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The path to the Death Star is paved with lies: On "Andor," as on Earth, disinformation defeats truth

The path to the Death Star is paved with lies: On "Andor," as on Earth, disinformation defeats truth

Yahoo07-05-2025

Two years is not very long, especially when you suspect your time is running out. This is how much time the people of Ghorman have to wake up to the inevitability of their destruction — two years, which translates to eight episodes in "Andor" terms.
This is also how long it takes for the Empire to persuade enough of the galaxy to believe that 800,000 Ghorman citizens deserve to be displaced or eradicated. As Imperial Security Bureau (ISB) head Major Partagaz (Anton Lesser) mentions in 'One Year Later," the second season premiere, this is no easy task. Ghorman, Partagaz warns, is not without political power.
As for why that is, he doesn't say. Instead, series creator and showrunner Tony Gilroy shows us, in what appears to be a tourism film, that Ghorman is a cosmopolitan fashion mecca reminiscent of Paris. People dream of visiting, and if not that, owning clothing made of its famous fabric, woven from fiber spun by spiders.
But the Empire needs a mineral in the planet's soil that not even its people, the Ghor, know about. Hence, on faraway Coruscant, it dedicates a secret task force devoted to ensuring that when the time comes, the planet's people won't be able to get in its way, and that few will desire to help them.
This is where the Ministry of Enlightenment's propaganda weavers enter the picture.
'Hasn't there always been something slightly arrogant about the Ghor? Oh, we all feel it – what is that?' one purrs during the group's first pitch meeting. He and his partner continue, you know, just ask a few questions. What gives them the right to put themselves first? And, did a 'dedicated Imperial naval inspector' really have to die to protect Ghorman pride?
'We did that,' a second Enlightenment specialist proudly states. 'We made the story. We shaped it, we blew it up. We decided when it was over. With the right ideas, planted in the right markets, in the right sequence, we can now weaponize this galactic opinion.'
There is a Ghorman resistance, but it is small and manipulated by ISB supervisor Dedra Meero (Denise Gough), who relocates to the planet with her lover Syril Karn (Kyle Soller) and plants him within the insurgents' ranks. Syril believes he's simply keeping tabs on them, while his overbearing mother Eedy (Kathryn Hunter) swallows every lie about the Ghor that the Imperial News pours into her ears.
'They won't get another credit of mine! I'm not buying Ghorman again. I'm sick of it,' she harrumphs. 'They were always too good for the rest of us!'
A few episodes later, we see reporters on the ground in Ghorman speaking as if they're in a war zone instead of a place trying to go about its business during an Imperial occupation that grows more visible every day. One speaks of 'the continued and inexplicable Ghorman resistance to Imperial norms.' Another talks about the unknown number of Imperial casualties in a series of fire bombings at terminals.
By the time the mining equipment and black-clad shock troops drop on the planet without warning, it's too late for anyone to turn back – including Syril, who realizes at the 11th hour that Dedra used him to facilitate mass murder. Partagaz blithely describes it another way in his one-on-one meeting with Dedra, his star employee: 'It's bad luck, Ghorman.' The thought makes her a little sick, but her boss has the cure for that bout of conscience, too.
'Let the image of professional ascendance settle your nerves,' he coos.
Arguments are the 'Star Wars' universe's conversation stimulant, but they tend to concern trivial matters. With 'Andor,' debates revolve around what it's trying to say or do, which is more a matter of timing and societal circumstance than anything else. Gilroy maintains in every interview that his show does not specifically take aim at Trumpism and its policies.
'The sad truth is, I did not write this with a newspaper,' he told Rolling Stone before the new season premiered, adding that he and the writers started sketching out its two-season arc four or five years ago. 'History has its own relevancy, and the repetition and the rinse and repeat of history is something that a lot of people don't really seem to be aware of.'
Sure. Many speculative fiction writers say some version of this whenever people point out disturbing similarities in their shows and movies to current events. In the same way that 2016's 'Rogue One: A Star Wars Story' arrived in theaters just as the nation officially embraced the Dark Side, the first season of "Andor" debuted just in time to confirm that America was well on its way to becoming an autocracy.
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Even back then, its writers didn't have to consult dead tree pulp to recognize the ways the right-wing media has warped so many people's views to a degree that the morally indefensible is acceptable.
