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Trump set to announce Kennedy Center Honorees as he tries to put his stamp on DC

Trump set to announce Kennedy Center Honorees as he tries to put his stamp on DC

CNN2 days ago
President Donald Trump will appear at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday, where he's expected to announce the first recipients of its hallmark honors since he seized control of the institution's board earlier this year.
The visit to the iconic performing arts complex comes as Trump seeks greater authority over Washington, DC, and its most prominent cultural institutions in an aggressive bid to put his stamp on the Democratic-led city.
Trump — who was installed as Kennedy Center chairman in February — teased the new slate of honorees in a Truth Social post on Tuesday that also alluded to Republican efforts in Congress to rename the complex after him.
'GREAT Nominees for the TRUMP/KENNEDY CENTER, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, AWARDS,' Trump wrote.
The Kennedy Center later said it's 'honored' to host the president and appeared to preview a slate of honorees that included a 'country music icon, an Englishman, a New York City Rock band, a dance Queen and a multi-billion dollar Actor.'
The visit will mark the president's third Kennedy Center appearance since returning to the White House, underscoring his personal interest in the activities of the performing arts center.
A White House official said Trump would tour the Kennedy Center, as he weighs how to spend the $250 million that Republicans set aside in July for renovations to the center as part of their tax and spending bill.
'Thanks to his advocacy, our beautiful building will undergo renovations to restore its prestige and grandeur,' the Kennedy Center said Tuesday on X.
In addition to taking control of the performing arts center, Trump has pressured DC's museums, memorials and other historic sites to recast American history in a more favorable light, criticizing what he called in a March executive order a 'revisionist movement' meant to 'undermine the remarkable achievements of the United States.' On Tuesday, the White House ordered a review of Smithsonian museums and exhibits to ensure alignment with that directive.
The president has also embarked on wide-ranging renovation of the White House. And in an unprecedented move this week fueled by his personal frustration with incidents of crime and homelessness in DC, Trump federalized the city's police force.
The sprawling effort to exert federal influence across DC is an escalation from his first term, during which he remained largely disengaged from the cultural institutions of a city that had overwhelmingly rejected him at the ballot box. Trump notably declined to attend the Kennedy Center Honors all four years after some of the honorees in 2017 said they would boycott a traditional White House pre-reception.
Yet since returning to office, he has prioritized bending key elements of DC to his will, as part of what officials have framed as an effort to beautify the city and its key institutions and drive out what Trump has long criticized as 'woke' elements that don't conform to his worldview.
The Kennedy Center has served as an early focal point of that project, drawing an institution that had traditionally remained above the fray of partisan politics directly into the center of the nation's culture wars.
Trump in February dismissed a slew of Democratic appointees from the center's board of trustees, replacing them with aides and allies that included chief of staff Susie Wiles and second lady Usha Vance. Trump was subsequently elected chairman, with longtime confidant Ric Grenell installed as the Kennedy Center's new president.
The takeover prompted sharp criticism from Democrats and angered artists connected to the Kennedy Center — including the producer of the hit musical 'Hamilton,' who cancelled an upcoming run of the show that was supposed to go through 2026. A series of other prominent artists, including director Shonda Rhimes and musician Ben Folds, resigned from their positions at the center.
Since then, Trump has taken a hands-on approach to overhauling programming and drawing up plans for renovating the complex.
On Monday, the Kennedy Center said it would host the premier of a film produced by the Christian Broadcasting Network that 'showcases the remarkable resurgence of faith among the youth in America.' It's an early sign of how programming may shift under the Trump-appointed leadership. The movie includes an appearance by Ben Carson, Trump's former secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
That premier follows an earlier run of 'Les Misérables' — a favorite musical of Trump's — that the president attended in June. The appearance drew a mixed reaction, with some attendees booing Trump and four drag queens sitting below the presidential box in protest of his prior vows to rid the Kennedy Center of drag shows.
Yet within the GOP, the Kennedy Center has become another rallying point for demonstrating loyalty to Trump. In July, House Republicans added a measure to a spending bill that would rename the center's opera house after first lady Melania Trump.
Soon after, Rep. Bob Onder of Missouri introduced the Make Entertainment Great Again Act, which would go a step further and strip former President John F. Kennedy's name from the complex in favor of making it the 'Donald J. Trump Center for Performing Arts.'
But ahead of Trump's visit on Wednesday, that proposal had yet to gain steam; so far, Onder's legislation has not attracted a single co-sponsor.
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Pigtails, pink tracksuit, 'permanent performance mode': Alyson Stoner pulls back the curtain on childhood stardom
Pigtails, pink tracksuit, 'permanent performance mode': Alyson Stoner pulls back the curtain on childhood stardom

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Pigtails, pink tracksuit, 'permanent performance mode': Alyson Stoner pulls back the curtain on childhood stardom

