Tag Archives: Shameless

Timothée Chalamet Sings in ‘SNL’ Monologue to Celebrate the Strike Ending and the Return of ‘Shameless Self-Promotion’ – Variety

  1. Timothée Chalamet Sings in ‘SNL’ Monologue to Celebrate the Strike Ending and the Return of ‘Shameless Self-Promotion’ Variety
  2. Timothée Chalamet Teases His ‘Saturday Night Live’ Wardrobe PEOPLE
  3. Who’s hosting Saturday Night Live tonight, November 11? Last Night On
  4. Timothée Chalamet Bursts Into Song In ‘SNL’ Monologue Acknowledging End Of SAG-AFTRA Strike Deadline
  5. Timothée Chalamet raps about his ‘baby face’ in ‘SNL’ monologue with help from Kenan Thompson CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Shameless,’ former NBC host says of the Olympics returning to Beijing

“The IOC deserves all of the disdain and disgust that comes their way for going back to China yet again,” Costas said on CNN’s “Reliable Sources” Sunday.

Costas referenced the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics and the 2015 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia as examples of the International Olympic Committee’s seeming disregard for the prevalence of human rights abuses when selecting host nations. But now, there’s a “greater understanding of everything that China represents,” he said.

“They’re shameless about this stuff,” Costas said of the IOC.

Journalists will face a unique challenge during the Beijing games — balancing politics and sports, CNN’s chief media correspondent Brian Stelter said, adding that there are many unknowns in terms of censorship and how free international journalists will be when it comes to reporting on events in and around the games.

“Some journalists heading to Beijing are taking precautions like bringing burner phones and laptops,” Stelter said, referencing an earlier Washington Post story.
There is a lot of money on the line — NBCUniversal has a $12 billion contract to broadcast the Olympics through 2023. And both NBC and ESPN announced this week they will not be sending their usual contingent of reporters and producers to the Games due to Covid concerns.

NBC previously announced it would include geopolitical context during its Beijing coverage, but that its focus will be on the athletes.

“We are going to be focusing on telling the stories of Team USA and covering the competition,” Molly Solomon, executive producer and president of NBC Olympics Production, said during a presentation to reporters Wednesday. “But the world, as we all know, is a really complicated place right now. And we understand that there’s some difficult issues regarding the host nation.”

Costas, acknowledging his respect for the challenges his former colleagues will face in Beijing, described Olympics reporting as a sort of “quasi journalism.” That’s because NBC pays a massive rights fee along with the production costs, putting the network in a somewhat promotional position for the Games. He added that covering the Olympics isn’t simply a news event, but also an important “cultural panorama” and “travel log” of the host nation, aspects that could be greatly reduced because of Covid and the potential for constant monitoring by Chinese authorities.

“It’s a centerpiece of the entire network strategy at a time where everything is fractionalized,” Costas said.

During the fanfare of the Games, Stelter asked how viewers should expect the geopolitical context to be covered.

“I would anticipate … [NBC] will acknowledge the issues at the beginning,” Costas said, “and then address them only if something specific that cannot be ignored happens during the course of the Games.”

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‘Shameless’ Star Emma Kenney On Emmy Rossum Exit From Showtime Series – Deadline

“We 100% felt like a family, and we still do,” said Emma Kenney of her fellow Shameless cast members. “We had such a bonding experience.”

And like a family, she says, relationships among the actors were complicated.

Kenney, now 22, spoke about her experience on the recently-wrapped Showtime series on the popular Call Her Daddy podcast today, including her interactions with co-star Emmy Rossum.

Kenney said her relationship with Rossum, who played her sister on the show, felt like a siblingship “in good and bad ways.

“We were both so young, I was obviously a lot younger. There were times where she would try to be a good influence and then there were times where she would be blatantly giving me…not the best advice,” Kenney said. “Maybe she was struggling with her own inner problems and taking it out on other people. But we all handle situations differently.”

“Growing up I took note of — not just from her in particular — things I want to carry on my life and things I don’t want to carry on.”

Asked if she felt like she was living in Rossum’s shadow on the show Kenney replied, “I felt that dynamic for sure and I never understood it. I was 9 and she was over 10 years older than me, so I’m like, ‘Why is there a weird competition here when I’m not trying to compete?’ I don’t know if it was other people on set creating that, or if it was her creating it, but I know I wasn’t creating it.”

Rossum left the show in 2018 and Kenny said after she left “the set became a little bit more of a positive place.

“I remember pre-her leaving, I’d go to set some days and I’d be very anxious about having a scene with her because if she had a bad day, she made it a bad day for everybody.”

As for where their relationship stands now, Kenny says they are not in touch.

“I have a lot of love for Emmy, I’ve known her for so long. We haven’t spoken in years… but that’s okay,” she said. “I have a lot of love for her, and I hope that she finds her happiness.”



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Ricarlo Flanagan, ‘Shameless’ actor, dead at 40: report

Ricarlo Flanagan, the actor, rapper and stand-up comedian best known for “Shameless” and being a semifinalist on Season 9 of “Last Comic Standing,” has died at age 40.

