Tag Archives: hopefuls

HBO’s Casey Bloys Talks Emmy Wins & Updates On 2025 Hopefuls ‘The Last Of Us’, ‘Euphoria’ & ‘White Lotus’; Calls On Gay Twitter For ‘Gilded Age’ Support – Deadline

  1. HBO’s Casey Bloys Talks Emmy Wins & Updates On 2025 Hopefuls ‘The Last Of Us’, ‘Euphoria’ & ‘White Lotus’; Calls On Gay Twitter For ‘Gilded Age’ Support Deadline
  2. ‘The Last of Us’ Cast Reunites on Emmy Awards Red Carpet 1 Year After Show’s Premiere Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Casey Bloys Reflects on HBO’s Emmys Dominance, Looks Ahead to 2024 — and 2025 Hollywood Reporter
  4. Here Are The Eight Emmys ‘The Last Of Us’ Won For HBO Forbes
  5. How Many Emmys Did ‘The Last of Us’ Win in 2024? Parade Magazine

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College Football Playoff, bowl projections: Paths for Ohio State, New Year’s Six hopefuls with berths clinched

With the penultimate College Football Playoff Rankings released Tuesday, it is time to examine the prospects for the teams still in the hunt for the four-team field. There are basically five teams in contention for those spots with only four of them actually competing in conference championship games played across Friday and Saturday.

Given it is such a short list this year, we have expanded this annual story to include a look at what possibilities exist for the four remaining New Year’s Six games outside of the playoff. There is not much flexibility with so many conference connections involved, but there is still some intrigue.

Without further ado, here is list of the remaining CFP contenders in order of their current ranking along with an explanation of what each team can accomplish this weekend. Let’s take a look how those teams stack up with Championship Week and the final CFP Rankings ahead.

College Football Playoff paths

New Year’s Six paths

The New Year’s Six options are more numerous. After the CFP pairings are set, the Rose, Sugar and Orange Bowls will select the teams for their games. Here is how that will go down.

Rose Bowl

If the Big Ten and/or Pac-12 champions advance into the playoff, the bowl gets to choose its replacements. Traditionally, those would be the highest-ranked teams remaining from those conferences. However, the Rose Bowl has the option to choose its entrants from a “cluster” of similarly rated teams.

If Michigan and USC both won this weekend, the Rose Bowl could have been left with a rematch of last year’s game featuring Ohio State and Utah. That would have been less than ideal. The Rose looked prepared to insert No. 8 Penn State from the Big Ten and/or No. 12 Washington from the Pac-12 to ensure the game was not a repeat. The Buckeyes played at the Rose Bowl twice in the last four years, while the Nittany Lions have not been in the game since 2016. The Huskies were a possibility from the Pac-12 as the Utes, in addition to playing the Rose Bowl last year, would have also taken their fourth loss.

However, all of that became moot Friday night with Utah beating USC to ensure the Pac-12 champion advances to the Rose Bowl. With Ohio State moving into the playoff and Michigan already locking up a spot, Penn State is now projected for the Rose Bowl as the Big Ten representative. The wildcard is Purdue, which would automatically be in this game if the Boilermakers become the Spoilermakers against Michigan.

  • Michigan wins: Penn State vs. Utah
  • Purdue wins: Purdue vs. Utah

Sugar Bowl

Similarly, the Sugar Bowl features conference champions from the SEC and Big 12. The Big 12 situation is set. Since TCU will be a playoff team win or lose, Kansas State will be in the Sugar Bowl either as the Big 12 champion or the replacement for the Horned Frogs. If Georgia wins, No. 6 Alabama will replace the Bulldogs in this game. Otherwise, LSU gets in as the conference champion.

  • Georgia wins: Alabama vs. Kansas State
  • LSU wins: LSU vs. Kansas State 

Orange Bowl

This bowl only gets one conference champion. The ACC title winner is the anchor with No. 9 Clemson vs. No. 23 North Carolina deciding the berth as neither team can reach the playoff. The opponent is the highest-ranked team remaining from the SEC, Big Ten or Notre Dame not in the playoff, Rose Bowl or Sugar Bowl. That representative will come from the SEC and be either Alabama or No. 7 Tennessee.

