If you had both "Aaron Rodgers vs. Jimmy Kimmel feud" and "Jeffrey Epstein conspiracy theories" on your 2024 bingo card, you're off to a pretty good start. On Kimmel's Monday night episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the late night host spent seven minutes (!) bashing the quarterback on-air. Why? Well, for putting his name in conversation with Epstein, the late billionaire and convicted sex offender. It makes for a surprising headline, but for anyone who has been following along, it's just the latest development in a years' long battle between the two men. |
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Ahead of Sunday night's Golden Globes, the star of 'Rustin' and 'The Color Purple' clued us into his red carpet approach: "I'm just there to sip the champagne and dance like no one's watching and have a good time." |
| You work hard. You deserve some nighttime luxury. |
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The first home I remember is the one we lost. It is startling and vivid in my memory, the way that childhood sensations are. The rounded corners on each step of the wooden staircase, on which I bruised my shins. The pink enamel bathtub in my parents' bathroom, where my father once submerged me in scathing purple water to calm a massive outbreak of hives after being bitten by an ant. The rough terracotta tiles of the roof I'd climbed out onto from my bedroom window one evening, to the alarm of the family across the street who spotted me sitting out there calmly in the twilight. We lost this home when I was nine. In hindsight, the signs were clear. |
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From planning to plotting, these notebooks get it done. |
| The writer-director behind the awards-season heavyweight discusses satire, storytelling, and the capitalist systems that inhibit art. |
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So the former president*'s lawyers took their arguments for absolute presidential immunity out for a spin in the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on Tuesday morning. The proceedings lasted about an hour-and-a-quarter, but the arguments died almost instantly, thanks to a judge named Florence Pan, who clearly can see a church by daylight. The crucial moment came when Judge Pan engaged John Sauer, the former president*'s counsel, on the most fundamental basis that could be imagined. Sauer maintained that no president could be brought up on criminal charges involving "official acts" until he was first impeached by the House and convicted in the Senate. |
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