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‘Wheel Of Fortune’ Has A Brand-New ‘High Tech’ Board For The Upcoming Season

Wheel of Fortune is having a midlife crisis. The upcoming season of the syndicated game show, which has been hosted by Pat Sajak and Vanna White for over 40 years, will feature a “high tech” new board for White to reveal that it’s ANOTHER FEATHER IN YOUR CAP, not ANOTHER FEATHER IN YOUR LAP, you dummies.

Wheel of Fortune now unveiling to us an updated puzzle board for this season,” a Good Morning America correspondent said in the video above,” and it is high tech. “When Pat Sajak and Vanna White first took over the show, Vanna had to manually turn the puzzle board pieces.” Before the new board, White explained, “I would touch the edge of the letter because it was a TV monitor. Now it’s a flat screen.” A laser triggers the letters to be turned over, which is apparently the same technology that’s used for the Mars rover.

White, 65, used to have to manually turn each letter piece, but this new high-tech board will allow her to uncover the letters without even touching them. Using Lidar technology, which was used on the Mars rover, White just has to run her hand over the screen, and a laser will detect her presence and show the letter.

Yeah, but did the Mars rover ever win Julie from Idaho an ugly couch? I think not. Wheel of Fortune returns for season 40 (!) next Monday, September 12.

(Via the New York Post)

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Why Did People Think Harry Styles Spit On Chris Pine?

Last night (September 5), there was a screening of Don’t Worry Darling at the Venice Film Festival, but most of the drama seemed to be in the audience instead of on the screen: A video from the event seemed to depict Harry Styles spitting on co-star Chris Pine, with Pine reacting with a smile.

However, further examination showed nary a particle of saliva exiting Styles’ mouth during the alleged incident. Drag queen Dr. Panti Bliss-Cabrera offered a succinct explanation of what seems to have happened: “Chris Pine is holding a pen (?) which he puts down on his seat to clap, then realises that the glasses he’s just been looking for have been there on the seat the whole time too. ‘Silly me!’ (then puts them on in longer clip).”

Beyond that, why did people think Styles spit on Pine?

Well, people thought there was some tension between the two. At a press conference earlier in the weekend, Styles said, “You know, my favorite thing about the movie is, like, it feels like a movie. It feels like a real, like, you know, ‘go to the theater’ film movie.” As Styles spoke, Pine stared blankly ahead, which some interpreted as a reaction to Styles’ perhaps not-so-coherent thoughts.

Furthermore, after Florence Pugh reportedly had a falling out with director Olivia Wilde, Pine enthusiastically and effusively interacted with Pugh on the festival red carpet, so some speculated that was another source of tension between Styles and Pine, since Styles and Wilde are reportedly dating.

So, while imaginations had plenty of jumping points for running wild, Styles seems to be cool with Pine, or at least cool enough to not spit on him in public.

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Marco Rubio May Have Just Come Up With The Worst Possible Excuse For Trump To Have Classified Docs At Mar-A-Lago: It’s A ‘Storage’ Issue

In the wake of the FBI’s raid on Mar-a-Lago on August 8, 2022, MAGA Republicans and right-wing media have worked tirelessly to generate a whole list of stupid reasons why Donald Trump would be hoarding top-secret government documents at his Palm Beach home and golf club, and there have been some real doozies.

Initially, Trump himself claimed that as Supreme Dictator president, he had the right to take whatever he wanted from The White House (narrator: he did not). Rudy Giuliani, meanwhile, says that Trump was just doing what any true patriot would do: stealing highly secretive government documents in order to keep them safe at his private, unsecured home. Ohio congressman Mike Turner was one of several people to suggest that Trump needed the materials in order to write his memoirs. (LOL.) Meanwhile, Fox News reported that all of the drama surrounding January 6th and the fallout from the vicious attack on the Capitol probably just caused the fact that he had these classified papers to simply slip the big guy’s mind.

But Marco Rubio may have just offered up the most pathetic excuse of all: As MSNBC reports, the Florida senator has decided to chalk Trump’s illegal access to classified documents as a simple “storage” problem. Over the weekend, he explained that:

“This is, really, at its core, a storage argument that they’re making…. I don’t think a fight over storage of documents is worthy of what they’ve done, which is [a] full-scale raid and then these constant leaks.”

Guess The White House office manager better stock up on filing cabinets during their next Staples run!

