Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s rhetoric on immigrants: ‘A complete lie that he knows is a lie’

September172024
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With other late-night hosts on holiday after the Emmys, Jimmy Kimmel talks Donald Trump’s lies about Haitian immigrants and posting on Truth Social that he hates Taylor Swift.Jimmy Kimmel returned to his ABC stage the night after the Emmys, also known as “the old Tinseltown reach-around”, he quipped.The annual television awards were “not a good night” for Kimmel’s show, as he joked that his obvious victory in variety series was stolen by The Daily Show.“A few months ago, Jon Stewart wasn’t even the host of the Daily Show! They swapped him in illegally,” he continued with the bit.“My own network, ABC, rigged it against me.

They’re attacking me from the inside now,”“It was three on one! And we won by a landslide, and we have the biggest crowds,” he joked,“No host in history has been treated more unfairly than we were … Guillermo, I need you to find the 11,000 votes,”In more serious news, Kimmel recapped the apparent second assassination attempt on Donald Trump by a man who “appears to be a troubled individual,His political views are all over the place”, he said, noting that he tweeted earlier this year that his dream ticket would be Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy, “which is how you know he’s nuts”.

“But Trump, of course, is blaming Kamala Harris and President Biden for this,” said Kimmel,According to Trump, “their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country, and they are the ones that are destroying the country … They use highly inflammatory language,I can use it too, far better than they can, but I don’t,”“Right, you are nothing if not a calming influence,” Kimmel deadpanned,“This is a man who for the last week has been spreading a complete lie that he knows is a lie, saying Haitian immigrants are eating pets in Springfield, Ohio.

This is a man who just last week joked about Nancy Pelosi’s 84-year-old husband being brutally attacked with a hammer by one of his deranged fans.This is a man who literally hours before this happened posted on Truth Social the words I Hate Taylor Swift.”Kimmel tried to visualize the thought process behind Trump publicly expressing hatred toward arguably the biggest pop star in the world, who endorsed Harris minutes after their presidential debate last week.“It’s Sunday morning, 7.40am.

Trump just wolfed down a plate of ketchup and eggs with nine strips of limp steamer-trade that no one can afford to eat anymore because of Biden,” Kimmel imagined.“He’s got three TVs on, he’s looking at his phone, Melania is somewhere, he has no idea, but he hasn’t seen her for weeks.So he’s scrolling through Newsmax on Twitter, and he sees a story about how many people registered to vote after Taylor endorsed Kamala Harris.”“The most popular singer of the century is telling her fans not to vote for him, and he can’t take it anymore,” he added.“He’s had enough.

He thinks ‘I hate Taylor Swift’ and he whips out his little thumbs and he types ‘I hate Taylor Swift’,”Kimmel went on and on, up until Trump “waddled out to the first hole” of golf in defeat,
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s rhetoric on immigrants: ‘A complete lie that he knows is a lie’

With other late-night hosts on holiday after the Emmys, Jimmy Kimmel talks Donald Trump’s lies about Haitian immigrants and posting on Truth Social that he hates Taylor Swift.Jimmy Kimmel returned to his ABC stage the night after the Emmys, also known as “the old Tinseltown reach-around”, he quipped. The annual television awards were “not a good night” for Kimmel’s show, as he joked that his obvious victory in variety series was stolen by The Daily Show.“A few months ago, Jon Stewart wasn’t even the host of the Daily Show! They swapped him in illegally,” he continued with the bit. “My own network, ABC, rigged it against me

September172024
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‘Flipped universe’ Ladies Lounge exhibit intended to expose gender inequality, Mona’s lawyer tells court

Men and women may be recognised as equal under Australian law, but women still suffer unequal opportunity on a daily basis, a lawyer for Hobart’s Museum of Old and New Art (Mona) has told a court.Mona is appealing a tribunal decision that found the museum had engaged in gender discrimination by denying men entry to its Ladies Lounge installation, created by the artist Kirsha Kaechele, who is also the wife of the museum’s owner, David Walsh.The installation has been closed since Tasmania’s civil and administrative tribunal (Tascat) ordered in April that Mona must start admitting men after the New South Wales man Jason Lau complained when he wasn’t allowed in.The gallery’s lawyer Catherine Scott told the supreme court the lounge was designed to promote equal opportunity and give men an experience of ongoing discrimination.Women in Australia in 2024 were less valued and less powerful than men, less safe at home from gendered violence and paid less, she said

September172024
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Trent Dalton’s Love Stories review – a stage adaptation that grabs you by the heart

Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), BrisbaneFrom the team that brought Boy Swallows Universe to the theatre comes a new work that tells a city’s worth of stories – and packs an emotional punchFor two months during the pandemic, the Australian author Trent Dalton lugged a sky blue 1960s Olivetti typewriter to a busy Brisbane street corner and invited strangers to tell him a love story. A sentimental, slightly absurd stunt – and one that could have gone very wrong. But Dalton, ever the charmer, has a way of finding the extraordinary in the everyday.The result was Love Stories, a book brimming with intimate confessions, grand gestures and all the messy business of being human. Now, in a stage adaptation for Queensland Performing Arts Centre, adapted by Tim McGarry and directed by Sam Strong, those stories don’t just leap from the page – they explode with theatrical spectacle

September172024
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Intrigue, desire … and awful landlords: why queer authors are suddenly writing about houses

‘I think it’s an investigation of belonging – one that we didn’t have a literal space for before.”I’m on the phone with the novelist Yael van der Wouden, conferring with her about a recent trend in LGBTQ+ writing: a preoccupation with houses. I figured she would be a good person to talk to because her new novel The Safekeep centres on a lonely old house in the Dutch countryside that suddenly, one summer, is flooded with queer desire and intrigue. The problem is that the Booker-shortlisted author is talking to me in transit, touring Europe, at this moment on a train rattling across northern Italy. Reader, witness the irony of our discussing ideas of rootedness and belonging as Van der Wouden keeps getting ousted from her seat

September162024
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Fifteen architecture firms shortlisted for NSW competition aimed at alleviating housing crisis

More than a dozen architecture firms from across Australia and overseas will vie to design homes for five Sydney sites set aside by the New South Wales government to help alleviate the state’s housing crisis.The 15 finalists in the government’s pattern book design competition were announced on Monday, culled from the portfolios and expressions of interest of more than 200 entries.Although pattern books to build mass housing have been sporadically used since colonial times, this is the first time the NSW government and not private enterprise has been the instigator. The idea behind a pattern book for building is to provide a fast track for construction by pre-approving selected designs, thereby cutting through red tape and lengthy development applications.After submitting site-specific designs in October, five winners will be selected to build their low- and medium-rise designs across the five metropolitan sites, of which only one has so far been revealed – Sydney Olympic Park

September162024
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Last surviver of the Bloomsbury Group? Meet David ‘Bunny’ Garnett, 1972

In 1972, the Observer encountered one of a near-extinct species: Bloomsbury Group survivor writer David ‘Bunny’ Garnett, nearly perishing in the process, thanks to Garnett’s hair-raising driving. ‘“You drive with great imagination,” I said faintly,’ journalist Ruth Hall reported when Garnett collected her for an overnight stay at his cobwebby, dead-fly-infested French farmhouse.It’s a funny, affectionate portrait of a man who ‘retains an incredible “niceness” – there is no other word for it’. Beret-clad Garnett, then 80, was an attentive if eccentric host, frying potatoes, stoking the fire and plying Hall with walnut cake and a bespoke hotwater bottle fashioned from a beer bottle. He was modestly embarrassed to be interviewed, offering an alternative: ‘I’ve prepared a List of the Best and Worst Things in Life

September152024