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#Bill Rancic
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Bill Prutt for Slate:
On Jan. 8, 2004, just more than 20 years ago, the first episode of The Apprentice aired. It was called “Meet the Billionaire,” and 18 million people watched. The episodes that followed climbed to roughly 20 million each week. A staggering 28 million viewers tuned in to watch the first season finale. The series won an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Reality-Competition Program, and the Television Critics Association called it one of the best TV shows of the year, alongside The Sopranos and Arrested Development. The series—alongside its bawdy sibling, The Celebrity Apprentice—appeared on NBC in coveted prime-time slots for more than a decade. The Apprentice was an instant success in another way too. It elevated Donald J. Trump from sleazy New York tabloid hustler to respectable household name. In the show, he appeared to demonstrate impeccable business instincts and unparalleled wealth, even though his businesses had barely survived multiple bankruptcies and faced yet another when he was cast. By carefully misleading viewers about Trump—his wealth, his stature, his character, and his intent—the competition reality show set about an American fraud that would balloon beyond its creators’ wildest imaginations.
I should know. I was one of four producers involved in the first two seasons. During that time, I signed an expansive nondisclosure agreement that promised a fine of $5 million and even jail time if I were to ever divulge what actually happened. It expired this year. No one involved in The Apprentice—from the production company or the network, to the cast and crew—was involved in a con with malicious intent. It was a TV show, and it was made for entertainment. I still believe that. But we played fast and loose with the facts, particularly regarding Trump, and if you were one of the 28 million who tuned in, chances are you were conned. As Trump answers for another of his alleged deception schemes in New York and gears up to try to persuade Americans to elect him again, in part thanks to the myth we created, I can finally tell you what making Trump into what he is today looked like from my side. Most days were revealing. Some still haunt me, two decades later. [...]
Now, this is important. The Apprentice is a game show regulated by the Federal Communications Commission. In the 1950s, scandals arose when producers of quiz shows fed answers to likable, ratings-generating contestants while withholding those answers from unlikable but truly knowledgeable players. Any of us involved in The Apprentice swinging the outcome of prize money by telling Trump whom to fire is forbidden. [...]
Trump goes about knocking off every one of the contestants in the boardroom until only two remain. The finalists are Kwame Jackson, a Black broker from Goldman Sachs, and Bill Rancic, a white entrepreneur from Chicago who runs his own cigar business. Trump assigns them each a task devoted to one of his crown-jewel properties. Jackson will oversee a Jessica Simpson benefit concert at Trump Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City, while Rancic will oversee a celebrity golf tournament at Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor, New York. Viewers need to believe that whatever Trump touches turns to gold. These properties that bear his name are supposed to glitter and gleam. All thanks to him.
Reality is another matter altogether. The lights in the casino’s sign are out. Hong Kong investors actually own the place—Trump merely lends his name. The carpet stinks, and the surroundings for Simpson’s concert are ramshackle at best. We shoot around all that. Both Rancic and Jackson do a round-robin recruitment of former contestants, and Jackson makes the fateful decision to team up with the notorious Omarosa, among others, to help him carry out his final challenge. [...]
Trump will make his decision live on camera months later, so what we are about to film is the setup to that reveal. The race between Jackson and Rancic should seem close, and that’s how we’ll edit the footage. Since we don’t know who’ll be chosen, it must appear close, even if it’s not.
We lay out the virtues and deficiencies of each finalist to Trump in a fair and balanced way, but sensing the moment at hand, Kepcher sort of comes out of herself. She expresses how she observed Jackson at the casino overcoming more obstacles than Rancic, particularly with the way he managed the troublesome Omarosa. Jackson, Kepcher maintains, handled the calamity with grace. “I think Kwame would be a great addition to the organization,” Kepcher says to Trump, who winces while his head bobs around in reaction to what he is hearing and clearly resisting. “Why didn’t he just fire her?” Trump asks, referring to Omarosa. It’s a reasonable question. Given that this the first time we’ve ever been in this situation, none of this is something we expected. “That’s not his job,” Bienstock says to Trump. “That’s yours.” Trump’s head continues to bob. “I don’t think he knew he had the ability to do that,” Kepcher says. Trump winces again.
