George Clooney laments sale of 'mom-and-pop' shop Paramount



Actor George Clooney compared entertainment studio Paramount to a "mom-and-pop" shop after a massive entertainment merger will see the company swept up in an $8 billion sale.

Clooney was asked in a recent GQ interview if he was invested in the outcome of the sale, given its history and the fact that it means there is one less studio hiring actors.

'It's all getting eaten up by big Walmarts and Amazons around the world.'

"Paramount’s one of the great original studios," Clooney said.

Paramount was founded as the Paramount Pictures Corporation in 1912.

"But some of it you just have no say in it. Because the business, it's all getting eaten up. It's like everything — it's all getting eaten up by big Walmarts and Amazons around the world. Our version of mom-and-pop shops in a small town is Paramount."

Clooney's idea of small business may not be everyone's. Paramount Global's 2023 revenue was just shy of $30 billion.

Still, this was enough of a decline to send shares tumbling — and prompt the company to start shopping for offers.

The upcoming merger has already resulted in nearly 2,000 job cuts at Paramount Global and the shuttering of its television studios, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The studio is responsible for popular show "Reacher" on Amazon's Prime Video, as well as other shows like Roku's "The Spiderwick Chronicles."

Paramount Global's parent company, National Amusements, will be purchased by Skydance Media and other investors for $2.4 billion, along with another $1.5 billion in cash to pay off debts, and an additional $4 billion to buy off remaining Paramount shares.

Clooney reminisced in his interview about how studios "developed stars" in the past but added, "We kind of were at the very end of that, where you could work at a studio and do three or four films, and there was some plan to it."

"I don't think that’s necessarily the case anymore. So it's harder for you to sell somebody something on the back of a star."

The 63-year-old added that it's a "great time as a young actor" due to the plethora of television shows being made.

Clooney most recently made headlines after making an about-turn following a fundraiser for Joe Biden in May 2024. The actor praised the president at the successful event that brought in over $28 million for the Democrat's presidential campaign.

Clooney quickly changed course in July 2024, however, penning an op-ed in the New York Times that claimed Biden could save democracy by stepping out of the presidential race.

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Democrats use streaming services more than Republicans, with only one platform used more by GOP

Democrats use streaming services more than Republicans, with only one platform used more by GOP



Democrats use streaming services more than Republicans do, with the liberal party members out-watching their conservative counterparts on almost every major streaming platform.

Of the top eight streaming platforms in the United States, more Democrats had subscriptions on seven of them in 2023. The difference in viewership is not staggering, but on each of those seven platforms at least 5% more Democrats are members than Republicans are.

The largest gaps are on Netflix, where 68% of Democrats watch as opposed to 58% of Republicans, as well as Hulu, which has a 44% DNC watch rate compared to 33% GOP. The biggest difference came on HBO's MAX service, which saw 33% Democrat usage and 20% Republican usage.

The national consumer study by MRI-Simmons, analyzed by Variety, did show that one streaming platform is more preferred by conservatives. Paramount Plus saw 24% usage by Republicans in 2023, while 22% of Democrats subscribed.

While the survey did not attribute reasons for why a given streaming service was preferable, Paramount's streaming service holds the rights to beloved show "Yellowstone."

The drama series reportedly has high viewership in cities such as Dallas, Oklahoma City, and Fort Myers, Florida, according to Time, which also noted the show's significant crossover with the outlet Country Living.

The show's co-creator, Taylor Sheridan, recently appeared on "The Joe Rogan Experience" and explained his view on political division in the country.

"It's fascinating the language is being reinvented before our eyes there's all these new words that are just meant to keep one person from disagreeing with another person's position," Sheridan explained. The filmmaker then cited a passage he had read about why liberals and conservative opinions have drifted further apart as opposed to aligning on issues.

"The liberal point of view was that crime and all these social ills ... it was a, so it's a social construct, and that if you could find a way to level the playing field for everybody that crime would be eliminated all these issues would go away," Sheridan began. "The flip side of that is the conservative view, which is there's evil in the world [and] there's good in the world. We're going to try and manage the evil as best we can and create an opportunity for people to succeed or they can f**k up and best of luck," he continued.

"One side seems naive, one side seems extremely harsh, but those are the beliefs and that side can never compromise with this side and vice versa because you're abandoning your own ideology."

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Kelsey Grammer says he still supports Donald Trump



Actor Kelsey Grammer of "Frasier" fame has noted that he still supports former President Donald Trump.

"I am," Grammer said during an interview with BBC Radio 4's "Today" when asked whether he is still a Trump supporter. He added that he would "let that be the end of it."

A radio host noted that "Kelsey Grammer himself was perfectly happy to go on talking about it. The Paramount+ PR people, less happy that he talked about it," the radio host added, indicating that the PR people decided that there had been "plenty of time for our interview."

