Aaliyah’s music influenced an entire generation of R&B music lovers before her tragic death nearly two decades ago. Despite her popularity, much of her music isn’t available on streaming services, a fact her estate has been working hard to change. But shortly after her former record label teased an announcement, the singer’s estate accused executives of “leeching off” her life’s work.
Aaliyah’s Estate issued a statement Wednesday making it clear they did not authorize her former label’s announcement. “For 20 years we have battled behind the scenes, enduring shadowy tactics of deception with unauthorized projects targeted to tarnish,” they wrote. The estate continued to say it is an “unscrupulous endeavor to release Aaliyah’s music” without transparency or their approval:
“Now, in this 20th year, this unscrupulous endeavor to release Aaliyah’s music without any transparency or full accounting to the estate compels our hearts to express a word – forgiveness. Although we will continue to defend ourselves and her legacy lawfully and justly, we want to preempt the inevitable attacks on our character by all the individuals who have emerged from the shadows to leech off of Aaliyah’s life’s work.”
Aaliyah’s Estate goes on to say they are continuing to manage her memorial fund and “other creative projects that embody Aaliyah’s true essence.”
See the full announcement made by Aaliyah’s Estate above.
One of the best things to emerge from the pandemic is the popular face-off livestream Verzuz, which pits two legendary artists against each other in a showdown. This week’s battle between The Lox and Dipset seemed like it would be a close one out of the gate, but The Lox, and most prominently Jadakiss, pulled out ahead to gain accolades and praise that dubbed them the clear winner. Plenty of hip-hop heads are weighing in on the impact of Jadakiss as an MC, and noted hip-hop head LeBron James had to put his own two cents in when it comes to The Lox member’s greatness.
“JADAKISS is the most UNDERRATED hip-hop artist of ALL-TIME!! MY GOODNESS,” the basketball star wrote, adding a hefty dose of emojis to his all-caps praise. “@thelox
just so [fire emoji],” he continued. “3 bullies.” Then, he shared his favorite clip from the battle, where Jadakiss launches into a freestyle over Biggie’s “Who Shot Ya” instrumental.
JADAKISS is the most UNDERRATED hip-hop artist of ALL-TIME!! MY GOODNESS @Therealkiss
On March 29th at 8:44 a.m., a tweet was fired off into the void.
It was a harmless thing. A photo of a Hollywood actor smiling jovially into the camera. Its owner, one @JoeyMulinaro, captioned it thus: “Another famous guy we all know but absolutely refuse to know his name.”
That “guy” was Kyle Chandler.
Before this tweet, we just assumed everyone knew America’s hazel-eyed sweetheart. After all, Chandler has been steadily booking gigs for decades, playing some of TV and film’s most memorable characters. He’s remembered by younger millennials on Tumblr platforms and Reddit forums as the beloved Coach Taylor of NBC’s sports drama, Friday Night Lights. If you were a ’90s kid, you probably saw him cutting his teeth on shows like Homefront and Tour of Duty. Even if you were new to the Kyle Chandler fandom, you still should’ve been aware of his most recent acting credits — Hulu’s Catch-22, Netflix’s Bloodline, and that George Clooney-helmed space movie that dropped late last year.
And yet, reading some of the replies left us as gobsmacked as we were when we first encountered the post.
One commenter admitted they often confused Kyle Chandler with Ron Livingston (Boardwalk Empire, Office Space). Another recognized him as the guy who got blown up on an episode of Grey’s Anatomy. “Bomb Guy is his name,” they wrote. Still, most disturbing was the person who simply dropped a picture of Jon Hamm into the thread with the query, “This guy?”
Had our faith in humanity taken a severe hit? Sure. Were we now terrified of a future that might be populated with people who couldn’t recite the “Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose” slogan if a gun were pointed to their head? Of course. But at the end of the day, this Kyle Chandler slander falls back on us. We are the stewards of these great mediums known as television and film and if we don’t teach the children about history’s on-screen heroes, heroes like Kyle Chandler … well, then, we deserve to see him cataloged in the annals of history as one Twitter commenter labeled him, “Attractive White Man #406.”