“Yeah,” he says to no one in particular, “but, I mean, would America buy a n— winning?” Kepcher’s pale skin goes bright red. I turn my gaze toward Trump. He continues to wince. He is serious, and he is adamant about not hiring Jackson. Bienstock does a half cough, half laugh, and swiftly changes the topic or throws to Ross for his assessment. What happens next I don’t entirely recall. I am still processing what I have just heard. We all are. Only Bienstock knows well enough to keep the train moving. None of us thinks to walk out the door and never return. I still wish I had. (Bienstock and Kepcher didn’t respond to requests for comment.) Afterward, we film the final meeting in the boardroom, where Jackson and Rancic are scrutinized by Trump, who, we already know, favors Rancic. Then we wrap production, pack up, and head home. There is no discussion about what Trump said in the boardroom, about how the damning evidence was caught on tape. Nothing happens.
We attend to our thesis that only the best and brightest deserve a job working for Donald Trump. Luckily, the winner, Bill Rancic, and his rival, Kwame Jackson, come off as capable and confident throughout the season. If for some reason they had not, we would have conveniently left their shortcomings on the cutting room floor. In actuality, both men did deserve to win. Without a doubt, the hardest decisions we faced in postproduction were how to edit together sequences involving Trump. We needed him to sound sharp, dignified, and clear on what he was looking for and not as if he was yelling at people. You see him today: When he reads from a teleprompter, he comes off as loud and stoic. Go to one of his rallies and he’s the off-the-cuff rambler rousing his followers into a frenzy. While filming, he struggled to convey even the most basic items. But as he became more comfortable with filming, Trump made raucous comments he found funny or amusing—some of them misogynistic as well as racist. We cut those comments. Go to one of his rallies today and you can hear many of them.
If you listen carefully, especially to that first episode, you will notice clearly altered dialogue from Trump in both the task delivery and the boardroom. Trump was overwhelmed with remembering the contestants’ names, the way they would ride the elevator back upstairs or down to the street, the mechanics of what he needed to convey. Bienstock instigated additional dialogue recording that came late in the edit phase. We set Trump up in the soundproof boardroom set and fed him lines he would read into a microphone with Bienstock on the phone, directing from L.A. And suddenly Trump knows the names of every one of the contestants and says them while the camera cuts to each of their faces. Wow, you think, how does he remember everyone’s name? While on location, he could barely put a sentence together regarding how a task would work. Listen now, and he speaks directly to what needs to happen while the camera conveniently cuts away to the contestants, who are listening and nodding. He sounds articulate and concise through some editing sleight of hand.
Then comes the note from NBC about the fact that after Trump delivers the task assignment to the contestants, he disappears from the episode after the first act and doesn’t show up again until the next-to-last. That’s too long for the (high-priced) star of the show to be absent. There is a convenient solution. At the top of the second act, right after the task has been assigned but right before the teams embark on their assignment, we insert a sequence with Trump, seated inside his gilded apartment, dispensing a carefully crafted bit of wisdom. He speaks to whatever the theme of each episode is—why someone gets fired or what would lead to a win. The net effect is not only that Trump appears once more in each episode but that he also now seems prophetic in how he just knows the way things will go right or wrong with each individual task. He comes off as all-seeing and all-knowing. We are led to believe that Donald Trump is a natural-born leader.
Through the editorial nudge we provide him, Trump prevails. So much so that NBC asks for more time in the boardroom to appear at the end of all the remaining episodes. (NBC declined to comment for this article.) [... So, we scammed. We swindled. Nobody heard the racist and misogynistic comments or saw the alleged cheating, the bluffing, or his hair taking off in the wind. Those tapes, I’ve come to believe, will never be found.
No one lost their retirement fund or fell on hard times from watching The Apprentice. But Trump rose in stature to the point where he could finally eye a run for the White House, something he had intended to do all the way back in 1998. Along the way, he could now feed his appetite for defrauding the public with various shady practices. In 2005 thousands of students enrolled in what was called Trump University, hoping to gain insight from the Donald and his “handpicked” professors. Each paid as much as $35,000 to listen to some huckster trade on Trump’s name. In a sworn affidavit, salesman Ronald Schnackenberg testified that Trump University was “fraudulent.” The scam swiftly went from online videoconferencing courses to live events held by high-pressure sales professionals whose only job was to persuade attendees to sign up for the course. The sales were for the course “tuition” and had nothing whatsoever to do with real estate investments. A class action suit was filed against Trump.
