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Killer Mike Pleads With Fellow Citizens Of Atlanta To Not ‘Burn Your Own House Down’

Tensions have been running high throughout the country following the death of George Floyd in Minnesota on Monday. Protests began in Minnesota early last week and have spread throughout the nation, as citizens expressed their fury as well as solidarity with each other. Many protests in various cities have turned violent, including in Atlanta, which prompted one of its most prominent citizens, Killer Mike, to plead with them to bring an end to the destruction during their protests.

Joining Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and T.I. for a press conference during the protests, Killer Mike began by expressing his feelings on the death of George Floyd. “I’m mad as hell,” he said. “I woke up wanting to see the world burn yesterday, because I’m tired of seeing black men die.” Speaking about Derek Chauvin, the officer who knelt on George Floyd’s neck, Killer Mike said, “He casually put his knee on a human being’s neck for nine minutes as he died like a zebra in the clutch of a lion’s jaw.”

“We don’t want to see one officer charged, we want to see four officers prosecuted and sentenced. We don’t want to see targets burning, we want to see the system that sets up for systemic racism burnt to the ground,” Killer Mike said later in his speech. Despite his outrage, Mike expressed disagreement with the approach of protestors and their violence.

“I am duty-bound to be here to simply say: That it is your duty not to burn your own house down for anger with an enemy,” he said. “It is your duty to fortify your own house, so that you may be a house of refuge in times of organization.” Killer Mike would also remind viewers that “Atlanta is not perfect. But we are a lot better than we were and we are a lot better than a lot of cities are.”

You can watch Killer Mike’s speech in the video above.

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A Teen Recorded Herself Coming Out To Her Mom, And Her Reaction Is Making My Heart Swell


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Jimmy Kimmel Begs America To Vote Trump ‘Out Already’ In An Emotional Monologue About George Floyd

The last week was a historic one in America, filled with tragedy and rage. The death of George Floyd in Minneapolis has sparked protests across the nation, leading to clashes with police that have in many cities turned violent. No one’s in a laughing mood, certainly not Jimmy Kimmel. On Friday’s episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the late night host joined a host of other celebrities, from Charles Barkley to Lil Wayne to Taylor Swift, using his platform not to distract viewers from what’s really happening but to focus on it directly.

Kimmel, who’s no stranger to making progressive pleas, spoke about how the nation tends to react to acts of police brutality in a circular manner:

Unfortunately, this is the loop we get stuck in: It goes from ‘It isn’t right to kill an unarmed man’ to ‘Well, it also isn’t right to loot and set fires and attack the police,’ to ‘But the police are attacking us, over and over, and nothing changes’ to ‘Well, that needs to be settled by the law’ to ‘But an officer of the law just killed another man,’ and so on.

The protests in response to Floyd’s death have been going on all week, starting in the South Side of Minneapolis and spreading to places like New York City, Atlanta, and elsewhere. Late Wednesday night, as riots engulfed Minneapolis, President Donald J. Trump took to Twitter, calling the protesters “thugs” and threatening that ”when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

“Our disgusting excuse for a president, Mr. Tough Guy, Donny Bonespurs, decides I know what I’ll do: I’ll makes this worse,” Kimme said. “Our president is ordering the military to shoot Americans, specifically black Americans.” He noted that Trump tried to walk it back, claiming he wasn’t threatening lives, but Kimmel wasn’t having it. “That sad thing about how much he lies is he’s not even good at it.”

Kimmel then addressed those who make up the bulk of Trump’s base:

I especially want to pose this question to older people who’ve seen this before in this country, who’ve lived this nightmare of race riots already in the ‘60s and ‘70s, ‘80s, now: Is this who you want leading us, a president who clearly and intentionally inflames violence in the middle of a riot to show how tough he is? A commander in chief who threatens to put members of our military, our National Guardsmen and -women, in the position of having to shoot a fellow American on sight? I don’t care what you are — right, left or Republican, Democrat, I can’t imagine that there are many of us who want that. Enough is enough, we’ve got to vote this guy out already.

