Media Search:



Bill Pullman reveals the joke Hillary Clinton made after they watched Independence Day together – The Independent

Bill Pullman has reflected on watching his 1996 hit Independence Day with then-president Bill Clinton and first lady Hillary Clinton.

In the sci-fi action movie, Pullman played a fictional president of the US trying to help save people from an alien invasion.

During an appearance on last nights episode of The One Show (25 July), Pullman recounted the experience of watching the movie with the couple, saying: All of a sudden, in the middle of the publicity junket, we got flown to the White House. I sat next to Bill Clinton and watched this movie.

Presenter Alex Jones then asked if the former US leader had any notes on Pullmans performance, to which the actor replied: Hillary had a nice comment, which was, When we take our next vacation, we know who we can get to take over for a weekend.

He laughed, adding: She didnt offer the whole week, just the weekend.

Independence Day, which also starred Will Smith, Jeff Goldblum, Randy Quaid and Mary McDonnell, grossed $817m (591m) worldwide, making it the highest grossing film of that year, beating out blockbusters including Twister, Scream, and Mission: Impossible for the top spot.

Bill Pullman in Independence Day

(Snap/Rex/Shutterstock)

In 2020, Pullman dismissed a tweet by Donald Trump, showing the then-president superimposed over his iconic speech scene in the film.

Responding to the tweet, Pullman said: My voice belongs to no one but me, and Im not running for president this year.

See the rest here:
Bill Pullman reveals the joke Hillary Clinton made after they watched Independence Day together - The Independent

Judge Takes James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, and Kevin Clinesmith Personally Off the Hook in Trumps RICO Lawsuit Against Hillary…

Donald Trump was captured in a bombastic pose on April 6, 2016, in Bethpage, N.Y. James Comey was photographed backstage during a talk in Berlin, Germany, on June 19, 2019.

A federal judge has removed fired FBI director James Comey, fired FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, fired FBI agent Peter Strzok, resigned FBI lawyer Lisa Page, and former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith as personal defendants in Donald Trumps RICO lawsuit against Hillary Clinton and other individuals and institutions.

Trump filed the $24 million lawsuit against the aforementioned defendants and others, including the Democratic National Committee, on March 24. He amended the lawsuit by nearly doubling its page count on June 22. In a pile of separate but logically connected motions to dismiss, Clinton and most of the other defendants have argued that Trumps claims are barred by the statute of limitations or otherwise fail as a matter of law.

Trump is arguing that the defendants maliciously conspired to weave a false narrative that their Republican opponent, Donald J. Trump, was colluding with a hostile foreign sovereignty. He has alleged violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, conspiracy, injurious falsehood, malicious prosecution, computer fraud, theft of trade secrets, violations of the Stored Communications Act, and several other causes of action.

Former FBI Lawyer Lisa Page, walks to a House Judiciary Committee closed door meeting in the Rayburn House Office Building, on July 13, 2018 in Washington, DC. Page Page worked on the special counsels Russia investigation, and her text messages with Peter Strzok is under scrutiny by House Republicans. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images.)

The federal government was not a defendant to the lawsuit. However, it moved U.S. District Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks on July 14 to substitute itself as a defendant instead of Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, and Clinesmith. The cited authority for the move was 28 U.S.C. 2679(d)(1), a federal statute which reads accordingly:

Upon certification by the Attorney General that the defendant employee was acting within the scope of his office or employment at the time of the incident out of which the claim arose, any civil action or proceeding commenced upon such claim in a United States district court shall be deemed an action against the United States under the provisions of this title and all references thereto, and the United States shall be substituted as the party defendant.

In other words, the claim must proceed against the government, not against the individual, when the individual was conducting affairs that were part of his or her scope of employment. The procedure is legally known as a Westfall Act Substitution.

Because plaintiffs tort claims are based upon conduct within the scope of these former FBI employees employment with the government, the United States is the sole and exclusive defendant for those claims, government lawyers wrote to Judge Middlebrooks on July 14.

Peter Strzok. (Image via Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images.)

