Florida to open second immigration detention facility, 'Deportation Depot'New Foto - Florida to open second immigration detention facility, 'Deportation Depot'

Florida will open a second immigration detention, processing and deportation facility, dubbed "Deportation Depot" by Gov.Ron DeSantis, in about two weeks. The new site, at the Baker Correctional Institution near Lake City in the northeast part of the state, will house more than 1,300 people, the governor and other state officials announced at an Aug. 14 news conference. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents will use the nearby Lake City Gateway Airport to transport immigrants. "This is a priority for the people of our state; it's a priority for the people of this country," DeSantis said. The state had intended to use the Florida National Guard's nearby Camp Blanding as its second immigrant detention facility, but DeSantis said the Baker Correctional Institution would be more economical, costing about $6 million to get it "up and running." The facility was originally closed because ofa staffing shortage within the Florida Department of Corrections, but DeSantis said the Florida National Guard will staff the center. (Baker Correctional Institution is not the same as the Baker County Detention Center, which is already an ICE detention facility.) DeSantis said using Baker Correctional Institution, or Baker CI, would require "a lot less standing up than we would do at Blanding and far less than we had to do at Alligator Alcatraz." The state has poured money into the site in the Everglades, formally known as the South Florida Detention Facility, which opened July 1. Less than a month in, state contracts showed the facilitycost more than $250 millionto set up and it is expected to cost$450 million per year. DeSantis has said the federal government will reimburse the state for its immigration enforcement. Kevin Guthrie, head of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said the agency has been working with the feds for the past three months to receive a $605 million grant. The feds have also recently infused $170 billion for immigration and border-related activities for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in what's known as the Trump administration's "One Big Beautiful Bill," a massive tax and spending law. More:Big Beautiful Bill 101: What you need to know about the new law State Immigration Enforcement Council Director Larry Keefe criticized the "weaponized judiciary with the leftist lawyers" and the media "distorting facts" for "peripheral flank attacks," saying they're trying to obstruct the state's immigration detention efforts. Friends of the Everglades, a conservation group, and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida are suing the state, alleging the detention facility in Big Cypress National Preserve "poses serious threats to the sensitive Everglades ecosystem, endangered species, clean water and dark night skies." U.S. District Judge Kathleen M. Williams issued a temporary restraining orderto halt any further constructionof the South Florida Detention Facility and said she will issue a decision before the order expires on Aug. 21. Florida officials have said that once capacity at the South Florida Detention Facility was reached, they would look at opening another facility at Camp Blanding, a training center for the Florida National Guard in Clay County. Currently, there are 1,000 people detained at the South Florida Detention Facility, and there's capacity to hold 2,000. DeSantis said the federal government is "ramping up" removal flights from the South Florida facility. While the state operates the facility,the removalof undocumented immigrants is under federal jurisdiction. But DeSantis also said opening the South Florida Detention Facility has caused an increase of immigrants taking the state's"Voluntary Departure"option. The program is a collaboration between U.S. Customs and Border Patrol and the state, where Florida buys commercial flights for migrants as an alternative to detention. The state has not disclosed whether taxpayer dollars are being used to buy the tickets, how many tickets have been bought so far this year and to which countries these flights were headed to. Ana Goñi-Lessan, state watchdog reporter for the USA TODAY Network – Florida, can be reached atagonilessan@gannett.com. This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat:Florida to open second immigration detention facility

Florida to open second immigration detention facility, 'Deportation Depot'

Florida to open second immigration detention facility, 'Deportation Depot' Florida will open a second immigration detention, process...
National Guard troops have begun 24-hour operations in DC: OfficialNew Foto - National Guard troops have begun 24-hour operations in DC: Official