Kimmel ended his monologue by giving his platform to someone else. He played, in its entirety, a viral video by the Nashville actor Tyler Merritt, in which he gives a monologue entitled “Before You Call the Cops.” In it, Merritt, in a close-up against a black background, tells viewers all about him: that he’s a Christian who teaches Sunday school, that he’s done goat yoga, that he knows N.W.A.’s album Straight Outta Compton as well as he knows the musical Oklahoma!, that he hates bananas. “Does any of this really matter?” Merritt then asks. “No. I just wanted you to get to know me better, before you call the cops.”

You can watch Kimmel’s monologue in the video above.

(Via Deadline)

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Comedian Mo Mandel Is Trying To Rehab The Image Of American Small Towns

Mo Mandel’s new special on Discovery, Small Town Throwdown (which you can stream on the Discovery app and here) gave me pause. It’s brim-full of charming reminders to not judge a book by its cover while the comic gets hands on to free towns from the infamy of being saddled with a label like “drunkest” or “most boring.” There’s nothing at all wrong with the special, but it did cause me to wonder if I had, in my long career, written anything that veered into the space of municipal shit-talking. As best as I can tell, I think I’m clear. Though, as I confessed to Mandel when we spoke recently and briefly made it about me, one of the first things I ever wrote online was a lazy absentee article about North Conway, New Hampshire where I confused the words naturist and naturalist, quite possibly sending a bunch of nudists to the quaint New England town.

I’ve been to North Conway since and can report that while there’s a relaxing, scenic train ride and welcoming outlet center, I didn’t see one bare-ass in my travels. And that’s the full point of Mandel’s special: going to small towns like Appleton, Wisconsin (allegedly the drunkest) and Lubbock, Texas (allegedly the most boring) to see if he spots their much-publicized bare-ass or if they offer a more nuanced, label defying experience (spoiler alert: they do).

While Mandel (who created Comedy Knockout on truTV, has an Amazon special, and who has appeared on Conan) lives in Los Angeles now due to the demands of his job as a comedian and screenwriter, he doesn’t dig the “anonymity” of it, craving the communal bonds that he once knew. Not to sound like a Mellencamp lyric, but, he was born in a small town, his parents still live in that small town, and he’s seen it all before… when it comes to rural living and flung aspersions. Growing up in Booneville, California around about 699 other people, Mandel lived through the jokes about living in “The Boonies” and noticed how the people in the adjoining town would write off him and his as “hicks.” This despite being only nominally bigger. It’s a territorialistic quirk he’s seen all over on the road as a comic for more than 15 years. “Springfield’s got its Shelbyville. Everywhere’s got that,” says Mandel. But throwing a few elbows at the town next door is one thing. Taking far away heat from strangers is another.

“I read this article that came out three years ago in a big national newspaper where the reporter had written that this town in Minnesota was the worst town to live in in America. Red Lake,” recalls Mandel when I ask about the show’s DNA. “The town got really pissed off because it turned out the reporter had never been there. He was just throwing out all these statistics. So they demanded that this reporter come to visit. And when he showed up, he not only wrote a retraction, he loved it so much he actually moved there and still lives there to this day. He’s written a book about it.”

The nature of the media beast means you’re going to see pieces like the above referenced and aggregation of pieces like that. (Full disclosure: in 2016, we apparently wrote about the article about the drunkest town in America that sparked Mandel’s journey to Appleton.) People love to read that stuff. I’m looking to move and I’m all about dumb “best place to live” articles that have zero basis in local understanding.

Discovery

In a perfect world, writers would slip and slide into a bone-chillingly cold lake (Appleton) or join the rodeo (Lubbock) in the towns they’re writing about or talking about, as Mandel does (with vigor!) in the special with the help (and to the delight) of the folks whose towns he’s trying to redefine. If nothing else, it would make for better content with the ability to say something more tangible about the color and shape of the experience. And everyone knows that. I don’t know a single writer who wouldn’t rather put boots on the ground before putting finger to keyboard. But alas, it’s not a perfect world so those kinds of articles exist, coloring public perception. It’s part of the reason why Mandel is also teaming with USA Today (who has also run those kinds of articles, it should be said) to write about his experience in Appleton and Lubbock and, he hopes, supplant the other content when it comes to search results that people might encounter on a road trip or when looking up these towns.

