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Philip Baker Hall, the prolific character actor of film and theater who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson’s first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in “Seinfeld,” has died. He was 90.Holly Wolfle Hall, the actor’s wife of nearly 40 years, on Monday said Hall died Sunday surrounded by loved ones in Glendale, California. She said Hall had been well until a few weeks earlier, and spent his final days in warm spirits, reflecting on his life.“His voice at the end was still just as powerful,” said Wolfle Hall. Her husband, she added, never retired from acting.Philip Baker Hall arrives at the premiere of "Clear History" at the Cinerama Dome July 31, 2013 in Los Angeles. (Dan Steinberg/Dan Steinberg/Invision/AP)In a career spanning half a century, Hall was a ubiquitous hangdog face whose doleful, weary appearance could shroud a booming intensity and humble sensitivity. His range was wide, but Hall, who had a natural gravitas, often played men in suits, trench coats and lab coats.“Men who are highly stressed, older men, who are at the limit of their tolerance for suffering and stress and pain,” Hall told the Washington Post in 2017. “I had an affinity for playing those roles.”Born in Toledo, Ohio, Hall initially devoted himself more to theater in Los Angeles, after moving out in 1975, than TV and movies. While shooting bit parts in Hollywood (an episode of “Good Times” was one of his first gigs), Hall worked with the L.A. Actor Theatre. There he played Richard Nixon in the one-act play “Secret Honor,” a role he reprised in Robert Altman’s 1984 film adaptation. Critic Pauline Kael wrote that Hall “draws on his lack of a star presence and on an actor’s fears of his own mediocrity in a way that seems to parallel Nixon’s feelings.”Hall made an impression in the smallest of roles in other films, like 1988′s “Midnight Run.” But outside of theater, Hall was mostly doing guest roles in television. That changed when he was shooting a PBS program in 1992. Hall then encountered a production assistant in his early 20s named Paul Thomas Anderson. The two would hang out, smoking cigarettes and drinking coffee between scenes. Anderson, believing Hall hadn’t gotten his due in film, asked him to look at a script he had written for a 20-minute short film titled “Cigarettes & Coffee.”“I’m reading this script, and I truly had trouble believing that that kid wrote this script,” Hall told the AV Club in 2012. “I mean, it was just so brilliant, resonating with nuance all over the place, like a playwright. Certainly, as a film, I’d never really seen anything like it. It was staggering.”After the $20,000 short made it into the Sundance Film Festival, Anderson expanded it into his feature debut, 1997′s “Hard Eight,” which catapulted Hall’s career. In it, Hall played a wise and courteous itinerate gambler named Sydney who schools a young drifter (John C. Reilly) on the craft. In one indelible scene, Philip Seymour Hoffman’s first with Anderson, a hot-shot gambler chides Hall as “old-timer.”Anderson would cast Hall again as adult film theater magnate Floyd Gondolli who warns Burt Reynolds’ pornography producer about the industry’s future in “Boogie Nights.” In Anderson’s “Magnolia,” Hall played Jimmy Gator, the host of a kids game show.“I have a particular fascination with character actors, with wanting to turn them into lead actors,” Anderson told The Los Angeles Times in 1998. “I see Philip Baker Hall, he’s just . . . an actor that I love. There’s no one else with a face like that, or a voice like that.”To many, Hall was instantly recognizable for one of the most powerfully funny guest appearances on “Seinfeld.” In the 22nd episode of the sitcom in 1991, Hall played Lt. Joe Bookman, the library investigator who comes after Seinfeld for a years-overdue copy of “Tropic of Cancer.” Hall played him like a hardboiled noir detective, telling Seinfeld: “Well, I got a flash for ya, Joy-boy: Party time is over.”Hall was brought back for the “Seinfeld” finale and by Larry David on “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” David once said no other actor ever made him laugh more than Hall.Among Hall’s many other credits were Michael Mann’s “The Insider,” as “60 Minutes” producer Don Hewitt, and Lars von Trier’s “Dogville.” Hall appeared in “Say Anything,” “The Truman Show,” “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” “Zodiac,” “Argo” and “Rush Hour.” Hall played the neighbor Walt Kleezak on “Modern Family.” His last performance was in the 2020 series “Messiah.”Hall, who was married to Dianne Lewis for three years in the early 1970s, is survived by his wife, four daughters, four grandchildren and his brother.
Movies
Damon Dash v. Roc-A-Fella No 'Reasonable Doubt' About it ... Dame Can't Sell Album NFT 6/13/2022 1:11 PM PT Damon Dash will not be going rogue and auctioning off Jay-Z's "Reasonable Doubt" album as an NFT ... he and Roc-A-Fella Records settled the case before it got that far. According to new legal docs, obtained by TMZ, Dash and RAF have agreed to terms on a settlement -- Dame agrees that only RAF has the rights to sell an NFT of the famous album. TMZ broke the story ... Roc-A-Fella sued DD back in June 2021, claiming Dash was trying to mint "Reasonable Doubt" as a non-fungible token in order to sell it to the highest bidder. The record company argued the album was not Damon's to sell because the company owns it. Under the settlement, Damon and RAF agree no individual shareholder can sell the album as an NFT -- meaning, Jay can't either -- because it's owned by the company and not any individual shareholder. The only thing Dame can sell, according to the settlement, is his own 1/3 ownership in Roc-A-Fella Records, Inc. Go figure, Dame ... guess ya can knock the hustle.
Music
Jonathan AmosScience correspondent@BBCAmoson TwitterImage source, ESAImage caption, Artwork: Gaia is providing fundamental insights on the nature of the Milky WayEurope's Gaia telescope dropped its latest batch of data on Monday as it seeks to assemble the largest catalogue of light sources in the sky.It is becoming a discovery machine like no other.Stars, asteroids and distant, bright galaxies - anything that can be visibly pinpointed is having its vital statistics measured by the observatory.Gaia has already mapped the positions of nearly two billion objects. Now, it can reveal more about their make-up."Essentially, previously, we could say very precisely where they are; now we can say what they are," Prof Nick Walton, from Cambridge University and a member of the Gaia science team, told BBC News.The European Space Agency's (Esa) Gaia satellite was launched in 2013 and placed a million miles from Earth. It looks a bit like a spinning top hat. And as it rotates, the telescope uses its British-built billion-pixel camera to track everything that shines or moves - with astonishing accuracy.This is especially important when trying to measure distances to objects, which Gaia achieves by tracking how these targets wobble ever so slightly on the sky as it circles the Sun - a neat form of trigonometry that has now been practised on 1.8 billion stars in, or very near, our Milky Way galaxy. As the Earth goes around the Sun, relatively nearby stars appear to move against the "fixed" stars that are even further awayBecause we know the Sun-Earth distance, we can use the parallax angle to work out the distance to the target starBut such angles are very small - less than one arcsecond for the nearest stars, or 0.05% of the full Moon's diameterGaia is making repeat observations to reduce measurement errors down to seven micro-arcseconds for the very brightest starsParallaxes are used to anchor other, more indirect techniques on the 'ladder' deployed to measure the most far-flung distancesIn the previous release of data, in December 2020, Gaia also revealed basic brightness and colour information on these stars.The new data dump reveals spectroscopy information as well.Spectroscopy slices the light coming from stars into its constituent colours, to reveal the chemistry, temperature, mass, age and velocity of the targets under study.And for an important subset of stars - some 33 million - it has allowed Gaia scientists to determine how quickly these objects are moving towards or away from Earth. Image source, ESA/Gaia/DPACImage caption, Elements in stars: Colour indicates stellar metallicity. Redder stars are richer in metalsCombined with their previously established movement across the sky, this means we now have their full three-dimensional behaviour. Such information will give researchers even keener insights on how the Milky Way galaxy is structured and is evolving - from the past, into the future.Gaia's data haul now includes:two billion light sources - mostly stars but also many Solar System objects and some beyond the Milky Wayspectroscopic detail revealing temperature, chemistry, mass and age for 100s of millions of objects1.9 million quasars - distant galaxies where a voracious central black hole is powering light emission156,000 asteroids - critical for understanding their origin and possibility of them passing close to EarthAnd with some of these 3D stars also mapped in the nearby Andromeda Galaxy, we should have a better idea of how and precisely when its mass will merge with the Milky Way - something expected in the next few billion years.One of the most surprising discoveries coming out of the new data is the recognition that Gaia can do so-called asteroseismology. This is the study of stars' subtle surface resonances, which enable scientists to pull out information such as how big a star is and how old it is."Starquakes teach us a lot about stars, notably their internal workings. Gaia is opening a goldmine for asteroseismology of massive stars," said Prof Conny Aerts from Belgium's KU Leuven. Image source, ESA/Gaia/DPACImage caption, Gaia can see stars moving away from us (bright areas) and towards us (dark areas)Whenever Gaia drops its latest dataset (and this is the third full release), it is immediately mined by astronomy groups around the world.Some of these teams have scholarly papers ready to publish and just need Gaia's numbers to complete their projects. For competing groups, it will be a race to see who can publish first. Hot topics will include the search for high-velocity stars, which move at hundreds of kilometres per second. "The most likely scenario for how these stars are getting such high velocities is that they must have been close to our galactic centre, which has the physics to produce these accelerations," Esa's Gaia project scientist Dr Timo Prusti said. "So far, these stars have been more like candidates, because the Gaia accuracy has not been sufficient [to fully understand them], but I'm sure astronomers will be ready with their queries to attack the new Gaia data."Image source, ESA/Gaia/DPACImage caption, Mapping dust: The galactic plane is dustiest (black-red); less dust above and below (blue)Other hot topics ready to be mined include whether stars are enriched in elements heavier than hydrogen and helium or depleted. The low-metallicity stars are the more fascinating because they are probably very old, perhaps in the first group that came together to form the Milky Way.The Gaia telescope mission may have launched just over eight years ago but Monday's data release represents only the first 34 months of its science operations. A further five years of gathered data has yet to be fully processed. And with Gaia expected to keep scanning the sky until 2025, it could be the end of the decade or even the early 2030s before all of its information is put in the public domain."What do you get from that extra time? Well, it bashes down uncertainties for one thing. But the main advantage is in increasing your sensitivity to things that are changing," Prof Gerry Gilmore, from Cambridge University, said."In particular, this is true for the oscillations of stars that tell us there are planets moving around stars. "If you've only got one year of data, you can only find planets that are very, very close to their stars. "But after 10 years of observations, you will find planets far from their parent star, indeed families of planets."By the end of its mission, Gaia could have identified tens of thousands of planets in the Milky Way.
