Paul Rodriguez tries to #MeToo Will Smith

FeverPitch2

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i hear what you’re saying but a lot of people on the coli have been on will’s ass for having a gay/tranny son before the slap so it’s not like out of nowhere people are being critical about him. At the end of the day will is going to be alright. It’s not like he killed someone and that white man’s award doesn’t mean shyt. He’s been one of the most talented entertainers for over 30 years and his legacy will live forever.

Gay tranny son?
It's pretty simple. nikkas never thought the Fresh Prince PG rapper would amount to much.
Then he had a hit sitcom.
Then a hit movie.
Then he was the #1 actor in the world.
He got buff and women started to feel him.
Then he wifed one of the 90's dimes.
nikkas have been waiting so long.
It's nothing more than that.
 
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He aint been hot since DC Cab.
UKVu0t8.gif
 

13473

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here's what he's claiming

As Rodriguez remembers it, he asked everyone how they were, including Smith, who he claims flat-out ignored him. Then suddenly the star allegedly looked at him, jerked his arms away, and barked at him, “you don’t know what the f**k you’re doing.”

“Am I’m like, ‘Will, I’m just lacing up gloves, the camera isn’t even on me right now.’ I think my lines were something like, ‘stick and move Champ, stick and move.’


“And he just looked at me again and said, ‘you don’t know what you’re doing,’ and everything just went drastically downhill from there.”

In the days and weeks that followed, Rodriguez claims he was routinely mocked and bullied by Smith.


Such disparaging behaviour would reportedly include Smith ignoring his greetings and questions, in addition to “threatening” him and turning his fellow cast and crew members against him.


For six hours every morning, Rodriguez would sit in the make-up chair to cosmetically transform into Dr. Pacheco, often next to Smith, who would apparently refuse to say even a word to him.

“[I didn’t even get] the most basic cordiality, you know, not even ‘Good morning. How are you? How’s it going?’ when we all sat on a makeup chair.

“I mean, I was there for six hours every day, but there was never any bantering … we used to talk but now it was as if somebody smelled bad and I was tainted.

“And it tainted the other actors. All of a sudden nobody wanted to hang out with me. Michael Mann even started hollering me out in front of all the other actors in group scenes for things I wasn’t even doing.”

Rodriguez recalled one alleged alarming encounter with Smith while they were filming in Africa that he says has continued to bother him for the last 20 years.


The entire cast of Ali was invited for dinner at Nelson Mandela’s home, but his castmates, most of whom had distanced themselves from him, reportedly neglected to inform Rodriguez.


He said he was sitting alone in his hotel room when he got a knock at the door from Mykelti Williamson, who played boxing promoter Don King in the film, who informed him about the invite.

When he eventually arrived at the Mandela home, Rodriguez claims Smith was visibly upset and annoyed that he’d turned up.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air alum later came up to Rodriguez and issued him a bizarre “threat”, he alleges.


“I remember I was getting some food from the buffet in that beautiful house when he came up to me and said, ‘You need to be very careful. You’re a long way from anyone who likes you. Because you’re in Africa, there are no Mexicans here.’”


A stunned Rodriguez said he was unsure what to make of Smith’s alleged remarks and asked him to elaborate but he declined to do so.

“If that’s not a threat, I don’t know what is,” Rodriguez reflected, adding at the time he believed Smith’s remarks were racially charged.

At this point, claiming the bullying had become so unbearable, Rodriguez said he threatened to walk away from the production but was ultimately talked down by John Voight, who starred as the famed journalist and sportscaster Howard Cosell.

Voight, as Rodriguez remembers, told him that Smith was a method actor who was under an immense amount of pressure and suggested that relations between the pair would soon improve.

But more than a month into filming, Rodriguez says nothing changed so he made an impassioned plea to Smith to bury whatever hatched he had been holding onto.

