Tag Archives: traditional

Stop what you’re doing – Guitar Center just slashed $700 off the Gibson Les Paul Traditional Pro V in their official Black Friday sale – MusicRadar

  1. Stop what you’re doing – Guitar Center just slashed $700 off the Gibson Les Paul Traditional Pro V in their official Black Friday sale MusicRadar
  2. I’ve looked through all 99 pages of the Guitar Center Black Friday sale – these are the 5 guitar deals I’d take home today Guitar World
  3. I’ve scouted out all 99 pages of the Guitar Center Black Friday sale – here are 5 guitar bargains I’m considering Guitar Player
  4. I have 10 Gibsons in my collection and this massive $700 off Les Paul Traditional Pro V Black Friday deal makes me want to add another Guitar World
  5. You only have 24 hours to save up to 25% on some of our favourite Epiphones at Guitar Center Guitar World
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Berkshire Vice Chair Charlie Munger Compares Bitcoin to a ‘Stink Ball’ Among Traditional Currencies – Featured Bitcoin News – Bitcoin.com News

  1. Berkshire Vice Chair Charlie Munger Compares Bitcoin to a ‘Stink Ball’ Among Traditional Currencies – Featured Bitcoin News Bitcoin.com News
  2. Charlie Munger Says Investors Have To Buy These Stocks ‘To Get Ahead’ Seeking Alpha
  3. Charlie Munger Calls It Overhyped, but Buffett Owns Billions: Warren’s 3 Big AI Stock Bets InvestorPlace
  4. Legendary investor Charlie Munger blasted gamblers, touted Heinz and Hermès, and revealed Warren Buffett’s views in a rare interview this week. Here are his 22 best quotes. Yahoo Finance
  5. Charlie Munger Expresses Concern Over Bitcoin’s Rise Cryptonews
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Quizzes Replace Traditional Ads in Disney’s Streaming ‘Toy Story’ Football Game – Variety

  1. Quizzes Replace Traditional Ads in Disney’s Streaming ‘Toy Story’ Football Game Variety
  2. ‘Toy Story’ meets the NFL: Sunday’s Falcons-Jaguars game to feature alternate presentation for kids The Associated Press
  3. The NFL is going to infinity and beyond with ‘Toy Story Funday’ | GMA Good Morning America
  4. LOOK: Falcons QB Desmond Ridder turned into Toy Story character Falcons Wire
  5. The NFL’s Gen Z and Gen Alpha marketing strategy—inside the league’s Disney and Nickelodeon broadcasts Ad Age
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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JoJo Siwa Discussed Candace Cameron Bure’s “Traditional Marriage” Comments, And She Made Some Great Points – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. JoJo Siwa Discussed Candace Cameron Bure’s “Traditional Marriage” Comments, And She Made Some Great Points Yahoo Entertainment
  2. JoJo Siwa Doesn’t Regret Candace Cameron Bure Feud BuzzFeed
  3. JoJo Siwa Reignites Feud With Candace Cameron Bure After Calling Her ‘Rudest’ Celebrity CafeMom
  4. JoJo Siwa calls out Candace Cameron Bure again; slams actress’ remarks on traditional marriage PINKVILLA
  5. JoJo Siwa doesn’t regret calling Candace Cameron Bure out for being ‘rudest’ star she’s ever met Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Assassin’s Creed Mirage Doubles Down on Being a Traditional Assassin’s Creed Game

When it was first announced last year, Ubisoft framed Assassin’s Creed Mirage as a much more traditional Assassin’s Creed title — something of a return to the series’ original blueprint, before it adopted the open world RPG elements that defined Assassin’s Creed Origins and its successors.

While we’re yet to see actual gameplay from Mirage, the developer has been happy to reiterate its vision of a smaller, more focused historical outing. In a new interview with GamesRadar, creative director Stéphane Boudon emphasises the team’s commitment.

“Origins, Odyssey, Valhalla they are all great games with the promise to live an epic journey in a strong fantasy. Their scopes have been calibrated to fulfil those ambitions as they all embrace the RPG mechanics. But amongst our fans, we started hearing the desire for a character driven story, focused on the core pillars of the first ACs in a more intimate scale. It resonates with us as well as developers and this was the starting point of the project,” says Boudon.

