The World of Style & Entertainment

All the other crazy stuff we talk about. Politics, Science, News, the Kitchen, other hobbies.
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1111

Post by ti-amie »

Ron Filipkowski
‪@ronfilipkowski.bsky.social‬
Looks like the Russians like his Russia tie. It’s not red-white-blue either. It’s red-blue-white. Like the Russian flag. For a meeting with Zelensky.

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Shenanigans followed.

derek guy
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this is not a russian tie. it's a sign the person inside can cut your hair
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Adam Zinman‬
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· 5m
Actually in S. Korea it’s an indication that a massage parlor gives more than just massages. Learned that one the hard way.
Nowhyok‬
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· 7m
What is happening with where his tie and collar meet? Just too tight?
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1112

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“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1113

Post by ponchi101 »

I really did not like Cairo; the dirtiest capital I have ever been to (I have been to dirtier cities).
But that museum looks impressive. The city has plenty of museums so maybe they can centralize some of the other stuff. The museum where they have the Tutankhamen coffins was very shabby, except for that wing. I remember seeing some priceless items displayed on regular wood shelves. I thought it was odd.
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1114

Post by ti-amie »

‪CNN‬
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· 5m
As all eyes turned to the Louvre after the shocking theft of the French crown jewels, one especially dapper figure stood out. Now identified as a French teenager, he’s spoken to CNN about his style. cnn.it/441gkaq
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https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/10/europe/l ... rofile=cnn
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1115

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Does she really front a death metal band? Wait for it at about 40s in
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1116

Post by ponchi101 »

Poor, untalented, ugly looking, dumb, miserable.... me :cry:
Ok. I'll clean the bathrooms of her mansion.
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1117

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ponchi101 wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 1:57 am Poor, untalented, ugly looking, dumb, miserable.... me :cry:
Ok. I'll clean the bathrooms of her mansion.
:lol:
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1118

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“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1119

Post by ptmcmahon »

ti-amie wrote: Tue Nov 11, 2025 1:33 am

Does she really front a death metal band? Wait for it at about 40s in
I'm unfamiliar with her so I can't say if she does or doesn't in reality (google leads me to believe it true.) But that sure looked like lip synching to me.
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1120

Post by Oploskoffie »

I'll accept this as proof... ;)

Never be sad on a weekend. Cry during business hours and get paid for your depression. Don't let capitalism win.
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1121

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Kennedy Center ticket sales have plummeted since Trump takeover

Nearly nine months into the president’s oversight, sales for orchestra, theater and dance performances are the worst they’ve been since the pandemic, according to a Washington Post analysis.
October 31, 2025

Image
Seats are empty minutes before the beginning of a National Symphony Orchestra program at the Kennedy Center on Sept. 11. (Travis M. Andrews/The Washington Post)

By Travis M. Andrews
,
Jeremy B. Merrill
and
Shelly Tan

After President Donald Trump took over the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in February, he and the executive he put in charge repeatedly accused the institution’s former leadership of not doing the very thing they were responsible for: selling tickets.

“We had spent way too much on programming that doesn’t bring in any revenue,” Richard Grenell, a Trump ally and former ambassador to Germany, told the Washington Reporter, a conservative media outlet, in late March. According to Grenell, the center hadn’t been making money. It was too woke and niche. The new team was, in Trump’s words, going to make it “hot” again.

Nearly nine months after Trump became chair of the center and more than a month into its main season, ticket sales for the Kennedy Center’s three largest performance venues are the worst they’ve been in years, according to a Washington Post analysis of ticketing data from dozens of recent shows as well as past seasons. Tens of thousands of seats have been left empty.

Since early September, 43 percent of tickets remained unsold for the typical production. That means that, at most, 57 percent of tickets were sold for the typical production — and some tickets may have been “comps,” which are given away, often to staff members or the press. That compares with 93 percent sold or comped in fall 2024 and 80 percent in fall 2023.

The Post collected and analyzed ticket sales data from Sept. 3 to Oct. 19, which reveals an across-the-board drop-off in the center’s major theaters: the Opera House, the Concert Hall and the Eisenhower Theater. The performances included National Symphony Orchestra programs, touring Broadway musicals and dance performances.

The Kennedy Center did not respond to a request for comment.

Overall, the center could have sold tickets to roughly 143,000 seats during this time period. Of those, more than 50,000 remained vacant.

