In this feel-good underdog comedy, a remake of the 2018 Spanish film “Campeones,” Harrelson plays a disgraced minor-league-basketball coach who is forced to ...
But when you throw in the added veneer of fame, how do you then segue over to, OK, I want to be the part of me that is my heart, my loving nature? I don’t think that anybody should have the right to demand that you’re forced to do the testing, forced to wear the mask and forced to get vaccinated three years on. I want to see the kid I was, that 12-year-old who’s so full of love for everybody. Even when you’re studying to do some barbaric type of character, like in I don’t have to wear the mask. And right at the end of that time, my second daughter was born, and I wanted to When everybody opens the door for you — here’s the best table, here’s whatever you need — and people bend over backward, if your mind starts to believe, yeah, I deserve this, it’s not good. I was thinking about how you referred to yourself as an anarchist before, which I’ve seen you do in other interviews. The anarchist part of me, I don’t feel that we should have forced testing, forced masking and forced vaccination. I could have easily turned down some of those projects, but at the end of it I had lost my mojo. Is that just part of the illusion? Well, the scene when I first meet
Harrelson first became known as the lovable bartender Woody Boyd on the NBC sitcom Cheers from 1985 to 1993, for which the actor won a Primetime Emmy Award for ...
"That was a blunder," he said in the interview. Back in 1996, Harrelson was arrested in Lee County, Kentucky, when he symbolically planted four hemp seeds in protest of a state law that did not distinguish between industrial hemp and marijuana. "It was not a happy, frolicking, fun response," said Harrelson, adding, "I don't think it helped [my career]. He reprised the role on the spin-off series Frasier, for which he received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series nomination. Harrelson first became known as the lovable bartender Woody Boyd on the NBC sitcom Cheers from 1985 to 1993, for which the actor won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series from a total of five nominations. However, even a great actor turns down roles that he regrets.
After Woody Harrelson referenced an anti-vax conspiracy theory in his Saturday Night Live monologue, Elon Musk praised the show.
[Musk commented](https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1629734523255545856?s=20) on a video of the monologue, before retweeting it to his own page with [the praise](https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1629746474496999427?s=20), “So based. Scarlett Johansson may have been the one to induct Harrelson into the Five Timers Club, but Musk was the one waiting with open arms to welcome him into the [controversial hosts category](https://www.avclub.com/by-booking-elon-musk-saturday-night-live-is-dabbling-i-1846789459?_ga=2.57204456.317181584.1677506248-1488648406.1652714420). [COVID-19 to 5G](https://www.gq.com/story/coronavirus-5g-conspiracy-theory-explained). “Maybe they don’t realize that their propaganda is wrong?” Musk [tweeted](https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1629748345148174336?s=20) about the outlets. And Harrelson is no stranger to those: early in the pandemic, he posted and deleted from his Instagram a conspiracy theory connecting When it comes to anti-vaccination conspiracy theories, Musk’s support probably says more about him than the person spouting it.
Actor Woody Harrelson included a joke about an anti-vaccine conspiracy theory during his opening monologue on 'Saturday Night Live,' stirring up ...
Vaccination is most popular among Canadians over the age of 60. Others felt the joke was a harmful means of spreading false, anti-science rhetoric about the Almost immediately after the episode aired, Harrelson’s joke became the subject of fierce debate online. [government of Canada](https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/diseases/coronavirus-disease-covid-19.html?utm_campaign=hc-sc-phaccovidphmsem-22-23&utm_medium=sem&utm_source=ggl&utm_content=ad-text-en&utm_term=coronavirus%20in%20canada&adv=2223-266650&id_campaign=396783974&id_source=1245747283117539&id_content=&gclid=399861a05727155da9c3025c8460081e&gclsrc=3p.ds&) and the [World Health Organization](https://covid19.who.int/). The punchline: “I threw the script away. Harrelson, who got his start on Cheers, has been known to occasionally share conspiracy theories.
Woody Harrelson seemingly took aim at COVID vaccine mandates, lockdown measures in 2020 and recommended booster shots in his "SNL" opening monologue.
A September 2022 study by the CDC determined a [primary series of the vaccine in addition to a booster](https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccine-effectiveness) was significantly more effective at preventing hospitalization than only a primary series. He was awarded a jacket from Scarlett Johansson later in the show. I’m purple." Harrelson added: "I threw the script away. So, I’m red and blue which makes purple. "So the movie goes like this…
His comments—which appeared to compare Covid-19 vaccine-makers to “drug cartels”—were applauded on Twitter by Elon Musk.
