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Rolling Loud And Antonio Brown Hype Up His Upcoming Performance At The Miami Festival

Last night, Rolling Loud announced the lineup for its impending return to Miami this summer with headliners Future, Kanye West (billed as “Ye”), and Kendrick Lamar, but one name, in particular, jumped out at fans. The mysterious “AB” listed in the second line of the Friday section was intriguing, prompting some fans to wonder whether it was NFL wide receiver (and Miami native), Antonio Brown, most recently of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. As it turns out, it was!

Rolling Loud confirmed that “Yes, that’s Antonio Brown on our lineup,” with a tweet earlier today coinciding with the former Buccaneer’s own announcement that he would be performing, which he shared on his Instagram Story alongside a snippet of his debut single, “Pit Not The Palace.” He also tweeted the Rolling Loud flyer with the song’s title, generating even more buzz for his stage debut.

Brown’s exit from the Tampa Bay team was controversial; during a January 2 game against the Jets in New York, he stormed off the field, peeling off his uniform as he went. Later it was revealed that he had a serious injury when he left the game and he claimed that he was cut from the team for not playing hurt after helping the Bucs win the Super Bowl just a year prior.

It looks like he’ll have a soft landing if he chooses not to return to the NFL, joining the ranks of rapper athletes such as Damian Lillard and Miles Bridges of the NBA as he prepares for his festival debut. Rolling Loud’s Miami event is July 22-24, with tickets going on sale Monday, March 7 at 12 pm ET.

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Lake Bell Is Telling Stories Her Way On TV And In Film

Few actors have gotten the kind of front-row seat to Hollywood’s inclusivity shift like Lake Bell. The funny woman who earned her IMDb credits by playing the brash best friend in romcoms like What Happens In Vegas and No Strings Attached has been, in her own way, slowly nudging the gates open for the female storytellers that follow. In the last decade, she’s penned award-winning shorts, directed festival darlings, and made the leap to TV, helming two episodes of Hulu’s wild Tommy Lee and Pam Anderson biopic.

We’ll get to that last entry in her filmography in a bit, but to truly understand the many trails Bell has blazed in her journey to cement herself as a creator in the industry we must do what every good storyteller does: start at the beginning. For Bell, that was acting – first at a drama school in England, later as a supporting character on procedural TV shows like The Practice, E.R., and Boston Legal.

“I had a pretty fierce North Star to become an actor,” Bell tells UPROXX. “I knew that was the language that I needed to speak coming out of the gate as a creative.”

She’d go on to experiment with nearly every genre – comedy, drama, horror, thriller, and an irreverent Adult Swim show about a quirky group of doctors with charged libidos that parodies the more serious medical drama fare that is Greys Anatomy. Those gigs helped Bell hone her own voice, one she’d been quietly nurturing while sponging up every lesson each film set had to offer.

“I’d always been a sort of closeted writer,” she explains. “I think as I started to be in the trenches of actually being a working actor and reaping the rewards of that education, I realized it was always written in my heart to tell stories from that point of view: as a writer, as a director, as a producer, and as someone who could creatively erect these stories from nothing. That’s satisfying and scratches a lot of different creative itches.”

As Bell describes it, the cyclic nature of storytelling started to interest her as much, if not more than, the opportunity to disappear into pre-written roles on screen.

“I like the multidimensional nature of being able to conceive an idea, then pen it. There’s the lonely existence of a writer — which is so hermit-like – but then it opens into this shared mentality of bringing together a team to bring [the story] to life,” she says. “And then it gets lonely again in post [production], but being a part of that beautiful cycle was very, very appealing.”

Bell took the journaling and prose writing and dialogue sketches she’d been cataloging over the course of her career and began to mine them for story ideas. The first that popped up? A sharp-witted satire that dives into an obscure niche of Hollywood: the voice-over industry. Bell’s In A World would use screwball comedy and quick-hitting humor to mask an oddly empowering feminist narrative, all set within a world she had been fascinated by for some time.

“I think that I always am going to mine for a story that hides messaging that I believe in, and In a World is totally a secret manifesto for the feminist experience and how we perceive the ammunition of authoritative voice, which is still something that I soapbox about,” she explains. But her Sundance feature debut would have to wait. Despite being encouraged by her longtime agent to direct, Bell was hesitant to step behind the camera.

