable is not just his medical conditions but how he transforms everyone around him. His father battles addiction and personal demons, yet it is Austin’s simple and genuine love that becomes the catalyst for healing. It is a narrative that echoes far beyond the screen because it is real. It is messy, imperfect, and filled with both heartbreak and hope.
Though our stories differ, Austin’s life holds something universally relatable and deeply inspiring for us all.
My own life has not been without its share of bumps along the way. I have faced many personal challenges and losses. But these experiences have reinforced a truth I know we all share deep down: Life is fragile, but love, faith, and family are the glue that holds us together when everything else feels like it is falling apart.
Austin reminds us that real growth often comes through pain, that joy can coexist with sorrow, and that the most meaningful lessons often come from unexpected teachers. Sometimes, those teachers are children who see the world with unfiltered wonder. How lucky we might be to experience the world through such eyes.
So as we navigate through so much division, let us be unbreakable, not forgetting the simple, profound power of showing up for one another. True strength is not perfection but choosing to love boldly despite our flaws.
The boys at “South Park” will be devastated.
Kathleen Kennedy, the Lucasfilm president who crushed the Force better than Darth Vader ever could, is retiring to a home far, far away.
'But to really have, like, a death toll and be willing to do that is a pill too great for me to swallow.'
When Disney spent a cool $4 billion on the "Star Wars" universe in 2012, the now 71-year-old Kennedy — whose resume boasts “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “E.T.,” and “Gremlins" — seemed like the perfect person to run it.
And she was — for a minute. Her first film, “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” made ALL the money in 2015 ($2 billion worldwide, to be exact).
It’s been rough sledding ever since, culminating in the “South Park” episode where a Kennedy stand-in revealed her storytelling strategy — "Put a chick in it! Make her lame and gay.”
That bit went viral while “Star Wars” fans prayed for Kennedy to leave the franchise before it was too late. And it just might be too late after flops like “The Acolyte” and “Star Wars: Skeleton Crew.”
Oh, and she drove a nail in the “Indiana Jones” franchise’s coffin, too.
Take a bow, Kennedy. It’ll take years to undo the damage you’ve caused. We’ll always have lesbian space witches, though. They can’t take that away from her ...
Don’t know much about (movie) history ...
A new report from anonymous Oscar voters shed some depressing light on the state of Hollywood. Namely, some of the people pulling the Academy strings aren’t up on their film lore.
Case in point? Two 2025 voters opted against giving Ralph Fiennes a best actor trophy for “Conclave.”
It wasn't that they objected to the movie's ultraprogressive take on the search for a new pope, with an ending that feels like MSNBC castoff Joy Reid wrote it.
No, the voters in question applauded the actor’s work (he’s always solid). They didn’t want to honor him because, as they recalled, he already had a golden statuette.
Except ... he doesn't.
Guess doing a 10-second Google search on the topic was too much to ask ...
Now, how hard was that?
Rachel Zegler’s “Snow White” opens next month, and the woker-than-woke starlet is singing a different tune about the project. Zegler caught heat last year after she trashed the source material as stuffy, archaic, and, oh, so sexist.
Later, she torched President Donald Trump and his MAGA bloc, saying they should “never know peace.” Fine actress. Lousy marketer.
It’s clear she’s been coached in damage control 101 and is eager to make amends for her bratty comments. She told Vogue’s Mexico edition why the hate she’s experienced is actually a good thing.
“I interpret people’s sentiments towards this film as passion. ... What an honor to be a part of something that people feel so passionately about. We’re not always going to agree with everyone who surrounds us and all we can do is our best.”
Someone just passed remedial public relations ... congrats!
The Oscars are Sunday night, and anyone hoping for a return to glitz and glamour may be disappointed. Expect resistance theater all night long.
Why?
That’s what we’ve seen for the past several weeks across the Screen Actors Guild Awards, the Directors Guild of America Honors, and various related soirees.
And sadly, the ensuing wisdom will be anything but sage-like. Consider “American Pie” alum Natasha Lyonne’s red carpet word salad, which made the former Vice President sound cogent by comparison.
But to really have, like, a death toll and be willing to do that is a pill too great for me to swallow. ... Like, beyond the sort of dialectic around oligarchs and whatever else, it’s, like, when I think of the kids or, like, the 12-year-old girl that can’t get an abortion or something, or, you know, that’s what really, like, rips me apart.
Get this lady a prime-time gig at the 2028 Democratic National Convention.
Need more? Try Justin Simien, the creator of “Dear White People,” raging against you-know-who at the Film Independent Spirit Awards gala.
"If you're serious about stopping the white nationalist coup taking over this country, how about amplifying black history. ... Because black people, we’ve been in a fascist country this whole time."
Could this year’s Oscars ceremony set an all-time ratings low? With speeches like that, it's certainly got a fighting chance.
Dems Embarrass Themselves and ENTIRE NATION with Trump Speech Disrespect | Ep 1028