Tag Archives: nominated

Oscars 2024: Margot Robbie On The Barbie Snubs – “Greta Should Be Nominated As A Director” – NDTV Movies

  1. Oscars 2024: Margot Robbie On The Barbie Snubs – “Greta Should Be Nominated As A Director” NDTV Movies
  2. Robert Downey Jr. Says ‘Margot Robbie Is Not Getting Enough Credit’ for ‘Barbie’: America Ferrera Has the ‘Amazing Speech,’ but Robbie Is ‘So Actively Listening’ Variety
  3. Margot Robbie Breaks Silence on Barbie Oscar Nominations: ‘No Way to Feel Sad When You Know You’re This Blessed’ PEOPLE
  4. Margot Robbie breaks silence on best actress Oscar snub: “There’s no way to feel sad when you know you’re this blessed” CBS News
  5. Margot Robbie opens up about ‘Barbie’ snubs at Oscars USA TODAY

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Michelle Yeoh Says Oscar Snubs Happen and ‘There’s No Guarantee’ You Get Nominated Amid ‘Barbie’ Controversy: ‘It’s So Competitive Out There’ – Variety

  1. Michelle Yeoh Says Oscar Snubs Happen and ‘There’s No Guarantee’ You Get Nominated Amid ‘Barbie’ Controversy: ‘It’s So Competitive Out There’ Variety
  2. Why Diablo Cody Doesn’t Fixate on Those Barbie Snubs: ‘I Would Trade My Oscar for a Billion-Dollar Movie’ (Exclusive) PEOPLE
  3. Bill Maher Chimes in on ‘Barbie’ Oscars Controversy on ‘Real Time’: “Is This Really the Patriarchy?” Hollywood Reporter
  4. Whoopi Goldberg pushes back against ‘Barbie’ snubs at 2024 Oscars: ‘Everybody doesn’t win’ USA TODAY
  5. Opinion: The ‘Barbie’ outrage is missing a very important point’ CNN

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Sally Field Says Then-Boyfriend Burt Reynolds Was ‘Not a Nice Guy’ When She Got Nominated for an Oscar – Entertainment Tonight

  1. Sally Field Says Then-Boyfriend Burt Reynolds Was ‘Not a Nice Guy’ When She Got Nominated for an Oscar Entertainment Tonight
  2. Sally Field Reveals Burt Reynolds’ Infuriating Reaction To Her Oscar Nomination HuffPost
  3. Sally Field reveals why ‘jealous’ ex Burt Reynolds refused to attend Oscars with her Express
  4. Sally Fields Claims Ex Burt Reynolds Was Jealous of Her Stardom, Couldn’t Handle the ‘Buzz’ Ahead of Award Night Radar Online
  5. Sally Field says ex-boyfriend Burt Reynolds was so jealous of her fame he couldn’t bear to attend Oscars Grand Junction Daily Sentinel

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“Their Careers Are In The Toilet!” | Harry And Meghan’s Netflix Show Nominated For Award – TalkTV

  1. “Their Careers Are In The Toilet!” | Harry And Meghan’s Netflix Show Nominated For Award TalkTV
  2. Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Were Just Hit With Yet Another Snub That Shows Their Struggle To Conquer Hollywood Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Prince Harry, Meghan Markle’s award nod for explosive docuseries is ‘white noise’ to royal family: experts Fox News
  4. “It Should’ve Won Best Fiction” Harry And Meghan ‘Undeservingly’ Win Award For Netflix Documentary TalkTV
  5. Prince Harry and Meghan ‘grab us by the throat and hold our attention’, says expert Daily Star
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘My mother didn’t raise a hypocrite’: Why Brendan Fraser won’t be at the Golden Globes if nominated – Upworthy

  1. ‘My mother didn’t raise a hypocrite’: Why Brendan Fraser won’t be at the Golden Globes if nominated Upworthy
  2. MeToo five years on: More work needs to be done The Indian Express
  3. Brendan Fraser Won’t Attend Golden Globes After Accusing President of Sexual Assault lovebscott.com
  4. Brendan Fraser attends GQ party after declaring that he ‘will not participate’ in Golden Globes Daily Mail
  5. Oscar-tipped Brendan Fraser to skip Golden Globes after sex-assault allegation against HFPA member News24
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Lia Thomas nominated by University of Pennsylvania for NCAA ‘Woman of the Year’ award

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The University of Pennsylvania nominated swimmer Lia Thomas for the NCAA “Woman of the Year” award.

