Tag Archives: Snubs

Greta Gerwig Responds to Oscar Snubs and Says She’s ‘Happy,’ Reveals a ‘Chronicles of Narnia’ Script Was Written Before ‘Barbie’ Started Filming – Variety

  1. Greta Gerwig Responds to Oscar Snubs and Says She’s ‘Happy,’ Reveals a ‘Chronicles of Narnia’ Script Was Written Before ‘Barbie’ Started Filming Variety
  2. Greta Gerwig Finally Breaks Her Silence On ‘Barbie’ Oscars Snub HuffPost
  3. Helen Mirren says no one remembers which films won the Oscar for best picture. Do you? The Guardian
  4. Helen Mirren on Why Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie Shouldn’t Be ‘Upset’ Over ‘Barbie’ Oscar Snubs (Exclusive) Entertainment Tonight
  5. Greta Gerwig’s Next Big Swing | TIME TIME

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Ryan Gosling on Nearly Turning Down Ken, Singing Live at the Oscars and Wanting a ‘Beach-Off’ Over Those ‘Barbie’ Snubs – Variety

  1. Ryan Gosling on Nearly Turning Down Ken, Singing Live at the Oscars and Wanting a ‘Beach-Off’ Over Those ‘Barbie’ Snubs Variety
  2. The Lego Movie: There would be no Barbie—or backlash over those Oscars “snubs”—without it. Slate
  3. Margot Robbie Would Have Loved to See Greta Gerwig Get a Best Director Oscar Nom for ‘Barbie’ Hollywood Reporter
  4. Carey Mulligan: ‘Anyone who says awards don’t matter is 100 per cent lying’ The Times
  5. Carey Mulligan Says Actors Who Don’t Care About Awards Are ‘Lying’ PEOPLE

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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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Adam Schiff Talks ‘Barbie’ Oscar Noms Snubs & Patriarchy With Bill Maher, Celebrates “True Justice” Of Today’s $83M Jury Verdict Against Trump – Deadline

  1. Adam Schiff Talks ‘Barbie’ Oscar Noms Snubs & Patriarchy With Bill Maher, Celebrates “True Justice” Of Today’s $83M Jury Verdict Against Trump Deadline
  2. Opinion: The ‘Barbie’ outrage is missing a very important point’ CNN
  3. Why Was Greta Gerwig Snubbed for a Best Director Nomination? The New York Times
  4. Whoopi Goldberg pushes back against ‘Barbie’ snubs at 2024 Oscars: ‘Everybody doesn’t win’ USA TODAY
  5. Why Diablo Cody Doesn’t Fixate on Those Barbie Snubs: ‘I Would Trade My Oscar for a Billion-Dollar Movie’ (Exclusive) PEOPLE

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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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Ava DuVernay on Origin Award Snubs, Dave Chappelle, Angelina Jolie Support – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Ava DuVernay on Origin Award Snubs, Dave Chappelle, Angelina Jolie Support Hollywood Reporter
  2. Origin review: Ava DuVernay’s smart drama should be a documentary Polygon
  3. Review: ‘Origin’ is an emotional powerhouse that you’ll be talking about for years ABC News
  4. Ava DuVernay’s ‘Origin’ Based On Bestseller ‘Caste’ Launches Theatrical Run – Specialty Preview Deadline
  5. Ava DuVernay on her ‘rebellious and radical’ new film ‘Origin’ and the ‘caste system of Hollywood’ CNN

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Tony Awards: Wendell Pierce, Jessica Chastain Among Snubs as Lone Winners for ‘Shucked,’ ‘Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window’ Surprise – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Tony Awards: Wendell Pierce, Jessica Chastain Among Snubs as Lone Winners for ‘Shucked,’ ‘Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window’ Surprise Hollywood Reporter
  2. Curtain up for the 76th annual Tony Awards CBS Sunday Morning
  3. Jessica Chastain Wore a Completely See-Through Red Carpet Look and Fans Are Stunned Good Housekeeping
  4. The 2023 Tony Awards: Live Updates: The Telecast Begins Without a Script Because of the Screenwriters’ Strike The New York Times
  5. Critic’s Notebook: Fierce and Focused, the 76th Tony Awards Were a Much-Needed Win for Broadway Hollywood Reporter
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rishi Sunak Snubs Pak-Origin MP Over BBC Series On PM Modi And 2002 Riots

Ministry of External Affairs also reacted to the BBC report.

London:

Defending Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the British Parliament, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak distanced himself from the BBC documentary series, saying he “doesn’t agree with the characterization” of his Indian counterpart.

