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The Army is kicking out the 2nd Lt who made a holocaust joke on TikTok

April 27, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

The Army is in the process of separating 2nd Lt. Nathan Friehofer from the service after the artillery officer joked about the Holocaust on his TikTok channel back in August.

Friehofer grabbed national attention after he posted a video to his nearly three million TikTok followers at the time — he has accrued nearly 1 million additional followers since then — in which he asked what a “Jewish person’s favorite Pokemon character is,” before answering: “Ash.”

Following an investigation into the video, Lt. Gen. Michael Kurilla, the commander of the Army’s 18th Airborne Corps, found “Friehofer’s anti-Semitic statement on TikTok inconsistent with the values of Army service and inappropriate for anyone in a position of leadership over American Soldiers,” said Corps spokesman Col. Joe Buccino. “As a result, last month the Corps commander initiated the process of removing Friehofer from the Army.”

This latest development in the months-long saga of the lieutenant who got lost trying to navigate human decency on social media was first reported by The Washington Post.

Friehofer did not appear in uniform in the video, though he does appear in uniform in many other clips and photos posted to his social media accounts.

Immediately after the video began making the rounds online over the summer, senior leadership within the Army voiced their concern, with the 3rd Infantry Division to which Freihofer was assigned saying on Twitter that the statements in the video “are not indicative of the values we live by, and there is no place for racism or bigotry in our Army or our country.”

Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Grinston said at the time that the video was “completely unacceptable. On social media or not, racist jokes are racist. Period.”

Friehofer’s video, and the resulting backlash, came just a month after the Army unveiled new guidance on social media use in the ranks, in which it suggested soldiers apply the logic: Think, type, and then post. “’Think’ about the message being communicated and who could potentially view it; ‘Type’ a communication that is consistent with Army values; and ‘Post’ only those messages that demonstrate dignity and respect for self and others,” reads the policy. 

Following the uproar, Friehofer’s account was temporarily suspended, and he was removed from his position with the 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Stewart, Ga.

“The Corps commander’s decision was informed by a discussion with, and previous actions by, subordinate leaders and a deliberate review of all matters related to Friehofer’s public statement and military service,” Buccino said. “This process is ongoing; in concert with Army regulation, Friehofer has an opportunity to present final matters on his behalf. These matters are expected to the Corps commander within the next two weeks.”

Friehofer was notified that he was getting the boot back in December and has until Jan. 22 to submit evidence in support of his case, an Army officer with knowledge of the situation told Task & Purpose.

Still, considering that Friehofer ended the video that started all this by saying “Hey if you get offended, get the f–k out,” perhaps he should just follow his own and advice and get the get f—k out… of the Army.

Haley Britzky contributed reporting.

Filed Under: Articles - World

Cantik Bak Barbie Arab dan Berprestasi, Ini Potret Pesona Dinan Fajrina Istri Crazy Rich Bandung Doni Salmanan – Jadi Duta Kampus Saat Kuliah – KapanLagi.com

April 26, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Perlu diketahui Dinan Fajrina istri Doni Salmanan Crazy Rich Bandung ini berprestasi lho. Saat kuliah ia jadi duta kampus brand Ambassador pada tahun 2018.

Filed Under: Articles - World

Danish Sait, The Funny Guy | Forbes India

April 26, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment


With most of his videos clocking over 5 lakh views on Instagram, Danish Sait is among Indian social media’s biggest trailblazers

When we catch Danish Sait on a Zoom call mid-March, he’s down with Covid-19 and isolating. “Are you sure you can speak?” we ask. “Of course. I am much better now,” he says. We offer to do the interview another day, but the 32-year-old insists, “I’m fine. I’m not such a delicate darling either.” The first few days of the infection were bad, he admits, but with the symptoms on the wane, Sait is looking for an escape from boredom. “I’ve asked my manager to line up as much work I can do from home,” he says.

