Larry Wilmore ended "The Nightly Show" on Thursday with a little help from Jon Stewart, who stopped by to give the host a touching goodbye, along with a few words of advice. "I just decided to stop by and tell you I love you," Stewart told Wilmore in the show's final episode, adding that he should…
Jon Stewart began his appearance on the last episode of The Nightly Show by telling the departing host, Larry Wilmore, "I just decided to stop by and tell you I love you."
But that isn't the only reason he stopped by.
Stewart continued, "And may i say something else? Do not confuse cancellation with failure."
"What you, my friend, were tasked to do, you have done and done beautifully. You gave voice to under-served voices in the media arena ...it was a show that was raw and poignant and funny and smart and all those things. And you did it."
After acknowledging the talents of The Nightly Show's correspondents, writers and crew, Stewart continued.
"Did you resonate with an audience? I would say-- not only that, but in an important way -- but in a way that you don't even realize yet and won't reveal itself for years to come -- and it's this... you started a conversation that was not on television when you began. And you worked with a group of people who you invited to that conversation to collaborate with you, to sharpen that conversation, and what you don't realize is, you walk out of this room and that conversation doesn't end."
Four years after the media frenzy erupted around the notorious Miami “bath salts zombie” (who was not actually on bath salts), eerily similar reports—out of, you guessed it, Florida—have surfaced.
This article was originally published by The Influence, a news site that covers the full spectrum of human relationships with drugs. Follow The Influence on Facebook or Twitter.
This time, the suspected flesh-eater was reportedly high on flakka, a Novel Psychoactive Substance (NPS) in the cathinone stimulant class.
While toxicology results revealed that the 2012 “zombie” was not actually high on the NPS dubbed “bath salts,” which had been widely blamed for his crime, the media does not appear to have learned a lesson.
In this year’s brutal iteration, a couple was stabbed to death in a double homicide. When Martin County sheriffs arrived, their alleged attacker—a 19-year-old Florida State University student named Austin Harrouff—was reportedly pulling the skin off of one of his victim’s faces with his teeth.
Headlines like “FSU Student Allegedly Ate Victims Face While High on Flakka” have since proliferated, with reports linking the crime to flakka without any evidence but a sheriff’s speculation. It was a cop’s incorrect hunch that caused the 2012 bath-salts-zombie headlines, too.
“When we see a case like this, when someone is biting off pieces of somebody’s face, could it be flakka, the answer is it absolutely could be flakka case, we don’t know…It will be some time before we get any kind of toxicology report, but I would not be surprised, though, if we end up finding out that is the case.”
It’s pretty unconvincing stuff. And while it is possible that the alleged murderer was under the influence of some substance, if 2012 taught us anything, it’s that a sheriff’s gut is hardly hard evidence.
This article was originally published by The Influence, a news site that covers the full spectrum of human relationships with drugs. Follow The Influence on Facebook or Twitter.
Evidence is mounting to support the notion that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump knows he's going to lose the 2016 election but doesn't care because his real plan is to start a new media company when he loses.
Days ago, filmmaker Michael Moore theorized that Trump's run for the presidency was never serious, that in fact he was just trying to get a better contract for his reality TV shows The Apprentice and Celebrity Apprentice.
Quartz.com also pointed out that in June, Vanity Fair said that Trump was looking to start his own cable channel.
"According to people close to him, Trump hoped to leverage his millions of supporters into a loyal television audience, which, to him, might make the long slog of running for president actually worth it in the end," wrote Quartz's Adam Epstein.
In a tweet sent out just prior the publication of the Vanity Fair piece, Trump wrote, "The press is so totally biased that we have no choice but to take our tough but fair and smart message directly to the people!"
CNN's Brian Stelter pointed out on Wednesday night that Trump now has everyone in place to launch a media company with the hiring of Breitbart.com editor Stephen Bannen, ousted Fox News chairman Roger Ailes and Republican operative and "dirty tricks" specialist Roger Stone.
