Fox Sex Movie

Fox Sex Movie




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Fox Sex Movie
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Published November 11, 2022 6:30am EST

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten,
or redistributed. ©2022 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved.
Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Legal Statement . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by Refinitiv Lipper .

Fox News senior political analyst Brit Hume breaks down the apparent tension between Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump.
The series finale of Paramount+ "The Good Fight" left social media users stunned on Thursday for featuring a plot in which a character claimed to be sexually assaulted by Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis , only to confess he was lying later on in the show.
The finale of the courtroom drama's sixth and final season premiered on Thursday with the episode titled "The End of Everything." In a clip widely shared online, the episode features the main character Diane Lockhart, played by Christine Baranski, meeting with Felix Staples, a flamboyant, gay provocateur who has made appearances in earlier seasons of the long-running show. In a conference room surrounded by lawyers, Staples claims that he was sexually assaulted by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who forced him to have oral sex following a CPAC conference while interning for his office. 
Diane immediately dismisses the accusation as politically motivated "bulls---" despite Staples claiming to have DNA proof. The lawyers spend the episode gathering evidence to expose Staples for lying. He eventually confesses to fabricating the allegations to tarnish the Florida governor's reputation, because it will put former President Trump "ahead in the polling" in 2024's presidential race.

Incumbent Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to supporters at an election night party after winning his race for reelection in Tampa, Fla., Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022, as his wife Casey listens.
(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell))
The episode ignited a firestorm on Twitter , with users calling the show "unhinged" and questioning the legalities of casting the governor as a potential sex offender in the fictitious TV show. Other users called it the first of many smear campaigns by Hollywood to be brought against the Florida governor as he remains a popular potential 2024 presidential contender. 
"Let the smears begin," Newsbusters' Brent Baker wrote.
"How can you tell the next election has begun? This will give you a hint...," Off The Press author Paul Bedard agreed.
Spectator USA contributor Stephen L. Miller slammed the episode as "unhinged."
"Is this kind of thing legal? " Washington Examiner contributor Harry Khachatrian asked alongside the clip. "I realize the whole free speech thing is pretty robust, but can you just insert a real public figure into your fictional movie and make him a sex offender?"
"This is only the second most outrageous political allusion from this series, the first being that episode of The Good Wife where they pretend Donna Brazile is single-handedly responsible for choosing presidential nominees," Free Beacon associate editor Tim Rice recounted.
Others pointed out that the clip circulating online was largely taken out of context and failed to show the character's confession to lying about it for political purposes.
"Stop sharing that DeSantis TV show clip thing," podcaster Noam Blum wrote. "The whole point of the episode is that the guy is lying and DeSantis didn't do anything."
"This isn't what it sounds like," Washington Examiner columnist T. Becket Adams agreed. "If you know the show, you know the "accuser" is a reoccurring character best described as a ratf-cker. He’s lying here, and the lawyers bust him. Show doesn’t actually accuse DeSantis of assault.please do not ask me how i know any of this."
The season finale isn't the first time "The Good Wife" spinoff series landed itself in hot water online. In 2019, the show's official Twitter page posted an image from one of its episodes that shows a list of "target words" including: "Assassinate," "President" and " Trump " in a red column and a second orange column that started with the words: "Mar-a-Lago" and "Eliminate." The show was forced to put out a statement arguing that the post was taken out of context, and "created an impression and provoked a reaction that was not intended."

Actress Christine Baranski plays Diane Lockhart in 'The Good Fight'
(2003. REUTERS/Fred Prouser )
More recently, in the show's fifth season, the episode titled "Previously On" featured a rare admission of faith from Diane - a self-declared atheist- for the sake of electing Joe Biden as president . The scene depicted Lockhart having a "coronary event of some kind" while watching the updates of the 2020 election in real-time. The show also took a dig at Trump when it tackled the topic of censorship under his administration in a separate episode.
Yael Halon is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to yael.halon@fox.com . 
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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2022 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Legal Statement . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by Refinitiv Lipper .


