Tag Archives: Election 2024

Donald Trump Spokesperson Uses Kamala Harris Beyonce Song “Freedom”

Donald Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung appeared to take a shot on the Republican’s Democratic rival within the 2024 election, Vice President Kamala Harris, by utilizing her marketing campaign tune, Beyoncé’s “Freedom,” in a social media submit.

On Tuesday, Cheung shared a video on X (previously Twitter) exhibiting Trump strolling off his aircraft in Michigan for a marketing campaign occasion, with “Freedom” enjoying within the background. As Trump handed a Secret Service van, he raised his fists within the air. Cheung captioned the submit, “Landing in Michigan!!! @realDonaldTrump.”

https://twitter.com/TheStevenCheung/standing/1825948172495237263

It’s unclear whether or not the tune was really performed on the scene or if the audio was added later by Cheung. Regardless of considerations raised within the feedback about potential copyright infringement, the video remained on-line till Tuesday night time when The Hollywood Reporter observed the submit had been removed from the platform.

Earlier on Wednesday, Rolling Stone had reported that Beyoncé’s staff threatened to ship a cease-and-desist to the Trump marketing campaign over using the tune, which they reportedly didn’t obtain permission for.

When reached out to for touch upon the video by The Hill, Cheung responded, “Freedom, freedom!”

Neither Cheung nor Beyoncé’s representatives have responded to The Hollywood Reporter‘s requests for remark.

In July, Harris obtained fast approval from Beyoncé’s staff to make use of “Freedom” from her 2016 album Lemonade as a part of her presidential marketing campaign. The tune was featured in Harris’ marketing campaign launch video and an ad along with her operating mate, Tim Walz. Within the advert, Jeffrey Wright narrates, “What sort of America do we wish? One the place we’re divided, offended, depressed? C’mon! We’re People! Fascism? We conquered it. The moon? Landed on it. The long run? Constructing it. Freedom? No person loves it extra. And we combat for it.”

Trump, alternatively, has confronted authorized bother for utilizing songs in his marketing campaign with out permission. Final week, Isaac Hayes’ property sued him for 134 counts of copyright infringement after Trump Sam & Dave’s “Maintain on, I’m Coming” at a rally, which was written by the late musician. Moreover, after Trump used Celine Dion’s “My Coronary heart Will Go On” at a rally in Montana, Dion’s staff condemned the unauthorized utilization and questioned the tune alternative, writing, “… And actually, that tune?”

Jackie Strause contributed to this story.

This story initially posted at 10:44 a.m. and was first up to date at 1:54 p.m. so as to add the report of Beyoncé’s staff threatening to ship a cease-and-desist.

How the DNC 2024 Went From Biden-Led to Kamala Harris-Focused

In early July, this yr’s conference in Chicago regarded like it might be a significant dud for the Democrats. There was little or no to look ahead to within the Windy Metropolis again when the get together was in meltdown following President Joe Biden’s painfully revealing debate efficiency. Delegates and get together members then winced as Biden dug in his heels on stepping away from the 2024 ticket, and with every primetime interview the president sat for over the summer season, the Democrats’ precarious place turned extra obvious. The occasion, which is supposed to ignite the get together and encourage voters to prove for the Democrats’ ticket, started to appear like an obligation reasonably than a must-attend, doubtlessly historic occasion.

Then, that wind shifted. Biden bowed out towards the top of July, and Harris ascended to the highest of the ticket unchallenged, with everybody — together with Beyoncé — throwing her their assist. Inside 48 hours, real pleasure was unexpectedly within the air. Who would be a part of Harris on the ticket? And naturally, what would turn into of the upcoming Democratic Nationwide Conference? A brand new candidate calls for a brand new kind of conference — the Democratic Nationwide Committee would wish to current an occasion that ushers in a youthful get together figurehead whereas passing the guard from older Democrats and re-introducing Harris to the citizens in entrance of roughly 5,000 delegates, 12,000 volunteers and 15,000 media members.

The conference being broadcast over 4 nights this week is the work of DNC staffers who labored till the ultimate moments this week to appreciate a brand new imaginative and prescient, in accordance with a supply near the conference who spoke to The Hollywood Reporter on background. This new occasion was designed to rigorously current Harris as an thrilling chief whereas respectfully making house for Biden, honoring what Rep. Nancy Pelosi referred to as his “very selfless” act of stepping apart for the larger good of the get together. In the meantime, among the conference’s logistics needed to be tweaked, celeb invitations needed to be dealt with (the Hollywood components this week don’t scream Biden, in any case), contemporary movies wanted to be shot and a certain quantity of what’s seen on-site on the United Middle needed to be Kamala-ified.