"Steve Bannon is coming over from media. What media and politics have in common is it's all about aggregating the biggest possible audience," said Stelter, the host of CNN's Reliable Sources.
He went on, "Well, what if Trump loses? Think about who he has on his team now. Steve Bannon, Roger Ailes informally, Roger Stone, the confidante who's known for his dirty tricks. He has all the right people to put in place a new media company, whether it's a television network or on Facebook or something we can't picture yet. I think we have to at least consider that possibility even if Trump would never acknowledge that's real today."
This would explain why Trump is sticking to his losing strategy of appealing to angry white racists and "letting Trump be Trump." He might lose the election, but he's building a core audience of disaffected conservatives who will presumably tune in once the election is over to continue hearing Trump "tell it like it is."
Liberals and fans of truth in broadcasting may dread the arrival of Trump TV or whatever media polyglot the Trump-Ailes-Bannon team may dream up, but one can draw comfort from even a cursory look at Trump's long string of business failures.
Trump Steaks, Trump Airlines, Trump Atlantic City, his multiple bankruptcies, all of these expensive boondoggles point to a business executive who is feckless, reckless, disorganized and heedless of advice.
New York City ex-mayor Michael Bloomberg said at the Democratic National Convention, "Through his career, Donald Trump has left behind a well-documented record of bankruptcies and thousands of lawsuits and angry stockholders and contractors who feel cheated and disillusioned customers who feel they've been ripped off. Trump says he wants to run the nation like he's running his business? God help us."
“As a candidate, Trump has built his campaign on his success as a businessman, boasting about his successful deals, the jobs he claims he has created and his personal wealth," Purcell told the New York Times. "But in the case of Trump magazine, he licensed his name to an inept and irresponsible businessman who broke promises, put its staff out on the street, and left a cancer patient without health care. Almost 10 years have passed since this took place. It has left me hoping that come Nov. 8, Donald Trump will add another item to his long list of failures.”
Fox's Sean Hannity continued his tirade against CNN media critic Brian Stelter on his radio show on Tuesday during a phone call with Donald Trump Jr., Media Matters reported
"The guy lectures me because I raise questions about, you know -- Hillary's falling down, she had health issues that were pretty significant, won't release her health records, won't release her speeches to Wall Street," Hannity complained.
Stelter took Hannity to task for peddling "reckless speculation" about the Democratic presidential nominee's health.
But Hannity did not mention that it was Associated Press reporter Lisa Lerer who debunked the argument by conservative media that Clinton "suffered a seizure" during an encounter with Lerer in June.
"Seemingly as 'proof' that something was amiss with Clinton, Hannity exclaimed: 'Watch the reporter, like, pull back as she — the reporter got scared. And she keeps doing it. What is that?' Lerer wrote. "Fox News never contacted me to ask that question. For the record, I wasn't scared for a moment."
Instead, Hannity focused on Stelter, calling him a "little pipsqueak [and] so-called media critic."
"You've got Brian the stenographer Stelter, doing the bidding of Jeff Zucker," he ranted. "They literally have a professor from the Kennedy School of Journalism, who calls your dad a demagogue and says 'Well, demagogues, if they're elected, that usually leads to dictatorship," and the guy never questioned him.'"
Hannity and the younger Trump also indulged in another debunked argument concerning Mitt Romney's performance in the 2012 election.
"How dare I point out that it's a little odd to me that 59 districts in Pennsylvania in 2012, not one vote for Romney," Hannity said. "59 districts, I'm sorry, but that seems odd to me."
"Well, it's different. If you're a Democrat, you're allowed to have the dead voting for you," said Trump. "But if you're a Republican, that would never happen."
Except it did, in Philadelphia. As Billy Penn reported, City Commissioner Al Schmidt -- a Republican -- debunked the idea that there was malfeasance involved in the result, noting that it would be impossible to subtract votes from voting machines in the city, which has several districts that heavily lean toward Democrats.
