Brenda Venus
25.9K posts

Brenda Venus
@bvenus
Writer / Producer / Director -- Follow me on Instagram: https://t.co/su8ihHJIUD Facebook: https://t.co/L09tMkHuAi
Los Angeles เข้าร่วม Ocak 2009
1.4K กำลังติดตาม50K ผู้ติดตาม

Elon Musk just reduced American crime politics to a single question on Joe Rogan.
And answered it like it was arithmetic.
Musk: “While obviously not everyone who’s a Democrat is a criminal, almost everyone who is a criminal is a Democrat.”
That’s not a partisan attack.
That’s an observation about how incentives work.
If you’re a criminal, you don’t vote for the party promising longer sentences and more cops.
You vote for the one gutting bail laws and calling enforcement racist.
This isn’t opinion. This is game theory.
Musk: “Because the Democrats are the soft-on-crime party. So if you’re a criminal, who are you gonna vote for?”
Nobody wants to follow that logic to its conclusion.
But the math doesn’t care.
The softness isn’t accidental. It’s architectural.
No-cash bail. Decriminalized theft. Sanctuary cities. Defund the police.
These aren’t compassion. They’re infrastructure.
Every policy that removes consequences builds a constituency that needs them to stay gone.
That’s not ideology. That’s customer acquisition.
You don’t protect criminals because you care about them.
You protect them because they show up in November.
The people paying the price are never the ones writing the policy.
It’s the working-class neighborhoods getting hollowed out.
The immigrant families who played by the rules watching the system reward the ones who broke them.
The small business owners boarding up windows because the DA won’t prosecute.
They’ll spend the next week calling Musk reckless for this.
But he didn’t build the incentive structure.
He just described it.
And that’s what they’ll never forgive.
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@MrPitbull07 They are so very sweet together. A happy couple in Hollywood is rare. Congratulations—
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He needed a date for an Oscars party. A friend set him up with Bo Derek. They ended up together for 20 years — and nobody knew they'd gotten married until he casually mentioned it on a talk show.
*"Jerry, I can't believe I forgot to tell you… we got married."*
When John Corbett mentioned to his agent Norby Walters that he had no date for an upcoming Oscars party, he wasn't expecting much from the conversation.
Walters had a suggestion.
*"I'll get you a date, Corbett."*
Bo Derek had been one of the most recognized women in Hollywood since *10* made her a cultural phenomenon in 1979. She had graced magazine covers around the world. She had been married for twenty-two years to director John Derek — a relationship that both shocked and fascinated Hollywood. When he died of heart failure in 1998, Bo was forty-one years old.
She later described it as losing the air from the room.
She hadn't dated anyone in five years.
So when Walters called to ask if she might like to meet someone, she wasn't expecting much either. *"I kept saying to my friends, 'I'll wait until all the sparks get going,'"* she later recalled. *"And it finally happened."*
Corbett found her intimidating at first. Bo said she liked him instantly.
That was 2002. *My Big Fat Greek Wedding* — the film that would make Corbett a household name — hadn't been released yet. He was known from *Sex and the City,* but Bo was still the bigger name that night.
Neither of them seemed to mind.
They began quietly. They stayed that way.
For nearly two decades, they lived together on a ranch in Santa Barbara — surrounded by German Shepherds and horses, watching *Jeopardy!* over dinner, traveling when work allowed, and keeping their relationship almost entirely out of the spotlight. In a world where celebrity couples share everything, Bo and John simply lived their life.
*"We're such opposites in so many ways,"* Bo told Entertainment Tonight in 2020. *"We took this relationship one day at a time. And it just happens to be 19 years later we're still together — and we're gonna go for one more day."*
Then, quietly, sometime around Christmas 2020, they changed their minds about something.
No announcement. No headlines. Just a small wedding with close friends and family.
And then life went on.
Eight months later, in August 2021, Corbett appeared on *The Talk.* His friend Jerry O'Connell was on the panel. Midway through the conversation, Corbett paused.
