>DOUGH
TY Baker
https://twitter.com/donaldJTrumpJr/status/1769690515446882776?
Douglas Karr
@douglaskarr
You don’t hate traditional media enough for what they have done to this country. #bloodbath
From
Tom Elliott
7:46 AM · Mar 18, 2024
from Greenwood, IN
·
10.1K
Views
https://twitter.com/douglaskarr/status/1769691890750763068?
nice. Raheem digging into these faggots
2 hours ago
Raheem J. Kassam
Breaking
News
Trump Blasts Media Over Bloodbath Hoax.
President Donald Trump blasted the “fake news media” on Monday morning after a weekend of fresh hoax attacks on him over his use of the word “bloodbath” in a speech in Ohio.
”The Fake News Media, and their Democrat Partners in the destruction of our Nation, pretended to be shocked at my use of the word BLOODBATH, even though they fully understood that I was simply referring to imports allowed by Crooked Joe Biden, which are killing the automobile industry,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“The United Auto Workers, but not their leadership, fully understand what I mean. With the Electric Car Mandate being pushed by Biden, there soon won’t be any cars made in the USA – UNLESS I’M ELECTED PRESIDENT, IN WHICH CASE AUTO MANUFACTURING WILL THRIVE LIKE NEVER BEFORE!!! MAGA2024,” he concluded.
The bloodbath hoax was originally peddled by MeidasTouch bloggers and laundered into the corporate media on Saturday.
Supporting The National Pulse will enable us to produce investigative work into theDemocratic PAC MeidasTouch and its relationship with far-left donors and corporate media outlets. Join today to make it happen. show less
>https://thenationalpulse.com/
>nice. Raheem digging into these faggots
i'll get him started
Brett Meiselas
Brett Meiselas Biography, Age, Wife, Meidas Touch and Net Worth
Brett Meiselas Biography
Brett Meiselas is an American producer, entrepreneur, and co-founder of MeidasTouch, a political and production house producing hard-hitting and impactful political videos of the current election cycle. In this article, we have provided everything you need to know about the renowned producer.
Brett Meiselas Wiki
A third of the Meiselas trio of brothers, Brett is widely known in the United States and across the world as the co-founder of Meidas Touch. Having studied at the University of Southern California and Syracuse University S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Brett holds a dual degree in Television, Radio, Film, and Marketing Management. He graduated with honors-Cum Laude from the University of Southern California.
Early Career
He started his professional career in 2003 by founding a production company,Mei Films where he filmed and edited special events for people in his community.The company’s operations ran from September 2003 to January 2008. After that, while studying at Syracuse University, Brett worked as a producer, director, and editor for Citrus TV. He was tasked with writing stories, directing shows, and operating audio equipment for weekly newscasts.
He worked atCitrus TV up until May 2009and a year later landed a production assistant role at Left Right. While atLeft Righthe worked on the set of the VH1 reality series “I Want to Work for Diddy 2”. In addition, Brett also did an internship at Swan Haus Mediafrom May 2008 to January 2011.
Brett has done a few more internships and production assistant jobs, namely at Warner Bros. Studios forGreen Hat Films, as a production assistant for the Bachelorette Party The Movie which he was also an assistant editor and as a production assistant for the motion picture, Reach Me.
Professional Career
From September 2009 to January 2011, Brett worked several roles atTrojan Vision Television.First, he served as a broadcast producer and director. Thereafter in May 2010, he was promoted to a post-production manager role where he did comprehensive management of all post-production work. Thereafter, he worked as a producer for Hoodie Allen’s “Cake Boy” Music Video which propelled him to even greater heights in the production industry.
In January 2013, he served as a visual effects artist for The Starving Games motion picture. In this same year, he also served as a production Assistant and assistant director for another motion picture “Nonstop“. For Brett, 2013 was a year full of opportunities as he also got to produce Chamillionaire’s Overnight music video. In addition, he also produced a song for Good Old War.
Brett Meiselas on The Ellen DeGeneres Show
In September 2013, Brett was hired to be the head of post-production on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. The roles he played include;
Overseeing the entire post-production process for The Ellen DeGeneres Show.
