During a recent interview on Morning Joe, Conway rolled out his theory on Trump’s motives that would fit right at home outside of Satriale’s. Via Mediaite:
“First of all, they themselves would like to see the affidavit because, you know, Tony Soprano wants to know if Pussy Bonpensiero is the rat,” Conway began referencing the popular HBO show about a New Jersey mob boss.
“And they want to they want to see who was finking on them,” Conway added. The Guardian reported this week that top Trump aides believe that a Trump family member informed the FBI as to where to find key documents given the FBI’s intimate knowledge of where they were in Trump’s home.
Conway’s thoughts jibe with reports since the raid that Trump is obsessed (and paranoid) about who in his inner circle might have sold him out. He’s reportedly accused people of “wearing a wire,” and as Mediaite noted, there have been several theories that his own children and/or Jared Kushner turned against him to avoid prosecution.
On top of a potential “rat” in his midst, Trump has also been struggling to find legal representation due to his mercurial reputation and a penchant for not paying his bills. Other than that, it’s going pretty well.
Earlier this year, there was a report that Barbie-approved icon Margot Robbie would be starring in and producing a new movie from the Ocean’s Eleven universe with director Jay Roach attached to lead the project. Now it seems like a second Barbie-approved actor is joining the movie!
Ryan Gosling, who just wrapped up filming as Ken opposite Robbie’s Barbie, is reportedly joining the Oceans movie, according to Puck. The site reports that the deal is underway as Warner Bros Discovery aims to prioritize movies that will draw in a massive fan base, and we all know that Gosling sure can bring a crowd.
The Oceans franchise has featured a slew of Hollywood icons since the first movie was released in 1960, featuring Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr. Joey Bishop, and Peter Lawford. The 2001 remake featured an ensemble cast with every early aughts movie star you can imagine, including Geroge Clooney, Brad Pitt, Mat Damon, and Julia Roberts.
After the 2018 all-female reboot, it seems like Robbie’s upcoming installment will go back to the basics and take place in Europe in the 1960s. Roach and Robbie had previously worked together on 2019’s Bombshell, which secured Robbie’s second Oscar nomination.
The project is rumored to begin filming in the spring of 2023. So right before Margot Robbie begins The Summer Of Barbie. Hopefully, they will both dress like this in the intense heist movie!
The only major piece of the puzzle remaining has been when the song is actually coming out. There were rumors it would be released today (August 19), but the song is not out yet. Now, we know when the song truly is set to surface: Today, John revealed it’s going to drop next Friday, August 26. John’s announcement also included what may be the official single art, which features childhood photos of him and Spears.
Now that this info is out there, another piece of the puzzle yet to be uncovered is what the tune sounds like. It will still be a few days before we definitively know that, but Spears pal Paris Hilton had some laudatory words about the song, saying in a recent interview, “It’s going to be iconic. I just heard it a couple days ago in Ibiza and it is… it’s insane.”
I would be lying if I said I was super intrigued by the concept of Beast. It seemed to be a movie about Idris Elba fighting a big CGI lion, and “Idris Elba fights a CGI lion” doesn’t exactly scream “cinema.” But by the same token, Jaws is a movie about Roy Scheider fighting a mechanical shark and Jaws is arguably the first modern blockbuster. So maybe there was reason to give Beast, directed by Baltasar Kormákur (2 Guns, Adrift), the benefit of the doubt.
I briefly had my hopes up when Idris Elba, as American Dr. Nate Samuels, stepped off a small plane onto the South African veldt with his two daughters in tow. At the very least, rural South Africa makes for a picturesque setting. At a basic level, isn’t a change of scenery all we really want out of any movie?
“Where are we?” Dr. Samuels’ older daughter “Mir” (Iyana Halley) asks. “We’re the bush!” exults a smiling Samuels.
Meanwhile, his younger daughter, Norah (Leah Jeffries) complains about the heat. “My head is hot. My hair is hot. My spleen is hot,” Norah riffs.