By Rosa Sanchez Published: Nov 15, 2022
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The actress’s unhinged TikTok videos have launched a feminist awakening.
Where to begin with Julia Fox 's TikTok rants? In one word, they are enlightening. In another word, they are chaotic. But if anyone can be both, it's Fox.
The dominatrix-turned-actress-turned- DIY street style queen and anti-patriarchy guru has taken over social media with hilariously unhinged commentary on pretty grim, serious topics: aging, death, child support, body acceptance, and the United States' political divide, to name a few.
These TikTok monologues—most of which she films while in bed or walking the streets of New York City in her signature dark-eye look—have weirdly catapulted a sort of feminist awakening on the platform, with Fox as our unafraid leader, setting the record straight on questions nobody asked.
"Julia Fox for president" fans repeat in the comments.
Below, we run you through her most iconic rants. Choose your poison.
Fox's male-gaze, sex-symbol era is over, and she couldn't be happier.
"Now I don't need men to like me, and that is a luxury that I earned by making men like me and find me desirable or interesting or attractive for so many years," she says in one video, throwing it back to her days as a teenage sex worker.
"And I used to be so jealous of my friends that did not need to use their sexuality to get what they wanted; if they just had rich parents or, you know, were set up properly, had an education," she continues.
Fox, who is mom to son Valentino (whom she welcomed with ex-husband Peter Artemiev), says that at this point in her life, at age 32, she's in "a place where I'm like, 'Fuck it, I don't give a fuck.'"
She explains that she's committed to being a "man repellent" so much so that she regularly bleaches her eyebrows because men "absolutely hate it." She admits , "My son's father gets so triggered by these eyebrows, so that's why I continually do them."
"Also I, like, have a kid already, so it's like I already did what I was supposed to do by society's standards," Fox adds, "like, my vagine is retired. The doors are closed, shut, sealed. After what she went through? No, not happening."
Fox made a stitch with a TikTok user who claims playing with one's children is not parenting.
In it, the actress says she doesn't feel as much connection to her baby when they're "just playing together" as she does when they do chores around the house, and she doesn't believe parents should make their "world revolve around" their kids.
"'Cause I guess the point of parenting is you want to prepare them for the real world, but is it right to make your kid believe that as long as they're little and tiny and cute that we'll kiss the ground they walk on and we'll do anything for them, and the second they turn 18 that's their expiration date and we'll kick them out like ... yesterday's trash?" Fox asks.
She adds that she thinks that type of parenting, where the child is coddled, is "what creates so many narcissists."
Fox also touches on this topic during a conversation on Emily Ratajkowski's new podcast, High Low , with the two brainstorming ideas to make sure their sons don't grow up to be "entitled city brats."
More than once, Fox makes it clear that she is all about defying beauty norms —why else would she bleach her eyebrows and regularly step out wearing literal pieces of trash that she crafts into runway-esque designs?
"Just so you guys know, aging is fully in; like, fully, dirty girl, ugly, not wearing clothes that fit your body type, just fully just wearing anything you want," she says in a clip.
"All those things are in," she continues, adding that if she sees another skincare product that advertises anti-aging, she's "going to sue."
"I'm going to sue because I'm gonna age regardless of if I put the fucking $500 serum on my face. And you all fucking know it, and we know it, so let's stop lying to ourselves," she says. "Getting old is fucking hot, okay? It is sexy. It is probably the sexiest time in life, actually, because being pretty and hot in your 20s is the fucking trenches, okay? And I'm not going back there."
And she's not all talk; earlier this month, Fox showed up to the 2022 CFDA Fashion Awards with her hair spray-painted gray as "an ode to aging."
Fox gives the most candid, NSFW response to online haters who call her a hypocrite for championing natural aging on her social channels, even though she was previously a spokesperson for Xeomin (a toxin that essentially does the same thing as Botox, per New York-based doctor Dmitriy Schwarzburg ).
She says, "It's like, babe, the same way that when I was a dominatrix and someone came in saying, 'Hey, do you have experience piercing penises and balls or doing electrical play on my ball sack?' I was like, 'Yeah, I'm a pro at that.' I'm always gonna get my bag. Even if I've never done it before, I would still say I'm a pro, I know what the fuck I'm doing. So I'm just about my bag, honey, don't hate."
In another TikTok video, Fox remembers the day she turned 27 and refused to post anything on social media or celebrate her birthday, even after her friend Harmony flew in to visit her, because she was sad to be getting older.
"I was such a tyrant because I wanted the day to pass," Fox shares. "And that's sad, you know, 'cause Harmony, the girl I was with, she died. She's not even gonna have the privilege of getting older. We deny ourselves these milestones for what?"
Fox is known by her boldness and surrounds herself with equally outspoken women, but really, she stands by women of all strengths and characters.
"Do you guys wanna know what I find low-key, high-key annoying?" she says in a video. "When men are like, 'I love women. I was raised by a strong woman.' They always say like the strong woman thing; it's, like, their go-to, and it's, like, why am I only worthy of respect if I'm strong? What if I'm a weak woman? Does that make me less worthy of respect?"
So people don't always love it when celebrities speak out on political matters, but does anyone think Fox cares about being liked? Ahead of the 2022 midterms , the Uncut Gems star gave an honest PSA to her followers.
"Don't be a fucking loser, and get out and vote, because boomers are all voting and that's why our fucking world is fucked up, like actually," Fox says in the video. "So, we need to get out and vote. Gen Z where you at? Like, let's do it."
Fox seems to have no bad blood with her baby daddy, but that doesn't mean she doesn't have some thoughts on how single mothers should be treated.
"Do you wanna know what's something that really, truly fucking irks the shit out of me and it makes no sense to me at all?" she starts off in one video. "Why when you're going to court for child support ... they only award you the money [for] the stuff that you would need."
She notes that while moms get government help to buy diapers, formula, cribs, strollers, maybe rent, and whatever else they may physically need to take care of their children, "they don't pay you for your time."
"So if I have to now pick up your shifts 'cause you're not here—right, mister baby daddy?—I should be rewarded for that time that I put in," Fox argues. "And I think it just goes back to, like, men not valuing women's time; they don't think of it as valuable as their own."
Rosa Sanchez is the senior news editor at Harper's Bazaar, working on news as it relates to entertainment, fashion, and culture. Previously, she was a news editor at ABC News and, prior to that, a managing editor of celebrity news at American Media. She has also written features for Rolling Stone, Teen Vogue, Forbes, and The Hollywood Reporter, among other outlets. 
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Posted: Nov 16, 2022 / 10:41 PM PST

