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Comedian Jim Breuer has Glenn Beck in stitches with HILARIOUS (but powerful) message about finding faith

September 29, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

These days, it seems like everything is about politics, and comedy has been one of the biggest targets. Many comedians are walking on eggshells, but stand-up comedian and “Saturday Night Live” alum Jim Breuer isn’t one of them.

Breuer joined Glenn on the latest episode of “The Glenn Beck Podcast” to talk about why he’d rather be funny than fearful and what inspired his hilarious comedy special, “Somebody Had to Say It,” which has garnered almost 1.5 million views as of this writing.

Breuer made it clear that he does not consider himself to be political. “I’m not. I’m 100% not [political],” he told Glenn, before explaining how people started calling him political when he dared to ask questions about a certain shot that we’re not allowed to mention, let alone question.

“When did medicine become political?” Breuer asked.

\u201cJim Breuer, when did medicine become political?\u201d

— Grumpy Tony – Fringe Minority (@Grumpy Tony – Fringe Minority)
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“What kind of price have you paid for being called political?” Glenn asked Breuer.

“To be dead honest with you, once COVID really kicked in, and … once you realize we’re not going to be here, that we’re on borrowed time, and I do have God in my life … you come to terms with reality on a deeper level. And when COVID kicked in, I said, ‘You know what? All bets are off.’ I already knew I wasn’t in control. But now, not only am I not in control from the natural order of life, but now the puppet masters … are in control,” Breuer answered.

“It made me realize I don’t have time to worry about what people think of me. I know where I’m at in life. I know where I’m at spiritually. I know where I’m at with my family,” he added.

“That’s tremendous power,” Glenn said. “But it spooks the hell out of people.”

“But it shouldn’t!” Breuer exclaimed. “I’m excited that other people get this … but they’re stuck. We ain’t got time for stuck. To me, this is the time of, ‘You gotta rise.’ For years and years and years, you allow fear to control your life. Fear of dying. Fear I might get sick … everything’s based out of fear. It’s time for the fearless.”

\u201cOn this week’s Glenn Beck Podcast, comedian @JimBreuer tells me why he doesn’t care if people think his comedy is political: “I don’t have time to worry about what people think of me…It’s time for the fearless.”\u201d

— Glenn Beck (@Glenn Beck)
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Breuer also revealed his secret for dealing with tough times, and he’s seen his share. But he also said he’s seen miracles, including the incredible (and hilariously told) story of how he found faith, how God saved his marriage, and why one family friend was convinced his wife belonged to a cult.

Watch the full episode of “The Glenn Beck Podcast” below:

Want more from Glenn Beck?

To enjoy more of Glenn’s masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

Filed Under: Articles - World

Andy Cohen’s Son Reviews Music By Cher And It’s Hilarious

September 29, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Watch what happens when Andy Cohen introduces his 3-year-old son, Ben, to pop icon Cher.

In an Instagram video on Sept. 16, Cohen announces that he and Ben started their morning with a Cher-heavy playlist.

“What do you think of Cher?” Cohen asks.

“She was a singer,” a tiny voice says off-screen. “She was singing too loud for me.”

But the Bravo host — who is a diehard fan — refuses to accept Ben’s review. 

“You loved it,” Cohen tells him. He then reminds the preschooler that Cher reminded him of of Elsa from Disney’s “Frozen,” because “they’re both good singers.” 

“It wasn’t too loud,” Cohen says.

“Yeah, it was,” the little boy replies.

“It was Cher,” Cohen says, to which Ben quips, “It was Elsa.”

It’s only a matter of time until Ben is belting the lyrics to “If I Could Turn Back Time.” As Cohen explains to Ben in the clip, “There’s gonna be a lot of Cher in your life.”

During a 2019 appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” Cohen revealed Cher has nicknames for him and his BFF Anderson Cooper.

“We have a little bit of a texting relationship, Cher and I. It’s crazy,” Cohen shared. “She says I’m the evil one, and Anderson’s like the nice one saving the world.”

Cohen welcomed his second child, a daughter named Lucy, in April. Both of his kids were born with the help of a surrogate.

