Meta fires staff for ‘using free meal vouchers to buy household goods’
Kimmel on Trump’s town hall dance: ‘swaying like a manatee tangled in seaweed’
Late-night hosts discussed Donald Trump’s unhinged town hall which descended into a 40-minute dance and his latest attacks on Kamala Harris.On Jimmy Kimmel Live! the host asked international viewers for help, saying that in the US “there’s a big hole in the ship and it’s sinking” referencing the “general election anxiety” in the remaining days.Kimmel said: “We have the most ridiculous major candidate of our lives” in the shape of Trump before playing footage of the former president slamming him on a podcast calling him “terrible” and “a loser”.Trump claimed that he had been on Kimmel’s show many many times which Kimmel denied, saying it had only happened thrice. “Mike ‘the Situation’ from Jersey Shore was on more times than you,” he added
Jerry Seinfeld says he was ‘wrong’ to blame ‘extreme left’ for killing comedy
Jerry Seinfeld has backtracked on comments he made earlier this year blaming the “extreme left and PC crap” for negatively affecting comedy, saying he now believes “it is not true”.The 70-year-old comedian told the New Yorker in April that he believed television comedy was suffering because “people [are] worrying so much about offending other people”.“Nothing really affects comedy. People always need it. They need it so badly and they don’t get it,” he said
Kimmel on Trump’s latest attacks: ‘When they go low, they go really low’
Late-night hosts looked back at Donald Trump’s most recent, unhinged rallies and at the damage that some of his more harmful comments have had.On Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the host said that it “feels like the longest election campaign of all time” with just a few weeks left. He joked that we are now in the “somebody please put Trump in a home stretch”.Kimmel said that at this stage “it’s hard to believe that anybody is going along with” the former president given his recent behaviour.Trump recently visited Aurora, Colorado, a city he has demonised by claiming that Venezuelan immigrants have turned it into a war zone
Calls for ACCC investigation into live music industry amid warnings artists may be getting ‘ripped off’
Calls are mounting for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) to investigate business practices in the live music industry, as the ABC prepares to air a Four Corners report scrutinising the Australian arm of the live entertainment behemoth Live Nation.The public broadcaster began promoting the Monday night program late last week, alleging monopolistic behaviour and “maximising profits at the expense of both consumers and artists”.The 30-second screen promo includes Midnight Oil frontman and former Labor arts minister Peter Garrett accusing Live Nation of “misusing its market power” and “calling the shots” at the expense of artists and consumers.Before the program aired, Live Nation issued a statement, saying that based on the promotional material it had seen the company was expecting an “inaccurate and unbalanced” story.“The program was obviously fully formed without any input from Live Nation,” the statement said
‘It’s quite a thing to do a show here and openly use the word looting’: artist Hew Locke on decolonising the British Museum
After his triumphant Tate installation, The Procession, the artist is preparing a radical exhibition tackling Britain’s imperial past. He talks about why we must return plundered artefacts and rethink attitudes to heritageWithin the oak-panelled walls and glass display cases of the Enlightenment Gallery of the British Museum – a long, impossibly high-ceilinged room that is a temple to the gods of reason and imperialism – there is a little unmarked secret door, leading backstage or who knows where. You would never spot it unless you were looking. But for the rest of the autumn – for the first time in its 200-year history – that door will be symbolically flung open and three raucous figures will be emerging from it, invading the hushed space of marble busts and dinosaur fossils and leather-bound books. Leading the charge will be a young child of indeterminate heritage, in rags and patches, calling the others on
Sculpture by the Sea 2024: giant melanoma on Sydney beach to deliver ‘message that will be hard to ignore’
Sculpture has a knack of provoking debate. The medium’s ability to divide viewers on the aesthetics of a work – and often its cost to the public purse – can make sculpture a polarising subject. But it’s rare for a work to claim it may save lives.Working in the field of advertising, Sydney creative Andrew Hankin is not above hyperbole. But his team’s entry into this year’s Sculpture by the Sea could very well save a life or lives, as visitors to Tamarama gaze down in horror/awe/morbid fascination at a gargantuan sculpture resembling a melanoma
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