  • Georgia wins: Tennessee vs. Clemson or North Carolina
  • LSU wins: Alabama vs. Clemson or North Carolina

Cotton Bowl

This is the only game with at-large spots. One of those will go to the Group of Five automatic qualifier, which will be the winner of the AAC battle between No. 18 Tulane and No. 22 UCF. The other spot simply goes to the highest-rated team left that is not already in a New Year’s Six game.

Those options will be USC, Tennessee or Washington. What’s unknown where USC will fall, but at 11-2, the Trojans are the most-likely team to get the final New Year’s Six spot.

The highest-ranked team with no chance at all to play in the New Year’s Six is No. 13 Florida State. However, that does not mean all of the top 12 teams will qualify. In fact, the AAC champion will not be in the top 12. and Purdue would not rank that high either even as a Big Ten champion.

Beyond this list of contenders, CBS Sports has released my updated bowl projections for the 2022-23 season on Friday night. Reminder: These projections are not how things stand now but rather how I expect them to look following the conference championship games Saturday.

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GOP hopefuls turn to Pence to broaden appeal before election

NEW YORK (AP) — In Donald Trump’s assessment, Mike Pence “committed political suicide” on Jan. 6, 2021.

By refusing to go along with the then-president’s unconstitutional push to overturn the results of the 2020 election, Pence became a leading target of Trump’s wrath and a pariah in many Republican circles.

But the final weeks of this year’s intensely competitive midterm elections suggest that the former vice president’s fortunes have shifted as he lays the groundwork for his own potential 2024 White House campaign. The man who was booed last year at a conservative conference is now an in-demand draw for Republican candidates, including some who spent their primaries obsessively courting Trump’s endorsement, in part by parroting his election lies.

Pence has traveled the country, holding events and raising millions for candidates and Republican groups, including signing fundraising solicitations for party committees.

For some campaigns in tight races, Pence is seen as something of a neutralizing agent who can help broaden their appeal beyond Trump’s core base of support. That’s the case in Arizona, with a critical Senate race this year and where the 2024 presidential campaign will be hotly contested. Last week, Pence endorsed Senate nominee Blake Masters, who has struggled to pivot from the primary and win over moderates in a state where one-third of voters are registered independents.

“He takes a little bit of the edge off Masters with a lot of voters,” veteran GOP strategist Scott Reed said. “You know Masters is new to this, first-time candidate, said some silly things he probably regrets during the campaign. But now it’s all about undecided voters in Maricopa County. There’s not a lot more science behind this.”

The endorsements can seem jarring given that Pence has spent much of the past year pushing back on Trump’s election lies, which spurred the violent mob that descended on the Capitol on Jan. 6 while Pence was trying to preside over the formal congressional certification of Joe Biden’s election victory. Pence and members of his family had to be rushed to safety and were held for hours in an underground loading dock as the marauders roamed the building’s hallways. Some rioters chanted “Hang Mike Pence!” and erected a makeshift gallows outside.

Pence agreed to endorse Masters even though Masters, during the primary, baselessly denied the 2020 election results. Masters recorded a video in which he said he thought Trump had won and claimed on his website that “if we had had a free and fair election, President Trump would be sitting in the Oval Office today.” Trump endorsed Masters in June, saying in a statement: “Blake knows that the “Crime of the Century” took place, he will expose it and also, never let it happen again.”

Pence made no mention of that in Phoenix on Tuesday.

“What I came here to Arizona to say is not only is Blake Masters the right choice for the United States Senate, the people of Arizona deserve to know Blake Masters may be the difference between a Democrat majority in the Senate and a Republican majority in the Senate,” Pence said.

The former vice president, along with Masters and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, took just three questions, two of them from conservative websites. When a television reporter noted that Masters has questioned the 2020 election, a spokesman for Masters cut him off before he could finish his question.

Masters is not the only election denier Pence has endorsed or assisted.

Two days after the Masters event, Pence was in Georgia headlining a fundraiser for Burt Jones, the nominee for lieutenant governor. Jones not only embraced Trump’s claims of widespread election fraud and called for a statewide investigation into the 2020 race, but he also signed on to be one of his state’s fake alternate electors — a scheme now under criminal investigation.