The government pointed squarely to Trumps own complaint to articulate several precise reasons why the Westfall Act Substitution was appropriate in this case:

In this action, plaintiff, former President Trump, seeks damages because defendants allegedly falsif[ied] evidence, deceiv[ed] law enforcement, spread[] disinformation through the media, and exploit[ed] access to highly-sensitive data sources to the detriment of his reputation. Am. Compl. 1. He further alleges that these acts led to legal issues and political issues, and that he incurred substantial economic harm responding to those issues. Id. 525. He seeks damages for his costs associated with responding to numerous investigations and his impeachment.

Amongst many other defendants, plaintiff sues James Comey as 7th Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Peter Strzok as an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Lisa Page as an attorney for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Kevin Clinesmith as an attorney for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Andrew McCabe as the Deputy Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Id. 3842. As FBI employees, plaintiff alleges that the foregoing defendants opened a full field investigation, falsely accuse[d General] Flynn of colluding with Russia, kept open its investigation after General Flynn withdrew from consideration for the position of National Security Advisor, leaked information about the investigation to the press, expanded its investigation to include other individuals aside from General Flynn, and engaged in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) application processes during the investigation. Id. 342448. This conduct, plaintiff alleges, amounted to malicious prosecution and, in collaboration with other defendants alleged acts, conspiracy to commit malicious prosecution. Id. 667692.

The government therefore concluded as follows:

Here, Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, and Clinesmith all easily satisfy the District of Columbias scope of employment test. Counterintelligence operations and FISA surveillance are activities of the FBI. And the incidents out of which plaintiffs claims arose here relate to such activities. The employees easily pass the first prong of the District of Columbias scope of employment test, which does not pose a high bar.

Second, plaintiff identifies the former FBI employees as high-level officials and staff members working on high-level matters. [Citations omitted.] As high-level FBI officials and staff members, they understandably had no set business hours and performed official conduct at varying hours and locations. The Amended Complaint contains no allegations that their acts or omissions occurred in any context other than during the FBI counterintelligence investigation or that they occurred outside the authorized time and space limits of their jobs. Thus, these employees acted within the authorized time and space limits.

Third, all alleged conduct was actuated, at least in part, by a purpose to serve the United States. [Citation omitted.] These FBI employees were acting in furtherance of an approved and authorized counterintelligence operation. That operation necessarily entailed FISA applications.

Thus, Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, and Clinesmith were all employees of the government and, at all material times, all of their acts or omissions alleged in the Amended Complaint occurred within the scope of their employment under District of Columbia respondeat superior law. The Court should reject any challenge to the certification of Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, and Clinesmith.

The government then argued that the case should be dismissed because the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Trumps complaint. Specifically, the government noted that Trumps attorneys filed to present his malicious prosecution claims to the FBI before filing Trumps voluminous lawsuit in federal court. Tort claims against the government must be subjected to administrative presentment requirements under the Federal Tort Claims Act; here, Trump made no such submission, and several of his claims instantly must fail, the government argued.

Andrew McCabe. (Image via the FBI.)

Late on Thursday, Judge Middlebrooks agreed to substitute the government as a defendant instead of Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, and Clinesmith. However, Middlebrooks chose not to immediately rule on the broader request to jettison the litigation against the government as a substituted party.

In his three-page order, Middlebrooks characterized Trumps lawsuit as sprawling and recited, without much additional commentary, the rote mechanisms of Westfall Act Substitution: individuals were sued; they were acting within the scope of their employment as ascertained by the Attorney General; and the court was required to accept the Attorney Generals certification.

Middlebrooks noted that he could technically determine that the named federal officers were acting outside the scope of [their] employment and that Trump could litigate the question if he so chooses. If Trump does contest the matter, Trumphas the burden of altering the status quo by proving that the employee acted outside the scope of employment. That will be difficult to overcome, Middlebrooks suggested, because the AGs certification constitutes prima facie evidence that the employees were acting within the scope of their employment.

Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, and Clinesmith all now appear as terminated parties in the court docket.

The original government motion and the judges order are below:

[Photo of Trump by Andrew Renneisen/Getty Images; photo of Comey via Carsten Koall/Getty Images.]

