Things got heated up between Joy Behar and Meghan McCain on Monday morning’s “The View”.
24.06.2020 - 20:23 / hollywoodlife.com
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.
Things got heated up between Joy Behar and Meghan McCain on Monday morning’s “The View”.
Meghan McCain is not holding back her thoughts on Kanye West‘s potential run for President in 2020.
Also Read: Judge Temporarily Blocks Mary Trump's Tell-All Book About President and FamilyBolton’s book was published on June 23 after facing a volley of litigation from the Trump administration and the Department of Justice, which sought to block the publication of the book over concerns that it contained classified information.The former national security adviser’s memoir joins a number of other books written by current and former Trump administration officials, including an anonymous senior
In a new rant she shared on her IG account, Leah McSweeney seemed to throw some shade at her Real Housewives of New York co-star Ramona Singer again! As fans of the show know, the two are not on the best terms and that does not seem like it’s changed. While Leah did not name drop her nemesis, it was not that difficult to link what she said on IG Stories to Ramona.
Call it the Battle of the Bolton. Or Maybe Bolton Squared. Either way, on Wednesday night (June 24), The Late Show invited crooner Michael Bolton on to sing excerpts from the new White House tell-all The Room Where It Happened by former National Security Advisor John Bolton and the results were... hilarious. But also terrifying.
Michael Bolton.The joke is exactly what it sounds like — a fake trailer for the “exclusive audiobook” of John Bolton’s book, “also sung by Bolton… Michael Bolton,” the narrator of the clip tells us. Cue up the very real and very excellent voice of Michael, singing along to some of the more well-reported details from the book set to smooth rock music.
Former Trump Administration National Security Advisor John Bolton has been making headlines with his just-released tell-all The Room Where It Happened, spilling all manner of salacious details about the the alleged illegal and unethical conduct that led to the president’s impeachment.
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.
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.
Will Thorne Staff WriterThe Sunday night ratings race was won not by a game show or a summer series, but by ABC News’ interview of Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton.The interview, which comes amid the Trump’s failed attempts to block Bolton from publishing a book on his experience working under the current President, scored a 0.7 rating among adults 18-49 and drew 6.1 million total viewers, placing it among the most-watched programming of the broadcast summer to date.
John Bolton'smemoirofficially comes out Tuesday after surviving a security review and alegal challengefrom the Justice Department. But over the weekend, it was available in ways even his publisher is hoping to prevent.
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
NEW YORK -- John Bolton's memoir officially comes out Tuesday after surviving a security review and a legal challenge from the Justice Department. But over the weekend, it was available in ways even his publisher is hoping to prevent.
12 Years A Slave director said the race imbalance in the industries was “blindingly, obviously wrong”.Writing in this weekend’s Observer, McQueen called for the fast-tracking of BAME trainees within the film and television industries.“Yes, I’m fed up,” McQueen wrote. “I don’t want to hear anyone say, ‘Oh yes, it’s terrible’ ever again.
Also Read: John Bolton Says Trump 'Not Fit for Office,' Lacks Competence to Perform Job (Video)Excerpts of the book, which is scheduled for a June 23 release, have already been published and its contents reported upon.“We are grateful that the Court has vindicated the strong First Amendment protections against censorship and prior restraint of publication.
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.
WASHINGTON -- Former national security adviser John Bolton created a “mess" of his own making by moving to publish his book without receiving final authorization that the manuscript was free of classified information, Trump administration lawyers argued Friday in urging a judge to block the book's release.
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.