“I said, ‘I would never have the audacity to direct a full laid feature without having directed anything,’ Bell recalls. “And he said, ‘Well, then write a short film and direct that.’ And I literally stopped in my tracks. I was like, ‘That is an excellent idea.’”

Bell financed the short, titled Worst Enemy which focused on a female shut-in played by Michaela Watkins whose neurosis about her weight leads to an unfortunate incident with a girdle. It’s hilarious and awkward and, as Bell puts it, “a visual stamp” of how she wanted to tell stories. The short got nominated at Sundance and gave Bell enough of a confidence boost to helm her first feature, but the road to getting it made still wasn’t easy.

“It was at the time where actors, actresses weren’t writing and directing things,” she recalls. “It was almost before there was as much of an acknowledgment that there was a difficulty being a [female] filmmaker. It was almost before we were even talking about that in rooms.” Bell admits she’s seen a shift in that side of the conversation since.

“Now it’s terrific that there is this beautiful camaraderie that I have with other actors who have gained such success and really created beautiful pieces of work in a time where they feel empowered to do so,” she says. But, absent of that kind of creative revolution ten years earlier, it was on her to advocate for the stories she believed in.

“I walked into rooms and I just didn’t blink an eye. I wasn’t overthinking, ‘Ooh, I’m a female filmmaker trying to get something,’” she explains. “I had a very direct vision of what I wanted to do.”

And what she wanted to do was to churn out insightful, kind, and optimistic stories that gut-punched you with the raw, inescapable realities of life – stories that were funny and thought-provoking. It’s why, when her main character in In A World lands her dream voice-over job after fighting against the systemic sexism in her industry, Bell doesn’t let her enjoy the victory for too long. Her lead, Carol, soon learns that the studio selected her to narrate the trailer for an upcoming dystopia about a group of powerful Amazonian women simply because it was a good PR move – a nod to the kind of hollow feminism we’re still seeing today. Instead of letting that admission wreck her confidence and diminish her joy though, Carol decides to begin mentoring other women, teaching them how to literally harness the power of their own voice, abandoning that patriarchally-approved baby-speak for something stronger, more self-assured, and truer to their own femininity. So, a happy ending, but one that still manages to get the last dig in for good measure.

“There’s always an undercurrent of a bone I have to pick with society at large,” Bell laughs while explaining the film’s ending. That nagging feeling that she’s meant to use her lens to focus on societal issues we’d be more comfortable blurring into the background is partly why she signed on to direct two episodes of Hulu’s latest series, Pam & Tommy.

The show, starring Lily James and Sebastian Stan, recounts the famous couple’s even more infamous sex tape leak, how that breach of privacy was tied to the rise of the internet itself, and the devastation it caused in both stars’ lives, but especially Anderson’s.

“I think why the context of it is so important is because we were all getting a lesson about where the boundaries lie in personal versus public and how image can sort of prevent and also taunt different boundary crossings,” Bell offers when asked why now felt like the right time to revisit that particularly thorny period in pop culture history. Despite the show launching with a raucous look at Pam and Tommy’s whirlwind romance, Bell’s episodes focus almost entirely on the psyche of the woman at the center of this media storm. In the show’s fourth episode, the first Bell directed, we see Pam reeling from this invasion of privacy, desperately trying to make her husband understand why the tape will damage her reputation but boost his own. She’s shrewd and realistic, predicting the backlash she’ll eventually endure. By the end of the episode, she’s suffered a terrible loss because of the stress she’s under and she reacts in a way that’s both incredibly heartbreaking to watch and, also, strangely inspiring.

In Bell’s second directorial effort of the series, Pam has fully come into her own, asserting herself at board meetings in the face of chauvinistic guidance that tries to belittle and diminish her experience and on talk show appearances opposite Jay Leno types who attempt to use this violation of her privacy as the punchline to some tawdry joke. She’s calm, collected, almost detached in the way she predicts her inevitable “fall from grace,” something that feels entirely relatable for any woman who’s been the victim of revenge porn – a term that wouldn’t be coined until after Anderson’s media trial.

For Bell, taking the reigns of this woman’s story felt personal and she fought to make sure that Pam had agency in this show, despite its entire premise focusing on how that agency was stolen from her by small men and their petty grievances.

“I’m always really interested in telling stories where women have to find their voice or get to sort of stand up for their own agency,” Bell explains. “And I felt really moved by what episodes I did get in this eight-part series because they are integral to Pam’s journey. Lily and I definitely bonded over the messaging and the voice that we could give this woman so that it felt like a feminist discussion — this idea that just because your career is successful because of being scantily clad in X, Y, and Z medium, it does not negate your right to privacy. That is something that I think women have been struggling to protect for just an incredibly long time.”

