Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Adam Schiffs Insider Account of the Fight to Save Our Democracy – The Bulwark

Midnight in WashingtonHow We Almost Lost Our Democracy and Still Couldby Adam SchiffRandom House, 510 pp., $30

Vilification is one of the primary weapons in Donald Trumps political arsenal. Over the four years of the Trump presidency, perhaps no one was subjected to more of it than Rep. Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee andmore pertinentlythe lead manager of the House impeachment team during Trumps first Senate trial. Indeed, Schiffs name was almost never mentioned by the former president without the accompaniment of some juvenile taunt: pencil neck, Shifty Schiff, Little Adam Schiff, crooked Adam Schiff, and even Adam Schitt.

Of course, such crude appellations tell us far more about the appalling character of Donald Trump than anything else. But Trump is not alone. Surprisingly, even some ostensible anti-Trumpers have been furiously dumping on the congressman. To Eli Lake, Schiff is a showman playing the role of statesman, and for leveling various allegations against Trump that he could never prove, hes the boy who cried collusion. To Jonah Goldberg, Schiff is a dishonorable and dishonest hack with a gift for flinging hyperpartisan innuendo while seeming to be a studious and serious legislator.

Is any of this right? Even if Schiff is not the villain of Trumps nightmares, does he nonetheless deserve some of the incoming that has landed on his head?

Podcast November 17 2021

The findings of the Mueller report have been overshadowed by the discrediting of the Steele dossier, but the Russia-Trum...

One place to begin looking for answers is Schiffs own new book, Midnight in Washington, a lengthyand quite engrossingpolitical memoir.

Schiff begins with his hybrid political lineage. His fathers family were devoted Democrats of the FDR school. His mothers family were ardent Republicans, in the mold of the Rockefellers and the Lodges. From this mixed marriage, Schiff emerged as a moderate Democrat.

As a sophomore in college, he had a formative experience: A trip through Checkpoint Charlie into East Berlin presented him with living proof of the dehumanization of Communism along with an abiding appreciation of his own country, where both political parties, at least back then, shared a commitment to the rights and dignity of the individual.

After Stanford, Harvard Law, a federal clerkship, and a short stint in private practice, Schiff became a prosecutor in the office of the U.S. attorney for the Central District of California. After trying dozens upon dozens of garden-variety criminal casesbank robberies, drug deals, bribery, embezzlement, and so forthhe made a name for himself as the successful lead prosecutor in the third trial, after the first two had ended inconclusively, of Richard Miller, an FBI agent who had become a Soviet mole.

Frustrated with the limitations of his position, Schiff quit his prosecutors post after three years and settled in Los Angeles, where he gravitated to politics. He lost two races for the state assembly, a distinctly demoralizing experience, before getting his break: At age 36 he won a seat in the state senate, where he was soon to chair the judiciary committee, gaining a reputation for fairness and integrity by leading it in a bipartisan manner. In 1999, he got another break and was recruited to run for Congress, trouncing a Republican incumbent in what was then the most expensive race in House history.

The qualities that Schiff exhibited in the California Senate put him in demand in the U.S. House of Representatives. In 2007, thanks to his prosecutorial skills, Schiff was invited to take a seat on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI). The work of the committee at that juncture was largely nonpartisan and Schiff closely and amicably collaborated with another California legislator, the Republican Devin Nunes.

Then came Benghazi, the September 11, 2012, incident in which militants overran a U.S. diplomatic mission, killing four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador. After two years of wide-ranging inquiry, HPSCI issued a bipartisan report that debunked the myriad conspiracy theories that had cropped up, including especially those maintaining that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had reduced security around the facility and hampered a rescue effort.

But that finding was highly inconvenient to Republicans anxious to tar Clinton as she prepared for a 2016 presidential bid. Soon enough, comity and amity went out the door. Kevin McCarthy and right-wing members of the Republican caucus leaned on Speaker Boehner to form a new select committee to keep the issue alive. Reluctantly, Schiff agreed to serve on it. Most of the theater came from the majority Republican side, including calling Clinton herself for a grueling eleven hours of testimony. But Schiff nonetheless helped to produce some of the other more notable moments, as in his withering questioning in the deposition of the Republican star witness, General Michael Flynn, who had been the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency under President Obama until he was fired for incompetence.

Although the investigation failed in its bad-faith objective of damaging Clinton for her role in the Benghazi affair, it succeeded nonetheless by incidentally bringing to light the fact that she had used a private email server for official business, which, as Schiff notes, would ultimately contribute to her undoing at the hands of Trump.

Initially, Schiff thought the Trump presidency an impossibility, giving the ugliest of American campaigns no chance of success. He writes that I will forever be humbled by that blithe miscalculation. But with Trump as president, the pivotal action for Schiff became investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 race.

