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Aaron Sorkin Had Some Choice Words For Marjorie Taylor Greene After She Randomly Quoted ‘A Few Good Men’

The new year is already rollicking for Marjorie Taylor Greene. We’re only four days in, and yet the controversial Georgia lawmaker has already been permanently booted from Twitter, temporarily banned from Facebook, and gotten into a tussle with fellow Republican Dan Crenshaw. Now she’s added another notch to her belt: She’s pissed off Aaron Sorkin.

On Sunday, after Greene was kicked off Twitter because she couldn’t stop posting COVID misinformation, she went on a bit of a tirade. Among her charges was that Twitter was “an enemy of the people and can’t handle the truth.” It was a nod to the most famous exchange from Sorkin’s play A Few Good Men, turned into a star-studded, smash hit movie in 1992, where it was uttered by no less than Jack Nicholson.

But Sorkin wasn’t honored that arguably the most famous sentence he ever wrote wound up repeated by last year’s most notorious addition to the House. The playwright, screenwriter, and filmmaker — most recently of Being the Ricardos — went on The Late Late Show with James Corden. And when his host asked him about Greene quoting him, Sorkin’s response came so quick that he cut Corden off: “Yeah, she can go to hell.”

He later added, “I liked it a lot better when Burger King was using it in its billboards,” a nod to an advertising campaign the fast food chain used in 1998 to sell more Whoppers. In any case, he seemed less mad at Greene than he was at The New Yorker‘s semi-recent Jeremy Strong profile.

You can watch Sorkin trash Greene in the video above. The relevant exchange happens around the 4:50 mark.

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The Golden Globes Show Is Still Somehow Happening (Without Any Celebrity Presenters Or Many Guests)

It’s been a rough year for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. After years of mostly whispered controversy, the group, which has run the Golden Globes since 1944, were finally called out on matters ranging from accusations of self-dealing to insensitivity about sexual harassment to a lack of representation. (Before 2021, they didn’t have a single Black member, for one thing.) After last year’s shindig, they vowed to dramatically change, but not before NBC refused to air the ceremony, which is scheduled to happen on Sunday. And then there’s the Omicron variant, which has once again put the kibosh on many public events and gatherings.

But the show is still going on, sort of, though it’s not clear how. Variety obtained an e-mail from the show’s talent booker, which revealed that, well, they didn’t book any talent. In lieu of a splashy televised event hosted by, say, an increasingly aggro Rikcy Gervais, this year’s Globes will be…something.

“The Golden Globes will move forward with a small event on January 9th that will not only award the best performances in television and film for 2021, but also on recognizing the importance of supporting diverse creatives across the industry,” the e-mail reads. “The event this year will celebrate and honor a variety of diverse, community-based programs that empower inclusive filmmakers and journalists to pursue their storytelling passions. The HFPA has financially supported important underserved organizations for decades and will continue to invest in the future leaders of our industry.”

What’s unclear are details, such as if it will be aired somewhere, how the awards will be revealed if not, and who on earth will be present. As per the e-mail, “The event will have limited guests and with strict COVID protocols that include not only proof of full vaccination, but also a booster shot and a negative PCR test.”

Whatever it is, it’s happening this Sunday, Jan. 9, i.e., a mere five days away as of this writing.

NBC said they would consider airing the Globes again provided the HFPA made significant in-roads into improving their membership, among other things. In the meantime, they’ve added 21 new members to help diversify their brood. Stay tuned on whether they’ll just have a livestream, tweet out the winners or, you know, send them out via carrier pigeon.

(Via Variety)

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Gunna Reveals The Cover To ‘Drip Season 4,’ His Final Installment Of The Mixtape Series

After taking 2021 off (mostly; he was heavily involved in the recording of YSL Records’ Slime Language 2), Gunna splashily announced his return earlier this week with the fourth and final installment of his Drip Season mixtape series. Drip Season 4, which is due this Friday, January 7, is the first Drip Season tape in nearly four years, with Drip Season 3 dropping in February of 2018. Today, Gunna shared the cover, which transforms his face, as with previous versions of the cover. However, this time, in keeping with his increased status in the rap game, his transformation leans more toward epic than monstrous.

