Tag Archives: Racist

Which ‘Stranger Things’ Episode Is Show’s Worst-Rated After Review-Bombing?

Viewers are airing out their frustration with season 5 of Stranger Things by review-bombing the show — specifically Will’s coming out episode.

Part 2 of the fifth and final season premiered on Thursday, December 25, with “The Bridge” showing Will (Noah Schnapp) discussing his sexuality with his loved ones before the group went off to take down the show’s biggest villain, Vecna (Jamie Campbell Bower).

“I haven’t told any of you this because I don’t want you to see me differently, but the truth is I am different. I just pretended like I wasn’t because I didn’t wanna be,” Will told the group. “I wanted to be like everyone else. I wanted to be like my friends, and I am like you. I’m like you in almost every way.”

He continued: “We like Milk Duds in our popcorn with extra butter, and we like drinking Coke with Pop Rocks, and we like bike races and trading comics and NASA and Steve Martin and Lucky Charms and literally all the same things. I just — I don’t like girls.”

‘Stranger Things’ Part 2 Ending Explained: Who Broke Up? Did Will Come Out?

Will hinted that he “had this crush on someone” even though he knew “they’re not like” him, which viewers knew as a reference to his feelings for Mike (Finn Wolfhard).

In the days after the emotional episode aired, the score for the season on fan-driven Rotten Tomatoes went from the 70s down to 56 percent. Past seasons of the show have received mostly high 90s or 89 percent as the lowest score from viewers.

'Stranger Things' Star Addresses Speculation Scenes Were Cut From Season 5
NETFLIX

A campaign was also launched against the penultimate episode specifically, with IMDb ranking “The Bridge” as the show’s lowest-rated episode with a score of 5.4 out of 10 based on user response. More than 96,000 users reviewed “The Bridge” compared to other episodes this season, which have been rated by fewer than 50,000 people.

Review-bombing is a tactic previously used by disgruntled fans who have targeted shows such as Star Wars: The Acolyte, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, Bridgerton and more following attempts to be more inclusive on screen. Cast members of said shows have spoken out about receiving an onslaught of racist, sexist and homophobic comments on social media as a side effect of review-bombing.

Other Stranger Things fans, however, have criticized this half of season 5 for how it has wrapped up the show’s biggest story lines so far. Will’s big moment, meanwhile, has been years in the making, with the character playing a pivotal role since the show premiered in 2016.

The character appeared largely offscreen until he escaped from the Upside Down at the end of season 1. Will struggled to return to his normal life as things around him changed and the monsters from the Upside Down returned. Discussion around Will’s sexuality came to light during season 3, when he got in a fight with Mike.

How Long Is Each Episode of ‘Stranger Things’ Season 5? Runtimes Revealed

As fans questioned whether season 4 would confirm Will’s sexuality, Schnapp, 21, noted that he liked the ambiguity to his character’s love life.

“I feel like [creators Ross and Matt Duffer] never really address it or blatantly say how Will is,” he told Variety in 2022. “I think that’s the beauty of it, that it’s just up to the audience’s interpretation, if it’s Will kind of just refusing to grow up and growing up slower than his friends, or if he is really gay.”

The actor praised the way Stranger Things allowed Will to explore his feelings toward romance. “I find that people do reach to put a label on him and just want to know, so badly, like, ‘Oh, and this is it.’ He’s just confused and growing up. And that’s what it is to be a kid,” Schnapp added.

His costar Millie Bobby Brown also applauded the show’s approach to Will’s story through the years. “Can I just say, it’s 2022 and we don’t have to label things. I think what’s really nice about Will’s character is that he’s just a human being going through his own personal demons and issues,” she shared during the joint interview. “So many kids out there don’t know, and that’s OK. That’s OK to not know. And that’s OK not to label things.”

She continued: “It’s such an amazing role for Noah to play. And to be that role model for kids out there who don’t know what they’re going through growing up.”