For instance, recently, far-right YouTube influencer Nick Shirley shared a video from inside a Salvadoran prison titled 'The El Salvador Prison the Media Doesn't Want You to See.' It shows a bright white room full of prisoners hunched over sewing machines as Shirley sings the praises of its 'pretty amazing' system.
The prisoners' free labor, he says, provides clothing for law-abiding Salvadoreans, versus having to import it from the United States or China, 'helping create a more self-sufficient El Salvador." In March, when Fox News enthusiastically interviewed Shirley about his visit, the interviewer didn't question his opinion that the prison, which stuffs around 80 people into one cell, is housing 'some of the worst people roaming the Earth right now.'
That conversation took place around the same time that the major news outlets picked up the story that 238 Venezuelan migrants were deported to El Salvador's Terrorism Confinement Center —'a place so harsh that El Salvador's justice minister once said the only way out is in a coffin,' CBS News describes.
The network obtained a list of those migrants' identities by examining internal government documents and found that an overwhelming majority have no apparent criminal convictions or even criminal charges. Among those listed are a makeup artist, a soccer player and a food delivery driver, CBS reported.
'Andor' viewers can believe it, having seen this plot play out in its hero's unjust imprisonment in Narkina 5's manufacturing facility in its first season. Hence, Shirley's Central American vacation video generated many versions of a meme superimposing his image on stills from the show's prison arc.
Likewise, Season 2's disinformation storyline isn't predictive but reflective.
These actions join a saga long in progress, culminating in an America riven by fundamentally disparate versions of the truth.
A hapless, pliable corporate media abetted that outcome, as 'Daily Show' correspondent Desi Lydic satirizes on the series' April 30 episode via a montage of conflicting descriptions of the opening 100 days of Donald Trump's second term as president. 'As we all know, the American media is just as divided as the country itself,' she says, 'So depending on which cable news network you watch, Trump's first 100 days were either . . . sick,' she says, emphasizing that descriptor with sharp indignance before switching to a dumb bro drawl to finish, 'or … siiiiiiiiick.'
The net effect is an alarming percentage of Americans who fear their fellow citizens and foreigners, and a congressional body split between Republican enablers parroting the administration's propaganda and hapless Democrats rubberstamping Trump's agenda. We've watched ICE agents grab international students with legal status off the street and throw them into vans, and FBI agents arrest a Milwaukee judge, accusing her of allegedly obstructing immigration officers trying to arrest a man who was scheduled to appear in her courtroom.
We've been heading in this direction since Fox News' cable conquest after 9/11 and the resultant ascent of far-right news outlets like Breitbart and Newsmax. But what 'Andor' does particularly well is remind its audience that fascism can only succeed if everyday people make it acceptable.
The current trio of episodes, directed by Janus Metz and written by Dan Gilroy, hits us in time for the Ministry of Enlightenment's masterstroke to coincide with our president's clamp-down on a free press, including an executive order to cut funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
The war Russia instigated in Ukraine in 2022 is still hot, and more than half of Americans have been hypnotized into believing that the United States doesn't have a responsibility to help Ukraine defend itself, according to Pew Research. Influencers like Shirley assisted in shaping that opinion, too.
The slaughter in Gaza, where the Israeli government has created a humanitarian crisis by cutting off all food imports and medical aid, is ongoing. Meanwhile, Americans are ticked off that groceries are still expensive. Many contentedly swallow Trump's excuse that former President Joe Biden is to blame for our tanking economy, not his senseless import tariffs.
Disney+ is rolling out this season of "Andor" in weekly three-episode drops, with each covering a year before Luke Skywalker enters the picture in the Battle of Yavin. This has proven dissatisfying to those who would rather see the show's eponymous hero, Cassian Andor (Diego Luna), returned to the spotlight instead of using him as a guide through a rebellion struggling to find itself.
But making Cassian the main focus would obscure the show's larger point about free societies being hustled off a cliff by mass complacency, facilitated by falsehoods.
