
Angelina Jolie
Angelina Jolie is an American actress, filmmaker, and humanitarian. She is the recipient of numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, a Tony Award and three Golden Globe Awards.
Why Angelina Jolie Appears in the Documents
Angelina Jolie is mentioned in 10 documents within the Epstein file corpus, consisting of 8 articles, 1 chat, 1 email, originating from the House Oversight Committee.
These documents include titles such as "DeMilked - 30 Ordinary Photos With Amazing Backstories", "Evilicious", "Tuesday, August 30" among others. Angelina Jolie's name appears across these documents in various contexts. The document corpus contains a wide range of materials including media coverage, government records, and legal proceedings where many public figures are mentioned.
Disclaimer: Appearing in the Epstein document corpus does not imply wrongdoing, guilt, or any form of association with criminal activity. Many public figures are mentioned incidentally in these documents due to the broad scope of the released materials.
Documents (10)
DeMilked - 30 Ordinary Photos With Amazing Backstories
This DeMilked digest highlights how everyday photos can carry extraordinary meaning, featuring a gallery of 30 ordinary pictures with powerful backstories—from wartime heroism and historic rescues to intimate moments of loss and triumph—alongside stories about a Chinese makeup artist who transforms herself into iconic figures, a prodigious 16-year-old Serbian artist, and a humorous series pairing ordinary Slavic people with look-alike celebrities.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Evilicious
Marc D. Hauser’s Evilicious provides a science-grounded account of why humans commit extraordinary harms: evil is not a rare defect but an incidental byproduct of a promiscuously connected brain that can fuse desire with denial, reward with punishment, and in-group loyalty with out-group hostility. Drawing on evolution, genetics, neuroscience, and social science, Hauser traces how hormones like testosterone, neurotransmitters such as dopamine and serotonin, and genes like MAOA, DRD4, and COMT shape risk, self-control, and the taste for harm, while social dynamics—dehumanization, moral disengagement, bystander effects, and large-scale cooperation—show how everyday aggression can escalate into violence, genocide, or corruption. He argues that our capacity for both great kindness and great cruelty arises from the same core architecture, and that understanding these core ingredients can illuminate moral responsibility, inform policy and law, and equip us to foster a more humane future. A compact, provocative synthesis, the book reveals evil as a predictable, learnable aspect of human nature—and urges us to confront it with science, education, and compassion.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Tuesday, August 30
Peggy Siegal’s Venice diary provides an intimate, fast-paced tour of the 68th Venice Film Festival in 2011, tracing a week of red-carpet glamour, sun-baked palazzi, and exclusive soirees as she hobnobs with George Clooney, Madonna, Jessica Chastain, Al Pacino and other luminaries. Amid intimate press conferences and world premieres of A Dangerous Method, The Artist, Carnage, Contagion and Shame, the piece captures a festival ecosystem where couture, cinema history, and Oscar buzz mingle under Venetian heat and candlelit corridors. It also frames how Hollywood’s race for the Academy Awards begins overseas, with festival curators and global audiences shaping the year’s most anticipated films.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Vive L’Oscars: Peggy Siegal's Oscar Diary
Peggy Siegal’s exclusive Oscar diary offers a behind-the-scenes, celebrity-packed chronicle of the 2011–2012 Oscar season, tracing how nine Best Picture contenders—led by The Artist, The Tree of Life, The Help, Moneyball, The Descendants, Hugo, War Horse, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, and The Ides of March—moved from Cannes into a year of campaigns, glamorous pre‑Oscars parties, fashion moments, and studio strategizing, with sharp, intimate observations from Woody Allen’s abstention to Uggie’s rise and George Clooney’s dual life as actor and humanitarian.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscars 2011: A Personal Chronicle of the Oscar Season and Parties
