Politics
Unite the Kingdom burka stunt was pathetic and anti-feminist racism
If I ever had doubts about how protestors at Saturday’s Unite the Kingdom rally feel about Muslims (which I don’t), they were quickly laid to rest as my Instagram timeline flooded with photographs and videos of incendiary – and sometimes bizarre – anti-Muslim displays of behaviour, which included a Korean musician playing the cello while wearing strips of bacon on his shoulders, before shaking hands with Tommy Robinson on stage and announcing:
I may be hung like a chipmunk, but I’ve got enough balls to fight Islam.
I’m sorry, Mr. Cellist, but crispy cured pork will not result in me fainting or repel me back into the shadows like a vampire exposed to garlic. I also found his self-denegrating joke about the size of his package to be, in all honesty, quite sad. It plays into racist Western stereotypes about Asian men that have sought to emasculate them. It was an example of the ways in which people of colour belittle themselves to fit into white-dominated spaces. But I digress.
Saturday’s march was less ‘Unite the Kingdom’ and more ‘Unite the fight against Islam’ – the crusader references at the march were too many count. Far-right racists often accuse British Muslims like me of playing the victim card, but never has there been more blatant hatred for Islam on display than there was at Saturday’s march, which one attendee called ‘an incredible family day out in London‘ in a post on Facebook group Britain’s Voice, showing just how polarised British society has become. I am not sure you can call a rally where a 15-year-old girl was sexually harassed on camera ‘family friendly.’
However, the cherry on the top was Collectif Némésis’ niqab stunt.
Unite the Kingdom: an anti-Islam trope as old as time
Three members of the French right-wing ‘feminist’ group – I am intentionally putting the word feminist in quotation marks – took to the stage during last Saturday’s rally clad in black niqabs (the Islamic face veil) and abayas (an over garment worn by some Muslim women) before whipping them off in unison to a crowd of jeering men yelling “take it off.” How very feminist of them.
Not only was Collectif Némésis’s stunt reductive, resorting to the use of Muslim women’s clothing yet again as a symbol of what they perceive to be oppression, which is an anti-Islam trope as old as time, but by politicising our clothing and placing us on the frontline of their racist, bigoted political agenda, they are endangering us. And endangering fellow women isn’t very feminist, is it?
Muslim women bear the brunt of anti-Muslim hatred
The intent is clear: to stoke racist tensions by reinforcing the pernicious view of Islam as an oppressive force against women. And it is Muslim women who bear the brunt of these tensions.
It is well-documented that anti-Muslim hatred is gendered, with more Muslim women in Britain experiencing anti-Muslim harassment and hate crimes than Muslim men. Arguably, that’s because the hijab makes us more visibly Muslim. According to Tell MAMA, a non-governmental organisation monitoring anti-Muslim hatred in the UK, 65% of Islamophobic incidents in cities happen to girls and women, and stunts like the one Collectif Némésis pulled off last Saturday just embolden those who seek to harm Muslim women.
The consequences are serious; last month John Ashby was given a life sentence for raping and strangling a Sikh Woman last October in Walsall who he thought was a Muslim woman.
Mainstream British media outlets also bear some responsibility for the entitlement and impunity the far right feel when it comes to expressing their hatred towards Muslim women. When it comes to media coverage of the hatred that was openly expressed towards Muslims and Islam last Saturday, all you can hear are crickets.
Collectif Némésis’s actions contradict feminism
Then, there is the anti-feminist aspect of Collectif Némésis’s pathetic burlesque. The three French activists can be seen in the video encouraging the men in the audience to shout, ‘Take it off.’ The sexual objectification of women via the removal of clothing is misogyny at its finest. It also plays into the Orientalist and colonialist-era obsession that some white men in the West have with unveiling Muslim women. As a visibly Muslim woman, I feel equally hated and fetishised by far-right white men.
Collectif Némésis claims to be a feminist group, but really what they exhibited at the Unite the Kingdom rally was their blatant support for Britain’s misogynistic, patriarchal far-right movement whom, if they were to gain power, would rescind women’s rights. According to Politico, one in three Reform supporters are fans of Tommy Robinson, a party that has spoken about repealing the Equality Act 2010, imposing a tax on childless women, and lowering the legal abortion limit, among calls for a return to traditional family values reminiscent of The Handmaid’s Tale. Women who degrade, ridicule, and harm other women to win the approval of the same men who would hurt them, are, what queer feminist activist and writer Mona Eltahawy calls: foot soldiers of the patriarchy.
Right-wing women like those who are members of Collectif Némésis hide behind the guise of feminism and ‘liberating’ Muslim women. They have absolutely no interest in making life better for Muslim women; their hatred is one and the same.
Featured image via Instagram/CNN News 18
Politics
Keir Starmer’s Warning For Likely Successor Andy Burnham
Keir Starmer has issued a warning to his expected successor Andy Burnham over his approach to foreign policy.
The outgoing prime minister, who was dubbed “never here Keir” by his critics due to his frequent trips abroad, reminded the new MP for Makerfield that he will have to put the same effort into international relations.
He claimed internal issues, like the rising cost of living, are linked directly to the UK’s standing on the world stage.
Burnham, who is currently running uncontested to be the next PM, is expected to focus more on his domestic agenda when he gets into No.10 on July 20.
Speaking to the BBC, Starmer said: “If you’re prime minister and you care about what bills are going to be like in any part of the country, you have to care about finding a lasting solution to the situation in Ukraine, you have to care about what happens in the Strait of Hormuz.”
Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine meant European allies stopped buying Russia’s cheap oil exports.
Meanwhile, the US-Israeli strikes on Iran saw Tehran close the Strait of Hormuz, a major shipping lane which transports a fifth of the world’s oil supply.
A strain on international fossil fuels subsequently pushed prices up all over the world, including in the UK.
Starmer said he is “proud” that the UK has been a crucial part in dealing with both of these crises.
“I’m proud that the UK is now regarded as a leader, that other countries look to and want to engage with, and that is in our best interests here at home,” he said. “It’s not sensible to think we can just separate these two things out.”
He added: “The suggestion that in the modern era you could simply split up international and domestic… it just doesn’t make sense, it isn’t true, it isn’t right.”
“Whoever’s my successor is going to face the same global conflict,” Starmer continued. “We keep saying, and it’s true, we’re in a more dangerous and volatile world than we’ve been in for probably most of my lifetime. That’s not just a phase, that’s reality.
“That’s not going to change. And the domestic challenges aren’t going to change.”
Burnham has dodged a lot of scrutiny since winning a seat in parliament by not holding any press conferences.
He invited the public to ask him anything during a Reddit forum on Friday, where he said he would “100%” give the same amount of support to Ukraine as Starmer and wanted to continue his efforts to broker a closer EU relationship.
However, he did not answer any questions about his approach to Donald Trump.
Starmer has committed to staying on as MP for Holborn and St Pancras but promised to “keep my mouth shut” when his replacement takes over, adding that he has “always got on” with Burnham.
The outgoing prime minister had vowed to stay in post after Burnham won the Makerfield by-election last month, but – amid growing pressure from his party – U-turned three days later.
He told the BBC that it was a “really, really tough” decision, adding: “Taking the decision that your political career is over, it is an intensely personal matter, or at least it was for me. I wanted to do that with [my wife] Vic, and that’s what I did.”
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Trump’s Mocked After ‘Thieves, Radicals And Lunatics’ Line
President Donald Trump on Friday railed against communism during a bizarre speech at Mount Rushmore.
But as critics were quick to point out, his definition of what “communists” do sounds a lot like what he, his family and his associates have been accused of doing since he returned to the White House last year.
“Our American ancestors did not shed their blood at Concord and Trenton, Gettysburg and Shiloh, Midway and Normandy, just so that a band of thieves, radicals and lunatics could come in and loot, pillage our nation,” Trump said days after financial filings showed he earned more than $2 billion last year.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board this week accused Trump and his family of “profiting off the presidency in ways that demean the office.”
Trump’s windfall includes more than $1 billion from his crypto businesses ― money he pocketed, while The New York Times reported that some 764,000 other crypto wallets suffered massive losses.
The president has also struck gold by buying stocks in companies just before his administration announces decisions favourable to those firms.
“The Trump clan is cashing in on the Presidency in big and sketchy ways,” the Journal said.
Meanwhile, Americans have been struggling with a spike in the inflation rate ― something Trump dismissed only last month.
“I love the inflation,” the president insisted.
Trump’s speech was full of other lines about supposed “communists,” a word he is turning to with increasing frequency. The president has been falsely calling everyone who disagrees with him a “communist” as he tries to drum up Red Scare tactics. The move comes amid a deep plunge in his approval ratings and an increasing likelihood that his party will lose the House and possibly even the Senate in November’s midterm elections.
But it was his line about looting and pillaging ― which comes amid his own massive increase in wealth ― that had everyone pointing the finger right back at the president:
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Legally Blonde: As Elle Debuts, 21 Facts You Didn’t Know About The Original Film
It’s been 25 years since Elle Woods got into Harvard, introduced the world to the bend and snap and taught us all to never judge a book by its cover.
Legally Blonde premiered in 2001, becoming an instant hit with fans, inspiring viewers all around the globe and catapulting Reese Witherspoon to the A-list.
After Elle first donned her pink courtsuit, Legally Blonde became a global phenomenon, spawning a 2003 sequel, a Broadway musical and countless memes.
Now, the iconic character is back on our screens in the new prequel series Elle, which explores the iconic character’s life as a 16-year-old in Seattle in the 1990s.
To commemorate 25 years since the release of Legally Blonde, and the premiere of Elle on Prime Video, here are 21 behind-the-scenes facts you might not have known about the cult classic…
Elle Woods was loosely inspired by the author of Legally Blonde novel, and her real-life experiences at law school
The Reese Witherspoon film is based on a 2001 novel by Amanda Brown – also called Legally Blonde – which itself was inspired by her own life at Stanford.
The author shares more than a passing resemblance to Elle, admitting to the San Francisco Chronicle: “I wanted to go to Stanford when I saw the mall.”
During her first week at Stanford Law, she realised how difficult it was to find another woman who shared her interests in fashion and shopping. So, she started writing letters home, lampooning her lecturers and students. These 300 pages became the basis of her book.