His friends, though, will tell you isolation fatigue is a mere excuse; even in the best of times, Sait is a restive chap. “He can’t sit still for a minute,” says Vamsidhar Bhogaraju, writer, comedian and the director of One Cut Two Cut, Sait’s third film. “Even if he’s on a break, he’ll call up five times with some idea or the other. He’s always thinking about his next project.”

Videos, memes, BTS: How the war of content in IPL is heating up to keep at-home, online fans engaged

As an RJ, emcee, show host, actor, influencer and IPL’s only travelling comedian (with the Royal Challengers Bangalore, hosting the Insider Series as loveable buffoon Mr Nags for seven seasons now), Sait was a recognised multi-hyphenate even before the lockdown. But through the last several months, he’s broken out of his regional playground and produced online content that had social media across the country hooked and in splits.
A childhood photo of Sait and his elder sister Kubbra (right), who is now an actor. It was at home, growing up with Kubbra and his mother, that Sait learnt how to laugh without judgement

With most of his videos clocking over 5 lakh views on Instagram, Sait is among Indian social media’s biggest trailblazers. He’s as comfortable autographing actor Anushka Sharma’s palms as Mr Nags, as he is asking cricketer David Warner poker-faced, “Australia first had Warne, then Warner, when are they going to have Warnest?” His fan-following ranges from commentator Harsha Bhogle to former Jammu & Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, who alluded to his lockdown sketches through a tweet on his birthday on July 1: “Happy birthday… I’m not sure whether I should be wishing Jaya, didi, Ramamurthy, bro & all the others who share a birthday with you…”
Sait was quite the showman, even as a child. Kubbra, his elder sister and now an actor, recalls that in his pre-school days, he would sit on a merry-go-round with his classmate and hum ‘Do deewane shehar mein’. Later, at Coorg Public School in Kodagu, where he studied for six years, and at his college in Coimbatore, Sait would always be up on the stage for cultural events.
Mimicry also came easy to him and, at home, his antics were appreciated as the Sait siblings would record impersonations and voices on blank tapes, encouraged by their mother. “My mom’s great at mimicry too,” says Sait. It is at home too that Sait was wired to laugh without judgment. Says Kubbra, “Because he grew up with two women—our mother and me—his Hindi would be feminine gendered. Like ‘Main khaa rahi hoon.’ But instead of chiding him, we’d always have a good laugh.”

Sait has been travelling with RCB during the IPL for seven seasons now
Despite an early initiation to humour, being funny is not something Sait cultivated consciously. “I think it was his survival instinct. He would think that’s his way of being accepted when he was bullied in school, or when the pressures were too high. It came to him as a reflex. And his impersonations aren’t meant to hurt people. He catches on to quirks faster than anyone else and copies them,” adds Kubbra.
Through his astute comic sense, Sait is able to embellish a character from minutes-long spoofs into a full-fledged feature film. Self-centred politician Nograj, who started off as a radio and YouTube sketch, morphed into a Kannada movie in 2018 as Humble Politician Nograj and now a web series, produced by Applause Entertainment, filming for which has been completed. For his current and third overall, One Cut Two Cut, Sait elevates simpleton Gopi into an arts and crafts teacher and the protagonist of a family entertainer. “We put together a video of Gopi while Danish was travelling during the IPL in 2020,” says Bhogaraju, the debutant director. “In half a day we received about 600-700 emails from people saying they were interested in the character. That’s when we decided to turn it into a feature film.”
Adds Bhogaraju, “Most characters Danish does are not merely because he can do accents and impressions well, but because he has great insights into people. He picks up things that most of us are probably aware of but never really observe. That’s why his characters are life-like.”
Because Sait manages to sculpt characters through keen observation, and weave the quirks into scripts even for branded content, his product plugs seem far more organic and real than blatant. In over 40 brands that he has endorsed, from national ones like Swiggy to local ones like Bengaluru’s Hotel Empire—“I’ve sold pretty much everything. I have no filters of choosing a brand”—Sait has laid down clear ground rules on how much control he will have on content (“almost entirely”).
“This makes Danish’s content primarily entertaining in a Danish-way than making it seem like a mildly entertaining branded content. It helps the audience enjoy the content from the content creator’s perspective. The brand infusion is only incidental,” says Karthik Srinivasan, communications consultant. “If FMCG brands can try to infuse Hindi and Hinglish across India through advertising, then Danish is showing the reverse is possible too, that even without Hindi, you can gain pan-Indian acceptance if you stick to what you do best.”

