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Trump Actually Released A Statement To Plead For Credit In The Fight To Contain COVID: ‘Just A Mention Please!’

Currently, nearly 40% of the U.S. has been fully vaccinated, a fairly impressive feat considering where we were just a few months ago. And though he’s had absolutely nothing to do with the robust vaccination distribution plan that’s inching our country closer to some semblance of normalcy, former President Donald Trump would really like some credit for it.

No really, he’s begging for it.

Trump, who’s been banned from Twitter and pretty much every other social media platform, sent his latest missive to his followers via a press release — an art form he’s doing his damndest to bring back. The statement, which read like a long and rambling tweet, mostly consisted of Trump complaining that the Biden administration is getting credit for his hard work:

“Isn’t it incredible that because of the vaccines, which I and my Administration came up with years ahead of schedule (despite the fact that everybody, including Fauci, said would never happen), that we no longer need masks, and yet our names are not even mentioned in what everybody is calling the modern-day miracle of the vaccines?”

There’s so much wrong with this claim it’s hard to know where to begin but just to quickly recap, Trump’s Operation Warp Speed didn’t actually “create” vaccines, it just allocated funding to speed up the process of trials and approval. It did greatly contribute to Moderna’s two-dose vaccine, but Pfizer’s shot was entirely funded by the company itself. And research into the technology of these new mRNA targeting vaccines has been a decades-long process.

Still, Trump is pretty put out that Biden and his team haven’t even acknowledged his work in bringing these vaccines to the public, saying later in his statement: “Just a mention, please! The Biden Administration had zero to do with it.”

There are some definite factual inaccuracies with his claim. Trump’s Operation Warp Speed certainly sped up the vaccine approval process but as has been widely reported, when Biden took office, there was zero infrastructure to support a nationwide vaccine roll-out. The Biden administration basically had to start from scratch, and it’s only in recent weeks that they’ve been able to make meaningful progress, despite these vaccines being approved late last year.

So really, Trump is every guy you’ve had to do a group project with at school who comes up with the initial idea but then checks out for weeks and is angry when his name isn’t on the final term paper.

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Tones And I Hosts A Nightmarish Party In Her Spooky ‘Won’t Sleep’ Video

Continuing to ride the success of her smash-hit 2019 track “Dance Monkey,” Australian singer Tones And I has returned to share her first song of the year. Known for her buoyant hooks and playful lyrics, Tones And I brings her signature style to her eerie new track “Won’t Sleep.”

The dark pop single arrived with an equally-spooky visual. It opens with two young children wandering their local woods in search of a mansion, which appears to be throwing a massive party. Tones And I, fully transformed into a monster, beckons the children to join her soirée. The singer and a group of her fellow ghouls then break into a dance routine reminiscent of the iconic “Thriller” choreography.

Describing her inspiration behind the track, Tones And I said:

“I loved writing this song and playing around with the production, the bass, and the drums. It’s a song about me and my friends staying home and partying through lockdown. […] When coming up with the creative for this film clip, I thought to myself, ‘Picture the most crazy thing ever’… and that’s what I wanted it to be. As with most of my videos, there are lots of prosthetics and different characters, and I had so much fun shooting it!”

Watch Tones And I’s “Won’t Sleep” video above.

Tones And I is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Zack Snyder On Getting Back To Basics After What He Calls ‘Torture’

It’s not lost on Zack Snyder that he’s, most likely, the most interviewed person in the world right now, as I joked with him that the headline to this interview should be “Zack Snyder finally breaks his silence.” This is because of two reasons. One is, as you may have heard, his version of Justice League was unleashed, finally, to the masses a couple of months ago. And just as that whole entity (it feels wrong to just call that a “movie” since there’s so much else that goes with that whole project) started winding down, boom, here comes Zack Snyder again with a brand new Zombie heist movie, Army of the Dead. (Which will be in theaters this weekend and Netflix the next.)

Army of the Dead is a kind of back to basics for Zack Snyder, who says it was much needed because he is still, let’s say, obviously still pretty unhappy with his old bosses at Warner Bros. – launching, unprompted, into a list of grievances and describing the whole relationship as “torture.” I asked if he worried about any professional backlash from any of this and, well, I came away pretty convinced that, no, he very much is not.

