Entertainment
‘The Daily Show’ Says Trump ‘Needs to F–k a Dude’ After Compliments to Men
“The Daily Show” suggested Donald Trump was “discovering something about himself” after a string of headline-making comments made to men about their physical attractiveness.
Host Ronny Chieng wondered if the president should “f–k a dude” during Thursday’s monologue after Trump pulled a Coast Guard Academy graduate up on stage and rambled about his “muscles.”
“Trump gave the commencement speech at the Coast Guard Academy, and he had a different message for graduates,” Chieng started off on Thursday. “And that message was, ‘Daddy likey.’”
Chieng was referring to the heap of praise Trump bestowed upon one cadet, who notably earned a perfect score on every single fitness test. In the clip played by “The Daily Show,” Trump is seen praising the graduate as “something.”
“I want to see. I want to check him out,” Trump said. “Whoa. Wow. Look at this guy. Look at the muscles on this guy … Just hit him on the shoulder, my hand, it’s like hitting a rock.”
In response to the footage, Chieng quipped: “Well, we wanted Trump to stop harassing women, and I guess he found a loophole. I mean, seriously, is Trump a college sophomore? Because if you’ve been paying any attention recently, it looks like he’s been discovering something about himself.”
The comedy show then aired a compilation of all the times Trump has singled out handsome men, prompting Chieng to state: “OK, I’m just going to say it. The president needs to f–k a dude, all right?”
“Like, just go for it, Mr. President. I’m not even saying you’re gay,” he continued. “It just seems like something you need to get out of your system, you know, like as a novelty thing. And don’t worry about what your supporters will think. You’ll be fine — your base will love it and your shaft.”
Watch Chieng’s full monologue above.
“The Daily Show” airs weeknights at 11 p.m. ET on Comedy Central.
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movies
‘Victorian Psycho’ Review: Maika Monroe Swaps Scream Queen for Villain
The 21st century has yielded no shortage of stylish horror marbled with devious veins of pitch-dark humor — Peter Strickland’s In Fabric, Jennifer Kent’s The Babadook, Halina Reijn’s Bodies Bodies Bodies, Sam Raimi’s Drag Me to Hell, pretty much every Jordan Peele feature. Plenty of skilled directors can manipulate tension and fear while still poking us toward nervous laughter. But others end up with films in which the dueling forces cancel each other out, working as neither horror nor comedy. Zachary Wigon’s Victorian Psycho is one such awkward fusion, ultimately just coming off as silly.
Adapted from her novel by Spanish author Virginia Feito, the film mutes any scare factor by winking at the audience with archly exaggerated performances from an ensemble whose most consistent note from the director appears to have been “Go bigger!” At times, the movie veers almost into spoof territory, but it never commits to the bit enough to be anything more than a mismatched genre hybrid, despite its atmospheric visuals and strong design elements.
Victorian Psycho
The Bottom Line
We are not amused.
Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Release date: Friday, Sept. 25
Cast: Maika Monroe, Jason Isaacs, Ruth Wilson, Thomasin McKenzie, Evie Templeton, Jacobi Jupe
Director: Zachary Wigon
Screenwriter: Virginia Feito, based on her novel
Rated R,
1 hour 41 minutes
A late entry into Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section — and a perplexing choice — the film will open in the U.S. Sept. 25 through Bleecker Street.
Scream queen Maika Monroe switches teams to play the antagonist, Winifried Notty, who arrives at Ensor House, an imposing country manor adorned with Gothic gargoyles, to take up the position of governess to the two precocious children of screwy aristocrats Mr. and Mrs. Pounds (Jason Isaacs and Ruth Wilson).
In one of several voiceover passages that accompany chapter breaks, Winifried observes that the Pounds residence is “a much more dignified house” than those in which she’s previously been employed, the first of many hints at the murky past she’s escaping. We learn that the twins in her charge at one job went missing, that the child in her position before that drowned, and the town she hails from gained notoreity when a string of babies were found murdered.
There are the faintest echoes of Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre in the Yorkshire Moors setting. But if you start getting a Turn of the Screw vibe, you are being misled. Winifried — whose preferred diminutive, also the name of the demon inside her, is Fred, not Winnie — isn’t the one being spooked here. Instead, she’s doing the terrorizing, her unhinged creepiness apparent early on when she finds a severed ear in her bedroom and makes a snack of it.
Monroe slaps on the twitchy facial tics and drifts about the gloomily lit house in a state of demented distraction from the start. She’s dialed up to maximum madness from the minute we meet her. That’s as much the fault of Feito’s adaptation and Wigon’s direction as the actor’s performance, but it leaves this 19th century Patrick Bateman no place to go, robbing the movie of any element of sneaky shock value.
We learn through Winifried’s voiceovers that her mother tried to kill her when she was 8. “Yours is a soul cloaked in darkness,” she told her daughter. But instead of fearing that darkness, Fred embraced it: “In any case, we are together now till the end.” She was raised by a clergyman who was not her father; it’s inferred that he had shady ideas about parental rights.
In a funny touch of feminist commentary, the Pounds parents are intent on their bratty son Andrew (Hamnet survivor Jacobi Jupe) getting the best possible education but less bothered about glum daughter Drissila (Evie Templeton). “We don’t want her wasting her fertility years in some institute.” When she first meets them, Fred wonders to herself about the children: “Are they just quiet or stupid?”
Trouble surfaces when the gardener reveals to Winifried that he knows about her wicked past, demanding £50, “or some other sort of arrangement,” to keep quiet. The sharp end of an axe was probably not what he had in mind.