Managing a team of post-production professionals and providing guidance and direction.
Coordinating with producers, editors, and other stakeholders to ensure efficient workflow and timely delivery of episodes.
Implementing quality control measures to maintain the show’s high production standards.
Collaborating with the production team to develop and execute creative concepts and ideas.
Reviewing and approving edited segments, ensuring they align with the show’s tone and style.
Managing post-production budgets and resources effectively.
Researching and implementing new technologies, techniques, and tools to enhance post-production workflows.
Troubleshooting technical issues and providing solutions to ensure the smooth operation of editing systems and software.
Developing and maintaining relationships with external vendors and post-production facilities.
Assisting in the recruitment, hiring, and training of post-production staff.
Monitoring industry trends and staying up-to-date with advancements in post-production technologies.
>>nice. Raheem digging into these faggots
>i'll get him started
He won 2 Daytime Emmy Awards for editing in the categories of Outstanding New Approaches and Outstanding Interactive Media. He produced the following segments. #Momsplaining with Kristen Bell: PregnancyRealness, Ellen Presents ‘Summit’ and Life’s First-Evers with Jeannie (episode 2).
Brett Meiselas Age
Brett is currently in his late thirties and celebrates his birthday every year on the 10th of June. However, he is yet to share his exact age with the public. Nonetheless, we are working to establish this information and will update it as soon as it is available.
Brett Meiselas Height
Meiselas stands at a height of 5 feet 10 inches tall as of 2023.
Brett Meiselas Wife
Brett is married to his lovely wife,Emily Werbal. The lovely duo got married on August 25, 2018, in a beautiful ceremony that was held at Saddlerock Ranch – Chateau Le Dome in Malibu, California. The theme of the wedding was cocktail attire. Traveling guests stayed at Hyatt Regency Westlake Hotel in Westlake Village.
Brett with his wife Emily
Brett Meiselas Meidas Touch
Meiselas and his two brothers,Ben and Jordan, formed a liberal American political action committee in March 2020. The main aim of the committee was to stop the reelection of Donald Trump in the 2020 United States presidential election. The long island trio formed the group while in quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic.
From Left, Ben, Jordan, and Brett
The group name and tagline combine their father’s last name,Meiselas, and his mother’s maiden name, Golden,while referring to the ancient Greek king Midas, who was famed for his ability to transform everything he touched into gold.
Brett Meiselas Net Worth
Brett boasts an estimated net worth of around $5 million as of 2023. He owes this figure to his many years of production as well as the income he earns as a third of the founders of Meidas Touch which has a website and Youtube channel which has been monetized.
Exciting Facts About Brett Meiselas
Musical Talent: In addition to his work in post-production, Brett Meiselas is an accomplished musician. He has been playing the guitar since a young age and is known for his skillful performances.
Philanthropic Endeavors: Brett Meiselas is actively involved in philanthropy. He supports various charitable causes and has been dedicated to raising funds for organizations that focus on education, healthcare, and environmental conservation.
Legal Background: Before transitioning to the entertainment industry, Brett Meiselas pursued a career in law. He holds a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree and worked as an attorney specializing in intellectual property rights and media law.
Entrepreneurial Ventures: Alongside his work in post-production, Brett Meiselas has ventured into entrepreneurship. He has co-founded and invested in several successful startups, demonstrating his business acumen beyond his role in the entertainment industry.
Athletic Interests: Brett Meiselas is an avid sports enthusiast. He actively participates in various sports activities, including basketball and tennis. He believes in the importance of maintaining an active and balanced lifestyle.
https://archive.ph/wip/oHLrH
>Brett Meiselas
https://archive.ph/oHLrH
https://www.bgsirs.org/wiki/ben-meiselas/
>nice. Raheem digging into these faggots
>Brett Meiselas
>Brett Meiselas Biography, Age, Wife, Meidas Touch and Net Worth
>Ben
>noticed
>For the absolute keks. Look at who funded the uprising in Haiti. Not a coincidence.
