Johnny Depp called Donald Trump a "brat."
Washington:
It was a bad weekend for Donald Trump in celebrity punditry.
Rapper T.I., aka Clifford Joseph Harris, late Sunday became the latest entertainer to unload some VIP venom on Mr Trump.
The Grammy winner posted a video Sunday night on Twitter with a profanity-laced message for the GOP front-runner. "(Expletive) you and (expletive) what you stand for," he said. "Nobody who supports me will support you."
Actor Johnny Depp - who played the mogul in an hour-long mockumentary - called Mr Trump a "brat" during a talk at Arizona State University. And R&B singer John Legend got into a Twitter fight with Donald Trump, Jr., calling the GOP candidate a "racist."
Even one of Mr Trump's bigger celebrity endorsers this weekend waffled a bit on his support for the GOP candidate. Former boy bander Aaron Carter, who previously tweeted his membership on Team Trump, gave a more nuanced view in an interview with GQ magazine. Like, he's not OK with Mr Trump's stance against gay marriage, he said, or his plan to build a wall on the Mexican border. (Also Read: Will Smith Says Donald Trump Might 'Force Him' to Join Politics)
"If Trump can't change some of his ways of thinking, then I'm just going to sit this one out," he told GQ.
Still, he offered a few kind words that might serve as balm for poor Mr Trump: "He's a leader, not a follower, and he's proven that by humbling the other campaigns."
© 2016, The Washington Post
Rapper T.I., aka Clifford Joseph Harris, late Sunday became the latest entertainer to unload some VIP venom on Mr Trump.
The Grammy winner posted a video Sunday night on Twitter with a profanity-laced message for the GOP front-runner. "(Expletive) you and (expletive) what you stand for," he said. "Nobody who supports me will support you."
Actor Johnny Depp - who played the mogul in an hour-long mockumentary - called Mr Trump a "brat" during a talk at Arizona State University. And R&B singer John Legend got into a Twitter fight with Donald Trump, Jr., calling the GOP candidate a "racist."
Even one of Mr Trump's bigger celebrity endorsers this weekend waffled a bit on his support for the GOP candidate. Former boy bander Aaron Carter, who previously tweeted his membership on Team Trump, gave a more nuanced view in an interview with GQ magazine. Like, he's not OK with Mr Trump's stance against gay marriage, he said, or his plan to build a wall on the Mexican border. (Also Read: Will Smith Says Donald Trump Might 'Force Him' to Join Politics)
"If Trump can't change some of his ways of thinking, then I'm just going to sit this one out," he told GQ.
Still, he offered a few kind words that might serve as balm for poor Mr Trump: "He's a leader, not a follower, and he's proven that by humbling the other campaigns."
© 2016, The Washington Post