The Post also analyzed internal Kennedy Center sales figures from past years and credit and debit card transaction data, which underscores what patrons can see with their own eyes: Unfilled seats are now a regular feature of Washington’s national center for the performing arts.

According to the spending data, drawn from 40 million credit and debit cards analyzed by the consumer data and analytics company Consumer Edge, less than half as much money was spent on tickets in September and the first half of October 2025 as during that same period in 2024. This is less than people spent on the center during any other year since 2018, except 2020, when the venue was locked down for most of the year.

The drop in ticket buying may have broader consequences. Fewer patrons in chairs could lead to fewer donations, warned Michael Kaiser, who served from 2001 to 2014 as president of the Kennedy Center, where he boasted a budget surplus every year.

“Depressed ticket sales not only cause a shortfall in revenue; they also bode unfavorably for future fundraising revenue,” Kaiser wrote in an email after reviewing The Post’s findings. “The vast majority of donors are ticket buyers who are anxious to enhance their relationships with the organization by making contributions in addition to paying for their tickets. We had 40,000 generous individual donors by the time I left the Center in 2014. Funding from these individuals formed the foundation for all we accomplished.”

It is unclear what the Kennedy Center’s overall revenue picture looks like at the moment. The center has declined several requests from The Post to share concrete details about its financials. Ticket sales usually account for less than half of its revenue, according to the center’s publicly available tax returns from the past several years. The center also relies on corporate sponsorships, event rentals, philanthropic giving and other sources of income. Its building operations are funded by the federal government.

To compare the current sales to those of past seasons, The Post obtained internal “all-discipline” reports from the past several years. These share final ticket sales, revenue, attendance and more for all shows at the center from fall 2021 through the start of summer 2025. They used to be shared with all employees every Wednesday, but the new leadership ended the practice this summer.

An across-the-board drop-off

Despite Grenell’s critique of the former Kennedy Center management, swaths of empty seats were an unusual sight in the large venues before the takeover, according to The Post’s analysis.

From September to mid-October last year, on average, only 7 percent of seats were available for a typical production on the day of the performance. In 2023, 20 percent of seats were unsold. In 2022, a robust year for the center, only 6 percent of seats were available.

In 2021, as the center was reopening during the coronavirus pandemic, 34 percent of seats went unsold — a bit less than this year, when the median production had about 43 percent of seats available.

“Given the unprecedented takeover of a nonpartisan arts institution combined with the inexperience and rhetoric of the new management, I expected a decline in sales; however, it is truly shocking to see that these actions have been worse for business at the Kennedy Center than the aftermath of a global pandemic,” a former staff member said via messaging app, speaking on the condition of anonymity out of fear of professional blowback. “These numbers are likely more dire than they appear, as they don’t account for canceled productions or shows moved into smaller theaters due to weak ticket sales.”

There may be multiple reasons for the dip in ticket sales. On Broadway, musical theater sales are down, as the New York Times recently reported. The Trump administration’s recent National Guard deployment has hurt tourism and nightlife in Washington. And many former Kennedy Center patrons have pledged to boycott the institution until Trump is no longer chair.

“This downturn isn’t just about pricing or programming — it feels directly tied to the new regime’s leadership shift and the broader political climate,” said a current staff member, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. “I’ve heard from ticket buyers who say they’re choosing not to attend because of what the Kennedy Center now represents. The brand itself has become polarizing, which is unprecedented in my experience.”

Since 2018, in the same 45-day period The Post analyzed, only six shows had fewer than half of their seats filled. Five of them — all orchestra concerts — were this year. Among them was “The Legacy of John Williams and Steven Spielberg,” part of the National Symphony Orchestra’s Pops series, which typically brings in a broader audience.

During the concert, which one of this article’s reporters attended, the ushers repeatedly encouraged audience members to move up to more expensive seats, as much of the orchestra section was empty. The top two tiers, which were originally available for purchase, were closed several days before the three-performance run because of low ticket sales.
Even reliable shows are struggling

“We are doing the big things that people want to see,” Grenell recently said in an interview. “We are seeing a huge change because people are recognizing that they want to be a part of something that is common-sense programming,” he continued, employing a phrase he has often used while describing his plans for the Kennedy Center. (Grenell has repeatedly declined interview requests from The Post.)

The week after Trump announced his plans to take over the center, ticket sales dropped by 50 percent, several staff members said at the time. Months later, sales of subscriptions to the major seasons (theater, opera, etc.) were down by 36 percent, according to internal data obtained by The Post. And the numbers remain dismal.