Once again, the House intelligence committee was a central venue. Unsurprisingly, given the Benghazi precedent, what began as a purportedly bipartisan search for truth rapidly devolved into relentless Republican efforts to conceal Trumps misconduct, and, as Schiff writes, not just conceal it, but to construct a counternarrative that would devastate every truth in its path. In this, Devin Nunes, in partnership with team Trump and conducting his bizarre midnight run to the White House, led the way.

Americas intelligence agencies had unanimously agreed that the Russians, under Vladimir Putins direction, preferred Trump to Clinton and had taken a variety of steps to advance that preference. There was no way to know, writes Schiff,

whether the Russian operation had changed the outcome of the race that would ultimately be decided by just seventy thousand votes scattered among a few key states. Nor could we know whether the Russians had engaged in this unprecedented attack on our democracy on their own or had had the help of Americans, but I was determined to find out.

Finding out would consume Schiffs next four years, as the multiple strands of the Russia investigation unfolded, with Robert Muellers criminal inquiry and the Houses own. Muellers findings, released in April 2019, should have been devastating to Trump but the potential explosiveness was defused by the machinations of Attorney General Bill Barr, who, serving as the presidents Roy Cohn, skillfully misled the public about what Mueller had found.

If the wind went out of the sails of any move for impeachment, a gale blew in with Trumps perfect July 25, 2019 phone call to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, in which he attempted to extort a political favorthe smearing of Joe Bidenin exchange for U.S. military aid. Schiff reprises the entire affair in close detail and also recounts his own central role as the leader of the House team that presented the impeachment case to the Senate. Though the events are familiar to anyone who paid attention to the drama, Schiff supplies the gripping inside story, including his conflicts with fellow Democrat House Judiciary Committee chair Jerrold Nadler, who comes across as highly knowledgeable about the fine points of impeachment but also as a thin-skinned hothead. As a first draft of recent history by a pivotal inside player, Midnight in Washington is a source that will stand the test of time.

The abuse hurled at Schiff by Eli Lake and Jonah Goldbergin unseemly synchrony with Donald Trumprests in part on the proposition that there was no collusion between the 2016 Trump campaign and Russia despite Schiffs repeated claims to the contrary. This is rubbish.

As Robert Mueller stated in his report, unlike conspiracy, the term collusion is not a specific offense or theory of liability found in the United States Code, nor is it a term of art in federal criminal law. Mueller did not find a conspiracy. Nor did he find coordinationanother term that does not have a settled definition in federal criminal law but that Muellers team took to mean something more than the two parties taking actions that were informed by or responsive to the others actions or interests (emphasis added). But of such informed and responsive interplay between Russia and the Trump campaign there was plenty, as Muellers report makes clear.

Far from being the boy who cried collusion, Schiff documents chapter and verse of the nefarious behavior, taking the reader through one sketchy episode after another. There was, to begin with, in April 2016, the Russian approach, through an intermediary, to one of Trumps foreign policy advisers, George Papadopoulos, in which they told him that they were in possession of dirt about Hillary Clinton in the form of thousands of emails, presumably hacked, with the implication that they could aid the campaign by releasing them at strategic moments.

In June 2016, a Russian lawyer approached Donald Trump Jr., using a business contact as an intermediary. The intermediary asserted that the Russians had official documents and information that would incriminate Hillary and be very useful to your father, adding that this is obviously very high level and sensitive information but is part of Russia and its governments support for Mr. Trump. A few minutes later, Donald Jr. responded, If its what you say I love it. The secret meeting that followed in Trump Tower in late June was deemed of sufficient importance that Donald Jr. was joined by both Jared Kushner, Trumps son-in-law, and Paul Manafort, his campaign chairman. The Russian lawyer ultimately provided nothing meaningful at the meetingindeed, all the intrigue in advance and the meeting itself might seem to have been a shambling waste of timebut the Trump campaign made its eagerness to collude with Moscow unequivocally clear, and of equal or even greater importance, Moscow learned of that eagerness.

Then, in late July 2016, Trump directly implored Moscow to intervene in the race: Russia, if youre listening, he said to a roomful of reporters, I hope youre able to find the thirty thousand [Hillary Clinton] emails that are missing. I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press. As Schiff notes, the Russians were in fact listening, and they attempted to hack a private server belonging to Clintons personal office only hours later.

One could go on much further listing the material Schiff provides, recounting the ties of campaign chairman Paul Manafort to a Russian intelligence operative or Trumps extensive business dealings with Moscow, which he lied about over the course of his campaign, giving the Russians ready-made kompromat with which to blackmail him if the need arose.