A lot of what occurs in political campaigning happens at a fast tempo and what’s seen by the layman has fallen into place on the final minute. With so many components, that’s no completely different for conventions and this yr’s DNC, THR was informed this week. Including Washington and Kaling as hosts was a late-in-the-game transfer — with a well-known Black girl on one evening and one other who’s Indian-American taking host duties the evening earlier than meant to characterize Harris’ Jamaican and South Asian heritage. Whereas the committee actually seems to be downplaying any stress or main legwork brought on by the sudden shift to a Harris-led ticket — the schedules of two A-list TV producer-actors like Washington and Kaling can’t probably be extensive open — their late reserving for the DNC speaks to the significance they really feel in providing assist and the eye Harris instructions at this second. 

After the ticket change, Biden’s speech was moved to the primary evening. The DNC’s thought was to provide the profession politician the correct time to talk on to the get together and the nation following his historic exit. Many working on the DNC bought into politics due to Biden, THR was informed. And with Harris watching from inside the stadium (she took to the stage to embrace Biden when he concluded his remarks) this may enable for the remaining three nights to give attention to transferring ahead and cede the rostrum to the get together’s future.  

Sadly, the pitfalls of stay occasions, together with speeches operating over and ready for hooting and hollering to die down weren’t only a testomony to a celebration with loads to debate and a extremely engaged crowd. This all pushed Biden’s speech out of primetime and previous many a bedtime. The president hit the stage at 11:30 p.m. ET, so his 50-plus-minute speech went effectively previous midnight. It’s unclear when the numerous audio system from earlier on Monday evening had been booked, however the roster on day one — Rep. Maxime Waters, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass — appeared to be extra reflective of a Harris-led ticket than Democrats who would have been prioritized if Biden hadn’t ended his marketing campaign. 

Political conventions are usually a mixture of pre-taped candidate-friendly PR and stay speeches and sometimes staged moments designed to stay within the recollections of voters. Harris has spent a few of her previous few whirlwind weeks on shoots for movies, Politico reported, that are being proven throughout the conference. In the meantime, clips that might be used if any Democrat had been operating — the primary two nights embody a few of a former Trump supporter speaking about breaking out of MAGAland and making the journey throughout the aisle.

It’s tough to discern if the musical company had been booked for a Biden or Harris-centric occasion. James Taylor on evening one, who was bumped for time, actually screams Biden whereas rapper Frequent is probably going on self-proclaimed “hip-hop woman” Harris. As talked about, a lot is going on in politics that’s achieved final minute, and the DNC isn’t releasing performers till hours earlier than the evening’s occasions start. 

One performer that’s assured to impress the gang is Harris herself, whose temporary second onstage Monday bought what regarded like the complete enviornment onto their ft to cheer her on. A second like that solely helps to clean over any snags in proceedings at this altered conference, as a result of if the candidate’s star energy is that this robust, the job of the DNC was already achieved. 

Dawn Porter’s Biden Film Among Cuts at DNC Night One

The primary evening of the DNC in Chicago had an Academy Awards really feel — proper all the way down to the overruns and snubs.

On an evening when Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, AOC and others introduced the United Middle crowd to its ft with rousing podium speeches — and Kamala Harris made a raucously obtained shock look — quite a lot of different scheduled moments failed to return off.

Daybreak Porter, the documentarian who had produced a brief about President Biden for the conference, noticed a deliberate broadcast forward of the president’s speech shelved.

It was unclear when the choice was made to chop the movie from this system, however the expectation from the filmmaker’s camp coming into the evening was that the piece would run simply forward of the president’s tackle. Biden’s speech was pushed out of primetime by scheduling overruns that had his tackle not begin till about 10:30 p.m. ET, quarter-hour after the complete proceedings had been presupposed to wrap.

The movie was seen on Biden’s social accounts Tuesday morning accompanied by the message, “I like you, America.” That includes interviews with Invoice Clinton, Harris and different Biden confidantes, the 10-minute piece follows the general public servant from his election as a 29-year-old senator in then-Republican Delaware by way of his lengthy Congressional tenure, vice presidential phrases and present occupancy of the White Home. It alternates private particulars together with his personal global-centric ideology. “If we don’t lead the world, who does?” he says at one level.

Porter has an extended résumé that features movies about political figures, having made the 2020 acclaimed Civil Rights doc John Lewis: Good Bother and this yr’s Raphael Warnock- and WNBA-themed Energy of the Dream.

In the meantime, James Taylor didn’t carry out on an evening that each kicked off Harris’ ceiling-shattering candidacy and paid homage to Biden’s exit from the political stage. The crooner was scheduled for a slot between Dr. Jill Biden and Ashley Biden, however discovered himself with no good friend within the director’s sales space amid the sunny speeches some thought would by no means finish.

Taylor is a confirmed aspect to DNC organizers; he carried out on the 2012 conference that kicked off Barack Obama’s profitable reelection bid.

New York Democratic Congresswoman Grace Meng additionally appeared to have her speech scrapped amid the addresses from a slew of lawmakers and stakeholders.