Sait, in character as Mr Nags, with cricketer Yuzvendra Chahal
Once Sait graduated from college, he joined events management firm Phase 1 as a client servicing agent. “I used to put together a lot of profiles of artistes who were emcees and hosts. At some point, it hit me, ‘Hey, I also deserve being on these presentations as a performer and not be the guy putting it together’,” says Sait, who soon got a job offer with a radio station in Bahrain. “I lied my way into the job saying I had done radio before. It was a good lie, and I don’t regret it.” Sait’s earliest gig on air entailed saying his and the station’s name, and playing a song. The first time, it took him 6 minutes to get it right. It was while working at the community radio station in Bahrain that he would scour the internet to access international stations and learn tricks from them—like conducting game shows and constructing short sentences appropriate for radio. That’s where the idea of playing prank calls came from.
“However, my first prank call was also my last. I called up a school teacher and asked her to help me speak to a girl that I liked. But the local community didn’t like their trusted radio station fooling them. We had to take it off air immediately. But I had that clip that helped me land a job at a station in Dubai next,” says Sait. He started off as a producer in Dubai, doing prank calls every morning with celebrated presenter Kritika Rawat. Sait was young, ambitious and impatient, looking to get ahead of the line, perhaps a little too quickly. It threw him into a spiral of unhappiness. “I constantly felt I was painting a canvas and someone else was signing on it. The art was mine, but the artiste was someone else,” he says. “My mind was rogue and that was my first handshake with mental health issues.”
When Danish spoke to Kubbra about his condition, she hardly identified it as clinical depression as we know it today. But her brother’s bristling unhappiness was enough for her to tell him to pack up and return to India. In subsequent years, Sait has gone through depression in three phases and it was only later, through a similarity of patterns, that Kubbra realised what he had suffered from earlier. But even during his toughest phases—and Sait has openly spoken about it across platforms—when even tying shoelaces would seem onerous, he has performed seamlessly when thrown in front of the microphone. “When I perform, I am in a state of trance, the feeling is almost spiritual. I reach the zenith when I am playing someone else,” says Sait.
In 2010, Sait came back to Bengaluru from Dubai and “with some luck” met Darius Sunawala, an RJ on Fever 104 FM, and landed a job there. But his creative restlessness continued to bug him here as well. “My only goal was to show off my work. I realised it was not about the length or the size of your content, but the impact. For instance, I thought I wanted an evening show, but then when it did come to me, I no longer wanted it. By then, I got interested in films, digital content etc. You constantly evolve,” says Sait.
It was around the same time that the discovery of instant gratification on social media began to distance Sait from radio. “On air, you had to solicit text messages from listeners. But the minute you upload on the internet, you begin to get reactions,” he adds. During an improv comedy show, he struck up a friendship with Saad Khan, the director of Humble Politician Nograj. The stage of improv also opened the doors of RCB for him when Nikhil Sosale, the team’s head of business partnerships, saw Sait at a show. Since 2015, he has been travelling with RCB, alternating between Mr Nags (a character inspired by Ali G and Borat, both played by Sacha Baron Cohen) and the presenter, rubbing shoulders with the likes of AB de Villiers and Virat Kohli. “The idea was to emulate content by global sporting giants like Barcelona or any NBA/NFL team and give fans a glimpse of the lighter side of cricketers,” says Rajesh V Menon, the vice president and head of RCB. “With Danish growing and coming into his own in the last couple of years, we have used him to build other properties like Bold Diaries. He also adds to the versatility of content, ranging from short-form documentary to parody press conference videos.”
The flipside: The bio-bubble which Sait has had to endure since last year due to the Covid surge. “I felt completely down when I entered the bio-bubble last IPL. But then you learn to get on with it. When you get to speak nonsense with AB and Virat, strapping on a moustache, a wig and a pair of shades, you learn to pick yourself up,” he says.
But once the lights are off, Sait prefers to leave his characters behind and doesn’t like to indulge in casual mimicry at times too. “It got boring after a point,” he says. He does admit though that, at times, he is a bit of a Ramamurthy—the old-school Bangalorean. “Even though I am young, a part of me is an old soul. I believe I am wise enough to not do something stupid, and I am young enough to do something stupid. It’s a dichotomy that I live with.”

