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Here’s When And Where You Can Watch ‘American Horror Story: NYC’

Every year, the same thing happens: a new season of the Ryan Murphy FX anthology series American Horror Story comes and no one has any idea how to watch it. Living a life in which all television is consumed via streaming platforms can complicate things, especially, for some reason, when it comes to AHS. The latest season, American Horror Story: NYC, premiered on FX on Wednesday, October 19, and you can watch it several ways.

The old-fashioned way

You can watch AHS: NYC every Wednesday when it airs on FX 10 p.m. ET/PT

You can also stream new episodes on Hulu at 3 a.m. ET the morning after they premiere on TV. If you want to catch up on past seasons of the show, you can stream all 10 previous seasons on Hulu. If you don’t have cable and don’t want to get roped into it now, there are plenty of other ways to get live TV in the streaming era. Hulu offers a live TV option, and there are plenty of other options including Sling TV, YouTube TV, or FuboTV.

Next day on Hulu

New episodes of AHS: NYC will be available to stream on Hulu the morning after they air on FX (at 3 a.m., to be exact). If you want to stay up for that, you’re welcome to do so. All other ten seasons of AHS are available to stream on Hulu, too, in case you’re in need of a throwback to Coven.

Here’s FX’s vague description for the AHS: NYC:

“Mysterious deaths and disappearances ramp up in the city. Meanwhile, a doctor makes a frightening discovery, and a local reporter becomes tomorrow’s headline.”

The teaser for the series – and the eleventh season of AHS – provided nothing while giving us everything: a creepy, kinky glimpse of NYC nightclubs. AHS has come a long, long way from the murder house first season, which aired in 2011.

The series stars some AHS regulars including Billie Lourd, Isaac Cole Powell, Zachary Quinto, Sandra Bernhard, and Broadway’s very own Patti Lupone. Newcomers to the anthology series include Kal Penn, Rebecca Dyan, and Sis.

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In Which We Let Ethan Hawke Play Our Therapist For A Little While

Back in September at the Toronto Film Festival, I went into Raymond and Ray (which will be streaming on Apple on Friday) knowing literally nothing about the plot. I assumed it was a cross-country buddy comedy of sorts starring Ethan Hawke and Ewen McGregor. Turns out, instead, it’s about a father dying and two half-brothers with the same name having to deal with the fallout. This is a plot that, strangely, I can relate with because after my father died in 2017, a few months later I found out, yes, I have an older half-brother with the same name that I’d previously not known about.

Poor Ethan Hawke. The publicists, understandably, were very interested in me talking to someone from this movie, all things considered. I didn’t know if he had a heads-up or not, like, “Hey, this one is going to be a little different.” From what I gather, he did not. But maybe that was all for the best. He did seem quite shocked when I told him about all this. And the thing about Ethan Hawke, he’s kind of an emotional guy and wears his heart on his sleeve. And he seemed genuinely curious about all of this and had quite a bit to say about it all, including a story about something he witnessed as a young actor that he’s never forgot. (I’m just imagining if this were like, say, Tommy Lee Jones instead. “Get over it! I don’t care!”) Anyway, in the end, this was all, strangely, cathartic.

But, first, we talk about The Grabber again from The Black Phone, a movie that made a lot of money. But, even still, I can’t get on board with The Grabber’s behavior.

Last time we spoke it was about The Grabber. My opinion has not changed. That guy, he crossed way too many lines for me. I can’t be on board with him.

Well, good for you. I agree with you.

The Black Phone did really well, by the way.

Yeah, no kidding.

People loved it.

Isn’t it funny?

Horror movies?!

I know.

Does that surprise you when a thing like that takes off?

Yeah, it’s endlessly fascinating. There are certain films you make that you really believe in. You take a movie like Gattaca. I loved making that movie, and I loved that script, and I was very aware that the people I was working with on every department were at really high level. And I really thought we were making a great movie. And it comes out and nobody cares. And then 25 years later people are still asking you about it.

That’s true.

Then there are other movies that you think nobody’s going to notice or care about and they blow up and audiences relate to them in a different way. And it’s always so unpredictable to me. And it’s fascinating. Performers lives, it’s all about how what you do intersects with what the kind of zeitgeist is interested in at that moment. And I’ve always believed in Scott Derrickson, that script was amazing. And I remember when I read it, I thought this could be a monster hit. I mean, it was just so entertaining. And it’s strange. It’s very rare that I would say it’s a horror movie with a heart of gold. I mean, the kids’ performances are so beautiful. And their brother and sister relationship at the heart of that movie is so good that I thought it had a chance of being really unique inside that genre. But at the same time, that’s exactly the kind of thing, sometimes you do something unique and that’s why people don’t like it. The Lord giveth and taketh away.