The director goes on to detail the ways in which Mirage takes inspiration from the older games — while also improving on various concepts. There’s speak of a “richer and denser map”, and a reworked social stealth system that’s supposed to be much more dynamic. You’ll also be able to “reinvent” a range of stealth tools to better fit your style of play.



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Saying goodbye to the ‘traditional’ Rose Bowl: Penn State prevails over Utah as historic game enters new era

PASADENA, Calif. — In the end, the sky opened and rained on the Rose Bowl. Some would say it wept.

Just don’t try selling that to the smiling, dancing, happy (valley) Nittany Lions practically floating off the field at the end of the program’s first Rose Bowl win in 27 years. (Only its second ever.)

“It means the world,” said redshirt freshman linebacker Dominic DeLuca, blessed by fate to wear Franco Harris’ No. 34.

“Hopefully, somewhere up there, he is smiling,” DeLuca added.

Elsewhere, outside the competitive boundaries of the hallowed stadium, it meant closure. Not the kind you’d want to consider if tradition and Keith Jackson mean anything.

No. 11 Penn State’s 35-21 win over No. 8 Utah marked the end of an era. It is the last time the traditional combatants in the Rose Bowl will meet for the foreseeable future. In fact, whether the Big Ten and Pac-12 ever face each other again in Pasadena will be a matter of coincidence.

After the 2023 season, the Rose Bowl will be a College Football Playoff semifinal. So only by chance will a Big Ten and/or Pac-12 team play in the game. For different reasons, beginning with the debut of the 12-team playoff in 2024, the same circumstances will apply.

“That dawned on us … that we’re playing each other in the last ‘traditional Rose Bowl,'” Penn State athletic director Pat Kraft told CBS Sports. “For someone who grew up in the Midwest and in the Big Ten, this is it. It truly is the Grandaddy. So, to have this kind of moment is surreal.”

The finality of it, though, was palpable: This definitely wasn’t your granddaddy’s Granddaddy. 

Since the Rose Bowl reluctantly joined the BCS in 1998, it has been an uneasy relationship between tradition and evolution. Above everything, Rose Bowl traditionalists valued that Pac-8/10/12 vs Big Ten game. For 54 consecutive years (1947-2000), the conferences’ champions met here.

Then that BCS intervened. To participate in it, the Rose Bowl, Big Ten and Pac-12 agreed to give up their exclusivity to be part of the first college football championship decided on the field. The Rose’s first shot in the BCS rotation came in 2002. Miami met Nebraska for the national championship. Folks from both schools came back from Pasadena talking about how the welcome had been less than cordial.

That was manifested further the next year when Oklahoma played Washington State in front of only 87,000 fans, 6,000 short of capacity. Since the College Football Playoff debuted in 2014, only once have the Big Ten and Pac-12 champions met (2020, Ohio State vs. Washington).

In the 16 years prior to 2014, the Rose Bowl got its traditional matchup 10 times. That ratio will shrink substantially going forward.

The issue came to a head late last year when the Rose Bowl reluctantly agreed with the CFP to the parameters of the expanded 12-year playoff in 2024. It had run out of leverage in a sport that has become bigger than the first, oldest bowl in existence.

The Rose Bowl had held out for playing at its traditional Jan. 1, 5 p.m. ET, kickoff time. It was told no. Beginning in 2026, it will be filled with whatever teams are in the system at whatever date and time the CFP deems necessary.

“I don’t say this with insults, but we’re not the Guaranteed Rate Bowl,” Laura Farber, chair of the Tournament of Roses Management Committee, said before the game. “I had to look up where that bowl was taking place. We’re always going to be the Rose Bowl.”

You would get no argument from the Nittany Lions. As a young administrator, Kraft — a former Indiana walk on — vowed never to set foot in the Rose Bowl unless the team for which he worked was playing in it.

“No, it’s too special,” Kraft told CBS Sports. “Gotta earn it.”

On the most sacred of soils, Kraft got his wish. Never mind that, at the beginning of the century, Utah was in the Mountain West or that that Big Ten’s flagships Michigan and Ohio State — both of whom defeated Penn State — were knocked out of the CFP on Saturday.

But it was history with a side order of melancholy. For the first time since 2017, the game did not kick off in the sunshine.

Again, try telling Penn State this didn’t mean anything. The Nittany Lions won the game for the first time since 1995. This was their fifth appearance in the Rose Bowl since 1923.

