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‘Pawn Stars’ icon Rick Harrison says Trump tax policies change everything for small businesses
“Pawn Stars” personality Rick Harrison told Fox News that workers at his Las Vegas businesses are seeing “astronomical” boosts to their tax returns thanks to President Donald Trump’s small business tax policies.
Appearing on “Saturday in America,” Harrison told Fox News host Kayleigh McEnany that policies like tax-free overtime and equipment write-offs have injected a major boost into Nevada’s economy.
“I’ve had at least 10 employees tell me that their tax return was kind of, you know, they considered it astronomical. It was, like, twice what it normally is, and it just helps out,” Harrison said on Fox News.
Harrison, famous for running the Gold & Silver Pawn Shop featured on the hit television series “Pawn Stars,” also owns a restaurant and bar in Las Vegas, employing about 80 workers overall.
MILLIONS TAP TRUMP TAX CUTS THIS FILING SEASON AS REFUNDS TOP $3,400
He noted that things like full equipment depreciation, tax-free overtime and the up to $25,000 exemption on tips have increased employee take-home pay while incentivizing business owners to ramp up spending.
“The full depreciation on equipment is a godsend to so many businesses,” Harrison noted.
He stressed the impact of Trump’s “No Tax on Tips” policy, describing it as a game-changer for Sin City’s service workers.
“There’s no tax on the first $25,000 in tips, which is really, really huge,” Harrison said. “There is a lot of single moms and things like that that are service workers, and that just — it changes everything — the no tax on tips, especially in Nevada.”
The reality star spoke on May 4 at a small business summit at the White House and noted the difference between the Trump and Biden administrations.
“The last guy in office, all we heard was that we were the evil people, we were the bad people, everything else like that, we don’t pay our fair share,” Harrison said.
It comes as Las Vegas undergoes a shift of its own amid declining tourism.
Despite hardships hitting the popular destination, Harrison previously told Fox News Digital his store experienced record-breaking months in January and February.
“You give customers what they want, and they return,” he said in an April interview with Fox News Digital. “A lot of the hotels on the Strip… they’re not hospitals where you have to go to them. There’s choices out there, so they’re changing their pricing around.”
“I don’t have crazy prices, and that’s what [some of the other] casinos need to do,” he added. “Some casinos have always been doing that, and that is why they are doing well.”
Fox News Digital’s Ashley J. DiMella contributed to this report.
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Aaron Rodgers set to begin his 22nd NFL season after agreeing to a Pittsburgh Steelers contract
Aaron Rodgers is returning to the Pittsburgh Steelers — again. Finally.
The four-time NFL MVP agreed to a one-year contract worth $22 million guaranteed with the Steelers on Saturday, a source confirmed. The deal can climb to $25 million with incentives.
The Steelers had expected this to be the case perhaps weeks or even months ago, but Rodgers took his methodical, sweet time before committing. Now, it’s happening.
So, we are about to witness Rodgers in his 22nd NFL season at age 42 (and 43 when that comes along in December). And it all begins on Monday when Rodgers joins the team on the field for OTA practices.
This is all a good thing.
AARON RODGERS’ CHANCES OF RETURNING TO STEELERS ‘INCREASING’ AMID MIKE MCCARTHY HIRE: REPORT
It’s good for the Steelers, who have no other plausible starting quarterback with enough experience and accomplishments to make them a contender.
It’s good for Rodgers, who gets at least one more chance to go out on top as the Hollywood scriptwriters might imagine.
And it’s good for the NFL because this adds another entertaining storyline and a still fine player to the 2026 season.
STEELERS USHER IN NEW COACHING ERA; MIKE MCCARTHY-AARON RODGERS REUNION TALK BUILDS
Rodgers returning to the Steelers will reunite him with coach Mike McCarthy, who coached him in Green Bay where the two won a Super Bowl together in February 2011. And while Rodgers isn’t that long-ago player anymore, he still transforms the franchise from a club with a quarterback vacancy to a solid playoff-caliber operation.
The Steelers believe they already had the infrastructure Rodgers has traditionally thrived in: a respected head coach, a physical defense, a stable organization and a fan base that embraces hard-nosed football. What the Steelers have lacked as they looked into their 2026 prospects was, well, Rodgers.
So Rodgers gets another shot at writing his legacy. His time with the Jets became defined more by injury, frustration and unmet expectations than revival. Joining the Steelers last season offered inconsistency and a first-round elimination from the playoffs.
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The AFC North race once again becomes of the league’s premier weekly storylines. The Ravens and Bengals and now the Steelers have legitimate quarterback play to lead them to the division title. Sorry, Cleveland Browns, you’re running fourth in a four-team race on this front.
The NFL league office no doubt welcomes this news.
On Thursday it released the 2026 schedule. And although league officials say they were not certain one way or another whether Rodgers was returning, they nonetheless gave the Steelers four primetime games.