Conference organizers provided an uncommon motive for the shelvings: enthusiasm.

“Due to the raucous applause interrupting speaker after speaker, we in the end skipped components of our program to make sure we may get to President Biden as shortly as attainable in order that he may converse on to the American individuals,” a conference official instructed THR in a press release distributed Monday evening. “We’re happy with the electrical environment in our conference corridor and proud that our conference is showcasing the broad and various coalition behind the Harris-Walz ticket all through the week on and off the stage.”  

Amongst entertainers, nation star Mickey Guyton and alt-country fixture Jason Isbell did regale the gang, whereas veteran Golden State Warriors and U.S. Olympic males’s basketball coach Steve Kerr and actor-filmmaker Tony Goldwyn spoke, too.

Whereas the pre-primetime programming began just about on schedule, quite a lot of extra slack displays quickly impacted the printed. Guyton’s efficiency was scheduled for 7:45 p.m. ET, however wound up not beginning till 8:20 p.m. ET. From there, delays continued to snowball, resulting in Biden taking the stage exterior the normal primetime window.

THR contributor Eric Kohn added to this report.

Harris-Walz Campaign Releases 2024 Designers for Democracy Collection

Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz have tapped 16 Hollywood-loved designers for his or her newest merch drop.

Following the viral Chappel Roan-inspired camo cap, the Harris-Walz marketing campaign launched the Designers for Democracy assortment that includes attire and equipment by Sergio Hudson, Thom Browne, Joseph Altuzarra and different labels worn by Harris, former First Girls Michelle Obama and Hillary Clinton and numerous stars.

Reproductive rights, local weather change and voting consciousness are among the many themes of the 2024 marketing campaign assortment ($35 to $85) of tees, tanks, long-sleeved shirts, hoodies, sweaters, tote baggage and extra. Items embrace a floral terry material hoodie by Ulla Johnson emblazoned with “Our Our bodies” and “Our Vote” alongside the sleeves, a Victor Glemaud tank prime with the phrase “we aren’t going again / kamala” throughout the chest, a grey “Kamala.” sweater by Willy Chavarria and a black T-shirt by poet and artist Cleo Wade that includes a photograph of the Democratic presidential candidate as a younger woman with the phrases, “the primary however not the final.”

Different gadgets embrace a retro “America Is an Concept” tee and two pairs of ribbed socks by Brother Vellies designer and 15 % Pledge founder Aurora James (her items at the moment are bought out), graphic totes by Tory Burch and Brett Heyman and an American flag-inspired “Let’s win this” reversible scarf by Thom Browne. Gabriella Hearst created an ombré pink and purple baseball cap and sweatshirt with the phrases “democracy, girls’s rights and local weather,” whereas Chloe Kristyn designer Bettina Benson’s white tee options “we select freedom” throughout illustrated flowers. Jonathan Cohen, Prabal Gurung and Vera Wang additionally contributed designs to the gathering.

Per the web site, clothes are American-made and union-printed. Gadgets can be found for presale and orders ship in early October.

Ulla Johnson and Thom Browne items from the Designers for Democracy assortment.

Kamala Harris Retailer

Kamala HQ senior marketing campaign advisor Meaghan Burdick informed Vogue, “Vice President Harris and Governor Tim Walz are combating for a future that strengthens our democracy, protects reproductive freedom and ensures each particular person has the chance to not simply get by however to get forward. The Designers for Democracy are a bunch of beloved American designers who consider in that imaginative and prescient and are working to get Harris and Walz to the White Home.”

Of her T-shirt design, James defined on Instagram, “America is a wonderful, unusual and bountiful place. America can also be an thought. And precisely whose thought she is might be voted on up and down the poll all throughout the nation this November. For too lengthy folks that appear like me had been made to really feel that we didn’t belong right here. However America belongs to all of us, equally. And we belong to her, too. She is our house; she is our coronary heart; she is our thought.”

Sergio Hudson turned a family title after former First Girl Michelle Obama wore a head-to-toe plum look by the Los Angeles-based designer to President Joe Biden’s 2021 inauguration. Harris additionally wore a customized sequin cocktail gown with a floor-length tuxedo overcoat by the designer later that night for her first look as Vice President; most not too long ago she donned a shiny blue swimsuit set by the designer on the 2024 Essence Competition of Tradition. The previous First Girl wore a checkered tailor-made gown by Thom Browne to President Barack Obama’s 2013 inauguration. And Hillary Clinton sported a purple robe by Altuzarra on the 2022 Met Gala.

The Designers for Democracy merchandise act as donations to the Harris Victory Fund and are in the stores on-line at Kamalaharris.com.

Hillary Clinton Joins Stephen Colbert for Live DNC Late Show Episode

Stephen Colbert is taking The Late Present to Chicago for the 2024 Democratic Nationwide Conference — with some large names set to affix him for dwell reveals subsequent week.

