Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Jim Carrey Takes Swipe at EPA Chief Scott Pruitt With Latest Caricature

Jim Carrey Takes Swipe at EPA Chief Scott Pruitt With Latest Caricature
(FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images, @ana_luvs_TWD/Twitter)

Jim Carrey's latest target in his gallery of outrageous portraits is the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, Scott Pruitt.

The agency's administrator was embroiled in controversy after the EPA approved a Canadian energy company's pipeline expansion plan in March. When the pipeline project got the green light, Pruitt had been renting a fancy but favorably-priced condo that was linked to the company's Washington D.C. lobbying firm.


In the actor's provocative new painting, a caricature of another of Trump's appointees has a pipeline penetrating him from the rear with the pipe's contents spewing from his mouth. "I looked on Trivago. The cheapest room in Washington is a youth hostel with bunkbeds at $81 a night," Carrey tweeted on Thursday. "The $50 room Scott Pruitt got was a bribe from an energy lobbyist. Need your pipeline approved? Do it through Pruitt!"



Actor, comedian, and artist Carrey remains provocative with his depiction of the beleaguered Pruitt, who could be next through the revolving door of the Trump White House.

Pruitt's pipeline portrait is part of a collection taking aim at the Trump administration, which included a mockery of Donald Trump that Carrey shared on social media last week.

He tagged the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery and suggested they consider an early submission of a painting of 45 titled, "You Scream. I Scream. Will We Ever Stop Screaming?"



Earlier this week, Carrey pitted conservative pundits Sean Hannity and Alex Jones against each other as pro-wrestlers, suggesting they should join the WWE where their "hyperbole will do less damage to the culture."



Carrey also made this portrait of White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, calling her a liar and a monster.



The EPA and lobbying firm Williams & Jensen deny any correlation between the agency's approval of the pipeline expansion and Pruitt's condo leasing agreement, for which he was paying $50 a night.

Liz Bowman, a spokeswoman for the administrator declared, "Any attempt to draw that link is patently false."

However, the New York Times observed that whether or not any favors were accepted or granted, the action "can create an appearance of a conflict."

A spokesman for Williams & Jensen said that the lobbying firm did not intervene with the E.P.A. or Mr. Pruitt on the Enbridge pipeline expansion either before or after Mr. Pruitt was living in the condo owned in part by Vicki Hart, the wife of J. Steven Hart, the chairman of the firm.

The EPA chief is no stranger to controversy. The Trump appointee has been criticized for using public money for travel expenses, including flying first class and staying in luxury hotels.

Pruitt is also often criticized for his environmental views. He's not convinced carbon dioxide from human activity is responsible for climate change, and he denounces climate regulations established during Obama's administration.

Carrey's portrayal of Pruitt had the Internet sounding off on the painter's latest unveiling.



A couple Twitter users offered better lodging accommodations for the EPA administrator.



Others praised Carrey's stroke of genius on the canvas.


H/T - HuffingtonPost, Twitter, NYtimes

More from People/donald-trump

Jaleel White; Jaleel White as Urkel
Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images; Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images

Jaleel White Hilariously Reveals NSFW Reason Urkel Stopped Wearing Jeans On 'Family Matters'

If you're of a certain age, there is no pop-culture nerd more iconic than Steve Urkel, the geek-next-door on the '90s sitcom Family Matters played by actor Jaleel White.

But while he may have been a nasally dork constantly getting into mishaps that made him say "Did I do that?," it turns out Urkel had a rather un-Urkel-esque secret: He was packin'.

Keep ReadingShow less
Miley Cyrus; Chappell Roan
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; Mike Coppola/Getty Images for MTV

Miley Cyrus Gives Sound Advice To Chappell Roan About How To Navigate Toxic Social Media

Singer Miley Cyrus told Harper's Bazaar that people need to stop giving Chappell Roan a "hard time."

Roan's meteoric rise after her 2023 album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess became a sleeper hit this year has put her in conflict with fans and critics because she's been so open about massive fame coming on so rapidly and changing her life overnight.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jennifer Lawrence
Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

Jennifer Lawrence Reacts To Trolls Saying She's 'Not Educated' Enough To 'Talk About Politics'

Academy Award-winning actor Jennifer Lawrence opened up to CBS Mornings' Gale King about her new Apple TV+ documentary Bread & Roses—and had a new flash for all the trolls claiming she's "not educated" enough to tackle political subjects.

Bread & Roses, which was produced by Lawrence and Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, explores the lives of Afghan women under Taliban rule since the group seized control of Kabul in August 2021. Director Sahra Mani recently shared that Taliban policies have been so oppressive that women are barred from working, singing, playing music, dining out, shopping for food, or even walking in public without a male chaperone.

Keep ReadingShow less
A woman resting her head on a man's shoulder
a woman rests her head on another person's shoulder

People Break Down The Lessons They Learned From A Difficult Relationship

Ending a relationship is never easy.

Some couples are at least lucky in that they could bring their relationship to an amicable end, and even remain friends after breaking up.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of James Lankford; Tulsi Gabbard
CNN; Patrick T. Ballard/Getty Images

Conservative Senator Has Warning For Tulsi Gabbard Over Confirmation Hearings

In an interview with CNN's Dana Bash, Oklahoma Republican Senator James Lankford explained why he anticipates the Senate Intelligence Committee will have questions for Tulsi Gabbard, whom President-elect Donald Trump has nominated to be the next director of national intelligence.

Gabbard has drawn criticism for her connections to foreign adversaries, including a 2017 meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Keep ReadingShow less