Memo to anyone who voted Trump or Brexit - paedophile-loving Ewan McGregor hates you

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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I was supposed to interview the actor Ewan McGregor today.

We’ve met a few times. Once at Soho House in Los Angeles with our families, another time as we disembarked a plane, also in LA, and walked together for 15 minutes to passport control.

On both occasions he was friendly and charming. We talked about life, kids, movies. I liked him a lot.

So I was looking forward to seeing him again.

Unfortunately, it turned out he wasn’t quite so keen on seeing me again...

Memo to anyone who voted for Trump or Brexit - paedophile-loving hypocrite Ewan McGregor holds you in utter contempt. So why on earth would you want to see any of his movies ever again?


By Piers Morgan for MailOnline
24 January 2017

I was supposed to interview the actor Ewan McGregor today.

We’ve met a few times. Once at Soho House in Los Angeles with our families, another time as we disembarked a plane, also in LA, and walked together for 15 minutes to passport control.

On both occasions he was friendly and charming. We talked about life, kids, movies. I liked him a lot.

So I was looking forward to seeing him again.

Unfortunately, it turned out he wasn’t quite so keen on seeing me again.

McGregor arrived with a large Hollywood-style entourage at the ITV studios in London, where I currently co-host Good Morning Britain.


McGregor, seen here today, arrived at my television studios with his large entourage, before arguing in the green room over me


I checked Twitter in the next commercial break, realizing there was a problem, and discovered the ‘issue’

They were all escorted to the green room, where an argument then started with our editorial team because McGregor apparently hadn’t realized I was going to be involved with the interview.

He refused point blank to do it unless I was removed and it was performed by my co-host Susanna Reid.

This demand was denied, as were further demands for the interview to be severely shortened and to be restricted purely to talk about his new movie, T2 Trainspotting.

So, enraged that he couldn’t do the interview on the terms he wanted, McGregor left.

In the studio itself, we were warned there may be a slight ‘issue’ with McGregor appearing on the sofa, five minutes before he was due on.

I checked Twitter in the next commercial break and discovered the ‘issue’:

‘Was going on Good Morning Britain,’ McGregor had tweeted, ‘didn’t realise @piersmorgan was host. Won’t go on with him after his comments about #WomensMarch.’

Wow.

Let that tweet sink in for a few seconds.

An actor who had contractually agreed to appear on a TV show to promote his new film pulls out at the last minute because he doesn’t like the political opinion of one of the presenters.

First, there’s a shockingly unprofessional aspect to this. The hard-working GMB team had spent several days producing the segment. These things just don’t pop up on screen.

The interview had also been extensively trailed since yesterday so our viewers were also let down. They include many of the same people who pay good money to see McGregor’s movies.


He said he'd do it only if my cohost Susanna Reid did it alone, without me - despite the fact it's been teased for days and a lot of people had put a lot of work into producing the segment

Then there’s the political aspect.

Ewan McGregor is a very angry man when it comes to his politics.

A flick through his Twitter feed today revealed a man absolutely enraged by both Donald Trump’s ascent to the presidency, and by Britain’s decision to leave the European Union.

His fury at the latter may strike some as slightly disingenuous given that McGregor himself quit the EU years ago to go and live the life of a pampered millionaire movie star in Hollywood. But I’ll leave others to decide whether that is hypocritical or not.

One thing’s for sure: Ewan McGregor wants you all to know, very very loudly, that he HATES TRUMP AND BREXIT.

That’s fine. Nearly half of those who voted in the US election and EU referendum didn’t agree either. But both results came after free, fair elections. It’s called democracy.

Of course, that same democracy means Ewan McGregor’s perfectly entitled to have an opinion.

Unfortunately, what democracy doesn’t entitle him to do is ban or punish others if their political opinions happen to differ from his.

That’s the behavior reserved for dictators like Kim Jong Un in North Korea. (Against whom there has been no global march, ironically, despite his disgusting oppression of women.)

My argument against the Women’s March, as I wrote yesterday, was not that women shouldn’t be allowed to march. That is everybody’s right in a democratic society.

