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Ted Cruz Blasted Over This Galactic Mishap In Tucker Carlson Swipe

Ted Cruz Blasted Over This Galactic Mishap In Tucker Carlson Swipe

Yahoo5 hours ago

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) was roasted out of the galaxy on Wednesday after he used the iconic 'Star Wars' franchise to jab at former Fox News host Tucker Carlson over his awkward interview moment.
Carlson — who has opposed U.S. involvement in Israel's war with Iran — asked Cruz for Iran's population and questioned him over why he couldn't cite such a figure of a country he seeks to 'topple.' Cruz hit back by remarking that he doesn't go around 'memorizing population tables.'
A clip of their clash drew more than 34 million views on X, formerly Twitter, leading Cruz to post a seemingly AI-generated image of Carlson asking Luke Skywalker for the population of the Death Star (a space station for the autocratic Galactic Empire and a superweapon that Skywalker destroys in the first 'Star Wars' film).
Eagle-eyed 'Star Wars' fans on X swiftly took down Cruz's swipe at Carlson by noting that Skywalker — in the 1996 book 'Shield of Lies' — added up the number of people killed on the Death Star (the book is, notably, no longer considered part of the canon).
Others shared a different take on the Carlson-Skywalker comic by sharing an AI-generated illustration of the former Fox News host asking Grand Moff Tarkin — the commander of the Death Star — for the population of Alderaan, a planet he destroys with the space station's laser in the first film.
Cruz has claimed to be a big 'Star Wars' fan, telling ABC News in 2015 that presidential candidates who are asked which character they'd be in the franchise 'ought to be eliminated right off the bat' if they named Skywalker.
He went on to tell the network that Han Solo was the 'coolest character in all of cinema' before sharing his impressions of Yoda and Darth Vader.
Check out how 'Star Wars' fans and others reacted to Cruz's post below.
Real Star Wars heads know that in Shield of Lies (1996) Luke reveals he has memorized the exact number of people he killed on the Death Star and their stations, and that the weight of it stays with him constantly. Loser. https://t.co/xvvyjmFaxg
— F♯A♯∞, fka ☕️ (@coopercooperco) June 18, 2025
I've fixed it… pic.twitter.com/cqHegKax57
— FAM (@The_Beast63) June 18, 2025
1. Iran is a foreign country with an ancient history, not a starship in a fictional movie.2. Pretty sure Luke Skywalker and the Resistance knew the population of the Death Star.3. The arrogance of comparing yourself to Luke when you're clearly part of the Empire…. sheesh. https://t.co/XiQkfkNjOk
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) June 18, 2025
The Death Star was a space station built by an authoritarian regime in Star Wars. Its destruction was portrayed as an act of rebellion against tyranny. Focusing solely on its population ignores the fact that it was a weapon of mass destruction used to annihilate planets. pic.twitter.com/vTGA81EE74
— David Leavitt 🎲🎮🧙♂️🌈 (@David_Leavitt) June 18, 2025
and another thing: im not mad. please dont put in the newspaper that i got mad. https://t.co/Pf82tPzBmx
— Jeet Heer (@HeerJeet) June 18, 2025
https://t.co/dDskTlcxyjpic.twitter.com/0OTeWaixro
— Sami Gold (@souljagoytellem) June 18, 2025
If 90 million civilians had lived on the Death Star, would that perhaps have been relevant to the morality of blowing it up? https://t.co/aUBMc6dzcY
— Ben Burgis (@BenBurgis) June 18, 2025
You can tell not knowing even basic facts about the country he wants us to intervene in really got under his skin by how his PR strategy around it is so fumbling and embarrassing https://t.co/57vYEUNcr4
— Andrés Pertierra (@ASPertierra) June 18, 2025
Someone didn't understand the movie https://t.co/2Sy0aG7NFg
— The Real Zim Shady (@zimranjacob) June 18, 2025
This guy won the U.S. National Debating Championship in 1992. What happened? https://t.co/XUYXhiuZ6g
— Marissa D. Barrera (@mdb2) June 18, 2025
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Twitch streamer Hasan Piker is pushing Gen Z boys to the extreme left with twisted views on Israel, 9/11
Twitch streamer Hasan Piker is pushing Gen Z boys to the extreme left with twisted views on Israel, 9/11

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Twitch streamer Hasan Piker is pushing Gen Z boys to the extreme left with twisted views on Israel, 9/11