In a May interview with [Vanity Fair](https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2022/05/woody-harrelson-anti-mask-anarchist-cannes-interview-triangle-of-sadness), Harrelson said he found having to wear masks on set “absurd,” as he is “one who doesn't believe in the germ theory.” Covid-19 is spread through airborne transmission of droplets, and [masks prevent](https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/science-briefs/masking-science-sars-cov2.html) the “emission of virus-laden droplets” and “help reduce inhalation of these droplets” by the wearer, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. [saying](https://nypost.com/2020/04/05/woody-harrelson-sharing-coronavirus-conspiracy-theory-tied-to-5g/) he hasn’t “fully vetted it [but] I find it very interesting,” according to the New York Post. This unfounded conspiracy theory [spread](https://www.bu.edu/hic/2021/01/04/5g-doesnt-cause-covid-19-but-the-rumor-it-does-spread-like-a-virus/) during April 2020, when much of the United States was in lockdown. Harrelson didn’t directly mention the coronavirus vaccines in his monologue, but his jokes appeared to be barely-veiled references to pandemic restrictions and vaccine-makers (in reality, many states Harrelson said he “threw the script away” because “who’s going to believe that crazy idea, being forced to do drugs—I do that voluntarily all day long.” During his monologue, Harrelson joked about having a read a crazy script in which “all the biggest drug cartels in the world get together and buy up all the media and all the politicians and force all the people in the world to stay locked in their homes, and people can only come out if they take the cartels’ drugs and keep taking them over and over.”
During his 'Saturday Night Live' monologue last night, Woody Harrelson shared conspiracies about COVID vaccines, leading to debate online.
He appeared as part of [The White Stripes](https://www.nme.com/artists/the-white-stripes) in 2002, performing ‘Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground’ and ‘We’re Going to Be Friends’. The biggest drug cartels in the world get together and buy up all the media and all the politicians and force all the people in the world to stay locked in their homes. “I threw the script away,” he laughed. — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) [Announced at the start of the month](https://www.nme.com/news/music/jack-white-to-perform-on-saturday-night-live-later-this-month-3392461), the appearance was White’s fifth turn on Saturday Night Live. [Saturday Night Live](https://www.nme.com/tag/saturday-night-live) monologue last night (February 25), Woody Harrelson shared conspiracies about [COVID](https://www.nme.com/tag/coronavirus) vaccines, leading to debate online.
Woody Harrelson delivers the least funny SNL monologue in ages, indicating the bad vibes for the rest of the show. A recap and review of season 48, ...
[introducing musical guest Jack White for the first time](https://youtu.be/OHp_h7RLfAU), is another hint that something went awry during the opening monologue. [ nosy prison guards](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlKXYzYqxXY&list=PLS_gQd8UB-hKSlk9HSpAn8Cf3OZQN44Eb&index=3) who continue to be nosy, the guy who intermittently [ passes out during a theme park ride](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SLRIUeNX7pk&list=PLS_gQd8UB-hKSlk9HSpAn8Cf3OZQN44Eb&index=4) and keeps doing so, the mother who is [ creepily enamored with her son](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXq0rM_1VHk&list=PLS_gQd8UB-hKSlk9HSpAn8Cf3OZQN44Eb&index=8) and remains as such, and so forth. [ actually works](https://www.cologuard.com/using-and-returning-your-cologuard-kit), it sure seems weird that the anthropomorphic boxes from [ those commercials](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHo7mK6mcQQ) are so chipper. Every fresh detail here is funnier than the last, especially Thomas the box’s preferred word for defecation: “unleash.” Also, as much as I dragged the monologue’s overdependence on Harrelson’s prodigious weed use, the meta-joke about it at the end of this sketch is a perfect grace note to end on. Harrelson has a right to [ his opinions](https://nypost.com/2020/04/05/woody-harrelson-sharing-coronavirus-conspiracy-theory-tied-to-5g/), but it’s neither a defense of Big Pharma nor liberal priggishness to suggest that this bizarre and unfunny polemic should have been left out of the show. Che and Jost both deliver some of their jokes with genuine surprise and delight, like they’d either never seen them before or the jokes had been tweaked since they last saw them. In a morass of sketches that miss the mark, the most consistently entertaining part of this episode was the succession of goofy wigs Harrelson donned throughout the night. Harrelson has been a reliably funny presence in film and television for over 35 years, and the episode had nowhere to go but up. In any case, things got off to a rocky start with the fifth-time host emerging, arms akimbo, alluding to an imminent [ induction into the Five-Timers Club](https://www.vulture.com/2022/02/john-mulaney-gets-inducted-into-snls-five-timers-club.html) that didn’t happen. It would be a little funny if, in this sketch, Martin Herlihy and John Higgins were simply dating each other and excluding Ben Marshall from post-work hangs. This week’s episode, though, had the least funny and most discomfiting monologue in ages, which proved to be a prescient indicator of things to come. Post-monologue, the odds were still in the show’s favor.