Snyder still hasn’t seen the HBO version of Watchmen, though he plans to watch it. (He does seem like a very busy person.) Though I was curious if his position has changed about not using the squid in his 2009 adaptation of the comic, since the series did use the squid to great effect. Kind of surprisingly, his answer does sound like a “maybe,” with a few caveats.

Also, Snyder has already spelled out the plot of what his next two Justice League movies would have entailed. And he was clear he wanted to use the John Stewart version of Green Lantern in the movie we saw – going as far as to shoot a scene with the character, played by Wayne T. Carr (Warner Bros. wasn’t into the idea so he used Martian Manhunter instead) – and in the future movies. But what would John Stewart’s role have been in these future movies? Ahead, he walks us through that.

I think, right now, you are the most interviewed person in the world.

It might be true. I swear to God. If you go by my last three weeks and if you were with me, you’d say that is true. I don’t know how I could be interviewed more than I am right now.

I know more about what you have going on than I do close friends.

I’m sorry about that. I apologize. That’s not right. It is what it is, but yeah.

My joke headline for this piece would be “Zack Snyder finally breaks his silence.”

[Laughs] Oh, that’s cool. That’s good. “Zack Snyder comes clean.”

“He’s finally ready to talk.”

Yeah. I’m all warmed up. I’m ready to go!

Here’s my analogy. With Army of the Dead, it feels like a famous comedian who’s been in movies or the biggest series and decides, you know what? I want to do stand up again. Get back to my roots.

It is a little bit. I’d say it’s a good analogy because I shot the movie and I wrote the movie. Clearly, it comes from the well, if you will, in a pretty significant way. And so, yeah, I think that’s a pretty good analogy. I buy that.

Did you need that?

Oh god yeah. God yeah. It was cool to do the Snyder Cut of Justice League and that was fun and everything. But Warner Bros. still tortured me the whole time for whatever reason, they can’t help it. I don’t know why I’m such a fucking pain in their ass because I’m not trying to be, honestly.

Now what you just said right there – and I’ve seen your other recent quotes where you’ve said Warner Bros. isn’t being receptive to the SnyderVerse. Because look, every experience I’ve had with you is you are a nice guy and a really passionate filmmaker. But do you worry when you say things like that, not Warner Bros., but another studio might be like, “Well, if things go south, we don’t want to be on the receiving end of that”?

Well, I just don’t know who would ever end up on the other end? If you analyze what’s happened with Warner Bros., it’s not a normal situation. It’s a once-in-a-generation bizarro situation! I just had an amazing experience with Netflix and it was awesome and we had a great partnership and an incredibly great experience. So the only thing I would say is that it’s an unusual situation.

That’s true. And I just say that from a selfish standpoint because I want to keep seeing your movies and I don’t want you to get in too much trouble.

No, I agree. I don’t want to get in trouble either, but I’m not going to sit here and let them act like that and not… Look, they’re the ones that have been aggressive, not me. I haven’t done anything. Every day they’d turn around and do some weird passive-aggressive thing. So, I don’t know. It’s weird. But look, like I say, I had a great time making Justice League. I’m super glad I got to finish it.

And it’s not lost on me that you’ve been very supportive of Ray Fisher and Gal Gadot. And I am curious, with Army of the Dead, and it’s not the same thing, but when you replaced Chris D’Elia with Tig Notaro, when was the moment you realized, “Oh, we have a problem here?”

No, it was pretty instantaneous. As soon as it got brought to me and they were like, “This is the thing,” I was like, “Well, that’s problematic. We’re going to have to do something.” And I think it also became kind of a technical thing, right?

I’ll be honest, I didn’t really even know about it until after I saw the movie. It looked seamless.

Maybe I’ll get some kind of technical award as a DP for putting her in that movie, because that part was hard. It was funny because I shot the movie in a really super organic way, and I was like, oh, this is going to be cool, available light, and it’s going to be minimal and all this. And then cut to me on the stage, I have to recreate that in the most sterile circumstance possible with the most lights and the most everything. And so it was interesting. You have to really understand where the light is all the time to make it match, and you light the green screens correctly, it’s really problematic, but it was good. It was fun. It was an awesome exercise. And Tig is awesome.

