50 Cent really doesn’t want his taxes raised.
07.10.2020 - 16:11 / variety.com
Spike Lee still gets recognized on a walk in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.On this sunny September morning, the 63-year-old director and activist is participating in a socially distanced photo shoot on the street outside his production company, 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks. As Lee stands on the corner, a dark Subaru screeches to a halt.
“I’m a huge fan,” proclaims the driver from inside the car. Lee nods, but he’s accustomed to stopping traffic.
50 Cent really doesn’t want his taxes raised.
50 Cent has seemingly endorsed Donald Trump for president after voicing his concerns about proposed tax increases for top earners under Joe Biden.Posting on Instagram, the rapper conceded that “Trump doesn’t like black people” and shared a screenshot from CNBC to illustrate his concern over apparent tax raises.According to the somewhat misleading screenshot, top earners face 62 percent tax in his native New York.“WHAT THE FUCK! (VOTE ForTRUMP) IM OUT.
Tim Gray Senior Vice PresidentDonald Trump continues to invoke references that might be obscure or passé to many of his supporters, and Monday’s tweets included references to “the late, great Bob Hope” and a reply to the New York Times’ Maggie Haberman saying “Every rally is BOFFO.” But what exactly was he trying to say? Boffo is one of the terms coined by Variety to describe anything outstanding, like a hit movie.
Donald Trump is an “overt racist” whose behaviour has emboldened others to reveal their “inner prejudices”.The satirist, who is promoting the sequel to Borat that lands on October 23, also accused the US president of being an “overt fascist”.
Ted Johnson The chairman of the FCC issued a statement on Thursday saying that he plans to move forward with efforts to clarify Section 230, the provision of a 1996 law that gives immunity to internet companies like Facebook and Twitter over the way that they moderate content.Chairman Ajit Pai issued a statement as President Donald Trump and his allies have blasted Twitter and Facebook for steps they have taken to restrict the sharing of a New York Post story on Hunter Biden.
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerLook, up there in the sky – it’s a bird, it’s a plane…it’s President Donald Trump?The New York Times reported Saturday that President Trump floated the idea of a stunt when he left Walter Reed National Military Medical Center after treatment for COVID-19. The plan called for Trump to appear frail when people first saw him.
Chadwick Boseman was a soldier until the very end.
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterIs there anyone on the planet who hasn’t seen Sarah Cooper’s impersonations of Donald Trump? Her viral videos, set to the soundtrack of the president’s own (gibberish) words, have become ubiquitous during the pandemic.
Spike Lee is reflecting on his time working with Chadwick Boseman on. The 63-year-old director covers the New York issue of , and opens up about not knowing the actor was sick prior to his death.
Director Spike Lee is opening up about the tragic death of Chadwick Boseman as he recalls working with the actor on his recent film “Da 5 Bloods”.
Donald Trump is feeling healthy, according to pal Rudy Giuliani.
Ted Johnson Donald Trump did not participate in a call with on COVID-19 support to vulnerable seniors shortly after noon ET on Friday, despite prior indications that he would even after announcing that he tested positive for the coronavirus.The New York Times‘ Maggie Haberman reported that Vice President Mike Pence participated in the call instead.
Donald Trump’s taxes have been exposed, and the late-night hosts had a field day.
David Robb Labor EditorSandra Karas, secretary-treasurer of Actors’ Equity, was surprised Monday morning when she read The New York Times’ article about President Trump’s income taxes – and the $70,000 that he reportedly wrote off as a business expense for hair styling in connection with his TV show The Apprentice. “It made me laugh when I saw it in the paper,” she said.