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Speaking in Los Angeles, actor Jim Carrey criticized the Trump administration and said that "the Steve Bannons of the world convince us that we are separated". (September 6)
AP

Jim Carrey built his career by filling movie theaters, but recently he has attracted his audience the most drawings to protest President Donald Trump and his allies.

Carrey, a movie star who returns to TV show with Showtime's "Kidding" (Sunday 10 EDT / PDT), does not see political art as a career evolution,

Carrey's first cartoon, an image of Trump as a murderous clown with a finger on the button (probably nuclear), was published in a magazine on the eve of the 2016 presidential election. After Trump's surprise victory, he switched to the opposite direction: "I just scribbled my face in a chaotic way, completely disinterested and worrying about what happened."

Over time, the 56-year-old "The Truman Show" has sped up his production, which he shares with his 17.9 million followers on Twitter (@JimCarrey).

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To date, he has made more than 150 drawings, ranging from fancy – Trump's face like a piece of toast – to the crude (we see the president siding next to Russian President Vladimir Putin, behind him).

While Trump is Carrey's favorite subject, presidential allies, including Fox News host Sean Hannity, personal attorney Rudolph Giuliani and vice president Mike Pence, have been facing anger. of his pen. Others, including the special prosecutor Robert Mueller, have received flattering portraits.

The drawings are powered by inspiration. "They just came. They just arrive. Some concern is emerging and some information is coming out of the news, "he says.

Carrey has a few favorites, including a March 29 offer subtitled "You Scream. I scream. Will we stop shouting? "In which a bare – breasted president seems too excited to receive two scoops of ice, and another in which an authority figure holds a cut – off cat tail and asks for presidential help in Stephen Miller pajamas: "Stephen … Where's the rest of the cat?"

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"I like the ice drawing that I submitted to the Smithsonian as a presidential portrait," he says with a mischievous smile. Carrey says, "When evil is encouraged to flourish, sociopaths come to the top and you get all kinds of crazy things."

Although many drawings illustrate Carrey's anger and even his rage, he says he has a social media security system. His assistant checks his Twitter account and some friends watch his art and comments before they are published.

"They have opinions. Sometimes they go, "Go!" And sometimes they go, "Do not do it!", Which I think everyone needs. You could do a job of being a corrector of Twitter. The president needs one of them, "he says.

Carrey did not hear a reaction to the president's drawings.

"He's narcissistic. It could go both ways. He might like it … because it's about him, "he said thinking that he might have a reaction if he focused solely on the drawings of Senator John McCain, whom Carrey honored after his death with a glowing portrait. "When people say (Trump) is a narcissist and we should ignore him: No. Black out Donald Trump for a week and you will see the war with North Korea."

Carrey says she received support for the drawings, 80 of which will be featured in an exhibition at the Los Angeles gallery entitled "IndigNation", exhibited from October 13 to November 12. ten.

He also had a lot of opposition. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee expressed outrage at Carrey's drawing on March 17 of his daughter, President Sarah Huckabee Sanders' press secretary, and called Carrey

Carrey does not agree with those who criticize his portrayal of Sanders.

"They tried to do something that I should be ashamed of. But it was not something I could be ashamed of because liars are liars and ugly beginnings inside, "he says. "I did not draw an ugly person; I drew a person who became ugly.

Some of the objections are considered; some are not, he says.

"I appreciate the criticism. But some are sick. And you'll get to work on a comment and you'll realize that it can just as well be a bot, "he says.

But social media – "another place to play, another canvas" – is full of freshness and freshness.

"Twitter is like having an open door and a sign saying," If you want to kick me in the belly, feel free, "he says. "But I'm doing it right now."

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