Filed Under: Articles - World

Mike Tyson appears to punch airplane passenger in crazy footage

April 26, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Mike Tyson appeared to attack a fellow passenger on a Wednesday night flight, according to footage released Thursday by TMZ.

Tyson, who had boarded a Florida-bound plane from San Francisco, is said to have engaged with his fellow passenger prior to the incident, a witness told the gossip site, with the former heavyweight even posing for a selfie.

The passenger is also seen chatting animatedly behind Tyson’s seat as another passenger films the exchange. Things took a turn for the worse, however, when Tyson apparently grew agitated with the passenger, who had failed to leave him alone, with the former heavyweight champ then delivering a series of blows from over his seat.

A source close to Tyson claims the passenger was “extremely intoxicated” and “wouldn’t stop provoking” him, resulting in an onslaught of punches.

Tyson “walked off the plane just seconds later,” per a witness, while the passenger, who is seen with a bloodied forehead in the footage, received medical attention.

“My boy just got beat up by Mike Tyson,” a passenger filming the ordeal apparently said from behind the camera. “Yeah, he got f–ked up.”

The passenger who sustained the injuries is said to have gone to the authorities as well.

Tyson served time in prison beginning in 1992 after being convicted of rape. He was sentenced to six years behind bars, but served less than three years and was released in 1995.


With his boxing career behind him, Tyson has taken on a more mellow public persona with an admitted devotion to marijuana. The 55-year-old is launching a cannabis company with wrestling legend Ric Flair.

This week’s incident comes just weeks after Tyson encountered another overzealous fan at a comedy club, with the former fighter remaining calm and even hugging the admirer, who had a gun during the exchange.

Filed Under: Articles - World

On “Succession,” Jeremy Strong Doesn’t Get the Joke | The New Yorker

April 25, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

When Jeremy Strong was a teen-ager, in suburban Massachusetts, he had three posters thumbtacked to his bedroom wall: Daniel Day-Lewis in “My Left Foot,” Al Pacino in “Dog Day Afternoon,” and Dustin Hoffman in “Rain Man.” These weren’t just his favorite actors: their careers were a road map that he followed obsessively, like Eve Harrington casing out a trio of Margo Channings. He read interviews that his heroes gave and, later, managed to get crew jobs on their movies. By his early twenties, he had worked for all three men, and had adopted elements of their full-immersion acting methods. By his mid-thirties, after fifteen years of hustling in the industry, he’d had minor roles in a string of A-list films: “Lincoln,” “Zero Dark Thirty,” “Selma,” and “The Big Short.” He’d played a staffer in both the nineteenth-century White House and the twenty-first-century C.I.A. But, as he approached forty, he felt that his master plan wasn’t panning out—where was his Benjamin Braddock, his Michael Corleone?

“You come to New York, and you’re doing Off Off Broadway plays, and you are in the wilderness,” Strong told me, of his early career. “Your focus just becomes about the work and trying each time to go to some inner ledge. And you get used to people not noticing.”