In an effort to distinguish himself from the real Dr. Pacheco, Rodriguez said he removed his prosthetics and turned to Smith one day, saying, “’Look, if you’re unsatisfied with me, I’m not gonna sit here and take this abuse. It’s me Paul Rodriguez, man. I’m not Pacheco, I’d never use the word he used, that’s not who I am. I’m playing this guy’.

“I asked him why he was choosing to hurt me but I couldn’t get through. He just told me to ‘shut up and stand there’ [in silence].”

Rodriguez, hoping Voight’s predictions would eventually ring true, said he suffered through the rest of the production which eventually wrapped after six months of filming.

When the movie was eventually released on Christmas Day 2001, Rodriguez was heartbroken and embarrassed to find that all of his lines had been cut, and his portrayal of Pacheco was reduced to essentially that of an extra.

He found it devastating when friends and family members would call him, saying they’d seen the movie but barely spotted him in it – despite being a featured name in the credits.


Rodriguez believes Smith, and the way he treated him and turned other members of the cast against him, is to blame for his axing from the film.


“I did everything within my power to try to shine in that movie, including taking voice lessons to sound like Pacheco, and for all that I got ostracised and humiliated.

“This seriously injured my career, because Hollywood would’ve looked at how I was cut out and thought, ‘Wow this Rodriguez was so bad they cut him from the move’, but that wasn’t the case.

“It was a disaster and I have to overcome that,” he added. “Smith was amazing in that role, he was nominated for an Oscar – which I think he should’ve won – and the movie was incredible.

“But all I was left with was just a sickening feeling like I was some kind of sacrificial lamb. What was meant to be a dream role was made into a nightmare.”

Rodriguez accused Smith of sabotaging his role in the film, something he said was very important to him and that he’d worked incredibly hard to get.

The actor, who last year starred in the live-action remake of Clifford The Big Red Dog, said after the disaster of Ali he felt as though he’d been “relegated” from Hollywood.

“I’ve had some successes, but for the most part I feel as though I was cast aside after that,” he said. “I feel like I’ll never get a chance for a shot at the big time.

“I feel like Ali himself, he was put in prison during his prime years and you just don’t get them back. Hollywood isn’t clamouring for a 67-year-old leading man, so it’s my burden to share.”

https://www.news.com.au/entertainme...t/news-story/f319fe513f82c60755600abb18e5fbe5
 

FeverPitch2

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here's what he's claiming

As Rodriguez remembers it, he asked everyone how they were, including Smith, who he claims flat-out ignored him. Then suddenly the star allegedly looked at him, jerked his arms away, and barked at him, “you don’t know what the f**k you’re doing.”

“Am I’m like, ‘Will, I’m just lacing up gloves, the camera isn’t even on me right now.’ I think my lines were something like, ‘stick and move Champ, stick and move.’


“And he just looked at me again and said, ‘you don’t know what you’re doing,’ and everything just went drastically downhill from there.”

In the days and weeks that followed, Rodriguez claims he was routinely mocked and bullied by Smith.


Such disparaging behaviour would reportedly include Smith ignoring his greetings and questions, in addition to “threatening” him and turning his fellow cast and crew members against him.


For six hours every morning, Rodriguez would sit in the make-up chair to cosmetically transform into Dr. Pacheco, often next to Smith, who would apparently refuse to say even a word to him.

“[I didn’t even get] the most basic cordiality, you know, not even ‘Good morning. How are you? How’s it going?’ when we all sat on a makeup chair.

“I mean, I was there for six hours every day, but there was never any bantering … we used to talk but now it was as if somebody smelled bad and I was tainted.

“And it tainted the other actors. All of a sudden nobody wanted to hang out with me. Michael Mann even started hollering me out in front of all the other actors in group scenes for things I wasn’t even doing.”

Rodriguez recalled one alleged alarming encounter with Smith while they were filming in Africa that he says has continued to bother him for the last 20 years.


The entire cast of Ali was invited for dinner at Nelson Mandela’s home, but his castmates, most of whom had distanced themselves from him, reportedly neglected to inform Rodriguez.


