Tag Archives: streep

Kody Brown: This is Why I Accept My Gay Daughter

As has been well documented over the past several weeks, all is not calm, cool or even collected within the Sister Wives universe. There’s a whole lot of in-fighting taking place between the Browns. There was that whole catfishing scandal surrounding Meri, which prompted rumors that she would split from Kody … … which was followed by talk that Kody ad Robyn may be done for good. But while the relationship between Kody and his four better halves may have seen better days, there’s one connection in this reality star’s life that is as strong as ever: The bond between Kody and daughter Mariah. Yes, even in the face of a bombshell dropped by Mariah on last week’s installment of Sister Wives. As you can see below when you watch Sister Wives online , Mariah came out to her family as gay: Watch Sister Wives Season 11 Episode 6 Online Soon afterwards, Mariah took to Twitter and thanked a majority of her fans and followers. “wow okay y’all making me cry with your support. thank you thank you thank you thank you,” she Tweeted last Monday. But we still weren’t sure how Mariah’s famous family members were going to react. On last night’s episode, Kody admitted that he was “in a state of shock processing” everything that Mariah said about her sexuality, which included the following admission: “It’s always been there – it’s always been something I pushed away because I was scared. I think my biggest fear has always been to be gay. “So I didn’t let myself accept it because it was wrong – I was told [by members of the church] that it was wrong and that I would be a bad person.” Said Kody at one point: “We’re not happy Mariah’s gay; we’re happy Mariah knows herself.” He then went into more detail on Twitter. “A surprise to me. Required some deep thought,” Kody wrote of his reaction to the news. “After checking to see if she was sure, I just needed her to know she was safe.” The reality star added that The Big Man Upstairs made acceptance a lot easier. “God has prepared my heart and mind for 15 years. Now @mariahlian can feel safe being openly gay with our family.” Later on in the evening, Kody credited Charles Dickens for helping to open his mind, while also saying it’s sad that some of his “gay friends lose their religion.” He supposedly told one to start his own “church fellowship.” Say what you want about Kody Brown (we certainly have) and his unusual family dynamic. But he appears to have struggled with his daughter’s sexuality, eventually realizing that she’s happy with who she is and that’s all that matters. So some credit must be given to Brown for arriving at that conclusion. Click on the video below to view this episode in its entirety and see how all the relatives react to Mariah’s emotional confession: Watch Sister Wives Season 11 Episode 7 Online

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Kody Brown: This is Why I Accept My Gay Daughter

Meryl Streep: Is She Overrated?

Meryl Streep did not win a Golden Globe Award for her performance in Florence Foster Jenkins on Sunday night. And yet the veteran actress still managed to make the most memorable speech of the night. By a long shot. As you very likely heard by now, Streep accepted the Cecil B. DeMille during the ceremony, using her platform to call out Donald Trump for his frequent bullying and his disrespectful behavior. (Technically, Streep did not actually call Trump out; she never uttered his name.) After giving props to Hollywood for its diversity, and making a crack about how Trump wants to “kick out” foreigners, Streep arrived at the crux of her speech. She focused on the time in 2015 when Trump mocked a disabled reporter named Serge F. Kovaleski and told the crowd: “This instinct to humiliate when it’s modeled by someone in the public platform by someone powerful, it filters down into everybody’s life because it kind of gives permission for other people to do the same thing…  “Disrespect invites disrespect. Violence incites violence.” Streep was given a rousing ovation by all in attendance, with many in Hollywood jumping on Twitter to sing her praises.   Meryl Streep Attacks Donald Trump at Golden Globes (And Trump Responds!) “We will need a lot of people as clear and brave as Meryl Streep if we are to fight the corruption, bad ideas and lies of Donald Trump,” wrote Judd Apatow. “The definition of class,” wrote Diane Kruger. But Trump had a different viewpoint, as you might expect. Aside from pointing out that Streep was a Hillary Clinton “lover” and a “liberal movie [person],” Trump went on to slam the star as “overrated,” a distinction he has previously used for Megyn Kelly, Jon Stewart and the Broadway production Hamilton. Streep, of course, has been nominated for 19 Academy Awards over the course of her career. But she’s only won three times. Overall, Streep has been up for 335 awards, yet has only taken home 164 trophies. That means she wins fewer than half of the times she’s nominated. And people want to call her The Greatest Actress of Her Generation?!? Some might say that these numbers lend credence to Trump’s argument. Other people (named Rachel Dratch) may say “anyone who calls #Meryl “overrated” is unfit to serve.” Streep’s resume is suddenly a topic of conversation over the Internet… and we want you hear from YOU! Are you on Team Meryl? Or Team Trump? Do you think Streep should have used the Golden Globe Awards stage as a soapbox? Or should she have just stuck to entertainment? And, most urgently, do you think Meryl Streep is overrated? WEIGH IN NOW: YES, finally someone said it! No, she’s, like, a goddess! Who is Meryl Streep? View Poll »