Trump’s Racist Somali Remarks, Signalgate Report, CDC Vaccine Meeting

President Trump leans into a familiar political strategy of attacking immigrant communities as he intensifies racist comments about Minnesota’s Somali population and Congresswoman Ilhan Omar.
A Pentagon watchdog report finds Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth endangered U.S. troops by sharing classified strike plans over Signal, directly undercutting the White House’s claim that no harm was done.
And a CDC advisory panel appointed by the Trump administration prepares to revisit long-standing vaccine recommendations, including whether to scale back protections for newborns and young children.

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Law and Order: SVU’s BD Wong Apologizes for Racist Joke: ‘I Do Know Better’

Law & Order: SVU star BD Wong issued an apology after posting a racist joke on Instagram.

Wong, 65, commented on a video shared by content creator Mike Holston Monday, December 1, in which Holston, who is Black, was seen petting a binturong nuzzled on his shoulder. “Name this animal… wrong answers only 🤣,” Holston captioned the post, to which Wong responded in a since-deleted comment, “It appears to be a Black man.”

The Mulan and Jurassic World actor later deleted the comment and took to Threads to issue an apology for his ill-thought joke.

“Y’all I made a very bad joke. As most people in hot water do, I deleted it for Damage Control,” he wrote on Monday. “But it’s out there & continues to hurt & disappoint & I’m really sorry about the hurt part. Super dumb, but I tried to follow the ‘Wrong Answers Only’ prompt w/the wrongest answer. This succeeded only in that it was Super Wrong.”

Which ‘Law and Order: SVU’ Stars Are — And Aren’t — Returning for Season 27

Wong continued, “I know nobody gets a free pass. I’m sorry if this #wtfbd moment tarnished any respect you may’ve had for me. [And] thanks if you advocate for an internet that’s safe for everybody.”

In a subsequent Threads post, Wong wrote, “I want to elaborate re: a racist comment I posted, to clarify that I recognize & accept the responsibility for how terrible it is.”

“It’s also wrong to try to ‘explain’ anything, & I think that causes a further breaking down in folks’ trust,” he continued. “Let me please spend the energy on how wrong I know it is to exploit a despicable, racist trope in the supposed spirit of humor; I do know better, but again no excuses. Very sorry for the hurt I’ve caused & for taking lightly something so deeply injurious.”

Wong is best known for playing psychiatrist Special Agent George Huang in Law & Order: SVU, joining the cast in season 2 and appearing in the long-running NBC procedural drama through season 12. He later made guest appearances in episodes during seasons 13 to 17.

Stars Who Left ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’: Where Are They Now?

Wong reprised his role as Huang in the SVU season 27 premiere that aired in September.

In August, Wong, who is of Chinese descent, called out the casting of a non-Asian actor, Andrew Barth Feldman, as one of the lead roles in Broadway musical Maybe Happy Ending, replacing Darren Criss, who is of Filipino descent.

“The Asian community, particularly actors, feels rather betrayed by the news,” he wrote in an essay shared on Instagram.

“Advocating for one’s own representation is stultifyingly self-debasing. No, we don’t want to ‘get somebody fired.’ We must express, though, how painful it is to be passed over, yet how used to it we’ve become. How incomprehensibly rare ‘Asian Shows’ are,” he said.

“Team MHE does what it thinks it must. Producing a Broadway musical is a b*tch. I feel for them. Yet, this decision’s still taken as a hard slap in the face of both the Asian actor community and the Asian audience,” he continued. “Our long-standing history of exclusion is real.”

‘Big Brother’ Expert Taran Armstrong Calls Live Feeds a ‘Safeguard’ in Book

Big Brother’s favorite live feed updater Taran Armstrong is stressing the importance of having the 24-hour footage for the show.

Big Brother was born in controversy that has only ever continued to evolve with the show over time. From racist remarks and behaviors to threats of violence, expulsions, attempts at censorship and more,” Armstrong wrote in his new book, Behind the Mirror, which hit bookstands on Tuesday, November 25. “The live feeds have at least functioned as a safeguard against the worst the genre has to offer.”

Over the years, Armstrong has become a popular figure in the Big Brother fanbase as he provides daily updates about what’s going on in the house as a member of the “Rob Has a Podcast” (RHAP) team. (“RHAP” was created by Survivor alum Rob Cesternino and is a popular reality TV podcast that covers countless shows including Survivor, Big Brother, The Traitors and more.)