Flanagan’s agent, Stu Golfman of KMR Talent confirmed the news of his death to Deadline with a statement that read: “Ricarlo was one of the nicest people I have ever met in my life and a joy to work for. He will be missed dearly.”

An official cause of death was not given. However, Flanagan had posted to Twitter on Oct. 1 revealing to his followers that he had contracted the coronavirus. 

WHAM! BASSIST DEON ESTUS DEAD AT 65

“This covid is no joke. I don’t wish this on anybody,” he wrote at the time. 

A GoFundMe page was set up to raise funds to bring Flanagan’s remains home to his family in Cleveland, Ohio, so that they can lay him to rest. It described him as a “loving son, grandson, cousin, nephew, and friend with many amazing talents.”

“He brought laughter to every room he walked in,” the page adds.

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Comedian Ricarlo Flanagan has died at age 40.
(Ben Cohen/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images)

People reports that Flanagan got his start in comedy in 2007 when he found a flyer posted on a telephone pole in Ann Arbor, Michigan, advertising comedy classes. By 2015, he was a semifinalist on the ninth season of the comedy competition show. He also dipped into acting, with appearances on comedies like “The Mick,” “The Carmichael Show,” “Insecure,” “The Neighborhood” and “Kidding.” However, his most memorable performance was his recurring role on Showtime’s “Shameless.” 

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In addition to stand-up and acting, Flanagan had a passion for music. He was an accomplished rapper who performed under the name Father Flanagan. His debut album, “Death of Davinchi,” dropped in 2010. He followed that up in 2019 with “An Opus Inspired By Andre Martin” and, most recently, “Hope Your Proud” in 2020. He announced days prior to his COVID-19 announcement that a fourth album was on the way. However, it’s unclear if he was able to finish it prior to his death. 



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These Shameless Birds Steal Hair From Live Predators Like It’s No Big Deal

Birds’ nests are snug little places: safe, warm, and lined with soft materials to keep the vulnerable babies comfortable and protected.

For the tufted titmouse (Baeolophus bicolor) and its closest relatives, that material is often the fur of mammalian carnivores, which scientists had thought pillaged from dead animals, or opportunistically snagged when the animals shed.

 

New observations, however, have revealed that this is not the case: the feathered filchers frequently purloin the fur right off the backs of living, breathing predators.

“The titmouse I saw was plucking hair from a live animal,” said ecologist Jeffrey Brawn of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

“This was from a live raccoon with claws and teeth. And the raccoon didn’t seem to mind because it didn’t even wake up.”

Brawn saw the behavior quite by chance while conducting a bird count in Illinois, and was so intrigued that he went looking for an explanation.

He and colleagues, led by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign’s Mark Hauber and Henry Pollock, found that fur theft has been mentioned only sparsely in the scientific literature – but YouTube videos uploaded by bird enthusiasts turned out to be a rich resource indeed.

In these videos, tufted titmice were seen plucking fur from domestic dogs and cats, and even a porcupine. In addition, several other videos showed other bird species stealing fur, in whom such behavior had not been scientifically documented.

 

But, although the literature may have scant records, other resources suggest that birds stealing fur from living mammals is quite well known among the general public: Tufted titmice are described as occasional fur thieves on the Cornell Lab webpage for the species, and in Australia, yellow-faced honeyeaters purloin fuzz from snoozing koalas.

The researchers have named the behavior kleptotrichy, from Greek for “theft” and “hair”.

Interestingly, the YouTube searches also yielded many instances of birds retrieving shed animal fur from the environment, suggesting that theft isn’t their main source for the material.

Which raises the question: why take the risk of stealing the hair at all?

Animal fur can, of course, help insulate a nest and keep it warm, but the researchers believe that fur particularly from predators may have some other benefits.

“There’s a local species called the great crested flycatcher, which, like the titmouse, is a cavity nester, that actually puts shed snakeskins into its nest, possibly to deter predators,” Brawn said. Finches in Africa exhibit a similar behavior, using predator feces as a deterrent (and wouldn’t it just).

It might even be possible that the fur helps repel parasites, which can rapidly kill tiny hatchlings. Some birds line their nests with plant materials that can keep such interlopers at bay, although it’s unclear whether mammal fur has similar properties.

Further research will be needed in order to figure out what benefit the birds are getting from the fruits of their misdeeds, but preliminary geographic analysis conducted by the team suggests that kleptotrichy is more common in higher latitudes. This, in turn, suggests that the fur is gathered for keeping nests warm first and foremost.

 

Having actual scientific documentation of kleptotrichy is an important step towards figuring it out, because it lays out important basic information other researchers will now be able to build upon.

“Unexpected interactions such as these remind us that animals exhibit all types of interesting and often overlooked behaviors and highlight the importance of careful natural history observations to shed light on the intricacies of ecological communities,” Pollock said.

The research has been published in Ecology.

 

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