Harrelson, who hosted for the fifth time on Saturday, worked in a joke during his monologue that repeated a pandemic plot favored by vaccination opponents.
[Lee Goldberg](https://twitter.com/LeeGoldberg/status/1629736495115563008). Another [viewer asked](https://twitter.com/CaulfieldTim/status/1629870929395474432): “Does #SNL think just harmless noise? The actor, who described himself as an “anarchist, Marxist, ethical hedonist, nondiscriminatory empath, epistemological deconstructionist and Texan,” immediately began receiving accolades from people who oppose coronavirus vaccines.
Finally, at the end of the show, Scarlett Johansson came onstage to give him a jacket, thereby welcoming Harrelson to join the ranks of “SNL” five-timers. Other ...
Harrelson and Johansson – who is married to “SNL” cast member Colin Jost – are currently filming a movie together, titled “Project Artemis” costarring Channing Tatum. Finally, at the end of the show, Scarlett Johansson came onstage to give him a jacket, thereby welcoming Harrelson to join the ranks of “SNL” five-timers. [Woody Harrelson](https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/01/opinions/eat-the-rich-the-menu-triangle-of-sadness-stewart/index.html) this weekend, when he returned to host “ [Saturday Night Live](https://www.cnn.com/videos/media/2023/02/26/snl-cold-open-donald-trump-east-palestine-visit-emily-kohrs-mgw-orig.cnn).”
It isn't the first time the actor has shared his opinions on pandemic measures.
Actor Woody Harrelson appeared on 'Saturday Night Live' and dedicated his opening monologue to spreading misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine–see the ...
Woody Harrelson divided 'Saturday Night Live' viewers over a bizarre monologue that was seemingly spreading anti-vax conspiracies.
“It’s such an incredibly selfish & privileged position, the anti-vax, anti-lockdown, covid conspiracy one. [shared](https://twitter.com/HollHox/status/1629787722406666240?s=20). [tweeted](https://twitter.com/radiohouston/status/1629876227401039880?s=20), “Woody Harrelson ~actually~ admitted to being a drugged out redneck. [replied with a target emoji](https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1629748454925692932?s=20). [tweeting](https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1629746474496999427?s=20), “So based. Being forced to do drugs?
The actor, currently starring in the Oscar-nominated "Triangle of Sadness," and the new sports comedy "Champions," is as well-known for his affinity for ...
"I wanted to be emotionally available," he explained, "to my family, to my friends. And the feeling of that – like they say, that feeling that you get from that applause – that's what makes you say, this is it." I'm the year of the ox, you know, just slowly I trudge along. "Yeah. He said, "People are just anxious to put you in a little box in this industry, you know? He's been at "it" ever since. It just kind of freaked me," Harrelson said. But it's the laugh he got one day in his high school library that hooked him on show business: "The guys on the football team who had heard me do it before, they're like, 'Woody, do your Elvis.' And I'm like, 'Kidding me? "It's just a little dream of what a great dispensary could be," he said. "I've always been much more partial to the more indie spirit, you know, the movies that have this kind of deep heart," he said. "To just throw things out and see how it goes? Harrelson plays a prickly but charming basketball coach with NBA dreams, who finds himself coaching a team of players with intellectual disabilities called "The Friends."
The actor and marijuana entrepreneur spoke about the ups and downs of his career in Hollywood, including passing on "Jerry Maguire."
The actor and marijuana entrepreneur spoke about the ups and downs of his career in Hollywood, including passing on "Jerry Maguire."
Woody Harrelson, who has a history of spreading COVID-19 conspiracy theories, has drawn criticism for appearing to denounce pandemic safety measures and ...
In a May [interview with Vanity Fair](https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2022/05/woody-harrelson-anti-mask-anarchist-cannes-interview-triangle-of-sadness), Harrelson inaccurately stated that face masks don’t limit COVID-19 infections, claimed he hasn’t contracted the virus because his “immune system’s strong,” said he “doesn’t believe in the germ theory” and deemed protective equipment on set — such as masks and face shields — “rather absurd.” “I threw the script away,” he continued. County as those who received an updated booster during the latest coronavirus spike. Tips from experts to have a conversation that could possibly change their mind. “The movie goes like this,” Harrelson said. “I mean, who was gonna believe that crazy idea?