When she says this, Norah is wearing long pants and at least three layers of clothing, including a turtleneck topped by a jean jacket (her sister has a black hoodie with the hood up). Now, every thriller walks a fine line between the characters acting stupid enough to imperil themselves enough to keep the movie going, and characters acting so stupid that it feels manipulative, so stupid that you can’t put up with any more of their bullshit. It certainly feels like a harbinger of the latter when a thriller opens with a character complaining about the heat while wearing a turtleneck and jean jacket and not one other character in the scene thinks to suggest “Hey, maybe take off your jacket.”
Perhaps it’s overly nitpicky to focus on this one throwaway scene. Fine. Speaking more generally, the thing that Jaws has that Beast lacks (beyond fully-fleshed characters and compelling dialogue) is style. I can accept that the movie is about Idris Elba fighting a lion. If I try a little harder, I can even accept that Beast‘s characters aren’t smart enough to take off their jackets when it’s hot. But I can’t accept that the whole thing just looks kind of drab, cramped, and ugly.
Kormákur shoots most of the action following his subjects with a steadicam focused tightly on the backs of their necks. I don’t know if this was meant to create tension, but mostly it just induces boredom. Virtually every action sequence in Beast, which involves a “rogue lion” taking revenge on all humanity after his pride is murdered by poachers, lacks any real sense of spatial awareness. Action occurring within a recognizable space is what actually creates tension and makes the action compelling — that sense of anticipation, of potential energy building and then releasing. Most of Beast‘s action consists of characters shot in closeup while a lion attacks their land rover while our perspective shakes and tumbles like we’re inside a washing machine. There’s no movie magic, just the kind of “trick” that communicates nothing beyond “I’M DOING A TRICK!” The space between trailer and movie has been annihilated. We’re now merely meant to watch a series of advertisements for feelings.
Dr. Samuels and his daughters have come to South Africa, where he first met his now-dead wife (what would thrillers and Nicholas Sparks movies be without dead moms??) to meet up with his old friend, a game warden played by Sharlto Copley. There is some brief family drama, with Samuels’ older daughter blaming him for abandoning their mom while she was sick, but none of it really connects to the trip to Africa. They’ve apparently come for your basic safari, like any other tourists. The interpersonal dynamics add nothing to the drama and even Copley’s South Africanness feels watered down.
The only character with an intriguing perspective is the lion. He wants to decimate humanity because poachers murdered his family? I would like to subscribe to his newsletter. But Beast mostly treats him like your standard CGI baddie. One of the locals calls the lion “the devil,” and Beast is weighed down by this inability to decide whether the lion is rational or supernatural. Idris Elba’s eventual battle strategy has the most tacked-on, thinnest veneer of having to understand the lion’s mindset in order to defeat it, to the point that it feels like an apology.
Judging by a skim of his IMDB page, Kormákur‘s career seems to have a general “one for them, one for us” feel to it, of making one studio schlock picture and following it with something more personal. And who could blame any director for that? But Beast feels slapdash and detached to the point of being disdainful. It offers the barest idea of a movie about Idris Elba fighting a lion and nothing more.
‘Beast’ opens nationwide August 19th. Vince Mancini is onTwitter. You can access his archive of reviewshere.
When I first saw the headline that the IRS was raising the tax deduction limit for teachers buying classroom supplies with their own money—you know, the necessary items to do their jobs well—I was thrilled. The previous deduction of $250 was laughable, a virtual slap in the face to professionals who regularly spend two, three or four times that amount per year buying supplies for their students out of their own pocket.
But when I saw the amount the deduction was raised to, I rage laughed. $300? Are you kidding me?
It sounds great to say, “We’re raising the tax deduction for teachers by 20%” until you realize that the teacher deduction hasn’t been raised since 2002 and that 20% increase is a measly $50.
Fifty bucks spread over 20 years is $2.50 a year. Whoop dee frickin’ do. That doesn’t even come close to keeping up with inflation, for the love. Just to keep up with inflation, that $250 deduction from two decades ago should be over $400 now.
