Tag: Farage

  • Sorting Ukraine in a day and blasting Meghan: 7 things we learned in Trump’s Farage interview

    Sorting Ukraine in a day and blasting Meghan: 7 things we learned in Trump’s Farage interview

    [ad_1]

    electon 2020 trump 05080

    LONDON — Frost/Nixon it was not. But at least the golf course got a good plug.

    Brexit firebrand Nigel Farage bagged a half an hour sit-down interview with Donald Trump on Wednesday as part of the former U.S. president’s trip to his Turnberry golf resort in Scotland.

    The hardball questions just kept on coming as the two men got stuck into everything from how great Trump is to just how massively he’s going to win the next election.

    POLITICO tuned in to the GB News session so you didn’t have to.

    Trump could end the Ukraine war in 24 hours

    Trump sees your complex, grinding, war in Ukraine and raises you the deal-making credentials he honed having precisely one meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

    “If I were president, I will end that war in one day — it’ll take 24 hours,” the ex-POTUS declared. And he added: “That deal would be easy.”

    Time for a probing follow-up from the host to tease out the precise details of Trump’s big plan? Over to you Nige! “I think we’d all love to see that war stop,” the hard-hitting host beamed.

    Nicola Sturgeon bad, Sean Connery great

    Safe to say Scotland’s former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon — who quit a few months back and whose ruling Scottish National Party now faces the biggest crisis of its time at the top — is not on Trump’s Christmas card list.

    “I don’t know if I’ve ever met her,” Trump said. “I’m not sure that I ever met her.” But he knew one thing for certain. Sturgeon “didn’t love Scotland” and has no respect for people who come to the country and spend “a lot of money.” Whoever could he mean?

    One Scot did get a thumbs-up though. Sean Connery, who backed Trump’s golf course and was therefore “great, a tough guy.”

    Boris Johnson was a far-leftist

    Boris Johnson’s big problem? Not the bevy of scandals that helped call time on the beleaguered Conservative British prime minister, that’s for sure.

    Instead, Trump reckons it was Johnson’s latter-day conversion to hard-left politics, which went shamefully unreported on by every single British political media outlet at the time. “They really weren’t staying Conservative,” he said of Johnson’s government. “They were … literally going far left. It never made sense.”

    Joe Biden isn’t coming to King Charles’ coronation because he’s asleep?

    Paging the royals: Turns out Joe Biden — who is sending First Lady Jill Biden to King Charles’ coronation this weekend — won’t be there because he is … catching some Zs. “He’s not running the country. He’s now in Delaware, sleeping,” Trump said.

    Don’t worry, though: Trump explained how Biden’s government is actually being run by “a very smart group of Marxists or communists, or whatever you want to call them.” Johnson should hang out with those guys!

    Meghan Markle ain’t getting a Christmas card either

    Trump found time to wade into Britain’s never-ending culture war over the royals, ably assisted by a totally-straight-bat question from Farage who said Britain would be “better off without” Prince Harry turning up to the weekend festival of flag-waving.

    Harry’s wife Meghan Markle has, Trump said, been “very disrespectful to the queen, frankly,” and there was “just no reason to do that.” Harry, whose tell-all memoir recently rocked the royals, “said some terrible things” in a book that was “just horrible.”

    But do you know one person who really, really respected the queen? Donald J. Trump, who “got to know her very well over the last couple of years” and revealed he once asked her who her favorite president was.

    Trump didn’t get an answer, he told Farage — but we’re sure he had one in mind.

    Trump’s golf course really is just absolutely brilliant

    Only got half an hour with the indicted former leader of the free world now leading the Republican pack for 2024? Better keep those questions tight!

    Happily, Farage got the key stuff in, remarking on how “unbelievable” Trump’s Turnberry golf course is, and how it slots neatly into “the best portfolio of golf courses anyone has ever owned.”

    “We come here from this golf course,” Farage helpfully told Trump, from the golf course. “You turned this golf course around. It’s now the No. 1 course in the whole of Britain and Europe. You’ve got this magnificent hotel. You must have missed this place?”

    Trump, it turns out, certainly had missed the place. He is, after all, a man with “very powerful ideas on golf and where it should go.” A news ticker reminded us Turnberry is the No. 1 rated golf course in Europe.

    Legal troubles? What legal troubles?

