r/entertainment

Bruce Dern says Quentin Tarantino scolded Brad Pitt on set of ‘Once Upon a Time’ when Pitt called cut during Dern's improvisation: “He said ‘Brad, what did you just do?' Brad said ‘Well, that wasn’t in the script what he said.' Quentin said 'Never again will you ever cut a camera. That's my domain”

Bruce Dern says Quentin Tarantino scolded Brad Pitt on set of ‘Once Upon a Time’ when Pitt called cut during Dern's improvisation: “He said ‘Brad, what did you just do?' Brad said ‘Well, that wasn’t in the script what he said.' Quentin said 'Never again will you ever cut a camera. That's my domain”

hollywoodreporter.com
u/DamnThatsInsaneLol — 10 hours ago
▲ 312 r/entertainment+22 crossposts

SGM Mike Vining interview on Vietnam, Delta Force, and the sardines he never ate. His new book is coming out in August 2026

We Are The Mighty profiles retired Sgt. Maj. Mike Vining through the smaller personal details behind a much larger military résumé: Vietnam EOD work, Delta Force, Operation Eagle Claw, and later life outside uniform. The article uses the “sardines he never ate” story to humanize someone usually presented as a meme or legend.

Vining served as an explosive ordnance disposal specialist in Vietnam, where he recalled multiple near-death moments, including being left behind at an abandoned Special Forces camp and helping destroy the massive “Rock Island East” enemy weapons cache in Cambodia.

The profile also connects Vining to Delta Force’s early history. A related We Are The Mighty piece says he joined Delta in 1978 as an EOD specialist under Col. Charlie Beckwith, making him one of the unit’s original members.

The article’s strategic value is not just biography. It shows how specialized technical skills, especially EOD, became central to elite special operations as missions grew more complex and politically sensitive.

Vining’s post-service life, including mountaineering, historical writing, veteran community work, and distance from his internet fame, adds a useful contrast to modern military celebrity culture. The profile suggests that some of the most consequential operators may be least interested in mythmaking.

Do stories like Vining’s help preserve serious military history, or do meme-driven portrayals risk flattening complex service into legend?

wearethemighty.com
u/Sgt_Gram — 9 hours ago

Bruce Springsteen hails Stephen Colbert as "the first guy in America who lost his show because we got a president who can't take a joke"

nme.com
u/yourfavchoom — 13 hours ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 11.9k r/entertainment+2 crossposts

Jimmy Kimmel urged his ABC viewers to catch Stephen Colbert's 'Late Show' series finale on Thursday night: "Tune in to CBS, for the last time. Don’t ever watch it again."

latenighter.com
u/MoneyLibrarian9032 — 20 hours ago

‘The Late Show’: Stephen Colbert Brings Out Robert De Niro, Martha Stewart and Tons of Others to Quiz Him in Second-to-Last Episode

variety.com
u/ControlCAD — 19 hours ago