It was that it seemed to serve no real purpose other than creating an outlet for women to vent their wrath at the fact Trump beat Hillary Clinton, thus preventing her becoming the first female president.

The speakers reflected this fury. Foul-mouthed Madonna, who had previously offered ‘free blowjobs’ to anyone who voted for her friend Hillary, talked of thinking about blowing up the White House; Ashley Judd read cruel incest jokes against his daughter Ivanka Trump; and many of the signs carried by protestors were as crude and offensive as they deem the new President to be.

This wasn’t a ‘celebration of love’, as the organizers claimed, nor even a cry for gender equality. It was a political rally that wanted to show the world women hate Donald Trump.

Well, I don’t hate him. He’s a good friend of mine. I wouldn’t have voted for him even if I could because I don’t agree with many of his political views from guns to climate change. Nor do I defend his more offensive comments about women or Muslims.


I don't hate Trump - he’s a good friend of mine, though I wouldn’t have voted for him. I don't defend his more offensive comments about women or Muslims. But I do think he might turn out to be an effective president. How weird it must be to only speak to people who agree with you?

But I do think he might turn out to be a surprisingly effective president, and as NFL superstar Tom Brady, another friend of Trump’s who has also been criticized for not disowning him, said yesterday: ‘It’s just a friendship. Why the big deal? He’s been very good to me for a long time. If you know someone (as a friend) it doesn’t mean you agree with everything they say or do.’

Exactly.

I have many friends and family members with whom I disagree about politics.

How weird it must be to only speak to people who agree with you?

As soon as McGregor posted his tweet this morning, social media erupted. The luvvie lemmings, naturally, all raced to offer him their support. But many other people didn’t, and questioned why if he felt this strongly he didn’t argue the issue with me on air rather than running away?

Sadly, that’s not the way many entertainers behave any more.

They control everything they do through small armies of sycophantic managers, lawyers and publicists, and prefer to make political statements that remain unchallenged.

This was typified by Meryl Streep’s extraordinarily pompous and elitist anti-Trump speech at the recent Golden Globes.

Today’s announcement of the Oscars nominations merely served to remind us of last year’s Academy Awards, when virtually every winner turned their acceptance speech into some kind of political tirade.

I dread to think what will happen this year now that Donald Trump is President. But I’d stake a large bet Hollywood stars will compete to see who can savage Trump in the worst possible manner.


My argument against the Women’s March was that it seemed to serve no real purpose other than creating an outlet for women like foul-mouthed Madonna to vent their wrath. Celebrities prefer to make political statements that remain unchallenged - typified by Meryl Streep’s speech at the Golden Globes. I hate to think how Oscar speeches will go

They think that by doing this they make themselves hugely popular, just as British stars think they do by attacking Brexit and those who campaigned and voted for it.

Yet in reality, all they do is anger and upset half their audience who don’t agree with them.

I hesitate to give these celebrities any advice because most of them are too pampered, cossetted and arrogant to want to hear it.

But it’s worth remembering the words of Elvis Presley, who was a bigger superstar than all of them put together.

‘I want to remain apolitical,’ he said, ‘because I don’t think it’s right for me to use my celebrity and fame to persuade other people to think like me. I think everybody should make their own decisions about how they vote.’

There’s a reason he was called The King.

His subjects loved him for his music and performing, not for his ability to force fans to share his politics too.

Ewan McGregor had his fun with me today and gained plenty of publicity for his movie in the process, which may well have been his main motivation all along.

He’ll be feted for the furore in Hollywood, where to criticize something like the Women’s March is deemed a crime punishable by public stoning. (Talking of which, when’s the march against Saudi Arabia’s treatment of women, which is 1000 times worse than Donald Trump’s?)

But by refusing to be interviewed by me simply because I have a different opinion about a political march, McGregor revealed himself to be a narrow-minded, stupendously self-aggrandising, anti-democratic little twerp.

Perhaps everyone who voted Trump or Brexit should now boycott his movies?

After all, judging by the way he boycotted me this morning, that’s exactly what vainglorious Ewan would do to them if he were in their shoes.

Finally, Ewan McGregor will be the toast of every woman who marched on Saturday, for standing up for women’s rights.