So we’ve decided to rank some of the best performances by Chandler on TV and film. This list is not exhaustive — for an actor as prolific, how could it be? But it does serve as a guide to where you can stream some of the man’s greatest hits, a gateway if you will, into the Chandlerverse. Here are the best Kyle Chandler performances you probably forgot about.
Honorable Mention: King Kong (2005)
Universal Pictures
Peter Jackson’s interpretation of this classic monster verse story would introduce Chandler to that oversized ape nearly 20 years before he played an out-of-his-depth dad just trying to convince his daughter not to listen to trashy podcasts in Godzilla Vs. Kong. Baxter was a rather unlikeable character but Chandler’s charm — and a particularly heroic rescue scene — made him memorable nonetheless. Whoever thought to have this man swing down on a vine with a machine gun in hand like some old Hollywood glamorous Tarzan knew what they were doing.
We give George Clooney major kudos for finally giving fans what we’ve so longed for: a movie with Kyle Chandler, in space. The action is split between Clooney’s Earth-dwelling heroics — he plays a scientist trying to warn the last manned flight mission from returning to their uninhabitable home — and the happenings onboard the Aether, a ship meant to uncover whether one of Jupiter’s moons may be conducive to human life. Chandler’s pilot, Tom Mitchell, is a calming presence in the background for most of the film, but it’s his final few moments on screen that pack a punch. In Mitchell’s decision to embrace certain death by returning to a radioactive Earth with the hope he might find his family, Chandler plays on his greatest strengths: his family-man status, and the ability to convey incredible emotion through those searing puppy-dog eyes.
Martin Scorsese’s bombastic retelling of stockbroker and scam artist Jordan Belfort’s meteoric rise on Wall Street — and his subsequent downfall — is chock full of over-the-top performances by well-known stars. Everyone from Leonardo DiCaprio to Jonah Hill and Margot Robbie delivers darkly comedic turns that will live in Gif-able infamy. In comparison, Chandler’s every-man FBI agent feels tame, like the acting equivalent of a light helping of Quaaludes, which makes his eventual victory all the more interesting to watch. Chandler goes toe-to-toe with DiCaprio’s delusionally self-confident millionaire playboy, dishing out cutting insults and pairing them with a jovial smile. He’s laser-focused on bagging the bad guy but detached enough to not make this cat-and-mouse game personal. His final subway ride has fans questioning who really won, despite Belfort eventually serving time and Chandler’s agent scoring the biggest bust of his career.
Harge Aird is not the hero of Carol. In fact, he’s one of the film’s driving antagonists, an of-the-era businessman who refuses to let his failing marriage go quietly into the dark night of divorce. The fact that his wife (Cate Blanchett giving a tour-de-force) just happens to be in love with another woman only adds to Harge’s embarrassment and devastation. Despite the role being an obvious foil to the doomed romance at the heart of this film, Chandler manages to make us sympathize with his stereotypically masculine breadwinner type. Harge is awful, yes, but he’s also mourning his chance at achieving the “American Dream,” and that grief pushes him to act callously, even vindictively, towards the woman he believes is responsible for the death of his happiness. It’s a tough task to convey the nuance of this supporting character, one Chandler manages to do with very little screen time.
Godzilla has been in two Kyle Chandler movies now — technically, so has King Kong — but this film gives the actor the most to do. And by “most” we mean he plays the conventional lead as an ex-scientist and grieving father who holds Godzilla responsible for the death of his son. That family conflict fuels Chandler’s performance as Mark Russell, who spends most of the film searching for his missing daughter (Millie Bobby Brown) and ex-wife (Vera Farmiga). Once he finds them, he’s charged with saving the planet, which means working alongside his ancient enemy. Chandler’s screen-time is full of loaded exposition and melodramatic one-liners, but it still works and it adds stakes to a film that risks feeling too massive in scale to be at all relatable. Oh, and no one — we mean no one — can aggressively whisper as good as this man.
One of Chandler’s earliest breakout roles, this fantasy sitcom imagined a world where Chandler’s former stockbroker Gary Hobson is delivered tomorrow’s newspaper every morning and tasked with changing the future. It’s a fairly inventive premise given the show’s timestamp, and Chandler’s Hobson is the kind of virtuous, aww-shucks hero audiences root for. There’s humor, usually at Hobson’s expense, and an overarching mystery that poses some interesting questions. Oh, and cats. Kyle Chandler acts opposite a divinely-powered tabby cat in this thing. What more incentive do you need to watch?