Colbert’s stint within the Midwest kicks off on Monday, coinciding with the opening date of the DNC. That night time, he’ll be joined by Hillary Rodham Clinton and Julia Louis-Dreyfus (who will even host her personal panel throughout the DNC). Tuesday’s episode will function Nancy Pelosi and Home Democratic Chief Hakeem Jeffries, whereas Wednesday’s present may have Pete Buttigeg and a efficiency by Likelihood the Rapper. Particulars for the closing episode on Thursday haven’t been introduced but; visitors for that episode will likely be revealed subsequent week.

Every episode will likely be taped dwell from Chicago’s Auditorium Theater, a brief distance away from United Middle, the place most occasions from the conference will likely be held. Colbert had beforehand introduced the upcoming Auditorium Theater reveals in April. “I’m very excited to broadcast from the gorgeous Auditorium,” he mentioned on the time. “I began my profession in Chicago, let’s see if I can finish it there.”

In July, The Late Present aired dwell throughout the Republican Nationwide Conference, offering real-time updates. Nevertheless, as a substitute of touring to Milwaukee for the occasion, these episodes have been filmed on the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York Metropolis. The present has broadcast dwell throughout the political conventions in earlier election years, first in 2016 and once more in 2020.

The 2024 Democratic Nationwide Conference, scheduled for Aug. 19-22, will convey collectively Democrats from all around the nation to help Vice President Kamala Harris in her marketing campaign for the presidency, with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her working mate. Whereas the primary actions will likely be held on the United Middle, there will likely be further occasions hosted on the McCormick Place Conference Middle. Over 50,000 attendees are anticipated this 12 months.

A Roundup of Stars Heading to Chicago

Whereas the world waits to see if/when/how Taylor Swift or Beyoncé will weigh in on the historic marketing campaign to elect Kamala Harris as president, particulars are surfacing on the movie star contingent that has dedicated to touring to Chicago subsequent week for the Democratic Nationwide Conference.

The 2024 DNC is the official occasion the place Democrats from all 50 states and the U.S. territories will come collectively from Aug. 19-22 to rally for Harris in her bid to be elected to the White Home alongside vice presidential candidate Tim Walz. Nightly programming can be headquartered at Chicago’s United Heart with different social gathering actions set to happen at McCormick Place Conference Heart, all of that are rolled out as a collaboration between the Democratic Nationwide Committee, the Chicago host committee, the Metropolis of Chicago and the State of Illinois. Per the DNC, 50,000 guests are anticipated to descend upon Chicago, a determine that features 5,000 delegates and alternates and 15,000 members of the media.

These guests can have loads of choices for a way and the place to combine, mingle and commiserate concerning the state of U.S. politics at ancillary gatherings organized round official DNC actions. In accordance with a third-party occasion listing posted on-line, there are effectively greater than 100 occasions occurring subsequent week in Chicago with a roster of confirmed headliners that features John Legend, Jon Stewart, Billy Porter, Joan Jett, Octavia Spencer, DJ D-Good, Lil Jon and stars of RuPaul’s Drag Race, amongst many others.

Tongues have been wagging for weeks about which boldfaced names can be making the trek to the Midwest, much more so within the wake of July’s Republican Nationwide Conference that drew Amber Rose, Hulk Hogan, Jason Aldean, actuality TV star Savannah Chrisley, Child Rock, Dana White, Lee Greenwood and others. All eyes can be on the United Heart stage to see how strategists deploy Hollywood elite to the principle stage, notably in an election 12 months during which voters have repeatedly mentioned that inflation, the economic system and value of residing are probably the most urgent points.

Jon Stewart and his staff from Comedy Central’s The Each day Present will publish up from contained in the Athenaeum Heart for Thought & Tradition for your complete conference’s run from Aug. 19-22. Stewart will broadcast a dwell present on Monday to kick begin the week with the present’s roster of hosts and “all-star information staff” filling in for the remainder of the week. In accordance with a website providing tickets, the closing evening’s broadcast will run late (wrapping up after the shut of the DNC round 11:45 p.m. native time) and is anticipated to be probably the most starry evening of the conference.

Jon Stewart at The Each day Present.

Matt Wilson

The Inventive Coalition, led by Robin Bronk, has additionally confirmed particulars for a collection of occasions being hosted by the nonprofit, nonpartisan social and public advocacy group of the humanities and leisure group. Led by president Tim Daly and CEO Bronk, the org confirmed that it had booked a delegation that features Uma Thurman, Uzo Aduba, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Yvette Nicole Brown, Anthony Anderson, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Busy Philipps, Jon Cryer, David Cross, Yolonda Ross, Iain Armitage, Chris Witaske and Danai Gurira.