According to an announcement from the NCAA, the University of Pennsylvania nominated the transgender athlete for the award, which recognizes female student-athletes.

“Established in 1991, the award recognizes female student-athletes who have exhausted their eligibility and distinguished themselves in their community, in athletics and in academics throughout their college careers,” the NCAA nomination page reads.

NCAA member schools “are encouraged to celebrate their top graduating female student-athletes by nominating them for the NCAA Woman of the Year Award,” the announcement reads.

LIA THOMAS COMPETITOR TOUTS FINA RESTRICTING TRANSGENDER ATHLETES: ‘STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION’

University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas and Kentucky swimmer Riley Gaines react after finishing tied for 5th in the 200 Freestyle finals at the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships on March 18th, 2022 at the McAuley Aquatic Center in Atlanta Georgia.
(Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

After member schools make their nominations, their conference can then select up to two nominees.

Thomas, a former swimmer at the University of Pennsylvania, won the 500-yard freestyle event at the 2022 NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships Thursday.

Her participation in college women’s swimming has brought on a national debate, with some saying that she has an unfair advantage over other athletes.

FINA APPROVES ‘GENDER INCLUSION POLICY’ FOR TRANSGENDER SWIMMERS

Pennsylvania’s Lia Thomas waits for a preliminary heat in the Women’s NCAA 500 meter freestyle swimming championship start Thursday, March 17, 2022, in at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
(AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Riley Gaines, a swimmer at the University of Kentucky who tied with Lia Thomas for fifth place at the NCAA swimming championships, said that a majority of females aren’t okay with the trajectory of female sports.

“The majority of us female athletes, or females in general, really, are not okay with this, and they’re not okay with the trajectory of this and how this is going and how it could end up in a few years,” Gaines said on the “Unmuted with Marsha” podcast with Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn.

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She was referring to the NCAA’s refusal to change the rules in order to protect competitiveness in female sports.

The University of Pennsylvania also nominated Iuliia Bryzgalova for the award, who plays tennis at the school.

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Ketanji Brown Jackson to be nominated as first Black woman to sit on Supreme Court

Biden will deliver remarks on Friday afternoon announcing the selection, the White House said. CNN first reported Biden’s decision.

She received and accepted Biden’s offer in a call Thursday night, a source familiar with the decision told CNN, but was present for DC Circuit Court hearings Friday morning.

Biden met with Jackson for her Supreme Court interview earlier this month, a senior administration official said, in a meeting that the White House managed to keep secret.

For more than a year, the President had familiarized himself with her work, reading many of her opinions and other writings, along with those of other contenders.

But the official said Biden also was impressed by her life story, including her rise from federal public defender to federal appellate judge — and her upbringing as the daughter of two public school teachers and administrators.

“President Biden sought a candidate with exceptional credentials, unimpeachable character and unwavering dedication to the rule of law,” the senior official said.

From the beginning, Jackson was the leading contender, but the official said the President gave “considerable weight” to other finalists, including Judge J. Michelle Childs and California Supreme Court Justice Leondra Kruger.

The President reached his final decision this week, the official said, and extended the offer to her in a phone call on Thursday evening. She accepted in the call, which lasted several minutes.

The White House considered delaying the announcement, given the Russian invasion in Ukraine, but believed it was critical to get the second phase of the confirmation process moving, the official said.

In a statement, the White House cited Jackson’s “broad experience across the legal profession,” pointing to her career as a federal appellate judge, a federal district court judge, a member of the US Sentencing Commission, an attorney in private practice and as a federal public defender. The White House described Jackson as “an exceptionally qualified” and “historic” nominee, calling on the Senate to “move forward with a fair and timely hearing and confirmation.”

