An estimated 75 members of the Writers Guild of America met Friday afternoon for a 90-minute Zoom meeting that served as an outlet for their collective disappointment about their union’s silence after Hamas’ attack on Israel.
Showrunners including Hank Steinberg (Without a Trace), Howard Gordon (Homeland), Joel Fields (The Americans) and Marc Guggenheim (Legends of Tomorrow) attended the virtual gathering in which attendees expressed confusion about why the WGA, fresh off a nearly 150-day strike, has not joined other guilds including SAG-AFTRA and the DGA in condemning the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack that killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians.
“It feels very much as if we all marched in solidarity for five months having our guild’s back and here they are not having ours,” Guggenheim told The Hollywood Reporter after the meeting.
Much of Friday’s meeting saw writers looking for answers about the WGA’s silence as it pertains to...
Showrunners including Hank Steinberg (Without a Trace), Howard Gordon (Homeland), Joel Fields (The Americans) and Marc Guggenheim (Legends of Tomorrow) attended the virtual gathering in which attendees expressed confusion about why the WGA, fresh off a nearly 150-day strike, has not joined other guilds including SAG-AFTRA and the DGA in condemning the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack that killed 1,400 people, mostly civilians.
“It feels very much as if we all marched in solidarity for five months having our guild’s back and here they are not having ours,” Guggenheim told The Hollywood Reporter after the meeting.
Much of Friday’s meeting saw writers looking for answers about the WGA’s silence as it pertains to...
- 10/21/2023
- by Lesley Goldberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Paramount Global chair and National Amusements president Shari Redstone is one of the most powerful people in Hollywood. She is also an observant Jew and a supporter of Israel who has been reeling over the days since Oct. 7, when Hamas terrorists attacked the Jewish state, she told The Hollywood Reporter on Tuesday in a corner booth at Wolfgang Puck’s Spago. The Beverly Hills restaurant was closed to the public for the evening in order to host “Black & Jewish Conversations,” an event that Redstone and Gelila Assefa, Puck’s Ethiopia-born wife, began organizing well before the Hamas attack in order to foster increased conversation and partnership between members of Hollywood’s Black and Jewish communities.
“Look, I’m not doing well, to be honest,” Redstone acknowledged. “I think there are no words to describe what took place, and all I do every day is try to do something that’s...
“Look, I’m not doing well, to be honest,” Redstone acknowledged. “I think there are no words to describe what took place, and all I do every day is try to do something that’s...
- 10/18/2023
- by Scott Feinberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
It seems like Prince Harry has been giving interviews non-stop lately. That’s mainly to promote his memoir Spare as the duke has been doing promotional tours for the book since it came out in January.
Now a body language expert has noticed that in one interview, Harry was using gestures that signal just how “desperate” he is to get his story out for anyone who doesn’t know or hasn’t read about it yet.
Prince Harry speaks onstage during Global Citizen Vax Live in California | Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Global Citizen Vax Live Prince Harry’s interview with trauma expert
Prince Harry had a virtual chat with trauma therapist Dr. Gabor Maté on March 4. Viewers were charged just over $33.00 to watch the 90-minute livestream in which the duke spoke about some of the difficult experiences he’s had in his life.
The mere fact that Harry sat...
Now a body language expert has noticed that in one interview, Harry was using gestures that signal just how “desperate” he is to get his story out for anyone who doesn’t know or hasn’t read about it yet.
Prince Harry speaks onstage during Global Citizen Vax Live in California | Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Global Citizen Vax Live Prince Harry’s interview with trauma expert
Prince Harry had a virtual chat with trauma therapist Dr. Gabor Maté on March 4. Viewers were charged just over $33.00 to watch the 90-minute livestream in which the duke spoke about some of the difficult experiences he’s had in his life.
The mere fact that Harry sat...
- 3/7/2023
- by Michelle Kapusta
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
The suspect charged with hate crimes after he allegedly shot two different Jewish men earlier this week had a history of sending violent, antisemitic messages, according to court records filed on Friday.
On Friday, the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California announced two federal hate crimes charges against Jaime Tran, 28, for his alleged involvement in the shootings. The victims Tran targeted were Jewish men leaving religious services, authorities claimed. Both incidents took place in the Pico-Robertson neighborhood, an area with a large Jewish population where...
On Friday, the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California announced two federal hate crimes charges against Jaime Tran, 28, for his alleged involvement in the shootings. The victims Tran targeted were Jewish men leaving religious services, authorities claimed. Both incidents took place in the Pico-Robertson neighborhood, an area with a large Jewish population where...
- 2/18/2023
- by Andrea Marks
- Rollingstone.com
Former Pink Floyd front man Roger Waters came under fire recently, after a concert in Belgium where the band's famous inflatable pig floated around an arena with the Star of David branded on it. Also featured on the pig were dollar signs, a hammer and sickle symbol representing the Soviet Union, the Shell oil company logo and what looks like a silhouette of a man giving a Nazi salute.
One concert goer, an Israeli named Alon Onfus Asif who lives in Belgium, was offended by the perceived message. "That was the only religious-national symbol which appeared among other symbols for fascism, dictatorships and oppression of people," he tells Yediot Ahronot, "Waters crossed the line and gave expression to an anti-Semitic message, beyond all his messages of anti-militancy."
Once the news spread, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, released a statement. He tells The Amgemeiner, "With this...
One concert goer, an Israeli named Alon Onfus Asif who lives in Belgium, was offended by the perceived message. "That was the only religious-national symbol which appeared among other symbols for fascism, dictatorships and oppression of people," he tells Yediot Ahronot, "Waters crossed the line and gave expression to an anti-Semitic message, beyond all his messages of anti-militancy."