It must be noted that Anderson herself was not involved in the project and her feelings on its existence are still unknown. She may hate that her story is being re-told in this medium, that it’s being re-told at all. That’s fair and valid and something Bell has tremendous respect for.

“I would never force anyone to relive anything they didn’t want to,” she says when we broach the topic. But, as a storyteller who’s constantly looking to probe uncomfortable topics to find out why they stick in the societal subconscious and as a woman who’s experienced some of the same pushback and judgment, Anderson, herself went through, Bell sees it as her job to keep us talking about these unsettling issues – to even laugh about them at times – just so long as we’re not ignoring them.

“This story was acutely empathic to the plight of victims of this occurrence in our cultural history,” Bell says. “I just feel like there was this extreme sense of love and empathy and protectiveness over this woman’s story and what that meant to society at large. I felt really lucky that I got the opportunity to really take on a different visual language to express that and explore it in a new way.”

Bell hopes to continue challenging herself, finding new mediums and new stories that worm their way into our hearts, entertaining us even as they expose our own internal biases, making us laugh even as they offer some constructive criticism for fighting against the status quo. It’s her ability to embrace the duality of storytelling that makes her lens so unique and her films so memorable.

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A Military Veteran Has Issued A Blistering Response To Lauren Boebert’s Belligerent Behavior During The State Of The Union

There were a lot of takeaways from Joe Biden’s first State of the Union Tuesday night, but the one that dominated most of the news didn’t involve anything he said. It was Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene being total, predictable nuisances. Boebert was especially egregious. She heckled the president at the exact moment he started talking about his dead son Beau. Boebert inevitably doubled down on her comments, earning further condemnation, with some questioning the sincerity of her support for fallen troops.

One person who did just that was Eileen Rivers, an editor at USA Today and a veteran who spent four years as an Arab linguist. In a new column, Rivers took the Colorado representative to task, saying she “lowered discourse” while she “disrespected the office of the presidency.”

At the moment in Biden’s address, he was talking about soldiers who contract cancer on the job, as Beau may have. Right before a visibly choked-up Biden mentioned his deceased son, Boebert chimed in, shouting about the 13 U.S. soldiers killed during the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan last summer.

“When Boebert interrupted him, I also got choked up out of a combination of anger, grief and frustration,” Rivers wrote. “No one should have their thoughts about service member sacrifice stifled. Everyone should be able to speak about the loss of a loved one. When she stifled the president, she was also stifling me. Surely others who have lost loved ones felt that, too.”

Rivers also called into question whether Boebert really speaks for the troops. “Boebert does not speak for me. And neither do other members of the GOP who reinforced her sentiments on social media,” she wrote. “Are they really supporting service members? Or cloaking their desire for division in false patriotism?”

She then offered Boebert and her like-minded colleagues some advice:

If Boebert and the others who support her want to do something real for military veterans, they can start by distancing themselves from everything she did Tuesday night. False bravado and empty tweets do nothing for members of the military. But finding a way to avoid putting U.S. troops in another conflict would save lives and help families. So would getting behind Biden’s call for increased mental health services at veterans hospitals across the country.

Rivers concluded that “[u]ntil heckles turn into real solutions, we should all be angry.”

You can read Rivers’ full op-ed at USA Today.

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Dax Shepard Revealed That He Dated ‘Funny And Intelligent’ Ashley Olsen Years Ago

Dax Shepard is now happily married to Kristen Bell, and the duo have two young kids who don’t really bathe. But, long before Shepard married the Good Place actress, the comedian claims he was with another famous blonde, Ashley Olsen.

On an episode of Shepard’s hit podcast Armchair Expert, the actor says he dated Olsen “15 or 16 years ago,” when she and her twin Mary-Kate were just beginning their venture into fashion. “I just saw her at a party and was kind of thunderstruck by her beauty,” Shepard added.

The Olsen twins have been icons in the fashion industry after retiring from acting in the early 2000s. They created The Row in 2006, which was around when Shepard says they dated. “I was able to see her meet with design teams and, like, run her sh*t and she handled her [business], and it’s very impressive.” The Row features high-end clothing and accessories, you know, all the things they sold on their hit Playstation video game, Mary-Kate and Ashley’s Mystery Mall.

