Nolte: Left-Wing Rolling Stone Founder Jann Wenner Booted from Rock Hall of Fame for Racist Comments
Wenner wants us to believe that Marvin Gaye, who wrote, produced, and performed the What’s Going On album, “didn’t articulate at that level.”
Wenner wants us to believe that Marvin Gaye, who wrote, produced, and performed the What’s Going On album, “didn’t articulate at that level.”
Jann Wenner, who co-founded Rolling Stone magazine and also was a co-founder of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, has been removed from the hall’s board of directors after making comments that were seen as disparaging toward Black and female musicians.
ABC canceled a 50th anniversary Rolling Stone special in the wake of sexual misconduct reports against the magazine’s founder, Jann Wenner.
Jonathan Wells claims that Rolling Stone founder Jann Wenner sexually assaulted him in the early 1980s, according to BuzzFeed News. This is the second accusation of sexual misconduct against Wenner in as many months. Wenner is one of 46 members of the elite media accused of some form of sexual misconduct.
Rolling Stone founder and majority-owner Jann Wenner stands accused of demanding sex from freelance worker Ben Ryan in exchange for a lucrative contract. This makes Wenner the 11th member of the elite media accused of some form of sexual misconduct.
Under the apparent belief that all of the legal problems stemming from a discredited 2014 story about an unproven gang rape at the University of Virginia (UVA) were now over, Jann Wenner, founder and majority-owner of Rolling Stone magazine, put his “Bible of the Counterculture” up for sale. But just days after announcing the sale, the leftwing publication has been hit with yet-another legal setback involving the UVA debacle.
Whoever said “buy low, sell high” never said it to Jann Wenner.
Rolling Stone is celebrating the fact that it has been admittedly pro-gun control–and has been pushing gun control–for nearly 40 years.
Rocker Ted Nugent says the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is passing him by because of ties to the NRA and his support for the Second Amendment.
Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner apologized in a recorded testimony to the former University of Virginia dean who is suing the magazine for defamation but said he disagreed with the decision to retract the campus rape story, it was revealed at the defamation hearing Friday.