‘They Should Be F***ing Paying Me’: Russell Crowe Says He Gets Too Many Questions About ‘Gladiator 2’

Actor Russell Crowe said he’s taken so many questions about the upcoming film “Gladiator 2” that producers should pay him.

Crowe took home the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in 2001’s “Gladiator” — but as he informed reporters at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival, the follow-up film does not include him.

“They should be f***ing paying me for the amount of questions I am asked about a film I am not even in,” the actor complained.

“It has nothing to do with me. In that world, I am dead. Six feet under. But I do admit to a certain tinge of jealousy, because it reminds me of when I was younger and what it meant for me, in my life,” he continued.

Crowe went on to say that, while he certainly did not have any specific information to share about the film, he had every reason to believe that director Ridley Scott would deliver another story worth watching.

“I don’t know anything about the cast, I don’t know anything about the plot. I am dead!” He said again, adding, “But I know that if Ridley has decided to do a second part of the story, over 20 years later, he must have had very strong reasons. I can’t think of this movie being anything other than spectacular.”

in addition to discussing his own recent work in films like “The Pope’s Exorcist,” Crowe weighed in on his own future in Hollywood as he approached his 60th birthday.

“You are standing in front of the mirror, and go: ‘Who the f*** is that?’ I am in that period now,” he said. “I will take Ridley Scott as my role model: he is still discovering new things in his work. Or I will just stop and you will never hear from me again. I haven’t decided what it’s going to be. These are two very valid choices.”

Mike Pence: The Days Of Needing Affirmative Action Are ‘Over’

Former Vice President Mike Pence declared on Sunday that the days of America needing affirmative action are “over” following the Supreme Court’s ruling last week that two colleges that were using race as a determining factor in the admissions process acted illegally.

Pence made the remarks during an ABC News interview on “This Week” with host Jonathan Karl.

“But if the end result is that America’s most selective colleges and universities have fewer Black and Hispanic students, is that a problem for America?” Karl asked.

“Well, look, I think I couldn’t be more proud of the progress we’ve made toward a more perfect union in my lifetime, the Civil Rights Acts in the 1960s,” Pence said. “And I think there was a time for affirmative action, Jon, were to open the doors of our colleges and universities to minority students and particularly African Americans who may have been denied access.”

“But I think those days are over,” he continued. “You know, it was Justice Sandra Day O’Connor who more than 20 years ago, said that she thought affirmative action would go away in 25 years, it went away a little sooner than that. And I think that’s a tribute to our minority students. The incredible accomplishments of African Americans and Asian Americans in this country and Hispanic Americans speaks for itself.”

He added, “And I really believe that the decision by the Supreme Court today was an acknowledgement of the incredible progress that minority Americans have made, their extraordinary educational achievements, and I have every confidence that – that African Americans and other minority Americans are going to continue to compete and succeed in universities around the country, but we’re going to do it with a colorblind society that I – I think is the aspiration of every American.”

WATCH:

Former vice president and 2024 GOP presidential hopeful Mike Pence celebrates the Supreme Court's landmark ruling on college admissions, telling @JonKarl that he thought "there was a time for affirmative action."

"I think those days are over." https://t.co/u0Omv1gz0Y pic.twitter.com/DUDLGzfL48

— This Week (@ThisWeekABC) July 2, 2023

TRANSCRIPT:

JONATHAN KARL: Vice President Pence, thank you for joining us.

I want to start with the big Supreme Court decisions, specifically —

MIKE PENCE, FORMER VICE PRESIDENT, 2024 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Thank you, Jon. Good to be on.

KARL: — specifically the decision ending affirmative action as we know it.

I understand you fully support this decision. But if the end result is that America’s most selective colleges and universities have fewer Black and Hispanic students, is that a problem for America?

PENCE: Well, look, I think I couldn’t be more proud of the progress we’ve made toward a more perfect union in my lifetime, the Civil Rights Acts in the 1960s. And I think there was a time for affirmative action, Jon, were to open the doors of our colleges and universities to minority students and particularly African Americans who may have been denied access.

But I think those days are over. You know, it was Justice Sandra Day O’Connor who more than 20 years ago, said that she thought affirmative action would go away in 25 years, it went away a little sooner than that. And I think that’s a tribute to our minority students. The incredible accomplishments of African Americans and Asian Americans in this country and Hispanic Americans speaks for itself.

And I really believe that the decision by the Supreme Court today was an acknowledgement of the incredible progress that minority Americans have made, their extraordinary educational achievements, and I have every confidence that – that African Americans and other minority Americans are going to continue to compete and succeed in universities around the country, but we’re going to do it with a colorblind society that I – I think is the aspiration of every American.

KARL: But, respectfully, you didn’t answer my question. We’ve – we’ve seen what has happened in nine states that have banned affirmative action. We’ve seen in Michigan and California and Florida that after affirmative action was done away with, the result was that you saw fewer Hispanic and black students at their elite universities. So, again, my question to you, if that is the result here, is that a concern? Is that a concern for you?

PENCE: I just – look, I – I haven’t seen your studies. I don’t know the numbers. First job I ever had was as an admissions counselor at the college I graduated from. And all – I’m – I’m just very confident with the progress that we have made now in 2023, a fourth of the way through the 21st century, the achievements of African Americans, leaving aside the – the achievements of the first African American president, and African Americans all across the country. I’m just – I’m just very confident that African Americans, Hispanic Americans and other minorities are going to be able to compete and succeed. But we’re going to be able to do it with – with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision in place, that we’ll be judged not by the content – or judged by — not by the color of our skin, but by the content of our character and by our own academic performance.

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