96 hours at the Kamala Harris show: schmaltzy soundbites and spray-on chinos
The Democrat National Convention was all about ‘magic’, barnstorming rhetoric and the ruthless erasure of Joe Biden
The Democrat National Convention was all about ‘magic’, barnstorming rhetoric and the ruthless erasure of Joe Biden
A new Netflix documentary emphasises the decline in standards of a once leading production house.
As we stand in the CNN spin room after the debate, I just think: this is it. The end of Biden. The end of it all. It’s not every day you watch a living president die.
It is not so much that lying these days is more prevalent – it is just that telling lies has become perfectly acceptable, even mainstream.
A hundred and seven women said Harvey Weinstein had harassed them, assaulted them or raped them, so why was he only convicted of three – and now just one? It’s not simply a failure of the justice system. It’s because, right from the start, ordinary people saw the MeToo movement for what it was: Tinseltown rubbish.
Mary & George proves period dramas are hooked on swearing and orgies. Whether it’s Shogun’s fighting or Julianne Moore’s royal filth — obscenity is everywhere.
Margot Robbie is a formidable star, not a formidable actor. And before you accuse me of sexism, I think the same about Bradley Cooper.
TV anchors grappled with the bracelets of sincerity, while the cameras zoomed in on two slightly unsure septuagenarians.
The Duke of Sussex’s livestreamed chat with a controversial trauma expert has been likened to a Victorian circus freakshow act.
Harry, the son of a king, may complain all he likes about his own impossible existence, but his tragedies are nothing next to those of the daughter of ‘The King’.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/camilla-long