*"Jerry, I can't believe I forgot to tell you… around Christmastime, we got married. Bo and I got married!"*
He held up his wedding ring. O'Connell was stunned. So was everyone watching.
*"We're pretty private people,"* Corbett said. *"We didn't make an announcement. All our friends and family knew. But this is the first time either of us has said anything publicly about it."*
Of course it was. It was exactly how they would do it.
Bo Derek had spent much of her life in the public eye. But her real life — the grief, the years of solitude, the quiet relationship with someone she trusted, and finally a Christmas wedding that nobody heard about for months — she kept close.
*"He makes my day brighter,"* she has said.
They still hold hands. They still have barbecues with friends. They still feed the horses together every morning.
A blind date at an Oscars party. Twenty years. A wedding nobody knew about.
Sometimes the strongest love stories are the ones lived quietly — far from the spotlight, on a ranch in Santa Barbara, watching *Jeopardy!* and feeding the horses at dawn.

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Maye, a special thanks to you. Your guidance of an extraordinary young man may have saved our nation. Free speech on X alone is one of his greatest gifts to us. StarLink gave voice to the suppressed and hopeless. I hope I will get to shake your hand one day.
Maye Musk@mayemusk
Thank you for the Happy Mother’s Day flowers 🌺 Love m
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While the rest of the world watched the Twin Towers fall in horror on their TV screens, he grabbed his old gear and headed toward the smoke. He didn't call his publicist. He just showed up to work. Back in September 2001, he wasn't looking for a camera or a red carpet. He was looking for his brothers.
Before his fame, Steve Buscemi was a real New York City firefighter. He took the FDNY exam when he was just 18 years old and spent four years working 12-hour shifts in Little Italy with Engine Company 55.
He eventually left the department to pursue acting, but he never truly stopped being a firefighter at heart.
When the towers fell on 9/11, that old instinct took over. Buscemi didn’t reach out to his agent or wait for instructions. He called his old firehouse, but no one answered because of the sheer chaos in the city.
On September 11, he simply showed up at the pile of rubble known as Ground Zero. He found his old crew and asked if he could help. For the next five days, he became a firefighter again.
He put aside his Hollywood life and worked grueling 12-hour shifts. He spent his time digging through twisted steel and shattered concrete, searching for survivors.
There were no cameras following him around for a documentary. In fact, he fiercely avoided the press. He turned away reporters and declined interviews because he didn't want the focus to be on his celebrity. He wanted to be just another man on the line.
"It was a privilege to be able to do it," Buscemi later said about those days in the dust. "It was enormously helpful for me because while I was working, I didn’t really think about it as much, feel it as much."
For him, being part of the recovery was a way to process the shock that everyone else was feeling from a distance.
The internet often claims that no photos exist of him there, but a few rare shots do document his presence. They show a man covered in soot, wearing a simple fire helmet, with a face etched in total exhaustion and sorrow.
These weren't staged publicity photos; they were raw moments of a man doing a job. He didn't want the world to see him as a hero. He just wanted to help his friends.
However, the work took a heavy toll on him. After the physical labor ended, the emotional weight stayed. Buscemi eventually opened up about the deep depression and PTSD he faced after leaving Ground Zero.
Returning to a "normal" life felt impossible for a long time. "There are times when I talk about 9/11 and I’m right back there," he admitted in a rare, candid interview.
He didn't suffer in silence forever. He turned to therapy and found comfort in talking to professionals and other first responders who understood the trauma.
This experience turned him into a lifelong advocate for mental health. He realized that the scars you can't see are often the ones that take the longest to heal.
Even now in 2026, Buscemi is still showing up for the FDNY. He serves on the Advisory Council for Friends of Firefighters and helps raise money for mental health counseling. This mission is more urgent than ever.
Today, more FDNY members have died from 9/11-related illnesses than the 343 who were lost on the day of the attack. Buscemi makes sure these people are never forgotten.