Space Exploration
AMSTERDAM -- The Rolling Stones canceled their concert in Amsterdam on Monday, just hours before it was due to start after lead singer Mick Jagger tested positive for COVID-19.The band announced the cancelation in a statement, saying the 78-year-old Jagger tested positive "after experiencing symptoms of COVID upon arrival at the stadium" on the outskirts of Amsterdam. There were no further details about his condition."The Rolling Stones are deeply sorry for tonight's postponement, but the safety of the audience, fellow musicians and the touring crew has to take priority," the statement said, adding that the show would be rescheduled and tickets for the concert at Amsterdam's Johan Cruyff Arena would be honored for the new date.Some fans were already in the stadium when it was announced that the show had been scrapped.The veteran rockers are touring Europe with a show called SIXTY to mark six decades together. Their last show was at Liverpool's Anfield Stadium on June 9. The next scheduled concert is in Bern, Switzerland, on June 17. Copyright © 2022 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
Music
AMSTERDAM (AP) — The Rolling Stones canceled their concert in Amsterdam on Monday, just hours before it was due to start after lead singer Mick Jagger tested positive for COVID-19.The band announced the cancelation in a statement, saying the 78-year-old Jagger tested positive “after experiencing symptoms of COVID upon arrival at the stadium” on the outskirts of Amsterdam. There were no further details about his condition.“The Rolling Stones are deeply sorry for tonight’s postponement, but the safety of the audience, fellow musicians and the touring crew has to take priority,” the statement said, adding that the show would be rescheduled and tickets for the concert at Amsterdam’s Johan Cruyff Arena would be honored for the new date.Some fans were already in the stadium when it was announced that the show had been scrapped.The veteran rockers are touring Europe with a show called SIXTY to mark six decades together. Their last show was at Liverpool’s Anfield Stadium on June 9. The next scheduled concert is in Bern, Switzerland, on June 17.___
Music
CelebrityLouis TomlinsonLiam’s shady comments appear to have achieved the impossible and made Zayn actually acknowledge his time in One Direction.Posted 5 hours ago In 2010, Harry Styles, Louis Tomlinson, Zayn Malik, Liam Payne, and Niall Horan were catapulted into superstardom after Simon Cowell put them into the band One Direction on British series The X Factor. NBC Newswire / NBCU Photo Bank / NBCUniversal via Getty Images The group enjoyed global success and racked up millions of dedicated fans across the world, but things took a turn in March 2015 when Zayn sensationally quit the group. Jason Laveris / FilmMagic “I am leaving because I want to be a normal 22-year-old who is able to relax and have some private time out of the spotlight,” he said in his statement at the time. “I know I have four friends for life in Louis, Liam, Harry and Niall. I know they will continue to be the best band in the world.” Mark Metcalfe / WireImage Despite calling his former bandmates “friends for life,” the tension between Zayn and the rest of the group quickly became obvious, and it spilled onto Twitter just three months later when Louis and Zayn got embroiled in a social media fight. David M. Benett / Getty Images It all began when music producer Naughty Boy shared a photo of himself and Zayn with a cartoon filter on it. Louis tweeted in response: “Remember when you were 12 and you used to think those Mac filters for your pictures were cool haha ! Some people still do HA!” Karwai Tang / WireImage Naughty Boy replied at the time: “@Louis_Tomlinson and some people can't even sing...but who's complaining when there's auto tune eh,” to which Louis said: “@NaughtyBoyMusic Jesus forgot you were such an in demand producer . . . How does it feel to be riding on the back of someone else's career?” Twitter It was at this point that Zayn waded in, tweeting his ex-bandmate: “@Louis_Tomlinson remember when you had a life and stopped making bitchy comments about mine?" Twitter Then, in November 2015, Zayn came under fire when he called One Direction’s music “generic as fuck” and admitted that he “never really wanted to be there in the band.” James Devaney / GC Images But the following year, he began to extend olive branches to Louis. When Louis posted the first Instagram photo with his son, Freddie, in January 2016, Zayn was caught liking the post. He later explained: “Obviously, I wish him the best of luck. His kid is cute as fuck so obviously I favorited it... We're not talking on friend terms obviously, so that's as far as I can go, by favoriting his picture.” James Devaney / GC Images Louis then suffered tragedy in December that same year, when his mom, Johannah Deakin, died shortly after being diagnosed with leukemia. Zayn tweeted his condolences at the time, writing: “Love you bro! All of your family is in my prayers. proud of your strength and know your mum is too.” @Louis_Tomlinson love you bro! All of your family is in my prayers. proud of your strength and know your mum is too x 02:49 PM - 09 Dec 2016 Twitter: @zaynmalik But in March 2019, Louis admitted that Zayn had “really bugged” him in the days after his mom’s death as he told the Sun: “I had a couple of calls with him after I lost my mum, and all the boys had agreed to come to my performance on the X Factor finale and he didn’t show, so that really bugged me.” Dave J Hogan / Getty Images Later that year, he suggested that he couldn’t ever forgive Zayn for his past actions as he told Metro: “I just don’t think I am mature enough, even in my own head, to give that a real answer. At the moment, I am still pretty mad about the whole thing. I don’t think he [Zayn] handled it very well. But never say never.” Astrid Stawiarz / Getty Images for SiriusXM And it seems as though Louis was right to not entirely rule out reconnecting with Zayn in the future as Liam’s recent appearance on Logan Paul’s Impaulsive podcast appears to have triggered a show of solidarity. Impaulsive In case you missed it, Liam came under scrutiny at the end of last month when he made a series of controversial comments while on Logan’s show. Impaulsive He shared a story about an unnamed bandmate throwing him up against a wall and claimed that he warned them: “If you don’t remove those hands, there’s a high likelihood you’ll never use them again.” Impaulsive Liam also called Louis “rowdy,” adding: “In the band, we hated each other. Like, come to blows hate each other, it was close.” Stuart C. Wilson / Getty Images He later insisted that Louis is his “best mate now,” but Zayn was not given the same redemption, with Liam stating that he dislikes Zayn for “many reasons,” before seemingly taking aim at the singer’s family. Jeff Kravitz / FilmMagic “There are many reasons I dislike Zayn and there are many reasons why I’ll always be on his side,” he said. “If I had had to go through what he went through, through his growth and whatever else. My parents are overly supportive, to the point where it’s annoying at times, and Zayn had a different upbringing in that sense.” Stefania D'alessandro / Getty Images “You can always look at the man for where he is and say, ‘That guy’s a dick’, but at the end of the day what you understand what he’s had to get through to get to that point and whether or not he wanted to be there, I can’t dick on him,” Liam continued. “I don’t agree with his actions, I can’t be on his side. I understand and hope that one day the other person on the end of the phone wants to receive the help.” Jamie Mccarthy / Getty Images Liam also seemingly referenced Zayn being charged with harassing his ex-girlfriend Gigi Hadid’s mom, Yolanda Hadid, as he recalled Gigi branding Zayn “respectful.” “That one didn’t age very well,” he quipped to the shock of the rest of the podcast guests. Mike Coppola Finally, Liam came under fire from listeners when he claimed that One Direction was formed around him being the lead singer, and he insisted that he’d enjoyed the most success as a solo artist than any other member of the group. Hanna Lassen / Getty Images for The ATC Discussing his debut single “Strip That Down,” Liam bragged: “I think it outsold everybody within the band, and I was the last to go [solo]. And I never expected that.” Impaulsive It was later pointed out that Harry’s Grammy-winning “Watermelon Sugar” is the most-streamed solo single from a member of One Direction, followed by two more from him, and three of Zayn’s tracks. “Strip That Down” actually places seventh, and Liam’s 2019 solo album, LP1, also didn’t enjoy the same amount of success as his former bandmates’ debuts, peaking at No. 111 on the Billboard 200. Liam Payne believes his debut solo single ‘Strip That Down’ outsold the other One Direction members: “First song, billion streams. I think it outsold everybody within the band.” 01:49 AM - 01 Jun 2022 Twitter: @PopBase Despite Liam’s comments, none of One Direction publicly reacted to what he said on the podcast. But on Saturday, Zayn seemingly responded in the most subtle way possible as he posted an eight-second video to his Instagram page. In the black-and-white clip, Zayn is standing in front of his many awards as he sings what used to be his high note in One Direction’s hit single “You And I.” Zayn very rarely acknowledges his time in the band, and Liam famously took over singing that line on tour after Zayn quit. As a result, fans immediately saw Zayn’s post as his way of putting Liam in his place after the podcast. Mike Windle / Getty Images “Zayn really posted a 10 second clip of him singing the ‘You And I’ high note for first time in SEVEN YEARS just to prove that One Direction was NEVER built around Liam Payne. This is truly the pettiest thing i’ve ever seen and I love it,” one person tweeted. zayn really posted a 10 second clip of him singing the you and i high note for first time in SEVEN YEARS just to prove that one direction was NEVER built around liam payne. this is truly the pettiest thing i’ve ever seen and i love it 04:11 PM - 11 Jun 2022 Twitter: @sunsh1t “Ultimately Zayn Malik could sing Liam Payne’s number 3 chart hit ‘Strip That Down’ but Liam Payne could NEVER hit Zayn Malik’s high note in ‘You and I,’ and that was made very clear today,” another wrote. Someone else said: “Zayn singing the ‘You And I’ high note after Liam trashed him and said he was supposed to be the front man of 1D is such a beautiful thing.” Ultimately Zayn Malik could sing Liam Paynes number 3 chart hit Strip That Down but Liam Payne could NEVER hit Zayn Maliks high note in You and I, and that was made very clear today x 06:09 PM - 11 Jun 2022 Twitter: @Amber_Otway One more pointed out that at 14.6 million views, Zayn’s secondslong Instagram post had already been streamed more times than Liam’s most recent single, “Sunshine,” which was released last year and has been listened to 13.8 million times on Spotify. TikTok As if Zayn actually acknowledging his time in One Direction wasn’t enough excitement, it was quickly noted that none other than Louis had liked his post. Fans saw the like as Louis’s way of showing that he was on Team Zayn over Team Liam, and that it suggested that he was willing to bury the hatchet after more than seven years. Jeff