Last month, Pence was in New Hampshire for Senate nominee Don Bolduc, a retired Army general who also spent his primary campaign telling voters the race was stolen from Trump.

Marc Short, a longtime Pence adviser, declined to set a red line for candidates Pence would and would not endorse.

“It’s more about making sure that he’s being a team player where he needs to be,” Short said. “I think as a lot of these candidates look to solidify the party behind them, Pence can be helpful.”

There is no evidence of any widespread fraud or manipulation of voting machines in the 2020 election, underscored by repeated audits, court cases and the conclusions of Trump’s own Department of Justice. Still, support of false election claims run deep among GOP candidates this year.

The Masters endorsement notably came days after a debate in which he made headlines for seeming to have shifted from his most outrageous rigged election claims. Masters instead blamed Trump’s loss on “big tech,” “big media” and the FBI, and under repeated questioning, acknowledged he hadn’t seen evidence the vote count or results were manipulated, as Trump has claimed. (After the Pence visit, Masters told Fox News he stood by what he had said on his now-modified website, adding: “I think if everyone followed the law, President Trump would be in the Oval Office.”)

Short said Pence was happy to support candidates who had moved past 2020, as the former vice president has urged the party to do.

“If people sort of acknowledged a mistaken position before, he certainly wants to reward that,” Short said. “I think he wants to help conservatives first and foremost, but if people who were elected are now adopting new position about the events of Jan. 6,” Short said, “then that’s a positive.”

Jones and Bolduc have also tried to distance themselves from their previous statements.

In interviews, Jones has tried to play down the fake elector slate as a “procedural move,” while noting that voters rarely mention the 2020 race.

“Look he’s been consistent that he does not believe the 2020 election was rigged. He said that Joe Biden is president,” said Jones campaign spokesman Stephen Lawson, who noted that Pence and Jones have a long-standing relationship and, like Masters, share former Pence staff.

“For us, it was sort of a no-brainer because the vice president’s still very well liked in Georgia, very well received. And we’re in that final stretch where any Republican coming to raise money, support, is a value add,” he said.

“I think it’s certainly a nod to more mainstream kind of moderate Republicans. I think that’s a fair assessment,” he said.

Bolduc claimed throughout the primary race that the 2020 election had been stolen. During a debate, he proclaimed that “Trump won the election, and damn it, I stand by” and adding, “I’m not switching horses, baby.”

But right after the GOP primary — and a day after appearing with Pence — he told Fox News it was time to move on. “You know, we live and learn, right? And I’ve done a lot of research on this and I’ve spent the past couple of weeks talking to Granite Staters all over the state from every party. And I have come to the conclusion, and I want to be definitive on this: The election was not stolen,” Bolduc said. He described Biden as “the legitimate president of this country.”

(Earlier this month Bolduc changed his position again, saying he wasn’t sure what happened with the election. “I can’t say that it was stolen or not. I don’t have enough information.”)

Reed, the party strategist, said he understood the rationale behind Pence’s endorsements.

“He’s a big picture party guy. And it doesn’t surprised me that he’s hustling as hard as he is for people who may not be 100% Pencers,” he said. “By doing these kinds of events,” he added, “they’re going to take another look at him if he decides to run.”

Pence’s political future is an open question. Trump, who is widely expected to run again, remains deeply popular with Republican primary voters and would almost certainly be an early front-runner for the 2024 nomination. Pence has said his own decision about running will not be influenced by Trump, though allies often voice skepticism that Trump ultimately will end up on the ballot.

Beyond his endorsements, Pence has spent his time since leaving office performing a careful balancing act. He has distanced himself from Trump’s most corrosive statements while promoting what he calls the Trump-Pence agenda. Pence, like generations of could-be candidates, has used the primaries as an opportunity to forge new relationships and build goodwill, and continues to align himself with conservative causes. His trips often include college visits and speeches before anti-abortion groups.

Other potential 2024 candidates have campaigned for the Republican cause, including Texas Sen. Ted Cuz, who is on a monthlong, 17-state “Take Back America” bus tour. Trump has held rallies and finally begun spending a small part of his vast political fortune to help his favored candidates.