Updated: Nov 17, 2022 / 08:49 AM PST

Posted: Nov 16, 2022 / 10:41 PM PST

Updated: Nov 17, 2022 / 08:49 AM PST
CHULA VISTA, Calif. — Chula Vista police led an operation to check on nearly 300 sex offenders in the city, with officers busting some for failing to follow the rules.
The operation focused on sex offenders in the Tier 2 or 3 categories which means they pose a greater risk to the public.
A quick search on the Megan’s Law website shows the nearly 300 sex offenders in the city of Chula Vista. Officers say more than half of them are in the higher risk categories.
“It’s a concern,” neighbor Sylvia Diego said. “It worries me about that. It just worries me.”
Chula Vista police, along with other agencies including the District Attorney’s Office and the U.S. Marshals, conducted an operation to make sure the sex offenders were following the law.
“To make our community safe,” said Sgt. Joel Monreal of the Chula Vista Police Department. “To make sure our sex registrants are where they tell us they live and all the other information they provide to us is correct and accurate.”
The operation found 14 were out of compliance and one arrested on a felony warrant.
Parents in these neighborhoods are concerned.
“We have Megan that walks to school and now we have concern because we don’t know what homes these sex offenders are at,” Diego said.
According to the District Attorney’s office, there are about 4,500 registrants across San Diego County. Diego says after finding this out she won’t let her granddaughter walk to school alone. 
“It’s obviously alarming but I always do, you know, keep aware of my surroundings, so if I see that something’s off, I would know who to call,” neighbor Megan Romero said.
Chula Vista police says more than 150 registrants were in compliance.
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