John Krasinski says a British customs officer couldn’t believe Emily Blunt married him and stamped his passport in fury
"I remember going through customs. There was a guy about my age, seemed a bit grumpy. He said, ‘You’re an actor? Where do I know you from?’ I said, ‘We did the American version of your British Office’"
"He goes, ‘Oh, I love that show. The UK version.’ Strike one. Then he said, ‘Who are you visiting?’ I said, ‘My wife.’ He said, ‘Is she an actress? What’s her name?’ I said, ‘Emily Blunt’"
"He went, ‘You? You?’ I was like, ‘Yeah.’ He goes, ‘All right, get out of here,’ and stamped my passport with a fury"
The situation with the Kennedy Center has gone off the rails. It has officially reached levels of pettiness I didn’t think were possible, but Trump is once again defying the odds.
A court ordered his name removed from the building. He lost, fair and square. So, what does he do? He throws a tarp over the sign that says “The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts” and just leaves it there.
Not for a day, not for a week, but for WEEKS.
A federal judge is demanding answers, because apparently we live in a country where a sitting president has to be hauled into court to explain why he’s hiding a building from the American public.
A president with a real legacy doesn’t need to paste his name onto someone else’s. And he definitely doesn’t need to hide a sign because a court told him no.
A weak man with a bruised ego would. And that’s exactly what’s happening here.
It’s petty, it’s absurd, and frankly, it’s embarrassing.
Residents of Washington, DC, briefly experienced the worst air quality of any major city in the world, according to a company that ranks pollution globally, as the capital reckoned with the aftermath of a massive, 40-minute Fourth of July fireworks show. https://t.co/B9Y2AfeKG4
If I’m getting paid £250K per week, I will learn how to speak Spanish fluently before the end of this month despite my old age.
Money is a big motivator.