Lily Rader I Know That Girl

Lily Rader I Know That Girl




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Lily Rader I Know That Girl
Published August 27, 2020 12:36pm EDT
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Actress Milana Vayntrub, best known for her role as Lily on the AT&T commercials , revealed she's been dealing with a slew of upsetting and inappropriate comments online.
In an Instagram Live with her over 740,000 followers, Vayntrub addressed the sexual harassment .
"Maybe it just has to do with being a person on the Internet, or maybe it's specific to being a woman on the Internet. But all of these comments ... it hurts my feelings," she confessed.
The 33-year-old star said the comments are disturbing and she's felt violated by the trolls online. "Let me tell you, I am not consenting to any of this. I do not want any of this," Vayntrub said .
"The photos that have come out of me that are super-cleavage-y are from a pool party I went to in college over a decade ago. So yeah, all of the ‘milkies,’ and all of these … I mean, reporting them all – honestly, it’s like there are so many more of them than I have time to report," she added.
Users on social media have been posting objectifying memes of Vayntrub, leaving explicit comments, and distorting some of her old photos. Vayntrub was cast as Lily from 2013 through 2016 and returned to the role earlier this year.
"I'm hurting and it's bringing up, like, a lot of feelings of sexual assault," she said. "I am just like, you know, walking my dog and getting messages from people who have distorted my pictures to get likes on their accounts."

AT&T commercial star Milana Vayntrub spoke out about online sexual harassment she's been dealing with. 
(Lorenzo Bevilaqua/ABC via Getty Images)
AT&T condemned the comments in a statement to F ox News.
"We will not tolerate the inappropriate comments and harassment of Milana Vayntrub, the talented actor that portrays Lily in our ads," AT&T said. "We have disabled or deleted these comments on our social content that includes Lily and we will continue to fight to support her and our values, which appreciate and respect all women."
A rep for Vayntrub didn't immediately return Fox News' request for comment.
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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.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 .


© Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.
By Matthew Gilbert, Globe Staff | September 25, 2006
Sometimes Hollywood math says it best. ``Running on Empty" + ``The Fugitive" = ``Runaway," the new CW series that premieres tonight at 9 on Channel 56. The drama is about a family on the run, after Dad is wrongly accused of murder. The U S Marshals Service stays close on their trail, while Dad tries to gather evidence to exonerate himself.
The show has a few distinctions, notably the solid leading-man presence of Donnie Wahlberg, who deserves another prime-time opportunity after NBC fumbled ``Boomtown." As Paul Rader, a lawyer framed for the killing of an associate at his firm, he has a flawed, distant nobility. He plays Paul's guilt quietly, as a man who has had to dislodge his family from their comfortable Maryland home. With his plain face and sympathetic eyes, he captures Paul's mixed emotions about having to encourage his three children to lie.
Also a plus: Leslie Hope from season 1 of ``24" as Paul's wife, Lily. Hope knows how to play stalwart but stressed, and her bottled-up Lily sometimes looks about to explode as the family relocates. In one scene, she sinks to a low as she tells a cop she's a displaced person from Hurricane Katrina. But you know that, because the real murderer is threatening to harm her kids, she has no shame in doing anything -- including sacrificing her own dignity -- to protect them.
The problem with the CW show, the only new drama on the WB-UPN combo channel, is the Hollywood math. We've seen this on-the-lam material many times before, and it offers very familiar family tensions -- will 8-year old Tommy blow the family's cover? -- and close-call FBI suspense.
Also problematic is the danger that executive producer Darren Star and his writers will focus too closely on the cliche d melodramas of the show's teen kids, Henry (Dustin Milligan) and Hannah (Sarah Ramos). That would turn ``Runaway" into just another CW broodfest. Henry's a moody pinup boy, and his split from his girl-friend could result in all kinds of loud sighing.
The hope is that Star, from ``Sex and the City," will push the material in more original and unexpected directions as the Raders finally settle in small-town Iowa. He certainly has some potential to work with.
Matthew Gilbert can be reached at gilbert@globe.com .