Have a tip we should know? [emailprotected]

The rest is here:
Judge Takes James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, and Kevin Clinesmith Personally Off the Hook in Trumps RICO Lawsuit Against Hillary...

Harris Faulkner: Hillary Clinton Created the MAGA Movement – Barrett Sports Media

Fox News star Tucker Carlson took aim at several political commentators during a recent sit-down interview with University of Chicago journalism student Daniel Schmidt.

Carlson appeared on SchmidtsPiece of Schmidtpodcast. Carlson also shared some thoughts on why he hates college and why he thinks his detractors hate him.

The Fox News host told Schmidt that hes against college and even tried to convince all four of his children not to attend. Carlson said there are abundant objective data that shows that college is not a good choice for a lot of people.

I was just an abashed loser in college. I was just drunk every day and it took me years to recover from it, Carlson said. I should never have gone to college, my parents didnt go, my brother didnt really go. In my family there was a premium on reading and college was not considered an impressive option.

Schmidt told Carlson a story about the time the university brought in Dispatch Senior Editor David French, Dispatch Editor-in-Chief Jonah Goldberg, and political commentator Bill Kristol to engage with members of his class for a lecture and subsequent Q&A session.

As soon as I brought up your name, he (French) looked at me and cut me off instantly and said Tucker Carlson is a white nationalist, and just like filibustered for 10 minutes straight, he added.

Schmidt asked Carlson why people like French, Kristol, and Goldberg despise him.

I know all of those people from my previous life, Carlson said. I never had any problem with them. I know them well enough to know the limits of their intellect. I do think imposter syndrome plays a role here as well.

Carlson went on to mention other names of people he detests but said some of them are smarter than him.

Andrew Sullivan, who I detest as a person, I think hes a genuinely bad person but hes really smart.

Carlson told Schmidt his best advice that he can give is to find beauty in life, marry young and have children, and read lots of books.

Read the original:
Harris Faulkner: Hillary Clinton Created the MAGA Movement - Barrett Sports Media

Navarro urges Trump to skip planned DC speech: I had to fight Brother Larry Kudlow on daily basis – The Hill

Former Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro urged former President Trump not to deliver his keynote speech at the America First Policy Institute (AFPI), criticizing members of the think tanks staff and alleging they were working on a Trumpism without Trump coup.

Trump is set to deliver remarks on Tuesday at an AFPI summit, returning to Washington for the first time in a year and a half amid speculation he will run for president again in 2024.

But Navarro said Trump should put off the speech despite the need to create a stable of policy experts.

Yes, it is important for President Trump to have a well-credentialed stable of policy experts capable of both building a 2024 platform and finding solid MAGA talent to populate a new Trump Administration. But the AFPI Trojan Horsewhose leadership is now bragging about how it will staff Trumps shadow cabinetis decidedly not that, Navarro wrote in an op-ed on conservative website American Greatness.

Navarro slammed members of the AFPI, including former Energy Secretary Rick Perry, former National Security Council chief of staff Fred Fleitz and former economic adviser Larry Kudlow.

As I document in Taking Back Trumps America, I had to fight Brother Larry on an almost daily basis, not just on trade policy but also in my efforts to advance Trumps two most simple rules: buy American, hire American. And Kudlow worked hand-in-hand with several members of Trumps Council of Economic Advisors (CEA), who now constitute the free trade core of AFPIs economic experts, he claimed in his op-ed.

Navarro also called those associated with the AFPI griftersand claimed that their broader agenda might be to hijack the political attractiveness of Trumpism but replace Trump with an AFPI-anointed RINO [Republican in name only].

Marc Lotter, chief communications officer for the AFPI, slammed Navarro in an email to The Hill and noted Navarros previous support for 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.

It is unfortunate to see Mr. Navarro, a former Hillary Clinton supporter, turning into the DC swamp creature he once abhorred. AFPI is lead by nine former cabinet level officials and nearly 20 senior White House officials from Trumps White House, Lotter said.

As it relates to the other comments, AFPI is currently hosting a two-day summit laying out a detailed policy agenda for the future. The fact President Trump is closing this event shows his support for AFPIs work to continue the policies that put America First! he added.