National Guard troops have begun 24-hour operations around Washington, D.C., as of Thursday morning, according to a Department of Defense official. It's part of President Donald Trump'splan to address crime in Washingtonby taking over the city's police department and deploying the National Guard troops. Thursday's National Guard presence in Washington included one small unit deployed to both Union Station and the National Mall early in the morning, according to a spokesperson for joint task force behind the operation. The idea is that residents and tourists would awake Thursday morning to the sight of military presence, according to a person familiar with the effort. MORE: Trump to seek 'long-term' extension of federal control of DC police Earlier this week, some National Guard troops patrolled along the National Mall -- a relatively safe and quiet stretch of Washington known for museums, monuments and hot dog vendors serving tourists. Guard members on patrol are not carrying weapons as of now, and they will not have the weapons in their vehicles, according to two defense officials. A White House official told ABC News that overnight Wednesday into Thursday, the multi-agency federal task force made 45 arrests -- 29 of which were immigration-related arrests. Law enforcement teams arrested people on a variety of charges including first and second degree assault, controlled substance possession and distribution, and carrying a concealed weapon, the White House official said. FBI Director Kash Patel posted on Xthat overnight Wednesday into Thursday, the FBI and law enforcement partners in Washington contributed to the 45 arrests with 16 arrests "tied to the violent crime surge" and seized three firearms. "Your FBI will make DC Safe Again," Patel wrote. Law enforcement agents conducted a traffic safety compliance checkpoint on busy 14th Street in Northwest Washington Wednesday night, which led to one arrest. A group of protesters spoke out against the checkpoint, shouting at the law enforcement officers, according tovideo from Washington's ABC station, WJLA. Armyofficials said their mission was to aid law enforcement with logistics support, transportation and administration duties, as well as being visible around the Mall. "That's part of our assignment -- to go to the national monuments and be present," Col. Dave Butler, an Army spokesperson, told ABC News on Tuesday. MORE: National Guard troops told to maintain presence near National Mall as part of Trump's anti-crime mission Trump announced Monday that he planned to mobilize 800 National Guard troops to address what he considered "out of control" crime in the city, as well as taking over control of the Metropolitan Police Department. Trump has made claims about rampant violent crime in Washington, whichD.C. police statisticsshow is actually decreasing.Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said the cityhas spent the last two years driving down violent crime -- "driving it down to a 30 year low, in fact," she told MSNBC on Sunday. "It is true that we had a terrible spike in crime in 2023, but this is not 2023, this is 2025 and we've done that by working with the community, working with the police, working with our prosecutors, and, in fact, working with the federal government," Bowser told MSNBC. Defense officials said the joint task force, led by Army Col. Larry Doane, will run the operation. The task force includes 800 activated National Guard members, defense officials said. The troops will work in shifts of 100 to 200 troops at a time, and some of them will be assigned to administrative or logistical roles in support of local law enforcement. Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson on Thursday said the 800 National Guard troops will remain "until law and order has been restored." "They will remain until law and order has been restored in the District as determined by the president, standing as the gatekeepers of our great nation's capital," she said. The task force overseeing the activated Guard troops will operate similarly to how the D.C. Guard has handled inaugurations or responding to crises, as it did during the Jan. 6 riots. The National Park Service will play a considerable role because of its oversight of the National Mall, officials said. ABC News' Michelle Stoddart, Kelsey Walsh and Lalee Ibssa contributed to this report.

National Guard troops have begun 24-hour operations in DC: Official

National Guard troops have begun 24-hour operations in DC: Official National Guard troops have begun 24-hour operations around Washington, D...
Judge strikes down Trump administration guidance against diversity programs at schools and collegesNew Foto - Judge strikes down Trump administration guidance against diversity programs at schools and colleges