“I think he and all these guys are out there really helping the Republicans to win back the House and win back the Senate. It’s an effort that everybody needs to contribute to,” said David McIntosh, president of the influential Club for Growth, who has joined Pence at several events.

McIntosh, who has been at odds with Trump in recent months, said he believes the electorate is “moving on” from 2020 “to what’s on the ballot this election.” He said candidates such as Masters “want to show that they’ve got support from all different types of Republicans, everyone that’s out there, so there’s a unity theme.”

“It’s always been my view,” he added, “that leaders like that help themselves by helping.”

But being popular enough that candidates want to campaign with you is very different from being popular enough to be competitive in a presidential primary, and right now, Pence routinely polls in the single digits, far lower than Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

“Around here people talk about DeSantis and Trump,” said Georgia GOP strategist Brian Robinson, adding that attention is largely focused on the Nov. 8 midterms.

Pence’s policy group recently held a retreat in Utah at the Montage Deer Valley that was attended by GOP donors such as Matthew J. Bruderman, a New York investor who praised Pence’s election-year efforts.

“He’s been extremely effective and deserves credit for continuing to help elect people who he believes will help advance conservative principles,” Bruderman said by email, adding that he would “support him or any fiscal conservative of courage and character that wins the nomination” in 2024.

Art Pope, another donor who attended the retreat, said he “personally would love to see Vice President Pence run in 2024.”

“Yes there are frictions and there are divisions” in the GOP, he said, but the party is uniting behind its nominees now that primaries are over.

“Vice President Pence is both benefiting for that unity and helping lead that unification,” he said.

___

Associated Press writer Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix contributed to this report.

___

Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections and on Twitter, https://twitter.com/ap_politics



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Trump hits Pence over Jan. 6 role as possible GOP 2024 hopefuls gather

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NASHVILLE — Former president Donald Trump used an evangelical conference here to ridicule former vice president Mike Pence for upholding the Constitution on Jan. 6, 2021, choosing an audience that represents Pence’s political base as a venue to attempt to undermine him.

“Mike Pence had a chance to be great. He had a chance to be historic,” Trump said in his first remarks about his onetime governing partner amid Jan. 6 committee hearings revealing the intense pressure Pence withstood in deciding to go forward with his constitutional role certifying the election. “Mike did not have the courage to act.” He added: “Mike was afraid of whatever he was afraid of.”

Trump also referred to Pence, who did not attend the conference, as a “human conveyor belt” for his role in moving the election process forward, saying that he had considered labeling him as a “robot.” Trump’s own aides have testified they told the president it would not be constitutional for Pence to move to overturn the election.

Pence’s spokesman didn’t provide an on-the-record response to Trump’s speech. Several people close to Pence said they believe time will vindicate the former vice president’s Jan. 6 position among conservative voters, even as Trump continues berating him for refusing to step outside his ceremonial role overseeing the electoral college count.

In an interview earlier this week, Marc Short, who was Pence’s chief of staff, said that he believed Pence’s actions will eventually accrue to his favor. “The arc of history will bend toward what he did,” he said.

On Friday afternoon, Trump delivered the headline speech at the Faith & Freedom Coalition’s annual Road to Majority conference, which served as a preview of what the 2024 GOP presidential field could look like. But Pence — along with other possible presidential contenders — chose not to attend. Aside from Trump, no other speaker mentioned the Jan. 6 proceedings during the conference’s initial days.

The 90-minute speech was the first time Trump delivered an in-person rebuttal to the Jan. 6 committee’s proceedings, which have been broadcast to the public in three dramatic installments so far. His remarks — and his attacks on Pence — were met with applause from the conservative crowd.

The former president aggressively attempted to rebut the narrative of planned sedition that is emerging from the hearings. Trump told the conference he had hoped to return the 2020 election to the state legislatures rather than outright overturning it, a move that experts said would have violated the Constitution.

Pence was invited to address the convention as well, but chose not to, said Ralph Reed, the organization’s founder, who is close with both men. “If Mike Pence wanted to come and wanted to offer a rejoinder to these folks, he could have done it,” Reed said in a lunch with reporters Friday afternoon. “I’m not saying he should have done it.”