Per Thurman’s rep, she is now not capable of attend in particular person attributable to work commitments. Ralph can also be working subsequent week on the collection that landed her an Emmy, Abbott Elementary, however her consultant confirms that she is going to make the journey for Thursday to attend the conference’s closing evening. Brown, who actively donates her time and activism to politics and lots of different business causes, can be on the bottom in Chicago “and booked stable for a lot of occasions,” per her staff. Additionally confirmed are Aduba, Ferguson, Philipps, Anderson, Gurira, Cryer and others. The Hollywood Reporter has discovered that Connie Britton is prone to make the journey, and a supply signifies that Don Cheadle might also be on the bottom in Chicago.

Yvette Nicole Brown is “booked stable for a lot of occasions” subsequent week.

Jesse Grant/Getty Photos for Disney/Pixar

On Tuesday, Aug. 20, Inventive Coalition will host a VIP welcome dinner on the Whitehall Resort. The next morning can be an Empower Coverage Luncheon hosted by the org and sponsored by Full Sail College at Palmer Home Resort. Described as a management luncheon, attendees are anticipated to be “C-suite and coverage trailblazers from Fortune 500, leisure, Silicon Valley and coverage.” The next morning, the resort may also host The Case for Kindness, a reception hosted by the Inventive Coalition and sponsored by Articulus Leisure that could be a “salute to groundbreakers, trailblazers” and leaders from numerous sectors and particular curiosity teams.

Capping off the Inventive Coalition’s huge week can be a profit gala live performance at Chicago’s Ramova Theatre on Halsted Road on Wednesday, Aug. 21. Per The New York Instances, which referred to the occasion as a “contender for greatest and finest social gathering of the week,” the live performance can be co-hosted by Oscar winner Octavia Spencer and offered in partnership with Reproductive Freedom for All, Finish Residents United and Gabrielle Giffords’ gun security group. Up on the marquee can be Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Drive-By Truckers and SistaStrings. The NYT studies that Gurira, Armitage, Aduba, Giffords and her Senator husband, Mark Kelly of Arizona, can be on the scene. Earlier iterations of the gala live performance have seen such acts because the Purple Scorching Chili Peppers, Sting, the Black Eyed Peas, Journey, Elvis Costello, the Goo Goo Dolls and Melissa Etheridge take the stage.

Robin Bronk and Tim Daly.

Araya Doheny/Getty Photos

Music is anticipated to be a giant draw within the Windy Metropolis. Legend, who carried out on the Lincoln Memorial after President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris’s inauguration in January 2021, is headlining a present at Salt Shed for billionaire Illinois governor JB Pritzker on Tuesday, Aug. 20. The evening earlier than, the Equality PAC will current a celebration that includes LGBTQ expertise in Chicago’s iconic Boys City that can function RuPaul’s Drag Race stars Chad Michaels, Silky Nutmeg Ganache and Jackie Cox. Additionally on Monday, DJ D-Good will hit the turntables at a celebration organized by members of the Home Vitality & Commerce Committee, and rapper Lil Jon will headline a Southern Soul social gathering for Georgia’s State Democratic Get together at PRYSM nightclub.

Per his rep, Billy Porter will seem and carry out at a luncheon for veteran politico Nancy Pelosi in a exhibiting that can mark a reunion for the 2 who final teamed for the Emmy winner’s June present throughout San Francisco Delight. This story can be up to date as extra DNC particulars floor.

Billy Porter

Jamie McCarthy/WireImage

Isaac Hayes Family Sues Trump Campaign for Use of “Hold on I’m Coming”

The household of Isaac Hayes is suing Donald Trump and his marketing campaign for continued unauthorized use of the Sam & Dave hit track “Maintain on, I’m Coming,” which was co-written by the late soul icon.

On Sunday, Isaac Hayes III, the Grammy and Oscar-winner’s son, posted on social media that the household had filed go well with over the Trump marketing campaign’s use of the Sam & Dave hit at its rallies from 2022 to this yr, as most lately as in Montana on Aug. 9 “even together with your workplace apparently conscious that you simply had no permission,” based on the authorized letter.

“We the household of @_isaachayes Isaac Hayes Enterprises, represented by Walker & Associates, are suing Donald Trump and his marketing campaign for 134 counts copyright infringement for the unauthorized use of the track “Maintain on, I’m Coming” at marketing campaign rallies from 2022-2024,” the official Isaac Hayes account posted on X (previously Twitter), in a submit signed by The Hayes Household.

The submit added, “We demand the cessation of use, elimination of all associated movies, a public disclaimer, and fee of $3 million in licensing charges by August 16, 2024. Failure to conform will lead to additional authorized motion.”

Within the Discover of Copyright Infringement dated Aug. 11 and addressed to each Trump and the Trump marketing campaign, which was obtained by The Hollywood Reporter on Monday, the household’s lawyer James L. Walker, Jr. additionally requested the marketing campaign launch an official assertion as an official disclaimer that the household and Hayes Property “haven’t licensed, endorsed or permitted use of the Isaac Hayes Enterprises’ property at any level, now or in perpetuity all through the universe.”