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Meryl Streep: Is She Overrated?

Meryl Streep’s Creepy Clones of the Day

Meryl Streep is celebrated as one of the most talented actresses out there, and I guess based on her lack of sex appeal alone, she’d have to be a pretty amazing actress to have the career that she’s had while looking the way she does. That’s not to say she’s ugly, or some kind of acting monster, it’s just to say that her look isn’t one I’d ever masturbate to…not in the 70s and not today…and if I was a casting director in the 70s when she happened, I would have required the kind of blowjob that leaves my testicles sticking out of my urethra to give her her first break… All this to say, she’s got a bunch of clones that I guess she made in her lab in the pool house of her mansion…and this is what they look like…the Next generation of Streep, being introduced to the world..in whatever this is a campaign for…and it’s creeping me out. The post Meryl Streep’s Creepy Clones of the Day appeared first on DrunkenStepfather .

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Meryl Streep’s Creepy Clones of the Day

Top 10 Simpsons Guest Stars

Throughout it’s long and storied history, The Simpsons has had some of the biggest names in all of entertainment swing by and do a voice. With the show currently in its 26th season, we thought we’d take a look back at some of our favorites, all of whom have been nude on film at least once in their career. From one-time guests like Meryl Streep and Lucy Lawless to recurring guests like Beverly D’Angelo and Jane Kaczmarek , this week’s Top 10 will make every day feel like Whacking Day! 10 Jane Kaczmarek in Wildly Available Voiced Judge Constance Harm in “The Parent Rap” 9 Meryl Streep in Silkwood Voiced Jessica Lovejoy in “Bart’s Girlfriend” 8 Michelle Pfeiffer in Into the Night Voiced Mindy Simmons in “The Last Temptation of Homer” 7 Gillian Anderson in Closure Voiced Dana Scully in “The Springfield Files” 6 Helen Hunt in The Waterdance Voiced Renee in “Dumbbell Indemnity” 5 Kathleen Turner Voice Stacy Lovell in “Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy” 4 Winona Ryder in Sex and Death 101 Voiced Allison Taylor in “Lisa’s Rival” 3 Beverly D’Angelo in Vacation Voiced Lurleen Lumpkin in “Colonel Homer” 2 Lucy Lawless in Spartacus: Gods of the Arena Voiced Xena Warrior Princess in “Treehouse of Horror X” 1 Drew Barrymore in Doppelganger: The Evil Within Voiced Sophie in “Insane Clown Poppy”

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Top 10 Simpsons Guest Stars

Meryl Streep Is Learning Guitar, Like We Needed Another Reason To Love Her

Meryl Streep is learning to play guitar in order to star in Diablo Cody’s latest film, ‘Ricki and the Flash.’ As if we needed another reason to be obsessed with her.

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Meryl Streep Is Learning Guitar, Like We Needed Another Reason To Love Her

Meryl Streep Wins Best Actress For ‘The Iron Lady’

