Connect with us

ENTERTAINMENT

Putin tries to make billionaires feel guilty to fix Russia

Published

on

Vladimir Putin has been largely bravado about his war in Ukraine, only occasionally acknowledging the shortcomings of his plan. He also pulled out of the nuclear pact, which was like a tantrum, and in general, things are not going well with this conflict. Russia has turned to recruiting female military personnel, and Putin’s private mercenary group, the Wagner Group, is now recruiting Pornhub visitors, and that doesn’t even explain what’s going on with the Russian economy.

Reports of shortages of Viagra and paper in Russia, as well as the pathetic imitation of McDonald’s that the country has tried to install, show that consumers are already unhappy with the aftermath of the war. In addition, all the sanctions are flying from various Western countries, but Putin is here with a solution: he is trying to blame the billionaires for fixing Russia for him. In a speech addressed to the Russian elite, Reuters reported, the Russian president also sounded quite excited about the oligarchs, who are increasingly fearful of their country’s economy and are increasingly offshore asset regime:

“A responsible entrepreneur is a real citizen of Russia, of his country, a citizen who understands and acts in its interests,” Putin said. “He does not hide assets offshore, but registers companies here in our country and does not become dependent on foreign authorities.”

Good luck with that? My guess is that no oligarch who has lost his $600 million superyacht or several homes to sanctions-based forfeiture is willing to spend all his assets to help save Russia. No, Vlad will have to deal with this himself.

(By using Reuters)

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ENTERTAINMENT

ABC’s Drop-Off Series Adds Nancy Lenehan to Cast

Published

on

Nancy Lenehan has joined Ellie Kemper’s comedy pilot Drop-Off on ABC as a recurring role.

She will play Marianne, the warm, caring and responsible mother of Julia (Kemper) who has been taking care of her children for the past six years. “A working single mother herself, Marianne is not without compassion for Julia’s situation and she loves her grandchildren, but that’s over. Marianne decided from that moment on to live her own life, including having an affair with a guy named Rene and firmly taking time for herself, ”the description of the character reads.

In addition to Kemper, she joins previously announced cast member Judy Greer.

The Landing is an American film adaptation of the popular British comedy Homeland. Diversity exclusively reported adaptation news. The show was previously hosted on Hulu by Lionsgate.

According to the official logline, “Yulia is a working mom who is failing, so she sets out to find her village. With the help of new friends Calvin and Liz, Julia discovers that she can manage to balance work and parenting from time to time. This is a comedy for everyone who dropped their kids off at school, breathed a sigh of relief… and then realized it’s Sunday.”

Most recently, Lenehan starred in A League of Their Own for Amazon Prime. She has also appeared on the HBO Max series Generation, Bless This Mess for ABC, and HBO’s Veep. She also stars in The Boys and Jack Ryan for Amazon Prime. Her other television credits include How I Met Your Mother, My Name Is Earl, Little Britain USA and Worst Week.

Executive producer Kemper along with Sharon Horgan, Clelia Mountford, Stacey Greenberg and Kira Carstensen for Merman Television. Paul Feig, Dan Magnante via Feigco Entertainment. Holly Walsh and Helen Serafinowicz are also executive producers. Michael Showalter serves as executive producer and director. Julianne Smolinski is set to write and executive produce. Lionsgate and ABC Signature are the studios behind the production.

Lenehan represents Pakula/King & Associates and Meghan Schumacher Management.

Continue Reading

ENTERTAINMENT

Review of the film “From the Inside”: Willem Dafoe’s strange magentism

Published

on

“Art Forever”. This turn of phrase, uttered by Willem Dafoe’s character Nemo in Vassilis Katsupis’ directorial debut Inside, is a confusing little proverb with many layers of meaning. It rattles in your brain like a pinball, in much the same way that Nemo rattles in the luxury apartment where he’s trapped after an art heist goes wrong.

“Art Forever” speaks volumes about how much we value art, and it’s also a cheeky taunt when Nemo feasts on million-dollar pieces of contemporary art in a wealthy collector’s penthouse. Later, this statement would haunt and even threaten Nemo alone, in an increasingly dire situation of survival, with only art to fuel him.

“Inside” by Ben Hopkins (from the concept of Katsupis) contrasts the most primitive elements of humanity with the most advanced written in order to reveal the contradictory and alienating nature of our present world. An astute cold-blooded camera is filming this wealthy collector’s apartment in Kazakhstan when Nemo bursts in, hacking into the security panel with codes given to him by his partner on the walkie-talkie. Unable to find a specific painting, he is short on time and attempts to escape, but the security system malfunctions and he is trapped inside the apartment, a heavy carved wooden door locking the vault.

It takes a certain suspension of disbelief to believe that there really is no way out. But this highly automated smart home, which plays “Macarena” when the refrigerator is left open for too long and is equipped with a full fire suppression system in case of a fire, is so technologically advanced that it doesn’t even have a phone, computer, or access to the outside. It’s a luxurious prison, a gilded cage filled with priceless works of art, whose value fades away in this agonizing survival situation – after all, art can’t be eaten.

But Katsoupis and Hopkins do not completely undermine the value of artistic expression. Nemo finds himself in this nightmarish quarantine – first adapting, then fighting, literally battling the elements as a buggy home automation system scorches him with heat, then frost. The water is off, and he resorts to collecting it from automatic room sprinklers and licking moisture from the freezer. He dine on caviar before starving to death, turning his hungry eyes on the exotic fish that swim carelessly in their aquarium high in the sky.

It’s The Survivor: Penthouse Apartment and it maps our experience of staying at home in 2020 during the pandemic (watch Nemo pretend to host a cooking show) and explores some of the trauma caused by this technology-enhanced isolation and alienation. which is designed to make our lives more comfortable, but most often divides us.

Nemo’s company consists only of works of art, but his desire for communication and self-expression does not die. He develops a parasocial relationship with the building’s staff on the security monitors, unable to call out to or contact them. He eventually transforms into a sort of primitive man, painting on walls, creating strange altars and structures, developing an almost religious fervor in his isolation.

Katsoupis questions the overvalued value of art by reminding us that self-expression is inherently human and elemental. He is closer to the top of our hierarchy of needs than we might think.

Katsupis asks these leading and provocative questions about humanity, but offers no clear answers or messages. Rather, he lets his muse, Defoe, simply live on this harrowing journey with his strange magnetism and sense of timelessness, in a performance that is both primitive and transcendent. Nemo becomes a figure straight out of Greek mythology, reckoning with the forces of creation and destruction, but it’s not clear if he is Sisyphus, Prometheus, or perhaps even Icarus.

Walsh is a film critic for the Tribune News Service.

‘inside’

Rating: R, for profanity, some sexual content and nudity.

Duration: 1 hour 45 minutes

plays: Start March 17th in general release

Continue Reading

ENTERTAINMENT

Slim Thug says he stays rich by avoiding ‘gay’ designer clothes

Published

on

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2023 News Forest Media.