And again, even that amount wouldn’t be close to enough. An AdoptaClassroom survey of 5,400 PreK-12 teachers at public, private and charter schools across the U.S. found that teachers spent an average of $750 out of their own pockets for school supplies during the 2020-21 school year. About 30% spent more than $1,000.
In the face of that reality, raising the deduction limit from $250 to $300 is ridiculous, gross, rude, disrespectful and insulting. Teachers are professionals who are already paid less than what they’re worth. The fact that they have to buy supplies out of their own pockets at all is a travesty. The least we can do is let them deduct whatever they spend out of their taxes.
I’ve been a teacher and I’ve also been a business owner. The number of things a business owner can legally deduct is bonkers. You can deduct so many things from your business income that you pay zero taxes on it, and we’re putting this painfully low limit on out-of-pocket teacher supplies? Why? Who wins here?
u201c@Logically_JC My teacher friend tonight told me she had spent $1200 setting up her classroom.u201d
Honestly, why do we even have a deduction limit for teachers at all? It feels like whoever makes these decisions either doesn’t fully trust teachers or thinks they aren’t deserving of reasonable compensation. I mean, how much do they really think teachers are going to be able to deduct here even if there were no limit? Newsflash: Teachers aren’t rolling in extra dough. They’re not looking for ways to game the tax system to avoid tax liability. They’re literally spending their own money on their jobs—which is ridiculous—and hoping to get some back from the very same government that employs and pays them.
In recent years, some teachers have shared that they’re simply refusing to buy classroom supplies out of their own pocket anymore, pointing out that it doesn’t solve the problem, but masks it. It’s also simply not doable for many. The teaching profession tends to draw people who are willing to make sacrifices for kids, which is admirable, but financial sacrifice should not be an expectation inherent in the job.
When I say teachers aren’t paid what they are worth, I mean it literally. People who haven’t worked in a classroom have no idea. The energy it entails, the responsibility it requires, the emotional toll it takes and the time outside of school hours dedicated to the work are beyond any other job I’ve ever had. Yes, the work can be rewarding, but a lot of times it isn’t. In no other profession do we expect people to do so much for so little.
It’s not just that teachers deserve to be paid well. (Not merely adequately, but well.) Our kids also deserve teachers who are valued by everyone around them. They deserve teachers who have all the resources they need to educate to the best of their ability. They deserve beautiful learning environments and classrooms full of learning materials that their teachers didn’t have to dip into their wallets to pay for. They deserve to live in a society that prioritizes education above everything else, a society that understands quality education is the root of solutions to most problems.
Teachers are quitting in droves and many of those who are staying are barely hanging on. We can’t afford to keep losing good teachers. Money isn’t the only reason teachers are quitting, but it doesn’t help. Let’s drop the tax deduction limit altogether. It’s quite literally the least we can do.
Prank calls are a popular way to monkey around, but this story takes it to a whole new level.
The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call that was immediately disconnected. According to a social media post, dispatchers traced the mysterious call back to the offices of a local zoo nearby. However no one at the zoo made the call.
Make that no person.
Deputies soon realized the lawbreaker behind the call was Route—a baby capuchin with two opposable thumbs and quite possibly a mark on her permanent record.
“Capuchin monkeys are so smart,” Paso Robles’ Zoo To You owner Lisa Jackson told AP News, noting that capuchins are tool enthusiasts.
A Capuchin monkey named Route sent sheriff’s deputies scrambling after it dialed 911 on a zoo’s cellphone.
“She sees me all the time texting and playing with the phone. So I think that’s pretty much what she did,” says Lisa Jackson, zoo owner. pic.twitter.com/EW5JeGu02x — The Associated Press (@AP) August 18, 2022
“She sees me all the time texting and playing with the phone. So I think that’s pretty much what she did.”
You heard it folks—this was a textbook case of monkey see, monkey do.
Baby Route had picked up a cellphone found from inside a golf cart that traveled around the zoo’s 40 acres and started pushing buttons. That button combo just so happened to be for emergencies only. Whoops.