What has changed under Trump and Grenell?

There has been an influx of Christian programming, but many of these events have been free to the public. Numerous programming executives have resigned or been dismissed, part of a broader trend of layoffs at the center. The programming of the theater and the National Symphony Orchestra, in particular, is similar to that of previous years. One major difference was a high-dollar fundraiser that Trump hosted to open the summer run of “Les Misérables.” Another is the numerous artists who have said they won’t perform there.

Some adjustments are evident. The center moved “Parade” — a Tony-winning musical that ran from Aug. 19 to Sept. 7 — from the 2,364-seat Opera House, where it was originally slated to run, to the 1,161-seat Eisenhower Theater. In the last few days of its run, 43 percent of seats were available.

“The Sound of Music,” which included 32 performances from Sept. 9 to Oct. 5, was a centerpiece of the fall schedule.

“This is a beloved classic for so many people, and exactly the type of popular show you can expect on our stages from the new leadership,” Roma Daravi, the Kennedy Center’s vice president of public relations, told the Washington Reporter.

Grenell agreed, telling the outlet, “We are trying to be financially responsible and give shows that are common sense, blockbuster hits with the public.”

But it wasn’t a hit. While some performances nearly sold out, on average about one-third of the seats were still for sale day-of.
A window into the Kennedy Center’s financial health

Grenell and other members of the center’s new leadership team have repeatedly claimed that the center was deep in debt and paying its employees from debt reserves, and have even accused the former leadership of fraud, which those leaders deny.

Shows selling this poorly leave more than $1 million in potential revenue on the table — just 45 days into the season.

Consider a recent run of the National Symphony Orchestra’s “An Evening of Beethoven.” For the three shows, more than 2,000 seats, worth about $110,000, were still available day-of, according to The Post’s analysis of listed prices on the Kennedy Center’s ticketing website on the morning before each performance.

About $330,000 worth of seats were filled, according to the listed prices — but it is unclear how many were comps, which do not generate revenue. Indeed, several Kennedy Center staff members told The Post they’ve received far more free tickets than in previous years. The center has on occasion offered hundreds of comp seats for shows to “paper the house,” or to make it look like ticket sales are higher than they actually are, according to one staff member with knowledge of ticketing, speaking on the condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisal. “All in all, it is not a sustainable situation,” this staff member said.

The blowback to Trump’s takeover already extends into next year. “Hamilton” probably would have been the center’s biggest show in 2026, but the producers pulled out this summer. Producer Jeffrey Seller said at the time that the show was incompatible with “a new spirit of partisanship … [at] the national treasure that is the Kennedy Center.”

“‘Hamilton’ was proudly performed at the Kennedy Center in 2018 during the first Trump administration,” Seller said. “We are not acting against his administration, but against the partisan policies of the Kennedy Center as a result of his recent takeover.” Grenell called the cancellation a sign of political intolerance to conservative audiences.

The “Hamilton” run in 2022 sold $26 million in tickets (including subscriptions). The center paid Seller’s production company a $22.7 million fee, according to tax filings, and spent about $700,000 on marketing, according to the 2022 final all-discipline report. That’s to say nothing of the merchandise and concession sales generated by the more than 160,000 attendees.

The current leadership has not publicly acknowledged any challenges with ticket sales. But the chairman of the board has been serving as a pitchman.

In a recent Truth Social post, Trump praised the building’s newly painted columns and referred to the center as the “TRUMP KENNEDY, whoops, I mean KENNEDY CENTER.”

He also encouraged people to visit a building that “will soon be the finest Arts and Entertainment Center anywhere in the World.”

“Come see for yourself,” Trump wrote. “We are remaining fully open during construction, renovation, and beautification.”

Methodology

On a daily basis, The Post recorded the number of tickets available for 63 performances at the Kennedy Center’s Opera House, Concert Hall and Eisenhower Theater from Sept. 3 to Oct. 19. The figures all came from the venue’s ticketing sales website. We compared that with per-production sales figures contained in the Kennedy Center’s “all-discipline” reports for fiscal 2022, 2023, 2024 and partial data for fiscal 2025.

We calculated the share of seats still available for sale on the day of each performance (or for four weekend matinee shows, the day before), using the number of seats shown in the ticketing system for the theater as the denominator.

For prior years, we calculated the percentage of seats available as the venue capacity minus tickets sold, tickets comped and blacked-out seats, to get a figure comparable to the number of seats available for sale on the website. Blacked-out seats are treated as unavailable, so the capacity is constant for all shows in a given venue.