The moral panic about Andrew Tate and his influence on young men has been massive — but what about the leftist, socialist and arguably antisemitic mega-streamer influencing millions of predominantly young male followers? Hasan Piker, known to his 2.9 million Twitch followers as HasanAbi, appeals to the same 'bro' demographic as stereotypical right-leaning manosphere influencers — popping nicotine pouches, gaming on livestream and hitting up the gym as well as gun ranges — but he sells a very different ideology. The 33-year-old New Jersey born streamer, who recently showed up at anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles in a bulletproof vest, has self-described as leftist, socialist and anti-capitalist. He holds enormous cultural sway with the Zoomers who flock to Twitch, a platform with more users in the 16- to 24-year-old demo than any other. Advertisement 8 Hasan Piker has more than 7 million followers across Twitch, X, Instagram, and YouTube. AP Parents should have their eye on Piker, who has told his 7.3 million followers across platforms — multiple times — that America 'deserved 9/11' and that Jews are 'inbred.' He is truly indefatigable and on Twitch for seven, eight, nine hours day, at least six days a week. As of June 18, Piker's only taken two days off since the month started, and streamed more than 10 hours on June 8. Advertisement Set up at his home monitor, the streamer flips through news clips and articles, from Al Jazeera to Fox News, and occasionally films himself gaming or giving dating advice. He will usually rack up more than a million views over the course of a stream. 8 Piker has said that America 'deserved 9/11' and that Jews are 'inbred.' Instagram/@hasandpiker Piker's stamina is matched only by that of his fans, who flood the comments at breakneck speed. 'May Allah awaken President Xi and allow him to see the evil doing of Israel and the United States,' one commenter said on a recent stream. Another chimed in when Piker showed a clip from Fox News: 'In a just world Fox News in its entirety would be lined up in the Hague for these lies and propaganda.' Advertisement Even after Piker logs off his hours-long video feed, the messages keep pouring in. In a recent livestream discussing Israel's conflict with Iran, he called Israel 'the giant baby nation with nuclear arms' and said its 'existence is a great shame and a serious stain.' 8 Hasan Piker suggested that the May Israeli Embassy shooting could have been a false flag operation. YouTube/HasanAbi Piker also suggested the May 21 Capital Jewish Museum shooting in DC, which left two young Israeli embassy staffers dead, was a 'false flag operation.' 'Every single thing that [accused shooter Elias Rodriguez] did in the aftermath of the shooting is so f–king crazy that it's like, you could not have designed a f–king incident like this,' he said on his livestream. Advertisement Major political figures on the left are clamoring to sit down with him. 8 Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez appeared on Piker's livestream in March. HasanAbi/YouTube Pike got both AOC and Bernie Sanders on camera for an interview together in March, during which he gifted Rep. Ocasio-Cortez a booklet on the pro-Palestinian solidarity movement in Japan. In a recent interview with NYC democratic socialist mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, the pair discussed government-run housing and supermarkets, free public transport and criminal justice reform. 'I want Austrian style, Red Vienna, 65% of the entire city is just peppered with government housing, that's what I want,' Piker said as they bonded over donuts. 8 Piker interviewed Zohran Mamdani, NYC's democratic socialist mayoral candidate. HasanAbi/YouTube 'Let's talk about the unheard minority, the marginalized, people of wealth — POW — I feel like they're getting a hard bargain here with you,' Piker joked. 'Meritocracy, obviously real, Elon Musk worked the smartest and the hardest. Why do you hate the successful, wealthy people?' Meanwhile, Piker drives a $200,000 Porsche Taycan and lives in a nearly $3 million, 3,800 square foot West Hollywood home. Advertisement He was launched into popular consciousness via a strange and somewhat eroticized New York Times profile in April, with the headline 'A Progressive Mind in a MAGA Body.' 8 Piker owns an airsoft gun and occasionally posts photos from gun ranges. Instagram/@hasandpiker 'Mr. Piker's success on camera, in some part, has been aided by the fact that he is, by conventional standards, a very handsome man,' the profile fawned. 'He is 6 feet 4 inches tall and built like a professional athlete, with a square jaw, a beard and a head of thick dark hair.' While parents should laugh off the drooling, they'd be remiss to dismiss Piker's influence on young men who see him as aspirational. Advertisement He's a different kind of male role model than popular-right wing influencers — the sort who tells reporters at pro-Palestine rallies that 'a strong man protects those who can't protect themselves' and whose fans search desperately for a workout routine to achieve his physique. 8 Young male followers praise Piker (right) for his physique, which has inspired some to seek out his workout routine. @hasandpiker/Instagram There's a simplistic narrative that young men are moving to the right politically while young women are going to the left. While this might be more true of Gen Z than with prior generations, the fact of the matter is, kids are liable to go down any number of online rabbit holes. I know this as a Zoomer who grew up with YouTube and, as a tween and young teen, was led to the right and to the left at various times by algorithmic feedback loops. Piker's socialism isn't exactly fringe in Gen Z. A 2022 Pew poll found more 18- to 29-year-olds had a positive view of socialism (44%) than capitalism (40%), and a 2024 YouGov survey found 25% of that same age group had a positive view of communism. Advertisement 8 Piker streams up to 10 hours a day, at least six days a week, on Twitch. Instagram/@hasandpiker It's easier today than ever for a kid who's learning about the world to attach to a couple online voices — whether Andrew Tate or Hasan Piker — as portals to the outside world they're desperate to make sense of. While the mainstream media has its panties in a bunch over influencers turning young men conservative, they're writing fawning puff pieces about the radical left-wing streamers pushing youth to the opposite extreme. We should be equally concerned about kids getting radicalized in any direction — and all play our part in modeling skepticism, critical thinking and media literacy for a generation growing up in the internet age.

