logo
Fired Mandalorian actor Gina Carano settles legal dispute with Disney

Fired Mandalorian actor Gina Carano settles legal dispute with Disney

CBCa day ago
Walt Disney has resolved a legal dispute with actor Gina Carano over her firing from the Star Wars streaming TV series The Mandalorian, a spokesperson for Disney unit Lucasfilm said on Thursday.
Disney removed Carano from The Mandalorian in 2021 over social media posts that the company at the time called "abhorrent and unacceptable" for "denigrating people based on their cultural and religious identities."
Carano sued Disney in 2024 for wrongful termination and sex discrimination with backing from billionaire Elon Musk. The actor argued she was fired for voicing conservative opinions and that male stars who spoke out did not suffer any consequences.
The two sides stipulated in a federal court filing on Thursday that the case should be dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can't be refiled. The case had been scheduled to go to trial in Los Angeles in February of next year.
In Thursday's statement, the Lucasfilm spokesperson said Carano "was always well respected by her directors, co-stars and staff, and she worked hard to perfect her craft while treating her colleagues with kindness and respect."
"With this lawsuit concluded, we look forward to identifying opportunities to work together with Ms. Carano in the near future," the spokesperson added.
No details on the settlement were provided.
Carano, in a post on Musk's social media platform X, called the resolution "the best outcome for all parties involved."
"I am humbled and grateful to God for his love and grace in this outcome," Carano said. She also thanked Musk "for backing my case and asking for nothing in return."
Carano played warrior Cara Dune in the Star Wars series that became a hit on Disney+ when it debuted in 2019. Disney fired Carano from the show after a series of social media posts.
"Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers but by their neighbors … even by children," Carano wrote on Instagram, according to a Variety report at the time.
Carano also came under fire for posts on Twitter (now X) in which she derided mask-wearing during the COVID-19 pandemic and echoed false claims of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election.
Her posts were widely criticized online and spurred a trending #FireGinaCarano hashtag.
On Thursday, Carano said she was excited to "move onto the next chapter."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside the style legacy of fashion magnate and former Ontario lieutenant-governor Hilary Weston
Inside the style legacy of fashion magnate and former Ontario lieutenant-governor Hilary Weston

Globe and Mail

time11 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Inside the style legacy of fashion magnate and former Ontario lieutenant-governor Hilary Weston

There are many examples of the grace and elegance that Hilary Weston displayed in her years as a fashion model, Holt Renfrew executive and lieutenant-governor of Ontario. But one that stands out to her friend and colleague Mario Manza, divisional vice president of VIP services at Holt Renfrew, happened when the two got a flat tire on New York's Fifth Avenue in 2005. 'The driver, a gentleman who was a little on the older side and had a leg problem, was slowly getting out of the car and trying to make his way to open the door for Ms. Weston. Drivers were honking their horns and yelling obscenities, so I got out of the car and was greeted with equally colourful language, and the horns were getting louder and louder. Then the honourable Hilary Weston, dressed in a floral Oscar de la Renta dress, got out, looked at them, smiled and gave a royal wave. Well, the horns stopped and people started waving back.' The story says so much about Weston, who passed away at age 83 in England on Aug. 2. She was calm, cool, collected and, of course, always perfectly clad. She was the first Canadian to land a spot in Vanity Fair's The International Best-Dressed Hall of Fame and was an asset after her husband, W. Galen Weston, purchased Holt Renfrew in 1986. Designers were charmed by her fashion savvy, which helped the retailer score exclusive lines and launches. Holt Renfrew was the first to carry many hot international brands, such as Jo Malone, in Canada. Philanthropist and former Ontario lieutenant-governor Hilary Weston dies at 83 I remember Hilary Weston Weston counted Oscar de la Renta, Carolina Herrera, Karl Lagerfeld, Victoria Beckham and Pharrell Williams among her fashion friends, according to Manza. 'Sarah Burton and Alexander McQueen would drop everything to answer the phone when she called,' he says. Weston wore McQueen to three major life events: son Galen Jr.'s 2005 engagement party in Toronto, daughter Alannah's wedding in 2007 and her husband's 75th birthday party in 2009, the latter two taking place at Fort Belvedere, the former home of King Edward VIII, which the Westons lease from the British Crown. 'Hilary's influence was profound, from eyeing the next big designer ahead of the pack to sharing her favourite pieces for our private label collection,' says Bonnie Brooks, who held various roles at Holt Renfrew, including executive vice president, from 1980 to 1991. 'And because she was also a customer, she brought a perspective on service that would influence me throughout my career.' At Ms. Weston's suggestion, Holt Renfrew hired Krystyne Griffin, former president of Yves Saint Laurent Rive Gauche in Canada, who spearheaded designer outreach. 'In a few short years we opened Armani, Yves Saint Laurent, Chanel, Dior and Louis Vuitton shops with their own environments inside the stores — a first in Canada,' Brooks says. Weston herself told me in a 1995 interview for The Toronto Star how proud she was that she had pushed to bring in American labels such as Donna Karan and Calvin Klein. 'We've become headquarters for those designers, and it's a huge business,' she said at the time. 'My mother was part of all the big creative moves we made,' says Alannah Weston Cochrane, former creative director of Selfridges and former chair of Selfridges Group. 'We'd work for months on a concept, and she was always able to spot the one thing that we hadn't quite nailed.' For major flagship events, like Holt Renfrew's $4.5-million Viva Italia celebration of Italian culture and style in 2002 that was attended by members of the Etro, Pucci, Ferragamo and Bottega Veneta families, Weston weighed in on the guest list, party flow and press opportunities. For smaller luncheons and dinners, Manza ran every tablescape detail by her. 'Paying homage to the customers gave her great joy. She wanted each one to walk away feeling that they had experienced something wonderful and magical, so they knew they were appreciated and valued. She created that magic at her homes, as well.' Air Mail founder and co-editor Graydon Carter recalled via e-mail a dinner the Westons gave for him in Toronto years ago. 'Honestly, it was the most remarkable setting I had ever seen. Things at their place were done to perfection. It was during the Toronto Film Festival, and the guests from Los Angeles were goggle-eyed at the whole set up.' Carter, who presided over The International Best-Dressed List and its Hall of Fame when he was editor of Vanity Fair, lauds Ms. Weston and her husband for bringing Canada to the global stage. 'Hilary and Galen were true Canadian internationalists and unofficial ambassadors. With their looks and style, they touted the best of our country to the world.' One of Weston's final public appearances was at a dinner at the Art Gallery of Ontario in November 2023. She was hosting the intimate event to welcome Carolina Cucinelli, daughter of Italian designer Brunello Cucinelli. Many of the guests honoured the brand by dressing in creamy silks and cashmeres. But the hostess? She strode in wearing a red satin Alex Perry gown with a giant heart cut out of its back. Bold and sexy, it was basically the opposite of Brunello Cucinelli. But it was also 'typical Mrs. Weston,' Manza says, in that she never felt she had to wear a designer's clothes when spending time with them. Though Weston was quick to embrace hot new designers, she wasn't a fashion victim, and she had the stature and poise to carry almost anything off. 'She loved adventurous styles with plunging necklines, side slits and back details,' Manza says. And she wasn't shy about showing skin, even into her '70s and '80s. 'She was proud of her model-like body.' Weston shifted to more conservative dress when she became lieutenant-governor in 1997. 'She would sit with homeless people, squeegee kids under the Gardiner [Expressway] and other marginalized people because she was very keen to know their lives,' Manza says. 'So her wardrobe was not flashy.' Brooks recalls the fun they had transforming Holt Renfrew from dowdy to daring. 'She charmed her way through any challenge with a unique sparkle, grace and a wicked wit,' Brooks says. Including flat tires.