She is great. Will this influence how you cast in the future? Because from her quotes she even seems surprised about being in this movie.

I don’t see it. It felt normal. It feels natural to me. I was like, this is amazing. I was shocked that she said yes, frankly. So that was the goodness for me, that she wanted to do it. So it’s worked out great for me. But yeah, my casting decisions, choices have been always slightly problematic for the studio. They’ve all come around, everyone is convinced. Not so much on Army, but on all my D.C. movies.

Right, people weren’t into Jason Mamoa at first, now everyone loves him.

Yeah. And Gal has always been slightly controversial, but once you see her in the role, you’re like, okay, she’s amazing.

I’ve been wanting to ask you this, and maybe you’ve been asked this already because, again, you’ve been interviewed so many times…

I’m breaking my silence.

I do love your Watchmen movie and I’m curious if you saw the HBO series.

I have not seen it yet. I do plan on seeing it at some point, but I have not watched it yet.

The reason I ask is, in flashbacks, they used the squid to great effect. And I’m curious if now, with the technology we have, if you now think you could have pulled off the squid, because back then you said it wouldn’t work because it would look weird, or whatever.

And by the way, I love Watchmen. I have no regrets. I love that movie 100 percent. It’s exactly what I wanted. And in some ways, I think there’s a great college class that someone could teach on the difference between Dr. Manhattan and the squid. And why we would have chosen Dr. Manhattan and how thematically that works as it relates to the climax of that book. But I would also say, that based on doing the movie that I just did, Justice League, I might consider it. Only because I feel like it would have required a slightly longer movie to do the squid, than say, Dr. Manhattan.

Well, that makes sense. And they had a whole miniseries to do it.

Yeah, exactly. And I think that to have the squid in the movie that I made, the movie would be a little bit longer. We had Manhattan already, so we didn’t have to set him up or anything.

Says the man who just released a four-hour movie a couple of months ago.

Exactly my point.

I was rereading the piece about where the next Justice League movies would have gone. You mentioned how you really wanted to use John Stewart’s Green Lantern but you had to use Martian Manhunter instead. I’m curious how John Stewart would have fit in in the whole story and what his role would be.

Well, you know I shot it, right? I shot John Stewart. So, yes, I wanted to use him. So basically what was going to happen is he had two roles. One, we would have seen him in the post-apocalyptic world. He was kind of like their scout and kind of like their, you know, “join the team.” And then in the final battle against Darkseid, he would have gotten the Green Lantern Corps and organized them to fight against Darkseid. Those would have been his jobs.

I like Martian Manhunter, but John Stewart’s the best.

I do, too. I like Martian Manhunter. By the way, Martian Manhunter was going to be in there anyway. So you would have both.

‘Army Of The Dead’ opens in theaters this weekend and hits Netflix the following weekend. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Seth Rogen Renewed His Take On ‘Fascist’ Ted Cruz While Telling Stephen Colbert Why This Isn’t Exactly A ‘Feud’

Seth Rogen previously proved that he wasn’t afraid to go in hard (and like no other) on the much maligned Ted Cruz. Back in January he began to launch attacks on the “fascist” senator and showed no mercy during the Texas ice storm, which saw Rogen dunk emphatically on the lawmaker who abandoned his freezing constituents for the sunny shores of Cancun. Naturally, Ted couldn’t hold his own while attempting to engage, and Rogen gamely told the MAGA insurrection enabler to “f*ck off.”

Well, Rogen visited with Stephen Colbert to discuss many things, including his weed company, Houseplant, and his unmistakable flair for spinning a pottery wheel. Then around the 4:30 minute mark in the above video, Colbert inquired about the Cruz rivalry. Rogen was game to discuss (and call Cruz a “fascist” again), but he wanted to make clear that this isn’t really a feud:

“Feud implies equal ground. If someone’s trying to murder someone with a baseball bat and someone is yelling that person to stop, is that a feud between the baseball bat-wielder and the person yelling at the baseball bat-wielder? I don’t know if that’s a feud. I think feud implies two people hitting each other with baseball bats.”