Luckily, Benjamin is more fond of Lucy than he is of Cher.

After bringing Lucy home from the hospital earlier this year, Cohen asked if it was fun to have his little sister at home.

“Yes, I love her,” Ben gushed.

Filed Under: Articles - World

Sterlin Harjo says ‘Reservation Dogs’ gives audiences permission to laugh : NPR

September 29, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Series co-creator Sterlin Harjo attends the series premiere of Reservation Dogs in Hollywood, Calif., Aug. 5, 2021.

Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images


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Series co-creator Sterlin Harjo attends the series premiere of Reservation Dogs in Hollywood, Calif., Aug. 5, 2021.

Reservations Dogs co-creator and showrunner Sterlin Harjo says he grew up surrounded by the “best storytellers in the world.”

Harjo remembers sitting in his grandmother’s kitchen as a kid, listening to tales of amazing characters — either real or imagined — often doing mundane or ordinary things. The magic was in the telling; a story about someone making a simple run to the store could be infused with sadness and regret, coincidence and magic.

“That’s how I learned to tell stories. … You can’t say that cinema is a Native American art form, but storytelling is, ” Harjo says. “I try to capture just a small amount of that in [Reservation Dogs].”

Reservation Dogs is the first and only TV series where every writer, director and series regular is Indigenous. Part comedy and part drama, the FX series streaming on Hulu follows four teenagers who long to escape the dead ends they face living on a reservation. They’re frustrated and alienated, caught between what’s left of traditional Native culture on the reservation and the broader pop culture. The show highlights the importance of Native traditions — while also mocking how tradition can be turned into sanctimonious pop culture clichés.

Harjo belongs to the Seminole and Muscogee Nations, and he says the positive feedback from his community — including his parents — is what keeps him going: “My dad, one day, said to me, ‘This show has given people, Native people, a reason to hold their heads up a little higher.'”

Last Halloween, Harjo noticed something he hadn’t seen before: “Every year at Halloween, there’s people that dress up in these fake, dime-store Indian clothing. And they are ‘Indian’ for Halloween. And we’ve all seen that growing up. We’ve all seen it. And my kids are going to have to see it. But all of a sudden, after Season 1, people, kids started dressing up as the Reservation Dogs. So many pictures flooded in on social media of them dressed as the Reservation Dogs.”

Interview highlights

On why he prefers the term “Indian” to “Native American”

My grandma said “Indian,” so I’m not here to change what my grandma said. And it’s what I know. I’m sorry that Christopher Columbus got it wrong, but that’s what we call ourselves, you know? That’s what we call ourselves. I also say “Native” and I say “Indigenous.” Just depending on where I’m at and who I’m talking to, those are all interchangeable to me. “Native American” is just a mouthful.

On the show’s name Reservation Dogs title paying homage to Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs

It came out when I was in college, and it was right as I discovered that I could be a filmmaker. … My father had a friend who worked for the cable company, and that’s the only way that we got cable. So I was able to watch movies for free because his friend did some backdoor stuff and hooked us up with a cable box that allowed us to watch HBO and Showtime. I just became immersed in movies and pop culture. MTV was out at the time. I think that when you’re from a rural community, that’s kind of how you live your life. You almost live your life through movies and through pop culture. … First of all, it’s a catchy title, not a lie, Taika [Waititi] and I came up with it. And then it was, well, if we’re going to have this show where these kids are living through and constantly referencing pop culture, like we have to tip our hat to the master of that.

On playing with the stereotypical “Indian warrior” imagery in the pilot

Most of the time people are very precious with Native people, like, “This is no laughing matter.” This is very serious and stoic, and that’s kind of how the world is trained to view us. We realize we need to bake into the show permission to laugh with us.

Paulina Alexis, Devery Jacobs, D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, and Lane Factor play the title characters in Reservations Dogs, a series about teenagers living on a reservation in Oklahoma.

Shane Brown/ FX on Hulu


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Paulina Alexis, Devery Jacobs, D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, and Lane Factor play the title characters in Reservations Dogs, a series about teenagers living on a reservation in Oklahoma.