That same year, Trump was caught bragging to Access Hollywood co-host Billy Bush that he likes to grab married women “by the pussy,” adding, “When you’re a star, they let you do it.” He later tried to recruit porn actor Stormy Daniels for The Apprentice despite her profession and, according to Daniels, had sex with her right after his last son was born. (His alleged attempt to pay off Daniels is, of course, the subject of his recent trial.) In October 2016—a month before the election—the Access Hollywood tapes were released and written off as “locker room banter.” Trump paid Daniels to keep silent about their alleged affair. He paid $25 million to settle the Trump University lawsuit and make it go away. He went on to become the first elected president to possess neither public service nor military experience. And although he lost the popular vote, Trump beat out Hillary Clinton in the Electoral College, winning in the Rust Belt by just 80,000 votes.
Trump has been called the “reality TV president,” and not just because of The Apprentice. The Situation Room, where top advisers gathered, became a place for photo-ops, a bigger, better boardroom. Trump swaggered and cajoled, just as he had on the show. Whom would he listen to? Whom would he fire? Stay tuned. Trump even has his own spinoff, called the House of Representatives, where women hurl racist taunts and body-shame one another with impunity. The State of the Union is basically a cage fight. The demands of public office now include blowhard buffoonery.
Bill Pruitt wrote in Slate that Donald Trump used the N-word on the set of NBC's The Apprentice in 2004 when referring to a Black contestant (Kwame Jackson)'s chances of winning the competition by saying "would America buy a n***er winning?"
This is yet another example of Trump's long record of anti-Black racism that dates back to the 1970s.
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kelly-clarksons · 3 months
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kellyclarksonshow: A fun Tuesday with @ hitrecordjoe, @ realjunesquibb and @ billrancic!
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A former "Apprentice" producer newly released from his nondisclosure agreement published an account on Slate that details former President Donald Trump's alleged use of the n-word to describe a Black finalist on the business competition show. According to the producer, Trump discriminated against the contestant, claiming Americans would not "buy a nigger winning."
That producer, Bill Pruitt, said Trump made the comments during a recorded but heavily edited boardroom meeting that was held to compare the performance of the two finalists in the show's inaugural 2004 season: Kwame Jackson, a Black Goldman Sachs broker, and white cigar entrepreneur Bill Rancic. The participants each weighed in, and it was Carolyn Kepcher, an "Apprentice" judge and chief of Trump's golf courses, who Pruitt recalls advocating strongly for Jackson because he successfully dealt with "more obstacles" than Rancic, mainly in the form of his antagonistic teammate Omarosa. According to Pruitt, Omarosa attacked several of their teammates in support of her "brother" Jackson, and Kepcher observed that the latter handled the awkward situation with "grace."
Kepcher then suggested that Jackson would be a "great addition" to the Trump Organization. But Trump was apparently uncomfortable with the recommendation. According to Pruitt, Trump "winces while his head bobs around in reaction to what he is hearing and clearly resisting."
"Why didn't he just fire her?" Pruitt recalls Trump asking of Jackson, as if Trump had suddenly forgotten that his own iconic line existed to be spoken by him alone.
“That’s not his job,” said Jay Bienstock, the showrunner. “That’s yours.”
“I don’t think he knew he had the ability to do that,” Kepcher added, as Trump continued to wince and bob.
"Yeah," Trump said, "but, I mean, would America buy a nigger winning?” Pruitt then looked at Trump, who looked "serious" and "adamant about not hiring Jackson."
After the meeting and Jackson's so-called firing, Pruitt writes, no one raised Trump's comments again. But they vaguely resurfaced in 2018, when Omarosa, fresh off a stint in Trump's White House, claimed in an NPR interview that she heard him say the n-word in a tape while promoting her new book, "Unhinged."
President Joe Biden's campaign was quick to capitalize on the report. "No one is surprised that Donald Trump, who entered public life by falsely accusing Black men of murder and entered political life spreading lies about the first Black president, reportedly used the N-word to casually denigrate a successful Black man," said Jasmine Harris, the campaign's Black media director, in a press release. "Anyone notice a pattern?"
The Trump campaign has denied Pruitt's account. “This is a completely fabricated ... story that was already peddled in 2016,” Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a statement. “Nobody took it seriously then, and they won’t now, because it’s fake news. Now that Crooked Joe Biden and the Democrats are losing the election, they are bringing up old fake stories from the past because they are desperate.”