Buddies: Had we done the interview, I might have asked the father of four girls how his heroic support for women justified him working for Roman Polanski, a self-confessed and convicted child abuser, on the film The Ghostwriter

Had we done the interview, I might have asked him how his heroic support for women justified him working for director Roman Polanski, a self-confessed and convicted child abuser, on the film The Ghostwriter.

Polanksi pleaded guilty to the statutory rape of a 13-year-old girl, then fled America to escape a lengthy prison sentence.

‘He’s a legendary filmmaker. One of the best,’ gushed McGregor in a 2010 interview about the paedophile, for whom Meryl Streep once gave a standing ovation at the Oscars.

A new warrant was issued for Polanski’s arrest during the movie’s post-production stage.

McGregor, who has four young daughters, was asked about it and said: ‘I felt sad for Roman because he’s an old man who I’m incredibly fond of. I like him as a man.’

Read more: PIERS MORGAN: On pedophile-loving hypocrite Ewan McGregor | Daily Mail Online
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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He was crap as Obi Wan Kenobi in Star Wars and only marginally better as Rent Boy in Trainspotting.
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Well whomever this guy is, I doubt many will now take him seriously after this unwarranted explosion.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
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48,412
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The war continues...

Piers Morgan reignites his feud with Ewan McGregor as he says the Trainspotting actor 'let himself down' by not appearing on Good Morning Britain


Trainspotting star pulled out of ITV show at last minute because of Piers Morgan

He said: 'Won't go on with him after his comments about #WomensMarch'

Piers Morgan said today: 'He (Ewan) let down viewers and he let down himself'

MailOnline column said star happy to work with child abuser Roman Polanski

Mr Morgan critical of Madonna's sweary rant to packed Women's March crowds

He said: 'This wasn't feminism. This was nasty women being nasty, whipped into a man-hating frenzy by some very nasty women on a stage'

By Martin Robinson, Uk Chief Reporter For Mailonline
25 January 2017

Piers Morgan's Women's March row with Ewan McGregor deepened today after he accused the star of 'letting himself down' for refusing to appear on TV with him.

The Trainspotting star was branded a 'diva' for pulling out of a Good Morning Britain interview at the last minute yesterday.

McGregor was due to promote T2 Trainspotting - the sequel to Trainspotting - but told Twitter followers: 'Didn't realise @piersmorgan was host.

Won't go on with him after his comments about #WomensMarch'.

Mr Morgan accused the actor, 45, of being a 'coward' and used his MailOnline column to point out that McGregor was happy to work with convicted child abuser Roman Polanski but not willing to debate with him on TV.

Today the GMB host opened the show by saying: 'He (Ewan McGregor) let down the viewers and he let down himself.'


Spat: Piers Morgan's Women's March row with Ewan McGregor (pictured this morning at BBC Broadcasting House) deepened after he accused the star of 'letting himself down' for refusing to appear on TV with him



Today the GMB host (pictured with Susanna Reid) opened the show by saying: 'He (Ewan McGregor) let down the viewers and he let down himself. I'd have respected him more if he came here, sat down and went "you are wrong"


Row: McGregor was due to promote T2 - the sequel to Trainspotting - on the ITV show but pulled out at the last minute yesterday





Fighting back: Ewan's decision to pull out led to a Twitter backlash, including by Mr Morgan himself

He said: 'He thought the Women's March was a fantastic thing. I thought it was flawed.

'I'd have respected him more if he came here, sat down and went "you are wrong".

'We could have had an adult conversation about it - we weren't going to ask him about it. We were going to talk about his movie that he was here to promote.

Piers' fury over McGregor's GMB snub



In the minutes after Ewan McGregor pulled out of an interview with Good Morning Britain hosts Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid discussed his decision yesterday.

Piers Morgan (PM): Ewan, who is an actor and will be in a movie, won't be talking about his movie. It says a lot about my thinking that an actor should stick to talking about movies.

Susanna Reid (SR): A lot of people didn't agree with you about the march, including the woman sitting next to you

PM: Well then come on and debate it. Don't just don't show up.