Whereas previous versions added fangs or bite masks to Gunna’s face, this latest one renders him as a bust that is cracking and crumbling, like a neglected work of art. It suggests both the end of an era and a mighty legacy worth rendering in stone — even if only temporarily. In a press release, the cover designer, contemporary artist Daniel Arsham, echoed this sentiment. “I’ve been a fan of Gunna’s music for quite some time and was pleased when he reached out to me a number of months ago through DM with questions about my work,” he said. “He was very curious about how some of the pieces that I create are made. He was intrigued about the crystal materials I use and the idea of time travel and the future, present within the works. We connected in person a few times and at some point, he asked if I wanted to work on the DS4 album cover with him.”

Prior to the announcement, Gunna released the Future-featuring single “Too Easy” and its remix, which features Roddy Ricch. They, along with “9 Times Outta 10,” constituted the Atlanta rapper’s first solo work since 2020’s Wunna. In the time since, Gunna’s profile has risen to the point of receiving a day honoring his achievements in Fulton County, Georgia, where he grew up.

Check out the Drip Season 4 cover above and stream it 1/7 via 300 and Atlantic.

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Fox News Host Sean Hannity’s Cooperation Is Being Politely Requested By The Jan. 6 Committee

Sean Hannity has been a close advisor to Donald Trump for his entire presidency, and more pressingly, the Fox News anchor was revealed as one of several media figures who attempted to get Trump to quell the violence during the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building. Naturally, the House select committee investigating the riot would like to speak to Hannity, but it appears to be going a different route than using a subpoena.

According to a new report, the committee plans to ask Hannity for his “voluntary cooperation” in an effort to shed more light on the events leading up to and including the failed coup. However and judging by the response from Hannity’s attorney, the committee probably shouldn’t hold its breath. Via Axios:

Jay Sekulow, counsel to Sean Hannity, told Axios, “If true, any such request would raise serious constitutional issues including First Amendment concerns regarding freedom of the press.”

While the committee has already revealed that it knows Hannity was attempting to contact Trump during the attack, Axios reports that Hannity’s influence on Trump was so huge that he reportedly held more sway than members of the former president’s own cabinet. According to insiders referenced by Axios, Hannity was often referred to as Trump’s “real chief of staff.”

As for Hannity’s frantic January 6 texts, they’ve been a field day for comedians like Trevor Noah who have enjoyed seeing Fox News exposed for publicly downplaying the attack while its anchors were secretly “freaking out” at what Trump had done.

(Via Axios)

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What’s On Tonight: Move Over Judge Judy, Steve Harvey’s Pounding the Gavel Now (Sure, Why Not?)

Judge Steve Harvey (ABC, 8:00pm) — Nope, the perpetual Miss Universe host is not a real judge, but he is doing the unscripted reality thing and making apparently binding decisions. This week sees some formerly friendly neighbors fighting over the cost of holiday-party damages. Sounds messy!

Black-ish (ABC, 9:30pm) — The fundraising When We All Vote event leads to Bow pressuring Dre. They may or may not succeed at making new friends while working for a great cause.

Queen (ABC, 10:00pm) — The women find themselves feeling stunned by Valerie’s impulsive actions, all while Lauren’s ducking a superfan who’s also a rising rapper, and Naomi faces a ghost from the past.

Action Pack: Season 1 (Netflix series) — Park the kiddos in front of this one, so they can follow a new superhero class who operate on both hearts and smarts while vanquishing the villains who descend upon Hope Springs.

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert — Tracee Ellis Ross

The Late Late Show With James Corden — Lily Collins, William Jackson Harper, St. Vincent

In case you missed this recent pick:

The Book of Boba Fett: Season 1 (Disney+ series) — Catch up on the season premiere before Episode 2 drops. The middle-of-the-night drop now favored by Disney+ shows is coming your way. When that happens, the iconic bounty hunter turns into a crime lord following his surfacing in The Mandalorian‘s second season. The very dead Jabba the Hutt has left a void in the galactic organized-crime realm, and Boba Fett is all too happy to fill it, but not by ruling by fear. Rather, he’s asking for respect, so we’ll see how that goes. Expect to see mercenary Fennec Shand along the way as these two head into underworld adventures that take them to Tatooine. It’s doubtful that we’ll see any Baby Yoda here, but one can hope for a miracle.