In the final analysis, the evidence of collusion (or for that matter coordination or conspiracy), as strong as it was, remains incomplete. As the Mueller report makes evident, albeit in oblique language, Trump and his team obstructed justice on numerous occasions, making it impossible for the full truth about Trumps criminality to emerge.

It must also be acknowledged that Schiff has made mistakes in the course of his investigations. As Eli Lake pointed out in a February 2020 article in Commentary, Schiff repeated elements of the now-discredited Steele dossier in a congressional hearing, leveling charges against the Trump aide Carter Page that did not pan out and for which Schiff never apologized. Schiff and his staff defended the continued issuance of FISA warrants against Page, warrants known now to be defective for relying on the Steele dossier, when there was reason for skepticism.

The damage to Page should not be understated. But these are minor transgressions when measured against the entirety of Schiffs record. It is both perverse and a calumnya case of anti-anti-Trump derangement syndrome perhaps?to chime in with the scurrilous Donald Trump and call Schiff a liar, as does the title of Eli Lakes most recent Commentary piece, or dishonorable and dishonest, as does Jonah Goldberg. Indeed, Adam Schiff is one of the few genuine heroes of the Trump era. Throughout the past five years, in the face of unremitting abuse and even death threats, he has worked with cool and measured eloquence to expose Trumps demagoguery and criminal conduct, seeking to protect the nation from further depredations by the most dangerous and depraved president in our history.

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Adam Schiffs Insider Account of the Fight to Save Our Democracy - The Bulwark

Inside Shadmans controversies after YouTubers deadly weapon arrest as perverted Hillary Clinton pics ar… – The US Sun

YOUTUBER Shadman has been involved in several controversies over the years before being charged with assault with a deadly weapon in Los Angeles.

Shadman is known online for his pornographic art and webcomics, some of which include political figures like Hillary Clinton.

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Court documents appear to show Swiss-bornShadman, real name Shaddai Prejean, was booked on October 26 in the California city.

Details of the case filed against Shadman in the Los Angeles County Superior Courts at Glendale Courthousehave been posted onUniCourt.

It reveals the 31-year-old has reportedly been booked under section 245 (A)1 which, under the California Penal Code, carries charges for assault with a deadly weapon.

Details about the alleged attack have not yet been disclosed by the police or official records.

Not much is known about Shadman, but he has been embroiled in controversy since he first began posting his work online.

He is said to be have been born in Switzerland and, according to a profile onIMBd, was kicked out of art school and dubbed a threat to society before moving to the US.

The controversial figure has always been photographed online wearing a mask or face covering and has built up a reputation for his illustrations of loli and characters like Elastigirl.

Loli is a form of Japanese manga or anime that is sexually explicit and uses cartoon characters who are underage.

Shadman launched his website Shadbase in 2009 and started his YouTube channel the following year.

But in 2019 he announced he was going to stop drawing loli and pornographic art due to the controversy it was receiving.

According to Sports Keeda, one website alleged that Shadman had drawn some of his artwork based on real underage girls.

It was also alleged that he made 34 pieces of art based on his mother.

The website also reported that he drew a 12-year-old actress in an inappropriate manner four years ago.

During the 2016 election, Shadman was widely slammed again after it was reported that he was asked to draw YouTuber Keemstar's underage daughter in an inappropriate piece of art with former President Donald Trump.

Keemstar threatened to call the police at the time, according to the outlet.

Shadman is reportedly due in court on November 19.

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Inside Shadmans controversies after YouTubers deadly weapon arrest as perverted Hillary Clinton pics ar... - The US Sun

The women of ‘Impeachment: American Crime Story’: Where are they now? – Los Angeles Times

This is the Los Angeles Times newsletter about all things TV and streaming movies. This week, we ask where the women of Impeachment are now, endorse Season 2 of an L.A.-set gentrification comedy and recount The Games nine lives. Scroll down!

Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone whos wondering what MSNBC will look like this time next year.

As our own Stephen Battaglio reported on Tuesday, anchor Brian Williams is leaving NBC News after 28 years and leaving MSNBC with yet another significant hole to fill in its rotation. Another, you ask? Thats because Rachel Maddow, host of the cable channels progressive flagship, is expected to depart her show next year to take on other assignments at NBC News.

As programming headaches go, losing half your prime-time lineup in such a short span is pretty high up there. Despite reports that former John McCain advisor Nicolle Wallace is the favorite to replace Maddow, for example, its unclear whether the popular Deadline: White House host, who has a school-age son, would want to sacrifice her evenings to the news. And there have been few signs thus far that wonky, bespectacled All In host Chris Hayes a tonal match for Maddow, who joined the network in 2008 as the coolheaded counterpart to firebrand Keith Olbermann is seen as her heir apparent.