Schmidt said voter fraud on the scale Hannity has proposed would require "hundreds of people engaging in a conspiracy, and no one finding out about it."
The claim has subsequently been rated "Pants on Fire" by Politifact.
In a new column, documentarian and filmmaker Michael Moore says Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is trying to lose the presidential election because he never wanted the job anyway.
Writing for AlterNet, Moore said that the former reality TV star is only running as a way of getting a better deal for the next season of The Apprentice.
Trump, Moore said, "never wanted to be president of the United States. I know this for a fact. I’m not going to say how I know it. I’m not saying that Trump and I shared the same agent or lawyer or stylist or, if we did, that that would have anything to do with anything. And I’m certainly not saying that I ever overheard anything at those agencies or in the hallways of NBC or anywhere else. But there are certain people reading this right now, they know who they are, and they know that every word in the following paragraphs actually happened."
"Trump was unhappy with his deal as host and star of his hit NBC show, 'The Apprentice' (and 'The Celebrity Apprentice')," Moore said. "Simply put, he wanted more money. He had floated the idea before of possibly running for president in the hopes that the attention from that would make his negotiating position stronger."
Trump let it be known in the industry that he was thinking about moving the Apprentice franchise to another network, then launched a campaign for president that was never meant to succeed.
"So, on June 16th of last year, he rode down his golden escalator and opened his mouth. With no campaign staff, no 50-state campaign infrastructure -- neither of which he needed because, remember, this wasn’t going to be a real campaign -- and with no prepared script, he went off the rails at his kick-off press conference, calling Mexicans 'rapists' and 'drug dealers' and pledging to build a wall to keep them all out. Jaws in the room were agape. His comments were so offensive, NBC, far from offering him a bigger paycheck, immediately fired him with this terse statement: 'Due to the recent derogatory statements by Donald Trump regarding immigrants, NBCUniversal is ending its business relationship with Mr. Trump.'"
Trump, the biggest-ever believer in his stellar business acumen, was stunned that the gambit not only didn't work, but got him fired. He decided to press on, regardless.
"And then something happened. And to be honest, if it happened to you, you might have reacted the same way. Trump, to his own surprise, ignited the country, especially among people who were the opposite of billionaires. He went straight to #1 in the polls of Republican voters. Up to 30,000 boisterous supporters started showing up to his rallies. TV ate it up," Moore wrote.
"Trump fell in love with himself all over again, and he soon forgot his mission to get a good deal for a TV show," said Moore. Trump decided that reality TV was too small of a venue for his big personality.
The night he won the New Jersey primary, said Moore, was Trump's "Oh, shit" moment.
"I’m actually going to be the Republican nominee -- and my rich beautiful life is f#*@ing over!” Moore said, imagining Trump's thoughts.
Then followed the agonizing series of gaffes and missteps.
"By this past weekend, the look on his face said it all -- 'I hate this! I want my show back!'” wrote Moore. "But it was too late. He was damaged goods, his brand beyond repair, a worldwide laughing stock—and worse, a soon-to-be loser."
"Many now are sensing the end game here because they know Trump seriously doesn’t want to do the actual job -- and, most importantly, he cannot and WILL NOT suffer through being officially and legally declared a loser -- LOSER! -- on the night of November 8th," Moore concluded.
The question is, how will that endgame take shape?
Fox News host Sean Hannity lashed out at the liberal media, cable network CNN and media reporter Brian Stelter in a particularly unhinged rant on Tuesday morning's Fox and Friends.
Conservative blog The Daily Caller cheered on Hannity's meltdown, in which he said that CNN personnel "literally kiss Hillary’s ass and Obama’s ass every day."
“There’s a double standard in everything. Donald Trump, Mike Pence said to me the other night that they’re playing two-on-one. The media is so in the tank, so on-board for Hillary, they’re abusively biased,” Hannity whined via phone.
