
Donald Trump names Kiss, Sylvester Stallone as Kennedy Center Honors picks
On Wednesday, Trump appeared on stage at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, one of the premier stages in Washington, DC, in a show of power over the national cultural institution.
'We'll make it better than it ever was, frankly,' he said of the awards show. ' It'll be something that people are going to be very proud of.'
This year's five honourees include disco singer Gloria Gaynor, country music musician George Strait, the rock band Kiss, British performer Michael Crawford and actor Sylvester Stallone, star of the classic films Rocky and Rambo.
Trump, a former reality TV star, also revealed that he would host the award show himself. In his opening remarks, he suggested his allies strong-armed him into taking the hosting gig.
'I've been asked to host. I said, 'I'm the president of the United States. Are you fools asking me to do that?'' Trump said. ' So I have agreed to host. Do you believe what I have to do?'
Wednesday's announcement was Trump's latest foray into the arts, as he seeks to reshape the US's cultural institutions to reflect his agenda.
During Trump's first term, from 2017 to 2021, the Republican leader never attended the Kennedy Center Honors, breaking with a longtime presidential tradition.
Since the ceremony's beginnings in 1978, presidents have been regular attendees, except in rare cases, including Cold War-era negotiations and the 1979 Iran hostage crisis.
But since returning to the White House for a second term in January, Trump has not only sought to make his presence known at the Kennedy Center, but he has sought to wield power over its programming.
On February 7, Trump announced he would purge the Kennedy Center's governing board and declared his intention to lead the institution as its chair.
'I have decided to immediately terminate multiple individuals from the Board of Trustees, including the Chairman, who do not share our Vision for a Golden Age in Arts and Culture,' Trump wrote at the time. 'We will soon announce a new Board, with an amazing Chairman, DONALD J. TRUMP!'
By February 12, the new Kennedy Center board had made good on its promise to elect Trump as chair.
Since then, Trump has expanded his reach into the country's arts and culture spheres. On Tuesday, for instance, his administration revealed it would undertake an 'internal review' of several Smithsonian museums, to 'ensure alignment with the President's directive to celebrate American exceptionalism'.
Trump also teased his new vision for the Kennedy Center Honors — and appeared to troll critics who expressed outrage over Republican proposals to rename the performing arts center after the Republican leader.
'GREAT Nominees for the TRUMP/KENNEDY CENTER, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, AWARDS,' Trump wrote on social media in the lead-up to Wednesday's announcement.
He pledged the revamped award show would reflect 'the absolute TOP LEVEL of luxury, glamour, and entertainment'.
The Kennedy Center Honors is expected to air on the TV channel CBS in December, and it broadcasts from its eponymous theatre.
In Wednesday's speech, Trump tied the upcoming ceremony to his broader campaign to crack down on crime in Washington, DC.
' In the coming months, we'll fully renovate the dated and, really, the entire infrastructure of the building and make the Kennedy Center a crown jewel of American arts and culture once again,' he said.
' We have the right location and soon we will be a crime-free area.'
Earlier this week, Trump invoked the capital's Home Rule Act to take control of the local police force and deployed members of the National Guard to patrol the city's streets, despite the fact that violent crime in the city was at a 30-year low.
Trump, however, has denied the legitimacy of those statistics, a claim he made again at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday.
' You're gonna see a big change in Washington crime stats very soon — not the stats that they gave because they turned out to be a total fraud. The real stats,' he said.
The Republican leader also hinted at potential political bent to the reimagined Kennedy Center Honors. He has previously denounced the Kennedy Center's programming, pledging to cancel performances including drag shows and book classic Broadway hits instead.
In response, the touring Broadway production of the hit musical Hamilton cancelled its scheduled stop at the Kennedy Center, as did comedian Issa Rae and the opera Fellow Travelers. Performers in a touring production of Les Miserables also boycotted shows to protest Trump's changes.