5. Grey’s Anatomy (2006 – 2007)
ABC
A guest-starring role normally represents the chance for a semi-known actor to reach a new level of recognition, but Chandler said “to hell with that” when he took on the role of bomb squad hero Dylan Young over the course of a few episodes of ABC’s hit medical procedural. Instead, Chandler’s fresh-faced hunk earned his own fabled legacy within the Grey’s universe. Fanfictions were written about him. Many hoped he’d show up on Ellen Pompeo’s beach this season. When diehard fans unite to discuss their favorite episodes, his appearance almost always makes the cut. Young was selfless and snarky, willing to cradle a bomb surgically removed from a patient in order to save the lead of the show. The fact that Chandler so impressed creator Shonda Rhimes with his minuscule screen time that she encouraged him to audition for another TV series that ranks even higher on this list, should tell you all you need to know.
Is Kyle Chandler’s tortured police detective the best thing about Bloodline? No, that would be Ben Mendelsohn. Is Kyle Chandler’s tortured police detective the second best thing about Bloodline? No, that would be Sissy Spacek. But is Kyle Chandler’s tortured police detective the third best thing about Bloodline? Well, it’s a tie between him and Linda Cardellini, but for a show as good as this Netflix crime-drama, being tied for third is really an accomplishment. Chandler plays John Rayburn, the good son, the upstanding community member, the man who cleans up the messes of his siblings while shouldering all of the blame from his biased mother. Eventually, that stress gets to him — as does his contentious relationship with his older brother, Mendelsohn’s Danny — and watching Chandler spiral, shedding his good-guy facade to reveal the complex, morally dubious man underneath is thrilling, even though you just know things won’t end well.
Game Night was not supposed to be a comedy vehicle that proved just how funny a certain dramatically inclined actor could be for Kyle Chandler. No, that honor should’ve been reserved solely for Rachel McAdams. But dammit, Kyle Chandler’s charisma is just too powerful to play second-fiddle, especially in this action-comedy where he plays Jason Bateman’s older, cooler brother named Brooks. Brooks is a scumbag, a suave, well-coiffed, incredibly rich scumbag whose black-market dealings interrupt a scheduled game night and cause the whole evening to go straight to hell in a handbasket. And yet, Brooks ends up being a lovable buffoon just trying to connect with his sibling and clean up his act while making a quick buck off Faberge eggs and Witsec lists and the like. You’ll end this movie actually rooting for the man, despite everything which just proves how potent Chandler’s likability really is.
This may come as a shock to hardcore Chandler stans, but he plays a really good bad guy. Like, almost too good. In this hilariously bleak dark comedy about a World War II bomber trying to escape service after the war is already won, Chandler inhabits the role of the show’s main antagonist, a paranoid, arrogant a**hole named Colonel Cathcart. He’s unhinged to the nth degree, forcing his men to go on more missions in order to impress his superiors and bolster his own self-worth. He’s wildly narcissistic, a bit idiotic, and callous in his treatment of others. And you can tell, you just know, Kyle Chandler is having the time of his life playing the dude.
Few TV shows are remembered accurately. Either nostalgia paints them as something precious and creatively unattainable or more modern societal shifts cause their jokes and storylines to age badly. ButFriday Night Lightsis a bit of a unicorn in terms of beloved TV fare — a family drama that’s as good as you thought it was upon second, third, and fourth viewing. Most of that can be attributed to Kyle Chandler, who plays the stalwart Coach Taylor, a man with deep roots in his community who’s just trying to provide a better future for his family and the boys on his high school football team. He’s a categorial “nice guy” but Chandler brings layers to him, deftly switching from jealous husband to exasperated father to disappointed coach and back again. And the speeches? Creator Peter Berg must have a touch of omniscience to him because how else would he have known that Kyle Chandler would one day become the king of locker room pep talks?