Rubio went on to say that the controversy surrounding Trump and the raid on his home isn’t that the former POTUS should not be allowed access to the documents that were in his possession, just that the documents shouldn’t be stored at Mar-a-Lago, which is 100 percent incorrect.

(Via MSNBC)

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Jennifer Lawrence ‘Worked So Hard’ To Forgive Her Father’s MAGA Politics And Has ‘Recurring Nightmares’ About Tucker Carlson

Ahead of Netflix’s Don’t Look Up in 2021, Jennifer Lawrence revealed that she had taken a Hollywood breather because she believed “everybody had gotten sick of me.” Whether or not that’s true, it’s clear that Lawrence’s career went into heavy rotation during The Hunger Games, Silver Linings Playbook, American Hustle years, along with the infamous Oscar fall seen ’round the world. She probably wanted some much-needed downtime, which is good for the soul. Jennifer got married to Cooke Mulroney, and they recently welcomed a son, and now, she’s talking to Vogue about the importance of political activism.

In the interview, Jennifer speaks about our post-Roe v. Wade society. She reveals how she nearly had an abortion in her 20s, but she had a miscarriage before the procedure could be carried out. The Don’t Look Up star also reveals how crushing it feels to joust with MAGA-agreeing relatives, which include her father. As anyone who’s looked the other way when an uncle goes bonkers on Facebook over a conspiracy theory knows, these are not easy waters to tread:

“I just worked so hard in the last five years to forgive my dad and my family and try to understand: It’s different. The information they are getting is different. Their life is different. I’ve tried to get over it and I really can’t. I can’t. I’m sorry I’m just unleashing, but I can’t f*ck with people who aren’t political anymore. You live in the United States of America. You have to be political. It’s too dire. Politics are killing people.

Jennifer also admitted that she sees a therapist, with whom she discusses “recurring nightmares” about far-right Fox News host (and reported Alex Jones text buddy) Tucker Carlson. That’s quite a revelation, and everyone needs to pour one out for therapists these days. Not only are they enduring this fraught world in which we live, but they’re helping to counsel everyone else who’s going through it. The full Vogue interview is well worth a read and includes Jennifer’s take on the gender pay gap, along with a discussion of how much she enjoys being a mom. Good on ya, JLaw.

(Via Vogue)

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Amber Midthunder On Her ‘Reservation Dogs’ Cameo And The Future Of Indigenous Representation On Screen

In Dan Trachtenberg’s Prey, Amber Midthunder became the first Indigenous actress to lead an action franchise. As a Comanche warrior out to prove herself, Midthunder’s Naru cleverly engineered a victory over sci-fi’s most lethal trophy hunter – a feat more experienced killers, hardened criminals, and special ops meatheads often couldn’t achieve.

So it’s funny to hear the actress, who guest stars in the latest episode of FX’s Reservation Dogs, talk about her fear of doing comedy. Taking down a Predator? Easy. But improv? Now that’s terrifying stuff.

“I was legitimately scared,” Midthunder tells UPROXX about switching genres for her role as an Indigenous influencer named Miss Matriarch. “I’ve had people say, ‘You should do comedy’ before, but it was just not what I felt called to, at all.”

Instead, Midthunder’s cut her teeth on sci-fi shows like Legion and the CW’s Roswell reboot, while delivering small but impactful performances in films like Hell or High Water and The Ice Road. A member of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes, she’s always been cognizant of her heritage when accepting roles and imbibed her characters with as much of her culture as she could, but now she’s finding the freedom to craft entire identities around her community’s past and present way of life. Her Miss Matriarch role, for instance, is a side-splitting amalgamation of influencer culture and self-help ethos and the cringe-inducing methods people often use to “get through” to the younger generations.

In other words, she’s a well-intended, wanna-be guru for Rez kids and Midthunder plays her with just enough earnestness to make you sympathize with her plight – while laughing your ass off at her ridiculous antics.

We chatted with the actress about trying comedy for the first time, becoming an action hero that’s actually relatable, and if Hollywood is finally making strides when it comes to Indigenous representation on-screen.

Reservation Dogs is your first comedy experiment. How did it go?

