“Gilmore Girls” star David Sutcliffe took to Twitter over the weekend to dispel the rumors that he had been involved in the Capitol riots earlier this month, which left five people, including a Capitol police officer dead.
10.01.2021 - 22:05 / hollywoodreporter.com
Google has suspended the social networking app Parler from its Google Play store after the riots attempting to interrupt the peaceful transfer of power in the U.S. on Wednesday.
The ban went into effect Friday. Parler, which is popular among Trump supporters, extremists and conservatives, will not be removed from existing users' phones as part of the Google ban and will still be available to download on other Android app stores and on the web.
“Gilmore Girls” star David Sutcliffe took to Twitter over the weekend to dispel the rumors that he had been involved in the Capitol riots earlier this month, which left five people, including a Capitol police officer dead.
Capitol riots earlier this month, which left five people, including a Capitol police officer dead. After several people tweeted that Sutcliffe, who played Lorelai's ex and Rory's father, Christopher, on the beloved series, attended the riots, the actor retweeted a video of a rioter smoking weed inside the Capitol. «There are rumors circulating that I 'stormed the capital (sic),'» the Canadian-born actor wrote, before adding, «Not true — though I would have been proud to share a smoke with this
We all know Christopher from Gilmore Girls was a deadbeat dad, but did you know he’s maybe even more problematic IRL?
Apple CEO Tim Cook is speaking out against the riot that took place at the U.S. Capitol and defending the decision to remove Parler fromApple's App Store.
Zello, the popular walkie-talkie app, has confirmed the use of the app during last week's Capitol riots and said it would "ban all militia-related channels." "It is with deep sadness and anger that we have discovered evidence of Zello being misused by some individuals while storming the United States Capitol building last week," the company wrote in a statement. The company added it does not have any evidence of how it was used "beyond anecdotal reports of typical social media vanity messaging,"
The New York transportation worker arrested this week, accused of participating in the deadly Capitol riots, was granted bail Wednesday during a federal court hearing. Magistrate Judge Judith McCarthy granted William Pepe a $10,000 bond, ordered him to wear a GPS monitor and imposed a 10 p.m. curfew during his initial court appearance.
saying, “Wait, so are we just not going to mention the fact that Chuck Norris was at the MAGA insurrection?”Wait, so are we just not going to mention the fact that Chuck Norris was at the MAGA insurrection? pic.twitter.com/aIukJpoCmFFans of the “Walker, Texas Ranger” star, however, were unconvinced that it was the actor.“Facial Recognition puts it at 85%, which is a computer’s way of saying, yeah it kind of looks like him, but not really…,” wrote one Twitter user.CBS via Getty ImagesGetty
The secure California-based messaging app Signal may be surging in popularity in the wake of the U.S. Capitol riots, but another messaging app, Telegram, is also seeing a rise in users.
Neil Young has a few things to say about the state of America.
Maren Morris called out the wives of some country singers for “not knowing the difference between racial injustice and Nazis breaching our Capitol” after the riots last week.
Donald Trump‘s days in office, and the credits on his IMDb page, are growing shorter. In the days following the horrific riots at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, fans of the film Home Alone 2: Lost In New York, the 1992 sequel to the film Home Alone (1990), demanded that Donald Trump’s cameo be completely edited out of the film. “Who can get us a Trump free version of Home Alone 2 we can watch next year. I need that re-release,” one person said on Twitter.
Following news of Parler being removed from Apple's App Store on Saturday, Amazon will soon follow suit by dropping thesocial networking app from its web hosting services.
Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., called for a racketeering investigation on Sunday following Amazon, Apple and Google’s decisions to suspend the alternative social media platform Parler after Wednesday's U.S. Capitol riot.
Arnold Schwarzenegger is criticizing President Donald Trump after the Capitol riots. The 73-year-old former governor of California released a video on Sunday slamming both Trump and those who've supported him after supporters of the president violently stormed the Capitol.Before he spoke about Trump, though, Schwarzenegger, a republican, thought back on his childhood in Austria, a country that «suffered the loss of its democracy.»«I grew up in Austria.
Senate Democrats are pushing for two of their Republican colleagues to resign following Wednesday’s riot at the U.S. Capitol building, claiming that their roles in challenging the results of November’s election helped to "undermine" democracy.
Todd Spangler NY Digital EditorParler, an alt-right social network favored by some Trump supporters, is set to go dark Sunday after Amazon’s AWS division said it’s pulling the plug on the service’s hosting account.Amazon informed Parler, which boasts of a hands-off policy to content moderation, of the imminent loss of its web hosting services on Saturday.
George Clooney has a scathing message for Donald Trump.
Twitter on Friday permanently suspended the president’s @realDonaldTrump account, and with it, his direct access to nearly 90 million followers. It was a serious setback at the end of President Trump’s roughest week of his four-year tenure in the White House.
Life happens in moments.Things change in the blink of an eye. Along with the universal gift of self-determination comes the responsibility of decision making. My life changed dramatically with a single step.