On the 100th anniversary of that appearance, Penn State quarterback Sean Clifford reminisced about his first time on the West Coast in the fourth or fifth grade. His dad surprised him with a trip to a football camp.

“I just remember really falling in love with football, specifically falling in love with the quarterback position,” Clifford said.

In the last game of his college career, Clifford was the Rose Bowl’s offensive MVP, throwing for 279 yards and two touchdowns.

There is a lifeline out there for tradition. Following the 2024 and 2025 seasons, if the Pac-12 and/or Big Ten champions are ranked in the top four and get a bye, the highest-ranked of those two will be guaranteed a spot if the Rose Bowl is a quarterfinal that year. If that had been in place this season, Michigan would have played in Pasadena as the Big Ten champion against the winner of Ohio State and Kansas State. 

“The Rose Bowl is iconic,” CFP executive director Bill Hancock said.

Monday was another reminder it is not exclusive.

By essentially giving the Rose Bowl an ultimatum, the CFP stakeholders reinforced what a 12-team playoff had become. The games themselves matter more than when or where they are going to be played.

Farber was asked if the likes of an Alabama-Cincinnati playoff game in the Rose Bowl will matter to its grand tradition?

“That’s a really great question,” she said. “Do you know we’re in the Alabama fight song? … Tradition is what you make of it. We need to evolve, too. We need a balance between tradition and innovation.”

Rain couldn’t dampen Penn State’s party. It did presage that new era where the sun may not shine on the Rose Bowl all the time, in terms of its traditional matchup.

“I’m not trying to sound snotty or whatever,” Farber said. “But we are the ‘Granddaddy of Them All.'”

Yes, but for how long?

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The Legend of Heroes: Kuro no Kiseki II -CRIMSON SiN- coming to PC on January 26, 2023 in Korean and Traditional Chinese

Clouded Leopard Entertainment [56 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/companies/clouded-leopard-entertainment”>Clouded Leopard Entertainment will release The Legend of Heroes: Kuro no Kiseki II -CRIMSON SiN- [21 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/games/the-legend-of-heroes-kuro-no-kiseki-ii-crimson-sin”>The Legend of Heroes: Kuro no Kiseki II -CRIMSON SiN- for PC [16,589 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/pc”>PC via Steam on January 26, 2023. It will support Japanese audio with Korean and Traditional Chinese subtitles only. It will be priced at $468 HKD / $1,790 NTD / 79,200 KRW for the standard edition, and $668 HKD / $2,530 NTD / 109,500 KRW for the Digital Deluxe Edition.

The Legend of Heroes: Kuro no Kiseki II -CRIMSON SiN- first launched for PlayStation 5 and PlayStation 4 on September 29 in Japan and October 27 in Asia.

Here is an overview of the game and PC version, via Clouded Leopard Entertainment:

■ About

The latest chapter in the Trails [30 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/series/trails”>Trails saga is finally here! The Legend of Heroes: Kuro no Kiseki II -CRIMSON SiN- features a streamlined version of the battle system from its predecessor, which swiftly and seamlessly transitions from field battles to command-based turn battles, as well as the LGC Alignment system, which allows players to change their character’s three unique attributes (Law, Gray, and Chaos) according to their playstyle, influencing their status, the forces they fight with or against, and even how the plot unfolds!

Furthermore, The Legend of Heroes: Kuro no Kiseki II -CRIMSON SiN- is loaded with unique content, including a variety of new challenges throughout the Republic of Calvard.

■ Prologue

S.1209. After the threat of the mafia organization Armata was gone, the Republic of Calvard regained its former peace. But one day, in a corner of Edith City, a bizarre incident occurs in which a CID (Central Intelligence Department) special operations squad was found slaughtered.

The Calvard Police and Bracer Guild begin investigating the matter. But sensing that a new time of chaos may come, underground factions also start making moves.

Meanwhile, Spriggan Van Arkride also begins his investigation, kickstarted by a visit from an unexpected someone.

Who is the culprit behind the massacre? Why did they do it? And what will happen to Agnes, who is searching for the Eighth Genesis, the last legacy of her great grandfather?

The brutish roar of a crimson beast, and an encounter with a young boy and girl seeking “something” will lead them down a “Trail” that they cannot escape.