Reed said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) was also invited but did not attend.

The conference represented the first major gathering of potential 2024 GOP contenders, giving them a chance to begin testing messages with one of the most influential audiences in Republican presidential politics: evangelical leaders and activists.

Attacks against President Biden and Democrats focused on high inflation, high gas prices and references to the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Most added populist strains to their pitches, with barbs directed at Big Tech and corporate leaders. And all touched on cultural issues, bemoaning coronavirus protocols, school curriculum and shifts in gender identity that the left embraces.

Trump also hinted he might seek the White House again, at one point musing about “our next Republican president” and adding: “I wonder who that will be.” He paused as the crowd of about 2,000 gave him a standing ovation.

“Would anybody like me to run for president?” Trump asked, as the crowd whistled, cheered and some began chanting “U.S.A.”

But he was hardly the only one testing the waters. Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.) who addressed the crowd on Friday morning, walked back and forth across the ballroom stage and predicted that Republicans will win majorities in the House and the Senate in November, and then, holding his hands up he added: “And then in two years — I have a dream,” a reference to the Rev. Martin Luther King.

He paused for applause, and then described the dream of GOP control in Washington. “We will show America how you recover after a gut punch,” Scott said.

Sen. Rick Scott (Fla.), another Republican eyeing a 2024 run who heads the GOP Senate campaign arm, said he feels optimistic about GOP chances in November. “The backlash is coming,” he said.

Scott also referenced his controversial plan to increase federal income taxes for roughly half of Americans.

The plan was widely seen as an opening attempt at a presidential platform, and Democrats have latched on to it as evidence the GOP would implement harsh policies on the poor. “It’s not for the faint of heart,” the senator from Florida said. “It’s going to strike fear in the heart of some Republicans.”

Reed’s group made a major effort to reach out to Hispanic faith leaders, bringing in several hundred of them. Some of the first words in the program were in Spanish. A “Night of Prayer & Worship” included two prayers delivered in Spanish and translated into English and a Cuban band.

The three-day conference is being held in a well-air-conditioned ballroom at the sprawling Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center in Nashville. Vendors set up outside the conference room were selling iodine pills to protect against the effects of a nuclear fallout ($35 for a seven-day supply) and pro-Trump T-shirts including a top-selling one emblazoned with the phrase “Trump told you so.” A booth was promoting pregnancy counseling services.

Possible GOP presidential contenders painted Democrats as more than just the opposition, but as an almost anti-American force who dislike the country. “The left wants nothing less than a revolution,” Nikki Haley, U.N. ambassador during the Trump administration, said during Thursday’s keynote speech. “Theirs will be the opposite of 1776. They take us backwards.”

Scott went further: “The militant left wing in our country have become the enemy from within.” He paused to let the audience absorb his message. “You think that’s pretty dramatic, right? To call them the enemy from within.”

Scott suggested the country needs corporal punishment. “A switch is a southern form of encouragement,” he said, after explaining how his mother used to hit him with one to push him to focus more on school. “Sometimes I look around our country today and I think we need a new form of encouragement.”

Rep. Jim Jordan (Ohio), who said he hopes Trump runs again, also hit on the theme. “The left doesn’t like the country,” he said. “They don’t like the people who make things, grow things and move things.”

Several spoke about Ukraine, with Haley telling a story about how she broke protocol by meeting with the Ukrainians before she met with the Russians as U.N. ambassador. She used her admiration of Ukrainian fighters to make a point about what she says is a comparative lack of patriotism she senses in America.

“I have a confession,” Haley said. “I look at the Ukrainian people and realize we used to have that kind of patriotism. That used to be us. We had that great American spirit and we need to get it back.”

There will be additional speakers, including Senate nominee Hershel Walker of Georgia, who will take the stage Saturday.

Aside from directing ire at Pence, Trump also has raged about other former advisers who have testified, including Short, Bill Stepien and former attorney general William P. Barr, according to two people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations, and has focused extensively on the hearings even as some of his advisers have tried to play down his interest.

During his speech Friday, Trump alleged that Barr was too fearful of being impeached to intervene on his behalf. “Bill Barr was afraid of certain things. You know what they are,” Trump said.

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