    A couple of minutes still on the clock, Farage danced delicately around Trump’s recent courtroom drama, saying he had never seen the former president “looking so dejected” as when he sat before the Manhattan Criminal Court last month.

    Trump predicted the drama would “go away immediately” if he wasn’t running for president. But he made clear there are still some burning issues keeping him going: Namely, taking on the “sick, horrible people” hounding him through the courts and relitigating the 2020 election result.

    In an actual flash of tension, Farage delicately suggested Trump won in 2016 by tapping into voters’ concerns rather than reeling off his own grievances. “You brought this up,” the former president shot back.

    At least they ended it on a positive note. Trump said a vote for him in 2024 would “get rid of crime — because our cities, Democrat-run, are crime-infested rat holes.” Unlike Trump Turnberry, which is the No. 1 rated golf course in Europe!



    [ad_2]
    #Sorting #Ukraine #day #blasting #Meghan #learned #Trumps #Farage #interview
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Christoph Waltz: ‘My only regret is that I didn’t attack Nigel Farage enough’

    Christoph Waltz: ‘My only regret is that I didn’t attack Nigel Farage enough’

    [ad_1]

    Why do you generally choose not to talk about the characters you have played? It seems unusual for an actor. tttophonks

    Because that’s not what I do. I play them. I think it is absolutely ridiculous that actors go on their bonus DVD interviews and explain what they were doing. That’s not what an actor does. An actor plays the part for you to make up your mind. I always quote Harrison Ford: “My job is not to tell you what I think about my character. My job is to tell you what you think about my character.” It’s completely counterproductive for an actor to talk about his part. If it requires explanation, you have to ask yourself a few questions. That’s why I don’t talk about the characters.

    I’ve always wanted to know what you would be doing if you weren’t acting. I’ve always imagined you as some kind of fixer for international hitmen. wildsville

    I don’t even know what a fixer for an international hitman does, but it’s a nice, poetic description of people’s image of me. It’s far too late to think about what I would have done. I wanted to be an artist, I wanted to be a cinematographer, then I became an actor. Why? That is open to speculation, especially on my part. I’ve been doing this for over 45 years. So you understand my hesitance to think about what I would have done had I not become an actor. Maybe I’d have become an alcoholic, or a bank president – or both.

    I can remember a very early interview in which you actually predicted that you would win an Oscar … Red_Roland

    That’s incorrect. I never predicted that. If I did, then it was facetious. People run around thinking they will win the lottery, otherwise they wouldn’t be dumb enough to spend all that money. The chances that you win are millions to one. The chances that you will get run over when you cross the street are infinitely higher. Do you leave your house in the morning, thinking, “I’m going to be run over today”? Of course not. You go about your day, otherwise you couldn’t function. That’s exactly why I never said I would win an Oscar.

    Christoph Waltz as SS officer Hans Landa in Inglourious Basterds
    Christoph Waltz as SS officer Hans Landa in Inglourious Basterds (2009). Photograph: c Weinstein/Everett/Rex Featur

    You won Oscars for your supporting roles in Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained. Which role in another Quentin Tarantino movie would you most – and least – like to have played? TopTramp

    Here’s a big misconception perpetuated by the dreadful bonus DVD crap that is slung around. You do not choose roles by what you see. The end product is inseparably connected to the personality of the person who played it. You choose roles from what you read. To watch a movie and say, “Oh, I would’ve liked to play that part,” means you think you could have played it better. It’s a very immature thought to entertain. It’s counterproductive and completely misses the point to say: “Oh, I would’ve liked to play Robin Hood in Men in Tights,” because maybe I don’t even look good in tights.

    Why do you think directors predominantly cast you as the bad guy? persekabpas

    Well, that again is a limited vision. I don’t know how many roles I’ve played in movies over the course of my career. It’s probably 150, and I may have played 50 bad guys. Directors do not predominantly cast me as bad guys. This person predominantly saw me as the bad guy. But that’s a different question.