Donnie Wahlberg as Paul Rader and Leslie Hope as Lily Rader star in "Runaway" on The CW.
(Brooke Palmer/CW)


© Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.
By Matthew Gilbert, Globe Staff | September 25, 2006
Sometimes Hollywood math says it best. ``Running on Empty" + ``The Fugitive" = ``Runaway," the new CW series that premieres tonight at 9 on Channel 56. The drama is about a family on the run, after Dad is wrongly accused of murder. The U S Marshals Service stays close on their trail, while Dad tries to gather evidence to exonerate himself.
The show has a few distinctions, notably the solid leading-man presence of Donnie Wahlberg, who deserves another prime-time opportunity after NBC fumbled ``Boomtown." As Paul Rader, a lawyer framed for the killing of an associate at his firm, he has a flawed, distant nobility. He plays Paul's guilt quietly, as a man who has had to dislodge his family from their comfortable Maryland home. With his plain face and sympathetic eyes, he captures Paul's mixed emotions about having to encourage his three children to lie.
Also a plus: Leslie Hope from season 1 of ``24" as Paul's wife, Lily. Hope knows how to play stalwart but stressed, and her bottled-up Lily sometimes looks about to explode as the family relocates. In one scene, she sinks to a low as she tells a cop she's a displaced person from Hurricane Katrina. But you know that, because the real murderer is threatening to harm her kids, she has no shame in doing anything -- including sacrificing her own dignity -- to protect them.
The problem with the CW show, the only new drama on the WB-UPN combo channel, is the Hollywood math. We've seen this on-the-lam material many times before, and it offers very familiar family tensions -- will 8-year old Tommy blow the family's cover? -- and close-call FBI suspense.
Also problematic is the danger that executive producer Darren Star and his writers will focus too closely on the cliche d melodramas of the show's teen kids, Henry (Dustin Milligan) and Hannah (Sarah Ramos). That would turn ``Runaway" into just another CW broodfest. Henry's a moody pinup boy, and his split from his girl-friend could result in all kinds of loud sighing.
The hope is that Star, from ``Sex and the City," will push the material in more original and unexpected directions as the Raders finally settle in small-town Iowa. He certainly has some potential to work with.
Matthew Gilbert can be reached at gilbert@globe.com .


Donnie Wahlberg as Paul Rader and Leslie Hope as Lily Rader star in "Runaway" on The CW.
(Brooke Palmer/CW)


© Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.
By Matthew Gilbert, Globe Staff | September 25, 2006
Sometimes Hollywood math says it best. ``Running on Empty" + ``The Fugitive" = ``Runaway," the new CW series that premieres tonight at 9 on Channel 56. The drama is about a family on the run, after Dad is wrongly accused of murder. The U S Marshals Service stays close on their trail, while Dad tries to gather evidence to exonerate himself.
The show has a few distinctions, notably the solid leading-man presence of Donnie Wahlberg, who deserves another prime-time opportunity after NBC fumbled ``Boomtown." As Paul Rader, a lawyer framed for the killing of an associate at his firm, he has a flawed, distant nobility. He plays Paul's guilt quietly, as a man who has had to dislodge his family from their comfortable Maryland home. With his plain face and sympathetic eyes, he captures Paul's mixed emotions about having to encourage his three children to lie.
Also a plus: Leslie Hope from season 1 of ``24" as Paul's wife, Lily. Hope knows how to play stalwart but stressed, and her bottled-up Lily sometimes looks about to explode as the family relocates. In one scene, she sinks to a low as she tells a cop she's a displaced person from Hurricane Katrina. But you know that, because the real murderer is threatening to harm her kids, she has no shame in doing anything -- including sacrificing her own dignity -- to protect them.
The problem with the CW show, the only new drama on the WB-UPN combo channel, is the Hollywood math. We've seen this on-the-lam material many times before, and it offers very familiar family tensions -- will 8-year old Tommy blow the family's cover? -- and close-call FBI suspense.
Also problematic is the danger that executive producer Darren Star and his writers will focus too closely on the cliche d melodramas of the show's teen kids, Henry (Dustin Milligan) and Hannah (Sarah Ramos). That would turn ``Runaway" into just another CW broodfest. Henry's a moody pinup boy, and his split from his girl-friend could result in all kinds of loud sighing.
The hope is that Star, from ``Sex and the City," will push the material in more original and unexpected directions as the Raders finally settle in small-town Iowa. He certainly has some potential to work with.
Matthew Gilbert can be reached at gilbert@globe.com .


Donnie Wahlberg as Paul Rader and Leslie Hope as Lily Rader star in "Runaway" on The CW.
(Brooke Palmer/CW)


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