Mr Sunak made these remarks on the controversial documentary that was raised in the British Parliament by Pakistan-origin MP Imran Hussain.

“The UK government’s position on this has been clear and long-standing and hasn’t changed, of course, we don’t tolerate persecution where it appears anywhere but I am not sure I agree at all with the characterization that the honourable gentleman has put forward to,” he said while responding to Hussain’s question on the BBC report.

UK’s National broadcaster BBC aired a two-part series attacking PM Narendra Modi’s tenure as Gujarat Chief Minister during the Gujarat riots of 2002. The documentary sparked outrage and was removed from select platforms.

Prominent Indian-origin UK citizens condemned the series. Prominent UK Citizen Lord Rami Ranger said the “BBC caused a great deal of hurt to over a billion Indians.”

Condemning the biased reporting of BBC, Rami tweeted, “@BBCNews You have caused a great deal of hurt to over a billion Indians It insults a democratically elected@PMOIndia Indian Police & the Indian judiciary. We condemn the riots and loss of life & also condemn your biased reporting.”

Ministry of External Affairs also reacted to the BBC report and said that this is a completely biased copy.

While addressing a weekly briefing in New Delhi, MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said, “We think this is a propaganda piece. This has no objectivity. This is biased. Do note that this hasn’t been screened in India. We don’t want to answer more on this so that this doesn’t get much dignity.”

He even raised questions on “the purpose of the exercise and the agenda behind it.”

“The documentary is a reflection of the agency and individuals that are peddling this narrative again. It makes us wonder about the purpose of the exercise and the agenda behind it; frankly, we do wish to dignify these efforts,” he added.

Referring to apparent remarks made by former UK Secretary Jack Straw in the documentary series, Bagchi said “He (Jack Straw) seems to be referring to some internal UK report. How do I have access to that? It’s a 20-year-old report. Why would we jump on it now? Just because Jack says it how do they lend it that much legitimacy.”

“I heard words like inquiry and investigations. There is a reason why we use the colonial mindset. We don’t use words loosely. What inquiry they were diplomats there…investigation, are they ruling the country? Bagchi asked.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Macron snubs Scholz in Paris – POLITICO

BERLIN/PARIS — Relations are now so icy between Emmanuel Macron and Olaf Scholz, the leaders of the EU’s two economic powerhouses, that they do not even dare to be seen together in front of the press.

The French president and German chancellor held a tête-à-tête in Paris on Wednesday, but there was no joint news conference in front of the cameras, which is normally the driest of routine diplomatic courtesies after bilateral meetings. Berlin had earlier announced that such a press appearance was going to be held. Then the Elysée Palace ruled it out.

After the working lunch concluded, officials on both sides — who did not want to be identified — argued that the meeting was a success.

“It was very constructive, very strategic,” said one of Macron’s advisers. “We’ve all had our nose to the grindstone on energy, and today we were able to elevate the conversation, and discuss what we want to do in five, ten years’ time.” According to a German official, the meeting was “a complete success.” 

But the cancelled press conference told its own story as a snub to Scholz. He had travelled with a full press corps to Paris, and from there was continuing to Athens for another state visit. Denying a press conference to a visiting leader is a political tactic that’s generally applied to deliver a rebuke, as was recently done by Scholz when Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán visited Berlin.

“Presumably, there has so far been a lack of contact and exchange between the respective new government teams of Scholz and Macron,” said Sandra Weeser from Germany’s liberal Free Democratic Party, who sits on the board of the Franco-German Parliamentary Assembly. “So, we are certainly also at the beginning of new interpersonal political relations, for which trust must first be built.”

The tussle over a media show is just the latest episode of a deepening row between the EU’s two biggest powers.

In recent weeks, Scholz and Macron have clashed over how to tackle the energy crisis, how to overcome Europe’s impotence on defense and the best approach to dealing with China.

Last week, those tensions spilled into public when a planned Franco-German Cabinet meeting in the French town of Fontainebleau was postponed to January amid major differences on the text of a joint declaration, as well as conflicting holiday plans of some German ministers. Disagreement between the two governments was also broadly visible at last week’s EU summit in Brussels.

The war in Ukraine and the inflation and energy crisis have strained European alliances, just when they are most needed. What has always been a vital alliance between Paris and Berlin has seemed discordant at best.

French officials complain that Berlin isn’t sufficiently treating them as a close partner. For example, the French claim they weren’t briefed in advance of Germany’s domestic €200 billion energy price relief package — and they have made sure their counterparts in Berlin are aware of their frustration.