'I shouldn't make this political because they made the Academy Awards political and they went down the tubes,' Trump said on Wednesday.
'They'll say, 'Trump made it political,' but I think if we make it our kind of political, we'll go up, OK? Let's see if I'm right about that.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Jazeera
an hour ago
- Al Jazeera
US sanctions Brazil health officials over Cuba's overseas medical missions
The United States has announced it is revoking the visas of Brazilian, African and Caribbean officials over their ties to Cuba's programme that sends doctors abroad, which Washington has described as 'forced labour'. The US named two Brazilian Ministry of Health officials, Mozart Julio Tabosa Sales and Alberto Kleiman, who have had their visas revoked for working on Brazil's Mais Medicos, or 'More Doctors' programme, which was created in 2013. In a statement on Wednesday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said sanctions were imposed on officials 'involved in abetting the Cuban regime's coercive labour export scheme', which he claimed 'enriches the corrupt Cuban regime and deprives the Cuban people of essential medical care'. 'The Department of State took steps to revoke visas and impose visa restrictions on several Brazilian government officials, former Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) officials, and their family members for their complicity with the Cuban regime's labour export scheme in the Mais Medicos programme,' Rubio said. In an earlier statement, Rubio also announced visa restrictions for African officials, without specifying the countries involved, as well as the Caribbean country Grenada, for the same reasons. The Cuban government has called Washington's efforts to stop its medical missions a cynical excuse to go after its foreign currency earnings. Cuba's deputy director of US affairs, Johana Tablada, said its 'medical cooperation will continue'. '[Rubio's] priorities speak volumes: financing Israel genocide on Palestine, torturing Cuba, going after health care services for those who need them most,' Tablada wrote on X. Cuba's international missions are sold to third countries and serve as a main source of foreign currency for the economically isolated nation, which has been subject to decades-long crippling sanctions by the US. Havana's international medical outreach goes back to the years following the 1959 Cuban Revolution, as Fidel Castro's communist government provided a free or low-cost medical programme to developing nations as an act of international solidarity. It is estimated that Havana has sent between 135,000 and 400,000 Cuban doctors abroad in total over the past five decades. Brazilian Minister of Health Alexandre Padilha said his government would not bow to what he called 'unreasonable attacks' on Mais Medicos. Cuba's contract in the programme was terminated in 2018 after then-President-elect Jair Bolsonaro questioned the terms of the agreement and Cuban doctors' qualifications. Washington is already engaged in a heated diplomatic row with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's government after imposing sanctions on Brazilian officials involved in Bolsonaro's ongoing trial over his alleged coup plot in 2022. Cuba's healthcare system is public and meant to be universally accessible. But decades of sanctions and a downturn in tourism due to Trump's travel ban mean the one-party state is no longer medically self-sufficient. Since returning to the White House, the Trump administration has resumed its 'maximum pressure' campaign against Cuba that typified his first term. Last year, the island nation of 9.7 million people could not afford the $300m needed to import raw materials to produce hundreds of critical medicines. In July, Trump imposed sanctions against Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, Minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces Alvaro Lopez Miera, and Minister of the Interior Lazaro Alberto Alvarez Casas for their 'role in the Cuban regime's brutality toward the Cuban people'. Earlier, the Trump administration also signalled its intention to tighten visa restrictions on Cuban and foreign officials linked to Havana's medical missions around the globe. Rubio described the medical programme as one where 'medical professionals are 'rented' by other countries at high prices', but 'most of the revenue is kept by the Cuban authorities'. In 1999, after Hugo Chavez's Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela, Cuba sent medical staff and educators to the country. In return, Cuba bought Venezuelan oil at below-market prices, developing the idea of Havana exporting medical professionals as a source of revenue. Some 30,000 Cuban medical workers were sent to Venezuela in the first 10 years of the 'Oil for Doctors' programme. Cuba later received hard currency to set up permanent medical missions in countries including South Africa, Brazil, Ecuador and Qatar.


