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In a world where Leftists will brand anyone to the right of Joseph Stalin a “Nazi,” Roseanne Barr had to apologize for calling George Soros a Nazi
Robert De Niro, whose best bet at any future success in Hollywood rests squarely on a Meet the Fockers sequel, tried reclaiming the glory days in front of
In a series of since-deleted tweets, Roseanne Barr relayed her emotions over the cancellation of her show, explained the chain of events that led to it and addressed co-stars who had publicly called her out over her actions.
It was impossible to escape yesterday’s big news: ABC canceled “Roseanne,” the hit reboot of the 90s sitcom starring Roseanne Barr.
ABC aired the final episode of the first season of it’s “Roseanne” reboot, and it dominated every other show it competes with in primetime, among all viewer demographics.
Andy Lassner, an intellectually-challenged producer for the Ellen DeGeneres talk show, blasted Trump supporters by insinuating they are helpless, useless, and/or lazy.
Roseanne Barr may be the most successful sitcom lead in the country right now. But that doesn’t stop her from getting frustrated by the poisonous state of social media today.
“Roseanne” returned to ABC in March 2018, and the reboot proved to be a success. The “Roseanne” reboot garnered 25 million viewers on their debut episode, and ratings held strong during week two, with 15 million.
Fans were outraged when ABC canceled Tim Allen’s popular sitcom “Last Man Standing” last year, and many couldn’t help but suspect that the reason why was political. The show had become popular among conservatives
Citing no evidence to support her claims, comedienne Kathy Griffin complained on social media that she’s been placed on a ‘kill list’ and is the target of “constant death threats.”
Kanye West has been celebrating liberation from the liberal think tank that is the entertainment industry and Hollywood, while his peers have been openly mocking and denouncing him.