Then it happened. In 2016, Kathryn Bigelow, the Oscar-winning director of “The Hurt Locker,” cast him in a big role, as a National Guardsman in her film “Detroit.” Around the same time, Strong had lunch with Adam McKay, who had directed him as a financial analyst in “The Big Short.” McKay said that he was executive-producing a new HBO show called “Succession,” which he described to Strong as a “King Lear” for the media-industrial complex. McKay gave him the pilot script and said, “Tell me what role you connect with.” Strong picked Roman Roy, the wisecracking youngest son of Logan Roy, a Rupert Murdoch-like media titan. “I thought, Oh, wow, Roman is such a cool part,” Strong said. “He’s, like, this bon-vivant prick. I could do something that I hadn’t done before.”

That August, Strong, who was living in Los Angeles with his fiancée, went to film “Detroit.” He had done deep research for the role, watching military documentaries and practicing marksmanship at a shooting range. He arranged to miss part of his wedding-week festivities for the filming. But, after one day, Bigelow fired him. “I was just not the character that she had in her mind,” Strong said. “It was a devastating experience.” (Bigelow says that the character wasn’t working in the story; after Strong pleaded with her, she came up with another part for him, as an attorney.) Then he flew to Denmark to get married, staying at a castle called Dragsholm Slot. That’s when he got the call that the “Succession” people had cast Kieran Culkin as Roman.

Read More 
An interview with J. Smith-Cameron, who plays Gerri on “Succession.”

Evidently, the role hadn’t been McKay’s to give. Strong tried to let go of the fantasy he had pursued single-mindedly for decades. But the show’s creator, Jesse Armstrong, agreed to audition him for the role of Kendall Roy, the moody middle son and Logan’s heir apparent. “I’ve always felt like an outsider with a fire in my belly,” Strong told me. “And so the disappointment and the feeling of being thwarted—it only sharpened my need and hunger. I went in with a vengeance.” He tore through books about corporate gamesmanship, including Michael Wolff’s biography of Rupert Murdoch, and cherry-picked details he liked; apparently, Murdoch’s son James ties his shoes extremely tightly, which told Strong something about his “inner tensile strength.”

At the audition, Strong, his shoes tied tight, read a scene between Kendall and the C.E.O. of a startup that he’s trying to acquire. Armstrong was skeptical. He asked Strong to “loosen the language,” and the scene transformed. “It was about, like, Beastie Boys-ing it up,” Strong recalled. “I was missing the patois of bro-speak.” By the end of the day, he had the part.

Kendall is the show’s dark prince, a would-be mogul puffed up with false bravado. He is often ridiculous in his self-seriousness, especially when he’s trying to dominate his indomitable father. Strong was perfectly cast: a background player who had spent his life aspiring, and often maneuvering, to fill the shoes of his acting gods. “Kendall desperately wants it to be his turn,” Strong said. Last year, he won an Emmy Award for the role.

Strong, who is now forty-two, has the hangdog face of someone who wasn’t destined for stardom. But his mild appearance belies a relentless, sometimes preening intensity. He speaks with a slow, deliberate cadence, especially when talking about acting, which he does with a monk-like solemnity. “To me, the stakes are life and death,” he told me, about playing Kendall. “I take him as seriously as I take my own life.” He does not find the character funny, which is probably why he’s so funny in the role.

“I just realized—I’m indifferent to landscape.”
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When I asked Strong about the rap that Kendall performs in Season 2, at a gala for his father—a top contender for Kendall’s most cringeworthy moment—he gave an unsmiling answer about Raskolnikov, referencing Kendall’s “monstrous pain.” Kieran Culkin told me, “After the first season, he said something to me like, ‘I’m worried that people might think that the show is a comedy.’ And I said, ‘I think the show is a comedy.’ He thought I was kidding.” Part of the appeal of “Succession” is its amalgam of drama and bone-dry satire. When I told Strong that I, too, thought of the show as a dark comedy, he looked at me with incomprehension and asked, “In the sense that, like, Chekhov is comedy?” No, I said, in the sense that it’s funny. “That’s exactly why we cast Jeremy in that role,” McKay told me. “Because he’s not playing it like a comedy. He’s playing it like he’s Hamlet.”

