A tourist who was attacked by a bison at Yellowstone National Park is recovering after being flung into the air.
The Park Service reminded visitors that “wild animals can be aggressive when people do not respect their space.” https://t.co/01m54hBAIv
Which means we, the consumers, effectively own nothing. We just rent games from you now, and you can revoke or change that rental agreement whenever you want. This is a terrible fucking move, Sony.
Taylor Sheridan says quitting his acting role on Sons of Anarchy over a $5,000 per episode dispute led to a writing career behind Sicario, Yellowstone, Landman and more
“Season two of Sons of Anarchy had ended. I'm an actor on this show making scale. And I literally would leave the set of that show and go to my other job because I didn't make enough on that show to pay my rent and live”
“So after season two, I told them, I said, ‘Guys, I'm not coming back and doing this again for this price. I want what the other 14 people, not even asking for what Charlie gets or Katie or Ron Perlman. I just want what the other 11 guys are getting.’ And they couldn't do it”
“The other guys were getting, it's a 13-episode show, they're getting $20,000 an episode before taxes, before agents, before everything. We're not talking about an exorbitant amount of money. They said, ‘We'll give you $15,000 and we'll guarantee you 10 episodes. That's all you're getting’”
“I do the math on it, and I said, ‘That's not a raise. No.’ And my attorney responded to this business affairs guy. He said, ‘Look, I've got kids on fucking cooking shows on YouTube that make more than that.’ And he goes, ‘Well, then the guy should go get a cooking show on YouTube. We just don't have to pay him because there's 50 of that dude. I can recast that guy tomorrow’”
“I realized my value is I'm imminently replaceable and that my business did not respect me. So I quit the show. Whether you want to call it pride or ego or integrity, but I just realized I've maxed out what I can do as an actor in this industry. And the people that have all the power are the people telling stories. So I'm going to tell my own stories. That's when I decided that I was going to write”
The Supreme Court issued several major rulings Tuesday, weighing in on birthright citizenship, transgender athletes in girls' and women's sports and on campaign spending limits. Here’s how each justice voted in the key cases.
The high court struck down President Trump's executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship, reaffirming the more than 100-year-old understanding that nearly all of those born in the United States are citizens. In a divided decision in the case Trump v. Barbara, the Supreme Court split 6-3 in finding that Trump's policy is unlawful.
From @TheAthletic: The all-white dress code Wimbledon has enforced for nearly 150 years didn't limit Naomi Osaka. Her latest Grand Slam fashion statement drew from Japanese ceremonial dress — and from one of her favorite movies, “Kill Bill.” https://t.co/6jBRz5ZwWQ
BREAKING: The Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down President Trump's executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship, reaffirming the more than 100-year-old understanding that nearly all of those born in the United States are citizens.
When I see a one-story house or a two-story house somewhere, and there will be an argument that the stairs are a wasted space, I will throw this video.