Shepard continued with praise for both twins, who he described as “super funny and sarcastic and intelligent. And they are major f**king bosses.” Of course, we knew this, since you need to be a boss to be able to star in over a dozen movies before the age of 18.

Despite their acting ventures, the two have been relatively quiet since making their way into the fashion scene and famously did not return for the Full House reboot. Luckily, Shepard has never seen the show before. “I luckily never saw that show,” he said. “Because I probably wouldn’t have been able to be attracted to Ashley if I knew her as a baby.” It should be noted that when Shepard met Olsen she was likely 19 or 20 according to his timeline, which would make him in his early thirties, but oh well.

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Kanye West’s Documentary ‘Jeen-Yuhs’ Is More Mythmaking Than Insightful

With the third and final episode of the Netflix Kanye West documentary Jeen-Yuhs finally available for streaming, the time has come to take stock and determine what lessons can be gleaned from its nearly five hours of behind-the-scenes footage. Did we learn anything we didn’t already know? I don’t think so, but for viewers of a certain age, who maybe didn’t get to watch all this go down in real-time or who were late aboard the Kanye West bandwagon, there is certainly value in watching the come-up, seeing that he always had an oversized ego and the ambition to match. The first two episodes of the documentary also show that the Kanye we know today came from humble beginnings, that he didn’t always have pop culture in the palm of his hands the way he does now.

But by the time the third episode comes around, we see the result of what that level of dominance has ultimately come to. And while director Coodie Simmons, who shot the documentary alongside longtime partner Chike Ozah, refrains from passing judgment on his friend Kanye, the documentary comes across as more mythmaking than insightful. While Coodie and Chike are far from yes-men, they’re maybe a tad bit too sympathetic considering how close they were to Kanye when he was just a guy from Chicago. The problem is, that no one should be as big as Kanye has gotten and do the problematic things Kanye has done without criticism. In Kanye’s own words, “no one man should have all that power.”

I can see how it would be interesting for outsiders to learn how some of the industry works, or to catch a glimpse at the sort of impromptu in-studio listening sessions and recording magic that can happen during the creation of a beloved classic. I’ve always found documentaries to be kind of misleading in that respect because it’s easy to cherry-pick those moments from hours and hours of footage of what in my experience are mostly boring and tedious processes (for a taste of that, just put those 2-minute clips on repeat for about 10 hours). And they can certainly tailor a perspective regarding artists’ relationships, conversations, and personalities for the benefit of the narrative being told rather than the truth of the events being recorded.

But it’s hard for even a grouch like me to deny the tenderness of Kanye’s relationship with his mother, of watching her ease his agitation when he believes he should be signed already, be a star already, be there — in whatever far-flung future he imagined for himself — already. She reminds him not to get ahead of himself, she beams with pride at his accomplishments, she admires his new jewelry, even when you can kind of tell she wants to admonish him for making irresponsible purchases. Her influence on him is undeniable and indelible, and it’s easy to see how her loss could cause such a disturbance for him. She grounded him when his ego threatened to turn him into a hip-hop Icarus; without her, he’s flown too close to the sun and crashed multiple times.

The documentary lets viewers draw this conclusion for themselves, even as most of us had already figured this out just from watching him snatching Taylor Swift’s mic at the VMAs, going through meltdowns on his Pablo tour, donning a bright red Make America Great Again cap to stump for the destructive administration of Donald Trump, and pushing through his own campaign, even as it wore down his relationship with his wife Kim Kardashian and turned him into a possible puppet for a flagging Republican reelection campaign. Because all of this is crammed into the final hour and a half of the documentary, it almost downplays Kanye’s downfalls in favor of focusing on his climb, as if justifying his newfound position just because he worked for it.

That’s cool, but as endearing as it is to watch Kanye interact with his biggest cheerleader, his mom, it’s heart-wrenching to see him in his current state because watching this documentary feels like joining the crowd watching a train wreck. It almost feels like we’ve so reduced this man’s humanity that he can’t even see it in himself. He’s a commodity, he’s an event, he’s entertainment — and in constantly trying to live up to his own capacity for spectacle, he’s lost sight of the kid from Chicago who dreamed of all this before making it come true. He’s become miserly, focused on his money and accomplishments to the exclusion of the people with whom he should be sharing them, he’s become paranoid, lost in the dark twisted fantasy of his persecution complex, and failing to see the beauty of his position. He’s lost his sense of humor and wonderment and humility, the possibility of failure, because he’s now surrounded by exactly the yes-men who don’t mind seeing him set himself on fire (sometimes literally) as long as there’s the potential of entertainment in watching him burn.