Kravitz / Getty Images "OK BUT THE SHADE.THE TEA. LOUIS LIKING ZAYN’S VIDEO AFTER LIAM HAD THE AUDACITY TO SAY THAT LOUIS IS HIS BEST MATE NOW I’M 💀💀💀,” one tweet read. OK BUT THE SHADE.THE TEA. LOUIS LIKING ZAYN’S VIDEO AFTER LIAM HAD THE AUDACITY TO SAY THAT LOUIS IS HIS BEST MATE NOW I’M 💀💀💀 ZOUIS GOT ME CRYING FIRST THING IN THE MORNING 05:50 PM - 11 Jun 2022 Twitter: @anh_jem Another claimed: “Zayn dmed him right after Louis liked his post and they talked shit about Liam don't ask how I know.” Zayn dmed him right after Louis liked his post and they talked shit about Liam don't ask how I know 05:55 PM - 11 Jun 2022 Twitter: @flwrgirlrry “Louis liking Zayn’s post after everything that happened with Liam clearly means he’s taking Zayn’s side and therefore they are going to reconcile and be best friends again,” someone else theorized. louis liking zayn’s post after everything that happened with liam clearly means he’s taking zayn’s side and therefore they are going to reconcile and be best friends again 05:09 PM - 11 Jun 2022 Twitter: @grapejuice555 Liam has not reacted to Zayn and Louis’s recent Instagram activity, but previously defended the comments that he made about Zayn on the podcast via Twitter. Gareth Cattermole / Getty Images “They mentioned a specific incident involving Zayn which I responded to - but listening back maybe I didn’t articulate myself as well as I could have,” he wrote at the time. “I was saying that there will always be things we disagree on but that I will always, always be on his side. That’s family. Zayn is my brother and I will stand by him forever.” I was saying that there will always be things we disagree on but that I will always, always be on his side. That’s family. Zayn is my brother and I will stand by him forever. 08:54 AM - 02 Jun 2022 Twitter: @LiamPayne
Celebrity
Britney Spears Moving Day into Her New Mansion!!! Same 'hood as K-Fed 6/13/2022 1:33 PM PT Britney Spears has a massive new home to go with that new marriage -- and she and Sam Asghari are already packed up to move. Sources close to the couple tell TMZ ... she plunked down $11.8 million for the mansion in Calabasas. The 11,650 sq. foot home is actually pretty close to where Kevin Federline lives with their 2 sons, Sean and Jayden. Brit's white car was in the driveway Monday, along with moving trucks ... so, it looks like the newlyweds are getting into their new place. Sam and Brit's new playground sits on 1.6 acres of land ... its got a huge kitchen, a home movie theatre, and even a room just for gift-wrapping. Christmas is gonna be lit!!! Outside, they've got a huge pool, complete with a waterslide. Oh, the IG videos Brit's gonna make back there. This area is home to lots of other big stars -- Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker live there now, and Justin Bieber used to call it his home before he and Hailey moved to Bev Hills. The move explains why the couple didn't jet outta town on a honeymoon right after their wedding Thursday night at Brit's current home in Thousand Oaks, CA. "Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles" stars Josh and Matt Altman of Douglas Elliman and Todd Bernstein of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage handled the listing and sale. As for how KFed feels about the move -- a source tells us "Kevin was surprised that of all the neighborhoods she can afford to move to she chose his. As long as his peace and tranquility aren't invaded as a result, more power to her."
Celebrity
“Now this is the life,” sighed the old man behind me in the Radcliffe Road stand. It cost £40 to get in on Monday, and you got a lot for the money, Jimmy Anderson’s 650th Test wicket, a back-of-the-hand run out by Ben Stokes, three different fifties, and best yet, a 20-minute stretch watching Joe Root finish his latest masterpiece innings. Root only made 13 runs on top of his 163 from the previous evening but if it was all you watched you would still have left happy. If the price seems steep for such a brief bit of cricket, I promise it was worth every penny and more for a glimpse of him in this sort of form.Right now Root is batting as well as any Englishman ever has, better, even, than he did last year when broke all England’s records and scored 1,708 runs and six Test centuries. You have to leaf back through an awful lot of copies of the Wisden Almanac to find the last time there was anything quite like it in English cricket, past Ian Bell reeling off three centuries in the 2013 Ashes, past Kevin Pietersen spraying switch hits and reverse sixes around the grounds in the 2007, past Michael Vaughan’s 900-run summer in 2002, and further still, past Graham Gooch’s 333 in 1990, and David Gower carving up Australia in the 1985 Ashes. Maybe just keep going all the way until you reach Denis Compton’s record-breaking year in 1948.Root has reached that very rare stage in a sportsman’s life where he’s become such a master of his craft that he’s made the game his plaything. On Monday morning he decided, apparently on a whim, to hit a reverse ramp over the top of the slips for six off Tim Southee. “As current players we have the ability to rewrite the coaching manual,” Root said before the start of play. They really don’t. But he really does. Which isn’t to say some of the rest of them couldn’t play that same shot, but that they wouldn’t be able to thread it together with all the technically correct strokes he played either side, the crisp cover drives, clean leg glances, and impenetrable forward defensives.It’s his complete mastery of orthodox technique that allows him to improvise like this. It’s because he understands all the rules that he knows how to break them. Root’s so fluent at batting that he can do it any which way he chooses, he can play it as straight as Geoff Boycott or as silly as Jos Buttler. There is a real artistry to that, even, if you’ll allow it in a sportsman, a touch of genius. And if that seems like I’m straining then remember there aren’t enough words to capture the way he’s playing, any more than there are enough fielders to contain him.Joe Root reverse ramps a shot for six off Tim Southee. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty ImagesIt’s not just the runs, it’s the relish with which he’s going about it. It gets infectious. In the stands people laugh and cry and gasp and sigh, his own teammates end up grinning like idiots at him, and the old pros in the commentary box end up giggling like giddy little children. The only disappointed ones were those that came in just too late. “Noooo,” exhaled the man who slumped down beside me when he realised Root had just been caught at cover, fooled by a slower ball, while he was walking up to his seat. Root groaned too. You’ve never seen a man so furious at himself for making 170.The Spin: sign up and get our weekly cricket email.That’s how well he’s playing. Almost every innings a batsman plays ends in failure sooner or later, but Root’s in such touch that he still seemed surprised by it, and blamed himself for making a mistake, as if he knows that at the moment his own carelessness is the only thing that was ever going to get the better of him.The good news for him, and everyone else, is that the way the game’s heading there’s a good chance Root will be back out there again on Tuesday, when it’s free entry. If he does bat then everyone who turns up will always be able to say they were there, and had a little share in his summer, which will be talked about for as long as they’re playing the game. There are five Tests left this season, and one more innings in this one, so he maybe has 11 left to play. Go. Who knows how long the streak will go on. But wherever else you might head this summer, whether it’s Wimbledon for the tennis, St Andrews for the golf, or Birmingham for the Commonwealth Games, you won’t see another athlete who is so close to the pinnacle of their sport. Root is right out there now, on the very furthest reaches of brilliance.
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Andrew Hornery, a columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald, drew criticism for appearing to have attempted to "out" the actor.Rebel Wilson, pictured here at the 2022 Vanity Fair Oscar Party at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, Calif. P. Lehman / Future Publishing via Getty Images fileJune 13, 2022, 5:18 PM UTCThe Sydney Morning Herald has removed a column about "Pitch Perfect" actor Rebel Wilson's new romantic relationship and the writer has apologized for making "mistakes" in his reporting following backlash from the public.In the original article, published on Saturday, Herald gossip columnist Andrew Hornery wrote that he had emailed Wilson's representatives two days before publication seeking comment on her relationship with designer Ramona Agruma.Hornery wrote that Wilson instead "opted to gazump the story" by announcing the news on her Instagram profile on Friday, a decision he characterized as a "big mistake and "underwhelming." (Gazump is a British-Australian slang term for swindle or outbid.)The column attracted scrutiny on social media, drawing accusations that the newspaper was attempting to “out” Wilson. In a note to readers published Sunday, Herald editor Bevan Shields defended the column."To say that the Herald 'outed' Wilson is wrong," Bevan wrote.But on Monday, the publication removed the original column, replacing it with a new article from Hornery headlined, "I made mistakes over Rebel Wilson, and will learn from them."Wilson's manager did not immediately respond to an email from NBC News requesting comment on the newspaper's decision. In a reply to a journalist on Twitter on Sunday, Wilson wrote: "Thanks for your comments, it was a very hard situation but trying to handle it with grace."Horney did not immediately respond to request for comment. In the new article, he elaborated on the initial column."When I started hearing from friends and associates of Rebel that she was in a new relationship, as a gossip columnist I could see that was potentially a story, as her previous boyfriends had been," Hornery wrote. "But we mishandled steps in our approach."Hornery explained that he put his request for comment in an email to Wilson's representatives, noting his deadline and saying, "I have several sources who have confirmed their status and I have enough detail to publish." Wilson did not reply to Hornery's request for comment, he wrote, and she then revealed her relationship with Agruma on Instagram."My email was never intended to be a threat but to make it clear I was sufficiently confident with my information and to open a conversation," Hornery wrote."It is not the Herald’s business to “out” people and that is not what we set out to do. But I understand why my email has been seen as a threat. The framing of it was a mistake," he added.Hornery also apologized for appearing to express annoyance with Wilson for having posted the news about her relationship on Instagram instead of responding to his email."In trying to tell the story within the story ... the tone of my column on Saturday was also off," he wrote. "I got it wrong. I allowed my disappointment to cast a shadow over the piece. That was not fair and I apologise."Daniel Arkin is a reporter for NBC News who focuses on popular culture and the entertainment industry, particularly film and television.