Racism is not the only charge Pruitt is leveling against Trump. He also alleges that Trump made lewd and demeaning comments about female camera operators, having Pruitt order one woman off an elevator because she was "too heavy" and comparing another one's appearance to that of his daughter, Ivanka.
“There’s a beautiful woman behind that camera,” Trump said, according to Pruitt. “That’s all I want to look at.”
Beautification of Trump and his brand, meanwhile, was what the show was all about, Pruitt wrote. "In the show, he appeared to demonstrate impeccable business instincts and unparalleled wealth, even though his businesses had barely survived multiple bankruptcies and faced yet another when he was cast,” he said. “By carefully misleading viewers about Trump – his wealth, his stature, his character, and his intent – the competition reality show set about an American fraud that would balloon beyond its creators’ wildest imaginations.”
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leanstooneside · 9 months
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& NEVER THE TWAINS SHALL MEET
1. David Letterman's round waist
2. DJ Pauly D's balanced calf
3. Bill Rancic's fleshy buttocks
4. Marni Senofonte's chocolaty mouth
5. Hugh Grant's alcoholic mouth
6. Steve Carell's herbaceous wrist
7. Cheryl Burke's heavy eyelash
8. Sophie Monk's smooth foot
9. Lana Del Rey's hard ankle
10. Keanu Reeves's fresh nostril
11. Christie Brinkley's bright belly
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brandnulife · 2 years
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Celebrities Who Had Covid-19, Part Two
Abby Mueller
Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne (deceased)
Al Sharpton
Amy Robach
Ana Narvaro
Angela Kinsey
Anthony Fauci
Antonia Banderas
Ashanti
Beanie Feldstein
Ben Carson
Bill and Guiliana Rancic
Brian Cox
Brielle Biermann
Boris Johnson
Camila Cabello
Charlotte Lawrence
Chris Christie
Coco Gauff
D’Andra Simmons
Drew Pinsky
Ellen DeGeneres
George Stephanopoulus
Gloria Estefan
Grimes
Gwyneth Paltrow
Hal Willner (deceased)
Hannah Brown and Adam Woolard
Hilary Duff
Hugh Grant
Indira Varma
J.K. Rowling
Jason Tartick and Kaitlyn Bristowe
Jay Benedict (deceased)
Jimmy Kimmel
Joe Exotic
John Prine (deceased)
Kellyanne Conway
Kenzo Takada (deceased)
Khloe Kardashian
Kristofer Hivju
Larry King (deceased)
Lena Dunham
Lewis Hamilton
Lil Cease
Liv Tyler
Marcus Smart
Maxine Waters
Michael Strahan
Nancy Grace
Peter Giannikopoulos
The Pretty Reckless
Prince Charles and Duchess Camilla
Queen Elizabeth II
Rev. John Jenkins
Rachel Matthews
Robin Roberts
Rudy Guiliani
Sara Bareilles
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Sarah Palin
Sean Payton
Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne
Shawn Johnson
Sunny Hostin
Tiffany Haddish
Tom Brady
Trisha Yearwood
Vivek Murthy
Whoopi Goldberg
Xavier Becerra
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recentlyheardcom · 2 months
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Bill Rancic Says Justin Bieber Is 'So Good' With His 11-Year-Old Son
Invoice Rancic can’t recover from how nice Justin Bieber is along with his and spouse Giuliana Rancic‘s 11-year-old son, Duke. “[He’s the] biggest man ever. The nicest man. So good with Duke. I like that child. He’s not a child anymore, however [I] love him,” the entrepreneur, 53, solely instructed Us Weekly of Bieber, 30, on Tuesday, July 23, whereas selling his new “Greenback Invoice With…
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seositetool · 2 months
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Bill Rancic Says Justin Bieber Is 'So Good' With His and Giuliana's Son
Bill Rancic can’t get over how great Justin Bieber is with his and wife Giuliana Rancic‘s 11-year-old son, Duke. “[He’s the] greatest guy ever. The nicest guy. So good with Duke. I love that kid. He’s not a kid anymore, but [I] love him,” the entrepreneur, 53, exclusively told Us Weekly of Bieber, 30, on Tuesday, July 23, while promoting his new “Dollar Bill With Bill Rancic” podcast. “[I’m] just…
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cuteenglishquotes · 3 months
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My son's going to have a job, and if he wants to get a car when he gets his license, he's going to pay for it on his own like I did. Bill Rancic
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allthedaysordained · 6 years
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Giuliana and Bill Rancic’s holiday home in Gozzer Ranch, Idaho
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sidewalkstv · 2 years
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Episode #1117 - Bill and Giuliana Return
Bill and Giuliana Rancic; music by Tiffany Woys and Shiadanni. #BillRancic #GiulianaRancic #RPMItalian #Tiffany Woys #Shiadanni
Bill and Giuliana Rancic; music by Tiffany Woys and Shiadanni. Airdate: 5/23/2002 (KCRT) SIDEWALKS host Lori Rosales talks to Bill and Giuliana Rancic, the entrepreneur and entertainment journalist, about their love life and being owners/partners in RPM Italian. Plus, we have music by Tiffany Woys (“I Don’t Want You Back”) and Shiadanni (“Penny Pills”). Co-Host: Richard R. Lee. Watch…
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themoinmontrose · 7 years
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reality star bill rancic @BillRancic is 46 today #happybirthday 
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californialifehd · 7 years
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DWTS celebrity Witney Carson is set to grace the cover of the Los Angeles Travel Magazine
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princepotatosack · 2 years
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here is my character sheet for surrender mc!!