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“I was sitting in tort class when the novel popped into my head,” recalled Amanda Brown to Stanford Magazine. “I wanted to do a parody of law school.”
“I wrote it all on pink paper, with my pink furry pen,” Amanda told the SF Gate in 2003, claiming she “finally found an agent” when they picked out of a pile of manuscripts solely “because it was on pink paper”.
Amanda self-published her book, but it soon found its way onto the desks of a production company, who then sent it to the team who would go on to write the Legally Blonde film.
“It immediately struck us as one of the greatest movie ideas ever, and we pitched it as ‘Clueless meets The Paper Chase’, one of those law school movies from the 1970s. I might have worn a lot of pink in the meeting,” writer Kirsten Smith said, as reported by The News Daily in an oral history article.
The original script for Legally Blonde had a very different message
Legally Blonde has become known as a modern-day feminist classic, addressing topics like misogyny, sexual harassment in the workplace and power dynamics between men and women. But, the original script was much raunchier and had far less of a positive female-empowerment message.
“The first script was very raunchy, to be honest, in the vein of American Pie,” Jessica Cauffiel, who plays Margot, told The New York Post in 2021.
“What we know now as Legally Blonde, and what it began as are two completely different films. It transformed from nonstop zingers that were very adult in nature to this universal story of overcoming adversity by being oneself.”
The writers also explained there were a few other differences between the original manuscript and the final product.
“It wasn’t a murder trial, and she ended up with a professor, so we made some changes. It was a matter of finessing the details and adding a few characters, like Paulette and her friendship,” screenwriter Karen McCullah explained in that same interview.
There’s a reason that Elle Woods attended Harvard rather than Stanford

In the Legally Blonde book, Elle attended Stanford, like its author. However, this was changed in the film adaptation, for the simple reason that the university wouldn’t let filming take place there.
The university has long implemented a no-filming rule due to “year-round campus activity” and in order to protect “the privacy and safety of its students, faculty and staff.”
After being turned down by Stanford – where, ironically, Reese Witherspoon also studied – the producers approached USC, which rejected the offer, telling Vulture that there was “too much stereotyping going on” in the script for their liking. The team then reached out to UCLA, Yale, and the University of Chicago — all of whom also wanted nothing to do with Elle Woods.
Finally, Harvard agreed to being mentioned in the film, although they didn’t want the movie filmed there.
If you think the film’s campus looks sunny for Massachusetts, where Harvard is actually situated, that’s because the movie they filmed at institutes in California.
While USC and UCLA didn’t want to be associated with Elle, they were happy for the filming to take place on their campuses all the same.
Reese Witherspoon and Jessica Cauffield spent time with a sorority to prepare for their roles
“We [talked] an entire sorority into going out to dinner at a Mexican restaurant. Reese offered to buy them free margaritas all night,” Jessica recalled to the New York Post.
“She leans over to me as the drinks are on the way and goes, ‘We’re not drinking anything. We’re drinking water’. We stayed sober as they got tanked, and we took notes.”
In a 2001 interview with Entertainment Weekly, Reese called her time with the sorority girls “an anthropological study”.
“You learn what they eat, how they behave, how they take care of their young, that sort of thing,” she quipped. “Seriously, though, I’ve learned that people don’t know what their worst characteristics are.”
She added: “It’s inherent to our nature that we don’t know what, in ourselves, is abhorrent to other people. So it’s really easy to infiltrate people’s lives. They showed all sides of themselves. Sometimes I’m shocked, like, I can’t believe they just said that to me!”

