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Jeff Daniels chastises Trump voters: ‘I hope you're losing tons of money'
Jeff Daniels chastises Trump voters: ‘I hope you're losing tons of money'

The Guardian

time25-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Jeff Daniels chastises Trump voters: ‘I hope you're losing tons of money'

The actor Jeff Daniels has said he hopes those who voted for Donald Trump's second term in the White House lose money as a consequence. Speaking to MSNBC's The Best People With Nicolle Wallace podcast, Daniels addressed the president's supporters, saying: 'I hope you're losing tons of money, those of you who thought this would be OK. My question is, 'What are you guys going to do about it?'' Daniels continued by saying he believed Trump's slate of tariffs would cost him supporters. ''Wait a minute, the grocery bill is what? $180 more? I can't get that car that we have to have unless I pay another $8,000. What? Who do I blame for that? Who do I see about that?' One person. 'At the end of the day it would be about just the price of eggs, did it go up or down, because that's what he told me he was going to lower the price of eggs or my grocery bill,' Daniels continued, before describing the president as a 'snake-oil salesman.' Daniels said he had been surprised by the pace of change since Trump took office again in January. 'We've lost decency, we've lost civility, we've lost respect for the rule of law – lost it,' he said. 'We have normalised verbal abuse on the internet. We've normalised bullying; much as the woke generation tried to, you know, change that, it's back … 'I mean, nobody has great things to say about politicians. They never have. Go back to Mark Twain. But ideally, we're supposed to elect the best of us. Not the worst of us. He's everything that's wrong with not just America but with being a human being.' Daniels's most recent projects were TV series American Rust and A Man in Full. He rose to fame with roles in Ragtime, Terms of Endearment and Heartburn, before finding international acclaim in The Purple Rose of Cairo in 1985. Other films include Something Wild, The Squid and the Whale, Speed, Dumb and Dumber and Steve Jobs. He plays Ronald Reagan opposite Jared Harris as Mikhail Gorbachev in a forthcoming take on the 1986 Reykjavik Summit.

The big screen or the streaming screen? Which outlet offers more to the Pittsburgh film industry?
The big screen or the streaming screen? Which outlet offers more to the Pittsburgh film industry?

CBS News

time16-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CBS News

The big screen or the streaming screen? Which outlet offers more to the Pittsburgh film industry?

Pop quiz: What was the last movie you saw in the theater? Now, what was the last movie you streamed or TV show you watched multiple episodes of on a streaming service? It was probably easier to answer the second question than it was the first, right? Certainly, that has had an impact on the film industry, including here in Pittsburgh. While the pandemic did a number on the movie industry and it's still struggling to recover, streaming entertainment took off and is still climbing. When The Dark Knight Rises hit the big screen, we swelled with Pittsburgh pride at the very obvious local scenes. "We're not picky, we just want the work," said Dawn Keezer, the Executive Director of the Pittsburgh Film Office. The local film workers are getting that work, while the streaming screen might be smaller, Pittsburgh is appearing on Watson on CBS, and The Pitt with Noah Wyle on Max. "All those scenes where you see when they're sitting in the ER, that's all modeled after [Allegheny General Hospital]," Keezer said. "They love pretending they're here, we just really wish they were here." Both Watson and The Pitt shot their exterior shots in town for about four days each, but the rest is studio work elsewhere. "The cost differential between filming Watson where it was written, in Pittsburgh, or Vancouver, Canada, was $16 million," Keezer explained. "So they went to Canada." Since movie theater attendance is half of what it was pre-pandemic, streaming shows is now huge and a bigger source of entertainment for many, but since it's now multiple episodes in a season rather than a single movie, it means more work. "Longer work, look at Mayor of Kingstown, they're here for about six months out of every year," Keezer said. "Now, we're in the process of completing season four with hopes for season five." American Rust has also made return visits, but there is still a desire for the 12-week stays of a major film. "I don't think movies are dead," Keezer declared. "I don't think theaters are dead. I think people are still looking for forms of entertainment. It's a matter of creating the content that they actually want to see." Keezer pointed out that it's especially challenging for families with younger children to find something in the theaters, and with the exception of the Minecraft Movie , even teenagers like her son have no desire to go see a movie; they'd rather watch YouTube or one of the other streaming outlets. Now, all of that said, even with the desire for the return of a big movie to Pittsburgh, the streaming services offer workers the chance to move up in the crew and establish connections. When it comes to movies, it's like starting from scratch each time.

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