notes below:-)
she is a naperville girlie. i know this to be true. fellow chicagoans you know what im talking about
she has 3 older brothers because thats the kind of thing that would enable/explain her personality lol.
i think maybe she has irish ancestry but i havent decided. also i don't think ransic is a real last name but this is chicago and its giving polish to me.
ok i just looked it up and there was a guy who was on the apprentice named bill rancic (originally Rančić) who has croatian ancestry. also he is from chicago! so croatian pat ransic confirmed i guess?
i was thinking about which neighborhood she lives in like is it lincoln park? is it gold coast? cause her wife is a successful lawyer and all that. and then i remembered they are lesbians so obviously it was only ever going to be andersonville
anyway peebee if you ever need a chicago sensitivity reader im right here!!!!!!!!! xoxoxo
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theocseason4 · 3 years
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Giuliana rancic came into my work trying to buy Lemon Myrtle Essential Oil for her son. I think Bill came in too. We don’t carry it and I told her you shouldn’t ingest essential oils
Omg nooooo not essential oils giuliana!!!
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leanstooneside · 3 days
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A friend's frown is better than a fool's smile
• Marc Anthony's autolytic forearm
• Brad Pitt's autolytic knee
• Wilmer Valderrama's autolytic knee
• Sophia Bush's autolytic upper arm
• Jennifer Meyer's autolytic breast
• Leonardo DiCaprio's autolytic nose
• Kelly Osbourne's autolytic breast
• Kate Bosworth's autolytic cheek
• Justin Timberlake's autolytic neck
• Lindsay Lohan's autolytic nostril
• Sherri Shepherd's autolytic bottom
• Farrah Abraham's autolytic shoulder
• Amber Riley's autolytic elbow
• Ashley Hebert's autolytic waist
• Ellen Page's autolytic lower leg
• Roger Federer's autolytic nose
• Leona Lewis's autolytic belly
• Kevin Durant's autolytic eyelash
• Jaime Pressly's autolytic hand
• Mia Farrow's autolytic tooth
• Camilla Belle's autolytic buttocks
• Michael Jackson's autolytic waist
• Ben Roethlisberger's autolytic shoulder
• Odette Yustman's autolytic waist
• Miranda Kerr's autolytic eyebrow
• Kendra Wilkinson's autolytic wrist
• Janelle Monae's autolytic thumb
• Star Jones's autolytic knee
• Ali Fedotowsky's autolytic tooth
• Marcia Cross's autolytic hip
• Channing Tatum's autolytic hand
• Willow Smith's autolytic leg
• Bill Rancic's autolytic ankle
• Alessandra Ambrosio's autolytic ankle
• Kanye West's autolytic bottom
• Levi Johnston's autolytic ear
• Zlatan Ibrahimovic's autolytic nose
• Nick Cannon's autolytic breast
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brandnulife · 4 years
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Celebrities Who Had Covid-19
Aaron Tevit
Adam Sclesinger
Allen West
Alyssa Milano
Andre Dickens
Andrea Bocelli
Andy Cohen
Anna Camp
Antonio Banderas
Arie Luyendyk Jr.
