“There Are All Sorts of Dangers”: What Threat Does Don McGahn Pose to Trump?
The White House lawyer, who witnessed a series of events crucial to Mueller’s obstruction of justice probe, had little choice but to speak with the special counsel.
The White House lawyer, who witnessed a series of events crucial to Mueller’s obstruction of justice probe, had little choice but to speak with the special counsel.
“I want her to be a badass again,” said Emmy-nominated The Handmaid’s Tale actress about her character and her hopes for Season 3.
An unfollow says a thousand words.
So far, the president’s talent for constructing parallel realities has been a boon to Republicans. But with the “red wave,” that could all come crashing down.
As Gretchen Carlson and Regina Hopper try to make over the competition, they can’t seem to catch a break.
Plus more secrets from this year’s batch of Emmy-nominated production designers.
Cue the tourists.
The president’s former fixer could have a $20 million reason to flip, and he’s practically holding up a finger phone and mouthing “call me!” at Robert Mueller.
In the basement of Williamsburg’s hip William Vale Hotel, Sprouse spends most days making mead—and fielding the groups of female fans who still can’t quite believe they‘ve found him there.
“I think we do some even weirder stuff in Season 3,” said the Emmy-nominated actor about what’s to come on Stranger Things.
No matter what side of the law their roles were technically on, this year’s crop of nominated actors often embodied characters who tread the line between good and bad.
So much for Billionaire Boys Club.
In admitting to his “left-leaning” bias, Dorsey effectively handed conservatives more ammunition, perpetuating the cycle that forces him to continually tiptoe around them.
The public outings continue—this time, in fair Verona.
Blame Francis Ford Coppola.
David Harbour reveals that while this season might be the darkest yet, it’s grounded in an unlikely source.
The airline was given a heads-up in advance.
The actress and director reportedly paid a settlement to a man accusing her of sexual assault.
“It’s, like, butter-soft! Who needs a knife? . . . Superb!”
A $34 million five-day opening proves inclusion is “not just this thing you are supposed to care about. It’s better for your bottom line,” said Nina Jacobson, a producer who knew the movie would open big.
As the last remaining Clark struggled to overcome her anger, actress Alycia Debnam-Carey delivered one of her best performances yet.
What is Munchausen by Proxy?