He said he was sitting alone in his hotel room when he got a knock at the door from Mykelti Williamson, who played boxing promoter Don King in the film, who informed him about the invite.

When he eventually arrived at the Mandela home, Rodriguez claims Smith was visibly upset and annoyed that he’d turned up.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air alum later came up to Rodriguez and issued him a bizarre “threat”, he alleges.


“I remember I was getting some food from the buffet in that beautiful house when he came up to me and said, ‘You need to be very careful. You’re a long way from anyone who likes you. Because you’re in Africa, there are no Mexicans here.’”


A stunned Rodriguez said he was unsure what to make of Smith’s alleged remarks and asked him to elaborate but he declined to do so.

“If that’s not a threat, I don’t know what is,” Rodriguez reflected, adding at the time he believed Smith’s remarks were racially charged.

At this point, claiming the bullying had become so unbearable, Rodriguez said he threatened to walk away from the production but was ultimately talked down by John Voight, who starred as the famed journalist and sportscaster Howard Cosell.

Voight, as Rodriguez remembers, told him that Smith was a method actor who was under an immense amount of pressure and suggested that relations between the pair would soon improve.

But more than a month into filming, Rodriguez says nothing changed so he made an impassioned plea to Smith to bury whatever hatched he had been holding onto.

In an effort to distinguish himself from the real Dr. Pacheco, Rodriguez said he removed his prosthetics and turned to Smith one day, saying, “’Look, if you’re unsatisfied with me, I’m not gonna sit here and take this abuse. It’s me Paul Rodriguez, man. I’m not Pacheco, I’d never use the word he used, that’s not who I am. I’m playing this guy’.

“I asked him why he was choosing to hurt me but I couldn’t get through. He just told me to ‘shut up and stand there’ [in silence].”

Rodriguez, hoping Voight’s predictions would eventually ring true, said he suffered through the rest of the production which eventually wrapped after six months of filming.

When the movie was eventually released on Christmas Day 2001, Rodriguez was heartbroken and embarrassed to find that all of his lines had been cut, and his portrayal of Pacheco was reduced to essentially that of an extra.

He found it devastating when friends and family members would call him, saying they’d seen the movie but barely spotted him in it – despite being a featured name in the credits.


Rodriguez believes Smith, and the way he treated him and turned other members of the cast against him, is to blame for his axing from the film.


“I did everything within my power to try to shine in that movie, including taking voice lessons to sound like Pacheco, and for all that I got ostracised and humiliated.

“This seriously injured my career, because Hollywood would’ve looked at how I was cut out and thought, ‘Wow this Rodriguez was so bad they cut him from the move’, but that wasn’t the case.

“It was a disaster and I have to overcome that,” he added. “Smith was amazing in that role, he was nominated for an Oscar – which I think he should’ve won – and the movie was incredible.

“But all I was left with was just a sickening feeling like I was some kind of sacrificial lamb. What was meant to be a dream role was made into a nightmare.”

Rodriguez accused Smith of sabotaging his role in the film, something he said was very important to him and that he’d worked incredibly hard to get.

The actor, who last year starred in the live-action remake of Clifford The Big Red Dog, said after the disaster of Ali he felt as though he’d been “relegated” from Hollywood.

“I’ve had some successes, but for the most part I feel as though I was cast aside after that,” he said. “I feel like I’ll never get a chance for a shot at the big time.

“I feel like Ali himself, he was put in prison during his prime years and you just don’t get them back. Hollywood isn’t clamouring for a 67-year-old leading man, so it’s my burden to share.”

https://www.news.com.au/entertainme...t/news-story/f319fe513f82c60755600abb18e5fbe5

Brehito is definitely leaving something out.
 

TEH

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Wish black ppl had that same fraternity. This Will Smith situation shows that we dont. Chris Rock forgave him, yet the POC coalition is on wills ass and black men are just ok with it.
Two black men were involved yet your implication is that you’re not really black if you don’t support one over the other.