And I think that that spirit character, he comes in at this moment in the pilot. … If I asked most people in the world to draw a Native American, that’s what they would draw. They would draw an Indian that was dressed in buckskins from the 1800s. They wouldn’t draw me. They wouldn’t draw any of the characters on the show. So it was almost like giving people some familiar territory and then turning it on its head.

On growing up on the Muscogee Reservation in Oklahoma

Right now I live on the Muscogee Reservation, which is part of Tulsa. Through a lot of complicated government policy and interactions with tribal governments that I can’t go into because it’d be another show, it was not identified as a reservation before, but it is now. But if you look at Oklahoma, it used to be Indian Territory, which was essentially one big reservation. Then, of course, oil and the land and other things disrupted that.

But this is where Trail of Tears ended. This is where all of the tribes that were forcibly removed by the U.S. government were brought to Indian Territory, which is Oklahoma now. So essentially it was one giant reservation. And you go an hour in any direction in Oklahoma or 30 minutes in any direction, in Oklahoma, you’re going to be in a new tribal territory, with different tribal languages on the stop signs and on signage in the town. Different cultures, different customs. And so it’s … a melting pot of Indigenous Native people from America. And I think there’s something like 38 tribes here.

So you grow up different when you’re in Oklahoma as a Native kid. … People know Native culture, people know who Native people are. And it’s a very diverse state. I think that not a lot of people know about Oklahoma and the diversity here, but in rural Oklahoma, it’s very diverse. And I don’t know, it was something that I wanted to celebrate in the show, growing up in Indian Territory, Oklahoma.

On why Native teens connected to rap music when he was coming of age

Rap was reaching the height of popularity … and being a Native kid, we gravitated towards it because it was the sort of punk rock that we were growing up with. It gave Native kids a culture and identity that they could grab a hold of at a time where our own identity was a bit lost and our own identity was less celebrated, we could grab a hold of hip-hop, and that became something that we could identify with that was taking it to the man that was exposing problems within our culture. I think that it became something that, as a term, as a means of endearment to us, that it helped us in our own identity and in our own struggle.

On the importance of ghosts and spirits in his culture – and in his work

I think that part of growing up and with Muscogee and Seminole culture is death is such a part of our experience. It’s very community-driven. Your cousins are like your brothers and sisters. Your aunts are your extended parents, and you’re close to your elders and everyone’s a part of this tight community.

I was constantly at funerals. I’ve been a pallbearer, like, 12 to 15 times, I think, give or take. And our songs, the songs that we sing, there’s these spiritual songs that we sing that mostly get sung and you hear them at funerals, and it’s all about facing death and mortality head on. There’s something really beautiful about a funeral in our community, where everyone comes together and it’s really funny. And you’re getting to see people that you haven’t seen in a long time and you say, “I love you,” to people that you wouldn’t normally say, “I love you” to. It’s just a part of being in a community.

Someone was always passing away. … In the culture you’re taught that they’re not gone and that you can still speak to them and talk to them and there’s ghost stories and things like that. But I just grew up with this sense of magic, and there’s a sense of like we can communicate, we can reach people in other places, and there’s ceremonies for it and there’s different things. It’s something that I’m fascinated with … and I explore it as much as I can through my work.

On the casting process for Reservation Dogs

You can’t go to Hollywood to cast a show like this. … [Native actors usually] get to play, like, a dead Indian outside of a teepee every five to 10 years, you know? So there’s not a big pool of Native actors in L.A. So we went to the communities, and shout out to Angelique Midthunder, who was our casting director. She went in and we went to different communities and we also had tapes sent to us from communities, but it was important that they were from an Indigenous community. … It wasn’t unnecessarily unorthodox for me, because I’ve been making these films for so long, and I know that there’s talent out there. There’s just not opportunities for Native actors to even know that there’s an opportunity to be in a movie.