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The infamous bend and snap move was created on a whim
Jennifer Coolidge co-starred in the movie as Elle’s manicurist turned BFF Paulette.
In one of the decade’s most iconic film moments, she tries the infamous “bend and snap”, a move which “has a 98 percent success rate of getting a man’s attention”, according to her trainee lawyer friend.
Legally Blonde’s writing team have revealed to Entertainment Weekly that they invented the famous move at the L’ermitage Hotel bar in Beverly Hills over some drinks.
“We were in between meetings and working on the script,” writer Karen McCullah recalled. “And we were trying to come up with a B-plot that happened in the nail salon and we were working in weird directions. Like, maybe it gets robbed, all sorts of crazy stuff.”
The writing duo then realised that they were overthinking the moment, which is when the “bend and snap” was invented.
“Kirsten jumped off her barstool and was like, ‘Like this?’ And then she did that move,” Karen said, revealing that the team came up with the “bend and snap” name the spot.
“It just cracks us up that that’s become such a lasting thing that people remember. It’s literally the silliest thing in the movie,” Karen added.
Legally Blonde’s bend and snap scene had a very famous choreographer behind it
The now-iconic move was choreographed by 80s icon and Mickey singer Toni Basil.
“I choreographed iconic things for David Bowie and Tina Turner,” Toni told The New York Times in 2021. “People interview me and they go, ‘You did the bend and snap?’ It’s like, ‘what, a one-and-a-half-minute number in the movie?’. But it was such an integral part.”
The original idea was for the bend and snap to be a full-length musical number, but this was eventually shortened for the final cut.
Ultimately, Reese explained, “it just felt odd” to have a full bend and snap number, “because there was just one musical sequence”.

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Legally Blonde was not written with any specific actor in mind to play Elle
Screenwriters Karen McCullah and Kirsten Smith didn’t picture any specific star in mind when adapting Amanda Brown’s book.
However, they were delighted when Reese Witherspoon signed on to play the lead, as she was a rising star at the time, having already appeared in Election and Cruel Intentions.
“We loved her in Freeway. She had so much moxie in that,” Kirsten told Business Insider. “She had the perfect balance of comedic ability, the intellectual vibes, and the real dramatic chops, too. She’s the entire package.”
Reese Witherspoon admitted the auditioning process for Legally Blonde was not the most positive experience
Reese doesn’t look back too fondly on her Legally Blonde audition, explaining to The Hollywood Reporter in 2019 that her manager told her to dress sexy, to differentiate her from her “shrew” character from Election.
After a string of failed auditions and missed roles, her team had an idea.
“My manager finally called and said: ‘You’ve got to go meet with the studio head because he will not approve you. He thinks you really are your character from Election and that you’re repellent,’” she explained.
During the audition process to play Elle, Reese had to speak to studio execs while in full glam.
“I remember a room full of men who were asking me questions about being a coed and being in a sorority, even though I had dropped out of college four years earlier and I have never been inside a sorority house,” she recalled.
Another A-lister was almost cast as Elle Woods before Reese Witherspoon, but turned it down

Dead To Me star Christina Applegate admitted she rejected the lead role in Legally Blonde, calling the decision a “big fucking mistake”.
In a 2023 interview with Vanity Fair, Christina said she turned it down as the role was too similar to her famous sitcom character in Married With… Children.
“I wouldn’t toy with the idea of Legally Blonde because it felt too fresh getting out of Married…With Children,” she explained, referring to her dumb blonde character Kelly Bundy in the family comedy. “It was very similar on paper.”
She joked that she would have “Witherspoon money” now if she had signed on to the role, but conceded: “You can’t imagine anyone playing Elle Woods other than Reese Witherspoon? I would have completely screwed it up.”
Interestingly, both Christina and Reese went on to play sisters of Jennifer Aniston’s Rachel in Friends, although they never shared the screen in the award-winning sitcom.
Meanwhile, a famous pop star was also considered by the producers
Producer Marc Platt put Britney Spears’ name forward as a suggestion when Christina Applegate turned down the part.
“Marc once [mentioned] Britney Spears, and I was like, ‘No, that’s not a good idea’,” writer Kirsten Smith revealed. “I think she hosted SNL the night before, and his kids were into her, so he threw her name out there.”
While Britney writes about being offered roles in Chicago and The Notebook in her autobiography, The Woman In Me, she never mentions Legally Blonde, so it could be that the pop diva was unaware her name was ever on the table.

Chloe Sevigny was among the stars who turned down a part in in Legally Blonde, too
Selma Blair’s performance as the “frigid bitch” Vivian Kensington is now considered iconic, but another actor almost wore those infamous pearls.
“I remember talk about getting Chloë Sevigny to play Vivian,” screenwriter Kirsten recalled to The New York Times. “That didn’t work out, and we ended up with our queen Selma Blair.”
She noted that “Selma and Reese were close, because they had done Cruel Intentions together”, meaning their friendship served as a “great anchor for everything” on screen.
“I was the last person cast, and I remember Chloe Sevigny passed,” Selma also told Entertainment Weekly.
“Her fingers are much too elegant; they needed someone with a bony little finger,” the actor joked.