On his personal Instagram account Sunday, Isaac Hayes III elaborated extra forthright causes for attempting to distance his father’s work from the Trump marketing campaign. “Donald Trump epitomizes an absence of integrity and sophistication, not solely by means of his steady use of my father’s music with out permission but in addition by means of his historical past of sexual abuse towards girls and his racist rhetoric. This conduct will not be tolerated, and we’ll take swift motion to place an finish to it,” Isaac Hayes III wrote.

He added, “We stand in solidarity with all musicians whose work has been co-opted with out consent by divisive political campaigns. A musical performer’s artwork is a mirrored image of their soul, not a software for selling hatred or bigotry. It’s time for all artists to unite and demand respect for his or her inventive legacies.”

Hayes co-wrote “Maintain on, I’m Coming” together with his songwriting accomplice David Porter. The track, which was first launched by Sam & Dave in 1996, hit No. 1 on the Billboard R&B charts and achieved gold standing.

The track has develop into a daily function of Trump’s rallies, with it typically taking part in earlier than and after the previous president’s stump speech. It additionally featured prominently on the 2024 Republican Nationwide Conference, with a band taking part in the track after Trump completed his prolonged and meandering 90-minute speech.

The Hayes household lawsuit is simply the most recent authorized battle between musicians and the Trump marketing campaign. The likes of The Beatles, Adele, Aerosmith, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John and Earth, Wind & Hearth have slammed Trump and his workforce for utilizing their music at political occasions. Certainly, the variety of musicians who’ve publicly requested that the Trump marketing campaign cease utilizing their work is so prolonged that it has its personal Wikipedia entry.

On Saturday, Celine Dion’s administration workforce launched a press release on behalf of the artist and her file label Sony for the Trump marketing campaign’s use of the Titanic hit “My Coronary heart Will Go On,” at a rally in Montana on Friday. “Under no circumstances is that this use licensed, and Celine Dion doesn’t endorse this or any related use…. And actually, THAT track?” the assertion stated.

Aug. 12, 8:30 a.m. Up to date to incorporate the Discover of Copyright Infringement.

Celine Dion Slams Trump Rally’s Use of Song ‘My Heart Will Go On’

Celine Dion denounced Donald Trump and J.D. Vance for utilizing her track, “My Coronary heart Will Go On,” at a rally in Montana on Friday.

Her administration group launched a press release on behalf of the artist and her document label for using the Titanic hit.

“Immediately, Celine Dion’s administration group and her document label, Sony Music Leisure Canada Inc., grew to become conscious of the unauthorized utilization of the video, recording, musical efficiency, and likeness of Celine Dion singing “My Coronary heart Will Go On” at a Donald Trump / JD Vance marketing campaign rally in Montana,” her official X (previously Twitter) account posted.

The assertion continued, “On no account is that this use licensed, and Celine Dion doesn’t endorse this or any comparable use. …And actually, THAT track?”

The Trump marketing campaign has been slammed by a number of artists all through his presidential runs for utilizing their music with out their permission, together with Rihanna, Axl Rose and The Rolling Stones, the latter of whom threatened authorized motion towards the previous president. Neil Younger truly sued the previous president for utilizing his music.

Prince and Sinead O’Connor‘s estates disavowed Trump’s use of their artists’ songs “Purple Rain” and “Nothing Compares 2 U,” respectively. Tom Petty’s household additionally referred to as out the marketing campaign for utilizing the singer’s “I Received’t Again Down” in 2020 with out permission.

Dion not too long ago returned to performing onstage almost two years after saying her Stiff-Individual Syndrome prognosis. She sang Édith Piaf’s “Hymne a l’Amour” on the 2024 Paris Olympics opening ceremony, accompanied by only a piano.

Following the efficiency, she wrote on X (previously Twitter), “I’m honored to have carried out tonight, for the Paris 2024 Opening Ceremony, and so filled with pleasure to be again in one in every of my very favourite cities! Most of all, I’m so joyful to be celebrating these superb athletes, with all their tales of sacrifice and willpower, ache and perseverance.”

Why Liberal Jews Feel Worried About Bypassing Josh Shapiro as V.P.

Scrolling by means of the protection of the Tim Walz V.P. announcement Tuesday morning, I acquired a message from a buddy, a distinguished Jewish-American physician who identifies as a average.

“This makes me very unhappy,” she wrote.

The buddy had already been teetering on the cliff’s edge about Trump, believing him a more sensible choice on antisemitism for her household, which features a daughter finding out on a hotbed school campus. Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, opting towards Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro pushed her over that edge; to this buddy, it was proof the candidate had caved to anti-Jewish forces. And who’s to say she wouldn’t try this in workplace, too? “I didn’t say she was antisemitic,” she clarified. “I mentioned that she couldn’t stand as much as those that are.”