Before this statement, Rogen explained that he felt that Cruz was in effect, the person with the baseball bat. “His words cause people to die, and I’m making jokes about it. Is that a feud?” Rogen continued, “I don’t know. To me, it doesn’t seem like a feud. To me, it seems like I’m pointing out the fact that he is a terrible man whose words have resulted in death.” Fair enough, but if this was a feud (just saying!), Rogen would definitely be the winner. Especially since he refuses to ever smoke weed with the guy: “It would be beneficial to him because it would be humanizing in some way.”

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Rowdy Rebel And A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie’s ‘9 Bridge’ Is A Cross-Borough Connection

Brooklyn rapper Rowdy Rebel links up with the Bronx’s own A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie on “9 Bridge,” a haunting banger of a cross-borough connection. A Boogie kicks things off with a rapid-fire verse before Rowdy comes in for a few bars of his own before giving it back to A Boogie for a melodic flow. They go back and forth a few times, showcasing the sort of two-man game that ’90s NBA highlight reels were made of.

The new single is a nice departure for Rowdy, who’s been embracing the drill wave ever since making it out of prison earlier this year. At the end of the GS9 rapper’s six-year sentence, he was recruited by Funkmaster Flex and Nav for “Jesse Owens,” then by CJ for the NYC Remix of “Whoopty” with French Montana. “9 Bridge” gives him a shot to show off his versatility as he continues on the comeback trail.

Meanwhile, A Boogie uses the song reset his 2021 after a few stumbling blocks in 2020 and his remix of Mooski’s TikTok hit “Track Star.” Hopefully, this refresh will lead to more new music with the same level of renewed energy — or even a joint album, because the give-and-go flows here are *chef’s kiss*.

Listen to Rowdy Rebel and A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie’s “9 Bridge” above.

A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Charlotte Nicdao On ‘Mythic Quest’ Season Two And Finding The Limits Of Poppy’s Ego

Ted Lasso holds the crown for the most surprisingly heartwarming Apple TV+ show, but Mythic Quest certainly came for the king with its Quarantine episode last year. Filmed almost entirely from the homes and apartments of its on-camera talent, the bonus episode was one of the rare pandemic-inspired forms of entertainment that actually worked. So it perhaps should have been no surprise that the follow-up between seasons episode, Everlight, shined bright as well.

The second pandemic-themed episode, which had the entire cast back in the office to hold a celebratory LARPing competition, did all the things a bonus episode should. It added some slight character wrinkles and progressed the plot a bit, but it also reminded viewers just how enjoyable Mythic Quest has been to watch in the first place.

If the episode looked like a joy to film, it’s because it was. And more importantly, as Charlotte Nicdao pointed out, it brought the show back to the office and cut out all the Zoom jokes we’re already tired of.

“The whole team really wanted Season Two to put the past year-and-a-half behind us and make the kind of television that is actually comforting to watch when you’re going through troubled times,” Nicdao told us.

Season Two finds the Mythic Quest staff back at work on another expansion to the wildly popular game. Poppy is now (spoilers) an equal to Ian, at least on the org chart. But actually progressing to the point where she’s comfortable being a boss is another story entirely. Uproxx talked to Nicdao by phone a few days before the first two episodes of Mythic Quest’s second season hit Apple TV+ to break down what’s different for Poppy, how the show tackles some big issues in gaming, and why it’s so much fun to melt down on camera.

I know you’ve done a lot of press for Season Two already, so I have to ask — what is it like doing press in a pandemic, for a show that you filmed during a pandemic?

I have to say, I hadn’t done a lot of press before Mythic Quest. So I did press for the first season. And then after that, the press was done for the quarantine episode. And then this year Everlight, in season two, it’s all been remote. So I don’t know a lot about what it’s like to not do press remote. It’s definitely working for me.

I want to ask about the two bonus episodes. Personally, I don’t think I’m ever going to have any appetite for pandemic-themed entertainment. I don’t want to relive this, but the Mythic Quest episodes are a very big exception because they were wonderful and really fit what the feeling of this past few months and year or so have been.

Thank you so much.

When you were making them, did that storyline of isolation resonate with you personally? Because I know you’ve documented some of your experience on Instagram, very similar to mine, I think. Did you know that it was going to really connect with people?