‘That's not kooky' major Trump ally breaks with president on former news host
‘That's not kooky' major Trump ally breaks with president on former news host

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘That's not kooky' major Trump ally breaks with president on former news host

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., is known for her outspoken support for President Donald Trump. The two leaders of the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement, however, have very different opinions when it comes to former Fox News host Tucker Carlson. Carlson criticized Trump in the June 13 edition of his online newsletter, saying the president was 'complicit' in Israel's attack on Iran that took place that week, according to The Hill. The former anchor also accused 'warmongers' of urging Trump to 'direct U.S. military involvement in a war,' The Hill reported. On June 16, a reporter asked Trump about Carlson's comments. 'I don't know what Tucker Carlson is saying,' Trump said in response. 'Let him go get a television network and say it so that people listen.' Later that day, Trump posted on Truth Social: 'Somebody please explain to kooky Tucker Carlson that IRAN CAN NEVER HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON.' On the social media website X, Greene wrote a post in defense of Carlson, saying that he is one of her 'favorite people.' 'He unapologetically believes the same things I do,' Greene wrote. 'That if we don't fight for our own country and our own people then we will no longer have a country for our children and our grandchildren.' Greene also criticized 'foreign wars, intervention and regime change,' saying it would kill innocent people and would 'lead to our destruction.' 'That's not kooky,' Greene wrote in the post, a possible response to Trump's social media post. Greene's X profile has other posts where she criticizes those supporting American involvement in the conflict between Israel and Iran. Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Monday he is looking for the conflict between Israel and Iran to end with Tehran completely giving up on nuclear weapons, according to Politico. 'A complete give-up, it's possible,' Trump said, adding that he did not want to see a ceasefire but 'a real end' to the conflict, Politico reported. New England pols move to block Trump from attacking Iran without permission from Congress Trump blasts one of his key cabinet members: 'I don't care what she said' G7 countries are 'not big fans' of Donald Trump, new poll says Trump or AOC? Who do Americans prefer? A new poll tells the tale Trump admin asks court to rule against Harvard without a trial Read the original article on MassLive.

Jelly Roll's wild moment inspired Christian singer to set boundaries
Jelly Roll's wild moment inspired Christian singer to set boundaries