He could have stayed in a safe place and watched the news like everyone else. Instead, he chose to get his hands dirty. He didn't go there as a movie star; he went there as a New Yorker who knew how to use a shovel.

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@MuskVisionHub01 I pray he wins! He usually wins all of his battles.
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"I was a fool."
Elon Musk
In a stunning moment in federal court today, Elon admitted under oath that he feels like a fool for donating $44M to start OpenAI. Why? Because he built it to save humanity, only to watch it become an $800B "closed-source" giant for Microsoft.
But here’s the Vision…. He’s not just complaining; he’s correcting. He’s suing for $150B in damages and demanding OpenAI return to its non-profit roots.
Elon isn't fighting for the money, he's fighting for the original mission. If he wins, the AI world shifts back to the people. 🛡️🦾
Are you with the "Fool" who cares, or the "Genius" who sells? 👇 #OpenAITrial #ElonMusk #MuskVisionHub01

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@thehealthb0t Fatal heart damage! What is injected into the arm should not end up in the heart. Astounding testimony “against” the vaccines.
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SHOCKING SENATE EXPOSÉ: Pediatricians are getting PAID BONUSES to jab your kids — and they’ll DUMP your family if you say NO!
In explosive testimony before Sen. Ron Johnson’s subcommittee, Polly Tommey and Dr. Brian Hooker just blew the lid off the vaccine racket:
Pediatricians pocket **$200–$600 PER CHILD** in bonuses for hitting vaccination quotas. Some are raking in **OVER $1 MILLION A YEAR** pushing shots.
Refuse? They drop you like a bad habit. Parental rights? Crushed. Ethics? Non-existent.
The fear-mongering lies they feed terrified parents:
- “Your newborn will BLEED OUT without Vitamin K!”
- “Your child will DIE of cancer without the HPV shot!”
This isn’t healthcare — it’s a **greedy, quota-driven medical cartel** treating your babies like profit centers.
They don’t care about your child’s health. They care about their **BONUS CHECKS**.
Parents: **WAKE UP.** Do your own research. Say NO to experimental shots. Protect your kids from this corrupt system.
This is medical tyranny for profit.
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Maye Musk on Elon’s early days:
"I knew he was a genius and a good person, so I knew he would want to do something good. I invested in Zip2 to keep them going
On my 50th birthday, they gave me a little toy house and a little toy car and said, 'We're going to give you one day!' We were all struggling… but after they sold Zip2, I got a real home and a real car" ❤️
Elon Musk@elonmusk
❤️❤️ Happy Mother’s Day ❤️❤️ Appreciation to mothers everywhere who brought us all into the world and nurtured their beloved children 🥰
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Death of Hollywood.
You won’t be missed.
Stories used to be escape. Now they’re sermons. You pay to be insulted.
It starts with the casting.
Casting used to fit the character. Now it fits a quota.
Cleopatra. Snape. Helen of Troy. And now Achilles. Can’t even.
More effort goes into the race swap and the gender swap than into the story.
Oh and screw the Greeks I guess.
Thousands of cultures and thousands of years of human story treated like raw material for one narrow worldview, defined from one ivory tower in LA.
Even the stories themselves are gone.
Every blockbuster is a remake of a remake. IP recycled until the corpse stops twitching.
Same trauma backstory. Same girlboss arc. Same bumbling boyfriend.
Make sure while going into the quantum realm as ant-man you discuss the rent affordability crisis and how billionaires are evil. Like wtf.
Indie films starve. Originality starves. The same six studios feed you the same six stories.
Try to laugh at any of it and you get fired.
Comedy died the day cancel culture was born. You can’t laugh anymore. Someone somewhere is crying. And it’s your fault.
The funniest people in America haven’t been let in a writers room in a decade.
And the ones still inside? They think they earned a pedestal.
They didn’t. They got hired. Now they lecture you from it in $80,000 dresses about wealth inequality.