I think that the intention with those episodes was to never exploit the times that we were in, it was always to try to tell stories that we felt were going to help people watching. I think when we made the quarantine episode, we didn’t want to just be like, “Oh, I guess everyone’s on Zoom now. So let’s make some Zoom jokes.” I think we did make some funny Zoom jokes, but ultimately, we were also trying to connect to what a lot of people, including myself, were feeling at that time. That sort of … We’re being afraid and feeling isolated and not knowing what was coming next.

And then when we did Everlight, similarly, I think Rob (McElhenney) and Megan (Ganz) and David (Hornsby) and the whole team really wanted Season Two to put the past year-and-a-half behind us and make the kind of television that is actually comforting to watch when you’re going through troubled times. But obviously, because we’d addressed the pandemic with the quarantine episode, we needed to bridge into that, which is the purpose of Everlight.

And we were a team of people that were, I mean, yeah, we filmed during the pandemic, but there was definitely still that sense of like, we’re going back to some sense of normal after being in our houses for months and months. And that felt strange and exciting. And we were very excited to be around each other again. Everlight was about, for me anyway, it was about capturing some of that feeling.

Yeah, that was a really good way to transition back into what the plot points were that you left Season One with. I wanted to ask about that. Poppy’s first couple episodes in this new season are about the struggle with her new role alongside Ian. How would you describe what’s different about her, from maybe the first few episodes of Season One to now?

I think that throughout Season One, we get a few clues as to how big Poppy’s ego is. It’s just that it’s never been allowed to grow to its full size before, for various reasons. And then when we meet back up with her again in Season Two, she’s now got as much technical power as Ian does. And so, her ego is no longer having to be contained. It’s allowed to run rampant. So you see this whole other side of her that is a little bit more obnoxious and maybe a little bit more toxic, which is really fun to play with.

But the other thing that I was really interested in was this idea of, someone can be excellent at the job that they’re doing, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re going to be a great manager in their job. And so, Poppy is this prime example of this absolute genius programmer, that then gets put into a position where she’s leading teams of people toward her vision, doesn’t really know how to be a leader yet. So a lot of Season Two is about Poppy figuring out how to be a leader, what kind of a leader she wants to be, what’s effective, what doesn’t work.

It’s a really interesting exploration of the Peter Principle. But also, because in Season One and oftentimes even in the first couple episodes of season two, Poppy’s always asked to be the adult in the room compared to Ian. He has these big visions, and Poppy’s character is more practical. The shovel episode from Season One, I’m thinking about. And even early in Season Two where she says “Well, we need caulk in the game to do these things.”

Yes! (Laughs)

That’s a really interesting thing, because there are little granular things that make games happen, and then push the show along. But there’s also the push and pull of her ego as well.

Right. And then I think what’s interesting is throughout Season One, and then the beginning part of Season Two, you do see how she’s focused on these technical things that are about making the game work. But then as the season progresses, you realize that her vision is actually much, much bigger than that. And I would say much, much bigger even than Ian’s vision has ever been. And I think she sees it grow underneath her as it’s happening, and in many ways it doesn’t know how to handle it.

I wanted to ask just how into games you are. The show does a great job of addressing things in gaming, but it’s not a show about games. It’s a workplace drama, it’s about emotions and people and relationships. That balance is really well done here, but I wonder, what is the secret sauce to making that work and not be overbearing?

I mean, I think when I came into Season One, I wasn’t a gamer, and I was really concerned with understanding that world, especially because of the role that I was playing as the lead programmer of this company. I was like, I never understand how games work and what that community is like. And I imagine that a lot of our audience felt that way, coming into Season One as well, this feeling of like, “Oh, I have to really understand games or like gaming to be into this show.”

And coming into Season Two, after filming Season One, I think I had a much better understanding of … I’m still really fascinated by the world of gaming, because I really did get introduced to it through Mythic Quest. And I’ve gotten really into a bunch of different farming stimulators, and Ashly Burch has really gotten me into that world, to some extent.

But I think besides that, coming into Season Two, my perspective on what the show was changed a lot. I think there’s so much inspiration that comes from the gaming world that hasn’t been mined for story yet. But I also think, as you say, at its heart, it is a workplace comedy. It’s about a dysfunctional found family. And that was really what I was focusing on in Season Two. The stories of power dynamics, professional relationships, leadership, teamwork, and that kind of thing. And so, that was my creative process when I was approaching the character and the stories this season.