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Thursday struck down two Trump administration actions aimed at eliminatingdiversity, equity and inclusionprograms at the nation's schools and universities. In her ruling, U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher in Maryland found that the Education Department violated the law when it threatened to cut federal funding from educational institutions that continued with DEI initiatives. The guidance has been on hold since April when three federal judgesblocked various portionsof the Education Department's anti-DEI measures. The ruling Thursday followed a motion for summary judgment from the American Federation of Teachers and the American Sociological Association, whichchallengedthe government's actions in a February lawsuit. The case centers on two Education Department memos ordering schools and universities to end all "race-based decision-making" or face penalties up to a totalloss of federal funding. It's part of a campaign to end practices the Trump administration frames as discrimination against white and Asian American students. The new ruling orders the department to scrap the guidance because it runs afoul of procedural requirements, though Gallagher wrote that she took no view on whether the policies were "good or bad, prudent or foolish, fair or unfair." Gallagher, who was appointed by PresidentDonald Trump, rejected the government's argument that the memos simply served to remind schools that discrimination is illegal. "It initiated a sea change in how the Department of Education regulates educational practices and classroom conduct, causing millions of educators to reasonably fear that their lawful, and even beneficial, speech might cause them or their schools to be punished," Gallagher wrote. Democracy Forward, a legal advocacy firm representing the plaintiffs, called it an important victory over the administration's attack on DEI. "Threatening teachers and sowing chaos in schools throughout America is part of the administration's war on education, and today the people won," said Skye Perryman, the group's president and CEO. The Education Department did not immediately comment on Thursday. The conflict started with aFeb. 14 memodeclaring that any consideration of race in admissions, financial aid, hiring or other aspects of academic and student life would be considered a violation of federal civil rights law. The memo dramatically expanded the government's interpretation of a 2023Supreme Court decisionbarring colleges from considering race in admissions decisions. The government argued the ruling applied not only to admissions but across all of education, forbidding "race-based preferences" of any kind. "Educational institutions have toxically indoctrinated students with the false premise that the United States is built upon 'systemic and structural racism' and advanced discriminatory policies and practices," wrote Craig Trainor, the acting assistant secretary of the department's Office for Civil Rights. A further memo in April asked state education agencies tocertifythey were not using "illegal DEI practices." Violators risked losing federal money and being prosecuted under the False Claims Act, it said. In total, the guidance amounted to a full-scale reframing of the government's approach to civil rights in education. It took aim at policies that were created to address longstanding racial disparities, saying those practices were their own form of discrimination. The memos drew a wave ofbacklashfrom states and education groups that called it illegal government censorship. In its lawsuit, the American Federation of Teachers said the government was imposing "unclear and highly subjective" limits on schools across the country. It said teachers and professors had to "choose between chilling their constitutionally protected speech and association or risk losing federal funds and being subject to prosecution." ___ The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, alistof supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Judge strikes down Trump administration guidance against diversity programs at schools and colleges

Judge strikes down Trump administration guidance against diversity programs at schools and colleges WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Thu...
Why Is Taylor Swift's New Album Coming Out on October 3? What to Know About the Date's Special SignificanceNew Foto - Why Is Taylor Swift's New Album Coming Out on October 3? What to Know About the Date's Special Significance

Vittorio Zunino Celotto/TAS24/Getty Taylor Swift's 12th studio album,The Life of a Showgirl, will be released on Oct. 3, 2025 Fans have been speculating about why the singer — known for her clues — chose this date Swift said during the announcement onNew Heightsthat the date was a nod to her lucky number When it comes toTaylor Swift, nothing is accidental. The Grammy-winning singerannounced the release dateof her 12th studio album,The Life of a Showgirl,during an August 2025 interview onNew Heights. Once she dropped the date to co-hostsJason KelceandTravis Kelce(whom she's beendatingsince 2023), Swifties wasted no time dissecting the date for clues. Known for leaving hidden messages in almost everything she does, Swift opened up in a November 2021 appearance onThe Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallonabout the "cryptic" tradition she's had with her fans since she released her first album in 2006. "I wanted to do something that incentivized fans to read the lyrics because my lyrics are what I'm most proud of," the "Cruel Summer" singer said. "When it got out of control was when I started to realize that it wasn't just me that had fun with this, that they had fun with it too." So when Swift revealed thatThe Life of a Showgirlwould be released on Oct. 3, fans immediately began speculating about the date's secret meaning. Here's everything to know about the date's possible significance. Taylor Hill/TAS23/Getty In true Swift fashion, the "Shake it Off" singer didn't giveNew Heightslisteners a straightforward reason for choosing the date. But when Jason brought up how Oct. 3 adds up to "13" — which real stans know isSwift's favorite number— she didn't deny that it played a part. "It's easy to remember, it's 10-3," she said. "Never not annoying. Always going to try to force a 13 into the situation, and this one was right there." Travis Kelce/Instagram The number 13 has long held special significance in Swift's career. She explained the connection to MTV News and said the lucky charm began with her birthday, Dec. 13, 1989. "I was born on the 13th," she said. "I turned 13 on Friday the 13th. My first album went gold in 13 weeks. My first No. 1 song had a 13-second intro. Every time I've won an award, I've been seated in either the 13th seat, the 13th row, the 13th section or row M, which is the 13th letter. Swift added, "Basically, whenever a 13 comes up in my life, it's a good thing." Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Lucky number aside, October is also a big month for the Kelce family. Travis' birthday is Oct. 5,Donna Kelce's is Oct. 9 and Jason's eldest daughter,Wyatt Kelce, celebrates hers on Oct. 2. There's also a track onThe Life of a Showgirltitled "Opalite," which could refer to the October birthstone opal. "I picked a good month," Swift quipped on the podcast. "You know, all these Libras out here." Bob Levey/TAS23/Getty This isn't the first time the "Love Story" vocalist chose to debut new music in this particular fall month. She's dropped five other studio albums during October, including her self-titled first album,Speak Now,Red,1989andMidnights. Swift also released the re-recorded version of1989in October. CBS via Getty Although Swift hasn't publicly addressed the theories, fans have pointed out a few other reasons Oct. 3 might be significant. For one, it's National Boyfriend Day — a date the songwriter marked in 2024 bydebuting merchinspired by her song "The Alchemy," which many Swifties believe was written about Travis. October 3 is alsoMean Girls Day, as it's a reference to the iconic 2004 scene where Aaron Samuels (Jonathan Bennett) asked Cady Heron (Lindsay Lohan) what date it was. Though Swift has never confirmed any connections between the film and her discography,Mean GirlsstarAmanda Seyfriedsang acover of her 2011 song"Mean" during a festival in 2019. Read the original article onPeople

