CNN Chief Says NBC's Marketing Of Alex Jones Interview Was A 'Big Mistake'

NEW YORK ― As reporters attended an event Thursday at Time Warner Center, home of CNN, it was hard to ignore the controversy brewing at nearby 30 Rock.

On Sunday night, NBC will air Megyn Kelly’s interview with Alex Jones, a far-right figure with an audience in the White House and who has promoted dangerous conspiracy theories, such as the slaughter of 20 children at Sandy Hook Elementary school being a hoax. NBC has faced criticism for giving Jones a network television platform and a teaser prompted doubts he’ll be seriously grilled over his reckless claims. 

CNN Worldwide president Jeff Zucker defended booking Jones, telling reporters that he is a “newsworthy” subject because President Donald Trump “relies on him and his points of view.”

The issue, Zucker said, is that NBC’s handling this week didn’t indicate he’d be “held to account as much as somebody who spews such hatred and nonsense needs to be.”

“You can’t put out pictures of yourselves driving in cars together and wearing sunglasses and tease the way they did,” said Zucker, who was previously CEO of NBCUniversal. “If you’re going to do this story, the tease needs to be you holding up a picture of the dead kids at Sandy Hook and saying, ‘How dare you?’”

“New Day” co-hosts Alisyn Camerota and Chris Cuomo, who were being honored Thursday on the fourth anniversary of the CNN morning show, both agreed Jones is worthy of being interviewed given his influence. 

Camerota said she is interested in how Jones justifies “his sickening philosophy” and positions.

“The complete responsibility is on the interviewer to be prosecutorial and to really, really hold his feet to the fire,” she said. “If you can do that with someone who’s that slippery, then I do think it has some news merit.”

Cuomo said he would have released a transcript of the interview with Jones after the controversy began, which NBC has not done, but also defended the competitor against the charge it shouldn’t book the conspiracy theorist. 

“I think it’s a little dangerous to get into the ‘you don’t deserve a platform’ business,” he said. “If someone has no following, and they come out of nowhere, and I decide to elevate you, and make you relevant, now I think that you have a bigger stick in your hands when you come at me with that question.”

“But when you’re dealing with someone like Alex Jones, who clearly has a constituency, who has the president of the United States who has applauded him and supported his efforts ― at least in part ― well now the relevance is built in,” he continued. 

Jones appeared on CNN four years ago to debate gun rights with then-host Piers Morgan. But the controversy around this latest booking been more pronounced, with advertisers facing pressure to pull out of the show.

Zucker said the social media-accelerated trend of targeting advertisers isn’t a new tactic, but one that is being utilized during “a highly partisan time.” At the end of the day, he said, “the viewer gets to decide and advertisers will follow.”

Though Zucker said he viewed NBC’s marketing of the interview as a “big mistake,” he had also praised Kelly as a “very good journalist” and warned against prejudging the story. 

The Jones piece could still change quite a bit from the framing of the interview as seen in the teaser to how it airs Sunday night. 

Cuomo said he didn’t “envy the job of those producers and editors right now” who “must be re-cutting their asses off.”

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Ilana Glazer And Jillian Bell Want You To Know Why Movies Like 'Rough Night' Are Rare

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Ilana Glazer and Jillian Bell would like to address the “old dinosaurs” of Hollywood. Their new movie, “Rough Night,” is about rowdy women doing rowdy things ― something that shouldn’t be a rarity. It’s a stopgap, though hardly a solution, in a genre of storytelling that has largely remained the purview of men. 

Glazer, best known for “Broad City,” and Bell, the “Workaholics” star with standout roles in “22 Jump Street” and “The Night Before,” know “Rough Night” will invite correlations to macho capers like “The Hangover,” “Very Bad Things” and “Weekend at Bernie’s.” Scarlett Johansson, Zoë Kravitz, Glazer and Bell play college BFFs who reunite for a bachelorette weekend in Miami, where they are joined by the bride-to-be’s eccentric Australian pal (Kate McKinnon). The group’s booze- and cocaine-fueled hoopla takes a nosedive when they accidentally kill a stripper (Ryan Cooper) and attempt to dispose of the body. It’s the sort of antics that men undertake on the big screen all the time.

“We talked a lot about what people were going to compare us to,” Glazer told HuffPost last weekend at the movie’s New York junket. “Female-centric work is always more harshly compared and pigeonholed into some box when it’s described.” (For the record, Glazer has proudly never seen “The Hangover” and has no desire to change that.)

