Tensions were high during Friday’s episode of The View, resulting in a swift end to the co-hosts’ interview with GOP candidate Kim Klacik.
As seen in the video below (with a slightly longer version here), Klacik, the current Republican nominee for Maryland’s 7th congressional district, had just finished addressing the coronavirus pandemic when the interview became heated. Klacik asserted that President Bill Clinton’s administration had been responsible for sending biotech and manufacturing jobs overseas years ago, resulting in a lack of preparedness to handle the pandemic in the United States this year.
More from TVLineThe View in Review: The Soap It 'Replaced,...
As seen in the video below (with a slightly longer version here), Klacik, the current Republican nominee for Maryland’s 7th congressional district, had just finished addressing the coronavirus pandemic when the interview became heated. Klacik asserted that President Bill Clinton’s administration had been responsible for sending biotech and manufacturing jobs overseas years ago, resulting in a lack of preparedness to handle the pandemic in the United States this year.
More from TVLineThe View in Review: The Soap It 'Replaced,...
- 9/18/2020
- by Rebecca Iannucci
- TVLine.com
At 8 a.m. on a frigid January morning, Maya Rockeymoore Cummings, 49-year-old widow of the late Congressman Elijah Cummings, was standing on a busy street corner in Baltimore, enthusiastically waving at passing cars next to a campaign sign with her name on it. She’d been doing this every morning and evening at rush hour — rain, snow, or shine — before and after a full day of knocking on doors and talking to voters. There were no fewer than 32 people in the special election to succeed her legendary husband in Congress,...
- 3/3/2020
- by Laura Bassett
- Rollingstone.com
WASHINGTON -- While minority performers are appearing in more TV series, the entertainment industry is doing a poor job hiring minorities to write, direct and produce the movies, TV and cable shows that Americans watch, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said Tuesday. In its third annual report on minority hiring, "Out of Focus, Out of Sync", the NAACP found that gains made in entertainment industry practices in front of the camera were counteracted by the dearth of minority employees in other jobs. "In the past year, there have been modest gains in the onscreen employment of African-Americans and others, but with notable exceptions, these gains have been offset by behind-the-scenes rosters that remain virtually frozen demographically," NAACP president Kweisi Mfume said.
- 10/29/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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