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The Jazz Are Reportedly Trading Miye Oni And A Future Second Round Pick To The Thunder

Trade season is slowly approaching in the NBA, and as is typical, the first deals to get done are either to fill sudden roster holes due to injuries or cap/roster space clearing moves (sometimes both) with an eye towards future deals.

The Rajon Rondo trade that sent the veteran point guard from L.A. to Cleveland fit both of those categories, as the Cavs were desperate for a veteran guard after Ricky Rubio’s injury and the Lakers were eager to clear a roster spot and save some tax dollars (which involved adding the Knicks to the deal to take and waive Denzel Valentine). Our second trade of the new year fits the latter category, as the Jazz are apparently shipping guard Miye Oni out to Oklahoma City in an effort to clear a roster spot (if needed) as well as save some tax money as Oni’s guarantee date was coming up.

As for why the Thunder would do this, they’ll be getting a 2028 second round pick for taking Oni’s deal off the Jazz books, as Sam Presti continues his quest to collect every future draft pick in the NBA and eventually redeem them for a prize.

This is a move that could set up another move if Utah wants later, as they’ll have a roster spot handy for the buyout market or another trade.

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Justin Spitzer On Trying To Make The Next Great Network Sitcom With ‘American Auto’

Writer and producer Justin Spitzer has been a creative force within two of this century’s best workplace comedies in The Office and Superstore, but both shows have also shared the distinction of being thought of, by some, as the last great network sitcoms when they took their last bows. Along with, I am sure, New Girl, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, and Modern Family when they said farewell. Sensing a trend? It’s to the point where we can’t say goodbye to a show without weaving in larger messages about the state of things. Network sitcoms may not be in their golden age, but despite the constant speculation, they also might be unkillable.

For his part, Spitzer is out to create another iconic workplace comedy; one that might accidentally fall into that other tradition of being called the last great one in a few years… until the next one comes along, that is. By the way, I’m as guilty of this kind of snarky thinking as the next critic, but Spitzer makes such a spirited case in the name of broadly focused network comedies in this interview. One that makes you want to root for his new show to upend the notion and bring laughs to the masses.

The NBC show, which stars SNL alum Ana Gasteyer, Superstore alum Jon Barinholtz, and an ensemble cast playing executives trying to keep a car company afloat, debuted for a sneak peek (streaming now on Peacock) before the holiday break and is back on Tuesday, January 4 to begin its climb into a sometimes unfriendly zeitgeist in earnest. Can it do it and become a new favorite for fans of Spitzer’s brand of comedy? We spoke with him about all of the above, why he wanted to focus on a car company and stay on the network, and what he’s taken away from his past successes. Give it a read before deciding whether you want to give American Auto a test drive.

The state of network sitcoms, as it were, is not… This is not the golden era. What would make you want to take this idea to a network?

I mean, I don’t know that network sitcoms are any worse than in any other time. Networks, I think, have a broader audience to reach.

Let me clarify.

Yeah. I’m not offended or anything.

No, no, that’s fine. Just in terms of what drives the zeitgeist right now in TV culture — it’s not network sitcoms. I think that’s an objective thing to say. It’s not like it was with the Cheers era, Seinfeld, Friends. It’s a different era.

I fully understand the point. And come awards time, it doesn’t help for your show to be on a network. And that’s something those of us on a network have come to accept, but that can still change. And I always joke that like in business they always use the buggy whip as the example of like, “Someplace, there’s a buggy whip manufacturer, the best one in the world…” It’s like, someone is still making buggy whips somewhere. And that guy is making a good living making buggy whips. And maybe he’s not winning the buggy-whip awards.

You’re the buggy-whip guy.

Well, I’m the buggy-whip guy. But that is also to say, I think there’s a lot of very good network comedies, and I think a lot of good writers writing on networks. And I feel like if you have a show that can appeal to a broad audience, that doesn’t feel like it’s too niche, why not make it available for as many people as possible? And that’s not to say I would never want to do streaming or cable, I think I absolutely do. But this show feels like it can be on a network. And having grown up in the world of Cheers, and Friends, and eventually The Office and stuff, there’s still something kind of nice about that. About that eight o’clock, same time every week. That, I don’t know, maybe the nostalgic part of me still loves.