    Christoph Waltz as Regus Patoff in the Prime Video thriller The Consultant
    Christoph Waltz as Regus Patoff in the Prime Video thriller The Consultant. Photograph: PR

    Given your recent roles in The Consultant and Old Guy, what is your personal attitude to ageing? Valeriecath

    Helplessness? I’m not sure that personal attitude will give you a choice. Just this morning I saw another breakthrough in the discovery of how cells age. That doesn’t mean that we can or should reverse it. Human beings are faced with many situations that, in most aspects, are beyond our influence. We make ourselves extremely unhappy by falling into the trap that we have choices about everything. In my little book, the most important aspect is that we overlook the realm, aspects and points where we really do have an influence on our lives, existence or situation on this world. When we actually have a choice and influence, we sacrifice them for the sake of choices that go beyond our scope. Hence, I think ageing is beyond our influence. We age, we try to live a decent life, and the rest is unforeseeable.

    Did you get much backlash for calling out Nigel Farage in the days after the Brexit referendum? brucevayne1000

    My only regret is that I didn’t attack him enough. When he gloriously announced his retreat from politics, I said that the head rat is leaving the sinking ship, because clearly he saw that he had overshot in the face of Brexit, so he retired. Britain goes down, Nigel Farage is sitting on his money in the Cayman Islands and laughing himself silly. It’s beyond comprehension. I was at a press junket in London when I said it, and the person who did the interview took his SD card and fed it straight on to the internet.

    Christoph Waltz as a young actor in 1977
    Christoph Waltz as a young actor in 1977. Photograph: United Archives/Getty Images

    Do you still mourn the fact that a career in opera didn’t pan out as you maybe hoped as a younger man? Kevtb1987

    It’s rather pompous to say, “Do I mourn”. I studied opera but it was never really a viable option to become an opera singer.

    If they remade Die Hard, would you play Hans Gruber? Ker555

    No!

    I think you’d make a fantastic Doctor in Doctor Who. Would you be up for it? Felis_Lunar

    You can answer these questions on the silly level that they were asked, or you can answer them more sensibly. The question is rather: would the studio be up for that? Yes, I would, gladly, and I’m sure audiences all over the world would welcome it with jubilant enthusiasm.

    Would you like to play Dracula? teabags12

    It’s a funny question. You can’t play a concept. Dracula is a whole concept of horror. It defines the genre of the vampire movie. An actor cannot do that. I can play a very specific part. So if the right Dracula script comes along, most definitely. Will the right Dracula script come along? Not necessarily.

    In Inglourious Basterds, was that a real or a stunt apple strudel that you stubbed your cigarette in? wenders14

    A precise answer to that question would require a more precise definition of the term “stunt strudel”.

    Have you seen Rob Brydon’s impersonation of you? ColonelFlustered

    Seeing this question, I tried to find the clip online, then I got bored looking for it. It is easy to do any impression of me. It’s not difficult. Everybody who has a distinct way of speaking is easy to impersonate. When it’s easy to recognise, it’s easy to impersonate. Someone did an impression of me on Saturday Night Live. I saw it and didn’t recognise myself, but they thought it was hysterically funny. But they always do.

    Christoph Waltz with Kate Winslet in Roman Polanski’s 2011 film Carnage
    Christoph Waltz with Kate Winslet in Roman Polanski’s 2011 film Carnage. Photograph: Constantin Film/Allstar

    What kept you going when you were a struggling actor? Jonnieog

    I needed to support a family, so I didn’t have problems doing shitty jobs. The chances that I would have ended up as a cantankerous, frustrated old fart were pretty high, so I am seriously grateful that I managed to escape that. There are endless cop shows on German television, but it feels like in Germany they have more regional cop shows than anywhere else. So I played regional cops and regional murderers for what seemed like an eternity.

    The Allianz adverts you star in are really clever; it’s clear you’re a good match for the campaign. Is there anything you’ve seen and wished you had invested in at the time? ChristophWaltzVaultz

    Yes, I wish I had invested in Apple and Microsoft very early on! It’s a little in the vein of the lottery win. Allianz takes the other angle: what can I do to use what money I have in a meaningful and constructive way? How can I make sense with my money and create a situation that corresponds with my philosophy of life? The one term that is swirling around lately is empowerment, but education is the best annuity.

    Waltz lathers up.
    Waltz lathers up. Photograph: PR company handout

    I see Allianz as an educational, informative campaign to say there is more to know than you may gather from first sight. Why not have fun with it? After all, it’s your money.

    You seem like a nice guy. But should we trust you? Twist27

    No. On both counts.

    Waltz has partnered with Allianz’s Start Making Cents campaign to help people prepare for their financial future.

    [ad_2]
    #Christoph #Waltz #regret #didnt #attack #Nigel #Farage
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )