Los Angeles is slowly getting back to normal.
01.06.2020 - 05:37 / justjared.com
Richard Madden & Froy Gutierrez are showing their support at the Black Lives Matter protest.
Fans were quick to notice that the 33-year-old Rocketman actor and the 22-year-old Teen Wolf actor are protesting together on Sunday (May 31) in Los Angeles.
Both Richard and Froy took to Instagram to share solo photos of themselves at the protest, and fans pointed out that the same guy wearing an all black outfit with a black bandana over his face is in both of Richard and Froy‘s pictures.
Earlier this
Los Angeles is slowly getting back to normal.
Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez joined thousands of protesters at a Black Lives Matter rally in Los Angeles on Sunday (June 7, 2020), armed with posters made by her kids.The On the Floor hitmaker and her fiance were among the stars demanding justice for George Floyd, almost two weeks after the African-American man was killed at the hands of a white police officer in Minnesota.J.Lo documented their participation on Instagram, and revealed she had recruited her 12-year-old twins, Max and Emme,
As protests continue to rise across the nation demanding justice for George Floyd and the entire Black Lives Matter movement, YG joined the Los Angeles demonstrations over the weekend--but Chika is calling him out for misusing his platform.
his arrest. The 27-year-old star wasn't alone as he attended a Black Lives Matter protest in Los Angeles on Sunday. Sprouse was joined by model Kaia Gerber, actress Margaret Qualley, his co-star, Madelaine Petsch, and actress Eiza Gonzalez.
Sophie Turner gave an online critic a brief lecture after she shared images of herself and husband Joe Jonas at a protest against police brutality in Los Angeles. Like many celebrities, the “Game of Thrones” star, 24, took to Twitter on Sunday to share an image of herself joining protesters calling for police reform in the wake of the death of George Floyd, who died in police custody in Minneapolis, Minn., after an officer knelt on his neck for more than eight minutes.
Ellen Pompeo wears an all white look while taking part in a protest in Los Angeles on Wednesday afternoon (June 3).
Twins John and Edward Grimes, better known by their stage name Jedward, have shown their support behind the Black Lives Matter movement by joining a protest in Los Angeles, America.The march was in response to the wrongful killing of George Floyd, 46, an unarmed black man who was arrested, pinned to the ground and died after a policeman kneeled on his neck in Minneapolis, Minnesota in the US.The Irish pop stars, 28, shared several videos on their Twitter account where they could be seen marching
Jaime King really put herself on the line protesting against the police.
Jaime King revealed she was arrested while protesting outside the Los Angeles mayor’s home. The star joined more than 1,000 who gathered outside Mayor Eric Garcetti’s residence in Hancock Park on Tuesday to demand that the Los Angeles Police Department undergo systemic changes in the wake of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minn.The “Sin City” actress took to Twitter to reveal that she was arrested while protesting peacefully.
Fiona Apple has joined the ongoing protests in Los Angeles to support justice for George Floyd, who was murdered at the hands of four Minnesota police officers.One officer, Derek Chauvin, has been arrested and charged with third degree murder and second degree manslaughter, but the three others on the scene have been fired but not yet taken into custody."Cops: Don't be white chauvinists.
Ariana Grande left quarantine and joined a Black Lives Matter protest in Beverly Hills and West Hollywood on Saturday to advocate for an end to racial violence and police brutality after the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer.
2020 has been an unforgiving year, what with the coronavirus pandemic claiming more than 300,000 lives and counting. Moreover, the US is currently on an uproar after the death of African American, George Floyd, who died due to police violence.
On May 30, thousands of people on Pan Pacific Park in Los Angeles, California. Under the hot sun, the protestors stood still, straining to hear the speakers on stage read off name after name.