So is that a part of the planning? Like when you sit down and find an idea, is it, “I want to make the next… ” The challenge of it, is that part of what drives this as well?

Yeah. I mean, for me, I always feel like if I set too ambitious a goal I’ll get intimidated. You’ll never write a word if every word has to be perfect. You have to set, or at least I have to set the bar a little lower than that. Of course, that’s always the dream in the back of your mind, that you’ll somehow crack it and it’ll be the thing that everyone is drawn to. And that’s probably not going to necessarily happen. But even though maybe network isn’t driving the zeitgeist and the conversation in media, we’re getting a lot of viewers. And even, what, a 0.5 share is millions of people watching my show. And what more can you ask for? I guess an Emmy, but other than that.

Knowing what the goal is for you, has your creative process changed much through The Office and Superstore to now, or is it still pretty much the same?

It’s funny, it hasn’t changed much for me since The Office. But what I think we were doing on The Office, and which was happening even before I got on The Office is they would always talk about those early seasons when they didn’t think that show was going to go long-term, and how they were just making a show that they really liked and they were excited about. And I know that seems so pure and bullshitty, but it’s true. And so that’s what I feel like I was doing on Superstore and what I am doing on American Auto. I’m really doing stuff that I really am excited about and that I would want to see. And even though it seems obvious, it’s easy to fall into the mindset of you’re just feeding the beast. And you’re just following a structure and a formula.

What was the main takeaway from Superstore that you’re taking into American Auto?

I don’t know if this is exactly answering the question, but I think people enjoyed watching the break-room meetings, which were just people sitting around and talking about an issue. And sometimes you can get so obsessed with the story beats, and A leading to B leading to C (which is important), that you can forget to take a breath and let these conversations play out. And I think that’s something that I started to do… I wanted to make sure to have time for that in this show. And I think that comes from maturing a little bit, becoming a more confident writer. Saying like, “Not everything needs to be moving the story forward every single minute. And that’s important, but let things breathe. Have a minute and a half where people are talking about something that isn’t necessarily important to the plot.”

What is it about workplace comedies that really just clicks for you?

It’s very easy. That’s where you get the most disparate group of people that creates the most conflict, the most drama. These are not people that, like an ensemble comedy, that are drawn together because they like each other. Or even in a family comedy, maybe they have to be together, but there’s generally a love there. These are people that can hate each other. And even in these workplaces, it’s not like a TV show, or a magazine, or something where they’re even necessarily people of a certain ilk that come together. In a broad thing, they’re people that can have totally different values and are just forced to spend the majority of their lives, really, together. So I think that’s such… You just get a more interesting disparate group of people, and that’s more fun for me.

What was it about the auto industry that felt like a fit?

Well, it’s funny, the auto industry specifically wasn’t the thing that drew me to the world, it was I wanted to do a corporate workplace show. And early on, I was like, “It should just be widgets, generic widgets, or something as bland as paper from Dunder Mifflin.” Then I felt like, “No, I want something with a little more specificity.” And I wanted just like a big, relatable, down-the-middle American industry. I mean, or it’s multinational, but we associate it a lot with America. And there was just a handful of things that it could’ve been. I didn’t want it to be tech. I don’t particularly have a love for cars. So I thought, “Actually, that’s good. If I was too much of a car person, I might be playing a little too much inside baseball.”

But I wanted to do something about the corporate world. I thought that was certainly interesting when I originally pitched it coming off The Office. And then even more so after Superstore, which was about the working class, or that was blue-collar. Now, those are people that get squeezed, and get fucked over sometimes by decisions being made at the very top. And now what is the world of those decisions? These aren’t people that want to screw people over. These are people that are doing the best that they can with the situation at hand. How do those decisions get made? So that’s what drew me to the corporate world.