PM: I like Ewan. He's a good actor, but he's not a world leader.

SR: You tell people what to think.

PM: I don't!

SR: You judge people on what to think.

PM: No. There are different views about these things. I didn't vote for Brexit but don't disagree with people who did or Trump

(Later discussing Eurovision contestants)

PM: You know I've never heard of you, never met you, but already think you're better than Ewan McGregor! (mock crying) I'm about to cry, Ewan McGregor doesn't want to come on the sofa with me. I think it's because he knows I don't like Star Wars.

SR: Your wife still likes him.

PM: She won't after this! A lot of people are saying get over yourself, which is my view.

PM: We're presenting an award tomorrow. I hope it's for best actor, and I hope Ewan wins. If he does, I'm going to shove the award where the sun don't shine.


'So I hope that people who watch that yesterday shared my disappointment that he didn't actually just come out and have that conversation.

'That's all I want to say about it - lets not bang on about it. But I was very disappointed he did what he did. He let down the viewers and he let down himself.'

Mr Morgan appears to have upset the actor because he was angry about Madonna's comments about 'blowing up the White House' after Donald Trump won the US election and said protesters were 'whipped into a man-hating frenzy by some very nasty women'.

McGregor was due to promote T2 - the sequel to Trainspotting - on the ITV show but pulled out at the last minute.

He tweeted this morning: 'Was going on Good Morning Britain, didn't realise @piersmorgan was host. Won't go on with him after his comments about #WomensMarch'.

In a new column for MailOnline yesterday, Mr Morgan said that the actor was about to appear on air when he pulled out of the interview because he refued to be on screen with him.

He said: 'McGregor arrived with a large Hollywood-style entourage at the ITV studios in London, where I currently co-host Good Morning Britain.

'They were all escorted to the green room, where an argument then started with our editorial team because McGregor apparently hadn't realized I was going to be involved with the interview.

'He refused point blank to do it unless I was removed and it was performed by my co-host Susanna Reid.

'This demand was denied, as were further demands for the interview to be severely shortened and to be restricted purely to talk about his new movie, Trainspotting 2.

'So, enraged that he couldn't do the interview on the terms he wanted, McGregor left'.

After leaving ITV studios he tweeted: 'Was going on Good Morning Britain, didn't realise @piersmorgan was host. Won't go on with him after his comments about #WomensMarch'.


Falling out: Trainspotting star Ewan McGregor (both pictured yesterday ) pulled out of a TV interview with Piers Morgan because he was critical of the Women's March in Washington


Backlash: Mr Morgan pretended to cry on screen and accused the star, 45, of being a 'coward' who should 'stick to talking about movies'.

The GMB host then responded: 'Sorry to hear that @mcgregor_ewan - you should be big enough to allow people different political opinions. You're just an actor after all'.

'A real man would have come on and debated it with me, not run away like a coward'.

He added: 'He's an actor, not the Dalai bloody Lama'.

Susanna Reid, who says she disagrees with her co-host on the issue said in a tweet to McGregor: 'Such a shame. Challenge views where there's difference. Would have liked to see that debate on air - it's an important one'.

Morgan had previously voiced his displeasure at the protests which took place around the world, saying: 'I'm planning a men's march to protest at the creeping global emasculation of my gender by rabid feminists. Who's with me?'

Comments under Mr McGregor's tweet were largely opposed to his decision - with some suggesting it was a publicity stunt ahead of T2's release on Friday.

Lee Roberts told him: '@mcgregor_ewan let's get this right. You can kick the s**t out of Darth Vader, but run scared of @piersmorgan. You are supposed to be a Jedi'.

Michael Kelpie wrote: 'Poor decision first up, it is your job to promote your film. Second, you should have told @piersmorgan to his face'.

Emma Harding said: 'Rich Celebrities like you get paid to entertain us. Nobody cares about your political views!!'.

Mags Walker ‏tweeted: 'How silly! All he said was march when you have something to march for? Too many 'celebs' getting political'.








Reaction: The majority of people who saw McGregor's online snub were critical of his decision not to face Morgan on TV

Piers Morgan wrote about the Women's March for MailOnline and was particularly critical of Madonna.