“Our Deputies have seen their fair share of ‘monkey business’ in the County. But nothing quite like this,” the Sheriff’s office wrote.
They also posted adorable photos of the guilty party.
Route’s antics are certainly hilarious and rival that of “Curious George,” but they also prove why trying to own a capuchin (or any monkey, for that matter) isn’t the best idea.
According to The Spruce Pets, capuchins rarely get enough stimulation and activity when raised by humans, leading to destructive behavior.
Plus it can be nearly impossible to mimic a natural environment and diet. Do you really have the time and resources to make your own mini jungle and serve mixed fruits and vegetables mixed with baby food … twice a day?
Oh yeah, and it’s illegal to own one in 35 out of 50 states. So there’s that.
Basically, even though movies and television shows make owning a monkey seem like a dream … maybe reconsider.
As Zoo to You wrote on its Facebook page, “let this serve as an educational lesson that monkeys are NOT animals that should be kept as pets! They’re so inquisitive you never know what might happen!”
Still, we can admire these super-smart monkeys and their odd quirks from afar. For example, you know how we humans might try to form bonds through a well-meaning high five or fist bump? Capuchins prefer instead to poke each other’s eyeballs. How fun.
They also wash their hands and feet with pee, and scientists still aren’t sure exactly why. Comfort? Pleasure? A good tree grip? The world may never know.
Lastly, they very well may be nature’s radical feminists. Female capuchins have been known to throw rocks at their potential male mates.
One thing’s for sure—capuchins might be born for mischief, but it’s never less than highly entertaining.
And now for the real question: How will Route cause chaos next? Another fake 911 call? Will she accidentally order a delivery of 70 pizzas? Guess we’ll have to stay tuned.
After the Sandy Hook school shooting in 2012 failed to push legislators to take action to help prevent school shootings, there has been a sense in America that these tragic events have become normalized. Worse, there’s a feeling that far too many people seem to believe that guns are more important than children.
The 2021-2022 school year came to an end with the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, where 21 people were murdered by a gunman armed with an AR-15-style rifle. The sound of the school bell ringing again for the 2022-2023 year fills many parents with a sense of dread that their kids could be next.
Cassie Arnold, a mother and arts educator who lives in Texas, created a chilling reminder of the danger our kids face in schools by sending her daughter to first grade in a dress sewn together with Kevlar.
Kevlar is the material used to create bulletproof vests.
“My daughter was in kindergarten last year and she knew that her place in ‘lockdown drills’ was by the toilet in the classroom bathroom, and that she had to wait till the administrators banged on the doors, and that she had to be quiet,” Arnold told Yahoo Life. “She wasn’t fazed by it. She was just like, well, this is what we do.”
The depressing thing is that there are thousands of kids like Arnold’s daughter who’ve lived their entire lives under the threat of deadly violence in their schools.
Arnold’s hope is that the dress will inspire others to push back against the notion that there’s nothing that can be done and we need to live with the threat.
“The biggest hope is that we can keep the conversation going,” Arnold told Yahoo Life. “The dress can create a conversation—not just a nonpartisan conversation—and allow us to come to an equal playing field. We need to protect our babies.”
The piece is also noteworthy because instead of being partisan fingerpointing it asks for people to sit down and talk about what’s happening.
Arnold hoped that her piece would be satirical but, in fact, it accurately depicts reality in Texas. In her Instagram post, she points out that Texas looks to spend tens of millions of dollars on bulletproof police shields and barriers in classrooms. While assault weapons are readily available, the state’s efforts are clearly centered around stopping bullets from hitting people rather than preventing them from being fired in the first place.
“[The dress] was originally designed to be satirical, to be a more extreme response to these tragedies. But, the real responses from some of our leaders were too close for comfort,” Arnold wrote on Instagram.