Jennifer Coolidge apparently thought she was auditioning for the role of Elle
Reese Witherspoon and Jennifer Coolidge recently reunited for a 25th anniversary catch-up, where they shared their experiences of working on the film.
During this chat, they spilled some gossip, including why Jennifer auditioned for the movie.
“I thought this was the funniest thing. I was so lucky to get cast in this movie, and it is one of my favourite jobs of all time,” she recalled, joking: “But I stupidly thought that when I was auditioning, I thought I was gonna be Elle.”
Before Jennifer Coolidge was cast in Legally Blonde, a rock legend was apparently in consideration for her role
Jennifer Coolidge’s gives an iconic performance as Elle’s beautician, but she wasn’t their first choice.
In The New York Times’ piece on Legally Blonde, Jennifer shared some of the other actors she’d heard were in the line-up to play Paulette.
“I don’t know if they’re true [but I heard] that Courtney Love was up for [my] role,” she claimed. “I heard Kathy Najimy was up for it, [too].”

Alanna Ubach had a creative way of impressing casting directors to land the part of Serena
Future Euphoria star Alanna Ubach used an unusual tactic to land the role of Elle’s sorority sister.
Jessica Cauffiel had already been cast as fellow Delta Nu Margot when she met Alanna in the bathroom during a chemistry read.
“She’s like, ‘Hey, hey, are you in this movie?’” Jessica recalled during the virtual 20th anniversary reunion.
Jessica then claimed that Alanna begged for help booking the job, telling her: “I don’t have any money, I need to make rent, will you help me make rent?”
“She was so funny and so ballsy, I said, ‘Okay’,” Jessica continued.
From there, the two put their heads together and “choreographed simultaneous moves”, which Jessica made the casting directors think they were naturally in sync.

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The Legally Blonde writing team only had one actor in mind for the role of Emmett, Elle’s love interest
“We spent a lot of time faxing the casting director, like ′Luke Wilson, Luke Wilson!’” Kristen explained.
“And then, finally, after the table read where a different actor played Emmett, we were like ‘Luke Wilson, Luke Wilson!’. And he was like, ‘That’s a really good idea.’ We were like, ‘We’ve been telling you!’”
Luke was subsequently offered the role without even needing to audition.

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The actors added their own flourishes to the script
While the Legally Blonde script didn’t leave a lot of room for improvisation, the screenwriters recalled to Business Insider that the cat still found room to add a personal touch to their characters.
During rehearsals, Jason Christopher came up with the line “you bitch!” – which his character shouts after his boyfriend Enrique denies their relationship in his testimony.
The screenwriters also revealed that it was Alanna Ubach’s idea to speak fluent Vietnamese at the nail salon.
“I thought, ‘How funny would it be if we frequent this nail salon so much that I’ve been immersed in Vietnamese and I’ve picked up the language?’” the actor said.
Life as a new mum took was taking its toll on Reese Witherspoon while shooting Legally Blonde
Reese took on the role of Elle Woods just months after welcoming her daughter Ava in September 1999. As a result, while she looked fresh and bright on camera, she didn’t always feel that way.
“Some nights Ava would wake up screaming because she had the flu, and I would spend most of the night trying to rock her back to sleep and then have to be on the set at seven in the morning for make-up!” she explained to Cinema.com in 2001.
“And then you throw in the fact that I’m supposed to be playing a very bubbly and energetic California preppy who is smiling all the time!”
“I kept thinking, ‘I’m going to kill myself! I’m never going to make it!’” she joked.

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Another famous face was supposed to make a scene-stealing cameo
While putting Legally Blonde together, screenwriter Kirsten had read an article which said that video applications were the done thing when trying to impress professors at places like Harvard – and they wanted Elle’s to be extra special.
“We wanted to shoot [Elle, Serena and Margot] chasing Judge Judy wherever she tapes her show and them being like, ‘Judge Judy! Judge Judy! Can we get an autograph?’ Kirsten said. Unfortunately, the team couldn’t get the real-life judge on board, so the idea was ditched.
Alanna Ubach’s alternative idea was also cut.
“I thought, ‘Reese, what if Ryan Phillippe played a really famous judge who had his own show, and we have him on billboards’,” the actor said of Reese’s then-husband.
Reese wasn’t keen on the idea of adding her partner to the film, though, reportedly telling her: “Alanna, no one’s going to believe that my husband’s a judge. Are you kidding me?”
Matthew Davis, who plays Warner, admitted he had a major crush on Reese Witherspoon, which affected his performance somewhat

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In a 2001 interview with Movieline, Matthew admitted he acted like a “bumbling idiot” around his co-star because of his crush – despite her being married to Ryan Phillippe at the time.
“At first I was such a bumbling idiot with her, the producers pulled me aside one day to see if I was OK,” he revealed.
When the actor later confessed his feelings to the Election star, she let him down gently.
“She was like, ‘That’s so sweet!’,” he explained. “OK, let’s work on the scene…’.”
In hindsight, Matthew admits his behaviour on the set of Legally Blonde wasn’t always the most professional.
“I felt starstruck by all this because it happened so quickly and I hadn’t adjusted,” he told Teen Vogue in 2017. “I definitely wasn’t cool. At the first table read, I just kept going on and on about how much I loved her work, fawning all over her.”
Matthew told News.com.au that he also “adored” his on-screen girlfriend, Selma Blair, during filming.
“I developed a crush on her at the time but she was with someone else — I think she was dating the guy from Rushmore [actor Jason Schwartzman] but he was coming around and I was kind of like ‘who is this guy?!’” Matthew shared.
Legally Blonde almost had a sapphic happy ending
Legally Blonde famously ends with Elle freeing her client, graduating at the top of her class, becoming best friends with her former nemesis and staying with doting boyfriend Emmett.
However, the cast told The New York Times that the ending in the script was markedly different.
“The first ending was Elle and Vivian in Hawaii in beach chairs, drinking margaritas and holding hands,” said Jessica Cauffiel. “The insinuation was either they were best friends or they had gotten together romantically.”
Another alternative ending for Legally Blonde didn’t go down too well with test audiences

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At the 2015 Vulture Festival, the screenwriters revealed that their original script wrapped at the courthouse right after Elle won the case, with her and Emmett kissing on the steps.
“It was just kind of a weak ending,” Karen McCullah admitted. “The kiss didn’t feel right because it’s not a rom-com — it wasn’t about their relationship.
“So test audiences were saying, ‘We want to see what happens – we want to see her succeed.’ So that’s why we rewrote for graduation.”
“We screened the movie two or three times, and every time people didn’t want to end it with a kiss,” she also explained to the New York Times.
“They thought it wasn’t a story about [Elle] getting a boyfriend, which was really cool to have people say that.”
An interesting part of this axed ending would have fast-forwarded to a year later, with Elle and a now-blonde Vivian starting their own Blonde Legal Defence Club at Harvard Law School.
“There was an ending that Vivian was blonde, and I did [go blonde],” Selma admitted to the podcast Shut Up Evan. “I have the Polaroids. I looked just like Faye Dunaway in Bonnie And Clyde – the beret was on and the blonde.”
Legally Blonde is now streaming on Prime Video, as are the first episodes of Elle.
Politics
The House | It’s half a century since a prime minister who wasn’t a full-time occupant of No 10