In the Ghorman arc, Luna's spy primarily serves as a witness. He's at the scene of the massacre that occurs not as part of the cause, but to satisfy a vendetta that the violence's outbreak delays. Not long after Cassian escapes, he's rushed to Coruscant to chaperone Mon Mothma (Genevieve O'Reilly) to her destiny as the Rebel Alliance's leader on Yavin. The Galactic Senate has obeyed in advance, and its politicians make a show of supporting Palpatine's lies about Ghorman. So Mon knows that she must summon the nerve to speak out against the Ghorman genocide, and doing so will mark the end of the life she knows.
This legislative last stand also realizes the woeful hopes of American constituents who wish their legislators would effectively rise against this administration instead of writing strongly worded letters. If only our congressional officials and senators had Mon's courage or the long-term vision of Alderaan's Bail Organa (Benjamin Bratt, an acceptable recast of a role previously played by Jimmy Smits), who helps make her speech and hasty exit possible.
'Of all the things at risk, the loss of an objective reality is perhaps the most dangerous,' Mon says as her fellow legislators boo her. 'The death of truth is the ultimate victory. When truth leaves us, when we let it slip away, when it is ripped from our hands, we become vulnerable to the appetite of whatever monster screams the loudest.' Then she calls the monster, Emperor Palpatine, by name as the Empire cuts off the Senate's version of a C-SPAN feed, and Cassian swoops in to help her run for her life.
Elsewhere, Dedra has a panic attack once the gravity of her role in the Empire's sanctions mass murder sets in, but that's not enough to jumpstart her conscience. Syril nearly strangles Dedra for deceiving him, but backs off when she reminds him he didn't seem to mind all the promotions. His final reward for risking everything for a raise is a shot to the dome right after Cassian, his white whale, looks him in the eye and doesn't recognize him. "Who are you?" Cassian asks. Syril is dead before he can answer.
Prior to Mon Mothma's flight from her apathetic political class, she watches as Ghorman's senator is dragged off by Imperial officers despite not having committed any crime. 'It's my people today and yours tomorrow!' he warns, and the events of "Star Wars: Episode IV — A New Hope" tell us he's right. Once totalitarianism gains momentum, it doesn't wait for the opposition to catch up. Yet none of the Ghorman politicians' colleagues intervene. How many of us would? How many of us are?
Oddly, some people still stop short of characterizing 'Andor' as commentary on fascism, although parallels between the Empire and Adolf Hitler's Third Reich abound. They always have. (Those white armored guys who can't shoot straight aren't called stormtroopers coincidentally.) Maybe this was a matter of discomfort with how similar America's corporatized society looks to that of the Galactic Republic.
'Fascist isn't quite the right category for the Empire,' opined a commenter on a 2022 think piece posted on the Online Library of Liberty. 'Fascism emphasizes the unity of the people under the Leader. It has heavy propaganda campaigns to promote loyalty. All economic activity is closely controlled,' they said, clearly not suspecting what the second season of 'Andor' or 2025 would have in store.
New episodes of "Andor" premiere Tuesdays on Disney+.

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In 2025 FCS football, the Dakotas or everybody else? Plus CFB news

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Sabrina Claudio's New Album: A Soulful Step Into Story, Self And Sound

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Bava: I feel like one of the things you've given your fans and listeners is this connection to a deeply feminine, empowering space. And with the title Fall in Love with Her, I have to ask—who is 'her'? Is she the muse? Is she you? Or is she more of a symbolic entity? Because to me, that's what it feels like it's unlocking. Claudio: I think for me personally, 'her' is me in the future. Side note—the reason why I called the mini-series Fall in Love With is because I feel like when people listen to the album, they're going to relate to it in their own way. It could be Fall in Love With—and you fill in the blank, you know? But for me, it's definitely about the future me. And the future me will—it'll be forever, right? It's always going to be the future me. I'm always trying to evolve, always trying to be better, and I'm always looking forward to the version I'm going to become—in a year, or five years, or ten. But this album is strictly about me looking ahead toward that better version of myself—whether that's tomorrow, the next day, or the next year. And it's about everything I've had to—or still have to—leave behind: decisions I've made, people who weren't serving me, anything that wasn't serving me. It's about staying aligned and committed to this path toward becoming my best self. And yeah, I think throughout the album, the way I structured the track list tells that story. In the end, it's the person I strive to be. The last track on the album is 'Memory Foam' —and to me, it's a song about resilience, a song about strength, about pushing through the heartaches and hardships. You know, as you listen, you'll hear that evolution—where I've been, where