:unimpressed:
 

JT-Money

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All these people in Hollywood sound like raging lunatics. There is a story out how Chris Rock humiliated Michael Ealy on his first major acting gig. Sounds like they both getting a nice dose of karma.
 

Biscayne

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Two black men were involved yet your implication is that you’re not really black if you don’t support one over the other.


:unimpressed:
No, the implication is that you don’t fan the flames of smearing one black man and keeping the beef going, when the two black men have patched it up already. Y’all keep trying to make it into a Will vs Chris thing, when it’s evolved into a Will vs Hollywood cacs, comedians, and c00ns thing.
 

TEH

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No, the implication is that you don’t fan the flames of smearing one black man and keeping the beef going, when the two black men have patched it up already. Y’all keep trying to make it into a Will vs Chris thing, when it’s evolved into a Will vs Hollywood cacs, comedians, and c00ns thing.

It is a Will and Chris thing. Cause it’s really a discussion between posters and some side with one more than the other.


also

Like I said earlier we have to live with our decisions. Especially knowing how cacs are. He forgot the nature of the beast. And truthfully none of us on here can stop that steam train no matter who we side with or what we type.
 

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Coli brehs are in this comedians camp. I hope you all realize what’s about to happen as the agenda is in full swing. Hope y’all had a good time defending the Hollywood calvalry going against Will. Ask yourself this, why is it now coming out that Will Smith is an alleged jerk?

:jbhmm:

You all seem have all these whataoutisms to defend Cosby and other black male celebrities who have harmed black women, but seem to be on board with the cacs that are on Wills ass. To non blacks, this isn’t about defending Chris Rocks honor or the honor of black men, it’s about a black man getting away with assault at an award show..let Chris Rock slip up and see how these cacs turn on him as well. Enjoy the show. :mjgrin:
I personally dont give a shyt what happens to Will cause he did that to himself but THIS is just fukkery overload :huhldup:
 

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here's what he's claiming

As Rodriguez remembers it, he asked everyone how they were, including Smith, who he claims flat-out ignored him. Then suddenly the star allegedly looked at him, jerked his arms away, and barked at him, “you don’t know what the f**k you’re doing.”

“Am I’m like, ‘Will, I’m just lacing up gloves, the camera isn’t even on me right now.’ I think my lines were something like, ‘stick and move Champ, stick and move.’


“And he just looked at me again and said, ‘you don’t know what you’re doing,’ and everything just went drastically downhill from there.”

In the days and weeks that followed, Rodriguez claims he was routinely mocked and bullied by Smith.


Such disparaging behaviour would reportedly include Smith ignoring his greetings and questions, in addition to “threatening” him and turning his fellow cast and crew members against him.


For six hours every morning, Rodriguez would sit in the make-up chair to cosmetically transform into Dr. Pacheco, often next to Smith, who would apparently refuse to say even a word to him.

“[I didn’t even get] the most basic cordiality, you know, not even ‘Good morning. How are you? How’s it going?’ when we all sat on a makeup chair.

“I mean, I was there for six hours every day, but there was never any bantering … we used to talk but now it was as if somebody smelled bad and I was tainted.

“And it tainted the other actors. All of a sudden nobody wanted to hang out with me. Michael Mann even started hollering me out in front of all the other actors in group scenes for things I wasn’t even doing.”

Rodriguez recalled one alleged alarming encounter with Smith while they were filming in Africa that he says has continued to bother him for the last 20 years.


The entire cast of Ali was invited for dinner at Nelson Mandela’s home, but his castmates, most of whom had distanced themselves from him, reportedly neglected to inform Rodriguez.


He said he was sitting alone in his hotel room when he got a knock at the door from Mykelti Williamson, who played boxing promoter Don King in the film, who informed him about the invite.

When he eventually arrived at the Mandela home, Rodriguez claims Smith was visibly upset and annoyed that he’d turned up.

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air alum later came up to Rodriguez and issued him a bizarre “threat”, he alleges.


“I remember I was getting some food from the buffet in that beautiful house when he came up to me and said, ‘You need to be very careful. You’re a long way from anyone who likes you. Because you’re in Africa, there are no Mexicans here.’”