That wouldn’t have made sense if Rodgers weren’t on the team.
It makes sense now.
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Julianne Moore slammed for saying she doesn’t want to act in movies with ‘explosions and guns’
Julianne Moore ruffled some feathers online after saying she doesn’t like movies with “explosions and guns.”
During a recent interview with Variety at the Kering Women in Motion Talk at the Cannes Film Festival, the 65-year-old actress sparked backlash when she shared the kinds of projects she is interested in acting in at this point in her career, saying she is “less and less interested in tragedy.”
“Particularly now at a time when things are really rough globally, it’s very difficult for me to invest in a story that I think is pretend, where I feel like the depth of the emotion, the measure of it, doesn’t measure up to what’s happening in the world. And I don’t feel like I want to engage in it,” she said.
She detailed reading scripts or watching other films and noticing “when something is there for stakes,” adding, “I don’t like easy stakes.”
“I don’t like someone being murdered. I don’t like explosions and guns. I don’t like histrionics. I don’t like things that raise the stakes without real feeling underneath,” she said. “I mean, that actually bothers me because that’s like noise. I don’t know how to play it. I don’t want to watch it.”
After a clip of the interview was shared on X, many fans took issue with Moore’s statement in the comments section, with many pointing out she has starred in multiple movies with guns and violence.
“I’ve lost count how many movies she’s done with guns,” one fan wrote. Another added, “Funny how artists forget their own catalog until it’s time to virtue signal.”
Another fan shared, “That’s great! Now playback all the degenerate, violent entertainment Julianne has happily participated in throughout her career.”
A fourth fan wrote, referencing the sequel to “Silence of the Lambs,” which tells the story of serial killer Hannibal Lecter, writing, “A man had his skull removed in Hannibal, and brain eaten.”
While many took issue with her comments, others came to her defense, with one writing, “Julianne Moore choosing emotion over chaos is exactly why she’s respected worldwide.”
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“I actually agree with her! We already have enough violence in the world! We need good family values in movies back!! Good family fun!! And the movie theaters will be full again! We want to go to the theaters but there’s not enough quality movies going out! That’s why The Devil Wears Prada was great,” another said.
This isn’t the first time Moore has faced backlash, as Vili Fualaau, who gained national attention for his illicit relationship and marriage with his sixth-grade teacher in the late 1990s, took issue with her film, “May December,” which told a similar story, calling the project a “ripoff” of his life.
Despite the backlash, Moore maintained when speaking to Entertainment Tonight in January 2024, that throughout filming the movie, director Todd Haynes was “always very clear when we were working on this movie that this was an original story … a story about these characters.”
“So that’s how we looked at it too,” Moore said. “This was our document. We created these characters from the page and together.”
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Moore won an Academy Award in 2015 for her leading role in “Still Alice,” in which she played a woman dealing with her early onset Alzheimer’s diagnosis. She was previously nominated for her roles in “Boogie Nights,” “The End of the Affair,” “The Hours” and “Far From Heaven.”
The actress was at the Cannes Film Festival as the recipient of the Kering’s Women in Motion Award, an award which is presented to an actress who has helped advance the role of women in society and film.
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Shaquille O’Neal trolls Charles Barkley during his LSU master’s degree graduation ceremony
Shaquille O’Neal is already a multi-multi-multi-millionaire ex-NBA player who has dabbled in everything from broadcasting to business to even being a sheriff’s deputy at one point, if I’m not mistaken.
Now, one of the few people on Earth who has gummy candies shaped like his head, now has his master’s degree.
And what better time to troll his buddy and TV cohort Charles Barkley than right before he’s accepting his degree during LSU’s recent graduation ceremony?
Shaq, of course, played his college ball at LSU before going on to a very successful NBA career, and, according to the school’s athletic website, he recently returned to complete his Master of Liberal Arts from the College of Humanities & Social Sciences.
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Like many schools, during graduation, they have someone there to read the names. Usually, you write it out phonetically so they don’t butcher it in front of your friends and family, after taking thousands of dollars from you.
I feel like most people will know “Shaquille O’Neal” when they see it, but Big Diesel slipped in a little something extra.
That’s Shaquille “I Hate Charles Barkley” O’Neal to you, pal!
I love how committed to the bit of giving each other grief at every possible turn, Shaq and Barkley are.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
In fact, I feel like, if even for a passing second, Charles Barkley at least considered going back to school just so he could walk at graduation and fire a salvo of his own back at Shaq.
Imagine several years of writing papers just to hand some adjunct professor with an okay-ish announcer voice a card that says, “Charles ‘Shaq Is A Tool’ Bark-Lee.”
It would be iconic.
Hell, maybe the folks at Auburn could fast-track this so the Round Mound of Rebound doesn’t have to suffer through a bunch of prerequisites for a degree in “leadership” or whatever.
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