Jeen-Yuhs feels like watching him burn. It starts off with a slow spark, a wisp of smoke as he does everything he can to fan the flames, but by the end of episode three, we’re watching a full-on conflagration, the hero that Jeen-Yuhs has spent three hours building up crumble to ash in front of our eyes. At the beginning of the third episode, Coodie mentions being ready to release the documentary at the end of Kanye’s College Dropout era, ahead of the release of Late Registration. To hear him say that explains the first two parts of the doc — and makes you wish that he really had done so, to preserve the old Kanye instead of trying to explain the one we’re stuck with now.

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Pat Sajak Gave A Heartfelt Defense Of The ‘Wheel Of Fortune’ Contestants That Went Viral

Wheel of Fortune is, alongside Jeopardy!, one of America’s most beloved game shows. Part of the appeal of Wheel is how approachable it is in a way Jeopardy! simply is not, because the average American cannot run through a category on 18th century English literature, but you can guess some letters and solve a puzzle.

While the masses love to laugh at Jeopardy! contestants who can’t answer simple pop culture or sports questions most of us know, nothing brings the game show schadenfreude out quite like a Wheel disaster like we saw on Tuesday night. The two minutes of contestants getting railroaded by a vengeful wheel that kept landing on bankrupt, while also throwing out a few painful misses on “Feather In Your Cap” became a viral sensation, with plenty laughing at the pain of those poor souls who just could not get the answer right.

On Wednesday, Wheel host Pat Sajak took to Twitter to author a heartfelt defense of those contestants, saying it “pains me” to see when people online ridicule contestants, and while he’s all for good natured fun, he also wants people to understand that it’s much harder being a contestant in those situations than it seems on your couch at home.

Sajak makes plenty of good points in this thread, and it’s nice to see him come out in defense of the contestants from his show. It is, undoubtedly, much easier to sit on the couch and yell things at the TV than it is to be on stage under bright lights with thousands of dollars on the line. He’s also right that “hat” not being the correct final word threw everyone for a loop and, coupled with some wheel chaos, it was a perfect storm for a painful sequence that just happened to be broadcast to millions on network television. He also knows not to completely wag his finger at fans for wanting to laugh at missteps, as that is truly one of the allures of watching Wheel, believing that if you ever got on that stage you’d nail every puzzle. Still, he makes a salient point that you might want to be careful laughing too hard at these, because if you get your chance on that stage, you might end up being the one trending for the wrong reasons.

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Marilyn Manson Has Sued Evan Rachel Wood Over Her Abuse Claims While Alleging ‘Malicious Falsehood’ And A Fabricated FBI Letter

Phoenix Rising, the two-part documentary from HBO and director Amy Berg, will soon open the door on Evan Rachel Wood’s allegations against Marilyn Manson. The project followed Evan’s years of advocacy for sexual assault survivors, along with how she took to Instagram in 2021 to name Marilyn Manson as the (alleged) previously unnamed domestic abuser that she spoke of while testifying to lawmakers (to get the Phoenix Act passed, in order to increase the statute of limitations for rape cases).

March 15 will be premiere day for Phoenix Rising, and less than two weeks ahead of that date, Manson (real name Brian Warner) has sued Wood for what he calls a string of false allegations against him. Manson previously denied allegations of sexual abuse by Wood and several other accusers, but now, he’s taking his pushback to court. Deadline first reported language from the lawsuit papers, in which he’s asking for a jury trial and claims that Wood (and Illma Gore, who he describes as Wood’s “on-again, off-again romantic partner”) spread “malicious falsehood” that has damaged his career.

There’s a lot there. You can read the full report at Deadline, but Manson also claims that Wood and Gore “hacked into the singer’s computers and social media,” and here’s his further accusations that Wood and Gore fabricated an FBI letter to influence accusers:

They impersonated an actual agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation by forging and distributing a fictitious letter from the agent, to create the false appearance that Warner’s alleged “victims” and their families were in danger, and that there was a federal criminal investigation of Warner ongoing (Attachment A);

They provided checklists and scripts to prospective accusers, listing the specific alleged acts of abuse that they should claim against Warner (Attachments B and C); and

They made knowingly false statements to prospective accusers (which have since been repeated by those accusers in court filings), including the defamatory claim that Warner filmed the sexual assault of a minor.