Jackson clerked for Breyer and served as a federal public defender in Washington — an experience that her backers say is fitting, given Biden’s commitment to putting more public defenders on the federal bench. She was also a commissioner on the US Sentencing Commission and served on the federal district court in DC, as an appointee of President Barack Obama, before Biden elevated her to the DC Circuit last year.

Opportunity for Biden to excite Democrats

Biden’s pick is a chance for him to fire up a Democratic base that is less excited to vote in this year’s midterm elections than it has been over the past several election cycles. It’s also a welcome change of topic for the President, whose approval ratings have been sagging in recent months as the Covid-19 pandemic has dragged on and inflation has affected consumers across the nation. The selection gives Biden a chance to deliver on one of his top campaign promises, and he’ll hope that the Black voters who were crucial to his election win will see this as a return on their investment.

Though it is historic, the choice of Jackson will not change the ideological makeup of the court. The court currently has six conservative justices and three liberal justices — and the retiring Breyer comes from the liberal camp. The court is already poised to continue its turn toward the right with high-profile cases and rulings expected from the court in the coming months on abortion, gun control and religious liberty issues.

Eyes will now turn to the Senate, where Biden’s Democratic Party holds the thinnest possible majority. The President will hope that Jackson can garner bipartisan support, but Democrats will need all their members in Washington to ensure her confirmation. Unlike for most major pieces of legislation, Democrats do not need Republican help to confirm a Supreme Court justice and can do it with their 50 votes and Vice President Kamala Harris breaking a deadlock. When Jackson was confirmed to the appellate bench, she had the support of three Republican senators.

Jackson is expected to have her courtesy meetings with senators next week, according to a person familiar with the plans. It’s common for Supreme Court nominees to meet with the leadership on both sides, then members of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

As a judge in DC — where some of the most politically charged cases are filed — Jackson’s issued notable rulings touching on Congress’ ability to investigate the White House. As a district court judge, she wrote a 2019 opinion siding with House lawmakers who sought the testimony of then-White House Counsel Don McGahn. Last year, she was on the unanimous circuit panel that ordered disclosure of certain Trump White House documents to the House January 6 committee.

The White House indicated her time in the federal public defenders’ office was critical to Biden’s selection, setting her apart from other candidates. Biden sought “an individual who is committed to equal justice under the law and who understands the profound impact that the Supreme Court’s decisions have on the lives of the American people,” the White House said.

Following Breyer’s retirement announcement in late January, Biden began reviewing background materials, such as legal records and writings, about his potential picks.

Biden first committed to nominating a Black female US Supreme Court justice when he was running for president in 2020. On a debate stage in South Carolina, Biden argued that his push to make “sure there’s a Black woman on the Supreme Court” was rooted in an effort to “get everyone represented.”

Coming from ‘a background of public service’

Jackson was born in the nation’s capital but grew up in the Miami area. She was a member of the debate team at Miami Palmetto Senior High School before earning both her undergraduate degree and law degree at Harvard.

At her 2021 confirmation hearing for the appellate court, she connected her family’s professions — her parents worked in public schools — to her decision to work as a public defender.

“I come from a background of public service. My parents were in public service, my brother was a police officer and (was) in the military,” she said at the time, “and being in the public defenders’ office felt very much like the opportunity to help with my skills and talents.”

Former House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, is a relative by marriage and introduced her at the 2013 hearing for her district court nomination.

Conservatives have already previewed how they will scrutinize her record defending Guantanamo Bay detainees as a public defender. The role she played in her uncle’s successful efforts to seek a commutation from former President Barack Obama has also attracted attention. When she was in private practice in 2008, she referred her uncle’s file to the firm Wilmer Hale, which several years later submitted the file.

As a judge, some other notable cases she has in her record are a 2018 case brought federal employee unions where she blocked parts of executive orders issued by former President Donald Trump, and a case where she ruled against Trump policies that expand the categories of non-citizens who could be subject to expedited removal procedures without being able to appear before a judge.