Solving the Williams conundrum may be no easier. The former NBC Nightly News anchor, who came to MSNBC under a cloud in 2015 and proceeded to turn his late-night posting, The 11th Hour, into a folksy, often wryly funny news digest of the Trump years, will not be an easy act to follow. (In truth, he was better suited to the patter of the panel show than the stentorian delivery of the nightly report.) Managing to keep the conversation light yet dignified in an era of very bad news is a task for professionals only.

Wherever MSNBC lands, it will almost surely mean shining a larger spotlight than ever on its supporting cast or an as-yet-unknown star. Will Joy Reid follow Williams lead and overcome past controversy to move into a later slot? Will onetime Trump target Ali Velshi parlay the openings into a move off the weekends? And how will the network utilize reporters such as Katy Tur and 2020 chartthrob Steve Kornacki, who are familiar faces associated not with opinion but news?

If you want a horse race worthy of Succession, listen to Maddow: Watch this space.

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Streaming recommendations from the film and TV experts at The Times

A scene from Season 2 of Netflixs Boyle Heights-set comedy Gentefied.

(Kevin Estrada / Netflix)

Boyle Heights remains the backdrop for Season 2 of Netflixs sharp and thoroughly Angeleno half-hour comedy Gentefied, despite rapid gentrification i.e. the annoying proliferation of ramen shops and electric scooters. The Morales family is still fighting to keep their taco shop, Mama Finas, afloat, but a greedy landlord and skyrocketing property values are making it more difficult by the day. Plus, they now have a bigger problem on their hands: Pop (Joaqun Coso) is facing deportation after being detained by ICE during a routine traffic stop in Season 1. Series creators Marvin Lemus and Linda Yvette Chvez pit realism against humor, ratcheting up the tension and the comedy over eight episodes as Erik (Joseph Julian Soria), Ana (Karrie Martin) and Chris (Carlos Santos) struggle to keep their familial bonds intact ... and their own dreams alive. Crisis can tear a community and family apart or bind them together tighter than ever. Which one will it be for the folks of Gentefied? Lorraine Ali

When The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City (Bravo) premiered late last year, it needed only three words (smells like hospital) to become an overnight sensation. So its quite the blessing, for those of us still in withdrawal from an eventful season of Beverly Hills, that the newest addition to the reality TV juggernaut continues to raise the Rocky Mountain-high bar in its sophomore run. All eyes, of course, are on cast member Jen Shah, who was arrested during filming on charges of fraud and money laundering. But Salt Lake Citys pleasures run deeper than the usual schadenfreude. Its flaring tempers and petty disagreements are inflected by multilayered differences of faith and race/ethnicity, and as a result its exploration of power and privilege taps richer veins than sports cars, glam squads and square footage (though theres plenty of that, too). Whether its gourmet queen Heather Gay extricating herself from Mormonism, rumors of bad behavior by Pentecostal church leader Mary Cosby, or Meredith Marks televised shabbat, the series embrace of belief might even be called a kind of profundity: At the risk of sounding too in thrall to its highbrow/lowbrow charms, it might be the most illuminating portrayal of the American religious marketplace currently on television. Matt Brennan

Everything you need to know about the film or TV series everyones talking about

Wendy Raquel Robinson and Hosea Chanchez return to The Game after a six-year hiatus.

(Fernando Decillis / Paramount+ )

More than six years after ending its nine-season run, The Game (Paramount+), a comedy about the players on a fictional pro football team and their significant others, is kicking off again.

The series, which began in 2006 as a spinoff of the CW comedy Girlfriends, has already been through its share of upheaval, with two networks, a cancellation and several cast changes including the departure of its two original leads under its belt.

Created by Mara Brock Akil, the original Game starred Tia Mowry-Hardrict as Melanie Barnett, an aspiring doctor who put her plans for medical school on hold to support her boyfriend, Derwin Davis (Pooch Hall), a star receiver for the San Diego Sabers. The show had a loyal following but struggled in the ratings during its initial seasons. Although Akil reportedly offered to revamp the show to make it more compatible with the networks youth-oriented programming, the network pulled the plug in 2009.

Less than two years later, the series was revived by BET, which was seeking quality scripted shows for its audience. With the original cast intact, the show premiered in 2011 to record viewership, only to be disrupted when Mowry-Hardrict and Hall left to pursue other projects. Akil brought on two new cast members Insecures Jay Ellis as a cocky No. 1 draft pick and Lauren London as a former child star but the series lasted just two more years, ending in 2015.