Fox News

time2 hours ago

  • Fox News

Jelly Roll's wild moment inspired Christian singer to set boundaries

Brandon Lake's collaboration with Jelly Roll on his new album, "King of Hearts," inspired him to set more boundaries in his own life. "He had told me how he threw his phone in the river after his Bridgestone show in Nashville. I was like, 'Tell me more about that,'" Lake told Fox News Digital. "He's like, 'I'm calling you from a flip phone right now.' And literally, because of that, I got a new phone. It's not a flip phone, but I needed to get a new number. I needed it to kind of focus in on my circle of people." Jelly Roll went viral last December when he threw his phone into a river, admitting that he felt overwhelmed at the time about all the calls and texts he was getting. Lake told Fox News Digital that too many people had access to his old number as he got more successful. "And while I would love to be friends with everyone… the bigger things have gotten, the smaller I've had to go," he explained. "And really make sure I have the right people around," adding that he's started setting boundaries. He released his new album "King of Hearts" this month. "I've been looking forward to this day for a long time," he said of the album release. "Funny enough, I got this tattoo a while back on my finger, King of Hearts, and just as like a reminder. More than focusing on the products and the things that I'm making, that I exist to minister to people, to minister God, but also like, ministry's about people, I'm here to reach people, love on people, serve people, and I wanna be a king of hearts, and shepherd people well, no matter what I'm doing." While Lake loves singing about his faith, there's one thing he says he wouldn't sing about when asked. WATCH: Brandon Lake was inspired by Jelly Roll throwing his phone in a river to set his own boundaries "I wouldn't sing about drugs or, you know… I'm sure there's plenty of things. I just can't really think. I do know what I want to sing about and that's my faith, that's what my family does. I wanna sing about things that have changed my life and I know that can change other people's lives." Lake said Jelly Roll first heard his new song "Hard Fought Hallelujah" on TikTok before he decided to collaborate with him on it. He said when he first wrote the song he wasn't sure if "the world would hear it." "But when you live with it for a while, and you show a few friends, the way they respond to it kinda usually tells you a lot, and we knew it was special," he continued. "And putting it out, I'll tell you, I would never would have imagined that Jelly Roll would have said yes. And the coolest part of the story is that he heard that song on TikTok. Before I even asked him to jump on it and fell in love with the song, was waiting for it to come out." By the time he reached out to ask Jelly Roll if he'd want to record it with him "because I just felt like the lyrics would really resonate with his story, he was like, 'Oh, I know what song this is. I'm definitely, I would love to be a part of it.' And then it's just produced an amazing friendship, and he's like a brother to me now." He and Jelly Roll have bonded over being husbands and fathers, and he said the country star has given him lots of encouragement in his career. Lake said he began to have his first mental health struggles a few years ago after he finished his first tour. He said his family thought they were doing the right thing, heading straight for a family vacation to Disney World, but he hadn't had time to decompress after the tour, and he suffered his first panic attack. "Well, a lot of people, Disney World's like heaven. To me, it was hell on earth at that moment in my life," he said. "I didn't have enough time to just like process, right? Everything, all my dreams were coming true. I just wrote with all my heroes. Just came home from my first tour and I just crashed. And one thing I had to learn was just very physically, I had adrenaline fatigue. And when you are in adrenaline fatigue, your emotional management system is under attack. Even your immune system is under attack. You can get sick, all of that." WATCH: Brandon Lake explains inspiration behind his new 'King of Hearts' album He said he began to have scary thoughts and every insecurity was amplified. "I isolated myself instead of running to community and running to my wife and saying, 'Hey, I'm having some wild thoughts,'" he explained. "And I went into a full-blown panic attack, and it was just like the voice of the enemy was so overwhelming. Every lie and insecurity was so overwhelming." He added, "I had a friend send me a voice memo of him praying over me because I was too prideful to pick up the phone. I thought, I'm gonna fix this myself. And when he prayed over me and I listened to it, I broke. I broke. In a great way." Lake finally told his wife about what he'd been struggling with, "and then I kind of began my journey, met with, started going to counseling and just realizing the toll, that the pace of life I was in, like what it was having on me, negatively. And that, I needed to find tools to stay in a healthy place." Since then, Lake said he's hired a health and performance coach who helps him "spiritually, emotionally, physically." He's changed his diet, and he wears an aura ring to monitor his sleep and HRV. "Spiritually speaking, though, I was trying to fill this void and chase another excitement," he explained. "And when I came home and I didn't have another thing to be excited about, I would try to fill it with even good things, like time with my wife and other things." He said it got to the point where he was so "needy" that his wife told him "'Babe, I cannot fill. I can't be for you what you need.' And so my counselor said one of the most elementary but helpful things. And he said, 'Brandon, you need to relearn how to go to God first and most.' First and most, and I wasn't taking these things to God, and my identity was wrapped up in the things I was doing over who he's called me to be." He said living on a farm has also been therapeutic. "Even moving out to the country has been very healing, and I needed to do something opposite of tour and the big platform," the Christian worship singer explained. "I need to get my hands dirty. I bought a tractor. I cut the grass. I moved some dirt, and it's been very healing." He added, "We've got cows. We have many donkeys. Tomorrow — we had a storm come through — so tomorrow, I will go from New York City to back home in the sticks outside of Charleston, South Carolina, and we had a storm come through, and a bunch of trees fell. So, I will be chainsawing some trees and making firewood and doing just very normal, yeah, just some dirty work." Lake said that will "do more for my heart and my head than a lot of things out there. And it's just crazy how simple. I mean, there's doctors prescribing people with depression time in the woods instead of pills, like time in nature. And I think God made it that way for a reason, made us that way, for reasons where it's, man, just being by the creek will revive you." "No one has just encouraged me more than him and just being like, 'Dude, you've got what it's, what it takes.' And I've stepped on some really scary stages in the past few months, and he's just believed in me every step of the way. And it's just been, it's been incredible." "King of Hearts" is out now.

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