I fought again vigorously.

Like Shapiro, Walz has been outspoken on antisemitism and the horrors of October 7, I mentioned.

As a folksy Midwesterner, the Minnesota governor brings electoral benefits that Shapiro and his coastal polish didn’t, I famous.

Not selecting a Jewish working mate is hardly disqualifying for workplace, I argued. If it was, each presidential candidate in historical past save one wouldn’t make the grade.

Additionally, I moderately identified, it’s not like Harris trashed Shapiro. She’ll stand arm in arm with him at rallies, gratefully take pleasure in his endorsement and possibly even give him a Cupboard place if she wins.

After which I ended. There was by no means going to be a method to definitively know why Harris selected Walz over Shapiro. What is understood is that the selection occurred after a aware progressive social-media marketing campaign to model Shapiro as “Genocide Josh” and paint him as some Netanyahu water-carrier when his positions on Israel have been normal Democratic two-stateism (and sharply anti-Netanyahu). And that carries with it the stench of one thing else.

Throughout Hollywood and past, liberal Jewish-Individuals at present really feel a way of unease. I don’t declare to talk for anybody however myself. However my ideas appear to be echoed among the many solidly liberal Jewish-American producers, brokers and executives I’ve talked to – specifically, that even when the choose was the results of electoral calculations, these calculations include baked-in antisemitic assumptions in regards to the voters.

Harris has drawn the assist of numerous Democrats in Hollywood who establish as Jewish, from Jeffrey Katzenberg to J.J. Abrams to Barbra Streisand. That received’t change. But it surely comes with a tinge now. As one producer I spoke to mentioned, “In fact I’ll keep on the prepare – Walz looks like dude. I simply preserve asking why it isn’t a Shapiro prepare.”

To make sure, there are Arab-American voters in Michigan and elsewhere who’ve robust emotions about Israel’s battle in Gaza and would vote on that foundation. As they need to. However as a consider bypassing Shapiro, that is inappropriate. As Florida Democrat Jared Moskowitz not too long ago famous, “Josh’s place on Israel is sort of an identical to all people else, however he’s being held to a unique normal. So it’s important to ask your self why.”

Or as Dana Bash mentioned on CNN Monday, “The assaults on Josh Shapiro for his stance on Israel and protests — he has the identical stance because the non-Jewish contenders and so they’re choosing at him, and we should always not let that go unsaid.”

And so liberal American Jews who assist the thought of a viable Jewish state no matter its insurance policies – it’s the place half our brothers and sisters dwell, in spite of everything – discover ourselves, as soon as once more, in an unattainable place, a political equal of the closing in of the partitions from The Temple of Doom. Warding off right-wing associates who see within the Walz choose an antisemitic conspiracy and proof of Democratic abandonment, we flip round and see spikes coming at us from the opposite path, within the type of campaigns to focus on a proud Jewish official and the exuberance that they labored.

These folks wouldn’t have been this gleeful, I believed as I scrolled by means of some progressive reactions, in regards to the near-miss of J.B. Pritzker or anybody else much less proudly Jewish. However they have been about Shapiro, a historically observant Jew who attended personal Jewish day college and embraces his religion brazenly.

Such reactions draw many liberal Jews again to the weeks after Oct. 7 and the shattering query we requested then – is the bottom being pulled out from underneath us? For the primary time shortly, at present evoked Debra Messing’s line from the pro-Israel rally on the Mall final November. “I do know you’re feeling misunderstood and maligned,” she mentioned to the numerous Jews in attendance. “I do know, as a result of I do too.”

These feedback sparked a backlash on the time. However many liberal Jews in Hollywood, media and tech recognized together with her remarks.

To some non-Jews I talked to, at present’s information was only a case of a tribal rooting curiosity not going our means. “Oh properly, you’ll get the subsequent one,” went their vibe. However when a Jewish chief this well-liked from a state so obligatory will get handed over, it turns into greater than only a matter of dropping a spherical of identity-politics poker – it touches an existential nerve.

Some Jews have additionally famous that in selecting Walz, Harris was merely making an attempt to steer clear of elevating Gaza as a problem. However exterior of antisemitic projection, why would it not try this? The concept a candidate would robotically need to speak extra about Israel just because he’s Jewish raises ugly tropes of twin loyalty, or worse.

Cautious of seeming killjoyish, some liberal Jewish-Individuals additionally sought to discover a silver lining – no less than now Jews wouldn’t be blamed for administration failures, they mentioned. They cited The Atlantic’s Yair Rosenberg, one in all probably the most eloquent expositors of the double requirements utilized to Shapiro, who in a latest piece expressed some reservations about what a Shapiro vice-presidency would carry.

“Anti-Semitism conceives of Jews as clandestine puppeteers who management the world’s governments and economies, fueling political and social issues,” he wrote. “A Jewish vp would supply the right canvas for these fevered fantasies—a largely ceremonial determine onto whom bigots may nonetheless challenge all of their conspiracies, casting him as the actual energy behind the Resolute Desk.”