This is undoubtedly the summer of National Parks. Everyone I know seems to currently be on or just back from an epic road-trip to witness our natural wonders. I can’t blame them. I’ve visited 55 of the 63 major US parks and hundreds of other NPS sites over the past few years, so I know their beauty well. I’ve also seen firsthand that there are many more people in the parks this year. And I’ve seen how staffing issues in parks and the surrounding areas can — and has — created a headache for many first time visitors expecting unobstructed views and wide open spaces.
While many of us have already made our summer park visitation plans, it’s not too late for you. Campsites may be booked out but the park system is actually pretty well set up to accommodate spontaneous travelers. Just know that summer parks crowds are real — and they can get bothersome for anyone wanting a secluded slice of nature.
To help you plan, I’ve outlined where you can expect to find the most and fewest number of people at some of the most visited US National Parks. Use this as a resource if you’re keen to get yourself a little extra elbow room in the last month of the busy season.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park — 12.1 Million Visitors, Annually
People are often surprised when I tell them that not only is Great Smoky Mountains the most visited National Park, but that it wins by a landslide. With more than three times the visitation of the second most visited park, prepare yourself for other people on your hikes — often a lot of other people.
The most-visited parts of the Great Smoky Mountains tend to be the places that are easiest to get to. The pull offs, park roads, and short hikes with big payoffs. Clingmans’s Dome and Cades Cove will be especially crowded but are, in my opinion, worth it.
Less Crowded:
Drive the Foothills Parkway, a 16.5 mile section of a planned 71 mile road that provides a different vantage point of the park, or visit the Deep Creek area.
Yellowstone National Park 3.8 million visitors annually
Old Faithful, Grand Canyon of Yellowstone, Grand Prismatic Spring are all iconic spots at Yellowstone National Park that everyone wants to see for themselves at least once in their lifetimes. And the crowds mirror that. I still recommend going, just be prepared. (and pro tip — watch Old Faithful from the lodge’s second floor balcony with a drink, if it’s open)
Less Crowded:
Hike almost anywhere — most people stay close to the lookouts. Fairy Falls trail will give you the best view of Grand Prismatic from above, and North Rim Trail gives you less crowded views of the lookout to the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone.
The Narrows and Angel’s Landing are all over your IG feed because those are the hikes everyone wants to do at Zion National Park. And for good reason, they are iconic and memorable and have some of the best views you will ever witness.
But they are also crawling with people.
Less Crowded:
Hike the East Side! While it’s also gaining in popularity it’s still less crowded than the main thoroughfare and just as gorgeous. Some hikes to try: Canyon Overlook, Petroglyph Canyon, and Observation Point (accessed from the East Mesa Trail).
Rocky Mountain National Park 3.3 million visitors annually
The Bear Lake Road corridor is the most popular part of Rocky Mountain National Park for sure — there is even a separate timed entry to this portion of the park this summer. It’s where you can access popular hikes like Emerald Lake and Sky Pond, so the crowds make sense.
Less Crowded:
Try the Wild Basin entrance! It’s a favorite of mine and generally less crowded. From here you can hike to the gorgeous Ouzel Falls. The Grand Lake entrance will also be less crowded in general than the two entrances from Estes Park.
Grand Teton National Park 3.3 million visitors annually
Crowded:
Grand Teton is the only national park with a commercial airport inside of it — so it makes sense that most of the park is crowded. It’s easy to access by air and then by car or bike once you arrive. Some popular spots are Jenny Lake, Mormon Row, and Schwabacher Landing.
Less crowded:
Hike! A great thing about Grand Teton is that you can truly experience the beauty without ever hiking more than 100 feet from your car. With the abundance of pull outs and lakes making the park easily accessible, the actual trails aren’t too crowded in my experience. Taggart Lake, Phelps Lake and Leigh Lake are some of my favorites (are you sensing a pattern?).
You can also venture over to the Idaho side of the Tetons which, while not technically within the park, have great Teton views and nowhere near the traffic.
Grand Canyon National Park 2.9 million visitors annually
Crowded:
Grand Canyon Village, where you will visit first when entering the South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park is going to be super crowded. There is no way around this. It’s where the tour buses and families and day trippers enter and most stay.