I hope to go—and hopefully, fall in love with that version of me too. Bava: That's really interesting. So many artists talk about how some of their best songs just kind of flow through them—that it's almost subconscious. Then, later on, when they look back, they start to realize what the song was really about or what it was trying to tell them. I love that idea of the past self and future self—that dynamic feels really present in your music. Do you ever look back on your songs and think, 'Oh, that's what I was feeling,' or 'That's what I was processing,' and have that kind of relationship with your own work over time? Claudio: Absolutely, and I think with this album in particular, that sentiment is really strong—because it's the first album where I'm actually writing everything from personal experience. Some of these songs I wrote during a heartache, or I would listen to them while I was going through something, and I've cried to many of them, many times. And now, some of the songs I wrote maybe a year ago, I listen back and think, 'Wow, I can't believe I was going through that at the time.' Now I can hear it from a totally different perspective. It's really interesting—even with songs I've written in the past. The song 'I Didn't Think' is one that's interesting for me, cause sometimes I honestly feel like I'm just a vessel. Concepts and melodies just flow through me and I kind of black out. Then I'll go back and listen and think, 'Damn, how did I do that? That's wild.' And I don't even remember what my headspace was. I'm telling you—sometimes it really does feel like a spiritual thing. So there's that. And then yeah, I don't know—I'm always listening back to things. It's just interesting to see how we evolve as people and as artists. There are things I would have done differently, or things I hear now and realize I might not even be able to tap into that same place again, even if I tried. It's always interesting. But yeah—I look back a lot. Bava: It's so fascinating to hear about the ritualistic side of writing and making music. Do you have certain things you do to help you get into that creative space, or is it something you can usually access anytime? Claudio: No, I definitely don't always have access to it. I can really only tap into that space when I'm in a studio environment. I'm not the kind of artist who writes at home or just anywhere—I find it really hard to get into that headspace outside of the studio. I need to be mentally prepared. I can't just book a last-minute session and say, 'Okay, I'm ready to go.' It also really depends on who's in the room. I go off of energy—I'm super sensitive to people's energy, what they're going through, or if the vibe just feels off. That's why I prefer working with the same people when it comes to my own music. With other artists, if I'm in the room as a songwriter, it's easier for me to adapt. But for my own stuff, I like the consistency—I like knowing what to expect. I'm a very routine-based person. When I go into a session, I work from 1 to 7 p.m.—very strict for some reason—and it has to be in a studio. It can be a home studio or any studio, but it has to be a studio space where I can lock in. I don't like taking breaks. If I walk out, I feel like the energy leaves with me, and when I come back, it's weird. It's strange—I know—but it kind of has to feel like work for me. And I like to work with the same team, and I need a few days' notice before a session. Honestly, it's kind of stressful if you think about it. It's not as free as people might assume, especially because my music feels really free. But I'm super regimented. Like, yeah—I don't play. Bava: Yeah, I mean—combining all the aspects of who you are—your music, your visual identity—I feel like you really embody that fully. You seem so connected to your intuition that if you waver from it even a little, it probably feels hard to stay aligned, like staying on that arrow. Claudio: Totally, totally. Bava: Speaking of the visual aspect—I feel like that's such a big part of your creative inspiration. When I think of your music, I also enter this rich visual world. How has that evolved and influenced this album? I'd love to hear more about the inspirations behind the new world you've created, because this feels like a completely different space. Claudio: It is. This whole album was inspired by something that my best friend and I wrote. So, there is—I'm trying to be discreet about my verbiage because I don't know when this is coming out. But anyways, by the end of it all, there's a much bigger picture. There's like this story of the album. And every visual that has been released is connected to that one story. But that story was written by my best friend before I even decided that I was ready to make an album. And essentially, the story that she wrote for me is what has inspired pretty much every concept, because I've made sure that every song on the album made sense with the story that she wrote. And then, when it came to the visuals, the visuals told enough of the story so that when you watch what is yet to come, you can watch it from the first music video all the way to the end of the bigger thing—and it will all make sense. I don't know how much sense that just made, but essentially, this is the most conceptual album I've ever had. And it was interesting—the process of it all—because I was... it was all very methodical, and