Come for the juicy child star gossip, stay to dismantle the system. Alyson Stoner's life radically and irreversibly changed in the aisle of a grocery store in 2002. A week after the MTV premiere of Missy Elliott's 'Work It' music video, which featured a 9-year-old Stoner dancing for a few brief seconds in pigtails and a pink tracksuit, a stranger approached the child with a request. 'Are you the little white girl in the Missy video?' the man asked, before adding, 'Can you do the dance?' The young dancer obliged, soon surrounded by customers watching the spectacle. This was the beginning of what Stoner, who uses they/them pronouns, calls 'permanent performance mode.' Stoner's career as a child star took off from there, and they became a mainstay on the Disney Channel for many years, appearing in Camp Rock and Mike's Super Short Show but never fully breaking out with their own series or movie like fellow Mouse House stars Miley Cyrus or Demi Lovato. It's an unusual trajectory, and Stoner's new book, Semi-Well-Adjusted Despite Literally Everything, is not the typical kid performer memoir. It's OK if you think so at first, though. It's all part of the plan. 'Copy-and-paste downward spirals' Stoner says they noticed a series of recent memoirs and documentaries highlighting a 'repeated pattern of former child performers … experiencing copy-and-paste downward spirals,' but no one had yet unpacked the ecosystem that creates that kind of pattern, nor tried to intervene and prevent it from continuing to harm children. 'I thought, 'I want to not only share my lived experiences — yes, all of the juicy details from the sets growing up — but also connect new dots for people across media, culture, child development and the industry,' Stoner, now 32, tells Yahoo over Zoom. 'Folks might show up to read about the childhood chaos of it all, but I hope they stay for the cultural critique.' Stoner is still an entertainer, and they recognize that their work onscreen is probably what you know them from. But they're also a mental health practitioner. For every reveal of childhood trauma or candid tale about a familiar name in their book, there's a revelation about something broken in the entertainment industry and a proposal to fix it. Knowing that fame and trauma would be the draw for a lot of readers, Stoner worked with a writing supervisor to strategize about what exactly to include. It's written chronologically and guided by Stoner's inner monologue over time, pulling directly from journal entries. With that in mind, the vulnerability on display is impressive. Stoner details heart-wrenching stories from their life: public and private scrutiny that contributed to an eating disorder that they sought treatment for in rehab, a tumultuous home life with an abusive stepfather and alcoholic mother, run-ins with stalkers and extortionists, rape and suicidal ideation. There are even stories about the inner workings of Hollywood and its stars that became tabloid fodder the same day the book was released. But that's just Stoner's real life. They're working with what they've got. 'There are ways you can speak about your direct, personal experience and still honor the humanity of everyone involved while calling for some accountability, while accepting that there are consequences beyond my control, no matter what I do or don't say,' Stoner says. 'So I wanted to make sure that even though the truth is not always polite, I could still deliver it with integrity … if I'm going to write a memoir, now is the time to get it [all] off my chest.' 'We're speaking about children as commodified products' Though the Disney Channel stars of today have a new playbook, Stoner says their learnings from childhood fame are more relevant than ever. 'Anyone with a Wi-Fi connection and social media profile can deal with challenges related to privacy, to safety, to parasocial relationships, mental health challenges due to our tech use,' they say. In June, I saw Stoner speak on a panel at VidCon, an annual convention for content creators and their fans. Their bravery stuck with me. Stoner interjected as experts discussed how the kid influencer industry could protect the young and famous, speaking clinically and professionally about the laws and regulations in place to protect them. 'I do want to ground the conversation in the reality that we're speaking about children as commodified products at the moment. I was one of them,' they said onstage. 'There are well-meaning people in all areas of the [entertainment] industry, [but] the entire system of it is warped here … we're talking about a child who cannot legally consent, who doesn't have legal rights to control what their parent shares of them.' 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Drawing on her mental health expertise, Stoner tells Yahoo that young people are losing the opportunity to have a 'play-based childhood,' where they're allowed to fail and experiment in private, giving them time and space to process what they're going through and better 'find equilibrium after intense experiences.' 'It's when it becomes a chronic and incessant experience with no respite that we start to see young people developing their own coping strategies,' Stoner says. That can lead to eating disorders and harmful obsessions. For child social media stars, it might even be worse. 'They're not portraying a character … this is actually the literal commodification of their humanity. And that's worth spending some time reflecting on,' they say. The plan to stop the spiral The more I talked to Stoner and read about their traumatic experiences as a child star, the more I was surprised that they were still in show business. I would have run for the hills to never think about this again. I was a big fan of Stoner when we were both kids, and I never considered why their disappearance from Disney might have been strategic, until they went viral in a 2021 YouTube post about the 'toddler to train wreck industrial complex' that they 'narrowly survived.' The reason Stoner isn't running away from the entertainment industry entirely is fairly simple, but perplexing — and it speaks volumes about their strength. Their 'unique and unexpected upbringing' gave them an understanding of both children and Hollywood, they tell me. 'I'm hoping that I can hold the middle in a way that allows people on all sides to be able to hear each other … so we can think about these things holistically and always … center the fact that children are not just mini adults,' Stoner says. 'Their brains and bodies are at literal different developmental stages and phases.' The child star industrial complex desperately needs to be rebooted. Discussion and legislation help, but Stoner has a practical and actionable plan. They created the Artist Wellbeing Essentials, a toolkit for performers and parents to learn about the pitfalls and potential risks they may face. It's made up of over 50 videos about specific experiences that performers go through, from learning to get into and out of character to managing audition rejection, and how they may affect other areas of their lives, like finances and education. 'I'm hoping [that material] is something that becomes standardized as a preventative resource, just like anyone would get if they're onboarding to a new job,' they say. Maybe Stoner's desire to stay in and overhaul an industry they 'narrowly survived' is less of an act of defiance than a genuine calling. Destiny is rarely this apparent outside of the Disney movies Stoner once acted in, but their real-life story is far more compelling. Solve the daily Crossword