If you’re looking for a comp for the special before committing to the hour runtime, WHY!? What else do you have going on right now? But also, Dirty Jobs feels like a fit. In that show, the ever-likable Mike Rowe committed to doing the work that too few people think about, revealing the spirit of a country of no-bullshit hard laborers who get stuff done and occasionally have some fun doing it. A spirit adjacent to the one fully on display in Small Town Throwdown. These shows are, in essence, microscopes instead of telescopes, demanding just a bit more attention than some dumb article because they bring more clarity than blur.

Anthony Bourdain is another figure who comes to mind when thinking about Mandel’s special — a hero of his and a wit who luxuriated in new experiences and the intimacy of sitting with someone and getting just a peek into who they are and what fires their life. Something Mandel also attempts, joking with locals while he keeps a wide-open mind about what they feel defines their towns. And isn’t that a devastatingly missed thing right now? Discovering strangers, new places, and things. I miss that more than getting a haircut (my self-administered fauxhawks are lit) or going shopping.

It’s hard to not look at this special through the COVID lense. Mandel says he’s received calls and emails since it debuted with people pitching new destinations (and also inviting him back to Appleton and Lubbock), but until things can more widely and safely open up he’s obviously not going to be able to have the kind of shoulder to shoulder experiences that pump blood into his mission to show off the personality of and within these places. Assuming, of course, that Discovery feels like there’s value in future editions. And I think there is. Especially in these fractious times.

“It’s nice to see a show about different parts of America with different kinds of people,” Mandel says. “And they’re just talking about regular life stuff, about loving their town, about what they do for fun. And not having to get involved in all the other bullshit that this country has gotten sidetracked about, I feel, over the last however many years, and losing sight of the commonality of what it’s like just to exist and be alive and live in a place, and respect your neighbors.”

Mandel says all this near the end of our talk, and he’s damn right. In fact, I’m so inspired by his words in the moment that I… get sidetracked by political bullshit, remarking that it’s nice to not be distracted by the site of red hats in rural America. Which I mean as praise for the apolitical nature of the show but which I now feel sounds smug and exclusionary — the kind of big city thinkybrain nonsense that this show is pushing back on (I live in the suburbs, but aspire to be a big city elite!) And this is my favorite part of my time with Mandel — he’s post-political in a prescriptive way when it comes to the mission statement of this special.

“Even if there is a red hat to be seen, that’s fine. We don’t want to talk about politics,” he responds. “I could be sitting there talking to a guy in a red hat. He could be wearing whatever hat, and as long as he is talking about what kind of Mac and Cheese burns a hole in your mouth and what they like to do on the weekend, that’s great. That’s 99% of what makes us human beings, regardless of our political affiliation.”

Let’s forget dumb divide-y labels and just eat fiery mac and cheese together for fifteen minutes is a unique pitch and one a lot of people might reject right now when all we can see are red hats and bumper stickers… rivals, villains, enemies. But seeing people as neighbors and remembering our commonality — even while the most universally affecting thing of our lives somehow gets used to press on our fractures — feels like… a start?

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It Took Four Days To Arrest The Officer Who Used A Knee Chokehold On George Floyd. Delays Are Built Into Investigations Against Cops.


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Black Influencers Are Calling On Popular Brands To Address The Deaths Of Unarmed Black People At The Hands Of Police


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47 Cleaning Basics You Should Probably Know By Now

I don’t blame you if you bookmark this now…and clean later.


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25 British Tweets That Made Us Laugh Out Loud This Week

“In a massive vindication of my diet, my trousers fell down outside the Co-op.”


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