On seeing Indian stereotypes in pop culture as a kid

My dad watched Westerns. … There was a way to sort of separate what was happening in the Western for me, because I didn’t recognize the Indians in the Western. They weren’t my experience. When you grow up and your grandma and your mom and your dad and everyone’s Native around you, and then you see this version of Native people in these Westerns that are just the bad guys that are faceless and sort of like the zombies. … They’re in the way and the white man has to exterminate them for Western expansion purposes and to tame the West or whatever, I don’t recognize that as my people. So it wasn’t painful to watch for me. I could separate it. I do see the issues in that now I have to explain to my kids why they can’t watch Peter Pan, and if there was a Western on, I would have to explain to them, like everything all of a sudden becomes a lecture, where I’m having to talk about film analysis with my children. It has an effect.

On absolving himself of the guilt that he can’t speak Muscogee

For a long time, I felt really guilty about that. … But at a certain point, I just came to the realization that government policy, genocide, colonization, … the forced removal by Andrew Jackson. So many things caused that. And I let go of that sense of guilt, because it’s all been about survival and there’s things that were taken away and there’s things that perish because of that. And all I can do is try to learn and realize that it’s not my fault, it came before me. The darkness that can take a language away, came before me. And you look at boarding schools … and how they actively took away our language. My parents and grandparents went to these boarding schools, so the fact that we have any of it left is a miracle. So I try to really focus on that: the miracle of it, the magic of the fact that we still have our culture and it is about survival. I try to focus on that instead of the guilt that I think you grow up with when you can’t speak the language.

Lauren Krenzel and Susan Nyakundi produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Beth Novey adapted it for the web.

Filed Under: Articles - World

Tekashi 69 Posts Bad Joke, Lil Nas X Shares Instagram DMs

September 28, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Let him move his bang so he can read that again.
Photo: Amy Sussman/BBMA2020/Getty Images for dcp

How could anyone forget Lil Nas X’s very clear warning: “Can’t nobody tell me nothing” from “Old Town Road”? Well, Tekashi 6ix9ine tried it. The 24-year-old rapper, a known snitch who famously looks like a toddler’s attempt at a coloring page, shared a homophobic, since-deleted social-media post earlier this week and got deservedly ethered for it by Lil Nas X. 6ix9ine reposted a screenshot of an article headline reading “China Makes COVID-19 Anal Swabs Mandatory for Foreigners” on Instagram and added the caption “Lil Nas X has entered the chat.” Where was the joke? Mmhmm, that’s what Lil Nas X thought, too. So, on Thursday, the internet-savvy Gen-Z former Barb (just a few more reasons why Tekashi shouldn’t have tried it) went to TikTok to expose how goofy the man is. With his own unreleased single “Call Me By Your Name” (yup!) as the background music for free promo, Lil Nas X pulls up a screenshot of unanswered DMs from 6ix9ine. “Gonna be in your city soon, what ya doing lol?” he allegedly wrote with an upside-down smiley face emoji and a red heart emoji.

this you ? pic.twitter.com/GBvc5Rxf8h

— nope (@LilNasX)

“This you?” Nas X captioned it, ending 6ix9ine with those two powerful words. The internet piled on because a celebrity this problematic can take a little cyberbullying. Some interpreted the DM as flirting, others just loved seeing the snitch get caught up. 6ix9ine responded with a video where he shows there are no messages between the two of them, but since you can unsend DMs, most aren’t buying it. Cackle like Raven-Symoné at what Twitter had to say below.

lil nas x and 6ix9ine are the two opposite ends of the gay barb spectrum

— shawty lynn ミ☆ (@HereComesShawty)

Lil Nas X exposing 6ix9ine tryna slide into his DMs after he joked about him on insta is proof that the gays will always win

— Conor GROVESY (f*ck ian connor) (@YungGrovesy)

Not Tekashi lookin’ for 6-9 inches 😂

— Jackée Harry (@JackeeHarry)

seeing Lil Nas X expose 6ix9ine sliding into his dms means i have to post this video pic.twitter.com/mONDQDXYxE

— . (@thechuuzus)

Filed Under: Articles - World

2022 Oscars: Will Smith punches Chris Rock, confrontation erupts over Jada Pinkett Smith haircut joke – 6abc Philadelphia

September 28, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Did Will Smith punch Chris Rock? ‘King Richard’ actor appeared to confront the comedian onstage after a joke about his wife, Jada Pinkett-Smith.

Filed Under: Articles - World

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