Grammer, who played the character Frasier Crane on the sitcom "Cheers," portrayed the character again for the sitcom "Frasier," which ran from 1993 until 2004. Grammer is reprising the role of Frasier Crane in the Paramount+ reboot, also titled "Frasier," which came out this year — the season 1 finale will come out later this week.

During a 2019 interview, Christiane Amanpour noted that Grammer is conservative and had voted for Trump and then asked the actor whether he had taken hits for it. "I'm unaware of taking a hit for it," Grammer said.

The actor played Christian pastor Chuck Smith in the 2023 film "Jesus Revolution," which was based on a true story. The real Chuck Smith passed away in 2013.

While Trump is facing GOP primary competition, he has been able to maintain a massive lead in the polls and appears likely to clinch the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

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Reality show will feature 'pansexual bachelorette' who is 'freed from typical dating show gender norms'



Many people enjoy watching romance-related reality series where a man or woman culls through a field of candidates while seeking that special someone.

But while shows like "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" focus on traditional heterosexual relationships, an upcoming series titled "Love ALLways" will feature a "pansexual" woman choosing from a collection of candidates from "all genders," according to a press release about the program.

"One pansexual bachelorette is given the chance of a lifetime to find her perfect match in the all-new dating series LOVE ALLWAYS, produced by Awesomeness Unscripted and Digital Studio. The first three episodes of the Gen-Z reality show will drop on Paramount+ on Friday, June 2, followed by a weekly release of the season’s remaining seven episodes on Paramount+ and Awesomeness’ YouTube channel," the press release states.

The bachelorette on the show is aided by two individuals who are also tasked with mentoring teams of candidates. The release teases that some of the candidates even start falling for each other.

"Over 10 episodes, bachelorette Lexi Paloma is freed from typical dating show gender norms as she sets out to find true love. But what's love without a little friendly competition? As she narrows down her pool of contestants of all genders, some start falling for one another, causing a spiral of drama, betrayal, passion and jealousy. Throughout the process, Lexi is assisted by two professional relationship gurus, Spicy Mari and Anthony Recenello, who also serve as mentors to their teams of potential suitors. Not only are the daters competing for a chance at love, but the relationship gurus are also going toe-to-toe to see whose protégé gets chosen," the press release states.

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Former comedians slammed for advancing Beijing's preferred virus narrative on late-night shows



Like their peers on "The View" and other obedient script-readers in the news media, corporate late-night hosts are now being confronted over their part in propagating Beijing's preferred and increasingly unlikely narrative regarding the origins of the COVID-19 virus — or at the very least downplaying the possibility of a lab leak.

Last week, "The View" cohost Whoopi Goldberg blamed former President Donald Trump for her long-standing refusal to recognize there was a good possibility that COVID-19 originated in the Chinese lab known for running dangerous gain-of-function experiments on coronaviruses.

Fox News Digital has since emphasized that this partisan blindness did not only affect liberal media personalities like Goldberg during the daytime.

Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel, and Samantha Bee are among the former comedians now facing backlash over downplaying or outright rejecting the lab-leak theory.

Colbert

Jon Stewart went on CBS' "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" in June 2021 and leveled his former subordinate with the suggestion that human meddling or error was responsible for the pandemic.

"I think we owe a great debt of gratitude to science. Science has, in many ways, helped ease the suffering of this pandemic, which was more than likely caused by science," said Stewart.

Colbert responded, "Do you mean perhaps there’s a chance that this was created in a lab?"

"A chance? There’s a novel respiratory coronavirus overtaking Wuhan, China, what do we do? Oh, you know, who we could ask? The Wuhan novel respiratory coronavirus lab. The disease is the same name as the lab! That’s just a little too weird!" Stewart replied.

The comedian stressed the point, saying, "‘Oh, my God, there’s been an outbreak of chocolaty goodness near Hershey, Pennsylvania. What do you think happened?' ... Like, 'Oh I don’t know, maybe a steam shovel mated with a cocoa bean?' Or it’s the f***ing chocolate factory!"

Visibly unnerved by Stewart's belief and the audience's reaction, Colbert countered, "It could be possible; you could be right. It could be possible that they have the lab in Wuhan to study the novel coronavirus diseases because in Wuhan, there are a lot of novel coronavirus diseases because of the bat population there," which prompted Stewart to quip, "I understand; it’s a local specialty and it’s the only place to find bats. You won’t find bats anywhere else."

National Review noted that, contrary to Colbert's suggestion, the bats studied in the Wuhan Institute of Virology did not come from Wuhan but rather caves outside the city of Nanning in southern Asia, some 1,000 miles away from the epicenter of the outbreak.

Jon Stewart On Vaccine Science And The Wuhan Lab Theory youtu.be

Colbert appears resolved to reject the possibility that a CCP-controlled lab with a checkered safety record was the source of a virus that slaughtered tens of millions of people worldwide.

On Feb. 27, he mocked the Department of Energy's conclusion that the virus likely originated in the Wuhan lab.