Last month, a Sony press release touted “Rough Night” as the first R-rated comedy produced by a major studio and directed by a woman since Tamra Davis’ “Half Baked” in 1998. Vanity Fair later published a headline with the same erroneous statistic, which discounts Nancy Meyers’ “It’s Complicated” and Mary Haron’s “American Psycho” (if you’re willing to consider that a comedy). Glazer also repeated this factoid, latching onto the notion as evidence of Hollywood’s resistance to adult female humor. The exact data almost doesn’t matter, though ― there are too few films that put women at the helm of bawdy material. Glazer is determined to speak out. In keeping, “Rough Night” ― directed and co-written by “Broad City” veteran Lucia Aniello ― represents another small step forward.

And yet. Glazer and Bell are keenly aware that one-off success stories can read as false progress. Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon have long said the 1991 feminist classic “Thelma & Louise” did little to galvanize female-focused projects, despite an Oscar-winning script by Callie Khouri and $81.5 million in domestic grosses when adjusted for inflation. Similarly, “Bridesmaids” was expected to precipitate a boom in female comedy, earning $169 domestically and an Oscar nomination for Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig’s script. Alas, here we are, still having conversations about the inhibitions surrounding women on the big screen.

“People get cocky,” Glazer said. “They think the change has happened.”

There’s a similar phenomenon at play with “Wonder Woman.” Now that it’s a bona fide critical and commercial success, the conversation turns to what that success means for female directors. Will more be invited to the table? It’s a reasonable question, but it carries the burden of implying that, had “Wonder Woman” failed, these aspiring filmmakers would still be stuck in the dugout. That’s a lot of pressure for one movie to carry.

Thankfully, Bell and Glazer are also writers who have devoted themselves to telling stories about women. The next season of “Broad City” premieres Aug. 23. Bell is working on one script with Charlotte Newhouse, her writing partner on the series “Idiotsitter,” which she likens to a Coen brothers movie. “And then the other one I like to call my little feminist project,” she said, referring to another she’s writing. Bell declined to elaborate, other than to emphasize, “It’s what I want to see as a viewer.” She’s determined to recruit a woman behind the camera, because “to hear the facts about female directors is actually upsetting.”

Hollywood should look at itself,” Glazer said.

“Rough Night” opens June 16.

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Beyond A Moment Of Silence

This week marks the second anniversary of the horrific murders of Rev. Clementa Pinkney and eight of his parishioners, gunned down by a white supremacist at Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church during bible study in Charleston, South Carolina. The attack remains a painful reminder that America as a nation has yet to reckon with its past, or to meaningfully address the policies and rhetoric that continue to create a culture that allows hate, division, and violence to thrive.

The attack at Emanuel AME was eerily reminiscent of the 1963 white supremacist bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, which killed four African American girls attending Sunday School. Just three years before the attack at Mother Emanuel, a similar hate crime was carried out at another house of worship: a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. There, a gunman killed six people and wounded four others.

These massacres are particularly heinous because the perpetrators targeted houses of worship — sacred places of peace, solace, love and community for people of faith. But what have we learned from the tragic loss of life in our most sacred spaces? How much more suffering must occur before we learn that more guns will not assuage the social, economic, and cultural issues infecting our country? 

How much more suffering must occur before we learn that more guns will not assuage the social, economic, and cultural issues infecting our country?

It is not nearly enough to hold a vigil in remembrance of the victims of such heinous attacks. An authentic effort to honor the lives lost to these and other brutal acts of violence demands transformative policy. It cheapens their memory when we hold a moment of silence, but fail to deal with the underlying social and political ills that fosters a culture of hate.  We cannot separate Mother Emanuel from the lax gun laws that allowed a deeply disturbed young man to buy a pistol two months before killing nine worshipers inside the Charleston church.

Regardless of where one lands on the political spectrum, the tragic loss of life and atrocities committed in houses of worship should move people — particularly people of faith — to action to curb acts of violence. As Dr. Martin Luther King said,

It may well be that we will have to repent in this generation, not merely for the vitriolic words and the violent actions of the bad people, but for the appalling silence and indifference of the good people.

It is disheartening that loss of life at Mother Emanuel, at the Oak Creek Sikh temple, and of innocent children from Chicago to Newtown has not resulted in an urgent commitment by policymakers to change our laws to curtail gun violence in this country.  Just this week, America witnessed the second incident in the span of six years where a gunman opened fire on a member of Congress.

As Gabrielle Gifford, a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives and gunshot survivor wrote,

We must acknowledge that a deadly problem like this brings a responsibility to find solutions. And that’s where we, as a nation, will need courage in abundance.

Sadly, even in the face of tragedy, lawmakers — many of whom identify as Christians — have doubled down on irresponsible gun laws that increase access to guns, further endangering the general public and law enforcement officials alike.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures and the National Rifle Association, at least 11 states have passed laws allowing the concealed carry of guns without a permit within the last year. Sixteen additional states have introduced legislation in 2017 to do the same.  There is a perverse logic that permeates the public debate around guns; it is an assumption that more guns are the answer to too many guns. But history clearly shows a positive correlation between an increase in gun violence and more lenient gun laws.

