Some of the biggest celebs are coming together to encourage people to wear masks.
29.06.2020 - 21:37 / etonline.com
reported this news late Saturday night.Another report from Brad Turner of the points out that this move is being done in conjunction with Nike, who serves as the athletic wear sponsor of the NBA. In recent years, the NBA and its players have been quick to adopt relevant aesthetics in the face of the social injustice around this country being in the national consciousness, particularly to Black Americans.
Following the death of Eric Garner at the hands of New York police, players like LeBron
.Some of the biggest celebs are coming together to encourage people to wear masks.
With the COVID-19 numbers spiking in the US, it’s clear that people aren’t following some of the most basic preventative measures, including wearing a face mask. Of course, without getting into the political weeds too much, you can probably chalk up a lot of this anti-mask sentiment to the President’s vocal disapproval of masks.
Ted Johnson ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos sat down with Mary Trump, the president’s niece, on Tuesday for what is being billed as an exclusive interview about her new tell-all book.The interview will air on Good Morning America on Wednesday, the network said, and on other news shows.On Monday, a New York judge lifted a restraining order that prevented Trump from discussing Too Much And Never Enough: How My Family Created The World’s Most Dangerous Man.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVEXCLUSIVE: In his first foray into the premium TV marketplace, uber producer Dick Wolf is prepping American Babylon, a period drama series chronicling the epic story of the creation of Las Vegas – the American Dream written in blood and neon. He has partnered on the project with long-time collaborator Tom Thayer, Pulitzer Prize winner and The Pacific writer Robert Schenkkan and The Pacific creator Bruce C.
The coronavirus lockdown has drained Robert De Niro’s finances, the actor’s lawyer has told a court in Manhattan.Speaking via a Skype call on Thursday as he fought to dismiss his estranged wife Grace Hightower’s emergency order to double her monthly American Express card credit limit to US$100,000, the movie star confessed he has been forced to make a series of cutbacks.Hightower’s lawyer told a judge that De Niro had cut her monthly American Express allowance in half, prompting his attorneys to
Robert De Niro is reportedly financially hurting because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Robert De Niro’s lawyer said today that his client would be spending much of his time in upstate New York on account of the coronavirus pandemic. His lawyer made the statement in a court hearing on Thursday.
The coronavirus lockdown has drained Robert De Niro’s finances, the actor’s lawyer has told a court in Manhattan.
The coronavirus pandemic has not only stopped Robert De Niro from working, but he's also taken quite the pay cut this year as well. In court, De Niro's estranged wife Grace Hightower asked for an emergency order for her husband, 76, to raise her monthly American Express credit card limit from $50,000 to $100,000, according to Page Six.
Robert De Niro‘s Nobu restaurant group is under fire after receiving millions of dollars in Paycheck Protection Program loans from the federal government amid the coronavirus pandemic.The upscale chain, which was founded by De Niro, 76, celebrity chef Nobuyuki “Nobu” Matsuhisa and film producer Meir Teper in 1994, has outposts all over the world, including several in the United States.According to government filings released on Monday, July 6, the Nobu brand, which also includes several luxury
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerThe National Basketball Assn. has reached agreement with its players union on 29 social justice statements that players can optionally have on the back of their jerseys instead of their names.The NBA plans to resume its season and playoffs on July 30 in Orlando, Florida.
Pageant, Vice’s music site Noisey declared them “America’s Next Great Rock Band,” and in the days that followed, NPR shined a spotlight on the duo by featuring an advance stream of the record on its website, The New York Times readied a profile, and Rufus Wainwright interviewed them for Billboard.By mid-May, as Hopkins put it, PWR BTTM were canceled.
Also Read: NFL Cancels 2020 Hall of Fame Game, the Kickoff to Preseason Football, Due to CoronavirusThe NFL declined to comment.The league’s increased focus on social justice comes four years after Colin Kaepernick began taking a knee during the national anthem to protest police brutality against minorities.
Peter White Television EditorEXCLUSIVE: Charles Booker, the Democratic senate candidate who narrowly lost to former Marine fighter pilot Amy McGrath in a close race in Kentucky, is set to have his campaign documented by American Relapse and Bernie Blackout director Pat McGee.Booker’s campaign was gaining steam right up until he lost to McGrath earlier this week by a narrow margin.McGee has been embedded with the Booker campaign after the Kentucky House of Representatives member handed him access
Ted Johnson, Erik Pedersen The New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department has upheld a Supreme Court justice’s temporary restraining order against President Donald Trump’s niece Mary Trump.Her book, Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man, will now be subjected to written arguments due to Dutchess County Supreme Court Justice Hal Greenwald within the next week.Robert Trump, the President’s brother, requested a preliminary injunction
lifted a temporary restraining order on Simon & Schuster that previously blocked the publisher from releasing an upcoming tell-all book from the president’s niece, Mary Trump — but the author still remains barred from publishing contents of her book until a court hearing scheduled for next Friday.On Tuesday, a New York Supreme Court judge granted a request for a temporary restraining order against Simon & Schuster and Mary Trump requested by Robert Trump, who said that Mary Trump would be
An African-American Broadway star is proud to be the new owner of an 1820 home that was built by slaves.