“In my talks with French parliamentarians, it has become clear that people in Paris want more and closer coordination with Germany,” said Chantal Kopf, a lawmaker from the Greens, one of the three parties in Germany’s ruling coalition, and a board member of the Franco-German Parliamentary Assembly.

“So far, this cooperation has always worked well in times of crisis — think, for example, of the recovery fund during the coronavirus crisis — and now the French also rightly want the responses to the current energy crisis, or how to deal with China, to be closely coordinated,” Kopf said.

Late last month, Paris felt snubbed by Berlin when German Chancellor Olaf Scholz found no time to speak to French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne | Jens Schlueter/AFP via Getty Images

A similar conclusion is being drawn by Weeser from the FDP, another coalition partner in the Berlin government. “Paris is irritated by Germany’s go-it-alone on the gas price brake and the lack of support for joint European defense technology projects,” she said. At the same time, she accused the French government of having until recently dragged its feet on a new pipeline connection between the Iberian peninsula and Northern Europe.

Unprecedented tensions

Most recently, the French government was irritated by the news that Scholz plans to visit Beijing next week to meet Xi Jinping in what would be the first visit by a foreign leader since the Chinese president got a norm-breaking third term. Germany and China also plan their own show when it comes to planned government consultations in January.

The thinking at the Elysée is that it would have been better if Macron and Scholz had visited China together — and preferably a bit later rather than straight after China’s Communist Party congress where Xi secured another mandate. According to one French official, a visit shortly after the congress would “legitimize” Xi’s third term and be “too politically costly.”

Germany and France’s uncoordinated approach to China contrasts with Xi’s last visit to Europe in 2019 when he was welcomed by Macron, who had also invited former Chancellor Angela Merkel and former European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker to Paris to show European unity.

Macron has refrained from directly criticizing a controversial Hamburg port deal with Chinese company Cosco, which Scholz is pushing ahead of his Beijing trip. But the French president last week questioned the wisdom of letting China invest in “essential infrastructure” and warned that Europe had been “naive” toward Chinese purchases in the past “because we thought Europe was an open supermarket.”

Jean-Louis Thiériot, vice president of the defense committee in the French National Assembly, said Germany was increasingly focusing on defense in Eastern Europe at the expense of joint German-French projects. For example, Berlin inked a deal with 13 NATO members, many of them on the Northern and Eastern European flank, to jointly acquire an air and missile defense shield — much to the annoyance of France.

“The situation is unprecedented,” Thiériot said. “Tensions are now getting worse and quickly. In the last couple of months, Germany decided to end work on the [Franco-German] Tiger helicopter, dropped joint navy patrols … And the signature of the air defense shield is a deathblow [to the defense relationship],” he said.

Germany’s massive investment through a €100 billion military upgrade fund, as well as Scholz’s commitment to the NATO goal of putting 2 percent of GDP toward defense spending, will likely raise the annual defense budget to above €80 billion and means Berlin will be on course to outgun France’s €44 billion defense budget.

Sick note

Last week’s suspension of the joint Franco-German Cabinet meeting wasn’t by far the first clash between Berlin and Paris when it comes to high-level meetings.

Back in August, the question was whether Scholz and Macron would meet in Ludwigsburg on September 9 for the 60th anniversary of a famous speech by former French President Charles de Gaulle in the palatial southwestern German town. But despite the highly symbolic nature of that ceremony, the leaders’ meeting never happened — with officials presenting conflicting accounts of why that was the case, from appointment conflicts to alleged disagreements over who should shoulder the costs.

French President Emmanuel Macron has refrained from directly criticizing a controversial Hamburg port deal with Chinese company Cosco | Pool photo by Aurelien Morissard/AFP via Getty Images

Late last month, Paris felt snubbed by Berlin when Scholz found no time to speak to French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne: A meeting between both leaders in Berlin had been canceled because the chancellor had tested positive for coronavirus. But several French officials told POLITICO that a subsequently arranged videoconference was also canceled, allegedly because the Germans told Borne’s office that Scholz felt too sick.

Paris was even more surprised — and annoyed — when Scholz then appeared the same day via video at a press conference, in which he didn’t seem to be quite so sick, but instead confidently announced his €200 billion energy relief package. The French say they weren’t even briefed beforehand. A German spokesperson declined to comment.