Armstrong added that while the Big Brother live feeds are a protective agent for the players and viewers, “there’s still plenty of room for improvement” as the show has continued to run for nearly three decades.

Why Lance Bass Would Never Go on ‘Big Brother’ Despite Being a Big Fan

Fans of Big Brother know all too well that there have been countless controversies surrounding the show over the years. In Behind the Mirror, Armstrong recalls the history of Big Brother, starting with the show’s early beginnings as an adaptation of the original Netherlands program before becoming the Americanized version fans know today. Armstrong also revisits the show’s countless controversial moments, from ones that fans will recognize from certain episodes to others that never made the final cut.

“There’s so much learning that you can do through the show. And one of the things that you can learn is the ways that other reality shows might be lying to you that you don’t even realize,” Armstrong exclusively told Us Weekly about why the live feeds make Big Brother special while discussing his book. “Because if you at least know the events of the feeds, you don’t need to watch them yourself. This is the main thing that a lot of people feel like, ‘Well, I’m not interested in the live feeds at all, because that’s way too much, or it might be boring.’ Most people are not watching the feeds. 24/7, most people are consuming the live feeds through social media or podcasts like mine, where they’re getting an update, sort of day to day, almost like you would a sports league.”

Taran Armstrong Book Big Brother Expert Taran Armstrong Calls Live Feeds a Safeguard in Book
Courtesy of Taran Armstrong/Instagram

Armstrong also talked about how the game has evolved thanks to iconic players like Dr. Will Kirby, Dan Gheesling, Taylor Hale and more.

While Armstrong is aware that not all reality TV lovers will be intrigued by his coverage of the history of Big Brother, he hopes that “people will find something valuable” in what he wrote.

“[I’m] trying to find a place of acceptance that it will not be for everyone. Some people will come to it, looking for something that’s not there, especially because it’s about reality TV,” Armstrong said of what he hopes Big Brother fans will take away from his debut book. “If you come to this book looking for juicy secrets and details or whatever, or gossip, you know that’s not really what the book was intended to be. So I hope that the people that are able to get something out of it.”

‘Big Brother’ Controversies Through the Years

Armstrong started writing Behind the Mirror after season 24 ended in September 2022. The podcaster spent a lot of time researching the history behind the show while also speaking to other players about their experiences in the game, including Tiffany Mitchell, winner Steve Moses and more. While Armstrong is used to covering Big Brother in real-time, going back to the archives was an interesting experience.

“When a season is live, it’s very up and down, you know? And the way that I cover a season live, as I mentioned, I’m live every day, and so every day, I’m telling a story of what happened the previous day, while also telling the story,” he told Us. “Up until this point, I’m every day sort of reevaluating what is the story of the season and when you’re when you’re looking back, especially when you’re looking back at a huge swath of history, it’s a lot easier to see the through line for the stories that can be told about it, or at least the ones that that I that I cared about and really loved.”

Behind the Mirror is available now and the audiobook is narrated by Armstrong.

Travis Kelce’s Ex Kayla Nicole Deletes X Account Amid Controversy

Travis Kelce‘s ex-girlfriend Kayla Nicole has seemingly deleted her X account amid a slew of controversy.

Multiple media outlets reported that the “Pre-Game” podcast host, 34, deactivated her X account on Thursday, November 6, after a number of alleged old tweets resurfaced. According to the Daily Mail, the messages dated as far back as 2010 and allegedly used racist and homophobic language.

Us Weekly reached out to representatives for Nicole for comment. As of Saturday, November 8, the reality competition TV star’s Instagram account was still active.

The resurfaced, alleged tweets come after Nicole recreated Toni Braxton’s look from her “He Wasn’t Man Enough” music video for Halloween, which also sparked online controversy. The footage featured Nicole lipsyncing to some of the lyrics from Braxton’s 2000 diss track, aimed at an ex-boyfriend and his new lover.