You need to stop dying at the end of these very successful movies you make.

I think that’s why I like them.

Because you don’t have to do another one?

I don’t have to do the sequel. Yeah.

I have a feeling we’re going to learn The Grabber has a twin brother and is up to no good.

Well, also, we’ve created the possibility for ghosts. So maybe just because The Grabber’s dead doesn’t mean he has to be gone.

So, Raymond and Ray… I saw it at the Toronto Film Festival just as a thing I knew nothing about. I thought it was about two buddies on a road trip. I had no idea it was about two half-brothers with the same name who meet after their dad dies. I mention this because after my dad died, in 2018 I learned I have a half-brother with the same name that I never knew about. I’m the target audience.

Wow!

And I believe he goes by Michael and I go by Mike. So this movie really fucked with me. Let me put it that way.

Yeah, I bet. I bet. I mean, that’s crazy.

A difference is we have not met. He doesn’t seem very interested in meeting me. So you two in this movie have a much better relationship than I have with my half brother with the same name.

Wow.

Sorry to dump this all on you.

No, I mean, I’m really glad you did. It goes to show you, all of our lives, we think, with our own family dynamics, that the pain and hurt of our life is so unique to us. And then the more you read, the more you realize that a lot of the things that we’re feeling most deeply are shared feelings that other people have out in the world and that they actually can relate. You know what I mean?

I do.

I don’t exactly know what I’m trying to say, but I’m sure had you heard more about the movie before you went to see it that you wouldn’t have gone?

I wouldn’t have gone, no. It’s funny, after I saw it I made a sarcastic tweet about how two half-brothers with the same name was too unbelievable. I heard from the publicist who thought I didn’t like the movie and I had to explain. I think at first she thought I was kidding.

You should write the sequel called Michael and Mike. Isn’t that fascinating?

Fascinating is a good way to put it.

And who knows, we don’t know how life works. Fifteen years could go by and you guys might end up really close or you might never meet.

I’m betting on the latter.

Well, it’s amazing to me how complicated fathers are. Like, how the hell did your dad could keep that from you?

I know! Unlike in this movie, my dad and him had no relationship. The best way it was described to me, when I first found out about all this in 2018, my friend told me, “To you, this is like a Wes Anderson movie. It’s whimsical. And you reach out and call him. To him this is a David Lynch movie. This past he’s trying to not think about and all of a sudden some dude with the same name calls up and goes, hey, I’m your brother.”

It’s funny how everything is point of view, isn’t it? I mean, I often say that to my kids when some situation presents itself. It’s like, think about this like it was a movie. Are you the good guy in this movie or are you the bad guy? And how do you think this movie will end?

Yeah, I might be the bad guy.

You’re John Candy and he’s Steve Martin.

Yeah, I didn’t know if you were going to get a heads up about this particular interview with me or not, so all of this, the movie, is kind of like therapy. I really don’t talk like to talk about it much anymore.

Well, I mean, I’m sorry to say this, but I also think that’s the point of drama is to make us think about things that we don’t have a forum to talk about in other ways.

Right.

I mean, you go see something like Long Day’s Journey Into Night, and your mom’s not a morphine addict, and blah blah. But when you get into the details of family intimacy, invariably, I mean you have a huge thing to relate to, but invariably you find uncovered truths that force you to think about things. That’s the value of drama, because thinking about things in general is good.

Yeah, one thing that this movie made me think about, I’m told my half-brother’s mom named him after my dad without my dad’s input. You’ll be shocked to learn my dad’s name was also Mike. And I feel like I was named this as an eff-you to that whole situation. Because my mom wanted to name me Jeff. I could have gone with Jeff. Jeff’s a good name.

You’re reminding me of… I was once in the middle of nowhere. I mean, I’m talking, I’m at a diner in the middle of nowhere. And I’m working with another actor who shall remain nameless, but he’s kind of minor-ly well known. I mean, he’s a middle-aged actor.

Can you tell me who it is?