Al Jazeera
an hour ago
- Al Jazeera
Ukraine, EU, US leaders speak ahead of Trump-Putin meeting: Key takeaways
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived on Wednesday in Berlin for a virtual summit with European officials and United States President Donald Trump, convened by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. The call was meant to bring European leaders together with Trump before the planned August 15 Alaska meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Those on the call included Merz and the US president, as well as US Vice President JD Vance, Zelenskyy, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron and Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof, among others. Here are the key takeaways: What happened on Wednesday? The prospect of Trump meeting alone with Putin has left European leaders uneasy. Since the Alaska summit was announced, they have worked to secure Trump's ear one last time, and on Wednesday, that effort resulted in a series of high-level calls. About 12:00 GMT, European leaders and NATO members held a video conference with Zelenskyy. Roughly an hour later, Trump and Vice President JD Vance joined the discussion. Chancellor Merz and President Zelenskyy then delivered joint statements, followed by a separate address from Trump at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. Later in the day, the 'Coalition of the Willing', a group of 31 countries committed to strengthening support for Ukraine against Russian aggression, met in a separate virtual session, issuing a statement. What were the key takeaways from all these talks? Here is a breakdown. Following the talks with other European leaders and Trump: Merz said that European and Ukrainian security interests must be respected at Friday's Alaska summit. He underlined the importance of Ukraine having a seat at the table in any peace discussions, with a ceasefire as the essential first step. 'We have made it clear that Ukraine will be at the table as soon as there is a follow-up meeting,' Merz told reporters in Berlin alongside Zelenskyy. 'President Trump wants to make a ceasefire a priority,' he added. Any territorial exchange in Ukraine 'must only be discussed with Ukraine', French President Macron told reporters in Bregancon, France, following the call. 'Trump was very clear on the fact that the US wants to obtain a ceasefire at this meeting in Alaska,' Macron said. 'We must continue to support Ukraine, and when I say 'we', I mean Europeans and Americans,' he added. Ukraine needs credible security guarantees as part of any peace deal, a spokesperson for Prime Minister Starmer said following the virtual summit. The United Kingdom's support for Ukraine is 'unwavering', he added. Zelenskyy, during the news conference with Merz, said Putin is 'bluffing' about being interested in peace. 'Russia is attempting to portray itself as capable of occupying all of Ukraine. That is undoubtedly what they want,' Zelenskyy said. The Ukrainian leader also warned that 'talks about us, without us, will not work'. 'Everything concerning Ukraine must be discussed exclusively with Ukraine. We must prepare a trilateral format for talks. There must be a ceasefire,' Zelenskyy added. He also said 'there must be security guarantees – truly reliable ones'. Among the agreed principles, Zelenskyy said, is that Russia must not be allowed to block Ukraine's path to joining the European Union or NATO, and that peace talks should go hand in hand with maintaining pressure on Russia. The Ukrainian leader also emphasised that sanctions should be strengthened if Russia fails to agree to a ceasefire during the Alaska summit. 'These are effective principles. It is important that they work,' Zelenskyy added. Thank you for your support! — Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) August 13, 2025 Following the call, Trump spoke at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC: 'We had a very good call. I would rate it a 10, very friendly,' Trump explained. The US leader then went on to discuss potential next steps ahead of Friday's meeting. 'There's a very good chance that we're going to have a second meeting, which will be more productive than the first. Because the first is: I'm going to find out where we are and what we're doing,' he said. Trump also mentioned the possibility of a later meeting 'between President Putin and President Zelenskyy and myself, if they'd like to have me there', after the first meeting between him and Putin. Trump also said he plans to call Zelenskyy and other European leaders after Friday's discussions with Putin. The US president also said there will be 'very severe consequences' for Russia if Putin doesn't agree to end the war after Friday's meeting. 'Do you believe you can convince him to stop targeting civilians in Ukraine?' one journalist asked Trump. 