Jittery housemaid Miss Lamb (Thomasin McKenzie) proves less trouble to manage, as Fred scares the wits out of her with bogus talk of a ghoul wandering the Moors. And the Pounds clan, far from a model of respectability, have their own seedy history, nonchalantly outlined by Mr. P. when Winifried admires the family portraits dating back generations. One ancestor was executed for committing buggery with his horses, Mr. Pounds’ father was a pedophile, and his mother was riddled with syphilis.
Appearing to have found her depraved people, Winifried vows to claim legitimacy by becoming a member of the Pounds family and making Miss Lamb her lady’s maid. But the voices inside her keep whispering, “Let Fred out!” That means no one is safe. Hallucinatory visuals bleed into reality as she imagines butchering the entire family. Or is it her imagination?
While Wigon’s last feature, Sanctuary, was both playful and controlled, this one has all the restraint of Pee-wee’s Playhouse (which I’d much rather be watching). The biggest issue is that never for a minute is it remotely frightening, despite Ariel Marx’s stormy orchestral score pushing all the correct gruesome buttons. Only in a nicely done coda that wraps things up like an Olde English legend does it become devilishly unsettling.
There’s a strong sense that Feito’s novel got more mileage out of such questions as who is truly sane or insane and whether evil exists in all of us. But that thematic potential is diluted in a movie that keeps hurtling forward without gathering steam.
The entire cast is better than the material; the movie seems convinced it’s a lot funnier and smarter and more disturbingly subversive than it really is. Not sure I entirely buy Monroe in villainous mode, but she gets points for throwing herself into it with deranged gusto. Isaacs and Wilson are such pros that they are amusing up to a point, chomping on the scenery with relish. But that pleasure, along with most others in Victorian Pschyo, wears thin.
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Entertainment
Mediaite’s Colby Hall Exits After Suspension Over ‘Editorial Errors’
Mediaite founding editor Colby Hall is stepping away from the media-politics website a month after he was suspended due to “editorial errors” in his newsletter.
“After 15 years as Founding Editor of Mediaite, I’m stepping away from the site I helped launch, and that has been my obsession for well over a decade,” he wrote in a Friday op-ed. “The decision follows the editorial errors in the One Sheet newsletter that surfaced in April. I addressed those mistakes on the record at the time, and I stand by what I said then.”
“These were honest mistakes. There was no excuse for them; the responsibility was mine, and the only credible response was to own it. Does intention matter in this sort of situation? I suspect some will show me grace, and many won’t. I get that. Journalism requires discipline, and in this case, I fell short,” Hall continued. “I’ve spent 15 years building a reputation I’m proud of, and that’s something I have to earn back, not something I can ask for. That work begins today.”
His exit comes after Status reported in April that “the outlet had fabricated quotes and committed other egregious errors,” including more than six instances “in which Hall appeared to invent stories out of thin air, fabricate quotes or misattribute reporting to the wrong person.”
“Thank you for bringing these errors to our attention,” Mediaite’s Joe DePaolo said in response at the time. “We presented your findings to Colby Hall who insists the errors were purely a result of sloppiness in how he aggregated and categorized information, not from the use of A.I. Regardless, it is completely unacceptable and Colby has been suspended from Mediaite pending further investigation.”
A month later, Hall is now turning to Substack and consulting work.
“I’m not pretending suspension is a wellness program. The past month or so was about as dark as anything I’ve gone through professionally. It’s not something I’d wish on my worst enemies, including Mark Levin,” he wrote in Friday’s message. “Mediaite will keep punching above its weight. I’ll keep writing, advising and looking for what’s next.”
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movies
The All-American Rejects Launch ‘SuperFan’ Microdrama On CandyJar
EXCLUSIVE: The All-American Rejects are launching microdrama series SuperFan. The bite-sized show will run to 31 episodes and will be available on the CandyJar microdrama platform.
The plot of the series sees the band kidnapped by a deranged fan who forces them to release new music. The story soon escalates from basement captivity to full-blown livestream chaos as the group are forced to finish their album under pressure while the internet watches.
Poster Child Pictures produces. For the band, the series is a new way to promote their new record, Sandbox, which is their first album in 14 years.
“SuperFan started as a crazy idea and somehow got crazier from there,” said Tyson Ritter of The All-American Rejects. “We are all about being disruptive and CandyJar understands exactly what we are trying to do. Being the first musicians in this space makes me feel like the monkey in orbit… next stop, the moon!”
Other names involved in the series include music video and microdrama producer Michael Reich, veteran television producer Chris Collins (And Just Like That), unscripted producer John Salcido (Welcome to Wrexham), and costume designer Mona May (Clueless).
CandyJar and The All-American Rejects also said they are teaming on a second project, billed as a “romance-forward original movie that speaks to the brand’s core audience.” SuperFan episodes will be released in free batches or viewers can subscribe to binge the whole series. U.S.-based CandyJar says 80M episodes are watched each month on its microdrama app.
“SuperFan is a unique and unexpected addition to CandyJar’s romance catalog, but we’re confident it will deeply resonate with our audience. While the content sits within the comedy and thriller genres, there is a strong overlap between our users and The All-American Rejects’ fanbase,” said Ali Albazaz, CEO and founder of CandyJar’s parent company, Inkitt. “The All-American Rejects are iconic, and we’re excited to continue this partnership with a second romance series that we know our users will absolutely devour.”
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