View original post here:
Navarro urges Trump to skip planned DC speech: I had to fight Brother Larry Kudlow on daily basis - The Hill

Learning Behind the Mask: Communities come together in remarkable ways to learn and adapt through COVID-19 – School of Journalism and New Media – Ole…

It has been two years since Ole Miss students were sent home, in-person classes were moved online and COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic. There have been challenging moments, deep sorrow over lives lost and moments of social disconnect. Nonetheless, communities have come together in remarkable ways to learn how to adapt and reconnect.

Integrating technology into classrooms has provided opportunities for students to learn beyond the traditional classroom setting and instantly connect with anyone, anywhere and at any time. The enhanced learning environment inside and outside the classroom has provided interactive experiences and intentional education. The combination of in-person, virtual, and hybrid appears to be conditioning students for the technologically-dependent world they live in today. The current student generation should be better equipped, more resilient, and more prepared to face whatever communication challenges and experiences should come because of the skills learned by communicating online.

Video conferencing, for example, has served a variety of purposes and enhanced learning because people have been able to virtually connect from across the globe with their peers, co-workers, and family members. Students meet inspiring speakers from their field on a Zoom call that they may not otherwise have had the chance to meet if they were in a traditional, everyday classroom setting. Throughout the school year, many professors, club leaders and organizations invite alumni and guest speakers to speak on Zoom.

Jacqueline Cole is a junior integrated marketing communications major from Memphis, who enrolled at Ole Miss in Fall 2019. Cole reflected and compared her experiences before and through the pandemic.

The graphic reads: Learning Behind the Mask: Communities come together in remarkable ways to learn and adapt through COVID-19

We didnt video-conference in our classes or anything before the pandemic, Cole said. But now, its a regular thing that I look forward to in many of my classes and clubs. Last semester, we had an influencer reach out to my internet marketing class. The influencer, Sara Caroline Bridgers, actually went to Ole Miss. She now lives in Hawaii, and we were able to talk to her about how she became an influencer, how she makes money, and how to promote a self-brand.

Remote opportunities have also provided many options for students in terms of learning and future possibilities for flexibility in the workforce. It has been to the advantage of students to learn more about the latest opportunities that have emerged in the past few years.

I can go beyond what I have always known because I have the idea now that you can work remotely from everywhere. So, I dont feel like I have to be stuck in one city, Cole said. I could definitely move around and have the opportunity to work for the same company, and my life wouldnt be affected because I had to move to a different location for another job. I feel like this [opportunity] has definitely opened up since COVID.

Since returning to campus this school year, Cole has noticed the empathy of her professors. She feels like her health is a priority. When Cole has to miss class for being sick, she knows she can rely on her professors to work with her outside of class to make up her work. She feels less pressured to constantly show up for class when she is not feeling well.

The teachers have become more understanding, Cole said. I have noticed that the teachers take more time and are a lot more caring about out-of-class circumstances. When students are sick, Zoom options for students make things healthier, especially for someone who gets sick all the time. I never feel like Im missing something anymore.

As the world is evolving at an extremely fast technological pace, The University of Mississippi is growing with it. The University has employed several initiatives to help students continue to learn and prevent learning gaps.

I have been able to connect with people despite the literal communication gaps, Cole said. I think the pandemic has helped the world, as a whole, communicate.

Students can pursue and balance their passions and hobbies with their academics when flexibility is built in by a remote schedule. Combining traditional and virtual procedures where necessary, timely, and convenient helps the day-to-day tasks flow more smoothly. The developments from the past few years, such as online advising, virtual tours and virtual speakers, should remain because they are efficient and informative.

Dawson Wilson is a senior majoring in integrated marketing communications from Ocean Springs. He is the current director of photography for UM Square Magazine and was the 2020-2021 photo editor for The Ole Miss yearbook. Wilson also shoots freelance photography.

Ever since COVID hit two years ago, I have learned just how much better of a learner I am when I take online and pace-yourself classes, Wilson said. I am a photographer, so this gave me leeway to really hone in on my craft while also being able to do school on my own time. I ended up finding the perfect balance of work, school, and play.