The Games latest iteration, which premiered Thursday, features a mostly new cast and a different setting, moving from San Diego to Las Vegas. Returning are Wendy Raquel Robinson as savvy sports agent Tasha Mack and Hosea Chanchez as her son, star quarterback Malik Wright. In the reboot, Mack has become successful enough to travel by private jet, while Wright eyes an ownership stake in his new team, the Las Vegas Fighting Fury which plays in ViacomCBS Stadium, a blunt (and indelicate) plug for Paramount+'s parent company. New cast member Adriyan Rae stars as Brittany Pitts, a daughter of two former Game characters retired football player Jason Pitts (Coby Bell) and his wife, Kelly (Brittany Daniel) who shuttles between the Vegas nightlife scene and the world of pro football.

Its a mixture of nods to the original and fresh material that the streamer is hoping will (re)capture the magic and score, in The Games 10th season, with old fans and new viewers alike. Greg Braxton

A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyre working on and what theyre watching

We interrupt our regularly scheduled programming to bring you this important bulletin: The Envelope podcast is back! Which means a whole new season of intimate stories and delicious behind-the-scenes details from the team that brought you news-making hits such as Kate Winslet talks about the mythical place that is Wawa and Josh OConnor slams proposed disclaimer on The Crown. Before their interviews with the A-list actors, directors and showrunners behind your favorite films and TV shows return on Nov. 30, hosts Mark Olsen and Yvonne Villarreal graciously agreed to give us a sneak peek at the new season. Listen to the trailer today, and follow wherever you get your podcasts. Matt Brennan

First things first. You have to answer the most important question of all, at least in the world of Screen Gab: What have you watched lately that you cant stop talking about?

Olsen: That would be Bergman Island (VOD), the English-language debut of French filmmaker Mia Hansen-Lve. The story of a couple, both filmmakers, on a writing retreat to Fr, the Swedish island where Ingmar Bergman lived and worked, the film is a subtly enchanting examination of how working lives and personal relationships inform identity and sense of self. Also, for anyone who was a fan of Vicky Krieps in Phantom Thread, this is the biggest dose of that sweet Krieps energy since then. Vulnerable and incisive, it is definitely one of my favorite films of the year.

Villarreal: My favorite part about Sundays is my Insecure text thread with friends. Im still in denial that this is the final season, but the journey has been a satisfying one so far even when it holds the mirror too close to the fumbles of adulthood.

Tell us one podcast guest youre excited about and why.

Olsen: For as long as Kirsten Dunst has been in the public eye, there is still something very enigmatic and unknowable about her, a hiding-in-plain-sight quality that I find extremely compelling. Her performance in Jane Campions new film The Power of the Dog (streaming on Netflix on Dec. 1) really captures everything I like about Dunst as a performer. As a woman who becomes increasingly isolated on her new husbands ranch in 1920s Montana, it stands tall alongside some of my other favorite roles of hers, in Sofia Coppolas Marie Antoinette and Lars von Triers Melancholia.

Villarreal: Im in the middle of prepping for my conversation with Jennifer Coolidge, who rightfully garnered much critical attention for her role in HBOs The White Lotus. She delivered a poignant and wounded comic performance particularly while sharing scenes with Insecures Natasha Rothwell as a fragile, wealthy woman struggling to cope with her mothers recent death. What I want to know is who makes her laugh. And I learned while reading up on Jennifer that some of the interiors in Sofia Coppolas The Beguiled were filmed at her New Orleans home, which now has me longing for an HGTV series about her space so I hope I can persuade her to give it some thought.

Youve both been podcasting from home since the start of the pandemic. Are there any funny behind-the-scenes stories or memorable disasters youre ready to talk about?

Olsen: Fairly early in the pandemic I was thinking wed do a session as audio-only and wasnt particularly presentable, and so of course everyone else on the virtual call wanted to do cameras-on. My colleague Jen Yamato said its the only time she has ever seen me without a collared shirt. So I quickly learned a lesson: Always be camera-ready.

Villarreal: Ive had more than a few oh-my-God moments in my short career as a podcast host. During my conversation with Anya Taylor-Joy for The Queens Gambit, which took place early one morning, I lost my train of thought while asking a question because my upstairs neighbors were getting ... quite amorous. I was sure Anya could hear it through the Zoom, though she swore she couldnt. But the story I most cherish is the time I spoke with Brian F off Cox from Succession. Noisy helicopters in my neighborhood disrupted our talk, and I apologized to Brian. And he responded with something like: Oh, thats quite all right, I was worried it was my stomach doing that.

Times staffers chew on the pop culture of the moment love it, hate it or somewhere in between

Sarah Paulson as Linda Tripp, left, and Beanie Feldstein as Monica Lewinsky in Impeachment: American Crime Story.

(Tina Thorpe / FX )

Throughout this season of American Crime Story (FX), which concluded Tuesday, weve brought you deep dives into the women swept up in the saga of Bill Clintons impeachment. Heres our guide to where the key figures are now, when youve finished bingeing the episodes piled up on your DVR.