kek
Whaddya know. Connections to Lady Gaga who enjoys a bloodbath now and then
The Marvelous Mr. Meiselas: Meet the Attorney Who Closes Deals for Lady Gaga, Sean Combs and the Weeknd
Malina Saval
April 10, 2019
The old joke goes, ‘How you get to Carnegie Hall?’ The answer? ‘Practice, practice, practice.’ The chestnut could also apply toKenneth R. Meiselas — known as Kenny —who, as partner and head of the music department at New York-based firm Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks, works in the building that houses the iconic concert hall itself. Variety is honoringKenny Meiselas and his son Benwith its Power of Law kudos at an invitation-only breakfast at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel April 10.
As the go-to attorney for Sean Combs, Lady Gaga, Nicki Minaj, The Weeknd and Usher,Meiselas’ career has seen a similar trajectory to that of some of the biggest music stars in the business. “Kenny’s expert advice and support throughout our journey has been invaluable,” says Wassim “Sal” Slaiby, The Weeknd’s manager.
>https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/marvelous-mr-meiselas-meet-attorney-130052318.html
Ironically, it was only after coming to terms with the sobering realization that he “couldn’t be a rock star,” that the Long Island native leapt into the field of lawyering. “I think I always knew that I wasn’t going to be a rock star, but nevertheless I toyed around with it,” says Meiselas, who earned a B.A. in political science at Washington U. in St. Louis before getting his J.D. at Hofstra U. in Hempstead, N.Y.
“To date myself, I was one of the many who saw the Beatles on ‘Ed Sullivan’ and I fell in love with rock and roll, and I knew that I just wanted to be a part of it,” Meiselas recalls with a whiff of youthful nostalgia. “I don’t think I had realistic dreams of being a rock star, but even while I was going to law school I was in a band as the lead singer and songwriter. We played local Manhattan clubs, and I’m very fortunate that there was no YouTube, internet or social media back then.”
They say the most successful music industry executives started out as failed musicians, so Meiselas is in good company. But what also makes a music professional rise above the noise is commitment, something that Meiselas recognized as he graduated law school. “It was a key moment in my life and I looked in the mirror and said: you are not that talented.”
But with career aspirations still deeply entrenched in a passion for music, Meiselas was unwilling to pivot completely away from his love of rock and roll. It was a serendipitous encounter in the late 1980s with members of the 1960s girl group The Exciters, whose 1963 hit song “Tell Him” reached No. 4 on the pop charts, that steered Meiselas toward the “business side” of entertainment.
“The lead singer of the group was Brenda Reid and her husband, Herb Rooney, was the producer and song arranger,” Meiselas recalls. “Coincidentally, they had a manager who happened to work in the same building where I was working as a young lawyer just starting, trying to get into the entertainment world. This manager worked down the hall and he was still fighting the good fight even though [The Exciters] hadn’t had a hit in many, many years. And one day he came knocking at my door and said, ‘Hey, I manage this group, The Exciters, and their song ‘Tell Him’ is on the soundtrack of the movie ‘The Big Chill,’ and they didn’t get paid. Can you help find a way to get them paid?’”
Meiselas placed myriad calls and “turned over every rock” and was finally able to hunt down a small label called Liberty Records. “They were part of EMI and they kind of said, ‘Where have you been? We’ve been looking for The Exciters! Of course we want to pay you!’ ”
That was the beginning of Meiselas’ career as a dealmaker. “It wasn’t a tremendous amount of money, but being an exploited group of the ’60s, it really mattered to them,” says the attorney.
A couple of years later, Cory Rooney, Reid’s son, approached Meiselas for some career advice. Rooney’s friend, Prince Markie Dee, was one of the founding members of the 1980s hip-hop trio the Fat Boys, but he wanted out of the band so that he and Rooney could focus on writing songs and producing.