The star, 58, told crowds in Washington: 'Good did not win this election, but good will win in the end. And to our detractors that insist this March will never add up to anything, f**k you.

'Yes, I'm angry. Yes, I'm outraged. Yes, I have thought an awful lot of blowing up the White House'.

In response Mr Morgan, MailOnline's U.S. Editor-at-Large, responded by saying: 'I love women and believe passionately in gender equality.

'I support all women's rights and have proven this point many times as an employer and promoter of women in the workplace.

'But I can't abide the feminazis, the radical, extreme feminists like Madonna.

'Real feminism is not about murdering men you don't like or stripping off to make money and pretending it's about liberating women.

'It's about striving to be so good at what you do that your gender is irrelevant, then making sure you are rewarded in the same way as a man. That, surely, is true equality?'.

He added: 'This was nasty women being nasty, whipped into a man-hating frenzy by some very nasty women on a stage.

'Love was trumped by hate and bomb threats. Ladies, I love you. But if you let the nasty women win, you lose'.

Protests against Donald Trump drew millions of women across the world to more than 600 rallies, the new President dismissed them with the scoffing tweet: 'We just had an election! Why didn't these people vote?'

But hours later, amid evidence that the Washington DC demonstration alone drew more people than his inauguration ceremony – not to mention an army of stars including Emma Watson, Scarlett Johansson, Drew Barrymore and Madonna – Mr Trump backtracked on his remarks.

Turning again to Twitter, Mr Trump wrote: 'Peaceful protests are a hallmark of our democracy. Even if I don't always agree, I recognise the rights of people to express their views.'

Marchers championed a variety of causes, including gender equality, black rights, abortion rights and general disgust over Mr Trump's history of misogynistic remarks. Many on the marches sported home-made, pink and pointy eared 'p ussy hats' to mock the US President's vilest language about women.

The New York protest outside Mr Trump's skyscraper home was attended by Dame Helen Mirren and Whoopi Goldberg while the LA demo drew Jamie Lee Curtis, Barbra Streisand, Charlize Theron, Kristen Stewart, Miley Cyrus and Jane Fonda.

The biggest event was in Washington DC, where officials estimated it drew more than 500,000 protesters – possibly twice the figure for the Trump inauguration the previous day. There were protests in British cities including Cardiff, Edinburgh and London.


T2 Trainspotting is the sequel to the 1996 cult British dark comedy Trainspotting


Millions of women around the world proudly marching to protest Trump. They wore pink p ussy hats, and the mood was one of celebration; a joyous gathering of the female gender


Message: Madonna announced she had thought ' an awful lot' about blowing up the White House


Ann Widdecombe calls women's marches 'pathetic' and brands men 'wimps'



Former Conservative politician Ann Widdecombe clashed with Good Morning Britain host Susanna Reid after branding the women's marches 'pathetic'.

The ex-MP, 69, who viewers recently saw chasing sheep around a field in the reality show Sugar Free Farm, said men had become 'wimps' because they were putting up with 'all this rubbish'.

She told the ITV show: 'I can remember when women were not equal. I can remember those days.

'Nowadays it's gone completely the other way. All women shortlists. Women have all the advantage in custody cases.'

Asked what she thought about the women's marches that were held around the world following President Donald Trump's inauguration, she laughed and stated 'pathetic'.

'You guys are such pathetic wimps. You go along with all this rubbish,' she said to co-host Piers Morgan.

She added of the protesters: 'They weren't arguing anything. They were shouting.'

Widdecombe said: 'We have got absolute equality. We've got advantages the men haven't got. I actually think it's gone very unfairly the other way.'

When co-host Reid said, despite legislation, women were not being paid the same as men, Widdecombe stated: 'I'm sorry, that is complete nonsense.'

When Reid said it was 'hard to get transparency', Widdecombe told her: 'May I finish Susanna? I'd like to finish this sentence.'

She said of Mr Trump's previous comments about women, for which he apologised: 'We're going back to an interview in 2005 and it's now 2017. Grow up guys.'


Read more: Piers Morgan reignites his feud with Ewan McGregor | Daily Mail Online
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