Dan Aykroyd doesn’t see any need to offend people.
13.10.2021 - 22:41 / foxnews.com
Jason Alexander recently avoided a question about cancel culture. The "Seinfeld" star, 62, refused to answer a photographer when asked if the jokes in the sitcom would still be popular today given the changes happening in society. "This I don't do," Alexander said.
"Anything but that." While Alexander didn't want to touch on the controversial topic, his "Seinfeld" co-star and the show's co-creator, Jerry Seinfeld, said back in 2015 that "political correctness" is hurting comedy. ESPN radio host
.Dan Aykroyd doesn’t see any need to offend people.
Madonna has never been shy about speaking her mind. In a new interview with playwright Jeremy O.
Madonna has said that there’s “no debate or discussion” over vaccines thanks to the fear permeated by “cancel culture”.The singer said in a new interview that the vaccines debate, which includes jabs for COVID, is stilted due to what she believes is fear for being reprimanded by having certain opinions.Asked by playwright Jeremy O Harris for V Magazine where peace exists in a world affected by a pandemic, Madonna replied: “It’s interesting because peace is subjective.
Being ambitious is just part of the game for Madonna.
Succession's Brian Cox has won a battle to say 'faggot' on the show and slammed 'cancel culture' in an interview centred around his candid new memoir and the fate of Logan Roy.
Caitlyn Jenner is the latest celebrity to speak out about those controversial Dave Chappelle remarks.
Olivia Jade is still trying to make the influencer thing happen.
BURBANK, Calif. -- Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason jr.
Ellen DeGeneres from 1997 to 2000 essentially got her blacklisted from Hollywood for a while. In a new interview with Page Six, she calls herself "patient zero in cancel culture.""This wasn't a long-term love affair," Anne said of the romance.
Dr. Dre's ex-wife, Nicole Young, kept mum when asked about reportedly serving the music producer with divorce docs while he was attending his grandmother's burial. The 51-year-old, who shares two kids with the Beats Electronics co-founder, was recently spotted leaving a drug store in Malibu, California with a bodyguard.
As cancel culture becomes more and more ubiquitous in show business, comedians are finding it particularly difficult to ignore. When one’s profession is to take the stage to shake up and lambaste pop culture and society, the odds that a joke or train of thought will venture into cancelable territory shoots up beyond even the most outspoken of celebrities.
Director David Zucker (Airplane!, Naked Gun) has attacked the problems of cancel culture, saying he could only make his Airplane! film today without the jokes.
Joan Collins said she doesn’t engage in social media for fear of cancel culture. The "Dynasty" actress spoke with The Sunday Times where she discussed why she does not engage online, noting that she steers clear of any and all online discourse for fear that her words will be misconstrued or taken out of context. "I don’t want to engage in any way, shape or form with these morons," she stated. However, that doesn’t mean the 88-year-old doesn’t have opinions.
Joan Collins isn’t going to let herself be censored.
Dave Chappelle and Netflix are facing intense backlash for the derogatory comments toward the LGBTQ+ community made during the comedian's latest comedy special, and the 48-year-old is speaking out about it. He's speaking out about «cancel culture,» that is, not the actual criticism aimed at his material. According to multiple reports, when Chappelle took the stage at a sold-out show at L.A.'s Hollywood Bowl on Thursday night, he reiterated his special's messages of kindness and love, and made