Content warning: This piece includes an account of an apparent suicide.
Jacqueline Bisset, a '60s and '70s Hollywood star, weighed in on the #MeToo movement, which went viral after Harvey Weinstein was accused of multiple cases of sexual harassment.
Motley was the first Black woman to serve as a federal judge and the first Black woman to argue a case before the U.S.
The activist’s refusal to give up her seat to a white passenger on a segregated bus in Alabama helped fuel the Civil Rights Movement.
Related: Remembering Martin Luther King, Jr. With 30 Fascinating Facts About the Civil Rights Icon. What Is Coretta Scott ...
A Paris court has found a filmmaker guilty of sexual assault on French actor Adèle Haenel when she was between 12 and 15 in ...
Christophe Ruggia was sentenced to four years and fined for sexually assaulting the actress Adèle Haenel when she was a minor ...
In light of recent events, it might be a good time to remember a very simple truth: Nazis are ALWAYS the bad guys.
With his 70th birthday looming on this year’s horizon, Microsoft founder Bill Gates looked inward to open a window into the man behind Windows and other seminal software that turned the personal compu ...
Cate Blanchett ‘distressed’ that #MeToo movement never ‘took root’ in Hollywood - ‘There’s so much that is bewildering and ...
I think she fell in love with the words themselves and how he was saying things she was trying to find the words for,' the 'A ...
Mexico Reaches Deal With U.S. to Delay Trump Tariffs President Trump said he would pause tariffs on Mexico for a month, but levies on Canada and China were still set to take effect on Tuesday ...