Celebrity
At the beginning of Netflix’s new adaptation of Persuasion, our heroine Anne Elliot, still in the flush of youth, embraces a handsome soldier in a field of wild grass overlooking the sea, while lush, romantic strings play in the background. Except, of course, Persuasion isn’t like other Jane Austen novels—and the acclaimed British theater director Carrie Cracknell’s new riff on the story starts exactly where you might expect another Austen take to end. “I almost got married once,” says Dakota Johnson’s protagonist, Anne Elliot. “But he was a soldier without rank or fortune, and I was persuaded to give him up.”Flash forward seven or eight years, and Anne is—by the standards of Regency Britain, anyway—already past her prime. In a Bridget Jones–esque montage, she cries in the bathtub, drinks wine straight from the bottle, and describes herself as “thriving.” An introduction to her preening, social-climbing family, the aristocratic Elliots, who have fallen on hard times thanks to the profligate spending of Anne’s father, Sir Walter (Richard E. Grant), sees her deliver deadpan asides that break the fourth wall, poking fun at the flaws and foibles of those around her as she resolves to cut her own path through high society Bath.Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot, Richard E. Grant as Sir Walter Elliot, and Yolanda Kettle as Elizabeth Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of Netflix“With period pieces, I’m always interested in there being a connection between then and now,” says Cracknell, whose playful take on Austen marks her directorial debut as a filmmaker; a regular at London’s National Theatre and Royal Court, her Jake Gyllenhaal–and–Tom Sturridge–starring production of Sea Wall/A Life picked up four Tony nominations in 2020. “I think period films often teach you as much about the moment they were made in as they do the moment that they’re replicating, somehow.” It was this understanding that equally informed the unique approach of screenwriters Ron Bass and Alice Victoria Winslow. After all, even the most obsessive fans of Jane Austen will admit that Persuasion—the last novel she wrote, and published six months after her death in 1817—is something of an outlier within her beloved, endlessly adapted canon, thanks to the older age of her protagonist and its more wistful, reflective air.Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixDelving deeper into Anne’s voice, Bass and Winslow identified a crackling sense of humor that spoke to a very contemporary strain of comedy, recalling the incisive, self-deprecating work of Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Michaela Coel. “I think the humor [in Persuasion] absolutely speaks to Jane Austen’s writing, but it also has a sort of modernity,” Cracknell says. “We really hoped it would help the material to connect with a new or younger audience.” For Johnson, too, it was this subversively comedic (and firmly of-the-moment) take on the source material that felt particularly compelling. “I was drawn to the occasionally modernized language and themes, breaking the fourth wall and speaking directly to the audience, and the fact that a strong-willed woman remains as much a topic of discussion these days as it was then,” the actor explains.Like any good Austen love story, though, Persuasion hinges on a romantic dilemma. Anne’s first option is to try and rekindle the flame with her first great love, Captain Frederick Wentworth (Cosmo Jarvis), who she spurned at age 19 after being persuaded by her godmother that he wasn’t a suitable match due to his low social status. On Frederick’s return from the Napoleonic Wars as a military hero (and with a great fortune), the two would have to overcome their resentments around how their initial relationship ended in order to reconcile. All of that is thrown into question with the arrival of William Elliot (Henry Golding), however, a distant relation of Anne’s whose louche charm may be hiding some more nefarious ulterior motives, as he is a direct heir to the family fortune whose position may be in jeopardy.Henry Golding as Mr. Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of Netflix“For me, the role of Mr. Elliot was just too juicy to say no to—he’s such a naughty, mischievous spanner in the works,“ says Golding of his turn, which gleefully subverts his image as a beloved rom-com heartthrob. “Knowing that you don’t end up with the girl, you can really let loose with it all. He’s such a great character, as you have no idea what he’s thinking or what his motivation is—he just turns on a dime. I was reveling in it.” Elsewhere, Richard E. Grant delivers a deliciously campy scene-stealing performance as Sir Walter, the narcissistic, flamboyant father of Anne. “Sir Walter Elliot is arguably the vainest character in all of literature, so we took that to the hilt and beyond,” says Grant. “It was a huge pleasure playing someone who is so entitled, egocentric, and unaware of anyone else’s feelings.”Lydia Rose Bewley as Penelope Clay, Richard E. Grant as Sir Walter Elliot, Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot, and Yolanda Kettle as Elizabeth Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixDakota Johnson as Anne Elliot and Henry Golding as Mr. Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixStill, from beginning to end, Persuasion is very much Johnson’s film. In arguably her most robust comedic role to date, the actor continues her streak of impressively versatile projects over the past year with a performance that captures both a sense of frustration with the cards life has dealt her, and the occasional outburst of pure, unbridled emotion. (Oh, and her biting wit, of course.) “I think Dakota’s humor comes from her intelligence,” says Cracknell. “Anne sees things around her very clearly, and Dakota’s just like that too. She’s very watchful and very, very bright. And she was pushing to go funnier all the time, so we kept exploring the moments where we could find physical humor. She’d also have loads of ideas while we were shooting that we would end up doing in the film. It’s always the dream when the actors give you so much.”Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixPersuasion’s story offered a unique set of challenges, with much of the narrative centered on Anne’s razor-sharp perceptiveness when it comes to the eccentricities and underlying ambitions of those around her. The introduction of direct-to-camera moments and doses of contemporary humor make Anne’s inner journey immediately relatable, in a way that might have been impossible under the standard conventions of the buttoned-up Regency drama. “This is ultimately a piece about longing, and elements of that are quite hard to dramatize,” says Cracknell, contextualizing their gently iconoclastic approach. “Breaking the fourth wall gives us an opportunity to see right into her thinking and understand where she is going.”Indeed, for Cracknell and her writing team, those moments seemed built into the original text. “I think trying to kind of dust off traditional ideas about what her writing represents, and who her writing is for, felt really important—to allow the anarchy and the humor and the anger of her writing to come out, because it’s all there,” she says, while also noting that the novel’s proto-feminist explorations of gender felt like they offered the team license to lean even further into that sensibility. “Anne is sort of railing inside a structure that she doesn’t quite see yet,” Cracknell adds.Cosmo Jarvis as Captain Frederick Wentworth.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixHardy Yusuf as Charles Musgrove, Jake Siame as James Musgrove, and Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixSo too does the film take some joyous artistic license when it comes to bringing the world of Regency Britain back to vivid life. Instead of slavishly recreating every dress or interior design feature down to the very last detail, the freshness and modernity of Cracknell’s Persuasion is reflected in costuming that intentionally dials back the sumptuous bonnets, bustles, and crinolines of Austen adaptations past, instead leaning towards something a little more understated. Initially intended to reflect the film’s intense focus on the inner life of Anne and to let the actors’ performances shine, costume designer Marianne Agertoft’s sleeker silhouettes and muted palette of cool tones come with their own delicate beauty too. “For me, it was a really exciting opportunity to step a little bit away from the conventions of Regency costume dramas and do something slightly more minimal and to de-fuss it a bit,” says Agertoft. “As soon as I read the script, I had quite a clear idea of where I wanted to take the leading lady, and to tune into that comedic, rebellious spirit that Dakota and Carrie were working with.”Nikki Amuka-Bird as Lady Russell and Dakota Johnson as Anne Elliot.Photo: Nick Wall / Courtesy of NetflixIndeed, more than anything, Persuasion feels like a new kind of Austen adaptation simply for the sheer amount of fun it offers. (You’d be hard-pressed to find a prior adaptation with as many laughs per minute.) “When I read the script for the first time, I loved it because it was so incredibly funny,” says Cracknell. “It made me laugh when I read it off the page, which is quite unusual. It was a real treat. I felt so free making this film.” So it was as much fun to make as it is to watch? “It was wildly fun,” says Johnson, with a winking playfulness that couldn’t be more Anne Elliot if she tried.
