The one and only Jane Fonda came to Los Angelesβs Museum of Contemporary Art to honor three legends of the art world β Frank Gehry, Theaster Gates, and Wendy Schmidt.Β
Jane Fonda
Tom Brady, Jane Fonda, and Cast Celebrate New Film ’80 For Brady’
80 For Brady, a tale of four best friends with a mission to travel to the Super Bowl and cheer on their favorite player, Tom Brady. Β There is a caveat however, those four best friends are all around the age of eighty, and along the way, struggles accompany the adventure.
Apple is inviting us to step into the magical βLand Of Luckβ to learn a thing or two about life in their newest original film Luck. Featuring a star studded cast of Jane Fonda, Whoopi Goldberg, Simon Pegg, Eva Noblezada and so many more, the story follows Noblezadaβs Sam Greenfield as she is at an incredibly defining moment in her life; aging out of foster care. Through her beautiful relationship work young foster sister Hazel (Adelynn Spoon) we begun to learn a tragic flaw of Sam, her bad luck. From the little disasters she experiences day to day (her toaster not working, leaves blowing into her bedroom) to the bigger things in life that have left her heartbroken, Sam canβt seem to catch a break. That is until she comes across Simon Peggβs Bob, the Irish talking cat who has a gift for Sam; a lucky coin that might just turn her luck around. When even that goes south, Sam is forced to enter into the magical land of luck in order to turn her luck around, and itβs in that very place that she learns a thing or two that might just change her perspective as well. This brilliant film opens up viewers eyes to so many big themes as well as the sweet little ones that will warm hearts. We sat down with Eva Noblezada and Flula Borg to talk all about Luck! Check it out!
It is hard to believe Super Bowl was already a few weeks ago. But the time-lapse and recent entertainment news makes us realize the power of the NFL.
Yvonne Orji Hosts Prime Video Year End Comedy Special, Yearly Departed
As the year quickly approaches its final days, the worldβs funniest women have gathered together to toast to a new year and roast the heck out of the wild year that was 2021.
With a background in fashion from Parsons, Karuna Chani is known for her fashion-forward makeup looks and ability to perfectly marry eastern cultural elements with western beauty trends. Bridal clients seek out the KC Makeup touch for a contemporary bridal look with elements of timeless beauty.

But that wasnβt as shocking of a statistic at the next one will read: β95% of Americans think the US Constitution should guarantee equal rights to women and men.β
Now, the second stat was used as a point in favor of passing the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), stating that if 95% Americans think there should be equal rights for men and women, then that would be a large deciding factor in gaining support to pass the bill and have total equality.
However, I read it as only 95% of Americans think women and men should have the same rights. Nonetheless, the point is that women should have equal rights as men, and the fact that itβs 2K16 and women still donβt is dumbfounding. We live in a country that prides itself on being for the common people, understanding of everyoneβs troubles and backgrounds, and yet we regard 51% of the population as lessers in society, their only legal right is voting.
Taking that into consideration, the people behind the Fund for Womenβs Equality/ERA Coalition, a coalition made to gain support for the amendment and help women in legal situations decided to host A Night of Comedy with Jane Fonda on February 7 at Carolineβs on Broadway. Appearing on Sunday included the coalitionβs board, including Gloria Steinem and Jessica Neuwirth, as well as other prominent activists and comedians, like Rosie OβDonnell, Judah Friedlander, Sasheer Zamata, Gina Brillon, Wyatt Cenac, Michelle Buteau, and Sarah Jones.
Why host a comedy night for a serious political topic? Steinem, who was recently in news for criticizing female Bernie Sandersβ supporters, stated that βlaughter is the only free emotionβ and that in some cultures, βit is thought to be a path into the unknown. So there is a reason why we are laughing our way to freedom.β
Of course these women have had their run-in with politics and politicians in the recent weeks, with Steinemβs comment as well as OβDonnellβs criticism with Donald Trump in 2015. While OβDonnell kept quiet and didnβt mention Trump in her stand-up act β instead opting for a look into her family life and her recent heart attackβthat didnβt stop Steinem from opening with him.
βItβs hard for any off us to be funny when Donald Trump is in the lead. And I hope there will soon be a group of rich people to explain that he is disgracing rich people. Heβs not really a successful businessman, he is a successful con artist. And somebody had figured out that had he just taken the $200 million or whatever he inherited from his father and invested it, he would now have more money than after going bankrupt three times and sticking everybody with his debt. This is not a businessman, can you surpass that for surrealism and humor?β
After being introduced, Fonda talked about her past and her role in activism and feminism. βI want to talk about how I came to feminism: it took quite a while to understand feminism. To understand that it didnβt mean you donβt like men, it means that women should be equal and that you were willing to stand up for that. And so I began to identify as a feminismβthat would be gloriously reinforced in me whenever I heard Gloria speak.β
Although letting it slip that a 9 to 5 sequel was attempted in the past, and her favorite part was when Dolly Parton started tapping her fingers while singing, Fonda closely sticked to the topic at hand. She did mention that she thought Trump was playing on βpeopleβs anxietiesβ with his βracistβ and βdangerousβ views. And in adding to the hate, she said βeven if he doesnβt make it, which I donβt think he will, all young Muslims: it will drive them closer to terrorists.β
At the end of the night, however, it wasnβt who was making the worst political remarks or who would become president, it was about and their rightsβor lack thereof. βAnd it is a seriously long fight but I think in some countries that have equality, they donβt have the right to practice those freedoms because they havenβt had a fight. And after we win weβre going to have muscle,β ended Steinem.