Hillary Clinton: Ran for president in 2016 as the first female presidential nominee for a major political party. Despite receiving more votes overall, Clinton lost narrowly in the electoral college to a reality-TV star named Donald Trump. She now hosts a podcast.

Linda Tripp: Tripp remarried in 2004 and, with her husband Dieter, opened a German-themed Christmas store called the Christmas Sleigh in Middleburg, Va. Until the end of her life, she maintained that she was a whistleblower who had been unfairly vilified for her role in the impeachment, which she described as a real high-tech lynching in a rare public appearance in 2018. Tripp died in April 2020 of pancreatic cancer. A tell-all book called A Basket of Deplorables: What I Saw Inside the Clinton White House was published posthumously last year.

Monica Lewinsky: Lewinsky spent the first few years post-scandal trying to pay off legal bills and remake her public image. She sat for a blockbuster interview with Barbara Walters, sparking a craze for her Club Monaco lipstick, and became a spokesperson for Jenny Craig, sold a line of handbags at Henry Bendel, hosted a short-lived dating show called Mr. Personality and appeared in an HBO documentary. She received a masters degree from the London School of Economics in 2006 and spent the next eight years out of the public eye. Since reemerging in 2014, she has worked as a Vanity Fair contributor, public speaker and activist. She also started a production company called Alt Ending, and has a first-look producing deal with 20th Television.

Paula Jones: In 1999, Clinton paid $850,000 to settle Jones sexual harassment lawsuit; Jones reportedly received just $200,000 of that money. In 2000, Jones defended her decision to pose in Penthouse as a divorced single mother with bills to pay: I thought it was the best thing to do for me and my children. Of course the money had something to do with it, she said. Like Lewinsky, Jones also wound up in a reality show, duking it out with disgraced figure skater Tonya Harding in the notorious program Celebrity Boxing. In 2016, she endorsed Trump for president and was invited by the campaign to attend the second presidential debate along with other Bill Clinton accusers, including Juanita Broaddrick. Jones recently denounced her portrayal in Impeachment as inaccurate and cartoonish.

Juanita Broaddrick: Like Jones, Broaddrick reemerged in 2016 during Hillary Clintons run for the White House. I was 35 years old when Bill Clinton, Ark. Attorney General raped me. I am now 73 it never goes away, she tweeted in a message that went viral. She attended the second presidential debate that year and defended Trump from criticism over his remarks on the Access Hollywood tape. In the wake of #MeToo, some liberals, including New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg, have reconsidered Broaddricks claims against Bill Clinton and come out in support of her. Broaddrick is active on Twitter, where she shares right-wing memes about vaccines and supposed election fraud. She has also defended conservative men accused of sexual misconduct, including Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

Ann Coulter: Coulter leveraged her role in the Paula Jones lawsuit to become one of the most prominent and controversial conservative media pundits in the country. She has written more than a dozen books, many of them bestsellers, and is known for her particular animus toward immigrants, refugees and Muslims. Despite or perhaps because of her willingness to say utterly indefensible things, she remains a fixture on political talk shows, including Real Time With Bill Maher. Once a Trump fan, largely because of his hardline stance on immigration, she recently denounced him as abjectly stupid. Meredith Blake

The TV shows and streaming movies to keep an eye on in the coming week

Singer Adele, left, is interviewed by Oprah Winfrey for CBS Adele One Night Only special.

(Joe Pugliese / Harpo Productions / CBS)

Fri., Nov. 12

Mayor Pete (Amazon). Buttigieg, who else?

Red Notice (Netflix). Dwayne Johnson, Gal Gadot and Ryan Reynolds run and jump.

The Shrink Next Door (Apple TV+). Businessman Will Ferrell is in a toxic relationship with psychiatrist Paul Rudd for 30 years.

Sun., Nov. 14

Adele One Night Only (CBS). The broadcast network singing special lives on.

The Freak Brothers (Tubi). Weed-centric cartoon finds 1960s underground comics heroes Rip Van Winkled into the present day, losing Furry from their moniker in their process. With Woody Harrelson, Tiffany Haddish, John Goodman and Pete Davidson.

Mayor of Kingstown (Paramount+) Not to be confused with Mare of Easttown. (Or Mayor Pete.) Family drama set against for-profit prisons. Dianne Wiest is in it!

Yellowjackets (Showtime). Girls soccer team crashes in the wilderness, things get all Lord of the Flies. Twenty-five years later, they are Melanie Lynskey, Christina Ricci, Tawny Cypress and others, still sorting it out.

Tues., Nov. 16

Simple as Water (HBO). Displaced Syrian families seek stability in Megan Mylans documentary.

Wed., Nov. 17

Marvels Hit-Monkey (Hulu) Japanese macaque out for revenge. Jason Sudeikis, Olivia Munn, George Takei. Animated, obviously.