■ PC Version Details

The Steam version is compatible with 21:9 ultra-wide monitors, allowing for a wider field of view. Compared to other versions, players can enjoy an advantage when attacking and defending against enemies.

■ About the Digital Deluxe Edition / Downloadable Content Pack

The Digital Deluxe Edition / Downloadable Content Pack includes all character costumes, attachment items, Holow Core voices and background music sets that will be available for sale after launch on January 26, 2023.

*Please note that early purchase bonus downloadable content and other consumable item downloadable content are not included.

■ Early Bird Purchase Bonus

Purchases of the Digital Standard Edition and Digital Deluxe Edition available on the Steam Store by 16:59 JST on Thursday, February 9, 2023, will include the three downloadable content items “Van’s Exclusive Mishy Suit,” “Holow Core Voice [R.A. Monitoring Target],” and “Agnes’s Z-1 Queen (Agnes Ver.) Costume,” available for download after purchase.

In addition, the main game will be available at a special 10 percent off price, from launch until 23:59 JST on Wednesday, February 1, 2023. Don’t miss out!

  • Van’s Exclusive Mishy Suit – The beloved mascot “Mishy” has arrived in the Republic of Calvard! The main character Van’s costume can be changed to a loose-fitting “Mishy suit” for actors.
  • Holow Core Voice [R.A. Monitoring Target] – The system voice of the tactical orbment Xipha can be changed to that of [R.A.], a mysterious figure under close watch by the CID, Calvard’s Central Intelligence Department.
  • Agnes’s Z-1 Queen (Agnes Ver.) Costume – When the Solutions Office team decided to compete in the Z-1 Grand Prix, their sponsor, Prince Sherid, took the liberty of designing the “Team SPRIGGAN” pit girl costume for Agnes.

*This bonus is available for both the Digital Standard and Digital Deluxe Edition.
*Early bird purchase bonus downloadable content will be available until 16:59 JST on Thursday, February 9, 2023.
*Please note that offer end time / date follows Japan Standard Time, not local time.

View a new set of screenshots at the gallery.

PC Announce Trailer

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Candace Cameron Bure’s ‘traditional marriage’ comments called ‘harmful and insulting’ by GLAAD

The Full House alum’s comments about how the Great American Family network will “keep traditional marriage at the core” of its storytelling has sparked backlash from celebrities and LGBTQ advocates. (Photo: Paul Archuleta/Getty Images)

Candace Cameron Bure is defending herself, after she was criticized on multiple fronts for saying that she ditched Hallmark to partner with faith-based network Great American Family because it promises to “keep traditional marriage” — between a man and woman — “at the core.”

“I would like to address my comments on Great American Family’s programming as reported in the Wall Street Journal,” she wrote Wednesday on social media. (Read the full text of her statement below.) “All of you who know me, know beyond question that I have great love and affection for all people. It absolutely breaks my heart that anyone would ever think I intentionally would want to offend and hurt anyone. It saddens me that the media is often seeking to divide us, even around a subject as comforting and merry as Christmas movies. But, given the toxic climate in our culture right now, I shouldn’t be surprised. We need Christmas more than ever.”

Characterizing herself as a “devoted Christian,” the actress said she said her comments were filtered through her religious beliefs.

“To the members of the media responsible for using this opportunity to fan flames of conflict and hate, I have a simple message: I love you anyway. To those who hate what I value and who are attacking me online: I love you. To those who have tried to assassinate my character: I love you. To everyone reading this, of any race, creed, sexuality, or political party, including those who have tried to bully me with name-calling, I love you. … And in the sole motivation of pure love, I hope you’ll join me in sharing God’s hope for all the world this Christmas season. Call that my Christmas wish.”

The Full House alum, 46, had a long-running relationship making holiday movies for Hallmark, but left ahead of it releasing its first gay-led holiday film. She made her controversial comments in a Wall Street Journal story published Monday, while promoting her upcoming Christmas movie on GAF.

“My heart wants to tell stories that have more meaning and purpose and depth behind them,” said Bure, who’s also been named chief creative officer at the company. “I knew that the people behind Great American Family were Christians that love the Lord and wanted to promote faith programming and good family entertainment.”

Jonathan Bennett, who stars in the Hallmark movie The Holiday Sitter featuring the same-sex romance, is one of the celebrities and LGBTQ advocates speaking out.