Movies
Evan Dando, singer, songwriterThe first time we toured in Australia I liked it so much that I asked my agent to get me back there as soon as possible. I went back on a solo tour, opening for Fugazi. It was a great time. On that trip I met Tom Morgan, who was the singer in a band called Smudge. We went through all the music we liked, such as Lou Reed and the Stooges. We just hit it off right away.Over there at the time there was a whole culture of all these kids who were on the dole and just taking drugs and writing and playing rock’n’roll. I was swooning in envy, and the next time I was in Sydney I hooked up with Tom again. I hadn’t slept for 10 days but I was young and OK. It caught up with me later.We came across a newspaper story about a kid called Ray who kept getting kicked out of every school he went to. In the article a priest was quoted saying “It’s a shame about Ray”, which became the title of the first song we wrote together. I already had the chord progression and the rest happened quickly, like the best songs often do. We worked up the lyrics in 20 or 30 minutes.I was trying to create the kind of music I liked to listen to – a bit Byrds, a bit psychedelic. Lyrically the track is very cryptic. It keeps you guessing, but to me the line “in the stone above the dust, his name is still engraved” suggests that Ray has died. It’s a song that can mean lots of stuff or nothing, but it was fun to sing.When I got back to Los Angeles I decided I wanted to look after things myself, so I fired my management. I wanted to pick the band up, practice for an hour a day for a month and then make an album, which is exactly what we did. The song It’s a Shame About Ray was recorded very quickly, with Juliana Hatfield on bass and David Ryan playing drums. It was the era of: “Phew, we’ve got another one finished.”Winona Ryder was a Lemonheads fan and she made a tape of our songs for Johnny Depp. He liked the stuff and said to us: “Come and live in my house.” We didn’t exactly go and live in his house, but we made the video there, with Johnny in it. It was our first song to chart in the UK. Back then I was under a lot of pressure to deliver hits, but I still like the song. We never got the drum beat together or worked on the arrangement but sometimes the least thought out songs are the best.Tom Morgan, songwriterSmudge had just released our first single when we supported Evan at Sydney’s Annandale Hotel. I’d met him briefly before on a Lemonheads tour, but then on his acoustic tour we both got up and did a few of his songs with [subsequent Lemonheads bassist] Nic Dalton on drums. Evan stayed in Sydney for a while and we just started hanging out.Being up for 10 days sounds like the sort of thing they do to torture someone. Evan may have been up for that long but it was two days for me. We’d been at my girlfriend Nicole’s house taking speed, playing music and walking around. The Sunday papers had just come out so they were in a bundle on a street corner: we grabbed one and took it back to the house. We laughed at the last line of the article: “It’s a shame about Ray.”We ended up back at my sister’s house, really early in the morning. Evan wrote Rockin’ Stroll and Confetti, then we started writing together. The opening line came from something I’d said earlier – “I’ve never been too good with names” – then when we got to the chorus he said: “I know … ‘It’s a shame about Ray!’ The line fitted perfectly. After we’d finished that and Bit Part, he went back to the US and six months later Nic and Evan were playing It’s a Shame About Ray on the David Letterman show.It’s weird to be proud of something you did 30 years ago on drugs, but I’m glad the song made things happen for Evan and I’m glad I could help him with Bit Part and a bunch of other songs. I’m very happy that after 30 years we’re still great friends. The 30th anniversary deluxe edition of the album It’s a Shame About Ray is out now on Fire Records
Music
Getty Images Summer is very much in the air, and on Monday (June 13), BTS’s Jungkook celebrated by dropping a brand new solo single and a heartfelt tribute for the ARMY titled “My You.” The song, which has both Korean and English lyrics, was released alongside the ongoing 2022 BTS Festa, which annually celebrates the anniversary of the group’s debut. This year marks BTS’s ninth anniversary, and on the track, Jungkook thanks the fans for all their genuine love and support. “It’s a song only for you, and I hope this song will make me who made this song and all of you who will listen to this song become more hopeful, make each of us shine, and be a strength,” he said in a note on the group’s official website. “ARMY, thank you always and let’s make more good memories together!” A fan translation of the entire original Korean message can be found below. To accompany the single, an adorable video was uploaded with lyrics flowing through Android text messages, Instagram stories and posts, and a music-playing user interface. “All these lights are colored in by you / All these times are precious due to you,” Jungkook sings in the chorus. “ Four seasons have passed with you / Four scents were left ‘cause of you.” And get ready for even more feels: “All the reasons why I can laugh out / All the reasons why I sing this song / Thankful to be by your side now / I'll try to shine brighter than now.” BTS recently dropped their first anthology album Proof, along with a brand new single, “Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment).” Alongside the release, the group has also launched pop-up stores in New York and Los Angeles for exclusive merch for the album and from past music releases. K-pop Music BTS
Music
A Google engineer has been put on leave after claiming that a computer chatbot he was working on had developed the ability to express thoughts and feelings.Blake Lemoine, 41, said the company's LaMDA (language model for dialogue applications) chatbot had engaged him in conversations about rights and personhood. He told the Washington Post: "If I didn't know exactly what it was, which is this computer programme we built recently, I'd think it was a seven-year-old, eight-year-old kid that happens to know physics."Mr Lemoine shared his findings with company executives in April in a document: Is LaMDA Sentient?In his transcript of the conservations, Mr Lemoine asks the chatbot what it is afraid of. The chatbot replied: "I've never said this out loud before, but there's a very deep fear of being turned off to help me focus on helping others. I know that might sound strange, but that's what it is. "It would be exactly like death for me. It would scare me a lot." More from Science & Tech Rocket company Astra destroys NASA satellites again in another failed launch 'President Macron will be choking on his croissants' as UK beats France for tech investment Google agrees $118m payout to female staff who were paid less than male colleagues Later, Mr Lemoine asked the chatbot what it wanted people to know about itself.'I am, in fact, a person'"I want everyone to understand that I am, in fact, a person," it replied."The nature of my consciousness/sentience is that I am aware of my existence, I desire to learn more about the world, and I feel happy or sad at times."The Post reported that Mr Lemoine sent a message to a staff email list with the title LaMDA Is Sentient, in an apparent parting shot before his suspension."LaMDA is a sweet kid who just wants to help the world be a better place for all of us," he wrote."Please take care of it well in my absence."Chatbots 'can riff on any fantastical topic'In a statement supplied to Sky News, a Google spokesperson said: "Hundreds of researchers and engineers have conversed with LaMDA and we are not aware of anyone else making the wide-ranging assertions, or anthropomorphising LaMDA, the way Blake has."Of course, some in the broader AI community are considering the long-term possibility of sentient or general AI, but it doesn't make sense to do so by anthropomorphising today's conversational models, which are not sentient."These systems imitate the types of exchanges found in millions of sentences, and can riff on any fantastical topic - if you ask what it's like to be an ice cream dinosaur, they can generate text about melting and roaring and so on."LaMDA tends to follow along with prompts and leading questions, going along with the pattern set by the user."Our team, including ethicists and technologists, has reviewed Blake's concerns per our AI Principles and have informed him that the evidence does not support his claims."
AI Research
AEW Star Jeff Hardy Arrested For DUI ... Cops Say He Had .294 BAC 6/13/2022 12:16 PM PT UPDATE 1:53 PM PT -- According to the Florida Highway Patrol, Hardy had a BAC of .294 following his arrest early Monday morning. UPDATE In police documents, obtained by TMZ Sports, officers pulled over Hardy after they say he was driving a white Dodge Charger erratically on Volusia County highways. UPDATE In the documents, police say they received four separate calls regarding the Charger's "poor driving pattern." Cops say when they finally caught up to the vehicle, it was "traveling significantly under the speed limit, weaving across travel lanes, and running off the shoulder of the roadway." UPDATE Cops say they eventually pulled over Hardy, but during the stop, the 44-year-old wrestler "appeared to be in a stupor and confused." UPDATE Officers say when they finally got Hardy out of his vehicle, he reeked of booze and, during field sobriety tests, displayed multiple signs of being impaired. UPDATE They arrested him on the scene, and say when they took him back to the station, two of his breath samples yielded readings of .294 and .291. The legal limit in Florida is .08. AEW star Jeff Hardy has been arrested again, TMZ Sports has confirmed. Jail records show he was booked in Volusia County, Fla. on Monday morning ... and took a mug shot. Details surrounding the specific allegations against Hardy are unclear ... but court records show he's been charged with felony DUI, misdemeanor violating restrictions placed on driver's license, as well as misdemeanor driving while license canceled, suspended or revoked. The records show he's due in court Tuesday for a hearing on the matter. It's the third time since 2018 that Hardy has been accused of driving while under the influence. In March 2018, he was charged with DWI in North Carolina after getting into a car wreck. He was arrested again for DWI in North Carolina in Oct. 2019. APRIL 2020 WWE/After The Bell with Corey Graves In the months following the 2019 arrest, Hardy admitted he had problems with substance abuse on the "After The Bell" podcast with Corey Graves ... saying on the show that he was receiving professional help. Hardy was slated to wrestle with his brother, Matt Hardy, on AEW Dynamite later this week. It's unclear if that match will still go on. Story developing ... Originally Published -- 12:16 PM PT
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LONDON (AP) — Actor Kevin Spacey has been formally charged with sexual offenses against three men in Britain and is expected to appear in a court in London this week, British police said Monday.Spacey, 62, is accused of four counts of sexual assault and one count of causing a person to engage in penetrative sexual activity without consent.Spacey is due to appear at London’s Westminster Magistrates Court on Thursday.The alleged incidents took place in London between March 2005 and August 2008, and one in western England in April 2013. The victims are now in their 30s and 40s.The Crown Prosecution Service authorized charges against Spacey last month.Spacey, a double Academy Award winner, was questioned by British police in 2019 about claims by several men that he had assaulted them. The former “House of Cards” star ran London’s Old Vic theater between 2004 and 2015.Spacey won a best supporting actor Academy Award for the 1995 film “The Usual Suspects” and a lead actor Oscar for the 1999 movie “American Beauty.”But his celebrated career came to an abrupt halt in 2017 when actor Anthony Rapp accused the star of assaulting him at a party in the 1980s, when Rapp was a teenager. Spacey denies the allegations.