Once the news spread, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, released a statement. He tells The Amgemeiner, "With this...
- 8/5/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
The following article is provided by Rolling Stone.
By Rj Cubarrubia
Roger Waters called for a boycott of Israel earlier this year, and now the former Pink Floyd singer-bassist is defending his The Wall Live Tour from accusations of anti-semitism in a Facebook post, titled "An open letter from Roger Waters." Waters begins the letter by explaining the recent controversy that erupted after a performance in Belgium last week: An Israeli man alerted a news source with video footage of a Star of David-marked prop pig that was featured in the show and destroyed by the audience at the end of the performance.
Link: Rolling Stone’s List of the 100 Greatest Artists Of All Time: Pink Floyd
The story gained traction and was picked up by Jewish newspaper The Algemeiner. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told The Algemeiner that Waters "is an open hater of...
By Rj Cubarrubia
Roger Waters called for a boycott of Israel earlier this year, and now the former Pink Floyd singer-bassist is defending his The Wall Live Tour from accusations of anti-semitism in a Facebook post, titled "An open letter from Roger Waters." Waters begins the letter by explaining the recent controversy that erupted after a performance in Belgium last week: An Israeli man alerted a news source with video footage of a Star of David-marked prop pig that was featured in the show and destroyed by the audience at the end of the performance.
Link: Rolling Stone’s List of the 100 Greatest Artists Of All Time: Pink Floyd
The story gained traction and was picked up by Jewish newspaper The Algemeiner. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told The Algemeiner that Waters "is an open hater of...
- 8/5/2013
- Huffington Post
Pink Floyd's Roger Waters has found himself in hot water after he insulted the Jewish community with a seemingly anti-Semitic display at a recent concert.
The incident happened Saturday, July 20 at a concert in Belgium, according to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. A giant, pig-shaped balloon emblazoned with the Star of David, as well as dictatorial symbols, dropped from the ceiling while Waters performed. His attire reportedly consisted of a long leather jacket and red-and-white arm band, "reminiscent of a Nazi uniform," per Jta. He was also carrying a fake machine gun.
“I came to the concert because I really like his music, without any connection to his political stance toward Israel,” concertgoer Alon Onfus Asif, an Israeli living in Belgium, told Israel daily Yediot Ahronot. “And I had a lot of fun, until I noticed the Star of David, on the inflatable pig. That was the only religious-national symbol...
The incident happened Saturday, July 20 at a concert in Belgium, according to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. A giant, pig-shaped balloon emblazoned with the Star of David, as well as dictatorial symbols, dropped from the ceiling while Waters performed. His attire reportedly consisted of a long leather jacket and red-and-white arm band, "reminiscent of a Nazi uniform," per Jta. He was also carrying a fake machine gun.
“I came to the concert because I really like his music, without any connection to his political stance toward Israel,” concertgoer Alon Onfus Asif, an Israeli living in Belgium, told Israel daily Yediot Ahronot. “And I had a lot of fun, until I noticed the Star of David, on the inflatable pig. That was the only religious-national symbol...
- 7/25/2013
- by The Huffington Post
- Huffington Post
Seems like there’s exactly one person in the world who doesn’t love Ted star Mila Kunis: Ukrainian politician Igor Miroschnichenko, who recently called the actress a “zhydovka” in a Facebook post.
The term, according to Simon Wiesenthal Center deans Rabbi Marvin Hier and Rabbi Abraham Cooper, means “dirty Jewess” — and is an “insidious slur invoked by the Nazis and their collaborators as they rounded up the Jews to murder them at Babi Yar and in the death camps.”
Yikes. It’s also a way for Miroschnichenko to imply that the actress — who was born in Ukraine and...
The term, according to Simon Wiesenthal Center deans Rabbi Marvin Hier and Rabbi Abraham Cooper, means “dirty Jewess” — and is an “insidious slur invoked by the Nazis and their collaborators as they rounded up the Jews to murder them at Babi Yar and in the death camps.”
Yikes. It’s also a way for Miroschnichenko to imply that the actress — who was born in Ukraine and...
- 12/21/2012
- by Hillary Busis
- EW.com - PopWatch
Mila Kunis is the target of an anti-Semitic attack unleashed by a Ukrainian politician.
Ukrainian lawmaker Igor Miroshnichenko targeted Kunis in an anti-Semitic Facebook post saying that the actress is not a true Ukrainian because she is a "zhydovka," according to TMZ. The term "zhydovka," which translates roughly to "dirty Jewess," has been used as a slur against Jewish people since at least the time of the Holocaust..
The Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, a global Jewish human rights organization that confronts anti-Semitism, hate and terrorism, has come to Kunis' defense in a letter to the Ukrainian prime minister, according to TMZ. In the letter, Rabbis Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper express their "outrage and indignation" and say Kunis is owed an apology.
The slur is laced with historic anti-Semitism. “The last time this term was used in any official way was during the Nazi occupation, when the Jews...
Ukrainian lawmaker Igor Miroshnichenko targeted Kunis in an anti-Semitic Facebook post saying that the actress is not a true Ukrainian because she is a "zhydovka," according to TMZ. The term "zhydovka," which translates roughly to "dirty Jewess," has been used as a slur against Jewish people since at least the time of the Holocaust..
The Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, a global Jewish human rights organization that confronts anti-Semitism, hate and terrorism, has come to Kunis' defense in a letter to the Ukrainian prime minister, according to TMZ. In the letter, Rabbis Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper express their "outrage and indignation" and say Kunis is owed an apology.
The slur is laced with historic anti-Semitism. “The last time this term was used in any official way was during the Nazi occupation, when the Jews...
- 12/21/2012
- by Cavan Sieczkowski
- Huffington Post
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