Manson has previously denied Wood’s claims that he terrorized, groomed, and abused her during their relationship. In response to Wood’s (as detailed in Phoenix Rising) accusation that he was “essentially raping” her on the set of 2007’s Heart-Shaped Glasses video, he also denies that claim. Wood alleged that she only agreed to simulate sex before Manson allegedly had nonconsensual intercourse while the cameras rolled. In response to those accusations, Manson issued a statement via a representative, who declared, “Brian did not have sex with Evan on that set, and she knows that is the truth.”

Phoenix Rising debuts on March 15 on HBO.

(Via Deadline)

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Pamela Anderson And Netflix Are Teaming Up To Produce The ‘Definitive Documentary’ About Her Life

On the heels of Pam & Tommy putting the iconic Playboy model and Baywatch star back into the headlines, Pamela Anderson has announced that a new documentary coming to Netflix will tell the “real story” of her life. Anderson teased the project on Wednesday afternoon with a handwritten note to her 1.3 million Instagram followers.

“My life, A thousand imperfection, A million misperception, Wicked, wild and lost, Nothing to live up to, I can only surprise you, Not a victim, but a survivor, And alive to tell the real story,” Anderson wrote on a piece of Netflix letterhead.

The documentary will reportedly be produced by Anderson’s son, Brandon Thomas Lee, who reposted her note on Instagram, as did his younger brother Dylan Jagger Lee. Via Variety:

Directed by Ryan White (“The Keepers,” “Ask Dr. Ruth”), the yet-to-be-titled documentary will feature exclusive access to Anderson, as well as archival footage and her personal journals.

The film’s logline describes the project as “an intimate portrait embedded in the life of Pamela Anderson as she looks back at her professional and personal path and prepares for the next steps on her journey.”

The announcement also marks Anderson’s return to social media. Back in January 2021, the model/actress deleted all of her accounts and vowed to live free by spending her time reading in the woods. You can’t blame her. Trees are pretty boring.

(Via Pamela Anderson on Instagram, Variety)

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Kevin Durant Will Return From His Knee Sprain Thursday Night Against The Heat

The Brooklyn Nets have been in a freefall since Kevin Durant went down with a sprained left MCL in mid-January, going 5-16 over the 21 games since he suffered the injury — and trading James Harden in the process.

While the Nets remain unsure of when the top prize of that trade, Ben Simmons, will be available to them — he has apparently had a bit of a setback in his ramping up to play again and is now considered “week-to-week” — they are getting their most important player back on Thursday. The team announced on Wednesday that Durant was no longer on the injury report and would make his return in Brooklyn when the Nets play host to the East-leading Miami Heat.

There are few teams in the NBA hotter than Miami right now, so it will be a stern test of Durant’s conditioning as he jumps back into NBA action. The Nets are currently eighth in the East at 32-31, a full three games back of Toronto after being swept by the Raptors on a back-to-back to start this week. If Brooklyn is going to claw out of the play-in, it will be incumbent on Durant to produce at an MVP level again and Brooklyn is going to have to start beating teams like the Heat to make the up the massive gap to the 6-seed, where Boston is a full 4.5 games up.

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Dennis Miller Is Abandoning His Show On Russian State TV In Response To The Invasion Of Ukraine

If you were unaware that Dennis Miller still has a TV show on the air, then you’re clearly not in the habit of watching propaganda TV. Since March 2020, Dennis Miller + One has been running on RT America, a U.S.-based news channel that’s funded by the Russian government (Miller’s show took over the slot formerly occupied by Larry King Now). While the SNL alum has had no qualms about cashing checks from the Kremlin before, Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine is apparently where Miller has drawn the line in what he can, in good conscience, abide by.

A source close to the situation told NBC News that Miller has decided to abandon the hour-long talk show, on which he welcomes sits down with a range of celebrities from the entertainment and sports worlds. “He has no plans on going back,” the source claims.

According to The Daily Beast, Ora TV—the production company behind Dennis Miller + One—has ceased production on all of its RT America series, including I Don’t Understand, which is hosted by legendary Star Trek actor William Shatner.

“Given the invasion of Ukraine and the tragic humanitarian crisis, Ora Media has paused production of content we license to T&R Productions,” Ora CEO John Dickey told Deadline. “Future business decisions will be made based on the evolving situation.”

(Via NBC News)