The novelty of the technology and circumstances at hand proves there is no true expert in the roomor on the Zoom. However, this is how and where great ideas can be born and developed. Students are navigating, growing, and learning during a highly confusing time when much of the world is trying to do the same.

I feel like going through all of this and knowing what I know now, the basic message that I have learned is just to live your life, Wilson said. If you dont do it, your mind will eat away at you with the what-ifs, but if you do it and dont like it, then you have the well, at least I tried it mindset.

Wilson went on to say, I think that whenever something major like this happens, technology will always advance to make things easier for us. As much as I think I remember the internet being super popular before the pandemic, it, no doubt, got much more popular during and after COVID. A big thing that people learned is how easy it is to find inspiration and a passion, while also being able to monetize that passion. At the beginning of the pandemic, when people were making small businesses in their homes with their stimulus checks, they realized how much the internet could open the world to everyone.

The University of Mississippi PRSSA chapter members in masks.

The world is more than what students have known thus far, in terms of location or opportunity. With the world becoming more technologically advanced, each generation must refine their online communication skills. Integrating technology into the classroom has helped college students navigate the complexities of communicating professionally and socially.

I was literally blown away when Kara Brand, who worked at Vogue, told us her story in our Square Magazine virtual meeting one day, Wilson said. The story was that she had graduated from Ole Miss and decided to move to New York. She worked for the MET Museum, where she worked the MET Gala annually.

One year, she met the editor-in-chief of Teen Vogue, and she was offered a job on the spot. From there, she moved to L.A. to work for Teen Vogue, where she eventually ended up landing a job at Vogue in New York City. That is the short story, but I was so fascinated by her and her luck. I definitely do not think we would have gotten to hear from her if we had not had the pandemic.

Elena Ossoski is a sophomore pursuing degrees in education and integrated marketing communications with an emphasis in public relations. Ossoski currently serves as editor-in-chief of UM Square Magazine, where she works with a team of directors to lead the staff. The staff worked together to publish the first volume of the student-run fashion magazine during the pandemic.

The pandemic provided an opportunity for reflection, outreach, and creativity for Ossoski and the magazine staff. Since UM Square Magazine posts weekly content online, including social media and blog posts, the team members could still contribute to story-telling, despite obstacles put in place by the pandemic.

Ive been able to form connections and relationships with people through social media and email, whether they are professional or friendships, even with people I havent met in person, Ossoski said. I would reach out to alumni, fellow students, and just people I thought were cool. Since it was during the pandemic, most people I interviewed I havent met in person. I would form relationships and share the stories through Square.

It has been very rewarding, Ossoski said.

Social media became a direct reflection of what people were craving during the pandemic. Society had been missing out on normalcy: students wanted to know what everyone else was doing daily, so students constantly watched everyone post about it online. Students longed to be with each other.

Theres so much knowledge that you can share from one person to another, Ossoski said. You can share someones life experiences, what they did that day, what they did at school, what they choose to wear each dayits a very intimate way to get to know somebodyand it also happened during the pandemic, when we also werent able to meet face-to-face, so it was just nice to hear about how other people lived their lives and share about these experiences on social media and on the blog. It just gave more insight to life in general.

Social media and blogs became an outlet to get to know each other. Students desire human connection. Sometimes, you need that push from someone who has done something slightly scary before you; deep down, you know it will be okay, but when you hear a story from an inspiring individual who has made it, it motivates you. Social media provided that extra level of connection during that time of disconnection that allowed our generation to reach out instantly and take that leap of faith that students otherwise may not have been brave enough to take.

This story was written by By Haley Clift.

To read more stories from The Review: https://issuu.com/mrmagazine123/docs/the_review_all_pages_final

To learn more about our programs: https://jnm.olemiss.edu/

To follow our school on social media @umjourimc: https://linktr.ee/umjourimc

Apply now: https://bit.ly/36t5f3l

See the rest here:
Learning Behind the Mask: Communities come together in remarkable ways to learn and adapt through COVID-19 - School of Journalism and New Media - Ole...