Actors try to find the real in the make-believe, but anyone who has worked with Strong will tell you that he goes to unusual lengths. Last year, he played the Yippie activist Jerry Rubin in Aaron Sorkin’s film “The Trial of the Chicago 7.” While shooting the 1968 protest scenes, Strong asked a stunt coördinator to rough him up; he also requested to be sprayed with real tear gas. “I don’t like saying no to Jeremy,” Sorkin told me. “But there were two hundred people in that scene and another seventy on the crew, so I declined to spray them with poison gas.” Between takes of the trial scenes, in which the Yippies mock Judge Julius Hoffman, played by Frank Langella, Strong would read aloud from Langella’s memoir in silly voices, and he put a remote-controlled fart machine below the judge’s chair. “Every once in a while, I’d say, ‘Great. Let’s do it again, and this time, Jeremy, maybe don’t play the kazoo in the middle of Frank Langella’s monologue,’ ” Sorkin said.

Strong has always worked this way. In his twenties, he was an assistant to the playwright Wendy Wasserstein, typing up her manuscripts. At night, he performed a one-man play by Conor McPherson in a tiny midtown bar, playing an alcoholic Irishman. Wasserstein discovered that Strong was spending a lot of time with her Irish doorman, studying his accent. Before Wasserstein died, in 2006—Strong was one of the few people who knew that she had lymphoma—she thought of writing a play based on him, titled “Enter Doorman.”

This fall, Strong was shooting James Gray’s film “Armageddon Time,” playing a plumber based on the director’s father. Strong let his hair return to its natural gray—it’s darkened for “Succession”—and sent me videos of himself shadowing a real handyman for research, repeating back terms like “flare nuts” in a honking Queens accent. Costumes and props are like talismans for him. In 2012, he played a possible victim of childhood sexual abuse in Amy Herzog’s “The Great God Pan,” at Playwrights Horizons. “There was a shirt he wore that was really important for him, and for compositional reasons we wanted to try it in a different color,” Herzog told me. “I remember him saying that the shirt he was wearing had functioned as his armor, and this new shirt wasn’t like armor.” They let him keep the shirt.

Strong’s dedication strikes some collaborators as impressive, others as self-indulgent. “All I know is, he crosses the Rubicon,” Robert Downey, Jr., told me. In 2014, Strong played Downey, Jr.,’s mentally disabled brother in “The Judge.” (To prepare, he spent time with an autistic person, as Hoffman had for “Rain Man.”) When Downey, Jr., shot a funeral scene, Strong paced around the set weeping loudly, even though he wasn’t called that day. He asked for personalized props that weren’t in the script, including a family photo album. “It was almost swatting him away like he was an annoying gnat—I had bigger things to deal with,” a member of the design team recalled.

“I think you have to go through whatever the ordeal is that the character has to go through,” Strong told me. This extreme approach—Robert De Niro shaving down his teeth for “Cape Fear,” Leonardo DiCaprio eating raw bison liver for “The Revenant”—is often described as Method acting, a much abused term that, in its classic sense, involves summoning emotions from personal experience and projecting them onto a character. Strong does not consider himself a Method actor. Far from mining his own life, he practices what he calls “identity diffusion.” “If I have any method at all, it is simply this: to clear away anything—anything—that is not the character and the circumstances of the scene,” he explained. “And usually that means clearing away almost everything around and inside you, so that you can be a more complete vessel for the work at hand.”

Talking about his process, he quoted the jazz pianist Keith Jarrett: “I connect every music-making experience I have, including every day here in the studio, with a great power, and if I do not surrender to it nothing happens.” During our conversations, Strong cited bits of wisdom from Carl Jung, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Karl Ove Knausgaard (he is a “My Struggle” superfan), Robert Duvall, Meryl Streep, Harold Pinter (“The more acute the experience, the less articulate its expression”), the Danish filmmaker Tobias Lindholm, T. S. Eliot, Gustave Flaubert, and old proverbs (“When fishermen cannot go to sea, they mend their nets”). When I noted that he was a sponge for quotations, he turned grave and said, “I’m not a religious person, but I think I’ve concocted my own book of hymns.”

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