“I literally watched a show on CNN over the weekend and you got this little pipsqueak named Brian Stelter," he said, clearly still stinging from Stelter's excoriation of him last week for trafficking in right-wing conspiracy theories regarding Hillary Clinton's health.
Hannity went on, "And he allowed this arrogant professor from the Kennedy School of Journalism, to talk about Trump being a demagogue and demagogues like Trump becoming dictators. That’s the type of coverage that CNN offers in this presidential race as they literally kiss Hillary’s ass and Obama’s ass every day.”
Fox and Friends co-host Ainsley Earhardt tut-tutted at his language.
“Wait a minute, Sean, I don’t know if we can say that. It’s early,” she said.
“I think it’s too late, we were going to go on a delay,” said fellow co-host Brian Kilmeade.
Hannity apologized, saying, "By the way, I say that on my show every night. I’m sorry guys.”
“We should be wearing targets here,” quipped Paul McCartney as he stepped nervously off a plane at Memphis airport on August 19 1966.
The Beatles arrived in Memphis amid massive controversy. In March, John Lennon had suggested in an interview with Maureen Cleave of the London Evening Standard that the Beatles had grown more popular than Jesus. When his remarks reappeared in the American teen magazine Datebook in August, they sparked a fierce backlash just as the band embarked on its final tour.
Hostility was particularly intense in the American south. In Alabama, DJs Tommy Charles and Doug Layton at the WAQY-Birmingham radio station were first to initiate a “ban-the-Beatles campaign”. Other stations, cities and towns soon followed suit. Starke in Florida had the dubious distinction of being the first place to burn Beatles records and memorabilia.
Similar conflagrations spread quickly across the region. Some of the most pyrotechnical protests involved those formidable guardians of white racial and religious purity, the Ku Klux Klan. In Chester, South Carolina, Klan Grand Dragon Bob Scoggins nailed a Beatles record to a large cross and set it on fire. In Tupelo, Mississippi, Grand Wizard Dale Walton urged teens to “cut their Beatle wigs off” and send them to a “public burning”. In Washington DC and Memphis, Klansmen in full regalia were an ominous presence outside the band’s concerts.
The “Jesus” controversy is often considered a watershed moment in the Beatles’s career. In the aftermath, they abandoned live shows and, according to biographer Jon Weiner, Lennon took his “first steps towards radical politics”. And yet the controversy remains largely misunderstood and misrepresented in the vast literature on the band. Virtually nobody has explored what kind of publication Datebook, the magazine responsible for circulating the claim, really was. Few commentators have got to grips with the motives of its owner-editor Art Unger, or considered the role of Danny Fields, later manager of the Ramones, who worked briefly at the magazine in mid-1966.
Datebook
While on Datebook’s payroll, Fields was tasked with revamping its cover for a special “Shout Out!” issue to mark the transition from bi-monthly to monthly publication. That was the issue that featured Lennon’s interview with his infamous quote, “I don’t know which will go first, Christianity or rock’n’roll!” on its cover. Even more prominent was McCartney’s tart comment on US race relations: “It’s a lousy country where anyone black is a dirty nigger!” The cover also advertised articles on LSD, the Vietnam War and the virtues of interracial dating.
This content suggests Datebook was not the “standard teenybop rag” routinely depicted in accounts of the “Jesus" controversy. Most of those accounts also erroneously accuse Datebook – Unger is seldom mentioned by name – of cynically reproducing Lennon’s controversial comments out of context and using the interview without permission.
In fact, Unger had been encouraged to use all four Beatles interviews, which were reproduced in Datebook without any significant changes, by Tony Barrow, the band’s press officer. In March 1966, Barrow wrote to Unger:
I think you might be more than interested in a series of ‘in-depth’ pieces which Maureen Cleave is doing on each Beatle for the London Evening Standard. I’m enclosing a clipping showing her piece on John Lennon; I think the style and content is very much in line with the sort of thing DATEBOOK likes to use.