Travis Kelce and Ex-Girlfriend Kayla Nicole: The Way They Were

“Did you know about us back then? / Do you know I dumped your husband, girlfriend?” Nicole lip-synched. “I’m not thinking ’bout him / But you married him / Do you know I made him leave? / Do you know he begged to stay with me? / He wasn’t man enough for me.”

Many fans suspected Nicole’s costume was a shady way of responding to rumors that Kelce’s fiancée, Taylor Swift, may have referenced her on her The Life of a Showgirl track “Opalite.”

(Some fans assumed Swift’s lyric that “she was in her phone, and you were just a pose” knocked Nicole for documenting her five-year relationship with Kelce via social media. One viral clip that was resurfaced by Swift fans saw Kelce once asking Nicole to “get off [her] phone” during a dinner date.)

Nicole eventually responded on her podcast with a cryptic explanation that her Halloween costume was inspired by a different “Taylor.”

travis kelce ex kayla nicole deletes social media
Kayla Nicole dressed as Toni Braxton for Halloween 2025. Courtesy Instagram / @iamkaylanicole

“I had a white best friend. Her name was Taylor,” she explained. “And she [had] the only house I could go over to as a kid because my mom didn’t play them type of games. I specifically remember driving home from private school in my uniform in the back of a paddy wagon with Taylor, and her mom was playing this song.”

Nicole described this childhood memory as an “a-ha moment” moment, as she realized: “‘Wow, white people listen to Black people music as well.’”

Kelce, 36, and Nicole were together from 2017 to 2002. The Kansas City Chiefs player later moved on with Swift in 2023, eventually announcing their engagement via a joint Instagram post in August.

Some theorized that Nicole responded to her ex-boyfriend’s engagement news hours later by resharing a video of actress Tracee Ellis Ross discussing the difference between happiness and joy.

“I think joy is different from happiness,” Ross noted in the clip. “I feel like happiness is something you can get at 7-Eleven and joy is something that you earn and work for and takes practice. I feel like joy has legs. I feel like joy has feet. I feel like joy has roots. I feel like joy creates space and allows room for more than just a good day. I think joy is an attitude. I think joy is a perspective, and I think joy is a lens through which I live and look at my life.”

Travis Kelce’s Ex Kayla Nicole Hints at Fallout With Brittany Mahomes

Nicole added a caption over the video where she explained: “Read about this very concept years ago in a book called Choose Joy: Because Happiness Isn’t Enough. I aspire! So so good.”

Elsewhere, Kelce and Swift, 35, were most recently spotted in their finest fall attire as they enjoyed a romantic evening at The Polo Bar in New York City on Wednesday, November 5.

Swift has supported Kelce several times by attending his NFL games throughout the 2024-25 season, though the couple can enjoy some quality time this weekend since the Kansas City Chiefs have a bye week. (The Chiefs will next play against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver, Colorado, on November 16.)

South Africa: Cyril Ramaphosa to meet with Donald Trump in US next week

It is difficult to hide: relations between South Africa and the United States are strained and have been so for months.

Since Donald Trump took office again as president of the United States, the two countries have repeatedly clashed over the US plan to resettle white South African farmers, which Donald Trump claims face “racial discrimination” in South Africa.

And in March, Washington expelled the South African ambassador Ebrahim Rasool over critical comments he had made on the subject of the Trump administration.

Could a meeting however help improve the situation?

Late on Wednesday, Pretoria announced that South African president Cyril Ramaphosa would travel to Washington next week. On the agenda is a meeting with Donald Trump.

While the South African presidency did not further comment on the issues to be discussed by the two presidents, the tensions surrounding the white farmers’ refugee status, which the US granted earlier this week, are likely to be included in the talks.

The US welcomed 59 white South Africans as refugees this Monday, the start of what the Trump administration said is a larger relocation plan for minority Afrikaner farmers who Trump has claimed are being persecuted in their homeland because of their race.

South Africa denies the allegations and says whites in the majority Black country are not being singled out for persecution.

No evidence of “genocide” of white farmers

The Republican president has singled out South Africa over what the US calls racist laws against whites and has accused the government of “fueling” violence against white farmers.