Less crowded:
The Rim trail. Yes, seriously. Hear me out here. Like many of the other parks of this list, aside from the bucket list type hikes, most people aren’t venturing too far from the parking lot. In the Grand Canyon that means a mile or so in either direction of Grand Canyon Village (or less) until you reach some solitude. Another great option is the North Rim — only open from May-October, it’s much less visited.
Acadia National Park 2.7 million visitors annually
Crowded:
Cadillac mountain (even with its reservation system) and Jordan Pond were the most crowded parts of the park during my visit last month. Acadia is consistently one of the most visited national parks while also being 5th smallest by land area — so many areas will probably have a few more people than you’d like. I wouldn’t avoid any of these areas though, just visit early in the day (or in the off-season).
Less Crowded:
The Schoodic Peninsula portion of Acadia is dramatically less visited. It is not directly connected to the main part of the park on Mount Desert Island, which seems to deter most people. But once you’re there you will be nearly alone to enjoy the beautiful coastlines and trails.
Olympic National Park 2.5 million visitors annually
Crowded:
In my experience (and I haven’t been in all seasons), I’ve never found Olympic particularly crowded. Maybe due to its size, but even the popular areas have never felt overwhelming to me. That being said, the most popular places are definitely the Hoh Rainforest and the beaches. Hurricane Ridge is also a popular spot. I still recommend going to all of them.
As far as hikes, Mount Storm King is very popular and will be crowded.
Less Crowded:
The South Fork of the Hoh trail is far less crowded than the main Hall of Mosses trail if you want to avoid more people. The Lake Quinault area is definitely at the top of my list and less crowded and more remote than some of the other areas on the peninsula. From there you can hike the short Rain Forest Nature Trail, Gatton Creek, or Irely Lake.
Now, Apple has debuted a live stream leading up to the second event, which shows Kanye hanging out with friends and collaborators, pumping himself up for the event. Fan accounts have captured high-profile visitors like Chance The Rapper, Ye’s weight-training moments in a Donda vest, and what looks like a new Balenciaga suit for tonight’s stream.
Excitement for the follow-up is definitely high, even if plenty of fans were disappointed in his Pro-Trump era, the strange follow-up that was his own presidential campaign, and didn’t think Ye was his best work. But with Kanye, a potential comeback is always in the works. Check out the live stream via the Apple Music link above.
There are 130 episodes of the original He-Man and the Masters of the Universe animated series that aired in syndication from 1983 until 1985. Here’s a fun fact about that series: Skeletor loses 130 times. Every single hare-brained scheme he comes up with to defeat He-Man and his pals fails every single time. Skeletor goes 0-130. That’s a truly remarkable level of incompetence. Yet, I watched, just in case Skeletor finally pulled one off. He never did.
By the way, have you watched these original episodes lately? A couple years ago I was at a hardware store in my New York City neighborhood and they had a DVD set for $3.99 so I bought it. This show is pretty much unwatchable to an adult. That’s not always the case. Some of the old Transformers episodes are still pretty good. I get why I liked it as a child, but I couldn’t make it through more than a couple of episodes.
I hadn’t yet seen Kevin Smith’s Masters of The Universe: Revelationwhen my Twitter feed lit up with angst. (My favorite was a tweet about how this series ruined the legacy of Moss Man, a character who, if you don’t know, is made of moss.) The series had gotten pretty good reviews, but after my experience of trying to rewatch those earlier episodes, I was going to take a pass on this one. But, I have to admit, the sheer amount of online “outrage” at whatever happened during this series piqued my interest. For this amount of people to be mad online, that tells me something actually interesting happens in this series.
(So, if you haven’t seen it and you plan to watch I’m going to get into specific spoilers.)
Look, He-Man kind of sucks. Not Masters of the Universe, but the character of He-Man, in that he’s not very interesting. And what would be the most interesting thing to do with He-Man? That would be killing him off, then watching the fallout across the rest of Eternia. Which is exactly what Masters of the Universe: Revelations does at the end of the first episode. Now, something that bothered me even as a little kid was the fact Teela didn’t realize Prince Adam was He-Man. And not just because they look exactly the same (at least Clark Kent wears glasses), but because all of Adam’s other close friends seem to know. She is literally the only character Adam is at all close with (other than his parents, who don’t seem to like him much anyway) who doesn’t seem to know this. So, yes, at the end of the first episode Teela freaks out because she was lied to. This makes sense! Also, it makes total sense it would be Teela in this role because no one else would be that mad they didn’t know this. What, are you going to have Stratos all upset about this? Why would he care? Teela is literally the only character who would be this upset.