Why Is Taylor Swift’s New Album Coming Out on October 3? What to Know About the Date’s Special Significance

Why Is Taylor Swift's New Album Coming Out on October 3? What to Know About the Date's Special Significance Vittorio Zunino Celotto/...
Queen of the '90s: Alicia Silverstone reflects on Aerosmith, "Clueless", Batgirl, and coming of age on screen

Alicia Silverstoneflashes a coquettish grin, her legs swinging, propelling her back and forth as she grasps the woven ropes to her left and right. She lets out a giggle as she swings higher. All that's missing are a pair of sunglasses andCary Elwysand this could bea scene right out ofThe Crush. In actuality, it's been 32 years since Silverstone's 1993 erotic thriller hit theaters… though you wouldn't know it by looking at her on this mid-July afternoon on the Los Angeles set ofEntertainment Weekly's '90s Issue cover shoot. The 48-year-old credits her veganism for her youthful aura, but the entire day feels a bit like a time warp back to the decade she helped define. A "90s Girl Anthems" Spotify playlist blasts out hit after hit, leading crew members to share stories of their graduation songs and school dances, and the still-swinging Silverstone to absentmindedly sing along to No Doubt's "Don't Speak" between takes. Then there's the fact that most of the crew is dressed like they just stepped out of one of Silverstone'sAerosmithvideos. The 1990s are having a moment, something Silverstone didn't really notice until a recent shopping trip with her son Bear, 14, in Europe, where she was filming her new Acorn TV crime dramaIrish Blood. "He wanted to buy baggy jeans, and I thought, 'That's so European of you,' because I hadn't quite seen it in the States yet," Silverstone recalls. "I guess he caught it first, and I just didn't know about it. But we went and got him some vintage jeans in East London. Grunge is back, it's cool to see." It has to be particularly cool for her to see given that a flannel-clad Silverstone helped solidify the look's popularity in the '90s via the "Cryin'," "Amazing," and "Crazy" videos before ushering in the preppy-plaid era withCluelessin 1995. Areosmith/YouTube (3) But before all that, "I was just a little girl putting on little dance shows at home," says Silverstone, who grew up in Northern California taking ballet classes — when she wasn't playing on her Game Boy. That is until "my dreams got crushed," she says matter-of-factly. "My ballet teacher smacked my bum and said something like 'You're too short to be a ballet dancer and your butt sticks out too much.'" (She laughs now, "I do have a butt, but still.") After that incident, the former aspiring dancer decided to put her creative energy towards acting. She'd done modeling and commercial work as a young kid, but fell in love with acting at the dawn of the '90s in theater class at Crocker Middle School. Jeremy Choh Silverstone's father took notice of her talent ("He discovered me," she jokes) and enrolled her in monthly acting workshops with Judi O'Neil, an L.A.-based talent manager who moonlit as an instructor — and searched for new talent — in the San Francisco area. "From age 12 to 14, I think I was pretty bad," she recalls. "I would be narcoleptic in class and just fall asleep all the time. There was a boy there, Jonah Blackman, that I had a crush on who danced with Baryshnikov and was in a milk commercial, so I was always distracted and giggling." But after a scene where Silverstone "really clicked in," O'Neil invited her to give Hollywood a shot. "At first, I was auditioning almost every day, but I wasn't getting anything," she says. "Then, all of a sudden, I started to get close to everything. They would say, 'It's between you and one other girl.' But that actually was worse. I'd get so close and then be disappointed, where before I didn't care." And she really cared aboutThe Crush. "They had me back many, many times, and it seemed like I was going to get the part — and then they offered it to someone else," Silverstone says of auditioning for writer-director Alan Shapiro's film about a 28-year-old writer who finds himself the object of a 14-year-old girl's dangerous obsession. "It felt really bad. For some reason, I felt like I was supposed to play this psychotic character," she adds. Warner Bros./courtesy Everett Collection Of course, that's not how the story ends. Silverstone says when the original star dropped out, she got the call that the part was finally hers. "I had to kiss the guy fromThe Princess