It was so cool. Obviously, the writing on the show is so good. I feel like you’ve heard about shows where there’s a loose idea and then you go in and you just figure it out. But no, everything [here] is just so top tier. There are so many moments where they’re like, ‘Talk about this thing,’ or you think the scene is over and then they’ll be like, ‘And then say this and then keep riffing,’ and so you can just go on and on and on. Tazbah [Rose Chavez] was like, ‘Listen, throw in as much Lakota as you want to.’ Those kinds of things were so much fun. Watching the episode, it’s just cool having been in that environment and experiencing that and knowing that that’s how shows like this are made.

Miss Matriarch is one of those influencers that just tries a little too hard. Why is she like this?

She did not grow up on her Rez and she’s obviously really overcompensating, really trying to hide it. Then on top of that, she genuinely believes in what she’s doing. So, it’s kind of endearing and it’s also what makes it more ridiculous. She truly is like, ‘These journals will save your life.’

The vibes are good.

Right? I’ve been comparing her to the mom from Mean Girls, I realize. She’s a little bit like, ‘I’m a cool mom,’ relating to the youth element. She’s trying so hard to get through to the kids. It is just the least effective way. I feel like people have all kinds of different ways of trying to find themselves or reclaim their culture and whatever. There are all kinds of different intentions behind that. But I think Miss Matriarch is a well-intended person. Her actions and what she says don’t always come off really well. She’s kind of that level of ignorance is bliss, well-intended, offensive, but she really wants to do her best.

Having worked on Prey and now Reservation Dogs, what’s unique about how each project approaches representation?

The biggest difference is the period, going back in time and representing a time period that with Prey, that time period is so often misrepresented. Just time and time again, throughout the history of film, any time you see Native people that are not in modern day, it’s just some different version of something that is wildly offensive. It’s either just a hyper-spiritualization or it’s just this wildly savage, one-dimensional trope. So, to have a movie like that where the focus was so much about accuracy and authenticity inside of a crazy action adventure, that opportunity, to me, was part of what made it so interesting.

Then you look at Reservation Dogs, and this is a relatable and honest, beautiful, heartbreaking picture of Rez life, just urban, modern-day, Rez culture — the jokes, the phrases, the way people talk, the family structure, the dynamics, even things that happened in this episode. That’s all stuff that people can relate to presently, and Prey is something that we all get affected by the representation of our history being accurately or, more often, inaccurately portrayed.

As ridiculous as this episode of the show is, it does lead to the group asking some important questions about decolonization and what it really means.

Those are the real things that we deal with. Those are the real questions that we have growing up or that youth has now. In Canada, I feel like they talk a lot about reconciliation and it’s like, ‘What actually is that? How does that actually get done?’ In the States, it’s like changing Columbus Day to Indigenous People’s Day. Is that going to do the job? No. It’s great for recognition. But I think oftentimes there’s so much lip service or there’s so much just band-aid appeasing that doesn’t really do anything substantial. That’s obviously very different from the characters in the episode, but I think in general, you have these conversations and it’s true. You’re like, ‘Well, what is the real answer?’ And it comes from the day-to-day life of the people in the community.

So, in a way, Miss Matriarch’s approach worked.

[laughs] Even accidentally, there’s progress made. I feel like, it does what it intends to while also being a comedy of errors, which I think is what the show balances so well — those beats that really can touch you, but then also just remain hilarious.

Prey gave us such an authentic portrait of 1700s-era Comanche life. Did you learn anything surprising while working on the film?

I’m not like, ‘Oh, I knew everything.’ There’s a lot of stuff that I learned. I think there’s nothing that was outwardly surprising. I did not grow up on my reservation, but I did grow up within my culture. But it was cool for me because I come from Plains people as well. So I’m Lakota, Nakota, and Dakota, and then there’s Comanche or Southern Plains. So, I’m Northern Plains, they’re Southern Plains. So getting acquainted with Comanche culture and seeing what was shared about our cultures and what was different was interesting. You’re raised with these stories, and so few people know them actually, that seeing them in front of me, that was what was so cool. Getting dressed in the morning and seeing everybody out there in the Comanche camp with the tipis and the buckskin, brushing teeth, playing games, brushing hair, brain tanning hides. That stuff was what was so cool, and it felt very transcendent to see that.

Then to know that we were going to share that with people. It’s weird to come from a people where you feel like your history is hidden or you come from a secret truth. I’ve grown up always knowing that we were very resourceful people and that we were very inventive and innovative and intelligent and well-kept. But that’s not how we’re represented. It felt like we were sitting on a secret that shouldn’t be a secret.