Read our interviews below and be sure to check out the ERA website for more information.
Gloria Steinem:
Can you elaborate on your comment with Bill Maher on female Bernie supporters?
Itβs on Facebook and I learned not to comment in the world of Twitter, so itβs on Facebook.
What do you say about the young voters who are voting for Bernie instead of Hillary?
I think that Bernie is saying the message of occupy. So he is stating the problem very clearly, which is a good thing, and Hillary is stating the solution very clearly, which is a good thing. And hopefully, Iβm sure in the future, they will end up together.
Do you believe Hillary would get the youth vote besides that demographicβs inclination towards Bernie?
Well she has the gender gap and the race gap as it is. So in 2008 I didnβt think she could win but now I think she can. But itβs going to be hell.
What do you think is going on with the Republicans?
Iβm sorry to say that theyβre not Republicans. Those of us who remember the real Republican Party, which supported the Equal Rights Amendment before the Democrats and others were pro-choice. These are extremists who have taken over the Republican Party, and itβs very dangerous to have one of our two great parties in the hands of extremists.
New York Representative Carolyn Maloney:
You canβt dismiss that Bernie is very popular with youth voters.
I think more people are gaining votership. I think she will get the nominee.
Have you been campaigning for her?
Yes I have, Iβve been to New Hampshire, Iβve been to Iowa, Iβm going to South Carolina and Virginia.
Those are the places that havenβt ratified the ERA. What can we do to wake them up?
Well itβs going to take a lot of grassroots effort and weβre going to keep working on it and thatβs what weβre doing.
But thatβs been going on for years.
Well itβs time to pass the Equal Rights Amendment. This is a wonderful gathering of people and I hope it brings more momentum: we have 180 cosponsors in the house and weβre working hard to make it happen. And many of the things that people said that we shouldnβt have fail. We passed it in β72 and it was ratified by 35 states and we need 38. Well what they said was βNo women in the military.β And the women are in the military. They said βCo-ed bathrooms.β Well have you been on a plane recently? Theyβre all co-ed bathrooms. They were concerned about gay rights; well the Supreme Court decision certainly helped straight out some gay rights questions. So many of the obstacles are no longer there, but the statistics are there, the inequality is still there. And if you look at the gender gap, it has been consistent for roughly thirty years. And what happens is the gender gap, it compounds into retirement, into your savings account, into your earnings. And itβs one of the reasons why women are the largest proportion living in poverty, in their old age.
Jane Fonda:
As someone whose received Oscar nominations, what do you think about its diversity?
Well I think itβs very clear that itβs part of the dialogue. We have to be talking about it. The Academy is taking it seriously and I think thereβs going to be changes.
What do you think about Bernie?
I think heβs great. I think heβs raising political issues. I think heβs very good at pointing out the problems and Hillary can solve it.
Judah Friedlander:
You worked with Tina Fey on 30 Rock so how was that like?
I think itβs pretty much what you would think it would be like. It was pretty awesome, yeah it was pretty awesome.
Taking that into consideration, what do you think about women writers and women comedians in the first place?
Itβs great and thereβs been more and more recently and thatβs good. I donβt think the reason thereβs more women in comedy is necessarily because show business is such an activist society. I think itβs because you have a few women like Tina Fey who have been very successful. And Hollywood, not always so creative from the business side of things, they just like to copy whatβs successful. But I hope that things keep getting more that way and more diverse. Iβm just saying that if youβre a feminist, donβt get relaxed and think feminism is solved, is what Iβm saying. You know itβs not like βWell, we love women now so weβre all for it.β Itβs bringing money and Hollywood only cares about money.
Would you call yourself a feminist?
Yeah definitely. I mean feminism means youβre for equal rights, so yes, Iβm for equal rights, 100%.
And why are here supporting the ERA?
Well I was asked to do it and I think itβs a great opportunity. One thing about America, and I talk a lot about this in my act, is the hypocrisy of America. Because not too many countries build themselves as the greatest country in the history of the planet, but we do. And Iβm actually working on a new stand up album and movie right now which is called βAmerica is the Greatest Country in the United States.β And itβs all about the hypocrisy of our history and are we really the best.
The Fund for Womenβs Equality and the ERA Coalition today announced their inauguralΒ A Night of Comedy with Jane FondaΒ comedy event at Carolines on Broadway on Sunday, February 7.