Celebrity cash, kudos boost 'March for
Our Lives' gun control campaign
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[March 24, 2018]
By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Oprah Winfrey calls
them "warriors of the light," actor Bill Murray says the young Florida
gun control campaigners remind him of the students who rallied to end
the Vietnam War, and George Clooney has donated $500,000 to their cause.
The teen organizers of Saturday's nationwide "March for Our Lives,"
aimed at toughening gun laws to help stop school shootings in the United
States, have won kudos and cash from dozens of celebrities, helping to
raise their national profile.
The April 2 cover of Time magazine will feature five students from
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida who have organized
rallies, walk-outs and challenged U.S. lawmakers since the February 14
mass shooting at the school that left 17 students and staff dead.
Miley Cyrus, Ariana Grande, Jennifer Hudson, Demi Lovato and Common are
due to be among performers at Saturday's main march in Washington D.C.,
while "Trainwreck" actress Amy Schumer and pop star Charlie Puth are
expected to headline a march in Los Angeles, organizers said.
"So inspired by the incredible students behind #MarchForOurLives. Can’t
wait to join them in DC to perform and show my support," Cyrus tweeted
earlier this week.
"Proud of these kids," Justin Bieber wrote on Twitter.
Winfrey, Clooney, director Steven Spielberg and Hollywood producer
Jeffrey Katzenberg have donated an aggregate of $2 million to the "March
for Our Lives" movement. Clooney and his wife Amal have said they would
march with the students on Saturday.
"This is their moment," Winfrey told Reuters Television in praising the
students. "They are the new young warriors of the light."
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A combination photo shows actors George Clooney (L to R), Oprah
Winfrey and Bill Murray in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Los Angeles,
California, and Berlin, Germany respectively. REUTERS/Files
"Groundhog Day" actor Murray compared them to the young protesters
of the 1960s who helped bring an end to the Vietnam War.
"Maybe this noise that those students in Florida are making, here
today, will do something of the same nature," Murray wrote in an
opinion piece for NBCNews.com.
Youth-oriented television channel MTV has teamed up with the NAACP
to send 17 buses of young people to Washington, D.C. on Saturday,
and has enlisted support through social media and video messages
from the likes of Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez, Jay-Z, Halsey and talk
show host Jimmy Fallon.
"Hamilton" creator Lin-Manuel Miranda and "Dear Evan Hansen" star
Ben Platt are also due to perform at the Washington demonstration
after releasing a fund-raising mashup of two songs from their
respective Broadway shows called "Found/Tonight".
Talk show host Ellen DeGeneres tweeted, "These kids from Marjory
Stoneman Douglas see a need for change in our world, and they're
doing something about it."
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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