So then, in the fifth and final episode that was released, Adam comes back, only to have Skeletor finally reveal his master plan that, no, he did not die as we thought he did, instead he was hiding for just the right moment to kill Adam. And he presumably does, stabbing Adam through the chest right before he transformed into He-Man. Skeletor then raises the power sword and says, “By the power of Greyskull,” then becomes some sort of He-Skeletor super-being.
After all this time, Skeletor finally wins. And who’s getting the credit? “Woke culture.” What?
Look, Skeletor deserved to finally have some good news. He now has one in the “win” column. But even in victory, his win is being credited to woke culture for giving Teela such a big role in the series (as I mentioned earlier, Teela is the only character where it makes since she’s feel betrayed). Good gosh, Skeletor literally can’t catch a break here. Imagine, after 40 years, finally winning and, instead of a victory lap, Skeletor has to read about how “woke culture” is the real villain and about how Moss Man, a character made out of moss, has been ruined. Skeletor finally wins and people are crying about “Moss Man.” What does Skeletor have to do to get your love? Or your hate?
Look, we don’t know what will happen in the remaining five episodes. But, for now, Skeletor finally gets the W. And if he’s reading this, I just want you to know that I, for one, noticed your victory. And I do not believe “woke culture” is the villain of Masters of the Universe: Revelations. I believe, you, Skeletor, are the villain. And I believe that after almost 40 years of watching your work that you deserved to finally catch a break. Congratulations, Skeletor. It’s past time you got your due.
Paramount+ hasn’t had a breakthrough hit like The Handmaid’s Tale for Hulu or Ted Lasso for Apple TV+, but there’s a lot of good stuff on there. It’s the home of The Good Wife spin-off, The Good Fight; Star Trek, including Picard and Lower Decks, as well as the original series and The Next Generation; and while HBO Max has every episode of South Park, Paramount+ is about to get 14 (yes, 14) new South Park movies.
Remember the episode where Cartman eats only the fried chicken skin and not the actual chicken? Cartman is South Park fans, the fried chicken skin is Paramount+, and the chicken is other streaming services.
“MTV Entertainment Studios has inked South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone to a new deal that will run through 2027, including 14 new movies made exclusively for Paramount+, beginning with two this year,” according to the Hollywood Reporter. “The new movies appear to be a way to get South Park programming on ViacomCBS’ own streaming service after cutting the HBO Max deal in 2019.” Paramount+ carries a lot of Comedy Central programming, and Comedy Central is owned by ViacomCBS, which…
Sorry, I started drifting off while explaining the boring intricacies of streaming deals.
The point is, new South Park movies (as well as a multi-year Comedy Central renewal that will bring the show to season 30)! The made-for-streaming movies will likely be closer to the three-part “Imaginationland” trilogy than South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut, one of the best big-screen adaptations of a TV show ever, but there’s no reason one of them can’t be a full-blown “Loo Loo Loo” musical. With Brian Boitano, naturally.
Trey Parker and Matt Stone sign new deal to extend South Park through season 30 and make 14 original made-for-streaming movies exclusively for Paramount+, starting with two films in 2021. Read the full press announcement: https://t.co/vhlzu0E96Fpic.twitter.com/uvPhRbVp7E
But on the scale of “big mistakes” to make, befriending an accused sex trafficker is definitely pretty high up on the list of no-nos. Which Gates understands (now), and feels sorry about (now). On Wednesday, Anderson Cooper invited the billionaire Microsoft founder and uber-nerd onto Anderson Cooper 360° to chat about COVID, but Cooper wasn’t about to let the opportunity to discuss Gates’ recent divorce (which was finalized on Monday) or the rumors that the dissolution of his marriage was, in part, due to his blossoming friendship with accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
After lobbing a few softballs his way about how he was holding up amidst his divorce, Cooper then went in for the kill when he asked Gates to “explain” his relationship with Epstein and whether he had “any concerns” about being associated with him. But Gates seemed prepared to defend his actions, while minimizing his link to the late, disgraced financier, explaining:
“I had several dinners with him, you know, hoping that what he said about getting billions of philanthropy for global health through that he had might emerge. And when it looked like that wasn’t a real thing, that relationship ended. But it was a huge mistake to spend time with him [and] give him the credibility. There were lots of others in the same situation, but I made a mistake.”