Knoxville early voting totals are very low. Maybe a cookie will help?
Knoxville early voting totals are very low. Maybe a cookie will help?

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Knoxville early voting totals are very low. Maybe a cookie will help?

Want a free cookie from Magpies Bakery? Get out and vote! Early voting in the Knoxville City Council primary election is halfway over, and only 2,002 early votes were cast as of Aug. 14. That means just 2% of Knoxville's eligible voters have cast ballots. Additionally, 472 absentee ballots have been cast. It's the lowest early voting participation at the halfway point in the past four city elections, officials said. The next-lowest was in 2021, when 2,419 votes were cast at the halfway point. If choosing the elected officials who make decisions that hit close to home isn't enough incentive, do it for a cookie. Magpies, the bakery that's been in North Knoxville since 1992, is giving out a free cookie to customers who flex their "I voted" sticker through early voting and on Election Day, Aug. 26. Magpie's is located at 846 N. Central St. They're open from 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. on Saturdays. They're closed on Sundays. Our Voter's Guide is available at to help you differentiate between the candidates. Who's voted? The Knox County Election Commission released a breakdown of the votes cast in each district: District 1: 379, or 3% of registered voters District 2: 561, 3% of registered voters District 3: 488, 3% of registered voters District 4: 625, 3% of registered voters District 6: 421, 3% of registered voters You can still request an absentee ballot The last day to request an absentee ballot is Aug. 16. Ballot requests can be emailed to absenteeballot@ There are a lot of eligibility restrictions around who can request absentee voting by mail, but some qualifications include voters who are 60 and older, will be outside the county on Election Day, are hospitalized, are attending school away from home, live in a nursing home or are away for military service and more. Find all the qualifications at Where is early voting in Knoxville? The early voting period is through Aug. 21. During that time, registered voters can go to any early voting location on any day or time it is open. Here are Knoxville early voting locations: City-County Building, 400 Main St., main floor across from Circuit Court Division 1 Downtown West, 1645 Downtown West Blvd., Unit 40 Eternal Life Harvest Center at Five Points, 2410 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. (next to Love Kitchen) Knoxville Expo Center, 5441 Clinton Highway New Harvest Park, 4775 New Harvest Lane Meridian Baptist Church, 6513 Chapman Highway When is early voting in Knoxville? Hours vary depending on the day and place you vote. There are no polls open on Sundays. Early voting hours for Downtown West, Eternal Life Harvest Center at Five Points, Knoxville Expo Center and New Harvest Park: Aug. 16: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Aug. 18-19: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Aug. 20: Noon-7 p.m. Aug. 21: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Early voting hours for the City-County Building: Aug. 16: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Aug. 18-19: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Aug. 20: Noon-7 p.m. Aug. 21: Noon-6 p.m. Early voting hours for Meridian Baptist: Aug. 16: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Aug. 18-19: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Aug. 20: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Aug. 21: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Allie Feinberg is the politics reporter for Knox News. Email: Reddit: u/KnoxNewsAllie This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: Magpies Bakery offers free cookie to Knoxville voters Solve the daily Crossword

Canadian PM Carney to visit Mexico in September to boost trade, Bloomberg News reports
Canadian PM Carney to visit Mexico in September to boost trade, Bloomberg News reports

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Canadian PM Carney to visit Mexico in September to boost trade, Bloomberg News reports

(Reuters) -Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney will visit Mexico on September 18 to meet with President Claudia Sheinbaum and discuss strengthening trade ties and supply chains amid U.S. tariffs, Bloomberg News reported on Friday, citing a person familiar with the matter. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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