Racists Hate ‘Get Out’ Get Out is in theaters and is killing it in the box office, becoming the highest grossing movie of the weekend. The movie, about what happens when a black guy goes to visit his white girlfriend’s family. The movie is real, hilarious and full of microaggressions. Of course, when a successful movie like this happens, people get aaaaaangry. Them: Get Out is racist and anti-white. Whoever wrote this hates white people! Jordan Peele: My mother and wife are white women. pic.twitter.com/6sATLrKjSe — Nev Patel (@unicorninkk) February 26, 2017 VERY ANGRY. You know a movie is doing the right thing when people get this big mad over it. And you know how we do…we laugh at these big mad people because that’s what we do. Let’s laugh and enjoy.
This Is Us is back! Following a hiatus, the beloved NBC drama returned with This Is Us Season 1 Episode 11, which was titled “The Right Thing to Do.” You can watch This Is Us online via the following video. And you can scroll down for a brief summary: First, Kate had trouble coping during the aftermath of Toby’s heart attack. As one might expect from her, of course. Second, William and Jesse grew a lot closer, forcing Randall to become accustomed to their relationship. Third, Olivia unexpectedly resurfaced. (We didn’t see that coming!) And, in the past, Jack and Rebecca looked for an affordable home in light of the news they’d be having triplets. As mentioned, click above to watch This Is Us online and find out more now.
Director Spike Lee will receive an honorary Oscar at next year’s ceremony. The honor will come 25 years after his groundbreaking film, Do the Right Thing, was…
Director Spike Lee will receive an honorary Oscar at next year’s ceremony. The honor will come 25 years after his groundbreaking film, Do the Right Thing, was…
Should you ride for your spouse or stand by your sibling? What’s The Right Thing To Do When Your Spouse And Sibling Are Fighting? Unless you’ve taken a vacation into outer space, you’ve heard about the now-infamous altercation between songstress Solange Knowles and her brother-in-law Jay Z that was caught on an elevator surveillance camera as Soloange, Jay Z, Beyonce, and the family bodyguard Julius were headed home from last week’s Met Gala after party. While hundreds of conspiracy theories continue to emerge regarding what could have possibly caused sissy-poo Solo to go full Power Ranger on Hov in a cramped elevator, the other theories circulating question Beyonce’s actions as the whole thing went down. Did she do the right thing by doing the bare minimum and pretty much staying out of the brief but brutal confrontation? Some say the motto should be “family over everything” no matter what, while others say that Mrs. Carter should have done more to get he r sister in check, thus siding with her husband. But what is the “right thing” to do in that situation? If Solange had good reason to spazz on Jay (which has been widely speculated due to Beyonce’s relatively calm demeanor during the attack), was Bey right to let her sister attack him and only step in briefly when absolutely necessary? And if it was Solange who was in the wrong, should Beyonce have defended her husband against her raging sister? What would you have done? Let’s discuss.
Spike Lee’s affiliation with the Jordan Brand is indelible ; from Mars Blackmon, to Do The Right Thing’s Buggin’ Out to the director himself rocking exclusives courtside at NBA games… Continue
Man, Spike Lee sure has a potty mouth: Spike Lee had a message for the Sundance festival crowd at tonight’s world premiere of his new film, “Red Hook Summer”: “Please tell them that this is not a motherf**king sequel to ‘Do the Right Thing’!” That’s what people had been saying, mostly to fill the vacuum of information surrounding the movie. All anyone seemed to know was that it was set in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn, that it followed a 13-year-old boy (newcomer Jules Brown) and his preacher grandfather (played by ‘The Wire’ veteran Clarke Peters), and that it featured the return of Mookie, Lee’s pizza-delivering character from his trailblazing 1989 movie about tensions boiling over in the summer heat. Lee, who took the stage for the post-screening Q&A draped in New York Giants regalia and immediately declared that the audience had “doubled the black population of Utah — maybe tripled it,” prefers to think of “Red Hook Summer” as “another installment in my great chronicles of Brooklyn,” a series that includes “She’s Gotta Have It,” Do the Right Thing,” “Clockers” and “Crooklyn.” “We never went to the studios with this film, I told you!” he shouted. “We said, ‘Were gonna do this motherf**king film ourselves and show it at Sundance…. This whole thing was planned out.” Of the studios, he added, “They know nothing about black people. And they gonna give me notes about what a young black boy and girl gonna do in Red Hook? F**k no! We had to do it ourselves!” Make sure y’all support Spike and his film! Source More On Bossip! Rocky Road: A List Of Couples That Might Not Make It Past 2012 Black Casts Ain’t Extinct Yet: A List Of Some of The Best All African American Films Real Is Overrated: The Most Notorious And Beloved Fake Celebrity Bodyparts Of All Time ChitChatter: Beyonce Speaks For The First Time Since Having Baby Blue Ivy About The Loss Of Etta James
Man, Spike Lee sure has a potty mouth: Spike Lee had a message for the Sundance festival crowd at tonight’s world premiere of his new film, “Red Hook Summer”: “Please tell them that this is not a motherf**king sequel to ‘Do the Right Thing’!” That’s what people had been saying, mostly to fill the vacuum of information surrounding the movie. All anyone seemed to know was that it was set in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn, that it followed a 13-year-old boy (newcomer Jules Brown) and his preacher grandfather (played by ‘The Wire’ veteran Clarke Peters), and that it featured the return of Mookie, Lee’s pizza-delivering character from his trailblazing 1989 movie about tensions boiling over in the summer heat. Lee, who took the stage for the post-screening Q&A draped in New York Giants regalia and immediately declared that the audience had “doubled the black population of Utah — maybe tripled it,” prefers to think of “Red Hook Summer” as “another installment in my great chronicles of Brooklyn,” a series that includes “She’s Gotta Have It,” Do the Right Thing,” “Clockers” and “Crooklyn.” “We never went to the studios with this film, I told you!” he shouted. “We said, ‘Were gonna do this motherf**king film ourselves and show it at Sundance…. This whole thing was planned out.” Of the studios, he added, “They know nothing about black people. And they gonna give me notes about what a young black boy and girl gonna do in Red Hook? F**k no! We had to do it ourselves!” Make sure y’all support Spike and his film! Source More On Bossip! Rocky Road: A List Of Couples That Might Not Make It Past 2012 Black Casts Ain’t Extinct Yet: A List Of Some of The Best All African American Films Real Is Overrated: The Most Notorious And Beloved Fake Celebrity Bodyparts Of All Time ChitChatter: Beyonce Speaks For The First Time Since Having Baby Blue Ivy About The Loss Of Etta James