The Post-Embarrassment Media Campaign of Andrew Yang
He once called himself the opposite of Trump. But he is another test of the theory that in politics, there’s no such thing as bad publicity.
Andrew Yang appeared on “Ziwe” on Sunday night to discuss billionaires, music and his campaign to become mayor of New York.Credit.Showtime, via YouTube
May 24, 2021Updated 4:49 p.m. ET
Years from now, when we look back on the history of pop-political interviewing, we may find it quaint that Sacha Baron Cohen had to disguise himself as Borat and Ali G in order to get public figures into uncomfortable situations.
Dan Perlman Talks New Show Flatbush Misdemeanors forbes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from forbes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Created by and starring Kevin Iso and Dan Perlman, the new Showtime series may feel familiar to anyone who has ever been young and struggling in Brooklyn. But don’t worry: It’s also funny.
âBillionsâ-Based Costume Courtroom Drama To Return Long Before âBillionsâ
Shull v. Sorkin is coming back to a courtroom near you (if you live in Manhattan), and to a livestream for everyone else.
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Artefactv / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)
Shull v. Sorkin is coming back to a courtroom near you (if you live in Manhattan), and to a livestream for everyone else.
It has been exactly 11 months since the last new episode of Showtime’s hedge fund drama “Billions” aired, and it remains unclear when the show’s dwindling number of fans will get to see the last five pandemic-delayed episodes of its fifth season, let alone the promised sixth. If you’re looking for a fix, however, you’re in luck, for the show’s battle with hedge-fund performance coach Denise Shull over just how much she and character Wendy Rhoades are alike (aside from the leather and ball gags) is coming back to court next week, and it will be available to
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During the dramatic swirl of last summer, as newborn activists hit the streets to protest the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and scores of other Black Americans, members of Congress (including the House Speaker, Nancy Pelosi) were photographed kneeling in Ghanaian kente cloth, and Aunt Jemima and Uncle Ben abruptly reached retirement age. Throughout, the twenty-nine-year-old comedian Ziwe Fumudoh, who lives in Brooklyn, interviewed defendants plucked from the court of “cancel culture” on Instagram Live. Her guests included the actress Rose McGowan, the food writer Alison Roman, and the influencer Caroline Calloway. One hardball question: “How many Black friends do you have?” It almost always made her interlocutors stutter and squirm.