For some slow-selling shows this year, the Kennedy Center blocked out whole sections of a theater. If a tier of seats was completely unavailable for sale every day in the week leading up to a performance, and if at least 25 percent of seats in the “Box & Chorister” or “Box Tier” section were available (to distinguish a near-sellout of the top tiers from those seats being unavailable for sale), then The Post’s analysis treated those seats as unsold. This was the case for 10 shows.

For calculating the median seat availability, Kennedy Center internal data for 2021-2024 is from internal “all-discipline” reports that summarize sales for each production, regardless of how many shows occurred. The Post looked at any production that had performances between Sept. 3 and Oct. 19. For 2025 data gathered by The Post, the data includes only performances that occurred within that date range.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertai ... ter-sales/

There are good charts at the link that don't show up well here.
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1122

Post by ponchi101 »

Everything he touches...
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1123

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Eurovision faces crucial decision over Israel
2 hours ago
Mark Savage Music correspondent

The Eurovision Song Contest faces a battle for its future at a "watershed" meeting in Geneva on Thursday.

Organisers and participating countries will debate whether Israel should be allowed to continue in the competition, amid protests over the way its government conducted its war in Gaza, and accusations of unfair voting practices.

Countries including Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands and Slovenia have said they will boycott Eurovision if Israel participates. Germany has indicated it will pull out if Israel is excluded.

The meeting comes after anti-Israel protesters attempted to disrupt both the 2024 and 2025 contests, citing their opposition to the Palestinian death toll in Gaza.

During this year's grand final in Basel, Switzerland, two people attempted to storm the stage and throw paint over Israel's contestant, Yuval Raphael. They were stopped by crew members and later arrested.

Raphael eventually took second place in the contest, after a convincing victory in the public vote.

However, the result triggered a backlash from other countries, who said Israel's government had artificially boosted their position through a broad, paid-for advertising campaign, urging people across Europe to vote for their song.

Israel has not responded to these accusations but frequently argues it has faced a global smear campaign.

Last month, Eurovision organisers announced they were tightening the competition's voting rules to limit the influence of governments on the results.

Without naming Israel, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) said it would "discourage disproportionate promotion campaigns", particularly if they were "undertaken or supported by third parties, including governments or governmental agencies".

It also announced that fans would only be able to cast 10 votes each, down from 20; and that steps would be taken to improve the detection of "fraudulent or co-ordinated voting activity".

"We very much hope the package of measures will assure members that we have taken strong action to protect the neutrality and impartiality of the Song Contest," the EBU said.

'Crisis point'

It is hoped that the new rules will be enough to assuage participants' concerns over Israel's presence at the contest.

The package will be put to EBU members - including BBC director general Tim Davie - at the organisation's biannual general meeting on Thursday.

If they are not convinced the changes are adequate, there will be a vote on Israel's future.

Natalija Gorščak, president of the management board at Slovenian broadcaster RTV, told BBC News she expected such a vote to go in Israel’s favour.

If that were to happen, Slovenia would refuse to participate in or broadcast the contest.

“I know that fans in Slovenia are disappointed,” Gorščak said. “I'm a fan as well and it's so bad because Vienna is so close to us and we won't be able to go.

“But still, we need to follow our principles and I think this is the correct way. Sometimes we need to be on the right side of history and this is the moment we are on the right side of history.”

Eurovision expert Paul Jordan called the situation “a real crisis point for Eurovision and the EBU“.

"There are no winners here. And it's a great shame that something which is meant to be apolitical has actually become a bit of a political football."

A vote on Israel's participation was originally due to take place in November, but it was cancelled after the declaration of a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip on 10 October.

Roland Weissman, director general of Austrian broadcaster ORF - which will host next year's contest in Vienna - subsequently travelled to Israel to meet with its Eurovision team and Israeli President Isaac Herzog.

There, he told reporters that Israel is "an inseparable part of Eurovision".

Others disagree.

Spain, one of the "Big Five" countries that contribute significant funding and audiences to Eurovision, has pledged to withdraw if Israel competes, saying the country had used the competition politically.

Speaking to a parliamentary commission, the president of Spanish broadcaster RTVE said he felt Israel's participation was "untenable", calling its actions in Gaza a genocide.

"As President of the (RTVE) corporation, I keep thinking that Eurovision is a contest, but human rights are not a contest," he said.