Let me tell you the story. And the guy’s sitting there and in walks this 19-year-old. You know, the bell rings in the diner when the door opens?

Like a movie.

Like a movie. And he looks like a younger version of the guy I’m sitting with. And this young man walks up to my friend and says, “Hey, do you know Melissa, ba da ba?” And my friend just looks at him, thinks about this woman’s name, and then after about 10 seconds he just says, “Are you my son?” And the guy says, “Yeah, nice to meet you.” And he just read in the paper that this actor was in town and just decided to come meet his father. And mysteriously, the young man didn’t want anything, or he just wanted to say hi and he left and he didn’t even give him his number.

What was that like for you? That had to be a very strange situation.

Yeah, because I was young at the time.

Were you like maybe this is how Hollywood works?

No, it was so not Hollywood, because of where we were. And it was more like what you’re talking about. It was fascinating and human and really complicated. The older father. He just asked a lot of questions about the mom, and how they were doing, and what their life was like, and how was he. And it was like a Chekhov short story or something. It was just, both people were full of so many feelings that they didn’t know how to process.

I just got a note from the publicist, “please do not print this person’s name.” I don’t even know it since you didn’t say it. So I can’t do it.

If we ever meet in person, or not recording on Zoom, I’ll tell you, but it’s not the interesting part of the story.

No, I get it.

You know what I mean?

Unless you’re like “and that man was Vladimir Putin.”

Oh yeah. “And that man was Darth Vader.”

Well, you’re right, I would not have seen this movie if I knew the subject matter, but I am glad I saw it. It was cathartic. At least you know it did hit home for one person out there, and that was me.

All right, well, I can’t wait to meet again, and thanks for being so open and talking about it.

But I’m still not on board with The Grabber. That guy is way over the line.

Yeah, agreed.

‘Raymond and Ray’ begins streaming via Apple TV+ this weekend. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Trump’s Legal Defense Team Is Apparently Such A Clusterf*ck That The Jan. 6th Committee Can’t Find A Single Lawyer Who Can Accept A Subpoena For Him

Donald Trump sure is a strange cat. We knew that already, but he’s so obsessed with things like ratings and crowd sizes (yes, he bragged about the crowd size of the deadly January 6 insurrection) that he decided that he wants to testify “live” (with cameras and everything) in front of the congressional committee that’s tasked with investigating the attack on the U.S. Capitol. Trump previously wanted to sue the committee, but he’s not exactly the most consistent man.

From there, one would imagine that Trump’s professed willingness to appear would make it easier to get him in the building. However, there’s a slight hangup because the committee can’t manage to subpoena him as of yet. There’s no one on Trump’s legal defense team who’s authorized to do so, according to ABC News. This actually doesn’t have anything to do with reports that few lawyers want to represent Trump — because they don’t want to be the next Rudy Giuliani or Sidney Powell — and also, the lawyers that Trump does have are tied up with his other cases. Via ABC News:

Both Evan Corcoran and John Rowley have told committee investigators they don’t have authorization to accept service of the subpoena on behalf of the former president, according to people familiar with the communications. Corcoran is representing Trump in matters related to the Mar-a-Lago documents probe and Rowley — in addition to Corcoran — has been representing Trump on executive privilege issues involving former White House aides who have received grand jury subpoenas.

Not ideal! So is this a blunder on Team Trump’s behalf that is unintended, and regardless of that answer, will Trump secretly be happy to yank more congressional chains? Maybe a little bit of both.

(Via ABC News)

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Pivot Gang Turns Over A New Leaf Following Tragedy On ‘Aang’

Since Chicago’s PivotGang crew’s debut album, You Can’t Sit With Us, dropped in 2019, Saba, Joseph Chilliums, MFnMelo, and FrshWaters have dealt with tragedy once again. The crew’s producer, Squeak, died last year at the age of 26 following a Cook County shooting. This came after founding member John Walt was killed in 2017. It’s a lot for the young Chicagoan to weather, but with “Aang,” they’ve come together for the first proper PivotGang track since Squeak’s death.

The hazy beat was produced by Saba and DaedaePivot, along with Gaidaa and Maria Sanchez, and the crew do their best to turn over a new leaf. Their signature sports references are littered throughout, from Shaq to Dwyane Wade to the now-elusive Cam Newton. Frsh Waters then brings their flow full circle, encapsulating the emotions that the crew must have been feeling after Squeak’s death, rapping: “If they take me right now, burning it down in my name / Dante inferno, a level of flames, all of my aim, it been the same / I was internalizing all the pain.”