Legendary actress wins third Oscar in upset victory over front-runner Viola Davis By John Mitchell Meryl Streep wins at the 84th annual Academy Awards Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images In a surprise that clearly shocked even her, acting legend Meryl Streep won the Best Actress Academy Award on Sunday (February 26) for her performance as Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady.” It’s Streep’s third Oscar; she won in 1979 for her supporting turn in “Kramer vs. Kramer” and for Best Actress in 1983 for “Sophie’s Choice.” Her nomination for “The Iron Lady” was her 17th, the most of any actor in film history. She’s received 13 nominations in the 29 years since her last win. “When they called my name, I had this feeling I could hear half of America going, ‘Oh no, come on. Her? Again?’ But, whatever,” Streep joked from the podium. In the lead-up to the awards, the race seemed to be a two-way contest between Golden Globe winner Streep and Davis, who took home the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actress. But Davis was easily the front-runner. Her film, “The Help,” was by far the most successful of all the films nominated in the Best Actress category, and she was the only contender whose film was also nominated for Best Picture. Streep even embraced her former co-star Davis on her way to the podium. The two were both nominated — Streep for Best Actress and Davis for Supporting Actress — for their turns in 2008’s “Doubt.” “First, I’m going to thank Don, because when you thank your husband at the end of the speech, they play him out with the music, and I want him to know that everything I value most in our lives, you’ve given me,” a teary-eyed Streep said. She also lavished praise on longtime friend and makeup artist Roy Helland, whom she worked with on her very first play when she moved to New York City to be an actress in the 1970s. They first worked together on the big screen in “Sophie’s Choice” and have since collaborated on “every single movie in between.” Helland scored his first Oscar for his work on “The Iron Lady.” Colin Firth, last year’s Best Actor winner for “The King’s Speech” and Streep’s co-star in the box-office hit “Mama Mia!,” presented the actress with the award. The actress dedicated much of her speech to her many colleagues in the room. “I really understand I’ll never be up here again,” Streep said. “I really want to thank all my colleagues, all my friends. I look out here and, you know, I see my life before my eyes. My old friends, my new friends. And really, this is such a great honor, but the thing that counts the most with me is the friendships and the love and the sheer joy we have shared making movies together, my friends. Thank you, all of you, departed and here, for this inexplicably wonderful career.” The MTV Movies team has the 2012 Oscars covered! Keep it locked at MTV.com all night and beyond for updates on the night’s big winners and the best red-carpet fashion . Join the live conversation by tweeting @MTVNews with the hashtag #Oscars. Related Videos Oscars 2012: Show Highlights Related Photos Oscars 2012: Winners Oscars 2012: The Main Show Oscars 2012: Parties

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Meryl Streep Wins Best Actress For ‘The Iron Lady’

REVIEW: Bad Mummy! The Iron Lady Oversimplifies — and Sucks Up To — Margaret Thatcher