4 min read
Andy Burnham will be the first Labour leader and first prime minister of any persuasion born in the north of England since Harold Wilson in the 60s. It’s not the only similarity between them.
Andy says he’s likely to follow Harold’s example of living away from Downing Street for at least part of every week, portraying it as an escape to the North. That said, the only northern aspect of Chez Wilson was its address: Lord North Street, a five-minute amble from Parliament.
Like Burnham, Wilson nourished his northern roots. Born in Huddersfield and representing a Merseyside constituency, he was a cabinet minister in Attlee’s government by the age of 31. In newsreel footage of the time, a young president of the Board of Trade speaks like a BBC announcer, replicating the clipped tones of Attlee. That was how senior politicians were meant to sound in the 1940s. It was Nye Bevan who convinced his friend not to suppress his Yorkshire vowels (nor to over-burden his speeches with statistics).
By following his advice, Wilson wasn’t adopting a persona, but discarding one.
As the social historian David Kynaston records in ‘A Northern Wind’, when Wilson entered No 10 in 1964, the cultural essence of the country was migrating in that direction – in music, cinema, literature, theatre, art and sport. There was even rugby league on the telly every Saturday afternoon. It was a decade dominated by Tom Courtney, David Hockney, Bobby Charlton, Alan Sillitoe and, overwhelmingly, by the Beatles.
Wilson was part of the zeitgeist, but it wasn’t northernness that determined his decision to keep the family home at Lord North Street when he returned to the premiership in 1974.
When Harold proposed to Mary, he was a very young university don; when they married, he was an extraordinarily successful civil servant, and by the time an election was called in 1945, he was back lecturing at Oxford. He was a ‘B list’ candidate (i.e. with no union sponsorship) in a hopeless seat, and anyway Churchill, the Great War leader, was bound to reap the rewards of victory. Mary was entitled to think her future would be amongst Matthew Arnold’s ‘dreaming spires’ pursuing her interests in art and literature and writing poetry. She detested Downing Street and what she saw as the skulduggery of political life.
Evicted by Ted Heath in 1970, the Wilsons’ only home was a modest holiday bungalow on the Scilly Islands (paid for by the royalties from Mary’s book of collected poems which sold an incredible 70,000 copies). Having sold their previous home in Hampstead Garden Suburb, the couple rented for a while before buying a twenty-year lease on the elegant Georgian terraced house close to Labour Party HQ in Smith Square. With one of their two sons still living at home, Mary was grateful for the escape from constant turmoil in No10 and had no wish to return to it.
So when Labour came back to power in 1974, Harold simply acted in accordance with his wife’s wishes, as he did two years later, keeping the promise made to Mary that he’d retire on his 60th birthday.
The two years spent working in Downing Street but living elsewhere had been a success. Some have suggested that was because Marcia Williams was Harold’s political wife, compensating for Mary’s disinterest, but that’s unfair to both women. Williams had been Harold’s political secretary since 1956, one of the first women to hold such a powerful position. Had she been a man, the arrangement wouldn’t have raised an eyebrow. In any case, Marcia and Mary were close friends, and Harold benefited from Mary’s private advice as well as Marcia’s professional wisdom.
After leaving office, they bought a flat in Ashley Gardens close to Westminster Cathedral, and it was there that Mary nursed Harold through the cruel onset of Alzheimer’s disease until he died in 1995. Mary occupied the flat alone for the next 23 years until her death aged 102.
Burnham is unlikely to have the time to match Wilson’s record of winning four elections, but just a couple would be enough for Labour supporters – with perhaps a plebiscite on Europe, the first of which Harold won in 1975. On the subject of homes, Harold Wilson’s record of 425 new houses built in a single year remains to be broken.
Alan Johnson is a former Labour cabinet minister and author of Harold Wilson: Twentieth Century Man
Politics
14 Hallmarks Of Ageing Regular Exercise Helps To Slow Down
You probably already know that exercise can help us to live longer.
Research has shown that walking 7,000 steps a day can lead to a 47% risk reduction in all-cause mortality, while strength training has been linked to up to four years of extra life.
In fact, the Mayo Clinic stated that strength training could “slow and, in many cases, reverse the changes in muscle fibres associated with ageing”.
But why exactly does that happen? And what do we mean when we talk about exercise “reversing” or “slowing” ageing?
A paper published in the Journal of Sport and Health Science said: “Current evidence suggests that exercise favorably modulates all 14 hallmarks of ageing.”
Here’s what those markers are, as well as how exercise improves them:
1) Genome instability
As we get older, our DNA is more likely to mutate, sustain damage, and lose the ability to repair itself.
This amounts to “genome instability”, which has been described in some research as the main driver of physical ageing.
But, the paper reads, regular physical activity “appears capable of promoting genome stability by reducing DNA damage and enhancing DNA damage repair”.
2) Telomere shrinking or loss (attrition)
Our telomeres – DNA structures that humans have at the ends of our chromosomes, and which keep our cells working better for longer – tend to shrink when we age.
Telomeres have been compared to “the protective plastic caps at the end of shoelaces”. Shorter telomeres are associated with a shorter life.
Thankfully, the review said: “Exercise can also activate telomerase [a special enzyme that maintains telomere length] and increase telomere length and thus decrease telomere attrition”.
3) Less epigenetic regulation
