Trump and Jimmy Kimmel exchange jabs at Oscars 2024
Former President Donald Trump Takes Aim at Oscars Host Jimmy Kimmel
“Has there EVER been a WORSE HOST than Jimmy Kimmel at The Oscars,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “His opening was that of a less than average person trying too hard to be something which he is not, and never can be,” he added, also making fun of ABC News host George Stephanopoulos.
Kimmel Fires Back at Trump
Kimmel decided to take a minute during the show to read Trump’s post aloud, saying he was “really proud of something,” asking the crowd if he could share the “review” he got. After reading part of Trump’s post, he said he was surprised the former president was still awake, adding, “Isn’t it past your jail time?”
In his post, Trump also criticized the awards show for being “a really bad politically correct show tonight, and for years – Disjointed, boring, and very unfair. Why don’t they just give the Oscars to those that deserve them. Maybe that way their audience and TV ratings will come back from the depths.”
Trump and Kimmel have mocked each other before, with the TV host saying in November 2022 he lost at least half of his fans due to his constant jokes aimed at Trump.
Oppenheimer Dominates the Night
Oppenheimer was the big winner of the night, earning seven awards, including Best Picture, Actor in a Leading Role, and Actor in a Supporting Role.
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How does the Mandela Effect impact our perception of reality and the way we construct our individual and shared histories
Mandela Effect refers to a phenomenon where a large group of people remember an event or a fact differently from the way it actually happened. The term was coined by Fiona Broome, who noticed that a significant number of people she spoke to believed Nelson Mandela had died in prison in the 1980s, when in reality he was released in 1990 and went on to become the President of South Africa. The Mandela Effect is often attributed to collective false memories, where details can become distorted or conflated over time. Some other examples of the Mandela Effect include the misremembering of the spelling of the children’s book series “The Berenstain Bears” as “Berenstein Bears,” the belief that the logo for the store chain JCPenney used to have a lowercase “j” instead of an uppercase “J,” and the belief that the Monopoly Man character has a monocle, when in fact he does not. The Mandela Effect has sparked a lot of interest and debate, with some theories suggesting alternate timelines or parallel universes are responsible for these misremembered details.
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