The group says the video for БЕСИТ / RAGE was accused of breaking Russia’s gay propaganda law
23.01.2020 - 09:31 / hollywoodreporter.com
Democratic presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard filed a defamation lawsuit against Hillary Clinton on Wednesday over an interview in which Clinton appeared to call Gabbard "the favorite of the Russians.”
Gabbard, a Hawaii congresswoman, said in her lawsuit filed in federal court in Manhattan that Clinton's comments in a podcast last year in which she suggested that Gabbard was being groomed by Russia to be a third-party candidate were based on either her own imagination or “extremely dubious
The group says the video for БЕСИТ / RAGE was accused of breaking Russia’s gay propaganda law
1. HomelandSeason 8 debut Claire Danes is back as Carrie Mathison in the final season of the drama. Her body is healing, but her mind is still fractured following months of brutal confinement in a Russian gulag. Meanwhile, the top priority for newly elected President Warner is to end the “forever war” in Afghanistan as he dispatches Saul to engage with the Taliban on a peacekeeping mission. Against medical advice, he asks Carrie to join him.When: Sunday on Crave
It's been eight years since Homeland premiered, and as much has changed in the real world as it has within the Claire Danes-led spy drama. When the show first debuted, 10 years after 9/11, the threat of suicide bombers and fear of the Middle East was the prevalent worry in America. Now, we're far more concerned with Russian hackers and election fraud.
Evgenia Markova has been appointed general director of Roskino, the Russian film promotion organization. She replaces Catherine Mtsitouridze, who left after nine years in the role.
Tyler, The Creator put his eclectic fashion taste on display when it came to Sunday's (Jan. 26) Grammy Awards, which will go down as one of the best nights in the 28-year-old's career. The Golf Wang boss hit the red carpet in a pink bellhop suit like he was fresh off a shift from his second job at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills.
Chinese film production and online group Huanxi Media has cancelled plans for the theatrical release of its blockbuster Chinese New Year film “Lost in Russia” and will release it online for free instead. The move is both a reaction to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak that has caused disruption and panic throughout China, and as the springboard for a new business relationship with online giant Bytedance, owner of wildly popular short video platform Tiktok.