Epigenetic factors are those that seem to be able to switch certain genes on or off without changing a person’s actual DNA. Those genes could be beneficial or harmful to someone’s health.
“Remarkably, recent evidence suggests that changes in epigenetic information are not merely consequences but also potential drivers of mammalian ageing,” the paper said.
Exercise could help our bodies to express our genes in a more beneficial way, they added.
“Accumulating evidence indicates that exercise-induced epigenetic modifications contribute to improved health outcomes in older adults” by regulating things like our DNA “off switches” (DNA methylation).
4) Less effective proteostasis
Proteostasis is the short term for “protein homeostasis”. It refers to the “delicate balance between protein synthesis, folding, trafficking, and degradation, which is essential for cellular function and organismal health”.
As we age, that network of processes can fall out of whack, increasing our risk of disease and, possibly, brain degeneration.
But “Increasing evidence indicates that exercise can restore proteostatic mechanisms disrupted by ageing”, the review said.
5) Decreased macroautophagy
Ageing well isn’t just about keeping the things we want going for longer. It’s also about getting rid of the stuff we don’t want and preventing unwanted buildups – which is where autophagy, sometimes called the body’s “cellular recycling system”, comes in.
Autophagy can help your cells to work more efficiently. But it slows down when we get older, giving e.g. cancer and other diseases better odds of taking hold.
“Several studies have shown that exercise can reverse ageing- and diet-induced impairments in autophagy across various tissues,” this study stated.
6) Dysregulation of nutrient-sensing signalling
Our nutrient-sensing network helps us to recognise the nutrients in our body and tells our cells how to respond appropriately.
A faulty nutrient-sensing network “has emerged as a key mechanism that contributes to ageing and age-related disease,” the review said.
“Importantly, exercise is capable of modulating multiple nutrient-sensing pathways, and thus exerting anti-ageing effects and promoting healthy ageing.”
7) Mitochondrial dysfunction
You probably learned in secondary school that mitochondria are the powerhouses of the cell. More specifically, they generate a lot of the energy our cells need to do their jobs.
And – you guessed it – ageing doesn’t exactly help our mitochondria to excel.
Yet “In elderly individuals, regular exercise is associated with improved mitochondrial health and enhanced physiological outcomes, including greater insulin sensitivity, superior muscle function, and elevated exercise capacity and efficiency, even when compared to older adults who engage in recommended daily [physical activity] levels but lack structured training,” the paper reads.
8) Cellular senescence
Older people have more senescent cells, sometimes called “zombie” cells, which stop dividing and build up over time. As they accumulate in larger and larger amounts, our bodies are at greater risk of ageing-related diseases.
A process called senolysis usually clears these “zombie cells” away, but when we get older, that cleaning system becomes less efficient.
Regular exercise seems to help lessen the burden of senescent cells.
9) Ageing-related extracellular matrix remodelling
The extracellular matrix (ECM) is the non-cellular part of our body that supports and maintains our tissues and organs. When it’s not working well, issues like arthritis and organ fibrosis can appear.
“ECM remodelling is a prominent feature of ageing tissues,” said the paper.
But “increasing evidence indicates that regular exercise can counteract these detrimental ECM alterations and preserve tissue structure and function”.
10) Stem cell decline
A decline in the regenerative power of our stem cells – very adaptable cells which are considered the building blocks of the body, and which can renew themselves – is considered “one of the defining hallmarks of ageing… resulting in impaired tissue maintenance and repair”.
However, regular “exercise has positive effects on the function of multiple types of stem cells and can promote tissue regeneration in aged organisms”.
11) Changes to intercellular communication
Our cells have to communicate with one another to make our body function. Changes to this communication form yet another “hallmark” of ageing.
But exercise seems to improve it. In fact, “exerkines”, which are secreted by tissues when we exercise, “mediate many of the systemic adaptations to exercise and play crucial roles in mitigating aging-related decline”.
12) Chronic inflammation
We’ve written before at HuffPost UK about “inflammaging” – a term GP Dr Suzanne Wylie told us refers to “the low-grade, chronic inflammation that develops as we age, even in the absence of obvious infection or illness”.
It can increase our risk of age-related disease.
Luckily, per the research, “An increasing body of epidemiological research indicates that engaging in regular physical activity or exercise can reduce aging-related chronic inflammation”.
13) Dysbiosis
Dysbiosis – a disruption to or imbalance in your gut’s microbiome, or community of microorganisms – could become more likely as we age.
And, the review found, that might “contribute to frailty and the development of age-related conditions”.
Once again, though, regular exercise might make dysbiosis less likely.
14) Psychosocial changes
“As individuals age, they often face a gradual contraction in the size and quality of their social network, increasing their vulnerability to social isolation and loneliness,” the review said.
That’s a shame, as isolation and related mental health struggles are linked to a higher risk of dementia and even a shorter lifespan.
“Increasing evidence suggests that the mental health of the elderly can be improved through exercise,” though, the paper ended.
Politics
The Atlantic Republishes JD Vance’s Scathing Trump Op-Ed On Its 10th Anniversary
The Atlantic used the Fourth of July as an opportunity to republish a 10-year-old op-ed that sharply criticized then-Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, comparing him and and his MAGA politics to heroin.

AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta
“We are republishing it on the occasion of its tenth anniversary, so that our readers can judge for themselves how well his assessment of the man he now serves as vice president has stood the test of time,” read an editor’s note from the publication.
Vance’s July 4, 2016, op-ed, titled “Opioid of the Masses,” argued that Trump was offering the public an “easy escape” from their pain.
“He never offers details for how these plans will work, because he can’t,” Vance wrote. “Trump’s promises are the needle in America’s collective vein.”
The editor’s note stated that the piece was published not long after Vance published his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.” The book deals, among other topics, with the opioid crisis in rural America. In his op-ed, he wrote that “many Americans have reached” for a “new” pain reliever.
“It enters minds, not through lungs or veins, but through eyes and ears, and its name is Donald Trump,” he wrote.
Read the 2016 op-ed here.
Vance, of course, went on to become Trump’s vice president in his second term. He has repeatedly addressed his once fierce criticism of the president — including reportedly musing that Trump could be “America’s Hitler.”
“I don’t hide from that,” Vance told Sean Hannity in 2024. “I was certainly sceptical of Donald Trump in 2016, but President Trump was a great president, and he changed my mind. I think he changed the minds of a lot of Americans.”
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Trump Says Republicans Will Not Lose Elections For 100 Years If They Pass SAVE Act
President Donald Trump evoked the threat of a “communist menace in our land” on Friday to push Republican lawmakers to pass his SAVE America Act and end the filibuster, promising them election wins for the next century if they do.
“America will never be a communist country. We can only lose the midterms if we allow ourselves to lose the midterms, if we are foolish, stupid and unwise,” Trump said in front of Mount Rushmore in South Dakota. “But if we terminate the filibuster as we should do and immediately vote for the SAVE America Act, then we will not lose an election for 100 years.”
The president has been urging Republicans to end the filibuster for months, causing a greater divide in the party. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has said, “The votes aren’t there, one, to nuke the filibuster, and the votes aren’t there for a talking filibuster.”
In addition to the filibuster’s termination, Trump demanded Congress pass the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, more commonly known as the SAVE Act, legislation that would require voters to provide in-person proof of citizenship to register to vote.
“We do that, we’re not going to lose an election for 100 years,” Trump said before going on an anti-communist tangent.
The president’s pressure on Republicans comes amid right-wing fear-mongering about democratic socialists following their recent primary victories, mislabeling them as “communist,” which is a distinctly different ideology.
“The Communist Party is made up of illegal immigrants, criminals, and everybody that doesn’t want to work. Communism is a loser. It always was, and it is right now,” Trump said. “It’s a big loser. Look at the people that are promoting it. They are not the people you’re going to follow.”
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
For Neurodivergent Mums, Birth Trauma Can Start Long Before Labour
For some neurodivergent women, birth trauma is not just about one terrifying moment in a delivery room.
It can begin during pregnancy, build through months of feeling unseen or unsupported, and follow women into the earliest days of motherhood.
As a midwife, I have supported many of these women through pregnancy, birth and early parenthood, and have seen first-hand how much additional pressure these experiences can place on those whose brains process the world differently.
Autism and ADHD do not disappear when someone becomes pregnant, yet maternity care still often assumes that every woman experiences these life-changing transitions in broadly the same way.
Pregnancy can bring unsettling changes
For some neurodivergent women, pregnancy can bring an overwhelming loss of certainty. Their body is changing, routines disappear, decisions come quickly and uncertainty becomes part of daily life.
Many have spent years developing routines and coping strategies that help them navigate the world, only to find pregnancy disrupts them completely. Busy waiting rooms, unfamiliar clinicians, rushed appointments and changing plans can unintentionally add to that sense of overwhelm, particularly for women who are already carrying previous trauma, fertility struggles or baby loss.
I have also cared for women who found group antenatal classes so overwhelming that they simply stopped attending because they felt there was nowhere they truly belonged.
The postnatal period can leave mums feeling invisible
Once the baby arrives, attention quite naturally shifts towards the newborn, but that can leave mothers feeling invisible at exactly the point they most need support.
A neurodivergent woman may be processing a difficult birth while navigating sensory overload, sleep deprivation, feeding challenges, physical recovery and the relentless demands of caring for a newborn.
At the same time, many feel under pressure to appear grateful and happy because everyone around them is focused on the baby.
Trauma does not always look dramatic from the outside, it may be the mother who cannot stop replaying her birth experience, becomes overwhelmed by constant noise or touch, panics when plans change or feels consumed by anxiety about getting everything right.
Sometimes it is the woman who simply needs a few quiet minutes after giving birth before she feels ready to hold her baby because her nervous system is completely overwhelmed, but worries she will be judged for not responding in the way people expect.
Many neurodivergent women have spent years learning to mask distress, meaning they can appear calm while internally feeling exhausted, frightened and unable to process everything that has happened.
Simple changes can make all the difference
Through my previous work in the NHS, and now at Cocoon Healthcare, where we support women through pregnancy and early parenthood, I have learned that understanding the mother in front of me is every bit as important as understanding her pregnancy.
Often the biggest improvements come from remarkably simple changes: allowing more time during appointments, offering clearer communication, reducing unnecessary sensory overload where possible, improving continuity of care and recognising that every woman will experience pregnancy differently.
Birth is never experienced in isolation, it is shaped by previous experiences, mental health, communication preferences, sensory needs and the support women receive before, during and after.
When we talk about birth trauma, we need to think beyond labour itself. We should be asking how safe women felt throughout pregnancy, whether they felt listened to, and whether the support they received reflected who they were as individuals.
Neurodivergent mothers do not need special treatment, but they do deserve maternity care that recognises there is no single, universal way to experience pregnancy, birth or early parenthood.
When women feel understood from the very beginning, they are far more likely to enter motherhood feeling confident and supported, and that benefits babies and families too.
Kate Mortimer is lead midwife at Cocoon Healthcare, a Yorkshire-based pregnancy and women’s wellbeing clinic.
Politics
Should celebrities and athletes shut up about politics? It’s complicated.
Americans are fed up with politics invading every aspect of their lives. But many can’t kick the habit.
Roughly 60 percent of Americans say it feels like politics are everywhere these days where it does not make sense for things to be political, according to new results from The POLITICO Poll. It’s a rare point of harmony between Republicans and Democrats, with majorities of both parties also agreeing that it is becoming less important what celebrities say about politics.
Unless they agree with them.
The same people who want politics out of everyday life are still influenced when the celebrities’ or athletes’ opinions align with their own. Nearly 70 percent of voters who backed Vice President Kamala Harris in 2024 would think “more positively” about a movie star if they spoke out against President Donald Trump. The inverse is also true: For nearly 60 percent of the president’s voters, their perception of a star would improve if they expressed support for him.
That picture comes into even sharper relief among the strongest partisans, who are more likely to expect that their favorite celebrities and institutions around them express their political views than those who are more in the middle.
That presents a complicated and often contradictory picture of how voters engage in politics as it bleeds into their daily lives — and the precarious line celebrities and local leaders need to walk as culture and politics become hard to detangle.
Celebrities and athletes have increasingly spoken out about causes like ICE crackdowns and racial equity on the world stage. Key culture podcasts — from the Joe Rogan Experience to Call Her Daddy — have hosted politicians including Trump and Harris. And actors like George Clooney were critical in calling for former President Joe Biden to end his 2024 campaign.