The conversation surrounding school shootings in America has been cyclical. A tragedy happens, a lot of things are said, but ultimately no substantial actions are taken by our leaders. Congress did recently pass the first gun control bill in decades in the wake of the Uvalde school shooting, but it took massacre after massacre to get to that bipartisan deal. Arnold’s piece is thought-provoking because it gets ahead of the cycle and begs for the conversation to continue before the next shooting. It also asks us to reconsider the idea that the shootings are a normal part of life in America.
“The timing is intentional,” Arnold wrote on Instagram. “School is starting and the elections in November are coming. It’s time to pressure those who have the agency to create changes to do so.”
The best new hip-hop this week includes albums, videos, and songs from Offset, Hit-Boy, Fivio Foreign and more.
August sure has flown by, but every week has mattered in some way. We have Offset’s solo (re)debut, Hit-Boy showing the people he is more than a super producer, Fivio Foreign continuing his major run over the year, and of course, the hidden gems you need to know about.
Here is the best of hip-hop this week ending August 19, 2022.
Albums/EPs/Mixtapes
Larry June — Spaceships On The Blade
Larry June
Larry June revels in the simple things life has to offer, such as natural juices and nice cars, but there’s nothing simple about his lyrical ability. He articulates this well on his new album Spaceships On The Blade, specifically in the record “I’m Him.” Babyface Ray, 2 Chainz, Curren$y, and more appear on these 18 tracks that balance rapper swagger with healthy humanity. Larry is setting a different standard.
Internet Money — We All We Got
Internet Money
Internet Money has a knack for bringing talent together. The new six-track offering We All We Got features a diverse array of voices, namely Lil Yachty, Lucki, Yeat, Ken Carson, and more.
The Homies — It’s A Lot Going On
The Homies
You may know them for their association with Jack Harlow, but The Homies are a talented collective that has been doing this music thing for some time. It’s A Lot Going On features Jace, Marzz, and Mason Dane for a musical display that accurately depicts this project’s title; The Homies can do it all and make it make sense.
OMB Peezy x DJ Drama — Misguided
OMB Peezy
Has any DJ Drama collaboration gone wrong? I’d say no, but let OMB Peezy show you for himself on Misguided. Peezy and Drama restore the feeling and enlist the help of G Herbo, NLE Choppa, and Morray for this 16-track masterclass.
YBN Nahmir — Faster Car Music
YBN Nahmir
It appears YBN Nahmir is gearing up for an entire series with this first Faster Car Music EP. With sole feature Jeremih, he gets off to quite a good start with standout tracks “Bows” and “Lamborghini Truck.”
Kelow Latesha — Turbo
Kelow Latesha
Kelow Latesha has her foot firmly pressed on the gas in her new project Turbo. The seven-track project only features Asian Doll, but with a range of records like “Titanic,” “OMG,” and “Charizard,” it may feel like this is a group effort.
Singles/Videos
42 Dugg — “IDGAF”
42 Dugg’s “IDGAF” is the whistle-rapper’s dismissal of anything that doesn’t serve him. He saw a huge rise over the last few years before having to spend time in jail, but his impassioned delivery is just another sign of the greatness that was unfortunately halted.
Pressa — “Blame Me”
Pressa’s “Blame Me” is a genuine inquiry as to why people hate on him. His high-pitched croon over thumping drums contributes to the earnest nature of his confusion, but he makes sure to remind listeners he is a “big killer” in case the vocals are misleading.
Doodie Lo — “I Swear To God”
Doodie Lo’s “I Swear To God” is less than two minutes long, but he doesn’t need more time. The message is he doesn’t trust a lot of people, he doesn’t kill and tell, and he keeps that heat on him in case anyone brings the wrong energy. Lil Durk looks like he’s having a lot of fun in the video too.
Big K.R.I.T. — “Extra Credit”
Big K.R.I.T opens “Extra Credit” saying it isn’t easy being great, but he sure makes it look effortless. When you hit every mark as a lyricist, do you really need extra credit? He’s coming for it all anyways.
Jay Worthy & Harry Fraud — “Winnipeg Winters” ft. A$AP Twelvyy
“Winnipeg Winters” quite literally sounds like a cold night driving through the city. Jay Worthy and Harry Fraud’s chemistry is magical, and A$AP Twelvyy adds some luxurious bars to boost the lush aura.