I think the show addresses a lot of maybe big problems in gaming, with crunch and burnout. And the push and pull with your character and Ian, but also the art staff during Season Two, is really done well. It’s done for comedy. It makes light of a very serious problem, but it’s not glib. It’s not preachy. I thought maybe, to your point, about the mining really interesting areas of gaming, that’s one where it’s a very easy example of how well the show works.

Yeah. Yeah. I think, we never want to be the kind of show that’s like moralistically wagging our finger at the audience. And so, we hope that you’re never watching anything like, “Oh, I’m supposed to be learning a lesson here.”

But at the same time, as you say, when you see the way that Ian and Poppy treat the art department, as though they don’t have lives and exist purely to serve Ian and Poppy’s vision, you definitely aren’t on Ian and Poppy’s side with that.

I wanted to ask about your speech in the second episode, but it seems like it’d either be really fun, or a nightmare to shoot, to get it right. Was it somewhere in between there?

I think, yeah. Look, when I got that scene, I was so excited, and then immediately after being excited, so nervous. I think that’s like the blessing and the curse of having such amazing writers on the show, is that you’re constantly getting material, that you’re like, “Oh my gosh, I can’t believe they want me to do this.” And then you’re like, “Oh no, I can’t believe they want me to do this.”

And so, going onto set that day, I was definitely, like, wanting to bring my all. And I think one of the things that I really love about the way that we filmed the show is there’s a collaborative process at every stage. So we were workshopping that speech, even as we were filming it. Megan and Rob and David were all calling out things to try and being like, “Why don’t you just ramble here? Or you should start crying there, or like kick your shoes off.” And I feel like that sense of movement as you’re working, for me, I love working that way, because it keeps the scene alive. And then I feel like you’re having fun with the entire thing, rather than overthinking it. So I hope that turned out well. It was really fun to shoot.

Oh yeah, it worked really well. I just watched it again a few minutes ago, and I was just thinking maybe about just how many takes that would take to get the timing right on everything. It seemed like there was a lot.

I feel like often when we’re filming, we don’t necessarily do multiple takes, but we’ll roll into another version, without cutting. I love working that way because it means you build this momentum with what it is that you’re building in the scene. And so, yeah. I mean, honestly, the filming of that speech was kind of a blur, because I was trying to pull on all these different fun emotions. And also in the most glamorous outfit that Poppy has ever worn, which I was very grateful that, that is not what I have to wear every day at work.

Rob has spoken a lot about evolving and being willing to learn lessons from things that he’s already made. And I think Mythic Quest is a really good example of the growth of just him as a person and the way that he’s viewing the world. And I think a lot of characters are seeing change happen within them, in different ways. I thought maybe you would have some insight into seeing that happen on screen and seeing actors take that step as well.

Yeah. One of the things that I love about the show is that it’s got all the comfort and warmth of the familiarity of a sitcom. We understand what we’re watching, in terms of it being this group, this ragtag bunch of people that get into funny adventures and antics. But it’s not the kind of show that resets its characters at the beginning of each episode.
You’re really watching every character in the ensemble grow episode to episode and change and learn. And that’s a really exciting challenge as an actor.

And then I think what makes it even more fun is that, as you say, Rob, as a showrunner, is so open to conversation and people’s own experiences. And so, I think each character is imbued a little bit with the actor’s experience and ideas. I don’t think that every workplace works that way. And I’m really grateful that, that’s how ours does.

I’ve been thinking a lot about the show in the first season and I think when you look back on it, you’ll be able to point to it and say, “Yeah, that’s how it was like to live in that time.” I think about the Nazi episode, with the server a lot. I wonder if you feel the same way in the light of how things have gone online and in real life in maybe few months, or the last year?

Yeah. I mean, I guess the show tries not to shy away from the discussions that the world is having at the moment. But again, it’s never meant to be … I don’t think as a TV show, we’re trying to say people, “Hey, we have the solutions.” I think that we’re more interested in reflecting on what those conversations are and using the characters’ voices to getting different things out.

You got to do a voice and sing on Adventure Time. Were you a fan of the series? What was that like?

It was so much fun. And I think that show … I mean, talk about comforting television. That show is the embodiment of comfort television. And to get to go in and play a princess, which is like, surely, every girl’s dream is to get to voice an animated princess. Right? It was a lot, a lot of fun.