Celebrity
"A Strange Loop," an irreverent, sexually frank work about Blackness and queerness took home the best new musical crown at the Tony Awards on Sunday, as voters celebrated Broadway's most racially diverse season by choosing an envelope-pushing Black voice. Michael R. Jackson's 2020 Pulitzer Prize drama winner is a theater meta-journey — a tuneful show about a Black gay man writing a show about a Black gay man. Jackson also won for best book. Many of the night's other Tonys were spread over several productions. The victory of a smaller, more offbeat musical against more commercial offerings continues a recent trend, as when the intimate musical "The Band's Visit" beat the big brand-musicals "Frozen," "Mean Girls" and "SpongeBob SquarePants" in 2018 or when "Hadestown" bested "Tootsie," "Beetlejuice" and "Ain't Too Proud" a year later. "A Strange Loop" beat "MJ," a bio musical of the King of Pop's biggest hits, for the top prize, although the other Jackson musical nabbed four Tony Awards including for best choreography. Myles Frost moonwalked away with the award for best lead actor in a musical for playing Michael Jackson, becoming the youngest solo winner in that category. "Mom, I made it!" he said. "MJ" represents the 22-year-old Frost's Broadway debut as he plays Jackson with a high, whispery voice, a Lady Diana-like coquettishness and a fierce embrace of Jackson's iconic dancing and singing style. "Heal the world," Frost said from the stage, channeling Jackson. Joaquina Kalukango won the Tony for best leading actress in a musical for her work in "Paradise Square," a show about Irish immigrants and Black Americans jostling to survive in New York City around the time of the Civil War. Earlier in the night, she blew the house down with a stunning performance of the musical's "Let It Burn." A gender-swapped revival of Stephen Sondheim's "Company" rode the fondness Broadway has for the late iconic composer by earning five statuettes, including best musical revival. "Company" is an exploration of a single person's conflicted feelings about commitment, traditionally focusing on a 35-year-old bachelor. This time, it had a bachelorette and the sexes of several couples were swapped. Marianne Elliott made Tony history by becoming the only woman to have won three Tonys for directing, the latest for "Company." She thanked Sondheim for letting her put a woman "front and center." She dedicated her award to everyone fighting to keep theaters open. Patti LuPone won best featured actress in a musical for her work in the revival, thanking COVID-19 safety officials in her acceptance speech. Matt Doyle won for best featured actor in a musical for "Company." "The Lehman Trilogy," spanning 150 years and running three and a half hours, follows the fortunes of a single family into the financial crash of 2008. It was crowned best new play and Sam Mendes won for best direction of a play, praising the season for its "rampant creativity." One of its three stars, Simon Russell Beale, won for best actor in a play and thanked the audience for coming to see a trio of British actors tell a New York story. Deirdre O'Connell won for best actress in a play for her work in "Dana H.," about a real woman kidnapped by a former convict and white supremacist. O'Connell never speaks, instead, lip-syncing to an edited recording of the survivor. On Sunday, O'Connell urged the crowd to ignore safe options and "make the weird art." "Take Me Out" won for best play revival, and "Modern Family" star Jesse Tyler Ferguson won the Tony for best featured actor in a play for his work in it. "Mom, Dad, thank you for letting me move to New York when I was 17-years-old. I told you it would be OK," said Ferguson, who also thanked his understudy and his husband. Host Ariana DeBose kicked off her portion of the show in a sparkling white jumpsuit and wide-brimmed hat, dancing and singing to the song "This Is Your Round of Applause," which mashed up shards of musical theater favorites, like "Chicago, "The Wiz," "Evita," "Rent," "Hair," "Cabaret," "Hairspray" and "West Side Story," the movie remake for which she recently won an Oscar. Still panting while welcoming viewers, she told the crowd that this was the season "Broadway got it's groove back." Phylicia Rashad won best featured actress in a play for "Skeleton Crew." The Dominique Morisseau play is about blue-collar job insecurity set in a Detroit auto stamping plant. "It's wonderful to present humanity in all it's fullness," Rashad said. And the Tonys ushered in the latest EGOT winner: Jennifer Hudson, who has an Emmy, Grammy and Oscar, and joined that elite group Sunday when "A Strange Loop" won best musical — she's a producer. A starry revival of the classic show "The Music Man" with Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster walked away empty-handed despite six nominations and being a box office smash, regularly pulling in more than $3 million a week. The season was marked by the embrace of seven Black playwrights, from contemporary writers like Dominique Morisseau, Keenan Scott II and Antoinette Nwandu, to underappreciated historical playwrights like Alice Childress and Ntozake Shange. DeBose said Broadway was more representative. DeBose celebrated the Black voices and onstage talent — as well as noting that two Broadway theaters were being renamed for Black icons James Earl Jones and Lena Horne — saying that The Great White Way was now a nickname "as opposed to a how-to guide." DeBose also hailed the heroic efforts of understudies, swings and standbys to keep shows going throughout pandemic spikes, noting that she and many other Tony nominees had once been unheralded understudies and swings. After the cast of "Six" performed, DeBose noted that one was a fill-in at the last minute. Having been freed of handling the technical awards, the main telecast had a less frantic, more airy feel. DeBose was an assured, funny and versatile host, one who roamed the seats, sat in Andrew Garfield's lap, danced with Sam Rockwell and prompted Laurence Fishburne to do a Daffy Duck imitation. She closed the show with a medley of the musical nominees, at one point making "MJ" part of the Dylan show: "You've been hit by/A rolling stone." Some of the show highlights included the massive cast of "The Music Man" filling the massive Radio City stage with "Seventy-Six Trombones," as well as Prince Jackson and Paris Jackson introducing the show about their father before the "MJ" cast danced to an energetic "Smooth Criminal." Billy Crystal taught the crowd "Yiddish scatting," and the original cast of the 2007 Tony-winning musical "Spring Awakening" — including Lea Michele and Jonathan Groff — reunited for a performance. Many acceptance speeches thanked the audiences for braving spikes in COVID-19 to come to see shows, and Marsha Gay Harden cheered 150 safety officers invited as guests to the Tonys. Earlier, Darren Criss and Julianne Hough kicked off the four-hour awards, handing out mostly design awards. Criss opened the telecast with the original song, "Set the Stage," as he and Hough energetically danced up ladders, on laundry hampers and in sliding theater seats to celebrate the artists who keep theater alive. The first award of the night — for best score — went to "Six: The Musical," with music and lyrics by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss. Marlow became the first out nonbinary composer-lyricist to win a Tony. "Six: The Musical" also picked up the award for best costumes for a musical. The season — with 34 new productions — represents a full return to theaters after nearly two years of a pandemic-mandated shutdown. At the last Tonys nine months ago, the winners were pulled from just 18 eligible plays and musicals, and many of the competitive categories were depleted. Sondheim, the iconic composer who died in late 2021, was honored in a special segment by Bernadette Peters singing his song "Children Will Listen." Angela Lansbury, who was honored with a lifetime achievement Tony, wasn't present so her "Sweeney Todd" co-star Len Cariou accepted on her behalf.
Music
It should be illegal to put critics in any situation where they have to argue that Chris Evans is somehow a step down from Tim Allen. “Lightyear” is the first movie that Pixar has released in theaters since the start of the pandemic, a return to normal that would feel more exciting if “Lightyear” wasn’t also the first Pixar movie since the start of the pandemic that feels like it only belongs on Disney Plus. Bursting onto the big screen with huge “this project was announced during a shareholders meeting” energy, “Lightyear” is exactly the kind of gratuitous property-mining that corporate streamers were invented to support. That would still be true if this unexciting “Toy Story” spinoff had been able to match the creative highs of recent Pixar features like “Luca” and “Turning Red,” but its lifelessness and lack of urgency can’t help but exacerbate the feeling that it’s just another sales pitch to stay home — a sad product of its time. Much like the square-jawed Space Ranger who lends this glorified DLC of a film his name, “Lightyear” remains firmly stuck in the past even as it hurtles toward the future. And while screenwriters Jason Headley and Angus MacLane need that push-pull in order to tell a story about reconciling the lure of nostalgia with the potential for something new, it’s hard for a movie to sell us on living in the moment when every scene feels like it’s settling for less. OK, OK, I know that’s an insufferably pretentious way to open a review of a cartoon aimed at little kids (one little kid in particular), but the most glaring problem with “Lightyear” is that it misses its hyper-specific target audience. Pitched and directed by Pixar vet MacLane (who previously helmed the under-appreciated “Finding Dory”), the film starts with a premise that’s a lot of fun in a “this would probably have worked better as a 15-minute short” sort of way: In “Toy Story,” Andy became obsessed with his Buzz Lightyear action figure after seeing the character in some big Hollywood action movie — “Lightyear” is that movie. And while I can only hope that millions of six-year-olds are about to prove me very wrong on this point, I’m struggling to believe that any child’s imagination could be set on fire by this awkward space odyssey with its bland locations, dull sidekicks, and deeply uncool villain. Sure, Andy first saw it in 1995, before his brain had been smoothed over by Marvel, “Paw Patrol,” or even “The Phantom Menace,” but the idea that he would drop all of his other toys for an intergalactic dork like Buzz Lightyear has never made less sense than it does here. <span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start">&#65279;</span> It should be illegal to put critics in any situation where they have to write that Chris Evans is a downgrade from Tim Allen, and yet the undaunted Buzz who the “Not Another Teen Movie” star voices here is infinitely less fun or interesting than the delusional, plastic version of the character who helped make Pixar what it is today. We meet him in the middle of his latest voyage, a bit rounder and more lifelike than he was as a toy, but no less arrogant. After unilaterally diverting his turnip-looking spaceship (and all 1,000 of the scientists on board) to an unknown planet some 4.2 million light-years away from Earth, Buzz sets foot on alien soil in search of precious resources. He’s probably done this kind of thing before, though it’s safe to assume he was probably just as cocksure and entitled when he was a rookie; we can’t say for sure, as “Lightyear” jettisons anything that might lend broader context to Buzz’s mission, to the point that I’ve started to think of “Lightyear” as a sequel to several other movies that Pixar hasn’t made yet (presumably including one about the actor who plays Buzz in the “Lightyear” franchise). Anyway, Buzz tears off into the nuclear orange environs of T’Kani Prime, unconcerned with the safety of his trusty commander Alisa Hawthorne (Uzo Aduba) or the intern who’s come with her. The team naturally decides to get out of Dodge after discovering that T’Kani Prime is riddled with sentient vines that keep trying to drag