Yannick Bury, a lawmaker from Germany’s center-right opposition who focuses on Franco-German relations, said Scholz must start rebuilding ties with Macron. “It’s important that France receives a clear signal that Germany has a great interest in a close and trusting exchange,” Bury said. “Trust has been broken.”

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Ukrainian Marta Kostyuk snubs Belarusian Victoria Azarenka at U.S. Open

Comment

The tap of two tennis rackets at the end of a U.S. Open women’s singles match Thursday was over in seconds. But for a sport in which handshakes are a valued post-match tradition, the exchange highlighted the strains playing out on the court since Russia started a war in Ukraine.

It happened right after Belarusian two-time Grand Slam winner Victoria Azarenka beat Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk, 6-2, 6-3.

The women had played for an hour and a half. On match point, Kostyuk’s forehand went into the net, sending Azarenka to the third round. The 33-year-old screamed in celebration, pumping her clenched fists while the crowd at Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens cheered. Kostyuk, meanwhile, approached the net with her racket lifted. The two then quickly bumped rackets before turning to shake the chair umpire’s hand.

The moment lasted less than five seconds, but the tension carried into post-match news conferences.

“It was just my choice,” Kostyuk said of skipping the handshake, adding: “We had a great match, don’t get me wrong. She’s a great competitor, I respect her as an athlete, but that has nothing to do with her as a human being.”

Kostyuk said she could not support tennis players who have not publicly condemned the war in Ukraine, which has killed more than 5,500 civilians and forced over 7 million people from their homes since Russia’s February invasion, according to the United Nations.

Belarus, where Azarenka is from, has been one of Russia’s staunchest allies in its incursion against Ukraine. While it hasn’t gotten directly involved in the conflict, Belarus has allowed Russian forces to stage troops and equipment there. The European Union and the United States have imposed sanctions on Belarus, and Ukraine has accused Russia of launching missiles from there.

Belarusian president, a Putin ally, did not expect war to ‘drag on’

In response to the attack, Russian and Belarusian players were banned from the Wimbledon tennis tournament earlier this year. At the U.S. Open, they’re allowed to play — but only if their flags and countries aren’t listed.

The war has prompted tennis players from across the globe to speak out. In February, Russian player Andrey Rublev scribbled “no war please” on a camera lens after winning his semifinal match in Dubai. Daria Kasatkina, the highest-ranked Russian female player, has been an outspoken critic of what she called “a full-blown nightmare.” In March, Azarenka said “I hope and wish for peace and an end to the war” in a statement posted to Twitter.

Nevertheless, Kostyuk — one of the most vocal Ukrainian players — has been challenging Belarusian and Russian athletes to do more to publicly condemn their countries’ leaders. In April, she was part of a group calling on the sport’s ruling organizations to ask Russian and Belarusian players if they supported the war. If they hadn’t denounced the conflict, the group requested that the athletes be barred from international events.

“As athletes we live a life in the public eye and therefore have an enormous responsibility,” the group wrote, adding that “there comes a time when silence is betrayal, and that time is now.”

This week, Kostyuk told reporters she had texted Azarenka before the match to say she shouldn’t expect a handshake.

“I genuinely wanted to warn her that I’m not going to shake her hand because she never came up to me, at least personally, and didn’t tell me her opinion,” Kostyuk said, adding that Azarenka hadn’t used her role on the Women’s Tennis Association players’ council to speak out against the war.

Azarenka, however rebuffed those claims in a news conference: “I feel like I’ve had a very clear message from the beginning, that I’m here to try to help, which I have done a lot. Maybe not something that people see. And that’s not what I do it for. I do it for people who are in need.”

The Belarusian also said she’d be “open any time to listen, to try to understand, to empathize” with Kostyuk. At the same time, she expressed confusion as to why she was removed from last week’s Tennis Plays for Peace exhibition and fundraiser for Ukraine. Though she was due to participate, Azarenka was eventually booted after Ukrainian players complained.

“I thought that this was a gesture that really shows commitment,” Azarenka said of her plans to participate in the event. “I’m not sure why it wasn’t taken that way.”

While shaking hands isn’t mandatory, it’s rare for players not to partake in the ritual, which is seen as a sign of respect. Tennis magazine writer Steve Tignor once described the moment as “the emotional crux of any match.”

In 2013, Azarenka told USA Today it was important for players to show “that mutual respect for each other” by shaking hands. At the time, she said she would never skip the ritual.

“But that never happened to me. Oh no no! And I would never do that … to my opponent,” she said.

Nearly 10 years later, a war would change that.

Julian Mark contributed to this report.



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