It’s been a long fall from grace for Franco in a career that has veered wildly from the highs of getting a Best Actor Oscar nomination for 2010’s “127 Hours” to the lows of his cringe-worthy co-hosting gig with Anne Hathaway at the 2011 Academy Awards. Seth Rogen (right) has revealed that he’ll no longer work with longtime co-star and friend James Franco after sexual abuse allegations. Representatives for Franco did not respond to The Post’s requests for comment on this article. When asked whether he would continue working with Franco, Rogen - who co-starred with Franco in 2008’s “Pineapple Express,” 2013’s “This Is the End” and 2014’s “The Interview” - told the UK’s Sunday Times that “the truth is that I have not and I do not plan to right now.”
After a series of sexual misconduct allegations against Franco, even his frequent collaborator Seth Rogen doesn’t want to work with him anymore.
In fact, in one of his first breakout roles, Franco earned an Emmy nomination and won a Golden Globe for portraying the ’50s screen legend in the 2001 TV biopic “James Dean.”īut 20 years later, the 43-year-old star has fallen from Hollywood heartthrob to disaster artist. James Franco was once the James Dean of his generation.
‘He hated James Franco’: Heard says drunk Depp attacked her over co-starĮlon Musk, James Franco won’t testify at Depp-Heard trial after all In front of television cameras Wednesday night, he said he agreed with the charges.From Lea Michele to James Franco: The Great Un-Canceling is upon us Torres' stepfather, Daniel Delgado, had demanded accountability for his stepson's death. Torres walked in front of him as he pulled the trigger, Dilworth said. He said he later saw Torres hold the gun and remove the gun's magazine and two bullets, the warrant said.ĭilworth said he took the gun from Torres and, checking to see if the gun was empty, pulled the trigger, according to a 911 recording. Dilworth told investigators he then placed the gun back in the nightstand, the warrant said. Another attorney, Michael Wrubel, who represented Dilworth in court Thursday at Black's request, declined to comment.ĭilworth and Torres were home from Apollo Middle School when Dilworth removed the handgun from Edwards' bedroom nightstand to show it to Torres, a police search warrant said. He also prohibited the boy from having a weapon or leaving his home, except to visit his attorney in Miami or if he has a medical emergency.ĭilworth's attorney, Melvin Black, couldn't be reached for comment despite two messages left with aides at his Miami office. Hurley ordered that Dilworth wear a GPS monitor after he was released from jail. Sullen-faced, he looked down as he went past television cameras. A conviction on that charge carries a mandatory life sentence.ĭilworth and his mother held hands as they walked toward the Broward Main Jail Thursday morning.
The boy, whom the Sun Sentinel is not identifying because of his age, avoided a possible grand-jury indictment for first-degree murder in adult court.
He also will remain under state supervision after his release, until he is 19.Ī 12-year-old Lauderhill boy convicted of beating to death his toddler cousin also remained in the juvenile system with an 18-month sentence after he pleaded no contest to second-degree murder in July 2008. Instead, he was ordered to spend six months to a year in a juvenile facility. Originally charged with second-degree murder, he could have been sentenced up to life in an adult prison. In a 911 call, 15-year-old William Gorzynski said it was an accident. Such a deal allowed a Coral Springs boy to stay in the juvenile system in January, when he pleaded no contest to manslaughter for stabbing his 14-year-old brother to death with a kitchen knife in a dispute over a loud computer. In a county where children accused of seriously violent crimes are frequently charged as adults, several children in Broward have benefited from such plea deals.