Clearly, Barrow already understood Datebook’s politics. Unger had created a socially engaged magazine dedicated to challenging all manner of prejudice, dogma, and discrimination, even as it dispensed advice about haircare, makeup and dating etiquette. The fact that Unger, like Fields, was a gay may have fuelled their determination to nurture more tolerant attitudes among Datebook’s young readers. Nowhere was Datebook’s quietly subversive agenda more clear than in the realm of race relations.
‘Segregation is a lot of rubbish’
At the height of the civil rights movement in the south, Datebook often focused on racial and religious intolerance. In 1961, for example, it asked “should you date boys of another race or religion?” and concluded that “across-the-line dating can be a healthy and desirable thing”. That same year Lillian Smith, a leading southern white racial liberal, urged Datebook’s overwhelmingly white female readers to break with the racism of an older generation. The magazine even included contact details for various civil rights groups so that readers could support the movement.
The Beatles were also aware of Unger’s liberal agenda. They first met him in 1964. Afterwards, their press office regularly supplied Datebook with news scoops and provided extensive access whenever the band toured the US. The band often proved willing accomplices in Unger’s plans. In 1965, Datebook reported a flight from Houston when drummer Ringo had “joined a circle of performers, many of whom were Negroes, and they talked about everything, including race relations, Ringo making his pro-integration feelings very clear”. Ringo insisted: “Segregation is a lot of rubbish. As far as we’re concerned, people are people, no different from each other.”
Understanding the Beatles’s links to Unger and their willingness to speak out on social issues in his magazine long before 1966, changes our perspective on the dramatic events of that summer. Suddenly, they begin to look less like the first chapter in the story of the band’s political awakening and more like an important episode in a much longer tale. Looking back through the pages, not to mention the covers, of Datebook certainly reminds us that Lennon was not the only Beatle with strong opinions on current affairs.
Fifty years on, it is time to stop casting Unger’s decision to reprint Lennon’s interview as the act of the unscrupulous owner of a “cheesy American teen magazine” out for a fast buck. Instead, we need to see it as one phase in his efforts to use Datebook to showcase progressive politics, encourage unconventional opinions, and expose all kinds of prejudice. The Beatles certainly recognised that Unger’s Datebook was very different from other teen publications. And so should we.
Comedy Central announced Monday that The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore will end this week, with Thursday night's episode slated to be its last.
Variety reported that the network characterized the cancellation as "a business decision."
Wilmore reportedly broke the news to his staff on Monday. The show has occupied the 30-minute slot after The Daily Show since Stephen Colbert ended The Colbert Report and moved to late nights on CBS.
Comedy Central president Kent Alterman said that Wilmore's show never caught on with young viewers, the network's core audience.
“We hold Larry in the highest esteem, personally and professionally. He brought a strong voice and point of view to the late-night landscape,” Alterman said to Variety. “Unfortunately it hasn’t resonated with our audience.”
It was, Alterman said, a “business decision” to end the show.
Wilmore released a statement Monday that said, in part, "I’m really grateful to Comedy Central, Jon Stewart, and our fans to have had this opportunity. But I’m also saddened and surprised we won’t be covering this crazy election or ‘The Unblackening’ as we’ve coined it. And keeping it 100, I guess I hadn’t counted on ‘The Unblackening’ happening to my time slot as well.”
CNN host Brian Stelter took time out from his Sunday interviews to once again go after Fox's Sean Hannity for his irresponsible rumor-mongering, and the media critic pulled no punches saying, "Last time I checked, Fox still has the word ‘news’ in its name."
Last Sunday, Stelter tore into the Fox News host for carrying water for GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, pointing out that Hannity has shown that he is no journalist.
The Reliable Sources host returned to Hannity's unabashed Trump cheerleading on Sunday, hammering the host for trading in "conspiracy theories" about Hillary Clinton's supposed health issues.
Noting that Hannity has built his case on out of context short film clips collected over the years, Stelter hammered the pundit for what he called "reckless speculation."