“[Cory] came to me and said, ‘You were so great to my mom and dad, can you help us? Mark wants to get out of the Fat Boys and we want to do serious music together,’ ” says Meiselas. “So I was able to get them out of the deal and their first project was on Uptown Records for an artist named Father MC. He was on the verge of becoming a superstar. His first album went gold, back when gold was meaningful, and he was on his way to reaching the next level. And the young guy doing A&R on the record was someone by the name of Puff Daddy. I think he was about 19. I got him fired from the project so Father MC could A&R it himself. We never really heard from Father MC again career-wise. But Puff came to me a couple of months later and said, ‘Hey, will you represent me?’”
Meiselas has repped Combs, whose music career exploded exponentially in the ’90s, and has since gone on to mogul status with a diverse portfolio that includes fashion, top-shelf liquor, television and much more, from that day.
Long article..
“I think when it comes to career, it’s all about luck combined with taking advantage of every opportunity and working hard to create other opportunities,” offers Meiselas. “But you never know where that first opportunity could come from.”
One of those plum opportunities came in the way of meeting Lady Gaga, who was famously dropped by Island Def Jam Records in 2007 before signing with Interscope and launching her Grammy- and Oscar-winning megawatt trajectory. A couple of years later, Meiselas first became aware of Gaga’s artistry. “It was before she really broke,” he recalls. “I’m a huge [David] Bowie fan and I just saw a lot of Bowie in her. I was really blown away by her even before she became a superstar.”
Meiselas officially came into the picture in 2011, “at the height of her stardom,” he recalls of the weeks after the release of Gaga’s second album “Born This Way.” “I get really passionate about artists who are emerging and who I think are special. She’s a throwback. I just saw that greatness in her.” Meiselas went on to negotiate such high-profile deals for Gaga as her residency at the Park MGM in Las Vegas and her starring turn — both on screen and on wax — in “A Star Is Born.”
“To represent a superstar at her level is a true team effort working with great people — Bobby Campbell her manager, her agents at CAA, Arthur Fogel at Live Nation and of course my incredible partners at the firm, in particular Sonya Guardo,” says Meiselas. Meiselas also praises Slaiby and Amir “Cash” Esmailian together with WME’s Sara Newkirk for the similar partnership role they play with The Weeknd.
(Pictured below, from left: Slaiby, The Weeknd, Esmailian and Meiselas)
Indeed, many stars look to Meiselas for legal advice on recording contracts, endorsement deals, publishing, touring and all manner of music business issues, and his roster reads more like a chart than a client list: The Weeknd, arguably one of the most important new artists to emerge in the past decade; pop-R&B hitmaker Usher; the influential rapper Nas; Cash Money/Young Money icons Nicki Minaj and Lil Wayne; the estate of Whitney Houston; hip-hop upstarts Rae Sremmurd and NAV; and “Call Me Maybe” singer Carly Rae Jepsen — not to mention newcomers Ella Mai (of “Boo’ed Up” fame, she was Grammy-nominated this year), Madison Beer and, triumphantly, Bebe Rexha.
While Meiselas tends to rep musicians once they are already firmly established, there are instances — as there were with some regularity during the height of firm founder Allen Grubman’s days, when the likes of Bruce Springsteen and Madonna were the upstarts — when a music attorney will take on a developing or so-called “baby act” and help steer the artist towards a recording or publishing deal.
>Long article..
Rexha was one of those. A fledgling songwriter at the time they were introduced, Meiselas says, “It was kind of an instant, ‘Wow, this girl is incredible.’ I literally knocked down the doors to get Bebe her first record deal.”
The investment paid off. Not only did Rexha score a hit as a writer, with a credit on Eminem and Rihanna’s Grammy-winning rap single, “The Monster,” she went on to release “Meant to Be” with Florida Georgia Line, one of the biggest country-pop crossover hits of all time, and she’s well on her way to success on her own solo terms.
The guidance of Grubman cannot be understated. A trailblazer in entertainment law and a key architect of the modern music business, he has been not just a mentor to Meiselas, but also a friend.
“It takes a village,” says Meiselas. “My partners — Larry Shire, who runs the film department, whose team worked side by side with me on ‘A Star Is Born,’ and Eric Sacks, who runs our corporate department, and of course to my mentor — the king — Allen Grubman. This team enables me to represent all of my superstar clientele in all of the diverse areas of their careers from music, film, television and theater to branding, licensing and strategic partnerships.”