PivotGang also recently announced the fifth annual JohnWalt Day concert. Taking place on November 26th at the Metro in Chicago, all of the crew members will perform and a portion of proceeds will benefit the John Walt Foundation which provides scholarships to young artists.

Listen to “Aang” and watch the Jude Appleby-filmed visualizer above.

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Mike Tyson Offered Cole Bennett Shrooms During Eminem’s ‘Godzilla’ Video Shoot, But He Had To Pass On Them

Videographer Cole Bennett has become one of the most sought-after directors in all of music over the past few years, accumulating such clients as Blink-182, Cordae, Gunna, Jack Harlow, JID, Juice WRLD, Ski Mask The Slump God, and even rap titan Eminem. The video for Eminem’s “Godzilla” is a wild, colorful affair, but as Bennett revealed during a recent interview with Hot Ones, the goings-on behind the scenes may have been even wilder.

As he chowed down on the super spicy “Wings of Death,” the Lyrical Lemonade founder detailed how Mike Tyson, who makes a cameo appearance in the video, tried to get him high on mushrooms.

“This video was like no other,” Bennett said. “It was one of those things. Like, growing up being a fan of hip-hop music, music videos, and just pop culture. I mean, I remember Eminem as being the biggest thing in the world so to get to work with him so closely and feel that energy and feel him be so ready to just log in all these hours and be so receptive to my ideas and my vision for things to, you know, a song that he had created was really, really cool.”

Continuing, he explained why he had to turn down Tyson’s gift. “Mike Tyson was off shrooms. He offered me some shrooms which, you know, was a bucket list moment for sure. But, you know, being on set and leading this vision was also a bucket list moment so I had to pick my poison there. Didn’t do the shrooms.”

Watch the full episode of Hot Ones above.

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Anne Hathaway brilliantly tackles the ‘language of hatred’ in powerful new speech

Anne Hathaway is certainly no stranger to being on the receiving end of viral vitriol. She had an entire chapter of it in her career beginning in 2013, notably called the “Hathahate” era. For years, following an unfairly infamous Oscars acceptance speech for her work in “Les Miserables,” the actress couldn’t endure a single interview without having to address the overwhelming amount of people actively, viciously disliking her.

While Hathaway herself admitted that the speech was overly saccharine—an understandable result of trying to compensate for social anxiety and a dash of imposter syndrome—it still in no way qualified being publicly viewed as some sort of indelible sin. Especially considering all the truly terrible behavior that (still) happens at awards shows.

Why people chose to villainize Hathaway is really its own conversation, but how she chose to grow from the experience is truly worth talking about. She not only has clearly been able to recover from a career standpoint—this year alone she has risen to festival darling and “Devil Wears Prada” worthy fashion icon status—she’s also managed to form some bona fide words of wisdom that just might help others create a less hateful, more loving world … spoken by someone who’s actually been through the ringer and had to learn the hard way.


According to a transcribed acceptance speech for ELLE’s 29th Annual Women in Hollywood event, the veteran actress, after generously praising other female icons in attendance, took a moment to share a story about a little girl, “age 8 to 11,” who she overheard lamenting to her mother about another (presumably) little girl, who “hated her own mouth.”

“In my opinion, the language of hatred begins with the self,” Hathaway said. “I felt it was important to bring this concept up because … I really felt for that young, young little girl experiencing the first flush of self-hatred, which is something I’m sure a lot of us understand. And we don’t have enough time to discuss all the myriad causes of the violent language of hatred, and the imperative need to end it.”

Hathaway then addressed how her own self-loathing manifested and magnified itself when reflected back through social media nearly 10 years ago.

“I was given an opportunity to look at the language of hatred from a new perspective. For context—this was a language I had employed with myself since I was 7. And when your self-inflicted pain is suddenly somehow amplified back at you at, say, the full volume of the internet … It’s a thing,” she explained.

“As the mother of young children,” she continued, “I am of the firm belief that we are born experiencing love. And then we form, in a culture of misplaced hate, unhealed hurt, and the toxicity that is the byproduct of both.”

When the effects of an unhealed society reared its ugly head in Hathaway’s direction, she realized that the only way to dissolve its potency would be to “no longer hold space for it, live in fear of it, nor speak its language for any reason. To anyone. Including myself.”