A stunned Rodriguez said he was unsure what to make of Smith’s alleged remarks and asked him to elaborate but he declined to do so.

“If that’s not a threat, I don’t know what is,” Rodriguez reflected, adding at the time he believed Smith’s remarks were racially charged.

At this point, claiming the bullying had become so unbearable, Rodriguez said he threatened to walk away from the production but was ultimately talked down by John Voight, who starred as the famed journalist and sportscaster Howard Cosell.

Voight, as Rodriguez remembers, told him that Smith was a method actor who was under an immense amount of pressure and suggested that relations between the pair would soon improve.

But more than a month into filming, Rodriguez says nothing changed so he made an impassioned plea to Smith to bury whatever hatched he had been holding onto.

In an effort to distinguish himself from the real Dr. Pacheco, Rodriguez said he removed his prosthetics and turned to Smith one day, saying, “’Look, if you’re unsatisfied with me, I’m not gonna sit here and take this abuse. It’s me Paul Rodriguez, man. I’m not Pacheco, I’d never use the word he used, that’s not who I am. I’m playing this guy’.

“I asked him why he was choosing to hurt me but I couldn’t get through. He just told me to ‘shut up and stand there’ [in silence].”

Rodriguez, hoping Voight’s predictions would eventually ring true, said he suffered through the rest of the production which eventually wrapped after six months of filming.

When the movie was eventually released on Christmas Day 2001, Rodriguez was heartbroken and embarrassed to find that all of his lines had been cut, and his portrayal of Pacheco was reduced to essentially that of an extra.

He found it devastating when friends and family members would call him, saying they’d seen the movie but barely spotted him in it – despite being a featured name in the credits.


Rodriguez believes Smith, and the way he treated him and turned other members of the cast against him, is to blame for his axing from the film.


“I did everything within my power to try to shine in that movie, including taking voice lessons to sound like Pacheco, and for all that I got ostracised and humiliated.

“This seriously injured my career, because Hollywood would’ve looked at how I was cut out and thought, ‘Wow this Rodriguez was so bad they cut him from the move’, but that wasn’t the case.

“It was a disaster and I have to overcome that,” he added. “Smith was amazing in that role, he was nominated for an Oscar – which I think he should’ve won – and the movie was incredible.

“But all I was left with was just a sickening feeling like I was some kind of sacrificial lamb. What was meant to be a dream role was made into a nightmare.”

Rodriguez accused Smith of sabotaging his role in the film, something he said was very important to him and that he’d worked incredibly hard to get.

The actor, who last year starred in the live-action remake of Clifford The Big Red Dog, said after the disaster of Ali he felt as though he’d been “relegated” from Hollywood.

“I’ve had some successes, but for the most part I feel as though I was cast aside after that,” he said. “I feel like I’ll never get a chance for a shot at the big time.

“I feel like Ali himself, he was put in prison during his prime years and you just don’t get them back. Hollywood isn’t clamouring for a 67-year-old leading man, so it’s my burden to share.”

https://www.news.com.au/entertainme...t/news-story/f319fe513f82c60755600abb18e5fbe5
this clearly leaves out whatever the fukk PAUL did :stopitslime:
 

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All these people in Hollywood sound like raging lunatics. There is a story out how Chris Rock humiliated Michael Ealy on his first major acting gig. Sounds like they both getting a nice dose of karma.
and Will is old school pre-internet famous. Dude's ego is on a whole other level.
 

TillWeDie

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All these people in Hollywood sound like raging lunatics. There is a story out how Chris Rock humiliated Michael Ealy on his first major acting gig. Sounds like they both getting a nice dose of karma.
There seems to be a ton of narcissism in Hollywood and everyone acting like MJ and Kobe if other people screw up or start slouching or taking some of their shine. Add onto to that the drugs, bruised egos, long hours, tough film locations/settings and people not knowing how to fix these situations because of all the ego
 
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