In South Carolina, the site of the Emanuel Baptist Church shooting, the legislature advanced a bill this year that would allow South Carolinians to carry guns openly without obtaining a permit, while simultaneously refusing to move a proposal aimed at closing the Charleston loophole to strengthen background checks. 

It is not nearly enough to hold a vigil in remembrance of the victims of such heinous attacks.

Laws cannot dictate virtue and goodness — but they can go a long way in keeping guns out of the hands of individuals who seek to harm innocent people.

Equally important, one cannot disassociate gun violence from the venomous rhetoric and policies targeting African-Americans, Latinx, women, Muslims, Jewish, and the LGBT community. According to the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, hate crimes rose more than 20 percent in nine major cities in 2016. Researchers link to the divisive rhetoric used during the 2016 presidential campaign.  The Southern Poverty Law Center, meanwhile, tracked over 850 hate crime incidents immediately after the election, a trend that has extended well into 2017 with a wave of intimidation, assaults, murder, vandalism, bomb threats, and arson. 

Hateful rhetoric and racial appeals used by public officials no doubt fuels extremist behavior and is indefensible. Our political officials should be held to a higher standard; they should promote peace instead of division and strife.

Lax gun laws coupled with hateful rhetoric is an explosive combination. Charleston and Oak Creek are cautionary tales of how hateful rhetoric can fuel violent behavior. When we fail to exercise the moral courage to challenge hate in all its permutations—including Confederate symbols—we are complicit in furthering the type of environment that leads to tragedy.

If we truly wish to honor the memory of those who lost their lives at Mother Emmanuel, we must show solidarity beyond a moment of silence. We must act in their name by standing up to hate and supporting common sense gun reform.

LaShawn Y. Warren is the Vice President of the Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative at the Center for American Progress.

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Dennis Rodman Gave Kim Jong Un A Mermaid Puzzle, 'Where's Waldo?' Book

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Former NBA player Dennis Rodman is hanging out in North Korea again and brought really bizarre gifts for his friend, dictator Kim Jong Un.

On Thursday, Rodman gave Sports Minister Kim Il Guk an assortment of presents intended for Kim Jong Un. Among them were a copy of Trump’s book “The Art of the Deal,” a copy of “Where’s Waldo? The Totally Essential Travel Collection,” a mermaid puzzle, two sets of soap and two autographed jerseys.

While the puzzle and the “Where’s Waldo?” book could be for Kim’s daughter, the other gifts are surely for Kim Jong Un himself. It’s unclear who the soap might be for. 

As for why Rodman went to North Korea to begin with, Rodman’s agent, Chris Volo, said the basketball player is “going to try to bring peace between both nations” in a Twitter video.

“That’s the main reason why we’re going,” Rodman added. “We’re trying to bring everything together. If not, at least we tried. We’re trying to open doors between both countries.”

Apparently the feeling Rodman has towards his North Korean friends is mutual. The sports minister told Rodman he’s “an old friend,” according to the Associated Press.

“In the past, our respected supreme leader met you several times and he used his precious time to watch the basketball match with the players you brought here,” he said. “In the past he met you, so our people all know you well. And also we feel that you are an old friend.”

We truly live in peculiar times.

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Little Girl Adorably Mistakes A Bride For A Princess From Her Favorite Book

Fairy-tale moments happen all the time in real life ― and these sweet photos are proof.

Last February, Scott and Shandace Robertson tied the knot in Seattle. While taking wedding day pics in the Ballard section of the city, a little girl stopped and stared up at the beaming bride.

As the couple soon learned, the awestruck two-year old thought Shandace was the “princess” from her favorite book ― the one’s she holding in this photo by wedding photographer Stephanie Cristalli Photography:

Scott posted the photos of his beautiful bride and the little girl on the photo-sharing site Imgur, where the swoon-worthy pics received over 900 comments. 

In an interview with HuffPost, Shandace recalled the sweet little encounter on the street. 

“The little girl didn’t say anything actually, she just smiled the entire time,” the newlywed said. “I could tell by her face that her heart was overflowing.” 

Princess Shandace gave the little girl a flower from her bouquet: 

The toddler loved it:

Then, the two princesses ended their royal meeting with a hug.

“Because I love little kids so much, I asked her mom if I could hold her,” Shandace said. “Her face expresses how we both felt, overjoyed!”

Aww.

In case you were wondering, the “princess” book the toddler was reading is the classic mystery novel The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, Scott told HuffPost. 

“I’m pretty sure she just liked the picture on the cover and became attached to it! The book is above my reading level, let alone a toddler’s,” he joked. 

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