‘American Auto’ returns to NBC Tuesday, January 4 at 8PM ET

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A ‘90 Day Fiancé’ Star Who Was Selling Farts In Jars Is Calling It Quits Because Her Diet Of Beans And Eggs Was Causing Chest Pains

Bitcoin, NFTs, jarred farts: these are the currencies of a bold new future. A bold new future that 90 Day Fiancé star Stephanie Matto can no longer be a part of after a doctor told her to shut down her lucrative jarred fart operation. Matto blasted to viral fame in December after she announced that she was making a killing bottling up her flatulence and selling it to God knows who over the internet. According to Matto, she was making as much as $50,000 a week just by letting one rip into a glass container and mailing it to what we can only assume are freaking weirdos.

But then strategy struck. Following a brisk month of peak fart sales, Matto’s health began to give out. The cause? Too much farting. Via Page Six:

Matto was rushed to a hospital with chest pains she feared were symptoms of a heart attack, according to the outlet.

After undergoing a battery of tests, including blood work and an EKG, Matto was told that her pain was the result of her steady diet of gas-inducing beans and eggs.

“I thought I was having a stroke and that these were my final moments,” Matto told Jam Press. “I was overdoing it.”

After pumping out 50 jars a fart a week to “meet demand,” Matto was forced to retire after experiencing intense pains from too much flatulence. As for what she plans to do now that the wind’s been knocked out of her sails, and the jars that she’d sell on the internet for cash money, Matto says she’ll invest her fart fortune in crypto. Of course.

(Via Page Six)

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Leikeli47 Goes HAM On ‘Chitty Bang,’ Her First New Song In A Year And A Half

Back in August, the subject of a Reddit thread read “Does anyone know where I can find the Leikeli47 song from the Madden 22 soundtrack online?” The mysterious banger from the Madden ’22 soundtrack indeed was nowhere to be found. “I believe it’s called ‘Chitty Bang’…..Song f*cking slaps but I can’t find it anywhere…Anyone knows whats up???” another user commented. Today, we finally have an answer for these patient hip-hop loving gamers.

For the first time in a year and a half, the masked Brooklyn rapper has officially released new music, in the form of the stone cold banger, “Chitty Bang.” Leikeli47 has always flashed a dynamic style, whether it’d be on the big horns of “Tic Boom,” the swing and bounce of “2nd Fiddle” or the dancehall charm of the uplifting “Hoyt & Schermerhorn.” But much like on 2020’s “Zoom,” Leikeli just comes to getcha on “Chitty Bang.” She attacks the hook over a totally massive bass line and spits heat on a verse with a fierce cadence akin to Cardi B:

“I see them hoes keep trying
Professional imitators
Ref, where’s the flag?
Now you’re making me mad
When 47 get that
B*tch you betta get back”

No word yet on whether “Chitty Bang” will end up on the follow-up album to 2018’s excellent Acryclic, but a press release for the new jam advised us to “stay tuned for more new music from Leikeli47.”

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Josh Hawley’s Year-Old Cheerleading Session For The Failed MAGA Coup Is Seeing A Lot Of Renewed Attention

In mid-January 2021, Missouri-based Senator Josh Hawley was radioactive due to his far-right ways and for his role in helping to incite the failed MAGA uprising by digging in his heels over certifying the Electoral College vote. In the aftermath of January 6 (and that fisted-salute photo; you know that you’ve seen it), his hometown newspaper shamed him, and an unexpected stand came from Hallmark, which had enough of being associated with him while declaring, “Hallmark believes the peaceful transition of power is part of the bedrock of our democratic system, and we abhor violence of any kind.”

Speaking of violence, people are remembering what Hawley said on Fox News on Jan. 4, 2021. It appeared that Hawley was insisting that something would happen on Jan. 6 that would make Trump remain the president, and Bret Baier didn’t seem like he wanted to hear about, at all. Via Aaron Rupar, here’s a clip from that conversation.

Naturally, this is wild to rewatch because Hawley’s faced no repercussions in the Senate, nor has Ted Cruz for his alleged role in stirring up the insurrection, although the rioters themselves are languishing in jail or, in the case of the QAnon Shaman, prison. As a result, a lot of people are marveling at this clip and the lack of consequences for what Hawley said here.

Meanwhile, the House Select Committee on January 6 keeps doing its thing.