The Hollywood actor used a drug cartel narrative to suggest the world's population was forced into taking COVID-19 vaccines, which drew criticism from some ...
They're all about profit," he said. "So, the movie goes like this: the biggest drug cartels in the world get together and buy up all the media and all the politicians and force all the people in the world to stay locked in their homes," he said. The actor, who laced his speech with jokes about marijuana and drug importation, said the last time he appeared on SNL was in 2019 when he was given a film script with a "crazy idea".
Woody Harrelson urges Hollywood to stop forcing COVID mandates on film sets.
“I threw the script away,” Harrelson added. “So the movie goes like this,” Harrelson explained at the monologue’s climax. “The anarchist part of me, I don’t feel that we should have forced testing, forced masking and forced vaccination. “I don’t think that anybody should have the right to demand that you’re forced to do the testing, forced to wear the mask and forced to get vaccinated three years on. Harrelson expressed uncertainty about the future of indie movies given “all the COVID protocols” in place, calling such protocols “absurd.” I don’t have to wear the mask.
Woody Harrelson hosted Saturday Night Live for the fifth time last weekend and the longtime cannabis consumer and advocate used the stage to crack stoner ...
Being forced to do drugs? I mean, who was going to believe that crazy idea? “I threw the script away. “The reason I like herb more than alcohol is because it makes me feel good. Before getting into the details of said script, Harrelson offered up a few reasons why he prefers cannabis over alcohol. Article content
Woody Harrelson drew praise and scorn for his opening monologue appearing to joke about coronavirus vaccines during the latest episode of NBC's "Saturday ...
The Hollywood Reporter featured the headline, "Woody Harrelson Takes on COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates and Conspiracies in ‘SNL’ Monologue." The Daily Beast’s Matt Wilstein wrote, "It was Woody Harrelson’s fifth time hosting Saturday Night Live this week, a distinction that often comes with a star-studded induction into the coveted Five-Timers Club. Will Any Lessons Be Learned?" "I threw the script away. And people can only come out if they take the cartel’s drugs and keep taking them over and over," Harrelson said. Several other outlets including Variety, Forbes and the Washington Post recapped the monologue as a "Covid conspiracy" with Washington Post editor Olivia McCormack, in particular, referring to it as a "pervasive" conspiracy and a "pandemic plot favored by vaccination opponents."
Musk weighed in on Twitter after Harrelson divided viewers with a joke that was widely received as an anti-vaccine conspiracy theory.
In January 2023, Musk tweeted that taking the second COVID booster vaccine "crushed" him. Various claims about the COVID vaccine's safety have repeatedly been dispelled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( Though these are not the same as more costly mechanical ventilators, which have helped seriously ill COVID patients, some of the hospitals told Antony Fauci by tweeting in December 2022: "My pronouns are Prosecute/Fauci." Harrelson "threw the script away," he said, adding: "I mean, who was gonna believe that crazy idea? The science is unequivocal."
Woody Harrelson lived it up at "SNL" bash at L'Avenue at Saks along with A-list guests following a bizarre, meandering anti-vaxx monologue.
Meanwhile, musical guest White was seen “canoodling” his wife Olivia Jean Markel and “looking very much in love,” says a spy. A source tells us Harrelson, who was there with his wife Laura Louie and one of his daughters, was spotted chatting up “Weekend Update” host Colin Jost and wife, Scarlett Johansson. While Twitter was whipping itself into a frenzy over his “Saturday Night Live” monologue, Woody Harrelson was having a perfectly nice night out with pals including Scarlett Johansson.
'I don't feel that we should have forced testing, forced masking and forced vaccination,' Harrelson said.
The anarchist part of me, I don’t feel that we should have forced testing, forced masking and forced vaccination. Harrelson has criticised Covid protocols in the past. “Based” is slang for being unafraid to be yourself and say what you think. Why should they have to be vaccinated? Being forced to do drugs?” “I don’t have to wear the mask.
'I don't feel that we should have forced testing, forced masking and forced vaccination,' Harrelson said.
The anarchist part of me, I don’t feel that we should have forced testing, forced masking and forced vaccination. Harrelson has criticised Covid protocols in the past. “Based” is slang for being unafraid to be yourself and say what you think. Why should they have to be vaccinated? Being forced to do drugs?” “I don’t have to wear the mask.