Bride!" Silverstone, then 15, says of working with Cary Elwes, who is almost 14 years her senior. "I was young, so because we had this kiss in the film, I thought that that meant he was my boyfriend now," she continues, with a laugh. "Not really… but a little bit." Upon release of the film in April '93, Silverstone — whose only other professional credit at the time was an episode ofThe Wonder Years— was catapulted into stardom, her trajectory boosted just two months later by her first music video. ("I didn't know who Aerosmith was when I got asked to do the videos," Silverstone admits.) Jeremy Choh The emancipated minor (so she could work longer hours) was given the labels "the new Lolita" and "video vamp," as well as 1994 MTV Movie Awards for Best Breakthrough Performance and Best Villain. How prepared was she for all that attention? "Zero. Zero prepared," Silverstone says. "It was really hard, because you're just a little girl. You're a little person and trying to grow up, and you're growing up in front of people. For any human, it's an awkward time…. For any human, most of life is pretty awkward." Still a teen,her body was openly discussed by the public and press(even, very regrettably, by this publication). "We definitely did it differently back then. And that was not easy, for sure. But it's all fine. Nothing to lose sleep over," she says quickly before pausing. "But certainly something that stays with you." Though with that attention came work, lots of it. "I got to work withJames Gandolfiniand French director Alain Courneau, I got to work withJeff Goldblum," notes Silverstone, who collaborated with the former two onNew Worldand the latter onHideaway. She was even offered a role onBeverly Hills, 90210. But, as the actress said inher first EW cover story in 1995, "There's no reason to get locked into a television show when you might be able to do a movie with somebody like Al Pacino." Jeremy Choh Then cameClueless. Like Aerosmith music video director Marty Callner before her, writer-directorAmy Heckerlingwas pushed by friends to seeThe Crushas she cast her next big project. "But I really wanted the girl from the Aerosmith videos," Heckerling told EW during ourCluelessreunion in 2012. "Then I sawThe Crushand realized they were the same girl." "Amy had to fight to get this made. All the studios said, 'We're not making a movie with a young girl as the lead. It's going to fail,'" Silverstone says of the 1995 film, which became an instant cultural touchstone. "I really think that it's magic in a bottle," she continues. "You don't get that often, and none of us could have thought that that was going to happen. But I think it was the combination ofMona [May]'s costume design, Amy's brilliant writing and directing, and I think that it's funny and charming. And Jane Austen'sEmmaisn't too shabby either, as a starting off point. I think Amy really had her finger on the pulse, and had a beautiful way of capturing moments in time." Paramount Pictures/Getty Cluelesscasting director Marnie Waxman would say the same of Silverstone in that '95 cover story, stating that her superpower was "embodying the culture." The actress seemed just as at home in the preppy high fashion ofCluelessas she did returning to grunge in her next movie — another steamy psychological thriller,The Babysitter— released just three months later. "What's funny is, when I got the role forClueless, I wore jeans," Silverstone says when asked about being a fashion icon. "Actually, my entire auditioning process up until around the time ofClueless, I wore jeans and a green T-shirt with a little pocket on it. That's just what I wore every single day. At that age, I never had any interest in fashion at all, so I would just wear whatever was around, even if it was really unattractive flannel." Jeremy Choh She may not have cared about her fashion, but helping craft herBabysittercharacter opened the actresses' eyes to the possibility of having more agency in her career. "They kept asking me to do it, and the script was interesting, but the character just felt like an object, so I kept saying no," she says of director Guy Ferland's script. "And then they were like, 'Well, what is it that you want it to be?' And so I started talking about how to have her be a human, and more interesting things for me to do so I'm not just a sex object. I don't know why I knew that, or how I knew that, but that seemed obvious to me at that time." But while she felt increasingly empowered behind the scenes, Silverstone's power at the