Tiger King 2" (Netflix). You can mistreat animals, hire someone to commit murder, wind up in jail and someone will still put you in a docuseries.

Thurs., Nov. 18

The Sex Lives of College Girls (HBO Max). They do have them. Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble mount a comedy true to its title.

Star Trek: Discovery (Paramount+). Fourth season. Sonequa Martin-Greens Michael Burnham is now your captain.Robert Lloyd

Want to know more about one of the filmmakers weve interviewed? Need a new show to binge now that your fave is done for the season? If you have a question about TV or streaming movies for the pop culture obsessives at The Times, send it to us at screengab@latimes.com and you may find the answer in next weeks edition.

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The women of 'Impeachment: American Crime Story': Where are they now? - Los Angeles Times

Trump Organization to sell Washington DC hotel in $375m deal reports – The Guardian

The Trump Organization has reportedly agreed on a $375m deal to sell its hotel near the White House in Washington DC.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the long-in-the-offing deal, with CGI Merchant Group, a real estate investment firm from Miami.

The New York Times said the buyer was exploring a renaming of the hotel, replacing the Trump brand with Waldorf-Astoria, under a deal with Hilton.

Any deal must be approved by the federal government, which leased the Old Post Office building on Pennsylvania Avenue to Donald Trump in 2013.

The hotel opened for business in 2016, shortly before Trump defeated Hillary Clinton for the presidency, and swiftly became a magnet for controversy.

Trump allies and foreign governments seeking to do business with the Trump administration made the hotel a Washington power centre, leading to accusations of self-dealing and violations of the emoluments clause of the US constitution.

The Trump Organization explored a sale before the coronavirus pandemic, during which business suffered badly.

Problems deepened after Trump was beaten at the polls by Joe Biden, a defeat he attempted to overturn by stoking supporters to attack the Capitol, at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue.

In March this year, Sally Quinn, an influential Washington author and journalist, told the Guardian she could not imagine most people staying there when they come. I dont know anybody who goes there or has gone there.

I suspect that whoever does buy it will take down all the gilt and all of the trimmings and turn it into something very un-Trump-like.

Documents released amid House investigations of Trumps affairs have shown that the hotel lost $74m between 2016 and 2020.

Trumps financial problems have been widely reported in October he fell off the Forbes list of the 400 wealthiest people in America for the first time in 25 years. He is also in widespread legal jeopardy, over his business dealings as well as his attempts to subvert the election.

Nonetheless, Trump remains the dominant power in the Republican party and seems likely to mount another White House run.

Noah Bookbinder, president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which sued Trump for accepting payment from foreign governments via the hotel, said: Donald Trump is now selling the location of four years of self-enrichment, conflicts of interest and constitutional violations.

Selling it now that hes out of office and the grift dried up is, to say the least, too little, too late.

The Crew lawsuit was dismissed after Trump left office, and the matter deemed moot by the supreme court.

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Trump Organization to sell Washington DC hotel in $375m deal reports - The Guardian

How Trump reshaped the fifth circuit to become the ‘most extreme’ US court – The Guardian

One publicly mourned the moral tragedy of abortion. Another suggested that same-sex marriage imperils civic peace. A third tweeted negatively about Hillary Clinton using the hashtags #CrookedHillary, #basketofdeplorables and #Scandalabra.

James Ho, Stuart Kyle Duncan and Cory Wilson are among six judges appointed by former president Donald Trump to the US court of appeals for the fifth circuit, skewing one of the most conservative and influential courts in America even further to the right.

The consequences of Trumps reshaping of the federal judiciary are being felt acutely at the fifth circuit on issues ranging from abortion to immigration to the coronavirus pandemic. The courts willingness to entertain Republican extremism has effectively made it their principal legal bulwark against Joe Biden.

The Supreme Court is, no doubt, the nations most powerful court. But the 5th Circuit, the federal appeals court that covers Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, is staking out a claim to be the most dangerous, Ruth Marcus, deputy editorial page editor of the Washington Post, wrote in August.

The supreme court does indeed have the last word on the constitutionality of contentious laws and bears Trumps stamp with his three appointees. But the great majority of cases never make it that far. Instead 13 appellate courts, each covering a different region, get to rule on most legal appeals around the country.

Edward Fallone, an associate professor at Marquette University Law School, said: Theyre really error-correcting courts. Their function is primarily to correct the trial judge if they made a mistake. They dont have the power to overturn settled precedent from the supreme court but, if there are cases where there is no precedent and theyre writing on a clean slate, then they get the first crack at defining what the law is.

Among the 13 appellate courts, which typically put cases before three-judge panels, the US court of appeals for the District of Columbia circuit in Washington is widely regarded as the biggest hitter. On Thursday, for example, it temporarily blocked the release of Trumps White House records relating to the 6 January attack on the US Capitol.