'I've had that conversation with him,' Trump said. 'Then I go home and I see that a rocket hit a nursing home or a rocket hit an apartment building and people are laying dead in the street. So I guess the answer to that is no, because I've had this conversation,' he added. However, he reaffirmed his intention to find a solution: 'I want to end the war. It's Biden's war, but I want to end it. I'll be very proud to end this war, along with the five other wars I ended,' he said, without explaining which other conflicts he was referring to. He has claimed credit for ceasefires between India and Pakistan in May and Israel and Iran in June, and helped mediate truce pacts between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda. Trump has also repeatedly made it clear that he covets a Nobel Peace Prize and believes he is deserving of one. The coalition issued a statement outlining four key requirements they believe should form the basis of Friday's talks. They said 'meaningful negotiations can only take place in the context of a ceasefire or a lasting and significant cessation of hostilities'. Second, if Russia refuses a ceasefire in Alaska, sanctions and other economic measures should be intensified to further strain its war economy. Third, 'international borders must not be changed by force'. Fourth, Ukraine should receive strong security guarantees, with the Coalition of the Willing ready to help, including a reassurance force after hostilities end. 'No limitations should be placed on Ukraine's armed forces or on its cooperation with third countries,' the statement said. And Russia cannot veto Ukraine's path to EU or NATO membership. Will the European intervention influence the Alaska summit? It's unclear, but analysts say that Wednesday's calls show how Europe has managed to make sure that Trump can't ignore the continent. 'Even if certain commitments are given, we don't know what will happen once Putin and Trump find themselves in a room,' Lucian Kim, a senior analyst for Ukraine with the International Crisis Group, told Al Jazeera. 'The Europeans have quite a lot of power and even more than they realise themselves,' he said, adding that it was an 'achievement' for European leaders to get Trump's attention, and there is now a difference in tone. 'It was not a given when Trump first got into office that he would listen to the Europeans,' he said. Kim also noted that Europe has used its power and influence to pressure Russia over the war. 'Russia was heavily dependent on Europe, not the United States, and this lack of trade is hurting Russia,' he said. 'Also, you have European banks that are holding hundreds of billions of dollars in Russian government assets.' 'Trump has realised that without the Europeans, it will be very hard to reach any solution in Ukraine.' What has Russia said so far about any peace agreement? On Wednesday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Alexey Fadeev told a press conference that Moscow's position remained unchanged since President Putin outlined it in June 2024. At the time, Putin had said that a ceasefire would take effect immediately if the Ukrainian government withdrew from four Ukrainian regions partially occupied by Russia — Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. He also insisted that Ukraine must formally abandon its bid to join the NATO military alliance. Russia currently controls about 19 percent of Ukraine, including the entirety of Crimea and Luhansk, over 70 percent of Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, as well as small portions of the Kharkiv, Sumy, Mykolaiv, and Dnipropetrovsk regions.


Qatar Tribune
4 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Common ground with US strengthened after call, says Von der Leyen
Europe, the United States and NATO have strengthened their common ground ahead of the summit between US President Donald Trump and Russia's Vladimir Putin in Alaska later this week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Wednesday. 'Today Europe, the US and NATO have strengthened the common ground for Ukraine. We will remain in close coordination. Nobody wants peace more than us, a just and lasting peace,' she posted on the social media platform X after a video call that included Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. She spoke of 'a very good call' during which they exchanged views on the upcoming bilateral meeting in Alaska on Friday. Rutte also spoke of a 'great call.' 'We are united in pushing to end to this terrible war against [Ukraine and] achieve just and lasting peace. Appreciate [Donald Trump's] leadership & close coordination with Allies. The ball is now in Putin's court,' Rutte posted on X. The aim of the consultations between the European leaders with Trump and Zelensky was to find a common line with Trump for his meeting with Putin. (DPA)