Jackson penned more than 500 opinions in the eight years she spent on the district court.

Republicans signal potential opposition

Though Biden has said that he’d pick a nominee with bipartisan appeal who is “worthy of Justice Breyer’s legacy of excellence and decency,” his decision to name the first Black woman to the court is already facing Republican opposition. Several Senate Republicans have told CNN they disagreed with the President’s decision to name a Black woman to the court rather than judging a nominee squarely on their credentials, even though Ronald Reagan and Trump both said they’d name a female justice to the Supreme Court when they were on the campaign trail.

Even before Biden nominated Jackson, GOP senators and Senate candidates were already concluding that she’d be far left, throwing cold water on the names floated as being on Biden’s potential short list and calling for a slow confirmation process. Still, Republicans are limited in their ability to block a Supreme Court nominee, and Jackson may win the support of some GOP senators.

Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Susan Collins of Maine all voted for Jackson last summer when she was confirmed as a circuit court judge on the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, the second most important court in the country.

But on Friday, Graham, who had expressed support for Childs, suggested Jackson does not have his approval, saying in a tweet that the choice of Jackson “means the radical Left has won President Biden over yet again.” Graham added that he expects a “respectful but interesting hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called for a “rigorous, exhaustive” review of Jackson in a statement.

“I also understand Judge Jackson was the favored choice of far-left dark-money groups that have spent years attacking the legitimacy and structure of the Court itself,” McConnell said.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has indicated that he wants to push a nominee through the process quickly, using Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s Senate proceedings as a model for Jackson’s confirmation timeline. And Sen. Dick Durbin, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, told CNN recently that he expects to have a hearing within a few weeks of the selection. The goal of the leadership is to have the nominee confirmed by the April 11 recess.

This story has been updated with additional developments, reaction and background information.

CNN’s John Harwood, and Manu Raju contributed to this report.

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Michael Erik Kurilla nominated to oversee US military operations in Middle East

Kurilla would replace Gen. Frank McKenzie, who has commanded CENTCOM since early 2019. McKenzie’s tenure is scheduled to end this spring.

Kurilla, the commander of the Army’s 18th Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg, would get his fourth star with the rank of general if confirmed to the new post.

Once confirmed, Kurilla will take over as head of the US Central Command as the Pentagon is still grappling with the chaotic August 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan, and keeping a watchful eye on Iran.

CNN has reached out to the White House for comment.

Kurilla, who was seriously wounded in a gun battle in Iraq in 2005, previously served as chief of staff to Gen. Joseph Votel, who commanded CENTCOM during the Obama and Trump administrations.

During the Obama administration, Kurilla also served as the assistant commanding general and director of operations at the Joint Special Operations Command, which specializes in the US military’s counterterrorism efforts.

Prior to that, he served for two years as commander of the 82nd Airborne Division after holding several other notable posts in the military.

His nomination comes during a dramatic week for US troops in the Middle East, with military bases in Iraq and Syria that hold American troops having been attacked on Wednesday, though no US forces were killed in the strikes.

US-led coalition forces fired back after the attack in Syria, which was conducted by suspected Iranian-backed militias who fired eight rounds of indirect fire.

In a separate attack on Wednesday, at least five rockets landed inside the Iraqi military’s al-Asad base in western Anbar province without causing any casualties. The Al-Asad base also hosts US forces.

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Edward Guerra Kodatt, Mike Madigan’s replacement, resigns after only 3 days, Angelica Guerrero Cuellar nominated as new successor

CHICAGO (WLS) — Two days after he was sworn in, the man who replaced Mike Madigan as state representative has resigned.

Now things have gone from bad to worse for Edward Guerra Kodatt. Facing pressure to resign as state representative, he stepped down and won’t be rehired from the job he had before working in the 13th Ward service office of Alderman Marty Quinn.

On Sunday, Kodatt made his pitch for the job of state representative, saying “It’s surreal for me to be here before you today humbly asking for your support.”

