Anonymous ID: 8752b7 April 22, 2020, 7:02 a.m. No.8883590   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3634 >>3645

All that shimmers, isn't gold.

 

People Are Finally Starting to See the Real Ellen DeGeneres and It Isn’t Pretty

 

As America’s preeminent lesbian daytime talk show host, Ellen DeGeneres has attained a somewhat unlikely arena of ubiquity in mainstream entertainment culture. But in the past year, there is evidence emerging that the tinge of mean-spiritedness that comes through in DeGeneres’ interviews and segments on The Ellen DeGeneres Show are consistent with a rumored behind-the-scenes demeanor. And now it’s not just a give-zero-fucks Dakota Johnson who is coming through with tales of the daytime media queen—it’s the workers.

 

DeGeneres’ comedy and sitcom career famously came to a halt when, in 1997, she used an episode of her show, Ellen, to come out. Even Laura Dern, who played her love interest in the episode, reportedly couldn’t get a job for years afterward. Of course, both women have since seen comebacks that have catapulted them to stardom and riches, but Ellen has more recently received a kind of countercultural check. Outside of her daytime audience and the celebrities she cavorts with, it appears that a good number of regular people—including several of the people who have worked for her and served her in other ways—reportedly find her to be reliably cruel.

 

There have been rumor mills in the comedy and TV worlds about DeGeneres’ meanness for years. Late last month, a Twitter thread by comedian and podcast host Kevin T. Porter brought many out with first, second, and thirdhand stories about DeGeneres’ various transgressions, from refusing to make eye contact with interns to getting a waitress fired for having a chipped nail, and more. Almost none of these stories have been shared or confirmed by anyone still in the industry, but in 2014, former Ellen head writer Karen Kilgariff did share with Marc Maron that she was fired from the show after refusing to cross the picket line during the 2008 writers’ strike. DeGeneres has allegedly never spoken to Kilgariff since.

 

Earlier this year, DeGeneres came under fire for more public-facing actions. After photos came out of her laughing it up at a Dallas Cowboys game with former U.S. president George W. Bush, fans and critics expressed anger that the host would get chummy with the head cheerleader of the Iraq War (and a vehement opponent to gay marriage). DeGeneres dismissed the criticism by saying that liberals and conservatives should be able to reach across the aisle to be friends.

 

But more recently, it’s become clear that DeGeneres doesn’t quite extend that self-styled grace toward those who cannot escape by virtue of being the head of it: the incarcerated. Performing a monologue from her multi-million dollar Beverly Hills home during the ongoing California lockdown, DeGeneres cracked that being self-isolated “is like being in jail. It’s mostly because I’ve been wearing the same clothes for 10 days and everyone here is gay.” Once again, viewers were incensed, and pointed out the obvious incongruity of the “joke”: As DeGeneres lounges in her enormous home, filming the show she earns $70 million a year to host, prisoners are being packed like sardines without any protective equipment as the virus spreads from guards to them, and even suffering beatings from some of those guards for daring to seek medical treatment.

 

And in a timely moment of worker outcry, the latest DeGeneres PR crash has come from her very own crew, who have been replaced by a non-union outfit that is running tech for DeGeneres’s at-home broadcast. Crew members spoke anonymously to Variety about the poor communication and shady side-dealing they’ve experienced as Ellen has shifted from studio broadcast to a more intimate lockdown-friendly format. Even though the unionized Ellen crew has the chops to transition to the at-home broadcasts, DeGeneres’s team made the decision to hire from outside, and are even planning to cut pay by 60 percent for the regular crew, who have already experienced reduced hours.

 

DeGeneres, who has a reported net worth of $330 million, makes much of performing acts of charitable giving on her show, and recently announced that she and her wife Portia de Rossi would be donating $1 million to COVID-related charities. But—in contrast to her football hangout with Bush—it’s always much more informative to understand how powerful people treat the non-powerful people they depend on, the ones who make their isolation possible.

 

In fact, the question of relatability is one that her wallet depends on, not only for a stand-up special peppered with strategic profanity but also during a family-friendly daytime show. The more Ellen can perform a kind of proximity to regular people on her show, the more she can attract their attention. This mask, however, has begun to slip.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/people-finally-starting-see-real-084637616.html

Anonymous ID: 8752b7 April 22, 2020, 8:12 a.m. No.8884152   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4192

Toni Lane Casserly death: Joan of Arc of cryptocurrency co-founder dead aged 29

 

The co-founder of cryptocurrency news website Cointelegraph acknowledged as the ‘Joan of Arc of blockchain’, Toni Lane Casserly, has died at the age of 29.

 

Ms Casserly’s spouse and children said on Tuesday that the cryptocurrency entrepreneur had died last week.

 

The Cointelegraph co-founder was a prominent public speaker and a staunch advocate of the blockchain technology that backs the bitcoin market.

 

“Toni saw how technologies was a device to unleash human consciousness,” said Lucian Tarnowski, an ambassador and founder at technological innovation company Civana.

 

In a tribute on Thursday, Mr Tarnowski added that “She was a good pioneer in the role blockchains would give in the return to local community.”

 

According to the cryptocurrency blog Coinfomania, Ms Casserly had not been well ‘for some time’ before passing away in Texas last week.

 

Her father, Nick Casserly, announced “with profound sadness and grief” that she had died writing in a Facebook post on April 14. He added that she had not been well since returning from a trip to California in August.

 

He said: “[I] remember her fondly as I know a lot of you had been reaching out to her with little success.”

 

Ms Casserly founded Cointelegraph in 2013 as a media platform dedicated to blockchain technology, crypto assets, and emerging fintech trends.

 

According to the blockchain encyclopaedia Everipedia, she later founded a bitcoin-based charity in 2015 that provided on-the-ground aid in Sierra Leone during the Ebola outbreak in Africa.

 

She also served as an advisor to several notable companies, funds and family offices, such as The United Nations, HSBC, Bosch, Cicso, P&G and the Institute for the Future.

 

Ms Casserly believed that blockchain technologies - as a decentralised economic tool - could improve lives and the work of governments.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/toni-lane-casserly-death-joan-091149628.html