Naru is not some supernaturally-gifted fighter, she’s just a warrior who believes in her abilities and wants others to do the same. Is that something you can relate to as an Indigenous actress?

Yeah, I think regardless of being an Indigenous actress, just the experience of being a person who feels called to something, and sometimes people believe in you and sometimes people don’t. I’ve had times when I really believe in myself and I’ve had times where I have so much doubt that I’m like, ‘Maybe I’m doing the wrong thing.’ I think that that’s true of any passion and any calling. Then obviously, you add in all the elements of race and equity and opportunity and stuff like that. But even just on that base level of ‘Do you believe in yourself and who around you believes in you?’ I think that’s timeless and relatable.

You’ve been open about rejecting projects in the past because they didn’t represent Indigenous culture authentically enough. What’s the Midthunder test when it comes to Native American representation?

The filmmakers are always really important. I think if you’re making an Indigenous story, you need Indigenous people to be involved. That is just a 100% requirement. Reservation Dogs — all of the creatives are Native. So that just brings a different level of ease and value to the show and to the content. Even in a movie like Prey, obviously, Dan Trachtenberg is not Comanche. But he cares, and he is so open, so wanting to learn, so flexible and correctable, and wanting to incorporate things. Obviously, Jhane Myers, our producer, is an enrolled member of the Comanche Nation. Native people behind the scenes are essential. Then you look at story elements and ask, ‘Well, how is this representing us? And what is the story here?’ All those elements are important.

What’s the vision for equal representation look like for you?

There are so many talented Indigenous people out there. I think some people are making Indigenous-specific stories and some are just making cool stories. I think that’s what’s next. It’s so important to have quality Indigenous-specific content. But also I think we are free to do whatever we may please. I think that we are free to do whatever we want, and it’s not, like, ‘Oh, they’re good storytellers for Indigenous people. They’re good filmmakers for Indigenous people. She’s a good actress for an Indigenous actress.’ No. They’re good filmmakers, just period. Good actress, period. I don’t think that we are limited to anything. Storytelling is our medium. We’ve been doing it since the very beginning. Everybody else is living in our space, I think.

So, I don’t think that we are limited to having to make any specific content or not. I think that it’s just we can have Native people playing Native people or we can have Native people playing superheroes or doctors or whatever. Maybe we don’t ever talk about it. That’s when things are equal, when it’s like, you’re not filling a quota. You just are there because you’re good and you deserve to be. You don’t have to make a point about pointing out somebody’s race. You just point out their qualities.

‘Reservation Dogs’ airs Wednesdays on FX on Hulu.

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Megan Thee Stallion Can Even Make A Funeral Sexy In Her ‘Ungrateful’ Video With Key Glock

Still hot off the release of her sophomore album, Traumazine, Megan Thee Stallion has dropped the visual for one of the album’s standout tracks, “Ungrateful.”

In the Collin Tilley-directed video for the Key Glock-featuring track, Megan is seen getting out of bed and donning lingerie before she dresses for a funeral. She arrives at the ceremony dressed to the nines in a lovely black dress. As the deceased is being buried, she is then seen in a lavish white dress with a matching large hat.

Though it is unclear who the funeral is for, it’s likely one of the “fake-ass, snake-ass, backstabbin’, hatin’-ass, no money gettin’-ass b*tches,” about whom she raps on the song.

While Megan has coined iconic phrases like “hot girl summer,” by way of her alter egos, she shared in an interview with New York Magazine, that Traumazaine is pure, unfiltered Meg.

“My alter egos have been people that I had to be at those times to be like my armor, like my shield,” she said. “I had to be Hot Girl Meg at that time. I had to be Tina Snow at that time. I had to be Megan Thee Stallion at that time. I love this album because I feel like it’s just me talking. It’s just Megan. It’s not me having to be anybody else.”

Megan Thee Stallion is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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‘Obsessed’ Previews The Fall TV Prequels And Premieres To Get Hyped For

Ahhh, Fall. The season of changing leaves, pumpkin spice lattes, and, you guessed it, a whole bunch of TV.

With the cooler temps and spookier vibes comes plenty of fantasy prequels and returning comedy favorites to keep binge-watchers entertained, which is why we’re dedicating the latest episode of Obsessed to all of the buzzworthy series you need to have on your radar this Fall. Hosts Taylour Chanel and Hollis Wong-Wear are breaking down the small-screen premieres they’re most excited for, and yes, they come with dragons, elves, and vampires attached.

