NEW YORK (AP) — When it comes to gathering support for major issues, Amy Schumer is at the cutting edge of influence. The actress and comic has more than 2 million Twitter followers, and nearly as many on Facebook and Instagram.
Her cousin, Sen. Charles Schumer, knows that.
On Sunday, they stood in front of New York’s City Hall for what they call their “crusade on guns.”
It started in August, when the two teamed up days after a gunman fatally shot two women in a Louisiana theater showing “Trainwreck,” starring Amy Schumer.
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“On Thursday, July 23rd, a man sat down for my movie, “Trainwreck.” I don’t know why he picked my movie,” she said on Sunday. “It is something I live with every day.”
“Schumer & Schumer” — as the cousins whimsically dub themselves — urged lawmakers to back a proposed gun control bill sponsored by the New York Democrat.
It would close the loophole allowing weapons to be sold without background checks at gun shows and online; fill gaps in the background check system itself; and stop arms trafficking of weapons across state lines.