Armani Caesar — “Hunnit Dolla Hiccup” ft. Benny The Butcher & Stove God Cooks
Armani Caesar is, hands down, one of the best women rapping today. As she powers towards her next project The Liz 2, out on September 2, she taps wordsmiths Benny The Butcher and Stove God Cooks for the cash-chasing anthem “Hunnit Dolla Hiccup.”
Lil Zay Osama — “Set Up” ft. Fredo Bang
Lil Zay Osama and Fredo Bang stay on their toes in the “Set Up” video. As two of the most real out, they handle being challenged with poise and confidence. Not to mention, piercing bars for days.
1TakeJay — “Social Media” ft. Blue Bucks Clans
Who better to offer a scathing analysis of social media than two artists who have gained traction through it? 1TakeJay and Blue Bucks Clan value being cool in real life as opposed to the timeline, but they show they can do both in this upbeat jam.
Stylistic Murder — “Represent The Real” ft. AZ & KRS-One, O.C., and DJ Flip
Just reading these names, you know you’re bound to hear a vintage rap record. Stylistic Murder, AZ, KRS-One, O.C. and DJ Flip overdeliver on “Represent The Real.” It will always be pleasing to get these nostalgic offerings as the rap landscape continues to change.
Jay Fizzle — “50 Freaky B*tches” ft. Lil Harold
Jay Fizzle and Lil Harold live every man’s dream. They sample the Mission Impossible theme song while among many beautiful women wearing less and washing cars more. “50 Freaky B*tches” is as fun and arousing as similar scenes look in movies.
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
88rising hasn’t taken their foot off the gas with their recent collaborations, and “Mind Games” adds another check mark to their list of jobs well done. Labelmates Milli and Jackson Wang have no interest in the complications of love, singing their hearts out in full rejection of anything that doesn’t bring them pleasure in the track written by Gallant and produced by Monsters & Strangers.
“Who says I want to think it through? Who says I want to play these mind games anymore?” Wang sings in the refrain after deeming himself a “mannequin in the world of emotion.” Milli later harmonizes with Wang in the powerful line, “Middle of the night asking you why I’ve been asking twice for so long,” before a beautiful saxophone solo.
“Mind Games” follows 88rising’s 2022 offerings “The Weekend,” “Don’t Go Changing,” and “Split,” all set to appear on Head In The Clouds III, the label’s third installment of their collaborative efforts bringing together close friends, family, and collaborators they respect from all over. 88rising is also gearing up for their Head In The Clouds festival taking place on August 20 and 21, with tickets available for purchase here.
Check out the new single “Mind Games” above.
88rising is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
Ahead of the 2022 Tournament of Champions, Jeopardy! great Amy Schneider will take part in another game show. The Titan Throwdown, which also added Matt Amodio and James Holzhauer as participants, benefits Project 150, a non-profit providing “free support and services to homeless, displaced, and disadvantaged high school students.”
The event received a boost from Jeopardy! host Ken Jennings, who tweeted, “Whoa, this is some lineup! And benefits a great cause. (NOT just @James_Holzhauer getting smacked around. A Las Vegas nonprofit called Project 150.).” The GOAT also shared an article about being on the Call Me Kat season premiere with co-host Mayim Bialik, which prompted a cranky tweet from a follower who is not thrilled by Schneider’s continued involvement with Jeopardy! (Thursday’s episode was a rerun from her historic stream).
“Why is Amy Schneider back on as a contestant? It is not fair to the new players. I won’t watch Jeopardy while she is on. I know she is your favorite winner,” Dina (who has one follower) tweeted, to which Jennings replied, “It’s a rerun Dina! Settle down!” That’s good advice for 95 percent of people on Twitter, actually: settle down.
The 2022 Tournament of Champions kicks off in November. Until then, here’s more information on this weekend’s Titan Throwdown, including how to attend:
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