"This whole 'Clinton is secretly sick' thing has been promoted by conservative news sites for years," Stelter remarked. "There is a grain of truth to the idea about her health because she did have a health scare in 2012. It was well reported at the time. But her doctors now say she is physically fit to be president."
"But Hannity's not interested in the truth about Clinton’s health," he continued. "If he was, he could have interviewed people who were actually there during the episodes."
"Look. Conspiracy theories are so much more interesting than the truth," Stelter explained. "But the last time I checked, Fox still has the word ‘news’ in its name."
Watch the video below uploaded by Real Clear Politics:
Futurama star Billy West indulged fans' wishes by giving life to a meme putting Donald Trump's words into the mouth of the show's bombastic -- and buffoonish -- Capt. Zapp Brannigan, Fusion reported.
West took to his Twitter account to post audio of himself reciting several actual quotes from the GOP presidential nominee in the voice of Brannigan, as seen below:
The conservative commentator Glenn Beck must reveal the names of confidential sources he used in reports alleging that a Saudi Arabian student injured in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing was "the money man" who funded the attack, a federal judge ruled.
In her decision on Tuesday, Chief Judge Patti Saris of the U.S. District Court in Boston also rejected Beck's latest effort to dismiss Abdulrahman Alharbi's defamation case against him and TheBlaze network, which broadcasts his radio show.
Michael Grygiel, a lawyer for Beck, did not immediately respond on Wednesday to requests for comment. Peter Haley, a lawyer for Alharbi, declined to comment.
Beck repeatedly linked Alharbi to the April 15, 2013 bombing on his radio show, including that he had been "tagged" as a "proven terrorist," and continued doing so after Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano cleared the student in congressional testimony.
Saris said Alharbi, 23, of Revere, Massachusetts, may learn the names of two Department of Homeland Security officials who allegedly provided information to officials at TheBlaze, to help refute Beck's claims and show his reporting was inadequate.
She said Alharbi may also be entitled to the name of a federal anti-terrorism agent who also spoke with TheBlaze, if that agent said Alharbi funded the bombing.
"The only way to verify or confirm what the confidential sources told the defendants would be to speak with the sources themselves," Saris wrote in a 61-page decision. Beck never spoke with the sources, she added.
Most U.S. states have shield laws protecting journalists from revealing confidential sources, but Massachusetts does not.
In letting the defamation case continue, Saris said Alharbi can try to show that the defendants were negligent, and may seek damages for emotional distress and harm to his reputation.
She said Alharbi cannot seek punitive damages because Massachusetts law does not permit them in defamation cases.
Alharbi had been a spectator near the marathon's finish line when two homemade pressure-cooker bombs ripped through the crowd, killing three people and injuring more than 260.
The ethnic Chechen brothers Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev were implicated in the bombing. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was sentenced to death in June 2015. Tamerlan Tsarnaev was shot and killed by police a few days after the bombing.
The case is Alharbi v. TheBlaze Inc et al, U.S. District Court, District of Massachusetts, No. 14-11550.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
"Game of Thrones" author George RR Martin has revealed he will release a "very special" edition of "A Game of Thrones", to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the first book in the "Song Of Ice And Fire" series.
Martin confirmed via his blog that the new edition will include an introduction by the World Famous Nebula Toastmaster John Hodgman and "a truly astonishing amount of artwork" -- a total of 73 black-and-white interior illustrations, and eight spectacular full-color plates.
He added that while some of the art will be drawn from the Ice & Fire calendars, from "The World of Ice and Fire", and from the card and board games and role-playing games, 48 of these pieces are "completely new, never-before-seen artwork". Martin also unveiled two examples of the type of artwork to be featured in the special "A Game of Thrones" edition.
The book will be entitled "A Game of Thrones: The Illustrated Edition" and will be on sale from October 18, 2016. However, no updates on Martin's highly-anticipated sixth book on the series, "Winds of Winter", have emerged of late, with Martin's publisher maintaining that a release date is not yet known.