Three of Neil Young songs were used at Donald Trump’s Mount Rushmore event and Young is not okay with it.
17.06.2020 - 01:01 / deadline.com
Ted Johnson John Bolton, Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, is days away from publishing his book and already has taped an exclusive interview with ABC News.But on Tuesday, the Justice Department filed a lawsuit against Bolton, seeking to at least temporarily halt the release of his memoir, The Room Where It Happened, which, according to publicity surrounding it, will provide a pretty scathing account of the way that President Donald Trump conducts his foreign policy.The crux of
.Three of Neil Young songs were used at Donald Trump’s Mount Rushmore event and Young is not okay with it.
Ted Johnson Neil Young objected to the use of his music in the prelude to President Donald Trump’s event at the base of Mount Rushmore, siding with Lakota Sioux who have long claimed the land as their own in violation of an 1868 treaty with the U.S.
President Donald Trump plans to be even more aggressive in the near future when it comes to race relations in this country. With an economy in shambles, unrest over racism and police brutality, and a huge spike in coronavirus cases, Trump is now trailing his presumptive Democratic opponent in the November election, former Vice President Joe Biden, in the polls.
The Rolling Stones have declared they are taking ‘further steps’ to prevent Donald Trump from using their music at his Presidential campaign rallies.The U.S. leader has ignored the previous cease-and-desist letters from the rockers, over the use of songs by the group, led by Mick Jagger.
Donald Trump’s campaign organizers are being threatened with a lawsuit once again. The president of the United States has been hit with several cease and desist orders since he first announced he was going to run for the presidency back in 2016.
The Rolling Stones are taking “further steps” to prevent Donald Trump from using their music at his Presidential campaign rallies.
It’s just so simple. Wearing a face mask has been proven to prevent the spread and transmission of the coronavirus.
John Bolton has faced brutal criticism for deciding to publish a book about Donald Trump‘s Ukraine scandal, rather than testifying in his impeachment trial, but he was met with a new controversy on The View. Co-host Meghan McCain, 35, derided the former National Security Advisor for calling his tell-all The Room Where It Happened, which is almost exactly the name of one of the most famous songs from the Broadway musical Hamilton.
Tom Tapp Deputy Managing EditorIn a clip released from tonight’s Late Show, host Stephen Colbert relentlessly questions former Trump national security advisor John Bolton about the president.
Ted Johnson Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany was pressed by reporters on Monday on why President Donald Trump, at his Tulsa rally, used the offensive phrase “kung flu” to describe the coronavirus.In one extended exchange, CBS News White House correspondent Weijia Jiang repeatedly asked McEnany why Trump used the terminology.She asked, “Last July, President Trump declared himself the least racist person there is…Why does he use racist phrases like ‘kung flu'”?“The president doesn’t,” McEnany
Dino-Ray Ramos Associate Editor/ReporterABC News’ exclusive interview with John Bolton, the former National Security Advisor to President Donald Trump, topped Sunday night’s ratings, delivering a 0.7 in the adults 18-49 demographic and 6.14 million viewers.
Ted Johnson ABC News devoted a primetime hour to an exclusive interview with John Bolton, Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, and they could not have asked for a better way of promoting the sit-down.It was tied to the pending release of Bolton’s book The Room Where It Happened, chalk full of scorching anecdotes about his former boss.Just on Saturday, a federal judge ruled against the administration’s effort to stop the book’s release this week, while chiding Bolton for not
Ted Johnson A federal judge has rejected a Justice Department effort to prevent the release of the memoir from Donald Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton.But U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth also was highly critical of the way that Bolton went about submitting his book for review and then went ahead and published it before obtaining a written clearance.Bolton “has gambled with the national security of the United States,” Lamberth wrote.
Ted Johnson A federal judge did not say when he would decide whether to grant the Trump administration’s move to block the release of former national security adviser John Bolton’s new book, but he did recognize a reality: The Room Where It Happened is already out there.“The horse, as we used to say in Texas, seems to be out of the barn,” U.S.
sued Bolton on Tuesday, arguing that Bolton breached his contractual and fiduciary obligations by revealing classified information in his upcoming book.The book, “The Room Where It Happened,” is scheduled to be published on June 23 from Simon & Schuster.
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerJohn Bolton, described as a full-time “Got Milk” ad by Trevor Noah, has a new book expected to be out soon, The Room Where It Happened. No, it’s not an homage to the musical Hamilton, which has a song of roughly the same name.
Ted Johnson A federal judge scheduled a hearing for early Friday afternoon on the Justice Department’s effort to obtain an emergency order to halt the release of John Bolton’s memoir, even though a number of journalists already have obtained the book and reported on some of its explosive claims about Donald Trump’s White House.U.S. District Judge Royce C.