Of course, there’s no better use of influence than to help create a platform through which his clients can make a deep, widespread philanthropic impact. It was Meiselas who furnished the legal expertise in 1994 when Combs founded Daddy’s House Social Programs, a New York City-based organization providing recreation and education for underprivileged and homeless urban youth. More recently, Combs has been involved with charter schools in Harlem and in the Bronx. Says Meiselas: “It’s always been very important for him to give back to the community.”
Other clients’ charities include Usher’s New Look Foundation, a non-profit that serves youth through a 10-year program aimed at developing passion-driven global leaders. And there’s Gaga’s Born This Way Foundation, led by the singer and her mother, Cynthia Germanotta, founded in 2012 to support the mental and emotional wellness of young people “and empower them to create a kinder and braver world.”
While Meiselas notes that he’s “in no way the driving force” of these massive philanthropic endeavors, he’s proud and inspired by his clients as they seek to foment greater good in the world. “When you find someone who’s so passionate about giving back, like Gaga and Usher, I really admire that,” he says. “I represent my clients and their passions are my passions, especially when they care about issues that are important and that I also believe in. Hopefully through the things that we do, be it contributions or attending events or providing pro bono legal aid, it’s helping their dreams come true.”
It’s Meiselas’s eldest son, Ben, who seems to have inherited that same proclivity for giving back. Partner and head of the civil litigation department of Geragos & Geragos, Ben Meiselas has steered two of the most high-profile civil cases in recent American history: Colin Kaepernick’s landmark lawsuit against the NFL and the victorious class-action suits against the now-infamous Fyre Festival and its founder, Billy McFarland.
“The work that he does is really about helping people with some of the more challenging issues that we face today,” says Meiselas. “He’s really the lawyer fighting for those important causes on behalf of his clients.”
But as Meiselas tells it, there was a time when Ben wasn’t certain he even wanted to graduate from college — the son, like father, was seduced by the biz. “He was introduced to the music scene at a very early age,” says the elder Meiselas, noting that Ben’s bar mitzvah party was held at Justin’s, Combs’ now-defunct restaurant in Manhattan.
“He used to go to the music studios with me and had early contact with all these artists,” Meiselas recalls. “Then he went to George Washington University. One year, he had this fun situation where he was working with Puff in Miami and he was running around with, I think, Bruce Willis and Nelly. He was supposed to be going back to school. He didn’t get on that plane. I tracked him down and he’s like, ‘Dad, I don’t need to go back to school. I’m already working.’ And I was like, ‘Guess whose kid is going to college?’ And he said, ‘Who?’ And I go, ‘Puff’s kid is going to college. And if his kid is going to college, you’re going to college!’ And then, fortunately, he got on that next plane.”
As for what comes next in his career, Meiselas is content with continuing to focus on his role in the music industry — “Remember I’m a frustrated rock star, so I was never looking to be a courtroom attorney,” he says — and spending time with his family, which includes wife, former publicist Beth Katz, and their teenage daughter, Rachel, who has her own radio show at her Long Island high school and aspires to be a sports reporter. Meiselas has three sons from a previous marriage: Ben; Brett, who has won two Emmy Awards working on “The Ellen Show” and now works as a producer and social media executive for Cubevision and the Big3; and Jordan, an advertising account executive for Translation in Brooklyn.
“I have always tried to balance my career in the music industry with being a father to my children — from coaching the kids in every sport to supporting them in their career goals,” says Meiselas.
He also serves as a guest lecturer each semester at his alma mater, Washington U. “In this class I teach they focus on entertainment and music, and the number one question I get is, how do break into the business? And there really is no one story,” he says. “There are a few things I can recommend to someone about how to pursue their passion, but, for me, I was just always looking to find a way to get into show business. Because I really have no desire to be any other type of lawyer.”
> https://variety.com/2019/music/news/ken-meiselas-attorney-lady-gaga-sean-combs-weeknd-interview-1203184151/
Variety link with the pics