Arielle Charnas
Ashanti
Balthazar Getty
Barron Trump
Begona Gomez
Ben Carson
Bill and Giuliana Rancic
Boris Johnson
Brian Stokes Mitchell
Bryan Cranston
Cam Newton
Carlin Bates (Bringing Up Bates)
Carol Sutton - deceased
Carrie Ann Inaba
Cedric Ceballos
Charley Pride - deceased
Charlotte Lawrence
Chloe Bennet (Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD)
Chris Christie
Chris Masters (The Masterpiece)
Christian Wood
Christopher Cross
Colton Underwood
Cory Booker
Craig Adams (Beyonce’s former personal trainer) - deceased
Cristiano Ronaldo
Cyril Ramaphosa
D.L. Hughley
Daniele Rugani
Danny Boaz (The Young & the Restless)
Dawn Wells (Gilligan’s Island) - deceased
Dave Chappelle
David Burtka and Neil Patrick Harris
Debi Mazar
Donald and Melania Trump
Donovan Mitchell
Dustin Johnson
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson
Ellen DeGeneres
Elizabeth Warren
Emmanuel Macron
Erica Watson - deceased
Erykah Badu
Fabio Wajngarten
Floyd Cardoz
Francis Suarez
Franck Riester
Frank Fox (Real World: San Diego)
Garrett Temple
George Stephanopoulos
Greg Rikaart
Harvey Weinstein
Herman Cain - deceased
Hope Hicks
Hugh Grant
Idris Elba
J Balvin
Jack Nicklaus
Janet Broderick
Jason Collins
Jason Crow
Jenee Fleenor
Jennifer Aydin (Real Housewives of New Jersey)
Jeremih
Jesse and Jacqueline Jackson
Jillian Michaels (The Biggest Loser)
Jim Parson and Todd Spiewak
Jimmie Johnson
Jim, RM and Suga of BTS
Joe Ellis
John Benjamin Hickey
John Mayer
John Taylor of Duran Duran
JoJo Siwa
Juan Williams
Kalie Shorr
Kanye West
Karl von Habsburg
Kaylee Hartung
Keisha Lance Bottoms
Keith McNally
Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds
Kevin Connolly
Keyontae Johnson
Khloe Kardashian
Kimberly Guilfoyle
Kristofer Hivju (Game of Thrones)
Larry Hogan
Larsa Pippen (Real Housewives of Miami)
Laura Bell Bundy
Lee Brice
Lena Dunham
Lesley Stahl
Lou Gossett, Jr.
Marcus Smart
Marianne Faithfull
Masoumeh Edtekar
Meat Loaf - deceased
Meghan King
Mel Gibson
Melissa Joan Hart
Mike Lee
Mikel Arteta
Nadine Dorries
Natalie Horler, lead singer of Cascada
Nga Nguyen
Nick Cordero - deceased
Nicki Minaj
Novak Djokovic
Olga Kurylenko
Oscar De La Hoya
Patrick McEnroe
Pere Aragones
Peter Thomas (Real Housewives of Atlanta)
Pink
Placido Domingo
Prince Albert II
Prince William
Quim Torra
Rachel Matthews
Rand Paul
Ray Benson
Richard Schiff and Shelia Kelley
Robert Pattinson 
Roy Horn - deceased
Rudy Giuliani  
Russell Westbrook
Sadie Robertson (Duck Dynasty)
Sam Asghari
Sean Payton
Sekou Smith - deceased
Sergio Garcia
Seth Curry
Sevyn Streeter
Shanna Moakler (Hollywood Exes)
Shannon Beador (Real Housewives of Orange County)
Shemar Moore
Sheree Whitfield (Real Housewives of Atlanta)
Slim Thug
Sincere Show
Sophie Trudeau
Stephen Amell
Steve Doocy
Sturgill Simpson
Tiffany Haddish
Thomas Doherty
Todd Chrisley
Tom Dempsey
Tommy “Tiny” Lester Jr. - deceased
Tony Shalhoub
Trey Songz
Tyler Hubbard
Usain Bolt
Vachik Mangassarian - deceased
Vanessa Williams (Ugly Betty)
Vivica A. Fox 
Von Miller
Wendy Williams
Whitney and Zach Bates (Bringing Up Bates)
Wiz Khalifa
Zoey Duetch (The Politician)
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