This insider diary chronicles the 2011 Oscar season from Cannes to the ceremony, tracing how nine films—led by The Artist, The Help, and The Descendants—built campaigns, buzz, and cross-country premieres while a glamorous whirl of parties, press rooms, and red carpets shaped the race for Best Picture, Director, Actor, and Actress. It threads through the social machinery of Hollywood, spotlighting the rivalries and alliances among stars, producers, and power brokers at exclusive gatherings, where fashion, sentiment, and whispered predictions mattered as much as films themselves; it features Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris, Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life, and the larger-than-life push around Meryl Streep vs. Viola Davis, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, and a canine superstar, Uggie, who became a cultural moment. The narrative crescendos with The Artist’s historic sweep—the first silent Best Picture winner since 1927—with Harvey Weinstein’s orchestration, Michel Hazanavicius’s triumph, and Uggie’s star turn, before closing on the glow and the reminder that the magic of Oscar night is unforgettable, even as life returns to reality.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Revealed: the world's most admired people
The Times-YouGov global survey reveals Bill Gates as the world’s most admired person, with Pope Francis, Barack Obama, Billy Graham and George W. Bush ahead of him in the U.S. and Gates topping the list in China; the Queen is the most admired woman overall, trailed by Jolie and Oprah, and the results show strong political, business and sports figures across nations while highlighting gender imbalances in some countries. The study also maps national leaders (Putin in Russia, Merkel in Germany, Sarkozy in France, Goodluck Jonathan in Nigeria) and notes that few local politicians reach the top ten in Australia and the UK, illustrates the media’s influence on who people admire (Pope Francis rising after Time’s Person of the Year) and even mentions Mandela’s near-top status had he been considered earlier; a concise Who’s Who section lists figures like Modi, Bachchan, Abdul Kalam, Anna Hazare, Arvind Kejriwal, Peng Liyuan, Abdul Sattar Edhi and Jokowi Widodo. Based on surveys of 13,895 people in 13 countries, the document also asks who is the most famous person in the world, with Obama leading that question.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Revealed: the world's most admired people
The Times-YouGov global survey reveals Bill Gates as the world’s most admired person, with Pope Francis, Barack Obama, Billy Graham and George W. Bush ahead of him in the U.S. and Gates topping the list in China; the Queen is the most admired woman overall, trailed by Jolie and Oprah, and the results show strong political, business and sports figures across nations while highlighting gender imbalances in some countries. The study also maps national leaders (Putin in Russia, Merkel in Germany, Sarkozy in France, Goodluck Jonathan in Nigeria) and notes that few local politicians reach the top ten in Australia and the UK, illustrates the media’s influence on who people admire (Pope Francis rising after Time’s Person of the Year) and even mentions Mandela’s near-top status had he been considered earlier; a concise Who’s Who section lists figures like Modi, Bachchan, Abdul Kalam, Anna Hazare, Arvind Kejriwal, Peng Liyuan, Abdul Sattar Edhi and Jokowi Widodo. Based on surveys of 13,895 people in 13 countries, the document also asks who is the most famous person in the world, with Obama leading that question.
Source: House Oversight Committee
iMessage Archive: Conversation between Jee and Larry Summers
This is an iMessage chat transcript from June–July 2019 labeled “HOUSE OVERSIGHT,” detailing a long, multi-threaded exchange between jee and Larry Summers that blends personal banter and professional planning with a deep dive into probability theory. The participants oscillate between technical debates on subjective versus objective probability, Bayesian reasoning, and the applicability of probability to single events, and broader discussions on economics, debt policy, and geopolitical topics—while also sharing personal updates, rehab-related notes, and references to news links and literary topics. The tone is candid and occasionally abrasive, yet the thread paints a picture of two interlocutors weighing risk, outcomes, and strategic decisions across both intellectual and real-world concerns.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Revealed: the world's most admired people
According to a global YouGov survey for The Times, Bill Gates is the world’s most admired person, with Pope Francis and Barack Obama also highly regarded, while regional differences prevail—Britain’s Queen is the top female figure, Putin dominates in Russia, and politicians often outrank entertainers in several countries; the poll also finds Obama to be the most famous person globally and demonstrates how media coverage can rapidly reshape public admiration.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Revealed: the world's most admired people
According to a global YouGov survey for The Times, Bill Gates is the world’s most admired person, with Pope Francis and Barack Obama also highly regarded, while regional differences prevail—Britain’s Queen is the top female figure, Putin dominates in Russia, and politicians often outrank entertainers in several countries; the poll also finds Obama to be the most famous person globally and demonstrates how media coverage can rapidly reshape public admiration.
Source: House Oversight Committee