But the fifth circuit, based in New Orleans, Louisiana, has long shown an ability to punch above its weight. Half a century ago it was seen as a trailblazer as it handled most civil rights cases. In 1964 Time magazine quoted a leading lawyer as saying: Without the Fifth Circuit, we would be on the verge of actual warfare in the South.

The courts transformation mirrored the politics of the deep south, recruiting from increasingly conservative ranks of judges and legal scholars. Of its 17 active judges today, 12 were named by Republican presidents.

When two vacancies arose during Barack Obamas presidency, Republicans managed to derail the nomination process and keep the seats open. (In 2015, notably, the court upheld a decision blocking Obama executive orders protecting undocumented immigrants whose children are US citizens.)

Then came Trump, who named six judges to the court, more than a third of its total composition. All are relatively young: they include Andrew Oldham, a former legal adviser to Texass governor, Greg Abbott, who is in his early 40s. Federal judges have lifetime tenure and typically serve long after the presidents who nominated them have left office.

Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond in Virginia, said of the fifth circuits judges: The vast majority have been appointed by Republican presidents going back to Ronald Reagan, George HW Bush and George W Bush. Of course, the Bushes knew all of these people personally, I think, but Trump has really amped it up because he has chosen even more conservative people than the Bushes did.

This affects which cases the court is likely to hear. Appeals in the ruby red states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas naturally go before the fifth circuit. But its hard-right reputation is also an invitation to outsiders for forum shopping, in which a plaintiff or their backers choose a court that will treat their claims most favourably.

Christopher Kang, co-founder and chief counsel of the progressive pressure group Demand Justice, said: What weve seen over the last several years is that conservatives have stacked the fifth circuit with very ultra-conservative ideological judges and so, when particularly controversial issues come up, lawyers from across the country find a way to file in the fifth circuit, which then allows it to hear these cases and have an outsized impact on the development of the law.

He added: This has been a very intentional decision by conservative legal activists to file their cases in the fifth circuit so that they can get the most extreme ruling possible as early as possible in the process.

In October the fifth circuit temporarily reinstated Texass abortion law, the most extreme in the country, which bars the procedure as early as six weeks into pregnancy and outsources enforcement of the ban to ordinary citizens. Earlier this month it issued a stay freezing the Biden administrations efforts to require workers at companies with at least 100 employees be vaccinated against Covid-19 or be tested weekly.

Kang remarked: Time and time again, the fifth circuit is the place for the most extreme rulings to come forward and then the question is whether or not the supreme court will step in or how the supreme court will react.

So far the fifth circuit has frequently proven too extreme even for a supreme court that has a solid conservative majority. The higher court reversed six of seven decisions by the fifth circuit in the 2019-2020 term and five of seven decisions in the 2020-2021 term. Among them were fifth circuit rulings upholding a Louisiana abortion law and striking down the Affordable Care Act.

Trump appointed more than 200 judges to the federal bench, including almost as many federal appeals court judges in four years (54) as Obama did in eight (55) partly because Mitch McConnell, the Republican majority leader in the Senate, thwarted many Obama appointees. Trump flipped the balance of several appeals courts to a majority of Republican appointees.

Biden, however, has set about reversing the trend with impressive speed. Kang commented: There definitely is grounds for optimism in that President Biden and Senate Democrats are prioritizing judges like never before on the Democratic side. I do think they are on pace for President Biden to appoint more appellate judges than Trump did in his first year.

Bidens emphasis on professional diversity is also encouraging, Kang continued. Public defenders and civil rights lawyers and union-side labour lawyers the kinds of lawyers who have been traditionally excluded from the bench are being elevated now and that is tremendously important.

The question is, how many vacancies will President Biden be able to fill? Because these are lifetime judgeships, youre only able to fill vacancies when a judge retires or passes away. President Biden is filling these vacancies very quickly but at some point there may not be any more vacancies to fill.

Conservatives, however, reject the premise that Trump warped the lower courts so they no longer represent the will of the people on reproductive rights and other issues. Curt Levey, president of the advocacy group the Committee for Justice, said: Polling indicates that something like 70, 75% basically think that there should be some protection of abortion but that it shouldnt be abortion on demand a moderate position which hasnt been able to be enacted because of Roe v Wade.

Depending on what the supreme court rules, it and the fifth circuit might very well be right in the middle of American public opinion. I could name a bunch of issues like that so I dont know that I buy that the fifth circuit is any more out of step with the American people than some of the more liberal circuits. The circuits tend to reflect America because its a number of presidents, going back to Reagan, who have appointed the judges.

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How Trump reshaped the fifth circuit to become the 'most extreme' US court - The Guardian