'Madden 18' story mode looks a lot like 'Friday Night Lights'

The rumors were true: EA is bringing FIFA 17’s story mode to the realm of American football. EA has revealed that Madden 18 will include a Longshot campaign that sees you fill the cleats of Devin Wade, a “forgotten prospect” hoping to make the cut i…

'FIFA 18' will continue 'The Journey' of Alex Hunter

One of the best additions to FIFA 17 was ‘The Journey’, a mode that put players in the shoes of a fictional young star called Alex Hunter. Today at EA’s E3 press conference, it was confirmed that FIFA 18 will pick up his story after the events of the…

‘A Way Out’ is a splitscreen-only prison break game

It’s been a while since we heard anything about Hazelight, the Stockholm-based studio led by Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons’ director Josef Fares. The team broke cover at The Game Awards in 2014, a brief teaser trailer in tow that showed two men travel…

'Anthem' is BioWare's brand-new open world

The team behind Mass Effect has something new up its sleeves. BioWare today revealed Anthem, a new open-world franchise seemingly set in a futuristic, jungle-ridden universe. The teaser shows a mech of some kind and a big beastie screeching into the…

Google reveals when it'll stop supporting Pixel and Nexus phones

Wondering when you should upgrade your Nexus or Pixel? Google has updated its support page to reflect when it will no longer offer telephone and online support for the devices, and you can use that info to make a decision. In the past, the big G prom…

'Star Wars Battlefront II' campaign looks like a spin-off movie

Star Wars Battlefront II is definitely much bigger than its predecessor — but we know that. EA’s E3 presentation did its best to balance new multiplayer tid-bits (Chewbacca, the planet Naboo, Yoda, Darth Maul, Rey and more) with the highly-anticipat…

The Trump 'SNL' Season Led Kate McKinnon To Smash A Wall With A Hammer

This latest season of “Saturday Night Live” had great ratings. This was due in large part to very popular Donald Trump-related sketches, as the country tuned in to see how “SNL” would interpret the president’s various gaffes.

Although the focus on Trump gained the show a large audience, you can imagine this constant focus on such depressing source material would be taxing on a staff tasked to somehow make the subject of Trump seem fun.

With that in mind, Kate McKinnon was on “The Tonight Show” Friday night and explained that after this season, she and her writer friends needed to blow off quite a bit of steam.

A hammer was involved. 

I grabbed the hammer and one of my writer friends was like, “Put a hole in the wall. Put a hole in the wall!”
Kate McKinnon

Host Jimmy Fallon and McKinnon ― who famously portrayed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton ― talked about how NBC is renovating the “SNL” offices.

“Before we left, the last week we were all blowing off a lot of steam because it’s been like a big season or whatever and we were told the walls are coming down,” said McKinnon. “The whole floor is being demolished.”

McKinnon explained how she was dancing to music with “SNL” writer friends and fellow cast member Aidy Bryant when they realized a hammer was in the room.

“I grabbed the hammer and one of my writer friends was like, ‘Put a hole in the wall. Put a hole in the wall!,’” said McKinnon. “So I did and I put a hole in the wall. And then they all put a hole in the wall.”

But apparently, McKinnon had misinterpreted the plans for renovation and took that “the whole floor is being demolished” too literally.

“Then Aidy came back from the bathroom,” McKinnon continued. “And she was like, ‘Guys, the walls aren’t coming down.’”

McKinnon told Fallon that after the hammer incident, she bought a “big bucket of spackle” and left it in the office. “I sincerely apologize to whoever I made trouble for,” McKinnon said while looking straight at the camera.

After the apology she also jokingly admitted, “But I did feel alive. Wow did I feel young and alive.” 

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Watch EA's E3 2017 event live right here at 3PM ET

The big names aren’t waiting until next week to reveal what they have for us at E3 2017. EA is kicking things off today with its event at 3PM ET/12PM PT. We’re expecting details on games like Star Wars: Battlefront II, FIFA 18, Madden 18, NBA Live 18…

2018 Honda Accord Prototype First Drive: All-new 2.0 Turbo packs a surprise

That’s right folks, Honda’s turbocharging the all-new model year 2018 with a new 2.0-liter direct injection turbo-four. In a recent event held at Honda’s R&D facility in Tochigi Prefecture, Japan, I got a taste not only of the new engine but also the similarly-fresh 10-speed automatic transmission the automaker has been working on. The fun didn’t stop there: wrapped up … Continue reading

Trump's Justice Department Memo May Be Bigger Than Citizens United

Yesterday, as the news cycles were dying down, the Trump Justice Department (DOJ) dropped a bombshell brief which Bloomberg reported. Citing George Washington as precedent, the DOJ is saying that it is AOK for President Trump to take foreign governments’ and state-controlled banks’ money for goods and services without congressional approval, that it is not a violation of the Emoluments Clause of the United States Constitution.

