| | MEDIA WINNER: Independent Russian Journalists Who Interviewed Zelensky Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was interviewed over Zoom by independent Russian journalists Tikhon Dzyadko, Mikhail Zygar, Ivan Kolpakov, and Vladimir Soloviev, and it was an eye-opening chat for multiple reasons. CNN senior global affairs analyst Bianna Golodryga, who was born in Moldova and is fluent in Russian, reported on their conversation in a long Twitter thread, providing English translations. (Dzyadko has since tweeted part of the video with English subtitles.) As Golodryga reported, Zelensky started the interview by discussing how Russian dictator Vladimir Putin was not expecting such fierce resistance from the Ukrainians. What followed was a frank discussion of the brutality of Russia's siege of Mariupol, Zelensky's communications with his troops, reports of dead bodies in the streets and Ukrainian children being kidnapped by Russian soldiers, and Zelensky's personal feelings of being "deeply disappointed" in the large number of Russians who voiced support for the war and how he expected this war to result in long-lasting hatred between the people of the two countries. Unsurprisingly, the Kremlin did not look too fondly upon the journalists' interview of Zelensky, who has been a major stumbling block in their propaganda efforts to spin their relentless attacks on civilians as "denazification." CNN's Jim Sciutto tweeted that Moscow's media watchdog Roskomnadzor issued a statement Sunday warning Russian news outlets against rebroadcasting or distributing the interview. The fact that these brave comrades in journalism put it online anyway is a testament to their principles and courage. These reporters participated in the interview and promoted the video on Twitter using their actual names and with their faces unhidden, knowing full well they risked invoking the Kremlin's ire. Bravo, gentlemen. |
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| MEDIA LOSER: The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences With concern over Covid-19 fading and groundbreaking nominees poised to make history, the 94th annual Academy Awards should have been a glitzy celebration of the best of movie magic. Instead, the broadcast dragged on with awkwardly unfunny hosts, a missed opportunity to meaningfully support Ukraine, and any good moments doomed to be overshadowed by The Slap. Will Smith's über-viral strike across Chris Rock's face (more coverage of that in the A-Block, below) is all anyone is talking about, and all anyone is likely to remember from the night's festivities. And that's a real shame for the creative talents behind films like CODA, which won both Best Picture and a historic Best Supporting Actor for deaf actor Troy Kotsur. Some of the Academy's challenges are admittedly out of their control. It's illogical to suggest they could have predicted or prevented Smith's Slap, and this year's nominees came from the second year in a row of movies released with theaters mostly shuttered due to the pandemic. But once again, many Americans haven't seen or perhaps even heard of the films nominated for those shiny golden statuettes, making them unlikely to be interested in tuning in (and the preliminary ratings confirm that to be the case). The Academy is responsible for the uncomfortably bad hosting trio of Amy Schumer, Wanda Sykes, and Regina Hall. After a lazily-written opener fell flat, they followed up by mocking the seriousness of a pandemic that's killed nearly 1 million Americans and a highly questionable bit that had Hall groping Josh Brolin and Jason Momoa on stage. Not a great look for the industry that condoned Harvey Weinstein for so long. And somehow the best they could do for Ukraine was a brief on-screen message asking people to "support Ukraine in any way you are able," promoting the #StandWithUkraine hashtag instead of any of the numerous well-vetted charities that are actually helping. Thanks for wearing ribbons, though. |
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| The Slap Heard 'Round the World Well, that was something different. For those of you who somehow managed to subscribe to our email newsletter but haven't been on the internet in the past few hours, Chris Rock was presenting the award for Best Documentary when he made a joke about looking forward to seeing Jada Pinkett Smith in G.I. Jane 2, a reference to her shaved head. But Pinkett Smith's hairstyle wasn't a fashion statement; it's a result of her struggles with alopecia, an autoimmune disorder that causes hair loss. Her husband Will Smith did not appreciate the joke, stormed up on stage, and soundly slapped Rock across the face. “Oh wow, wow. Will Smith just smacked the sh*t outta me,” Rock announced to the audience. “Keep my wife’s name out ya fucking mouth!” Smith loudly retorted, twice. This wasn't the first time that Rock had mocked Pinkett Smith from an Oscars stage, but it's already been assessed as destined to be one of the most memorable Oscar moments. The whole scene became even more surreal when Smith won the Best Actor for King Richard just minutes after The Slap. In his tearful acceptance speech, Smith apologized to The Academy and his fellow nominees -- but noticeably did not apologize to Rock. Rock seems like he's not holding a grudge. The LAPD confirmed he declined to file a police report. Two members of Congress tweeted, but quickly deleted, comments defending Smith. Other people on Twitter had a lot of hot takes about The Slap. And some of them were really, really bad. The View hosts roundly condemned Smith as "immature" and "violent." Fox News hosts somehow found a way to blame Democrats for The Slap. Yes, really. Howard Stern decided to tie Smith's actions to former President Donald Trump. Check out his head-scratching comments here. Our thoughts and prayers to the podcaster who has the name and verified Twitter handle to match of Will Smith, who got some really wild mentions overnight. ESPN's Stephen A. Smith was one of many who made this error. Reporters were ordered by the Academy producers to not ask Oscar winners about The Slap. Some tried anyway. Smith's son Jaden Smith tweeted his defiant support. And here's video of Smith dancing to his song Gettin' Jiggy Wit It at the Vanity Fair after party, his Oscar in hand. "Hollywood is a screwed up place," said Morning Joe host Joe Scarborough on Monday's episode in response to the whole kerfuffle. He may have a point. 🇺🇦 FOR LATEST UKRAINE COVERAGE CLICK HERE In Other News... Russian Billionaire Roman Abramovich and Ukrainian Peace Talks Negotiators Reportedly Poisoned During Kyiv Meeting Ted Cruz Developed Plan to Overturn Election and Keep Trump in Power After 2020 Election Loss, Per Report Trump Rejects Reports of Puny Turnout and Fan Walkouts at Georgia Rally: 'Massive Crowd ... Despite the Cold Weather' Ukrainian Military Intel Chief Says Putin Will 'Attempt to Create North and South Korea in Ukraine' to Save Face Reporters and Pundits Rave Biden's Warsaw Speech a 'Tear Down This Wall' Moment - Before WH Walkback Industry News... What Happened at the Black News Channel? How Toxic Content, Lawsuits, and Low Ratings Led to a Promising Network’s Collapse Chris Wallace Says Working at Fox News Was 'Unsustainable' After 2020 Election: I 'No Longer Felt Comfortable' With Fox News Programming 6.5.0 |
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"It's not a Democratic talking point. It's in the plan." Fox News’ John Roberts cornered Rick Scott (R) when the Florida senator tried to write-off the controversy of his policy ideas as “Democrat talking points.” Roberts interviewed Scott on Fox News Sunday and brought up Scott’s 11-step ‘Rescue America‘ plan, noting that Scott’s proposal calls for all Americans to pay income tax, and included this provision: “All federal legislation sunsets in five years. If a law is worth keeping, Congress can pass it again.” As Roberts read directly from Scott’s plan directly, he noted that this proposal could lead to Social Security and Medicare getting shuttered in 5 years, which Scott dismissed as "the Democrat talking points,” Scott began, but Roberts cut him off. “Hang on, Senator,” said Roberts. “It’s not a Democratic talking point. It’s in the plan.” Watch here. |
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