Peter Dinklage built his career as Tyrion. Then he shamed Disney into deleting the dwarves from Snow White. The movie lost $115 million. Dwarves are fine when they pay him.
Then they hand each other awards for it.
Best Picture eligibility now requires a diversity checklist. Story comes second.
They give each other gold statues for movies nobody watched.
Studio heads say men have to be retrained to like their movies. You can’t force people to eat shit.
Movies are escapes. Emotions. Other worlds.
If I wanted to be miserable, I’d have just watched CNN or looked at my bank account after taxes.
Entertain us or sit down.
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@RenzTom @KirkWiebe Frightening that we live in a world with this type of automobile technology that has turned on the driver of the vehicle.
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🚨End of Vehicle Privacy
Your car is no longer your car.
New vehicles come loaded with cameras pointed at your face, always-on microphones, and tracking tech that logs everywhere you go.
People are pushing back hard—they want their vehicles to stay private sanctuaries, not rolling surveillance devices feeding data straight to governments and corporations.
Traditional search and seizure protections are being erased. Warrants? Probable cause? Soon irrelevant when you’ve already “consented” by driving a modern car.
This is the highway to technocracy—total tracking, total control, the death of privacy.
Are you going to accept a camera in your face every time you drive? Or is this the line we draw?
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Thank God for honest people like Eric Clapton. But take note - they have not stopped pushing the Covid lies.
Died Suddenly@DiedSuddenly_
Legendary singer and musician Eric Clapton was just removed from the Rolling Stone top 10 list of greatest guitar players because he said he was injured by the COVID vaccine. When asked why, Rolling Stone had this to say: "His COVID comments clearly rule out any chance of being all-knowing."
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The room was laughing at her. 90 seconds later, 100 million people would know her name.
April 11, 2009. Glasgow, Scotland.
A 48-year-old woman walked onto the stage of Britain's Got Talent wearing a dress that didn't quite fit and hair that hadn't seen a salon in months. Her name was Susan Boyle. She'd spent most of her life in a tiny village called Blackburn, caring for her aging mother until she passed away two years earlier. She'd never married. Never held a steady job. Never left her small corner of Scotland.
She lived alone. She had a cat. She had a dream.
When she told the judges she wanted to be a professional singer like Elaine Paige, the audience laughed out loud. Simon Cowell raised his eyebrows. Amanda Holden bit her lip to suppress a smile. Piers Morgan smirked. Three thousand people in that auditorium had looked at Susan Boyle and decided, in an instant, exactly who she was.
They were wrong.
The music began. "I Dreamed a Dream" from Les Misérables—one of the most demanding songs in musical theater.
She opened her mouth.
The first note silenced the room like thunder.
Within seconds, the entire audience was on their feet. Amanda Holden's hands shot to her face. Piers Morgan was shaking his head in disbelief. Simon Cowell—the man who had seen everything—was grinning like he'd just witnessed a miracle. The same people who had been laughing were now screaming, cheering, some openly weeping.
Susan finished. She gave a small, awkward bow. She had no idea she'd just changed her life.
The video went online immediately. Within weeks, it became the most-watched video on the internet. Susan Boyle—the woman the world had laughed at—became the most famous person on Earth almost overnight.
She didn't win the competition. She came in second.
But she'd already won something far bigger.
Her debut album sold 10 million copies and became the fastest-selling debut in UK history. It topped charts in 33 countries. She's now sold over 25 million records worldwide. She's performed for the Queen of England and the Pope. She's been nominated for two Grammys.
And she still lives in the same small house in Blackburn that her parents bought decades ago.
Susan Boyle had walked onto that stage fully expecting people to laugh at her. She'd been bullied as a child. Told she was slow. Made to feel invisible for most of her life.
What she didn't expect was that 90 seconds of courage would rewrite everything the world thought it knew about her.
There is no first impression that cannot be shattered by truth.
There is no person who doesn't deserve a second look.
Susan Boyle taught 100 million people that lesson in the span of one song.
And the world has never forgotten.

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