A fan of love! Ever since Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez decided to give dating another try, Matt Damon has been one of their biggest fans.
02.08.2021 - 15:11 / metroweekly.com
Sunday Times, Damon seemed to suggest he was comfortable using “faggot” despite it being a homophobic slur.“The word that my daughter calls the ‘f-slur for a homosexual’ was commonly used when I was a kid, with a different application,” Damon, 50, said.“I made a joke, months ago, and got a treatise from my daughter,” the Stillwater star said. “She left the table.
A fan of love! Ever since Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez decided to give dating another try, Matt Damon has been one of their biggest fans.
Jenelle Riley Deputy Awards, Features EditorIn his new film “Stillwater,” co-writer/director Tom McCarthy wanted to present the image of an American hero – and then turn it on its head.
Whoopi Goldberg, Matt Damon, Mia Farrow, Liam Neeson, Diane Keaton, Mark Hamill, Nick Nolte and George Takei are part of an an all-star lineup of SAG-AFTRA members who have endorsed Matthew Modine for president of the union, and Joely Fisher, his running mate, for secretary-treasurer.
Matt Damon is making a very… interesting attempt to walk back his comments on homophobia.
“retire[d] the f-slur” after getting told off by his daughter.In a interview published by The Sunday Times, Damon related an incident months ago when he made a joke using what his daughter described as “the f-slur for a homosexual”. His daughter criticised him for using it and wrote “a very long, beautiful treatise on how that word is dangerous”.
Matt Damon is responding to backlash he received over the weekend after he says remarks from an interview were taken out of context. The "Stillwater" actor, 50, clarified an idea that he had only just stopped using the "f-slur" after he was admonished by one of his daughters.
On Monday, Matt Damon tried to address a story he allegedly told a reporter, published in the Sunday Times of London this weekend, which involved the use of a pejorative term for gay people.
Matt Damon, 50, is defending himself after talking about how he stopped using the “f-slur for a homosexual” only months ago in a recent interview. The actor clarified the remarks he made to the U.K’s Sunday Times, which was published over the weekend, in a statement that was obtained by The Hollywood Reporter.
Matt Damon is sharing his support for the LGBTQ+ community in the wake of backlash over a recent interview in which he mentioned the “f-slur” while discussing the importance of using the right language in today’s landscape.
Retiring a slur? In a new interview, Matt Damon explained that he recently stopped chose to stop using a derogatory slur after one of his daughters became upset with him.
Matt Damon’s title as the nation’s favourite adopted son is in jeopardy as he admits that he had to be told to stop using a gay slur by his child and Irish Twitter is furious.
Matt Damon revealed that he only recently stopped using what he calls "the f-slur for homosexual" people at the behest of one of his daughters. The "Stillwater'' actor sat down for an interview with The Sunday Times where he discussed changes in modern masculinity and what that means for him as an actor and public figure. He revealed that he used the slur in front of his daughter mere months ago, prompting her to get offended and leave the room. "She left the table.
Video: Matt Damon reveals what his oldest daughter thought of his new movie 'Stillwater' (USA TODAY)'Good Morning America's' Robin Roberts hosting new Disney+ showIdris Elba teams with Margot Robbie in James Gunn's 'The Suicide Squad'Emily Blunt tells Dwayne Johnson he 'sinks like a rock' trying to swim in 'Jungle Cruise'Mister Rogers' neighborhood is expanding with 'Donkey Hodie'Will Smith plays Venus and Serena Williams' father in 'King Richard' filmOscar-nominated actor Danny Aiello, known
Matt Damon is facing criticism after revealing that he just recently stopped using an offensive anti-LGBTQ slur. The change came, he said, after he was implored by one of his daughters to stop.The backlash began after the star gave a lengthy interview with U.K.'s over the weekend.
Owen Gleiberman Chief Film CriticAs an actor, Matt Damon has always had two sides: the light and the dark, the noble and the furtive, the boyishly winning and the ominously coldhearted. Early in his career, when he was that cute kid with the shiny hair and the big grin, he played characters who had a troubled layer or two, like the hero of “Good Will Hunting” (1997), but mostly he projected a decency that was unmistakable.
William Earl Amanda Knox, an American exchange student who spent nearly four years in Italian prison for the 2007 murder of her roommate Meredith Kercher before being acquitted in 2015, was the inspiration for the just-released “Stillwater,” starring Matt Damon and directed and co-written by Tom McCarthy.Although “Stillwater” spins a fictitious story, McCarthy has not been shy about name-checking Knox during the press cycle, and a Vanity Fair interview with her name in the headline inspired
Amanda Knox is sharing her thoughts on Matt Damon‘s new movie, Stillwater.