The Citizens United decision opened the floodgates of money from America’s wealthiest, and potentially anyone else funding SuperPacs to buy an election.

This Trump DOJ Brief, if accepted by Judge Ronnie Abrams, hearing the case brought by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, will open the floodgates of influence peddling for any president who can do business with entities attached to a foreign power.

The brief states:

Neither the text nor the history of the clauses shows that they were intended to reach benefits arising from a president’s private business pursuits having nothing to do with his office or personal service to a foreign power… Were plaintiffs’ interpretation correct, presidents from the very beginning of the Republic, including George Washington, would have received prohibited ‘emoluments.’

The ploy seems to be a graft of an op-ed by Northwestern University Law professor Eugene Kontorovich that appeared in the Wall Street Journal, which he then expounded upon in an article in The Washington Post.

Kontorovich observed that our first president was a landlord who had huge agricultural holdings. Washington wrote to Arthur Young, a friend, to see if he could drum up any potential renters of Washington’s agricultural lands.

Kontorovich assumes that, because Young had become a member of the the first British Board of Agriculture, his communications with Washington about recruiting farmers was a crossing of the Emoluments line. So, if George can do it, so can Trump.

The Norwestern law professor then adds that Washington directly supervised his land holdings, even though his nephew, George Augustine Washington, was put in charge of Washington’s business affairs. Likewise Thomas Jefferson had a hand in his large agricultural estate’s affairs.

The argument is a really weak bit of sophistry that manipulates history without context.

First, the President-managing-a-business ruse: The young United States government was very much a work-in-progress when George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were presidents. The workings of government were far less complex than they are today. Messages took weeks to move, and crises around the globe were not dealt with in real-time. Even domestic events, because of communications, and distance, were slow to evolve. In that, Presidents had more time for things that does not exist in the instant world of the 21st century.

Further, the operation of a large single land holding, or basic agricultural operations, in no way approximates Donald Trump’s complex and secretive global branding and land-ownership, or its opaque funding, deals, or possible ties to foreign governments.

The real weakness, though, in both Kontorovich and the DOJ’s position is a huge cherry-picking of the Emoluments Clause, which states:

“No Title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.”

Jefferson, and no subsequent president, tried to make any sort of business arrangement of the kind which Washington did, which is why Kontorovich and DOJ have to reach that far back, to POTUS 1, to make a weak case for Trump.

As for Washington, the Kontorovich’s suppositions are weak. The DOJ brief would have to prove that Young was functioning as a government agent, rather than a personal friend when he was assisting Washington’s request. There would have to be evidence in the historical record that Young had been directed by William Pitt, or the Parliament, to assist President Washington to develop a relationship that would offer a quid-pro-quo.

That level of political cunning was totally absent from that century of politics. There is no indication that Mr. Young was acting in any capacity beyond that of a friend with agricultural connections, outside of the scope of his government employment. That is NOT an emoluments issue.

President Washington would never ask Young to engage the government of Britain to assist him. Had our first president had counsel of the kind available to a modern president, that would have prescreened his actions to the degree that is done now, he most certainly would have had a memo advising against it, and would not have done anything that would imperil the ink drying on the new Constitution.

Trump has directly benefitted economically from foreign powers, and continues to do so. Foreign government employees book stays at Trump’s D.C. hotel and other hotels and golf courses, by the admission of many, to curry favor. He was granted dozens of trademarks by the Chinese. His organization receives payments from Abu Dhabi Tourism and Culture Authority. Eric Trump bragged, years before Trump took office, that his dad’s golf courses were backstopped by $100M from Russian banks during the Great Recession. Those banks not like ones in the U.S. and are heavily state-controlled.

No other president in history, including Washington, has had the hubris, gaul, chutzpah, to demolish the emoluments clause.

If this memo is given any standing by Judge Abrams in the CREW case, any future presidential candidate could set up investments that would allow foreign governments to funnel money to a then president through their personal business dealings.

It is bad enough that Citizens United allows for so many slush funds of dark money that state actors from other countries could contribute to the myriad fly-by-night legal entities used to the influence of an American election without detection.

If the Judge allows this, the taint of the Trump Compromise of Emoluments would forever question who ”owns” the White House. The office of the President will lose stature and power, both here and abroad, and another pillar of the U.S. Constitution will be ground into the dust of history by greedy men long on ambition, and short on patriotism and honor.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.