"Now, if like me you’re wondering why the Department of Energy is the one making this judgment, it’s because that agency oversees a network of national laboratories, some of which conduct advanced biological research," said the former comedian.

"No, no! Bad Energy Department, no bio-labs until you finish building your electric car-charging stations. Stay in your lane — you don’t see the Census Bureau building nukes," continued Colbert. "But whatever, who am I to say? They’re the Energy Department; I’m sure they’re smart. They wouldn’t release these findings unless they were absolutely confident."

Addressing the apparent ignorance of certain late-night script readers, National Review noted that the DOE weighed in because it "has a special division that, as part of its mission to track and mitigate the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, specializes in the study of biological weapons such as viruses."

"What’s that? They made their judgment with ‘low confidence,'” said Colbert, adding, "Anyway, we’ll have more on this story as soon as anyone has anything they can prove."

On March 1, Colbert doubled down, complaining to his fully vaccinated audience that the FBI won't share proof of the lab leak.

"If you can't share it, maybe tell someone at that Chinese lab, and if they leak it, you'll know you were right," said Colbert.

After intimating that an absence of proof was the proof of absence, Colbert then unironically invoked the wisdom of Dr. Fauci, recently reported to have discounted possible evidence of the virus' human engineering and concealed his efforts to push the counternarrative.

Kimmel

After the DOE confirmed that the Wuhan lab may be the origin of the virus, former comedian Jimmy Kimmel claimed during his monologue on ABC that the lack of an overwhelming consensus means "we didn't know then. We still don't know now. But what we did know is that Trump and his buddies blaming the Chinese resulted in a great deal of anti-Asian-American sentiment and even violence in this country. And that's why it was irresponsible for the president to call it the 'China Virus.'"

In 2020, Kimmel said then-President Donald Trump was "pushing U.S. intelligence to find evidence for this theory that the virus was accidentally released from a lab in Wuhan. That's his new angle to feed the wingnuts, to treat this virus like it was a conspiracy of some kind. ... Tomorrow, he'll blame the Spanish flu on Antonio Banderas."

Trump intimated in spring 2020 that he had seen evidence that gave him a high degree of confidence that the virus originated from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, adding, "Certainly it could have been stopped."

A day after suggesting Trump used the term "Chinese virus" to deflect blame from himself, on March 19, 2020, Kimmel said, "[Trump's] really going all in with this 'Chinese virus' nonsense. ... Just shut up already and let the doctors take over."

Kimmel's recent attempts at damage control are in response to a takedown on Fox News' "Tucker Carlson Tonight," where Carlson said, "Imagine if you're a comedian and all of a sudden your cue card has all kinds of talking points from politicians and foreign governments on it. Don't read it. You degrade yourself and you become complicit in the greatest crime in history."

\u201cTucker Carlson ends Jimmy Kimmel:\n\n"Imagine you're a comedian and all of a sudden, your cue card has all kinds of talking points from politicians and foreign governments on it... You degrade yourself and become complicit in the greatest crime in history."\nhttps://t.co/N6znnuoNAo\u201d
— Citizen Free Press (@Citizen Free Press) 1677550044

Bee

Fox News Digital noted that years prior to her cancellation for averaging less than half the number of viewers other late-show hosts netted, Samantha Bee denounced conservative outlets for suggesting that China may have had something to do with the virus.

After playing a montage of Fox News pundits criticizing the CCP, she said, "China, we know it's not your bad. ... Tying coronavirus to China and Chinese people isn’t just a racist dog whistle, it’s a whole racist orchestra… the coronavirus is not an excuse to be racist."

Cui bono

TheBlaze previously reported that Department of Health and Human Services records obtained via Freedom of Information Act requests revealed that media personalities such as Colbert and the hosts of "The View" were among those tapped to spread propaganda promoting COVID-19 vaccines on behalf of the Biden administration.

It is presently unclear whether there was a similar statist push behind these former comedians' efforts to downplay the lab-leak theory or whether this seemingly coordinated effort, while ostensibly politically motivated, was in fact spontaneous.

Arthur Bloom noted in the American Conservative at the outset of the pandemic around the time the liberal media began shielding China from criticism that "many media companies either do business with China or are paid by the government in some way."

"The companies that own the major news networks, NBC, ABC, and CBS, all do significant business in China. On the print side, top U.S. newspapers like the Washington Post and New York Times have been criticized for running paid China Daily inserts. What they were paid for these inserts is still unknown," continued Bloom.

Bloomed added, "By contrast, conservative news companies are much less involved in China. Conservative radio giant Salem, whose attempt to buy Tribune several years ago provoked an enormous freakout from media reporters over consolidation, is all-American. And Fox, after several troubled attempts to break into the Chinese market—including sending a News Corp team to help build People’s Daily a website—has mostly given up, after selling its Asia-Pacific operations to Disney over the last two years."

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