it was like a project almost. And I was trying to make sure... it was kind of restricting a little bit when it came to the creating of the music and then the visuals, because I'm just like trying to make sure that it all makes sense by the end of it all—when everything is released—that the whole story, the whole world that we created, makes sense. But it's hard to talk about when I haven't announced what the actual theme is. But just know that it's huge—a huge world that we've created—which I've never done something like that before. So that is what has inspired all of these visuals. It's one big love story. Let's just say that. Bava: That's so exciting I can't wait to see what you're talking about. But it's so interesting to hear like the catalyst of how these seeds are planted. Was there a song that you feel was a catalyst both sonically and story-wise? Claudio: Yes, actually. So, 'Falling in Love with Her' is a title track, and it's a song that I wrote. I started creating this album in January of 2024, but "Falling in Love with Her," the song, I actually wrote for another artist in the middle of 2023—before I even decided I was ready to make an album. I had this one song that I wrote for someone else, but I completely fell in love with it, and I asked if I could keep it for myself for when I was ready to make my album. That's going to be one of the songs on the album. I had that song for like six months, and I was talking to my best friend, and we were talking about just creating something together—because she's a scriptwriter, and she does so many things. But one of the things she does is write scripts, and she wanted to do something with me. And I was like, 'Well, I haven't started on my album, but I do have this one song that I love, and when I make the album, it's definitely going on there.'I played it for her, and her wheels started turning. She was like, 'Oh my god, let me live with this for a little bit,' and she came back with a whole story based on that one song. And yeah—essentially, that song inspired the story, but then the story inspired the album. Does that make sense? Because once she wrote the story, I was like, 'Oh—first of all, I need to make an album for this,' but second, I knew what I wanted to say in the album because it was all based on that story she wrote. Does that make sense? I'm like—subliminally—can't think of what's happening, it's so confusing, but yeah. Bava: I'm sure there are so many stories that can be unraveled within this, because I mean, creating a big project like this, it just keeps unraveling. Claudio: Exactly. Bava: Sonically though, I'm really curious, were you listening to new things, were you inspired by specific artists that made you kind of lean to this new version of your music? Claudio: I think just naturally, I was in rooms with a lot of—well, it was mainly genres for me, because I was tapping into so many different styles. I must have done at least 200 sessions in one year. I was working almost every day, and with that came being in rooms surrounded by different genres—like I was doing a lot of dance, indie, alternative, and obviously R&B. Subconsciously, all of it was just sticking in my brain. I've always listened to these kinds of genres on my own time—I love indie music, singer-songwriter stuff, and really big, cinematic things. And because I was actually writing in those genres for the first time—experiencing what that was like with my voice and ideas—I got more excited to try that on my own. Usually I'm in other people's worlds when I'm songwriting, but I was like, damn, I can't wait till it's my turn and I can do exactly what I hear in my head. So yeah, I've always listened to those genres, but now I finally got to create over them. And for my album, I worked—again—with the same people I always work with. They have a broader palette of music, and they're a big reason the songs sound the way they do. They brought their own references and inspirations, and we'd go back and forth on songs we loved. A lot of the time, I didn't even know the ones they were referencing, which I thought was a good thing—'cause I'd go in and do my own thing, since I'd never heard it before. They'd play it once, I'd be like, 'Okay, cool, let's try something like that,' and melodically I'd go somewhere else. So yeah, it was just a mix of the artists I worked with, the genres I was exploring, and the music I've loved my whole life. Bava: Are there some genres that you created with that you're kind of thinking someday you want to kind of go into that world and make kind of a very different project from? Claudio: I think one of my strong suits—which I've never done personally, but I've done with other artists—is dance. There's so—like, that's the category, but there are so many subgenres under that. Just a dance album would be really interesting for me—all types of dance—even Afrobeat or house or like all the subgenres under dance. I don't know why, but it's really easy for me to write to. I've just never done it on my own because I always think about, like, when I go on tour, the music I want to perform is usually the more emotional, ballad, singing-type songs. But I really love when I get the opportunity to work with a DJ or do collabs with people in the dance world. So maybe one day I'll do my own project—or like an EP or something like that—where it's all dedicated to the dance