The South African government says the relatively small number of killings of white farmers should be condemned but are part of the country’s problems with violent crime and are not racially motivated.

Trump said Monday that there was “a genocide taking place” against white farmers that was being ignored by international media.

This claim has previously however been discredited, most recently so by a South African court ruling in February.

The US criticism of what it calls South Africa’s racist, anti-white laws appears to refer to South Africa’s affirmative action laws that advance opportunities for Black people, and a new land expropriation law that gives the government power to take private land without compensation.

Although the government says the land law is not a confiscation tool and refers to unused land that can be redistributed for the public good, some Afrikaner groups say it could allow their land to be seized and redistributed to some of the country’s Black majority.

Source: Africanews

South Africa: Cyril Ramaphosa to meet with Donald Trump in US next week

It is difficult to hide: relations between South Africa and the United States are strained and have been so for months.

Since Donald Trump took office again as president of the United States, the two countries have repeatedly clashed over the US plan to resettle white South African farmers, which Donald Trump claims face “racial discrimination” in South Africa.

And in March, Washington expelled the South African ambassador Ebrahim Rasool over critical comments he had made on the subject of the Trump administration.

Could a meeting however help improve the situation?

Late on Wednesday, Pretoria announced that South African president Cyril Ramaphosa would travel to Washington next week. On the agenda is a meeting with Donald Trump.

While the South African presidency did not further comment on the issues to be discussed by the two presidents, the tensions surrounding the white farmers’ refugee status, which the US granted earlier this week, are likely to be included in the talks.

The US welcomed 59 white South Africans as refugees this Monday, the start of what the Trump administration said is a larger relocation plan for minority Afrikaner farmers who Trump has claimed are being persecuted in their homeland because of their race.

South Africa denies the allegations and says whites in the majority Black country are not being singled out for persecution.

No evidence of “genocide” of white farmers

The Republican president has singled out South Africa over what the US calls racist laws against whites and has accused the government of “fueling” violence against white farmers.

The South African government says the relatively small number of killings of white farmers should be condemned but are part of the country’s problems with violent crime and are not racially motivated.

Trump said Monday that there was “a genocide taking place” against white farmers that was being ignored by international media.

This claim has previously however been discredited, most recently so by a South African court ruling in February.

The US criticism of what it calls South Africa’s racist, anti-white laws appears to refer to South Africa’s affirmative action laws that advance opportunities for Black people, and a new land expropriation law that gives the government power to take private land without compensation.

Although the government says the land law is not a confiscation tool and refers to unused land that can be redistributed for the public good, some Afrikaner groups say it could allow their land to be seized and redistributed to some of the country’s Black majority.

Source: Africanews

49 white South Africans head to US under Trump refugee offer

A group of 49 white South Africans departed their homeland Sunday for the United States on a private charter plane, having been offered refugee status by the Trump administration under a new program announced in February.

The group, which included families and small children, was due to arrive at Dulles International Airport outside Washington on Monday morning local time, according to Collen Msibi, a spokesperson for South Africa’s transport ministry.

They are the first Afrikaners — a white minority group in South Africa — to be relocated after U.S. President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Feb. 7, accusing South Africa’s Black-led government of racial discrimination against them and announcing a program to offer them relocation to America.

The South African government said it is “completely false” that Afrikaners are being persecuted.

The Trump administration has fast-tracked its applications while pausing other refugee programs, halting arrivals from Afghanistan, Iraq, most of sub-Saharan Africa and other countries in a move being challenged in court.

Refugee groups have questioned why the white South Africans are being prioritised ahead of people from countries wracked by war and natural disasters. Vetting for refugee status in the U.S. often takes years.

The Trump administration says the South African government is pursuing racist, anti-white policies through affirmative action laws and a new land expropriation law it says targets Afrikaners’ land. The government says those claims are based on misinformation and there is no racism against Afrikaners and no land has been expropriated, although the contentious law has been passed and is the focus of criticism in South Africa.

South Africa also denies U.S. claims that Afrikaners are being targeted in racially motivated attacks in some rural communities. Instead, the South African government said Afrikaners, who are the descendants of Dutch and French colonial settlers, are “amongst the most economically privileged” in the country.