And that really is a simple, yet profound truth. If we wish to live in a kinder world, we must first make space within our own hearts for kindness. Speaking to ourselves and others from a place of compassion in theory takes very little effort. And yet, in practice it requires a conscious choice.

She went on to note, “There is a difference between existence and behavior. You can judge behavior. You can forgive behavior or not. But you do not have the right to judge—and especially not hate—someone for existing. And if you do, you’re not where it’s at.” Again, this is something she has learned firsthand.

Hathaway ended with self-described “debatable optimism,” saying that “I believe the good news about hate being learned is that whoever learned it can unlearn. There is a brain there. I hope they give themselves a chance to relearn love.”

“To that little girl—to all young people, actually,” the speech concluded, “I wish I could tell you the world is in a good place … that you will live untouched by inequality, bias, hate, and autocracy. We’re gonna need you … we need people who have learned to reject the hate prevalent in all facets of our society by contributing to a culture of love, starting with themselves.

“Please, darling, don’t hate your mouth. Love your life.”

You can watch a shortened version Hathaway’s speech below. Unlike in 2013, this is a must-watch for all the right reasons.

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He showed up for a job interview and the BBC accidentally put him on live TV as an expert

We’ve all been there at some point or another, nervously waiting for a big job interview hoping you don’t sweat through your good shirt. Interviews are stressful but there’s likely no job interview more stressful than the one Guy Goma went on in 2006 for the BBC, when he was mistaken for an expert for a news segment. The person they were supposed to interview for the news segment was Guy Kewney, an actual music industry expert. But with cameras rolling and questions being asked, Goma took a deep breath and answered the newscaster.


In the clip you can see Goma likely thinking through how he could gracefully exit the situation after the realization that he had been placed on live television with no idea what he was about to be asked. It didn’t stop him though, once he committed to going along with the expert interview he did pretty well. While he tried desperately to control his breathing, he was able to inform the interviewer that he was predicting more people would begin downloading music online and it would become a faster process. I mean, he was right, even if he had no idea at the time.

Surprisingly, after the on-air snafu and subsequent save by Goma, he didn’t get the job he applied for, which is weird because he was clearly perfect for whatever position he wanted. I’m pretty sure they dropped the ball there, but it sure would be nice to know what happened to the quick-thinking faux expert.

Unfortunately there are no recent updates about the whereabouts of Guy Goma after his brief and random moment in the spotlight, but he’ll always hold a place in television history. Watch Goma’s WTF reaction when he realizes what’s going on below.

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Breakthrough study shows that memories can be erased through a simple ‘sound cue’ method

Everyone has memories that they’d like to forget. Like that embarrassing moment at a school dance, the inappropriate joke you told in front of the wrong company or getting yelled at by the boss after screwing up at work.

But some memories are so traumatic they haunt us for the rest of our lives, causing severe distress. In people with PTSD, these memories can become more intense over time and impossible to avoid. The theory is that these memories become hard-wired in our psyches in an act of self-preservation. If we keep the trauma top of mind, we’ll be less likely to find ourselves in that situation again.

But the pain of these memories can far outweigh their benefit and lead people into a never-ending loop of trauma. That’s why a new study from the University of York is so encouraging. Researchers have found that using a method known as “sound cues” can help people forget specific memories.

It’s like they took a page out of the script of “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” a film that contemplates the potential complications that could stem from being able to selectively remove our memories.


For the study, 29 participants were taught associations for pairs of words, first “hammer – office” and then “hammer – Cardi B.” When the participants went to sleep in the University of York’s sleep lab their brain waves were measured to detect when they reached deep or slow-wave sleep.

While in this stage of sleep, the researchers played the object word to them (e.g., “hammer”).

Earlier studies found that when the word pairs were introduced to a participant while awake and then a word suggesting the pair was played to them during sleep, the participant remembered the word pair more vividly in the morning. For this study, researchers presented two word pairs and learned that when the pairs of words overlapped, there was an increase in memory for one pair and a decrease in the other in the morning.

This led researchers to believe that overlapping word pairs can diminish people’s memories in favor of others.

“Although still highly experimental at this stage, the results of our study raise the possibility that we can both increase and decrease the ability to recall specific memories by playing sound cues when an individual is asleep,” says the study’s first author Dr. Bardur Joensen, a former Ph.D. student in York University’s Department of Psychology, in a university release.