Bill Gates explains his past relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, saying they shared “several dinners” in which he hoped to raise “billions of philanthropy.”
“When it looked like that wasn’t a real thing, that relationship ended… it was a huge mistake to spend time with him.” pic.twitter.com/ljBMYD94Ei
Cooper then went on to talk about Gates’ admission that he had an affair with an employee 20 years ago, and recent reports that he has creeped some of the women he works with, who have said that his “behavior has created an uncomfortable workplace environment.” Cooper wanted to know whether Gates had any regrets. To which he replied yes, but added that “it’s a time of reflection and… at this point I need to go forward. You know, my work is very important to me. Within the family, we’ll heal as best we can and learn, learn from what’s happened.”
Sure. Because at 65 years of age, how should you be expected to know that sexually harassing your employees is a bad thing?
As The Wrap pointed out, one thing Cooper did not ask about was the “statement [Gates] made in a 2011 email, that Epstein’s ‘lifestyle is very different and kind of intriguing although it would not work for me.’ When that email was made public in 2019, Gates claimed that he was referring to Epstein’s interior design preferences.”
If only Clippy could help in coming up with better excuses.
After a handful of false starts dating all the way back to 2017, Impeachment: American Crime Story—the latest installment of the Ryan Murphy-produced crime anthology—is finally making its way toward a screen near you. While it’s dropping in just about a month, the creative team behind the FX series isn’t ready to give much about Impeachment away yet, as evidenced by its new teaser (which you can watch above).
While we all know the basic storyline—in 1995, then-President Bill Clinton had a sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky, a 22-year-old White House intern, which led to his impeachment—American Crime Story has never really been about the story you know. As they did with the O.J. Simpson trial and the murder of fashion icon Gianni Versace, the series is designed to let time and age allow viewers to relitigate these infamous incidents and scandals from a modern-day perspective and to consider what biases might have been at work in the initial media coverage.
In the case of the Clinton-Lewinsky affair—which for years had been referred to as “The Monica Lewinsky Scandal,” as if Clinton was just a hapless bystander who played a totally passive role in the relationship—it will be interesting to reexamine the case through the lens of the #MeToo movement. While powerful men who use their influence as sexual currency are being toppled as quickly as statues of Confederate “heroes,” the timing seems perfect to reexamine this case—especially knowing that Lewinsky was brought on as a producer, and signed off on each script.
Of course, in the irony of all ironies, the series is being adapted Jeffrey “Is This Camera On?” Toobin’s book, A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President, but we’ll just leave that alone.
Though we only get to see Beanie Feldstein as Lewinsky from the back—as she winds her way through the halls of the White House and makes her way to the Oval Office—and the camera cuts out before we get a good glimpse of Clive Owen as Clinton, this is one “teaser” that certainly lives up to its name.
Impeachment: American Crime Story will premiere on FX at 10 p.m. on Tuesday, September 7th.
Billie Eilish let fans know early on that her next era was going to be a departure from the sound that defined her debut album. Still, most people probably weren’t ready for her to make a jazzy album influenced by Frank Sinatra, Peggy Lee and Julie London. Happier Than Ever is a stunning left turn for the pop star, but proof that all she needs is herself when it comes to the music she wants to make. Today, she doubled down on her new era’s focus by actually covering a jazz classic in the style of London, heading over to BBC’s Radio 1 Lounge, where artist’s frequently give spins on other artists’s songs, and performed “I’m In The Mood For Love” accompanied only by Finneas on guitar.
Truly, anyone listening to the “Bad Guy” and “You Should See Me In A Crown” probably didn’t consider this was coming next. Then again, softer earlier songs like “When The Party’s Over” do point to the same tone and feeling of these tunes. If anything, Eilish is just proving her versatility early on, as our culture loves to put artists, particularly female ones, in a box as soon as possible. Check out the cover above.
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Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.