The first Afrikaner refugees were traveling on a flight operated by the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based charter company Omni Air International, Msibi said. They would fly to Dakar, Senegal and stop there to refuel before heading for Dulles.

They departed from OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, where they were accompanied by police officers and airport officials when they checked in. Msibi said they would have to be vetted by police to ensure there were no criminal cases or outstanding warrants against them before being allowed to leave.

The South African government said there was no justification for them being relocated but said it wouldn’t stop them and respected their freedom of choice.

They are expected to be greeted at Dulles by a U.S. government delegation, including the deputy secretary of state and officials from the Department of Health and Human Services, whose refugee office has organised their resettlement.

The flight will be the first in a “much larger-scale relocation effort,” White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller told reporters on Friday. Miller said that what was happening to Afrikaners in South Africa “fits the textbook definition of why the refugee program was created.”

“This is persecution based on a protected characteristic — in this case, race. This is race-based persecution,” he said.

The HHS Office for Refugee Resettlement was ready to offer them support, including with housing, furniture and other household items, and expenses like groceries, clothing, diapers and more, a document obtained by The Associated Press said. The document said the relocation of Afrikaners was “a stated priority of the Administration.”

There are around 2.7 million Afrikaners among South Africa’s population of 62 million, which is more than 80% Black. They are only one part of the country’s white minority.

Many in South Africa are puzzled by claims that Afrikaners are persecuted and meet the requirements to be relocated as refugees.

They are part of South Africa’s everyday multi-racial life, with many successful business leaders and some serving in government as Cabinet ministers and deputy ministers. Their language is widely spoken and recognised as an official language, and churches and other institutions reflecting Afrikaner culture hold prominence in almost every city and town.

The Trump administration has criticised South Africa on several fronts. Trump’s February executive order cut all U.S. funding to South Africa over what it said was its anti-white stance and also accused it of pursuing an anti-American foreign policy. It cited South Africa’s ties with Iran and its move to lodge a genocide case against U.S. ally Israel over the war in Gaza as examples of it taking “aggressive positions towards the United States.”

Source: Africanews

African UN leaders criticize ‘sexist and racist’ coverage of WTO’s first female boss

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Senior African leaders at the UN are unhappy with media coverage of the first female boss of the World Trade Organization (WTO), Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

The WTO this month announced officially the appointment of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as its new director-general.

The former Nigerian finance minister Ngozi will take over the role effective March 1, becoming the first woman and also African to lead the institution.

But reportage on her historic appointment has been criticised by African UN leaders who say “sexist and racist” language used in coverage of the appointment.

Members of the UN senior African group (Unsag) – including Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, head of UN Women, Winnie Byanyima, who leads UNAids, and Vera Songwe, the executive secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa have expressed their concerns in a letter.

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According to them the language used in some media to describe Okonjo-Iweala’s appointment was “offensive, sexist and racist in a world where both public and private sector leadership is dominated by ageing Caucasian men, who are revered for the experience and skills they bring and have never been characterised by their lineage and offspring”.

One headline in the Swiss daily newspaper Luzerner Zeitung originally read: “This grandmother will become the boss of the WTO.” The headline was later changed.

Mlambo-Ngcuka, co-chair of Unsag, told the Guardian that “There is a lot of prejudice against women in leadership that is just refusing to go away. We see it when it comes to female politicians or at grassroots level.”

“When men ascend [to power] at a later age, we celebrate their experience and accomplishments,” said Mlambo-Ngcuka.

– –

“No one talks about them as a grandfathers, it’s not a relevant talking point.”

Ngozi previously served as Nigeria’s finance minister on two occasions and once as a foreign affairs minister.

The 66-year old also served as former managing director of the World Bank and as a chairperson at the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization.

Shortly after her appointment she was is ready to tackle the challenges of the institution.

She said “In the 73 years of GATT and WTO, honored to be First Woman and First African to lead.

But now the real work begins. Ready to tackle the challenges of WTO. Forget Business as usual!”

Source: Africafeeds.com

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