“People who have experienced trauma can suffer a wide range of distressing symptoms due to their memories of those events. Though still a long way off, our discovery could potentially pave the way to new techniques for weakening those memories that could be used alongside existing therapies,” he added.

This research could provide a valuable tool in helping people who’ve been through traumatizing events so that they no longer have to live life trapped in their own mental prison. It could also be a valuable tool for everyone to learn how to better categorize and prioritize their memories to improve their mental health.

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An Astroworld Festival Victim’s Family Settles With Live Nation And Travis Scott

An Astroworld Festival victim’s family has settled its wrongful death lawsuit with Live Nation and Travis Scott, according to Rolling Stone. 21-year-old Axel Acosta was one of the 10 people who died as a result of injuries sustained in a crowd crush during Travis’ headlining set, and his family’s legal counsel, Houston lawyer Tony Buzbee, announced the settlement — thought to be one of the first among the nearly 300 suits stemming from the incident — today in a press release and on Instagram.

In it, the lawyer said that the terms of the settlement were “confidential” and wrote, “The Buzbee Law Firm announced today that the claims brought by the family of Axel Acosta against Travis Scott, Live Nation, and others involved in the Astroworld tragedy have settled. Victim Axel Acosta was a beloved son, brother, and student. He was kind and loving. He is greatly missed. Please keep his family in your prayers.”

The family and Buzbee filed the suit in November 2021, two weeks after the incident, with 125 other attendees for $750 million. Another lawsuit brought by the family of Brianna Rodriguez was also settled. A coroner confirmed that all 10 of the people who died at Astroworld Festival suffered compression asphyxia, according to Buzbee, who said in a statement, “The report confirms what the family already knew, which is that Axel was crushed and killed that night by the crowd, through no fault of his own. It is also important to note that Axel’s blood contained absolutely no intoxicants or other like substances. Now that we have received the official results, I want to say to our police chief: Shame on you. Shame on you for perpetuating and giving credence to a silly rumor that people were being injected at the concert. In doing so, you added more pain to an already unbearably painful situation for Axel’s family. Axel Acosta’s family looks forward now to presenting their case in court, in front of a jury, in the hopes that all those accountable are held legally responsible, and that a preventable tragedy like this never happens again.”

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Hollywood Super-Agent Ari Emanuel Is Basically Calling For Kanye West To Be Banished From The Entertainment Industry Completely

Between his hero worship of Donald Trump, his penchant for spewing antisemitic conspiracy theories, and his move to purchase Parler, which is essentially Twitter for white supremacists, Kanye West has managed to alienate just about everyone except the former president and the unhinged residents of Trumpland who would like to see the failed reality show host reclaim his Diet Coke button in the Oval Office.

Now, in a blistering op-ed for the Financial Times, which was picked up by The Hollywood Reporter, super-agent Ari Emanuel — whose client list includes Martin Scorsese, Denzel Washington, Robert Downey Jr., and Oprah Winfrey — is urging his fellow entertainment industry power brokers to cease all dealings with the man currently known as Ye.

In the piece, Emanuel, who is the CEO of Endeavor, urged corporate behemoths like Apple, Adidas, and Spotify to stop working with West, as they were only giving him a wider platform from which to spread his hate speech. Emanuel also urged Parler’s parent company to not go through with any deal to sell the network to the former Mr. Kim Kardashian.

“West is not just any person,” Emanuel wrote. “He is a pop culture icon with millions of fans around the world. And among them are young people whose views are still being formed. This is why it is necessary for all of us to speak out. Hatred and anti-Semitism should have no place in our society, no matter how much money is at stake.”

Emanuel noted that he wrote a similar piece for HuffPost way back in 2006, in which he asked Hollywood to turn its back on Mel Gibson following his antisemitic outburst after being pulled over while driving under the influence. The agent noted, however, that Gibson has apologized for his past behaviors, and that he has actually recommended him for projects as a result. In other words: being canceled doesn’t have to be a life sentence.

“We are all capable of learning and evolving, and if West would like to be educated about the history and consequences of anti-Semitism and the conspiracy theories he’s parroting, if he wants to reach out to religious leaders — including rabbis, Muslim leaders, Christian leaders — I’d be happy to help,” Emanuel said.

You can read the full op-ed here.

(Via The Hollywood Reporter)