box office dimmed in the summer of '97 with the poorly received crime comedyExcess Baggage(her first film as a credited producer), and the big-budgetBatman & Robin. Warner Bros. Pictures/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty "When it came out,I don't think people liked it very much," the Batgirl actress says of the superhero sequel, for which she won a Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress. "But later on, people told me it's their favorite movie.It's very camp," she adds. Still, you want every project to hit. "We're all humans, so obviously there are things that can hurt your feelings here and there, but I really just got into activism and my desire to make the world a better place," Silverstone says of brushing off career disappointments by diving into her animal rights and environmental activism, promoting the personal and global benefits of veganism, and authoringThe Kind Diet(2009) andThe Kind Mama(2014). "I think that gave me something else to think about. I guess if [acting] was all I had, then perhaps I might be a bit more devastated." New Line Cinema/courtesy Everett Collection Silverstone concluded the '90s starring alongsideBrendan Fraiser,Sissy Spacek, andChristopher Walkenin the romantic comedyBlast From the Past, her schedule slowing down to a steady film a year heading into the 2000s — rather than the four a year she was managing just a few years earlier. "BeforeClueless, I was much more intuitive and playful and had more confidence about what I was doing. And I think afterClueless, for a minute I got a little stressed and made it more intellectual or something. I had about three or four years of this strange feeling," Silverstone says looking back at the end of the decade. "Acting is important to me, but I have taken breaks from it at times, and then come back to it because I loved it so much. I've figured out that you can do all the things." Jeremy Choh Now is clearly not a break. In addition toIrish Blood(the first two episodes are out now), Silverstone hasYorgos Lanthimos' sci-fi black comedyBugoniain theaters Oct. 24, and the Netflix holiday rom-comA Merry Little Ex-Mas(produced by and co-starring another '90s icon,Melissa Joan Hart) streaming Nov. 12. That's on top of executive producingthe upcomingCluelesssequel series, where she'll reprise her role as Cher Horowitz, andPretty Things, an erotic thriller released in July and available on-demand. "The '90s erotic thriller is back!" Silverstone declares. "But in the '90s, the woman was the naughty one, and she was definitely crazy or going to kill somebody or end up dead. InPretty Things, it's an older, powerful woman and a younger man, and he's the weirdo. My character has a healthy relationship with sex and he ends up being the cuckoo bird. Now some might say she's a little cuckoo too, but I don't think so…" So it's not only the grunge look that's en vogue again. When asked to play word association and is given the prompt "The '90s," Silverstone doesn't hesitate: "I think ofNirvana,Courtney Love. There's so much. But for me, it'sClueless." It's totally not just her. Jeremy Choh ---------------------------------- Directed by Alison Wild + Kristen Harding Photography by Jeremy Choh Motion- DP: Ava Rikki; 1st AC: Philip Hoang; Steadicam Op: Luke Rihl; Gaffer: Dimitri Christoforidis; Best Electric: Hayden Klemes; SLT: Michael Roseman; Key Grip: Jonathan Lee; Best Grip: Gino Roberson; Grip: Anthony Sandalena; Camera PA: Jacob Rumer Photo- 1st Assistant: Chir Yan Lim; 2nd Assistant: Ferid Hasbun; Digital Tech: Dante Velasquez Jr. Production Design- Production Designer: Cody Fusina; Art Coordinator: Mitchell Dillon; Leadman: Trevor Rittman; Art Assistant: Joshua Eisenberg; Construction Lead: Devin Parker; Construction Assistant: Daniel Salveson Post-Production- Color Correction: Taylor Pool/TRAFIK; VFX: Viktor Metelev; Design: Alice Morgan Alicia Silverstone- Styling: James Yardley; Styling Assistant: Rachel Zlotowicz; Hair: John D/Forward Artists; Makeup: Allan Avendaño/A-Frame Agency (Cover)Dress: Marchesa; Shoes: Casa Lily; Jewelry: David Webb (Header)Dress: Jenny Packham; Shoes: Gucci; Earrings: Melinda Maria; Ring: David Webb (Additional Photos)Dress: Phan Huy; Shoes: Casa Lily; Jewelry: David Webb (Interview)Dress: Rebecca Vallance; Shoes: Reformation: Earrings: Rachel Katz; Ring: Effy Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Queen of the '90s: Alicia Silverstone reflects on Aerosmith, “Clueless”, Batgirl, and coming of age on screen

