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'Kimmel' Guest Host Diego Luna Rails Against Trump's 'Hate Speech' In Scathing Opener

'Kimmel' Guest Host Diego Luna Rails Against Trump's 'Hate Speech' In Scathing Opener

Yahoo5 days ago

'Jimmy Kimmel Live' guest host Diego Luna on Monday called out President Donald Trump's policies on immigration as he delivered an impassioned defense of undocumented workers.
'I have never been able to fully understand how it is that someone like Donald Trump is able to acquire this level of power,' said Luna, who is from Mexico. 'I always struggle to understand how his hate speech can take root in a country whose nature has always been a welcoming one.'
Now, he said, too many are living in fear ― and are afraid to show up at work or take their kids to school.
'This is very unfair and let me tell you why,' the 'Andor' star said. 'The multiple times that this country has had to rebuild itself, immigrants were always there to pick up the slack.'
He said immigrant workers risked their lives to fight the fires in Los Angeles earlier this year.
'They are the ones who build this country. They feed it. They nurture and teach its children. They care for the elderly,' he said. 'They work in construction, hospitality. They run kitchens. They're technicians, merchants, athletes, drivers, farmers.'
He said undocumented workers pay almost $100 billion a year in taxes, too.
'The only solution is clear now, and it's been clear for decades: Give them a path to legal certainty,' he said. 'This is what your neighbors really deserve to be fully welcome in this country where they already belong.'
He offered viewers some ways they can support the migrant community, drawing a standing ovation from the studio audience.
Luna is filling in this week for Kimmel, who is off through Labor Day. A rotation of guest hosts will take his place over the summer.
Check out the full Monday night monologue below:

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Readers sound off on a lack of lifeguards, Mamdani's promise and Planned Parenthood
Readers sound off on a lack of lifeguards, Mamdani's promise and Planned Parenthood

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time39 minutes ago

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Readers sound off on a lack of lifeguards, Mamdani's promise and Planned Parenthood

Brooklyn: As another summer season is upon us, the NYC Parks Department is once again taking advantage of the people of Coney Island and South Brooklyn by not supplying any lifeguards on the beach for a mile stretch between the Coney Island Pier and W. 37th St., the end of the Boardwalk. For the past few years, they have placed lifeguards on one bay on the amusement-area side of the pier where all non-local residents come off the trains and head to the beach, while Brooklyn residents are told that if they want to go into the water and cool off, they can all cram into the one bay, which isn't realistic. They should at least put some lifeguards toward the end of the Boardwalk at W. 33rd St., which seems to be a crowded area for the locals. There is a bathroom and some parking at that spot. Instead, the Parks Department has employees walking up and down the shore blowing whistles, telling people to get out of the water, which is mostly ignored because people have come down to the beach to cool off and relax. Take the money given to the ignored whistleblowers and hire a few lifeguards. Local politicians have been informed, with no response received. Do we have to wait for some drownings to occur before someone acts on this problem? William Blitzer Bayside: As a recent NYC retiree, I am very frightened of the prospect of having to change my current Medicare benefits to Medicare Advantage. Why can't the city just put new hires on the Advantage plan and leave the rest of us alone? $600 million is a drop in the bucket for NYC. What will they use it for, another needless bike lane? Mary Santora Yonkers: With their proclivity to never learn from past disasters, the radical Democrats have again demonstrated the definition of insanity by nominating Zohran Mamdani. The term 'democratic socialist' is perhaps the most glaring oxymoron in political history, and this purportedly educated mob continuously displays its baneful nescience, obviously having missed the history classes showing that socialism has been a failure — a deadly failure — wherever it has been employed. A death knell has been sounded, and New York City (and state) has one more chance to save itself from perdition. James McCaffrey Manhattan: Ranked-choice voting worked. Mamdani didn't win because of a trick. He won because enough New Yorkers ranked him first (and second and third) that he'll easily prevail when they run the tabulation. That's democracy, not a glitch. Suzy Sandor Astoria: A letter to NYC real estate: Do you think that many New Yorkers are struggling to afford a decent place to live? And that real estate has a role in building a brighter future for the city? Do you think it's worth listening to young people and their hopes? Do you think NYC has always been defined by its cultural and economic diversity? If yes to any of these, then please stop the tired, simplified critiques of Mamdani's Democratic primary victory. However you voted — and however you will vote in November — talk to the guy. Some in the real estate world are freaked out by this result, painting it in apocalyptic terms. But buildings need people who can afford to inhabit, frequent and maintain them. I invite you to imagine that the future Mamdani envisions might not be so bad. It may even be worth building together. Annabel Short Brooklyn: Voicer Art Gunther is correct. Pay is too low and now, no benefits. I married in 1970 and got my first apartment. I also started a job with New York Telephone Company, a union job. My one week's pay covered my rent. My total bills for rent and utilities were under $125 a month. My pay included free health care and a pension plan. 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How to watch the FIFA Club World Cup: Round of 16 schedule, channel, where to stream and more
How to watch the FIFA Club World Cup: Round of 16 schedule, channel, where to stream and more

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time40 minutes ago

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How to watch the FIFA Club World Cup: Round of 16 schedule, channel, where to stream and more

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Dick Van Dyke pulls out of comedy gig due to illness
Dick Van Dyke pulls out of comedy gig due to illness

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time41 minutes ago

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Dick Van Dyke pulls out of comedy gig due to illness

Dick Van Dyke was forced to pull out of a comedy event at the last minute due to illness. The 99-year-old actor was due to host Vandy Camp with his wife Arlene Silver, 53, at the Arlene Dick Van Dyke Theatre at Malibu High School on Saturday (28.06.25) but he had to cancel after taking ill. According to PEOPLE, Arlene made a speech where she introduced herself as 'not the Van Dyke you're expecting'. She went on: "I have to inform you that Dick is not up to coming to celebrate with us today. I'm sorry. "When you're 99 and a half years old, you have good days and bad days ... and unfortunately, today is not a good day for him, and he's sick that he can't be here.' The actor appeared on a livestream but Arlene added she was 'pretty confident' her husband would make the next event 'in person'. Speaking about how much Vandy Camp means to her husband, Arlene said: 'It is a celebration of your childhood, all of our childhoods, the music that's in the fabric of all of us, [and] Dick Van Dyke is a big part of that.' Calling her husband's fans 'the greatest human beings I've ever known," she added, "These Vandy Camp [events] are a wonderful opportunity to have you all in the same room and meet each other." And, Arlene – who married Dick in 2012 – praised her husband saying that "being around him just as a human being has made me a better person'. She added that he had given her "so much confidence to be able to stand up here right now," further explaining, "I would never be able to do this maybe, like, a year ago, but I've had so many experiences pushing myself out of my comfort zone, and right now I'm out of my comfort zone. "But I have to wear my big girl pants and hold the reins without Dick here as the safety net that he's always here with me.'

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