Phyllida Lloyd and Meryl Streep work a puny bit of flim-flammery in The Iron Lady : They turn Margaret Thatcher into a folk hero, a woman who, poor lamb, had to make sacrifices in her personal life in exchange for political power. This is a watery, artfully evasive picture, anchored by a stupendous feat of mimicry. Some people call that acting. In The Iron Lady , Streep plays Margaret Thatcher, and boy, does she play her: It’s not just the crafty prosthetics, the careful swooping of the powdery-no-color hair, the meticulously chosen jacket-and-skirt ensembles that conjure the chilly specter of the seemingly indestructible former Prime Minister of Great Britain. Everything Streep does — her strutting-pigeon walk, the way she purses her lips just so after making a particularly harsh pronouncement in the presence of her cabinet — suggests many hours’ worth of vocal exercises and scholarly dissection of video footage. Streep has obviously studied the hell out of Margaret Thatcher, but that isn’t the same as getting to the rotten core of her. The performance is neither sympathetic nor damning — it’s simply meticulous and unblinking, and it reads more as a failure of nerve than as an act of bravery. Yet Streep’s performance doesn’t exist inside a bubble, and it’s of a piece with the picture’s conception of Thatcher as a not-bad lady who actually had some good points, if you squint really hard. The Iron Lady focuses more on Thatcher’s personal and interior life, only brushing against her politics. It’s as if Lloyd and screenwriter Abi Morgan don’t want any of those old nasties — Thatcher’s crackdown on the miners’ strike of the mid-1980s, resulting in thousands of lost jobs; the institution of the poll tax; the insidious gutting of the National Health Service, at the hands of the woman who famously proclaimed “There is no society” — to intrude on their portrait of Thatcher as just a plain old grocer’s daughter with deep-rooted class insecurities and the kind of ambition that makes the male species cringe. Thatcher did, of course, make her male colleagues cringe, but The Iron Lady suggests that they cringed only because she was a threatening female, and not because they found her views politically and morally specious. It’s a bit of doublespeak that comes in handy when you’re making a picture about all that a woman must give up when she when she craves power and authority in a man’s world. Lloyd, Morgan and Streep are obsessed with those sacrifices, even though they can’t prove how authentic they might be in Thatcher’s actual brain: The picture opens, and continually returns to, Thatcher’s later, post-Prime-Minister years, as she’s toddling around at home in her housecoat and chit-chatting with her husband, Denis (played by the nearly always wonderful Jim Broadbent, who continues his track record here). She informs Denis that milk has gone up to 49p a pint — imagine! And nixes his just-for-fun idea of donning a silk turban with a suit for normal daywear. But it turns out that Denis no longer exists: He has died, and while Margaret accepts it logically, she can’t accept it emotionally. When her doctor, during a routine examination, asks her if she’s had any hallucinations recently, Streep’s Margaret flinches ever so slightly before responding, “No.” So you see, Margaret Thatcher, powerful as she was, was capable of being loved and, get this, actually loving . To a point: The story also flashes back to Thatcher’s younger days (as a teenager and young woman, she’s played by Alexandra Roach), driving away in her car to her new MP job as her two children, twins, run after the car, crying, “Mummy, don’t go!” Still, she puts the pedal to the metal — bad mummy! But that’s what you need to do if you want to run a country. The mid-period stuff in The Iron Lady focuses on Thatcher’s rise to power — by this time, she’s played by Streep, not yet obscured by age makeup, and addressing her fellow MPs in a series of prim, silly hats. When Thatcher loses the hats — as coached by her colleagues and mentors Gordon Reece (Roger Allam) and Airey Neave (Nicholas Farrell), the latter of whom would shortly thereafter be killed by an IRA bomb — she wins the general election. From there, she proceeds to choke off the power of the trade unions, stoke unemployment and institute tax policies designed to goad the poor into pulling themselves up by their bootstraps. But you don’t really see much of that in The Iron Lady , other than some cursory handwaving at the vague notion of lost jobs and montages made up of old riot footage. What you do see is Thatcher as channeled by Streep, being a tough old bird of a human being, a woman who, upon her engagement to Denis, announced, “I can’t die washing up a teacup!” Margaret Thatcher — at that point Margaret Roberts — was destined for greater things, and she got them. But Lloyd and Morgan — as well as Streep — are more fixated on the personal price Thatcher had to pay than they are on the damage she ultimately wrought. The picture reeks of sexist special pleading. The overarching tone is “Just look at what this woman had to overcome!” Lloyd might say in her defense that she wanted to make a personal portrait of Thatcher, not a political one. Clint Eastwood might say the same thing of his recent J. Edgar, which focuses more on J. Edgar Hoover’s closeted personal life and unhappiness than on the lives he destroyed in the name of patriotism. But when you’re dealing with figures whose decisions and policies have been so destructive, is it even possible to separate the personal from the political? And if it’s possible, is it advisable? The Iron Lady is a handsome-looking picture (the DP is Elliot Davis) with a handsome-looking star. Streep’s Thatcher, with those trilling, fruity vowels, that glint of superiority in her eye, is impeccable. But to what end? Streep gives us no real clues into Thatcher’s inner life — not that we necessarily want them. This is an oversimplified portrait disguised as a complex one. Nowhere in the movie is it mentioned, to suggest just one example, that Thatcher referred to those striking miners — people who were simply trying to make a living and provide for their families — as “the enemy within.” Some of us wonder, still, how Margaret Thatcher can continue to live with herself. Watching Meryl Streep walk around so ably in Thatcher’s skin isn’t enlightening; it’s more like a living nightmare.

Hollywood Ink: Meryl Streep Has Her Eye on Margaret Thatcher

Poll: Who Should Sandy Smooch at MTV Awards?

Now that MTV’s confirmed Sandra Bullock is making her first postscandal awards-show appearance, how fabulous it is we had it first! And to celebrate, we have a really sexy…

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Poll: Who Should Sandy Smooch at MTV Awards?

Meryl Streep — And the Oscar Goes to …

Filed under: Awards/Awards Shows Meryl Streep has one sure-fire Academy Awards prediction for tonight. HINT: It’s not her. … Permalink

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Meryl Streep — And the Oscar Goes to …