world. Bava: Through all of the process of all the many things that you do, is there a favorite part of the process for you—from writing to performing? Claudio: Oh, well, I think it kind of leads into the next thing. I love—I think it's always like a euphoric feeling when you're creating a song and it's all clicking, and everything is making sense, and you leave the session and you're listening to the song a million times over in your car, and you're like, 'Oh my God, we just created that.' And then that leads into the part where you get to perform it for people, and you hear people singing the song back—this song that you remember creating and being in awe of. So I think those are probably my two favorite parts of this whole thing—the creation of it all, and then getting to perform it, and realizing that what you created actually connects to people in a certain way. Hearing them sing it back, watching them sing it, or watching them get emotional—or even just the visual part of it all. Those are probably my two favorite parts of the whole—this whole artist thing, I guess. Bava: I mean this album is just so expansive—it's going to be so incredible live I think. I cannot—I can't wait. It just sounds like flying. Claudio: Thanks. That's why it's so long. Yeah, it's like—I feel like I'm flying, and I can't wait. I feel like the production is so massive on a lot of the songs. And my band—like, I've already performed a couple of songs with them for certain things—but I can't wait till we're on tour and just performing it with a bunch of people. And yeah, it's gonna be amazing. Bava: Is there a song that you're most excited to perform live? Claudio: It's hard to choose. Well, no—I gotta say I have my favorites already, and I think it's the bigger production ones. Like, 'Memory Foam' is one. And then I have another song called 'Detoxing,' which is kind of similar to 'Memory Foam' in the sense that it gives—like, I always compare it to a Coldplay, Avril Lavigne type nostalgic vibe. But it's really big, and when the band performs it, it's even bigger. The energy and the emotion are crazy. And then I have another song called 'Discourage,' which is kind of the same thing. It's just really big, really full—conceptually, they're emotional. And vocally, I feel like I've broken out of this soft, whispery, sensual vibe that I'm normally on. I'm singing stronger, and I'm almost belting in some songs, which is something I've never really done before. So when we go to perform it live, that'll be exciting. So yeah, I'd say those are probably my top three faves. Bava:Yeah, that's so wonderful. Is there anything else that you want to add into this for both the readers and the listeners that we hadn't talked about yet? Claudio: I don't think so. I think you asked a lot of amazing questions. I'm just really excited for the final piece of the puzzle—for me to be able to talk about it once I announce it. But yeah, just that this is an album I'm extremely proud of, and I hope that people resonate with it in their own way, and that all the vulnerability doesn't go to waste, and it connects to people deeper than ever before. So yeah, that's all I would say. Bava:Beautiful. It's so amazing to hear you as the storyteller—like that's the most ancient thing. And when you add that to the beautiful music, of course it's going to be so potent—and yes, it's going to resonate with many. So, thank you so much. Claudio:Thank you girl!

Taraji P. Henson Shares The Personal Reason She Took Her Latest Acting Role
Taraji P. Henson Shares The Personal Reason She Took Her Latest Acting Role

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Taraji P. Henson Shares The Personal Reason She Took Her Latest Acting Role

When life imitates art, playing a role can stir up echoes of the past — a lesson Taraji P. Henson revisited in her latest film. Henson, a Washington, D.C. native and a proud Howard University graduate, recently portrayed Janiyah, a struggling single mother in Tyler Perry's new film 'Straw.' It's a narrative Henson knows intimately, having been a single mother herself — a connection she spoke candidly about during a Wednesday episode of 'The View.' 'She's a single mother. She can't get ahead to save her life — and I've been in that situation before,' Henson said. 'But the difference between me is that I had an incredible support group.' The 'Empire' actor went on to reflect more on her own journey, crediting the presence of a strong 'family' and 'great sister circle' that helped lighten her load. The character of Janiyah, by contrast, is isolated — and Henson acknowledged that too many women live in that reality every day. 'I want them to feel seen,' she said. Earlier in the interview, Henson elaborated on why she felt compelled to take on the role. 'I love roles where I get to give a voice to the voiceless — because people who feel unseen need to know that they're not alone, and that people do see you,' Henson explained. She added that she's drawn to roles that 'will force the audience to lead with more grace and understanding — because you can never truly judge a book by its cover.' Taraji P. Henson On Why She Made Sure Project 2025 Would Go Viral Taraji P. Henson Made A Pretty Embarrassing Mistake At The BET Awards Taraji P. Henson Breaks Down In Tears As She Confirms She's Considered Quitting Acting

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