Swifties over the moon as Taylor Swift performs surprise set of songs for final Eras Tour show of 2023
Taylor Swift surprised the audience at her final Eras Tour show of 2023 with two exclusive songs that she hadn't performed live before
2023-11-27 21:52
Who is Ron Cephas Jones' wife? 'This Is Us' star dead at 66
Ron Cephas Jones died due to complications from a long-standing pulmonary issue
2023-08-20 15:23
Miranda Cosgrove and Mr Beast mock her viral 'curse word' meme in new TikTok
Mr Beast and Miranda Cosgrove have recreated one of the actor's most viral moments from an interview in 2022 where she reveals she "actually does cuss a little". Cosgrove broke the internet after she stumbled revealing her favourite curse word, and in the new TikTok, Mr Beast can be seen begging her to say it again. "Just say it!", he begs, before she eventually gives in, and he delivers a crazy celebration as though his favourite team had just scored. The duo we never knew we needed. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter
2023-10-16 19:27
Selling the OC's Sean Palmieri quits Oppenheim Group after fiery feud with Austin Victoria in Season 3 trailer
After the scorching success of 'Selling the OC' Season 2 in January 2023, Netflix eagerly greenlights a fiery Season 3
2023-11-21 10:58
“Worlds Collide” and “Run,” the First Music to Be Released From The Flash (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack), Now Available From WaterTower Music
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 12, 2023--
2023-05-12 22:16
Tristan Tate urges Ukraine to 'surrender' as he criticizes involvement of women and children in war, trolls label him 'coward'
In a prior instance, Tristan Tate vehemently opposed the idea of women taking part in armed conflicts
2023-10-06 12:57
'It was a massive war movie': Golda director Guy Nattiv made drastic changes to the story
Guy Nattiv has revealed that his biopic 'Golda' was initially supposed to be a "massive war movie".
2023-09-03 15:28
Houston rapper Big Pokey dies after collapsing on stage
Rapper Big Pokey has died at the age of 45 after collapsing on stage in Texas.
2023-06-20 11:26
Hollywood actor and writer strikes have broad support among Americans, AP-NORC poll shows
A new poll shows that Americans are much more sympathetic to Hollywood's striking writers and actors then they are to the studios on the other side of the table
2023-09-22 12:15
Olivia Dunne shines in dazzling black attire for exclusive magazine debut, fans say 'THIS IS WILD'
The LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne stuns in captivating black attire, winning hearts in her Elle magazine debut
2023-07-30 17:52
PaddleSmash on 'Shark Tank': What is the cost and how to buy unique backyard game
PaddleSmash is a new outdoor game that combines the best elements of Pickleball and Roundnet
2023-10-21 07:21
Russell Brand dubbed 'frappucino Neil Oliver' for spreading Maui conspiracies
Comedian turned commentator Russell Brand has weighed in on the ongoing wildfires in Maui, Hawaii, flouting conspiracy theories in his usual fast-paced, flamboyant style which are so outlandish, that he’s being compared to GB News anti-vaxxer Neil Oliver. Brand, who’s switched appearances on comedy films such as Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Get Him to the Greek for his Stay Free podcast in recent years, uploaded a video to his six million subscriber strong YouTube channel on Thursday with the title, “Something Doesn’t Seem Right”. As the baseless conspiracy theory that the devastating crisis on the US island was not aided by climate change but rather a ‘space laser’ continue to spread online, Brand jumped in and dismissed those rightly questioning such a nonsensical argument. “Now, some people would say, ‘Oh, that’s dangerous misinformation – that should be shut down.’ I think the opposite. “Discuss it, look at it, investigate it. Either it’s true or it’s not true, we can decide for ourselves, let’s not get excited,” he says. We have, Russell – that’s kind of what journalists do for a job… Towards the end of the almost 23-minute-long video, Brand turns to the conspiracy that the fires in Hawaii were “started deliberately to benefit rich elites” such as the investment management company and financial services provider BlackRock. He continues: “Now look at the Ukraine war. Ukraine have already done a deal with BlackRock to rebuild their nation using BlackRock investment. “If you apply that mentality to this situation, if BlackRock end up benefitting from the fires in Hawaii, then the conspiracy is almost a redundant detail. Did they start it? Didn’t they start it? “Is it inevitable that the suffering of ordinary people leads to the benefit of rich elites and massive organisations like BlackRock and billionaires across the globe and why is Bill Gates buying all this agricultural land when he’s not a farmer?” Yes, that’s one whole sentence. “Doesn’t it all feel like a kind of macro-conspiracy that’s so diffuse, institutional, oddly abstracted and bureaucratically opaque, that sometimes you just want to simplify it into ‘they started this fire! They started it with a laser from space!’ “And whether it’s true or not, it not only feels true, in terms of its results it is kind of true. There is a conspiracy to keep you poor and benefit rich elites,” he vented, adding that the “next time there’s a pandemic” the elite are “gonna control you more”. In other news, thesauruses are in short supply around the world. And it’s Brand’s ranting about a shadowy elite and government control during a pandemic which has likely led to social media users on Twitter/X branding Brand (ha) a “frappucino Neil Oliver”, the GB News host who has long peddled conspiracy theories about vaccines and an impending “one-world government”. Back in August 2021 he said he’d happily catch Covid – y’know, an actually deadly virus – “for the sake of freedom”, just so you know the kind of dangerous nonsense we’re dealing with here. Others, however, have pointed out to user Matthew Dimitri – who shared a clip of Brand on X – that Brand was actually making an argument about elites and organisations benefitting from natural disasters like the one in Hawaii, and that Dimitri has “misrepresented” Brand: Except instead of rejecting the laser conspiracy theory outright, remember, Brand said he ‘thinks the opposite’ and that instead we should “discuss it, look at it [and] investigate it”, which isn’t a complete dismissal of the idea. He doesn’t really give a definitive answer on whether the claim is true or not, but rather suggests that the result of the whole ‘is it or isn’t it’ debate is more important, as if it’s part of a broader conspiracy or distraction “to keep you poor and benefit rich elites”. Perhaps a far more compelling argument around all this is that Brand should learn to keep things succinct, for the benefit of everyone... Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-08-19 00:28
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