Israel has consistently denied accusations of genocide in Gaza, where the death toll has surpassed 70,000, according to Hamas-run health authorities.

If a vote against Israel were successful, Germany would probably withdraw and not broadcast the contest, a broadcasting industry source told the Reuters news agency.

Sources within Israeli broadcaster KAN said it believed discussions about excluding Israel were unjustified, asserting that KAN was in full compliance with EBU rules.

On Wednesday, pre-empting the EBU's general meeting, the broadcaster issued a press release confirming it was pressing ahead with its preparations for the 2026 contest.


https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2gq5q5p47o
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1124

Post by ti-amie »

Trump Awards Kennedy Center Medals to 2025 Honorees at White House

Published
Dec 06, 2025 at 07:48 PM EST
updated
Dec 06, 2025 at 07:49 PM EST

By Adeola Adeosun
Weekend Night Editor

President Donald Trump presented the 2025 Kennedy Center honorees with their medals during a Saturday ceremony in the Oval Office, calling the group "perhaps the most accomplished and renowned class" ever assembled.

This year's recipients are actor Sylvester Stallone, singers Gloria Gaynor and George Strait, rock band KISS, and actor-singer Michael Crawford.
Why It Matters

In early February, Trump fired the Kennedy Center's president and chairman, replacing most of the board with political loyalists who then elected him the center's new chairman.

The previous president, Deborah Rutter, was ousted and later replaced by Ric Grenell, who served as acting director of national intelligence in the first Trump term. The president's direct involvement in selecting honorees and moving the medal ceremony to the White House breaks from decades of tradition, where selections were made by a bipartisan committee and medals were presented at a State Department dinner.
What To Know

Trump also announced he would attend Sunday's Kennedy Center Honors program, marking the first time a sitting president would participate in the event after overhauling the center's leadership structure.

The president said he was "about 98% involved" in choosing the 2025 honorees when he personally announced them at the Kennedy Center in August—the first slate selected under his leadership. The honorees had traditionally been announced via press release, and it remains unclear exactly how this year's recipients were selected.

The new Tiffany & Co. medal features a gold disc etched with the Kennedy Center's image and rainbow colors on one side, with the honoree's name and ceremony date on the reverse. It hangs from a navy blue ribbon, replacing the previous large rainbow ribbon decorated with three gold plates.

Image
Kennedy Centre Honours recipient musician Paul Stanley of the rock band KISS, receives a medal from US President Donald Trump during the Kennedy Centre Honours medal presentation ahead of tomorrow's ceremony, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, December 6, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

Image
US President Donald Trump speaks during the Kennedy Centre Honours medal presentation ahead of tomorrow's ceremony, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, December 6, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

What People Are Saying

President Donald Trump: "This is a group of icons whose work and accomplishments have inspired, uplifted and unified millions and millions of Americans. These are among the greatest artists, actors and performers of their generation."

Trump on George Strait: "We can hardly imagine the country music phenomena without its king of country."

Trump on Gloria Gaynor: "We have the disco queen, and she was indeed, and nobody did it like Gloria Gaynor."

Trump on Sylvester Stallone: He called his friend a "wonderful" and "spectacular" person and "one of the true, great movie stars" and "one of the great legends."

Trump on Michael Crawford: "Great star of Broadway" for his lead role in the long-running Phantom of the Opera.

Image
US President Donald Trump speaks during the Kennedy Centre Honours medal presentation ahead of tomorrow's ceremony, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, December 6, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

Image
Kennedy Centre Honours recipient singer Gloria Gaynor receives a medal from US President Donald Trump during the Kennedy Centre Honours medal presentation ahead of tomorrow's ceremony, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, December 6, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

What Happens Next

The Kennedy Center Honors program, featuring tribute speeches and performances for each recipient, will be taped Sunday at the performing arts center for broadcast later this month on CBS and Paramount+.

Image
Kennedy Centre Honours recipient actor Sylvester Stallone receives a medal from US President Donald Trump during the Kennedy Centre Honours medal presentation ahead of tomorrow's ceremony, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, December 6, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

P1/2
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Re: The World of Style & Entertainment

#1125

Post by ti-amie »

p2/2

Image
The FIFA 2025 Peace Prize sits on the Resolute Desk during the Kennedy Centre Honours medal presentation ahead of tomorrow's ceremony, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, December 6, 2025. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

Reporting from the Associated Press contributed to this article.

https://www.newsweek.com/trump-awards-k ... e-11169168
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