The ladies dive into the worldbuilding of Amazon Prime Video’s blockbuster-sized Rings Of Power series, discussing how the show has modernized Tolkien with its diverse casting and relatable storytelling. And you know they’re going to talk about TV’s hottest show right now (pun intended), House of the Dragon. It’s got medieval politics, bloody swordplay, and mythical flying beasts (basically, everything a Game of Thrones fan could hope for).

The hosts wrap up their fantasy chat by previewing AMC’s highly anticipated Interview with a Vampire series — a period drama set in New Orleans with a GoT alumn as its lead — before running through some returning favorites, like Quinta Brunson’s Abbott Elementary and the final season of Atlanta.

For a full recap of everything worth watching this Fall, check out the video above.

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Joe Biden Had No Desire To Respond To A Heckler: ‘Everybody’s Entitled to Be an Idiot’

Calling all would-be hecklers: Joe Biden does not have time for your bullsh*t!

As Deadline reports, the president spent his Labor Day in Milwaukee, where he spoke with a group of union workers. That’s when a heckler decided to interject his opinion into what was meant to be a one-way conversation, and Biden made it clear that he wasn’t about to respond to that kind of malarkey.

During his speech, which was broadcast on MSNBC, Biden noted that, “As I said last week, we remain in the battle for the soul of America.” That’s when someone in the crowd decided he didn’t like what he was hearing and shouted out some bit of unintelligible gobbledygook. Biden, taking the high road, responded with an “Alright, God love ya.” But others in the crowd weren’t content to just let the agitator insult their president then go about his business.

When irritated attendees began booing and shouting back at the would-be wave-maker, Biden told them, “No, no, no … don’t — let him go,” then, without missing a beat, added that “everybody’s entitled to be an idiot.”

He’s not wrong.

Video taken by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel showed the man eventually being escorted out of the venue.

It’s hardly the first time Biden has had to contend with a mouthy critic. At least in this case, said loudmouth wasn’t a member of Congress.

(Via Deadline)

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Harry Styles’ ‘As It Was’ Is Now The Longest-Running No. 1 Single Of The Decade On The Hot 100 Chart

Harry Styles’ hit single “As It Was” is in the midst of its record fifth distinct run at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Now, that run continues: On the new Hot 100 chart dated September 10, “As It Was” is No. 1 for a 12th total week, which is the longest a song has spent in the top spot this decade.

“As It Was” is now ahead of Roddy’s Ricch’s “The Box” (11 weeks), Adele’s “Easy On Me,” BTS’ “Butter” (10 weeks each), Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License,” and 24kGoldn and Iann Dior’s “Mood” (8 weeks each). Furthermore, the song has spent 21 weeks at either No. 1 or No. 2, which ties The Kid Laroi and Justin Bieber’s “Stay” for the most total weeks spent in those spots ever.

Other notable goings-on in this week’s Hot 100 top 10 is Elton John and Britney Spears scoring the week’s biggest debut as “Hold Me Closer” enters the chart at No. 6. This makes Spears one of just a few artists who have had a Hot 100 top-10 single in four decades (’90s, ’00s, ’10s, and ’20s for Spears). Also noteworthy is Steve Lacy’s “Bad Habit” reaching a new peak at No. 2.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Fat Joe Will Get It Poppin’ As Host Of The 2022 BET Hip-Hop Awards

The rap-centric BET Hip-Hop Awards show went diggin’ in the crates for this year’s host, announcing that Fat Joe is going to turn the 2022 festivities all the way up. No, I’m not sorry. The show, scheduled to air on October 4 at 9 pm ET/PT, will take place at the Cobb Energy Center in Atlanta on September 30. Joe has garnered plenty of attention in the past few months thanks to his Instagram Live chat series covering everything from the hardest lyrics in hip-hop to whether or not J. Cole can really hoop.

In a statement to Billboard, Joe said, “This will be the BIGGEST award show in history. It’s truly an honor to host and produce the BET Hip Hop Awards, and I can’t thank Connie and the entire BET family enough for this opportunity. We’re going to celebrate music, culture, and entertainment, honor the biggest and brightest stars in the world and make this an unforgettable night full of laughs and surprises. Always remember that yesterday’s host is not today’s host.”

In addition to hosting the BET Hip-Hop Awards, Joe is preparing to release his memoir, The Book Of Jose, in November, and perform in a one-man-show in New York City.