Kodatt was sworn in as Mike Madigan’s hand-picked replacement in the 22nd District on Sunday. Now things have gotten more surreal and humbling. He resigned Tuesday night effective immediately under pressure from Madigan after Madigan became aware of what he referred to as “alleged questionable conduct” by Kodatt.

In a statement, Madigan and Alderman Marty Quinn said “we are committed to a zero tolerance policy in the workplace,” but they did not specify what the conduct was.

ABC7 knocked on Kodatt’s door at his house on the Southwest Side and called him, but he did not respond to our request for comment.

The whole situation raised questions with critics about the process behind Kodatt’s appointment and how it was handled by Madigan.

“It’s big disappointment that he had the one chance and 50 years to redeem himself and he played politics like he always does, not even vetting this individual, it’s an atrocious process and an atrocious mistake that he made,” said Jose Torrez, Coalition for Change Illinois 3rd District.

Madigan has now scheduled a new committee meeting for Thursday. This time, he plans to nominate Angelica Cuellar, a community services manager who received the second most support on Sunday. She had been nominated by Alderman Sylvana Tabares.

“Unfortunately, we find ourselves in a situation that could have been avoided. We could have avoided that if we had done a thorough process,” said Ald. Sylvana Tabares, 23rd Ward.

She said there is a lot of distrust in her community.

“I’m not the only one that’s frustrated,” Tabares said. “The residents of the ward are very frustrated, they’re just they’ve lost faith in the political process.”

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker weighed in on the matter Wednesday afternoon.

“Well, let’s be clear, the system of replacing a representative or senator has been in place for some time, and I do think it’s worth a review,” Pritzker said.

Even though he was only a state representative for three days, under state law Kodatt is eligible for an entire month’s pay – nearly $5,800.

Ald. Tabares said she would urge Kodatt not to accept the money.

Copyright © 2021 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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Kushner, deputy nominated for Nobel Peace Prize over Israel deals

Jared Kushner, the White House adviser under former President Trump, was nominated Sunday for the Nobel Peace Prize over his efforts in negotiating deals between Israel, the United Arab Emirates and other countries in the region over a hectic four-month period last year.

Reuters reported that Kushner and Avi Berkowitz, his former deputy, were nominated by Alan Dershowitz, the professor emeritus of Harvard Law School. Reuters called the deals the “most significant diplomatic breakthroughs in the Middle East in 25 years,” and many Trump supporters said the media downplayed their magnitude in order to hurt his chances at reelection.

The Trump administration brokered peace agreements between Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco. Kushner told Fox News in October that there have been “people in Washington for 30, 40 years” who were “never able to work on a single foreign transaction.”

He joked that peace deals are “much harder than President Trump is making them look.”

Kushner said “people have been very critical of the president over the last three years for whatever he does… but the reality is he’s taken a different approach on how to deal with Washington, he took a different approach in the Middle East and he’s put up results.”

Bahrain joined the United Arab Emirates at a festive White House ceremony in the fall marking the “Abraham Accords,” a pair of U.S.-brokered diplomatic pacts with Israel. While the UAE’s deal with Israel formally established ties, the agreement with Bahrain was less detailed and included a mutual pledge to follow suit.

TRUMP DECLARES ‘DAWN OF A NEW MIDDLE EAST’ AS HE PRESIDES OVER SIGNING OF HISTORIC DEALS

The Palestinians severed ties with the Trump White House, accusing it of being unfairly biased toward Israel. U.S. officials have in turn cultivated ties between Israel and Arab states, hoping to increase pressure on the Palestinians to reduce past demands in peace talks.

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The Reuters report said that President Biden is in the process of reviewing Trump’s deals and mentioned that it is unclear if Trump’s exit from the White House will hurt Kushner’s chances of receiving the prize.

Dershowitz told Fox News in a statement, “The Nobel Peace Prize is not for popularity. Nor is it an assessment of what the international community may think of those who helped bring about peace. It is an award for fulfilling the daunting criteria set out by Alfred Nobel in his will. These men, and the Abraham accords, they helped produce, meet these criteria better than any other person or groups eligible for the award.”

Fox News’ Talia Kaplan and the Associated Press contributed to this report

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