Rosenberg has forgotten extra in regards to the historical past of antisemitism than most of us will ever know. However this prepare of thought has all the time struck me as self-defeating. The response to fears of prejudice can’t be, “let’s cover the Jews to forestall us from discovering out about it.” 

A Jewish vp would have been necessary not solely as a result of it might have signaled the most recent progress of 1 ethnic group in America as thrillingly as Harris’ candidacy does for Individuals of Black and Indian heritage, but additionally as a result of it might have drawn antisemites out from the crevices, shining Louis Brandeis’ disinfecting gentle brightly upon them.

(That Harris’ husband is Jewish, by the way, ought to do little to quell the unease. Jewish affiliations are proof of nothing besides the reminder of previous justifications. It calls to thoughts those that a number of years in the past mentioned Taika Waititi’s Nazi comedy Jojo Rabbit couldn’t be antisemitic as a result of Waititi was Jewish. It wasn’t antisemitic. However that wasn’t the rationale.)

Walz is a stable candidate with a robust report of talking out towards antisemitism. Simply this spring he instructed Twin Cities PBS that, “I feel when Jewish college students are telling us they really feel unsafe in that, we have to imagine them.”

However Walz’s pro-Jewish bona fides doesn’t imply the choice to place him on the ticket – or the response to his appointment – can’t even be shadowed with antisemitism. Each may be true.

And so right here liberal Jews once more discover ourselves, hopelessly marooned between a perception that Democratic insurance policies are essentially higher for our pursuits and but anxious we’re not welcome in our own residence — feeling a mild nudge that maybe we’d discover ourselves extra snug in one other place however not sure, in the long run, of the place else to go.

Kamala Harris Too Smart to Take Advice from ‘Veep’

Although the actual world’s political similarities to Veep could seem more and more dramatic, present star Julia Louis-Dreyfus is certain Kamala Harris has it extra below management than any fictional counterpart ever did.

Dreyfus, who performed the fictional vp Selina Meyer on HBO’s Veep, advised London’s Sunday Occasions this week that comparisons between her character and the present vp are “inevitable.” However, she stated, “If Selina had any recommendation for Kamala, she had finest not take it. I feel Kamala is so clever she wouldn’t take the decision.”

Although Veep led to 2019, the present lately celebrated a resurgence in reputation following Biden’s withdrawal from the 2024 election (in season three, Meyer turned the primary feminine president after the sitting POTUS stepped apart, which prompted many memes evaluating the conditions to actual life).

Louis-Dreyfus met Harris in 2022, the place the actress stated they talked about “How a lot Veep obtained proper when it comes to the tradition of Washington, each backstage and in entrance of the curtain,” including that the now-Democratic nominee “was a giant fan of the present.”

Now getting ready to help Harris within the 2024 normal election, Louis-Dreyfus mirrored on the similarities between the fictional character and the nonfictional potential future president.

“Feminine candidates are extra scrutinized,” she stated. “That’s the actuality and we performed into it and used it to our comedic benefit. There may be an episode during which a personality suggests Selina open a speech with ‘As a girl’ and he or she stated, ‘I can’t establish as a girl! Folks can’t know that! Males hate that and girls who hate ladies hate that, which I imagine is most ladies.’ So we used that for lots of fodder.”

Louis-Dreyfus additionally spoke about her response to Donald Trump’s working mate, J.D. Vance, who lately got here below hearth for resurfaced feedback during which he referred to Harris as a “childless cat girl.” Harris is stepmother to 2 grownup kids along with her husband Doug Emhoff, and lots of on the left responded to Vance’s perspective with outrage.

“I believed, You poor fucking fool,” Louis-Dreyfus stated. “These guys can’t assist it. They will’t assist it!”

The actress additionally stated she sees similarities between Vance and Veep character Jonah Ryan.

“I feel in the previous few years the tradition of politics has turn into way more venal,” she stated. “So after we began we had been pushing in opposition to actuality, however now much less so, definitely when it comes to the nastiness of the communication.”

Creator Armando Iannucci lately advised The Hollywood Reporter he wasn’t certain if he may make a present like Veep at present as a result of “there aren’t any guidelines anymore. If one thing occurs, you simply say, ‘Oh nicely, it didn’t occur.’ You simply flip it round and simply say, ‘No. The alternative occurred.’ So, there aren’t any guidelines.”

Showrunner David Mandel echoed a part of Iannucci’s feedback when he advised THR, “We’d like issues to relax and heal earlier than Veep’s type of horrible outlook on the world returns. I feel it’s funnier when issues are going nicely and we joke about how dangerous issues are, then when issues are going badly. However boy, it makes me suppose loads in regards to the present in a very great way. I like individuals taking in regards to the present and sharing it.”