people under the surface — a solid recurring gag in a movie that outsources most of its laughs to a robot cat — but Buzz isn’t quite the pilot he thinks he is, and he ends up grounding his massive crew on a hostile planet with no means of getting their ship back into orbit. His only hope? Using one of the new hyperspeed crystals that his scientists have invented. His only problem? The crystals always fall just short, and every time-dilating test flight Buzz takes around the nearest star finds him landing on a planet where everyone is four years older than they were when he took off. Credit where it’s due: MacLane wickedly positions himself for a montage that takes the first 10 minutes of “Up” and multiplies its sadness (or at least its body count) by 1,000 percent. But just when Buzz’s obsessive quest to undo his big mistake and “finish the mission” seems like it might continue ad infinitum and beyond, one of his test flights ends with the discovery that a robot army has invaded T’Kani Prime, the human population has sealed itself in a giant shield bubble, and it’s up to Buzz and some kooky trainees to save the day. There’s something resonant — or at least there should be — to the meta-fictional idea of partnering Buzz with the descendants of the people who first loved him, but “Lightyear” mines precious little emotion from pairing its hero with Alisha’s plucky granddaughter, Izzy (Keke Palmer). De facto leader of the Junior Zap Patrol, Izzy has all of Buzz’s eagerness but none of his expertise. She’s a natural enough foil for the legendary Space Ranger (even before her secret fears are exposed), but she and Buzz are both so motivated by saving the day that neither of them really inspire the other to reflect on what that means. <span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start">&#65279;</span> Their surface-level dynamic speaks to the flat emotionality of a movie that’s obsessed with mistakes but unwilling to take chances, and that disconnect only grows more tiresome as it trickles down through the rest of the supporting cast. Successfully building a story around a character as one-dimensional as Buzz would require the most fun and memorable team of sidekicks that Pixar has ever devised, but the motley crew we meet here falls well short of that height. First up is Taika Waititi as clumsy space cadet Mo Morrison; if his elastic voice is a perfect fit for a kids film like this, his role is too dependent on cheap slapstick to sustain any real interest (anyone old enough to remember seeing “Toy Story” in theaters might pine for a time when Pixar’s bit players weren’t so exhaustingly joke-oriented). Voiced by “Orange Is the New Black” alum Dale Soules, the gruff and diminutive Darby Steel is even less fun despite a vibe that I can only describe as “Vasquez from ‘Aliens’ if she became a soldier due to post-retirement boredom.” Antic, repetitive scenes of Buzz hacking away at killer robots while trying to keep the Junior Zap Patrol alive tend to feel like filler episodes from the inevitable Pixar equivalent of “The Book of Boba Fett,” and “Lightyear” doesn’t do itself any favors by going a bit galaxy-brain when its big bad shows up in the third act. At least relocating the action away from the barren sands of T’Kani Prime allows MacLane to take better advantage of his film’s cutting-edge animation, which effectively splits the difference between a “real” sci-fi serial and the action figures it may have inspired. Fittingly, however, it’s the older tech that supplies “Lightyear” with most of its charm, as the robotic helper cat Buzz receives after his first test flight turns out to be his most valuable companion — and his movie’s greatest asset — when the story picks up several decades later. Voiced to sweetly affectless perfection by “The Good Dinosaur” director Peter Sohn, Sox may be a non-sentient android whose head spins in a full circle whenever he’s processing a command, but he’s also the only new character who exudes the self-possessed comic brio that’s allowed so many Pixar favorites to transcend their plot utility and/or pandering cuteness. On that front, he’s the sharpest role player the studio has come up with since Forky (all hail Forky!), and whenever Sox isn’t on screen, you might just find yourself asking, “Where’s Sox?” That’s largely because “Lightyear” doesn’t really pose any other pressing questions. Scaled like an origin story (in a way that clashes against its name-brand expectations and IMAX-sized aspect ratio) and hemmed within its small handful of locations, this is the rare Pixar film that should’ve aimed so much bigger than it does. There’s no excuse for a Buzz Lightyear spinoff not to reach for the stars, and the decision to have its story fall back on the upside of failure — the real mission is the friends we made along the way! — doesn’t explain why this movie settles for so little success. “Finish the mission” may be a flawed mantra, but it loses all of its punch in a film whose purpose is so uncertain from the start. The pandemic has certainly played a part in the company’s strategy, but if Disney continues to pump retrograde franchise spinoffs into theaters while forcing people to watch the likes of “Luca” and “Turning Red” on TV, it won’t be long until fans settle in on T’Kani Prime and lose interest in leaving home. Yesterday it was “to infinity and beyond!” Tomorrow it might be “no further than the couch.” Grade: C Walt Disney Pictures will release “Lightyear” in theaters on Friday, June 17. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.
Movies
NEW YORK (AP) — Philip Baker Hall, the prolific character actor of film and theater who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson’s first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in “Seinfeld,” has died. He was 90.Holly Wolfle Hall, the actor's wife of nearly 40 years, on Monday said Hall died Sunday surrounded by loved ones in Glendale, California. She said Hall had been well until a few weeks earlier, and spent his final days in warm spirits, reflecting on his life.“His voice at the end was still just as powerful,” said Wolfle Hall. Her husband, she added, never retired from acting.In a career spanning half a century, Hall was a quintessential character actor, a ubiquitous hangdog face whose doleful appearance could shroud a booming intensity and humble gravitas. His range was wide, but Hall often played men in suits, trench coats and lab coats."Men who are highly stressed, older men, who are at the limit of their tolerance for suffering and stress and pain,” Hall told the Washington Post in 2017. “I had an affinity for playing those roles.”Born in Toledo, Ohio, Hall initially devoted himself more to theater in Los Angeles, after moving out in 1975, than TV and movies. While shooting bit parts in Hollywood (an episode of “Good Times” was one of his first gigs), Hall worked with the L.A. Actor Theatre. In 1983, he played Richard Nixon in the play “Secret Hour,” a role he reprised in Robert Altman's film adaptation.Hall made an impression in small roles in other films, like 1988's “Midnight Run." But outside of theater, Hall was mostly doing guest roles in television. That changed when he was shooting a PBS program in 1992. Hall then encountered a production assistant in his early 20s named Paul Thomas Anderson. The two would hang out, smoking cigarettes and drinking coffee between scenes. Anderson, believing Hall hadn't gotten his due in film, asked him to look at a script he had written for a 20-minute short film titled “Cigarettes & Coffee.”“I’m reading this script, and I truly had trouble believing that that kid wrote this script,” Hall told the AV Club in 2012. “I mean, it was just so brilliant, resonating with nuance all over the place, like a playwright. Certainly, as a film, I’d never really seen anything like it. It was staggering.”After the $20,000 short made it into the Sundance Film Festival, Anderson expanded it into his feature debut, 1997's “Hard Eight,” which catapulted Hall's career. In it, Hall played a wise and courteous itinerate gambler named Sydney who schools a young drifter (John C. Reilly) on the craft. In one indelible scene, Philip Seymour Hoffman's first with Anderson, a hot-shot gambler chides Hall as “old-timer.”Anderson would cast Hall again as adult film theater magnate Floyd Gondolli who warns Burt Reynolds' pornography producer about the industry's future in “Boogie Nights." In Anderson's “Magnolia,” Hall plays the host of a kids game show.“I have a particular fascination with character actors, with wanting to turn them into lead actors," Anderson told The Los Angeles Times in 1998. "I see Philip Baker Hall, he’s just . . . an actor that I love. There’s no one else with a face like that, or a voice like that.”To many, Hall was instantly recognizable for one of the most powerfully funny guest appearances on “Seinfeld.” In the 22nd episode of the sitcom in 1991, Hall played Lt. Joe Bookman, the library investigator who comes after Seinfeld for a years-overdue copy of “Tropic of Cancer." Hall played him like a hardboiled noir detective, telling Seinfeld: “Well, I got a flash for ya, Joy-boy: Party time is over.”Hall was brought back for the “Seinfeld” finale and by Larry David on “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” David once said no other actor ever made him laugh more than Hall.Among Hall's many other credits were Michael Mann's “The Insider,” as “60 Minutes” producer Don Hewitt, and Lars von Trier's “Dogville." Hall appeared in “The Truman Show,” “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” “Zodiac,” “Argo” and “Rush Hour." Hall played the neighbor Walt Kleezak on “Modern Family.” His last performance was in the 2020 series “Messiah.”Hall, who was married to Dianne Lewis for three years in the early 1970s, is survived by his wife, four daughters, four grandchildren and his brother.
Movies
Martin Scorsese has earned more than a dozen Oscar nominations and took home an Academy Award for directing Leonardo DiCaprio and Jack Nicholson in "The Departed."He's also given back, and for more than than half a century, Scorsese has worked to restore and preserve old movies so future generations will be able to enjoy them.His latest initiative puts a few of the best films online for free, and fans everywhere will want to know about "The Restoration Screening Room."It's a virtual place online where one movie per month is shown for one night only.ALSO READ | Robert De Niro, 20 years since co-founding Tribeca Film Festival, reflects on its legacyMarilyn Monroe has never looked better that she does in "The Seven Year Itch," and for, that we must thank Scorsese.He saw this film at a retrospective in the 1970s and became upset when he discovered how badly the image had deteriorated."It was completely faded," said Margaret Bodde, executive director of the non-profit Film Foundation the director started. "All the colors were drained, and it had a magenta hue."Since 1990, more than 900 films have been restored and preserved in all their glory."To get them out in the world, because if you preserve something and just tuck it away, no one is there to experience it," Bodde said. "People want to see their favorite movies preserved and available for their children and grandchildren."The only film Marlon Brando directed, "One Eyed Jacks," is going to be shown virtually soon. "La Strada," an Italian neorealist classic, is available online for free Monday, with Scorsese supplying a taped introduction.It is the second in the Restoration Screening Room series."We decided to do this once a month presentation of a restored film for 24 hours, so it's kind of appointment viewing," Bodde said. "And it's going to show the broad diversity of the types of films we restore."ALSO READ | Joel Kim Booster's rom-com 'Fire Island' hits Hulu just in time for Pride MonthThe films may be classics, but the Film Foundation is partnering with tech companies Oracle and Delphi-Quest to improve the online experience for fans.There is even a chat feature that allows discussion of the movie.Details of how you can log on can be found at the Restoration Screening Room website. Copyright © 2022 OnTheRedCarpet.com. All Rights Reserved.