You got to go home to Australia in December. It was fascinating to see your quarantine procedure, but I wanted to maybe let you give the rest of the world a preview of what life can be on the other side of this, in a world where things are a little more contained, because you got to experience it already.

Yeah. I mean, in Australia at the moment, the world is more or less, 100% normal. There’s very little mask-wearing even because we’ve had zero cases for so long. And one of the things that surprised me was how quickly and naturally I slipped back into the way that we used to socialize. Feeling close to people, like physically close, being spontaneous with spending time with people, without having to ask, “Have you been tested? Or how many feet apart do we need to be? Or have you been vaccinated?”

It feels very natural and very normal. And it was a real reminder of how difficult the past year has been, not being able to operate that way. So I’m looking forward to the rest of the world, hopefully, getting to get back to that soon.

Absolutely. I’m a week out from being fully vaccinated, and I’m driving home immediately, to hug my mom, who I haven’t seen since Christmas 2019. It’s going to be good.

Oh, my gosh. That’s going to be amazing. I’m very excited for you.

Well, thank you.

When I hugged my mom for the first time, when I got back to Australia, I absolutely bawled my eyes out. So have fun with that.

‘Mythic Quest’ is currently streaming via Apple TV+.

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Liz Cheney Calls Out Fox News (While On Fox News) For Pushing Trump’s ‘Big Lie’

As part of her continuing efforts to break Donald Trump’s hold on the Republican Party, Wisconsin Congresswoman Liz Cheney called out Fox News while on Fox News. The contentious exchange went down Thursday evening when Cheney sparred with Special Report host Bret Baier after she blasted the network for continuing to push the “Big Lie” that the 2020 presidential election was “stolen” from Trump.

“We all have an obligation, and I would say Fox News especially, especially Fox News, has a particular obligation to make sure people know the election wasn’t stolen,” Cheney said.

Baier became particularly incensed and noted that his show has said that the election wasn’t stolen “numerous times,” which is true, but he can’t say the same for the rest of the network, especially the Trump-friendly shows Fox & Friends and Hannity. Naturally, Cheney wasn’t having it, and she let Baier know that he’s doing the interview, and she’s answering the questions. Via The Wrap:

“We need to make sure that the American people recognize and understand that the election wasn’t stolen, that we shouldn’t perpetuate the big lie and that there is real danger.” She further explained, “If we want to be able to defeat the really bad Biden policies, we have to attract voters back to us … the voters who left us by making clear we know the election wasn’t stolen and we are going to abide by the rule of law.”

Cheney’s fiery words arrive on the heels of congressional Republicans ousting her from her leadership position on Wednesday over her refusal to appease Trump by questioning the integrity of the 2020 election. Later that same day, Cheney was criticized by Sean Hannity who argued that the congresswoman wasn’t “canceled,” but instead, “fired” for being “psychotic” because she wouldn’t go along with the “party’s agenda.” Considering that agenda involves loyalty to Trump, it would appear Cheney had legitimate cause for calling out Fox News directly to its face.

(Via Acyn on Twitter)

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Jaleel White Says Former Mentor Bill Cosby ‘Is Paying The Appropriate Price’ For His Crimes

Steve Urkel and Cliff Huxtable had a tiff. What sounds like the makings of one hell of a network crossover event in 1989 is actually a very true story. Jaleel White, the actor who amused and annoyed both kids and their parents in equal parts as supreme nerd Steve Urkel on Family Matters, is speaking out for the first time on Bill Cosby’s sexual predation on TV One’s Uncensored.

Though White rose to fame as a kid actor on Family Matters, he had originally auditioned for the role of Rudy Huxtable on The Cosby Show (who, according to Entertainment Weekly, was originally supposed to be a boy). Though he was crushed that he didn’t get the part, White grew close with Cosby, who served as a mentor to him—and helped him when the young actor’s career hit some turbulence:

“I fostered a relationship with Mr. Cosby, separate and apart. Many dinners at his house, breakfasts, I even ran into a rough patch, and he’s directly responsible for why I ended up at William Morris Agency, which became an education unto itself.”

