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If you asked me to pick out my one most vividly remembered scene from
Coming to America, the classic Eddie Murphy comedy released in 1988, it would be the
Murphy s Prince Akeem of Zamunda is out on a date with his future wife Lisa McDowell (Shari Headley). But he s got a problem: Lisa doesn t know about Akeem s immense wealth and royal lineage, and Akeem, who is trying to pass himself off as a goat herder, ends up stuck with a paper bag filled with thousands of dollars thanks to his meddling friend and personal servant, Semmi (Arsenio Hall).
Enter the two homeless men sitting right outside the restaurant where Akeem and Lisa will have their date. Akeem pauses before they go inside and slips the men his paper bag. A few minutes later, after the happy couple is seated at their table, the homeless men reappear to shout thanks through a nearby window and we in the audience are hit with a realization: It s Randolph (Ralph Bellamy) and Mortimer Duke (Don Ameche), the chief antagonists
Take a Tour of Eddie Murphy s Seriously Luxe Homes
Take a Tour of Eddie Murphy s Seriously Luxe Homes
Eddie Murphy plays an African monarch in Coming 2 America, the sequel to the 1988 movie. In real life, the comic actor lives like royalty.
Claudine Zap and Randy White, provided by
March 17, 2021
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Eddie Murphy reprises his role as an absurdly wealthy African monarch in the recently released “Coming 2 America,” the sequel to the 1988 hit “Coming to America.”
In real life, he lives like royalty in Beverly Hills, CA. He’s bought and sold a princely array of Zamunda-worthy castles across the country.
But the Murphy revival is poised to go into full swing. He has plans to restart the
Beverly Hills Cop franchise and recently made an emotional return to the show that made him a star in the first place:
Saturday Night Live.
In terms of industry hierarchy, he is a hard man to place: he ought to be lauded as an African-American trailblazer, a man who achieved massive success without diluting himself or where he came from. But even in the anything-goes-1980s, his stand-up routines were criticised for their casual sexism and homophobia, and he does seem, in some ways, an unreconstructed product of that era.
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The CFTC and the DOJ both now pursue enforcement
actions against trading in commodities based on misappropriation of
confidential information.
Among the many changes resulting from the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act), one
that has been slow to develop, but broad in its significance, is
the assertion of authority by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) to police insider trading and misappropriation of
confidential information in commodities markets. As the primary
regulator for derivatives across a wide range of markets, spanning