Queen of the '90s: Alicia Silverstone reflects on Aerosmith, "Clueless", Batgirl, and coming of age on screen Alicia Silversto...
Denzel Washington, Who Has 2 Oscars, Says He's 'Not That Interested' in the AwardNew Foto - Denzel Washington, Who Has 2 Oscars, Says He's 'Not That Interested' in the Award

MIKE NELSON/AFP via Getty Denzel Washington said in a new interview withJake's Takesthat he is "not that interested in Oscars" Washington has been nominated for 10 Academy Awards in his career and won twice, in 1990 and 2002, for the moviesGloryandTraining Day, respectively The legendary actor's new movieHighest 2 Lowestis in theaters Aug. 15 and begins streaming on Apple TV+ Sept. 5 Denzel Washingtonmay be a two-timeAcademy Awardwinner, but the actor says he is not all that interested in the prestigious award. When Washington, 70, sat down with hisHighest 2 LowestcostarJeffrey Wrightto discuss their new movie with journalistJake HamiltononJake's Takesrecently, the actor said, "I don't do it for Oscars. I really don't care about that kind of stuff," when Hamilton referenced Washington's two Oscar statuettes. "I've been at this a long time, and there's times when I've won, shouldn't have won, didn't win, should have won," Washington said. "Man gives the award, God gives the award. I'm not that interested in Oscars. People say, 'Well, where do you keep it?' I say, 'Next to the other one.' " "I'm not bragging. I'm just telling you how I feel about it. On my last day, it ain't going to me a bit of good," he added. Washington has been nominated for an Oscar a whopping 10 times over the course of his career, beginning in 1988 for the movieCry Freedom. The actor won his first Academy Award in 1990 for his supporting role in the movieGlory, and he won his second Oscar in 2000 for his leading performance inTraining Day. (Washington was most recently nominated for an Oscar in 2022 for 2021'sThe Tragedy of Macbeth.) CHRISTOPHE D YVOIRE/Sygma via Getty "I don't think God ever asks, 'How many Oscars do you have?' " Hamilton said during the interview, in response to Washington's assertion. "He might go 'You know, that's why I gave you an extra week,' " Washington responded, with a laugh. "As long as He says, 'Now, get on up here,' I'm alright." Although Washington has ascended to an esteemed place in movie history, he identified himself as "a stage actor" first and foremost during a March interview withCBS News'Sunday Morningabout his Broadway run in William Shakespeare'sOthello, oppositeJake Gyllenhaal. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. MIKE NELSON/AFP via Getty "What's the definition of a Hollywood actor? Myself, I'm from Mt. Vernon, so I'm a 'Mt. Vernon actor,'" Washington said at the time, referring to his New York hometown. "I don't know what 'Hollywood' means. Somebody who's famous on film? A film actor, great success on film?" "I'm a stage actor who does film; it's not the other way around," he added in that interview. "I did stage first. I learned how to act on stage, not on film. Movies are a filmmaker's medium. You shoot it, and then you're gone, and they cut together and add music and do all of that. Theater is an actor's medium. The curtain goes up, nobody can help you." Washington and Wright costar with Ilfenesh Hadera, Aubrey Joseph, Wright's son Elijah Wright, Ice Spice, Wendell Pierce, Dean Winters and Allison Worrell in Spike Lee's latest movie,Highest 2 Lowest.The movie is in theaters Aug. 15 and begins streaming on Apple TV+ Sept. 5. Read the original article onPeople

Denzel Washington, Who Has 2 Oscars, Says He's 'Not That Interested' in the Award

Denzel Washington, Who Has 2 Oscars, Says He's 'Not That Interested' in the Award MIKE NELSON/AFP via Getty Denzel Washington sa...

 

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