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Tag: trumps

  • Donald Trump Still Collects Six-Figure Pension from SAG-AFTRA: Report

    Donald Trump Still Collects Six-Figure Pension from SAG-AFTRA: Report

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    There are many, many descriptions that come to mind when one says the name Donald Trump, but “union man” isn’t usually one of them. However, as per a story in The Hollywood Reporter, the former President of the United States (the one that was arrested not long ago, remains under investigation by several other prosecutors, and who also represents a full 50 percent of all presidential impeachments in U.S. history), is still drawing a sizable pension from the Screen Actors Guild—American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA). 

    This is notable because on February 4, 2021, Trump publicly quit the union. The organization’s board members held an emergency session following the events of January 6, and voted to hold a disciplinary hearing which would determine if Trump should be removed from the guild. Before that could happen, though, the former host of The Apprentice, who had also made appearances in movies and television shows like Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, Zoolander, The Nanny, and Spin City, sent a letter of resignation.

    And what a letter! SAG-AFTRA’s official site still hosts a copy of it, and it really is a quintessential sample of our 45th president’s rhetorical style. “I write to you today,” it opens, “regarding the so-called Disciplinary Committee hearing aimed at revoking my union membership. Who cares!”

    Before concluding, “I no longer wish to be associated with your union” and officially resigning, Trump accused the group of making a “blatant attempt at free media attention to distract from your dismal record” and added that “[y]our organization has done little for its members, and nothing for me—besides collecting dues and promoting dangerous un-American policies and ideas.”

    THR’s article disproves the notion that the union did nothing for Trump’s bottom line. According to financial disclosure forms he released late Friday, Trump took a pension from SAG valued at “between $100,000-$1 million in 2022” and a pension from AFTRA “valued at between $15,000-$50,000.” These pensions predate the merger of the two groups in 1992. 

    V.F. has reached out to a representative from SAG-AFTRA for comment, but did not immediately hear back. 

    The report also noted that he still receives money as a producer on the hit NBC show The Apprentice, which ran for 15 seasons, “to the tune of $100,000-$1 million.”

    Trump has 31 acting credits on the IMDb. While some of these are very much on the fringe (the list includes narrating the audio to his 2007 tome Think BIG and Kick Ass in Business and Life, which boasted two tickets to The Learning Annex’s Wealth Expo on its cover), Trump did, one must confess, work with some impressive people over the years while making cameo appearances. 

    Here he is (with his middle wife, Marla Maples) opposite Oscar-winner Will Smith on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.

    Here he is doing a little schtick with three-time Emmy-winner and two-time Oscar-nominee Judy Davis in four-time Oscar-winner Woody Allen’s film Celebrity.

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    Jordan Hoffman

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  • “History Has Become a Battleground”: Why We’re Still Living in Trump’s Post-Truth America

    “History Has Become a Battleground”: Why We’re Still Living in Trump’s Post-Truth America

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    The Republican Party’s assault on truth, supercharged by Donald Trump—whose prolific lying and “fake news” catchphrase defined his presidency perhaps more than his policies—brought scores of historians to the fore of mainstream news media. But the task of correcting the record has proven to be a daunting challenge in the current information ecosystem. Few historians understand the country’s historical battleground better than Kevin Kruse and Julian Zelizer, who, in their new book, Myth America: Historians Take On the Biggest Legends and Lies About Our Past, trace the origins of 20 age-old right-wing myths that continue to permeate American discourse today.

    The book’s incisive essays poke holes in everything from American exceptionalism and white backlash to Confederate monuments and America First, taking us on a sobering tour through some of the nation’s deepest and darkest chapters. Kruse and Zelizer, two Princeton professors, argue that Republicans are no longer just revising those chapters; they’re trying to expunge them altogether. “It’s easy to say, ‘Just stick to the facts, and assume that will win out,’” Zelizer tells me. “But that’s not the era that we live in.” 

    This interview has been lightly edited for style and clarity.

    Vanity Fair: A good place to start is where Myth America begins in its introduction, which centers on Trump’s use of alternative facts and the concept of fake news. What do you think it is about Trump in particular that’s allowed him to create an entire political movement around completely disregarding facts, and not just bending them and shaping them to his liking, as Republicans have done in the past?

    Julian Zelizer: There are two factors that were important: One is the state of the party. The Republican Party had changed a lot in the last few decades to a point where they were more comfortable with a politics that wasn’t grounded in fact. Often, disinformation became a normal way of talking about policy issues like climate change. So part of it is the party, and part of it is the media ecosystem, which over the years has lost a lot of the filters that were important. And we’ve also seen the emergence of an openly conservative media ecosystem. So there was Trump, but there was this environment that allowed him to thrive.

    I know both of you are particularly public-facing historians. You write for major outlets and make TV appearances. Do you feel like Trump and his deliberate historical amnesia has compelled more historians to venture out from the academy into the mainstream media?

    Kevin Kruse: Yeah, I think so. A lot of us are catching up with the work he and others have done in the last few years, and Trump has been a big part of that. Trump and his enablers and the conservative media ecosystem have pushed a series of really bold and startling claims about the American past to make their standing or their accomplishments in the American present seem bigger, better, and bolder than they otherwise might have been. And that’s, in turn, prompted a lot of us to get engaged. And I think, in this case, social media has been a two-way street. It has certainly helped Trump and his supporters spread a lot of falsehoods, but it’s also given every historian on Twitter or Facebook or Substack an easy way to respond.

    Zelizer: I think one other factor is that history has become a battleground. And it always has been, but the intensity has really accelerated. You’re seeing in different states efforts to legislate what can go on in the classroom. The former president made American history a central theme. He ended his term with [the 1776 Commission]—a response, in some ways, to the 1619 Project. So I think you’ve seen a broadening of interest among historians—even historians who don’t just do modern US history, like the two of us—to get engaged and to jump in.

    What are your thoughts on the mayhem that’s taking place on Capitol Hill right now, where we essentially have a House Speaker-in-waiting, who’s failed 11 times now to get enough votes from his own party. What do you think is historically unique about the chaos with Kevin McCarthy and do any aspects of it harken back to earlier times or political moments in America? [This interview was conducted last week, prior to McCarthy’s confirmation as House Speaker.]

    Kruse: One way to look at it would be to say, what does this moment tell us about the larger continuum of increasing extremism in the Republican ranks? If you see Kevin McCarthy as part of this group of self-styled young guns that came out about a decade ago, where Eric Cantor and Paul Ryan and McCarthy put this clip out where they were kind of a new generation. They’ve all been picked off one-by-one as the party has moved even past their own kind of extremism on the right. Cantor got primaried for being squishy on immigration. Paul Ryan got basically forced into retirement because he couldn’t deal with the crazies on the right. And McCarthy has tried to cultivate them, but even he is not enough. So it’s less about the votes for him and more about seeing this larger race to the far fringes. 

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    Jon Skolnik

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