things and adidas can t drop me. now what? now what? yeah, now what. and joining us now, founding partner at the media venture puck, an entertainment lawyer and former editor for the hollywood reporter. also with us, democrat state senator scott weiner of california. and host of politics nation, reverend al sharpton. matthew, let s start with you. fallout began earlier this week. others followed it slowly, but certainly adidas took their time. but right now, it appears that kanye is getting it from all sides. it appears to be just almost a unified front against him. absolutely. it will be very difficult for
him to tour, live nation has said that they won t work with him. his agents at caa said that they will not work with him on any tour upcoming. his music is still available on the major platforms and that is a whole separate issue, a very slippery slope when you go down that road. but most of the financial partners now have abandoned him. senator weiner, we saw part of the problem with kanye west s comments his amplifying them which is that it gives license to others to sort of come out from the shadows like the people hanging the signs in your state. what do you make of adidas move and how dangerous do you believe it is to have somebody as prominent as kanye west saying these things? thank you for having me. i m glad that adidas did this, i know that they will take a big hit to their bottom line but they did the right thing. and what kanye did, it is important to acknowledge how harmful and deeply dangerous it
Anti-Trafficking Group Leads Activists in Demand to Repeal California Law Decriminalizing Loitering postnewsgroup.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from postnewsgroup.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The NIMBY group Save Berkeley’s Neighborhoods won a court battle and trimmed UC Berkeley’s enrollment by 3,000. Now they’re offering a new deal to cut it by only 2,000, but the school says ‘No thanks, we’ll keep fighting you.’
SACRAMENTO - Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco)’s Senate Bill 260, the Climate Corporate Accountability Act (CCAA), passed the Senate by a vote of 23-7. SB 260 would be the first law in the country to require U.S.-based companies those doing business in California and generating over $1 billion in gross annual revenue to disclose all of their greenhouse gas emissions