“Everyone should always speak up for what they believe in,” said Jordan C. Brown, a Los Angeles-based Democratic strategist who has worked with campaigns and celebrities alike. “But there is a cost, and I think I would just caution people of the cost.”
The result is an American public that doesn’t quite know what it wants, one that’s tired of their lives being politicized — but are also influenced by partisan statements.
Voters still care about where celebrities and institutions stand
Majorities of both Harris and Trump voters say politics has invaded spaces where it doesn’t belong, but Trump voters are more concerned than Harris voters are.
For example, most Trump voters (52 percent) say there is too much politics in sports, compared to 31 percent of Harris voters who say the same. In some areas of daily life — like sports, movies and on television, and music — pluralities of Harris voters say there’s an acceptable amount of politics present.
But few Americans say they want more.
Some Americans also claim bringing politics into other realms doesn’t affect them. A plurality of Harris voters — 38 percent — say it doesn’t matter to them if athletes, for example, talk about politics.
And yet, the poll finds, Republicans and Democrats alike actually are swayed by statements from businesses and celebrities.
Strong majorities report that celebrities’, athletes’ or even their local grocery store owners’ political statements impact their views of that individual. And roughly one in five people say they have changed their own opinion on a political topic because a celebrity spoke out about it.
The poll results also reveal a clear pattern for when those statements matter most: Americans respond positively to them when they reflect their own world views.
The majority of 2024 Trump voters say they would view an athlete more positively if they made statements aligned with the president’s agenda, like “We need to crack down on the crime running rampant in our cities.” On the other side, over 60 percent of Harris voters say they would think more positively about athletes who make statements like “We need to tax the richest people in this country.” That’s true even for voters on both sides who said there is “too much” politics in sports.
It’s a familiar phenomenon, according to Shaun Harper, a University of Southern California professor who has researched athletes’ political activism. He described the “‘I don’t want politics in my sports unless they’re my politics’” mindset as “anti-democratic.”
“It is unfair to athletes and to our democracy to expect them to only selectively leverage their platforms and their free speech rights,” he said.
The most politically engaged voters are the ones who care most
The strongest partisans are even more curious about what local, religious and cultural leaders have to say compared with those in the center.
More than one-third of Trump voters who self-identify as “MAGA Republicans”, the president’s most loyal base, say religious institutions should make their views clear to their followers, compared to 22 percent of non-MAGA Trump voters.
MAGA Trump voters are also more likely to act on those political differences: Forty-three percent say they would not buy from a business that made clear it held different political views — compared with 27 percent of non-MAGA Trump voters and roughly 30 percent across all adults.
On the other side of the aisle, about one-third of self-identified “strong” Democrats say athletes should make their political views clear, double the 16 percent of those who say they are “not strong” Democrats who agree.
And 36 percent of “strong” Democrats believe schools and universities should make their political views clear to their students, compared to 22 percent of “not strong” Democrats.
Those who voted third party, or who didn’t vote at all, are even less eager to hear about politics in their regular life: Just 12 percent say celebrities should make their political views clear to their fans. And less than 10 percent said they’ve changed their opinion about a political topic because a celebrity spoke about it.
Celebrities are already less willing to engage with partisan politics
The results shed light on an ongoing debate as stars and campaign strategists try to figure out how — or even if — to engage celebrities with politics.
Finding a way to do so that doesn’t damage their own careers, given the complexity of voters’ and fans’ partisan divides, can be difficult, the poll shows. When some voters claim to want neutrality but secretly want their favorite stars’ politics to match their own, but others demand political engagement, it leaves celebrities to decide which group they can upset the least.
Democrats have used celebrity endorsements and surrogates in significant measure since former President Barack Obama’s star-studded 2008 presidential campaign. Harris, two years ago, saw an outpouring of support for her presidential campaign from a host of VIPs: Beyoncé and Kelly Rowland appeared at her rally in Houston, Taylor Swift posted an endorsement for the former vice president to her millions of social media followers, and Lady Gaga performed at her election-eve rally in Philadelphia.
But that backfired for the celebrities when Harris lost, said Todd Hawkins, a Democratic strategist and consultant based in Los Angeles.
“What we saw was the biggest backlash as a result of losing, folks saying celebrities should not tell us what to do, no one cares about what they think,” he said.
Trepidation about the partisan divide is driving many celebrities’ reluctance to get involved in politics in a high-profile way — a dynamic captured by actor Jennifer Lawrence in a 2025 interview with the New York Times, when she was asked about her willingness to speak out against Trump.
“I don’t really know if I should,” she said. “But as we’ve learned, election after election, celebrities do not make a difference whatsoever on who people vote for. So then what am I doing? I’m just sharing my opinion on something that’s going to add fuel to a fire that’s ripping the country apart.”
Last year, actor and entrepreneur Selena Gomez posted — and later deleted — a tearful video responding to immigration crackdowns that drew criticism from the right. And Hunter Hess, an Olympic freestyle skier, drew heat from Trump for saying that representing the U.S. in the Games “brings up mixed emotions” after Alex Pretti and Renée Good were shot and killed by ICE agents in Minneapolis.
“They’re very concerned, they’re scared as hell, but they were scared last year more than anything,” Hawkins said of celebrities. “I still see trepidation on how and what they will do to be engaged.”
The connection between politics and pop culture, however, will hardly dissolve anytime soon, said Brown, the LA-based Democratic strategist: “There’s that phrase: the only thing Hollywood and D.C. love more than themselves are each other.”
Politics
Demonstrators in white supremacist attire protest on Capitol Hill
Demonstrators donning the logo and insignia of Patriot Front, a white supremacist group, were seen protesting in the Eastern Market neighborhood and on Capitol Hill on the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence.
Sporting white masks, sunglasses and Patriot Front’s signature tan caps, the protesters carried Confederate, Patriot Front and upside-down U.S. flags as they marched through Capitol Hill. The group was also photographed riding public transit on Saturday morning.
Outside Union Station, demonstrators chanted phrases including “Life, liberty, victory!” and “Reclaim America!” — slogans regularly used by the group.
The demonstration unfolded as tourists and Americans alike flocked to the “Salute to America” celebration on the National Mall, which will culminate in a speech by President Donald Trump and a fireworks show expected to last for a record-breaking 40 minutes. The Trump administration has made the nation’s 250th anniversary a top priority over the past few months through high-profile initiatives like the Great American State Fair and restoration work at the Reflecting Pool.
Later, anti-Trump demonstrators were filmed walking toward the White House carrying a large Declaration of Independence banner and chanting “8647,” a slogan calling for Trump’s removal from the presidency.
Patriot Front was founded in 2017 by Thomas Ryan Rousseau, who split from the alt-right organization Vanguard America in the aftermath of the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Patriot Front’s website describes the group as a “fraternal, nationalist, activist organization” and writes that “Our people, born to this nation of our European race, must reforge themselves as a new collective capable of asserting our right to cultural independence.”
The D.C. mayor’s office referred POLITICO to the Metropolitan police department for comment.
“The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) is tracking First Amendment activities that occurred this morning in the Eastern Market neighborhood,” the department said in a statement Saturday. “MPD recognizes the rights of individuals to peacefully express their views and remains committed to maintaining public safety and security for DC residents and visitors.”
Gregory Svirnovskiy contributed to this report.
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