Eventually, White’s relationship with Cosby also hit a rough patch, though he declined going into the details as to why (despite the show being called Uncensored). But he did offer up a rather telling description of his own personal reckoning when he learned about Cosby’s sordid history of sexual assaults.

“I actually had a bit of a falling out with Mr. Cosby. I kept that to myself. Knocking off these monuments who are still human beings, it’s tough. And you go back in time, and you realize how close you were to something, and you put yourself in rooms where you realize his wife wasn’t there, that woman was probably there for that purpose. You know, it’s a hell of a hindsight thing to look at, and you don’t want anyone to feel like you’re trying to use them for clout. You know what I’m saying?”

Still, White (who now has a cannabis line called Purple Urkle) does not question that Cosby—who was sentenced to prison in 2018 for three to 10 years—is exactly where he should be. “A revered man did terrible things, and he’s paying the price,” the actor, who is now 44 years old, said. “I think that’s where we leave it: A revered man did a terrible thing, and he is paying the appropriate price.”

(Via Entertainment Weekly)

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Olivia Rodrigo Details Facing ‘Misogyny’ In The Music Industry As A Young Girl

It’s only been a few months since Olivia Rodrigo took the world by storm with her smash-hit debut single “Drivers License.” In the short time since the song’s release, the 18-year-old has already performed at a major award show and is currently gearing up for her SNL debut. But that doesn’t mean her success has come easily. Like most women in the music industry, Rodrigo says she’s had to deal with her fair share of misogyny, especially as a young artist.

Rodrigo recently sat down with NME for a conversation about her breakout moment and her impending debut album Sour. The singer explained the frustration of being pulled into a love triangle with her High School Musical: The Musical: The Series costar Joshua Bassett and his new love interest Sabrina Carpenter, who listeners suspected was the subject of “Drivers License.” “To be completely honest, it was really hard,” she said of the online speculation. “And, yeah, sometimes it wasn’t always the kindest or the most respectful. But I understand why people are curious and I’ve been curious about who my favorite songwriters wrote their songs about, so I completely understand.”

Further addressing the prejudice she’s faced in the industry, Rodrigo said:

“It would be a bald-faced lie if I say that I didn’t face any misogyny in the music industry – especially being a young girl. It’s a weird place to be. But I feel like I’m surrounded by people who really respect me and treat me with kindness. I’m really lucky in that regard and I hope that my generation of artists can really forge a path for younger artists.”

But despite the drama, Rodrigo says she’s not going to sacrifice the honesty she puts into her music. “I’m not going to sacrifice me being vulnerable and writing songs that I feel like are true to what I feel… I’m just always gonna write about what I feel the most intensely because that’s the best sort of songwriting.”

Sour is out 5/21 via Geffen Records. Pre-order it here.

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A Song From J. Cole’s ‘The Off-Season’ Has Fans Recalling His Tiff With Noname

J. Cole’s new album The Off-Season arrived last night to plenty of fanfare as listeners expressed their awe at his refocused rapping and generated enough streams to drive the new project to the top of Apple’s charts. However, not all of the reactions have been positive, as one song seems to be reminding fans of last year’s altercation with Chicago rapper Noname.

To recap: J. Cole and Noname became the center of a wide-ranging debate on social media when J. Cole released “Snow On Tha Bluff,” a reflective track in which Cole attempts to unpack his complicated emotions about social justice work and language. Many fans interpreted some of the song’s lyrics as references to Noname, who’d previously tweeted about celebrities keeping silent during the 2020 uprisings over the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, among others. She responded with “Song 33,” calling out his poor timing, and fans on both sides debated the merits of both points of view.

Today, it appears many are either reevaluating or reaffirming their positions, thanks in part to a line from “Applying Pressure,” the fourth song on the concise The Off-Season. “If you broke and clownin’ a millionaire, the joke is on you,” Cole asserts. However, it looks like plenty of listeners disagree, turning “Noname” into a trending topic as they revisit the debate, which Noname herself commented on just a few days ago.

While “Applying Pressure” is seeing its share of attention, fans also expressed fascination at “Let Go My Hand,” on which Cole confirms the rumored scuffle between himself and Diddy in 2013… right before inviting the man himself to close out the track with one of his trademark prayers.

The Off-Season is out now via Dreamville Records and Roc Nation. Get it here.