“I’m just proud to be part of Hallmark channel that is doing so much inclusive programming like The Holiday Sitter, which is an LGBTQ+ led Christmas movie,” the Mean Girls actor, who married Jaymes Vaughan earlier this year, told E! News on Tuesday. “I’m just so proud to be on Hallmark channel that’s making these movies for everyone, because Christmas is for everyone and Hallmark channels are for everyone.” He added that the film has “so much heart” and “humor” and predicts audiences will love it.

The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation has issued a statement about Bure’s “irresponsible” same-sex marriage comments.

“It’s irresponsible and hurtful for Candace Cameron Bure to use tradition as a guise for exclusion,” GLAAD’s President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis said. “I’d love to have a conversation with Bure about my wife, our kids, and our family’s traditions. Bure is out of sync with a growing majority of people of faith, including LGBTQ people of faith, who know that LGBTQ couples and families are deserving of love and visibility.”

Ellis called Bure’s comments “harmful and insulting” to the company’s LGBTQ employees as well as employees with LGBTQ friends and family.

“If GAF’s plan is to intentionally exclude stories about LGBTQ couples, then actors, advertisers, cable and streaming platforms, and production companies should take note and seriously consider whether they want to be associated with a network that holds exclusion as one of its values,” Ellis wrote.

Hilarie Burton, JoJo Siwa and more criticized her words, too.

Burton, of One Tree Hill fame, saw a headline with Bure’s comments and called her a “bigot. I don’t remember Jesus liking hypocrites like Candy. But sure. Make your money, honey. You ride that prejudice wave all the way to the bank.”

Siwa then entered the conversation, writing on Instagram, “Honestly, I can’t believe after everything that went down just a few months ago, that she would not only create a movie with intention of excluding LGBTQIA+, but then also talk about it in the press. This is rude and hurtful to a whole community of people.”

“Everything that went down” was a reference to Siwa and Bure making headlines earlier this year after Siwa posted a TikTok video calling the Fuller House alum the “rudest” celebrity she’s ever met after a past encounter. They later spoke privately.

Bure’s TV sister Jodie Sweetin joined the conversation by throwing support Siwa’s way. “You know I love you,” she wrote to the singer, who came out in 2021, after she slammed Bure for creating “a movie with [the] intention of excluding LGBTQIA+” people.

(Screenshot: JoJo Siwa via Instagram)

Bure’s gotten support from her 24-year-old daughter, Natasha Bure, who praised her for “continuously choosing Christ before all.”

In April, it was reported that Bure had left the Hallmark Channel, after 14 years as the unofficial queen of Christmas due to her countless holiday movies, for the role at Great American Family. She’ll produce religious titles under the “Candace Cameron Bure Presents” banner, and is involved in content creation and curation across many genres.

Candace Cameron Bure is appearing in the Great American Family movie A Christmas…Present. (Photo: Great American Media)

Bure recruited Lori Loughlin, the Full House actress involved in the college admissions scandal, for movie on the network. She also brought over Danica McKellar, who is best known as Winnie Cooper from The Wonder Years.

Bure will star in A Christmas… Present for GAF premiering Nov. 27.

___________________

Here’s the full text of Bure’s statement on Wednesday:

“I would like to address my comments on Great American Family’s programming as reported in the Wall Street Journal. All of you who know me, know beyond question that I have great love and affection for all people. It absolutely breaks my heart that anyone would ever think I intentionally would want to offend and hurt anyone. It saddens me that the media is often seeking to divide us, even around a subject as comforting and merry as Christmas movies. But, given the toxic climate in our culture right now, I shouldn’t be surprised. We need Christmas more than ever.

“I am a devoted Christian. Which means that I believe that every human being bears the image of God. Because of that, I am called to love all people, and I do. If you know me, you know that I am a person who loves fiercely and indiscriminately. My heart yearns to build bridges and bring people one step closer to God, to love others well, and to simply be a reflection of God’s huge love for all of us.

“To the members of the media responsible for using this opportunity to fan flames of conflict and hate, I have a simple message: I love you anyway. To those who hate what I value and who are attacking me online: I love you. To those who have tried to assassinate my character: I love you. To everyone reading this, of any race, creed, sexuality, or political party, including those who have tried to bully me with name-calling, I love you.