Tom Hanks, who portrayed Jim Lovell in ‘Apollo 13,' pays tribute to the late astronaut
Tom Hanks, who portrayed Jim Lovell in ‘Apollo 13,' pays tribute to the late astronaut

CTV News

time21 hours ago

  • CTV News

Tom Hanks, who portrayed Jim Lovell in ‘Apollo 13,' pays tribute to the late astronaut

Tom Hanks is honoring the real-life hero that he once portrayed in a popular, Oscar-winning film. After the death of astronaut Jim Lovell was announced on Friday, Hanks shared a poignant social media post to his Instagram, writing, 'There are people who dare, who dream, and who lead others to places we would not go on our own.' 'Jim Lovell, who for a long while had gone farther into space and for longer than any other person of our planet, was that kind of guy,' Hanks added in the post. The actor portrayed Lovell in the 1995 Ron Howard-directed film 'Apollo 13,' which told the story of Lovell's failed lunar space mission which almost cost him and his crew their lives in 1970. Apollo 13 would have marked NASA's third successful crewed moon landing, but during the ill-fated mission – which carried Lovell as well as astronauts John Swigert Jr. and Fred Haise Jr. on board – an oxygen tank located on the crew's service module exploded when they were about 200,000 miles (322,000 kilometres) away from Earth. Lovell famously delivered the news to mission control, saying 'Houston, we've had a problem.' The exchange was later immortalized by Hanks in the 'Apollo 13' movie, which costarred Gary Sinise, Kevin Bacon, Ed Harris, Kathleen Quinlan and the late Bill Paxton. With the damage effectively taking out their power source and other life support supplies, the Apollo 13 crew had to abruptly abandon their trek to the lunar surface and use several engine burns to swing around the far side of the moon and put themselves on a course back toward Earth. The three-person crew made a high-stakes splashdown return in the South Pacific Ocean about three days after the tank explosion, marking the conclusion of what has come to be known as the 'successful failure' of the Apollo missions. 'His many voyages around Earth and on to so-very-close to the moon were not made for riches or celebrity, but because such challenges as those are what fuels the course of being alive – and who better than Jim Lovell to make those voyages,' Hanks wrote in his tribute on Friday. Lovell died at age 97 on Thursday in Lake Forest, Illinois, according to a NASA news release, CNN previously reported. The cause of death was not immediately clear. He made a brief cameo in the movie as the captain of the USS Iwo Jima, the Navy ship that recovered the Apollo 13 crew after splashdown. 'Apollo 13' was nominated for nine Oscars, including best picture, and won two, for best film editing and best sound. By Jackie Wattles, Ashley Strickland.

Why did the Nelk Boys talk to Benjamin Netanyahu?
Why did the Nelk Boys talk to Benjamin Netanyahu?

CBC

timea day ago

  • CBC

Why did the Nelk Boys talk to Benjamin Netanyahu?

Two members of the Nelk Boys, a famous group of Canadian-American YouTubers known for their prank videos, recently released an interview with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The interview aired on the Full Send podcast. Hosted by Kyle Forgeard and Aaron Steinberg, the conversation ran for more than an hour, and it has earned almost two million views as well as more than 36,000 comments on YouTube alone. In this podcast-exclusive episode of Commotion, political commentator and streamer Hasan Piker, as well as political journalists Justin Ling and Alyssa Mercante join host Elamin Abdelmahmoud to react to the interview, and unpack what it reveals about the current media landscape.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store