“I have long wanted to find a home for more faith-based programming. I am grateful to be an integral part of a young and growing network.I had also expressed in my interview, which was not included, that people of all ethnicities and identities have and will continue to contribute to the network in great ways both in front of and behind the camera, which I encourage and fully support. I’ve never been interested in proselytizing through my storytelling, but in celebrating God’s greatness in our lives through the stories I tell.

“The God we serve is a wildly creative and loving God. He didn’t just capture a small part of my heart, He has captured all of my heart. He will be reflected in everything I do and say; in my family, my work and my interactions with people from all walks of life, God’s love and God’s compassion is front and center. All of that comes from the LOVE that God himself showered upon humanity when he gave the gift of joy and forgiveness on the first Christmas morning 2000 years ago. It is why I love Christmas stories and sharing true joy and true peace with millions of people around the world. And in the sole motivation of pure love, I hope you’ll join me in sharing God’s hope for all the world this Christmas season. Call that my Christmas wish.”



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Candace Cameron Bure’s Daughter Natasha Weighs in After Her “Traditional Marriage” Comment

Natasha Bure is sticking by her mother’s side.

The 24-year-old daughter of Candace Cameron Bure stood behind the Full House star after Candace said the Great American Family network, where she serves as a chief creative officer, “will keep traditional marriage at the core,” during an interview with The Wall Street Journal published Nov. 14.

“I love you @candacecbure for continuously choosing Christ before all,” Natasha wrote in a Nov. 15 Instagram post. “I applaud you every time for how you handle yourself with the upmost grace. As they continuously twist the narrative to beat down on the Kingdom, you stand firm in faith.”

Natasha added that words often get twisted—something she feels is “so incredibly sad to watch.”

“No matter how out of context or warped the words may get, the enemy will not prevail,” she wrote. “Society has gotten completely out of hand with believing every strategically worded headline broadcasted by the media…followed by cancel culture which is nothing but ugly.”

25 Things to Know About Candace Cameron Bure

Natasha added, “I am lucky to get to view you from a lense closer than most, and see how you are truly the real deal.”

Several celebrities called out Candace’s controversial view after she suggested there no plans to feature same-sex couples on Great American Family network.

JoJo, who came out as a member of the LGBTQ+ community in 2021, took to her Instagram Nov. 15 to share her thoughts, while seemingly alluding to the feud she had with Candace earlier this year—where Natasha also got involved.

Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP/Shutterstock; Instagram

“Honestly, I can’t believe after everything that went down just a few months ago, that she would not only create a movie with intention of excluding LGBTQIA+,” JoJo said, “but then also talk about it in the press. This is rude and hurtful to a whole community of people.”

Meanwhile, Hilarie Burton also took to social media to voice her opinion.

“Bigot,” she wrote in a Nov. 14 tweet. “I don’t remember Jesus liking hypocrites like Candy. But sure. Make your money, honey. You ride that prejudice wave all the way to the bank.”

E! News has reached out to Candace’s rep but hasn’t received a comment.

For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App



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Candace Cameron Bure Reveals Great American Family “Will Keep Traditional Marriage At Core” & Not Feature Gay Couples – Deadline

Candace Cameron Bure is opening up about her move from Crown Media Family’s Hallmark Channel to Great American Family and reveals if holiday movies will feature gay couples.

“My heart wants to tell stories that have more meaning and purpose and depth behind them,” Bure told The Wall Street Journal in an interview. “I knew that the people behind Great American Family were Christians that love the Lord and wanted to promote faith programming and good family entertainment.”

At Great American Family, Bure reunited with her former Hallmark boss Bill Abbott who has given her freedom in producing and creating content under the banner “Candace Cameron Bure Presents.” Bure explained that the reason she left Hallmark was because “it basically is a completely different network than when I started because of the change of leadership.”

Hallmark in turn said, “We want all viewers to see themselves in our programming and everyone is welcome.”

This holiday season, Hallmark is promoting its first holiday film with an LGBTQ+ storyline titled The Holiday Sitter, something that Great American Family is not going to do anytime soon from what Bure said.

“I think that Great American Family will keep traditional marriage at the core,” the Full House alum said.

Abbott on the other hand left the door open adding, “It’s certainly the year 2022, so we’re aware of the trends. There’s no whiteboard that says, ‘Yes, this’ or ‘No, we’ll never go here.’”

Bure said that the films she makes for Great American Family are not to be “off-putting to the unbeliever or someone who shares a different faith.”



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