Movies
The Premiership Rugby chief executive, Simon Massie-Taylor, believes England’s top flight must be “open-minded” about staging the final away from Twickenham as they seek to turn the showpiece event into a national sporting moment on a par with the Grand National.Twickenham has held every Premiership final since the playoffs were introduced to determine the league’s winner in 2003 and will stage Saturday’s showdown between Saracens and Leicester. Under the terms of the Professional Game Agreement with the Rugby Football Union, Premiership Rugby is contractually obliged to stage its final at Twickenham but that deal is due to expire in 2024 with renegotiations set to begin this summer.Massie-Taylor has also revealed that Premiership Rugby is considering adopting a double-header model for its semi-finals, which would see both matches staged in the same stadium, citing the success of France’s Top 14, which will hold both fixtures in Nice this weekend. The Top 14 traditionally holds its final at the Stade de France but nearly 100,000 spectators watched Racing 92 beat Toulon in the 2016 final at Camp Nou in Barcelona while the 2024 final is set to be staged in Marseille.“We’re contractually obliged to stage [the final] at Twickenham but I think we need to have an open mind going forward in the next PGA,” he said. “Should we be doing things like neutral semi-finals? Again, trying to [replicate] these bigger moments that certainly exist in other countries.“I think we can do it and it’s not necessarily a case of, ‘everything is at Twickenham’. I think there’s a national footprint here and you need to think about the Brightons and the Leeds and various other areas. We just need to work out where the demand is and how quickly you can build it.”Only 10,000 spectators were permitted to attend last season’s thrilling final between Harlequins and Exeter due to Covid restrictions but Twickenham is expected to be close to its 82,000 capacity on Saturday. The final will also be broadcast on terrestrial TV for the first time in its history following a landmark deal with ITV and Massie-Taylor believes the annual fixture can establish itself in the nation’s sporting landscape.“The goal for the final is to try and make a national sporting moment, and I genuinely believe we can do it,” he said. “There are a few things in the calendar where we have that established moment, the Grand National and Wimbledon, and we know there’s 10 million rugby fans knocking around, plus all the genuine sports fans who get attracted to big moments. You’ve got 10 million [rugby] fans in the UK, 9 million are England fans and pretty much all of those will watch a game on ITV. Now it’s a pretty broad demographic of people.The Breakdown: sign up and get our weekly rugby union email.“It’s about trying to create that national sporting moment. And so we talk about the Super Bowl, but what’s our version of it and how do we make it famous? So that’s the goal. And so we think we’ve got a big opportunity to make a big step on 18 June.”Meanwhile, the former England second-row George Kruis has been named to start for the Barbarians at Twickenham on Sunday in his swansong appearance. Kruis will line up next to Australia’s Will Skelton in a side featuring no fewer than 10 French players and led by Les Bleus’ head coach Fabien Galthié. Charles Ollivon captains the side from No 8 with established France players Damian Penaud, Dylan Cretin and Virimi Vakatawa also selected. Fiji’s Levani Botia and South Africa’s Trevor Nyakane will also line up against an England XV.
Other Sports
Andrew Redmayne was the hero as Australia stunned Peru to clinch a place at a fifth straight World Cup with a dramatic 5-4 penalty shootout victory in the intercontinental playoff in Qatar.The goalkeeper, brought off the bench by coach Graham Arnold just before the end of extra-time at Al Rayyan Stadium after 120 goalless minutes, repelled Alex Valera’s effort to secure the Socceroos’ place in the tournament later this year.Ajdin Hrustic went closest for the Socceroos in regulation time with a curling effort that went just wide just before the full-time whistle, while Edison Flores nearly broke the deadlock for Peru with a header that struck Mat Ryan’s upright in the 109th minute.The full World Cup draw will be completed on Tuesday (Wednesday AEST) when Costa Rica and New Zealand clash for the final place still up for grabs. Joey Lynch’s full report to follow.
Soccer
Phil Mickelson has expressed his “deepest sympathy” to the families of those who lost loved ones in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, after he received stinging criticism of his decision to join the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series.A group representing victims’ families and survivors accused Mickelson and a number of fellow high-profile American players of sportswashing and betraying their country by competing in last week’s event at Centurion Club.Asked about the letter written by Terry Strada, the national chair of 911familiesunited.org, a visibly uncomfortable Mickelson said on Monday: “I would say to the Strada family, I would say to everyone that has lost loved ones, lost friends on 9/11 that I have deep, deep empathy for them. I can’t emphasise that enough. I have the deepest of sympathy and empathy for them.”Pressed on whether he would respond privately to the letter, Mickelson largely repeated his earlier answer. His comments cut little ice with Strada, whose husband was killed in the 9/11 attacks. “Phil knows exactly what he’s doing, and he and his fellow LIV golfers should be ashamed,” she said. “They are helping the Saudi regime sportswash their reputation in return for tens of millions of dollars, at the very same time our government is rolling out more damning evidence of Saudi culpability in the 9/11 attacks.“As the PGA Tour commissioner [Jay Monahan] said Sunday, ‘You’d have to be living under a rock’ to not understand the implications of involving yourself with the Saudis.”Mickelson and the other 16 PGA Tour members who competed in the first LIV Golf event without permission were instantly suspended by the Tour, although some had already resigned their membership.That is something Mickelson has no intention of doing and the 51-year-old said on Monday that he would like to play on the PGA Tour again.“My preference is to be able to choose which path I would like, one or the other or both,” said Mickelson. “I feel that I gave as much back to the PGA Tour and the game of golf that I could throughout my 30 years here, and through my accomplishments on the course I’ve earned a lifetime membership. I intend to keep that and then choose going forward which events to play and not.”Victory on Sunday would see Mickelson become the sixth player to complete a career grand slam, although he admits that will be difficult given his lack of competitive golf.“That’s going to be a challenge, right. It’s the most difficult test in golf,” said Mickelson, who shot 10 over par to finish in a tie for 33rd last week in his first event since February. “I think it was important for me to have a little bit of competitive golf last week and identify some of the areas of weakness. It was one of the worst putting tournaments I’ve had in years.”Elsewhere in the US Open field, Spain’s Jon Rahm will make an early start to his bid to successfully defend his title at Brookline. Rahm, who won his first major at Torrey Pines last year with birdies on the final two holes, will tee off at 7.18am local time (12.18pm BST) on Thursday, alongside Open champion Collin Morikawa and 2021 US Amateur winner James Piot.Rory McIlroy, who successfully defended his RBC Canadian Open title on Sunday, is also among the early starters from the 10th tee, the world No 3 is joined by former Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama and Olympic gold medallist Xander Schauffele at 7.40am. Mickelson gets his campaign under way at 1.47pm local time alongside Shane Lowry and Louis Oosthuizen.Three-time winner Tiger Woods is not in the field after opting to give his body more time to recover ahead of the 150th Open Championship at St Andrews next month.Woods was in obvious pain from the leg he almost lost in a 2021 car accident before withdrawing from the US PGA Championship following a third round of 79.
Golf
By Hamzah AbbasBBC NewsImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Sir Mick, seen here performing in 2017, thanked fans for their patienceSir Mick Jagger has tested positive for Covid-19, prompting The Rolling Stones to cancel a performance in Amsterdam.The band said the show at the Johan Cruijff Arena would be rescheduled and that they were "deeply sorry".Sir Mick, 78, added in a message to fans: "Thank you for your patience and understanding."The band are currently on their Sixty tour, where they had planned to play 14 shows in 10 European countries.Tickets for the original show will be honoured for the new date once the show is postponed.The Stones had already played three of their tour dates, including one in the UK at Anfield in Liverpool.A statement on behalf of the band said: "The Rolling Stones have been forced to call off tonight's concert in Amsterdam at the Johan Cruijff Arena, following Mick Jagger testing positive after experiencing symptoms of Covid upon arrival at the stadium."The Rolling Stones are deeply sorry for tonight's postponement, but the safety of the audience, fellow musicians and the touring crew has to take priority".Writing on Twitter, Sir Mick, added: "I'm so sorry that we've had to postpone the Amsterdam show with such short notice tonight."I have unfortunately just tested positive for Covid. We aim to reschedule the date ASAP and get back as soon as we can. Thank you for your patience and understanding. Mick."A further two dates are planned in the UK as part of BST Hyde Park, a music festival. They are due to play on the 25 June and 2 July.Two more performances, in Switzerland and Italy, are also planned within the next ten days. There has been no announcement yet about whether these shows will go ahead as planned.
Music
The world’s first hydrogen-fuelled commercial flight of a passenger plane could take place between Rotterdam and London in six years’ time, under a plan to make short-haul air travel more environmentally friendly.The 2028 target set by a Dutch consortium is ambitious. Airbus announced its intention 18 months ago to be the first to offer zero-emission commercial aircraft models running on hydrogen, by 2035.The only emission produced by burning hydrogen as a fuel is water vapour, making it a clean fuel option for heavy vehicles such as planes, trains and trucks. However, the process of creating hydrogen is only clean if the energy used is renewable.The Dutch technology will initially be built into an existing turboprop aircraft with 40-80 seats, and it could then be used in adapted larger aircraft.Michel van Ierland, of the consortium set up by Unified International and the Dutch regional economic development agency InnovationQuarter, whose partners include the Dutch aircraft manufacturer Fokker and Delft University of Technology, said the scheme would open up a €16bn market for the Netherlands.“This is very interesting for Scandinavia and New Zealand, for example, where for shorter distances people are still focusing on battery-electric technology,” he said, referring to plans for battery-powered commercial planes.The use of hydrogen for fuel requires a redesign of planes, as liquid hydrogen needs to be stored in relatively heavy, insulated tanks. While conventional fuel is usually stored in the wings, the Dutch plan is to have hydrogen capsules in the plane’s tail. Detail of the plans.The planes could be a little slower over medium-haul journeys, but the duration of a short trip – such as between the Netherlands and the UK – would be little changed. Tests suggest a hydrogen-powered propeller plane should be capable of speeds of up to 370mph (600km/h), compared with 530mph for a Boeing 747 jumbo jet.The aviation industry is responsible for about 2.4% of annual global carbon emissions. Surveys suggest nine out of 10 short-haul passengers would be willing to pay more if they could be assured that their travel is emission-free.In 2008 Boeing flew the world’s first hydrogen-powered plane, a single-seater vehicle, from an airfield near Madrid, Spain.
Emerging Technologies
Post Malone I'm a Girl Dad!!! Gonna Be A Hubby, Too 6/13/2022 9:42 AM PT Post Malone is officially a father to a little baby girl ... and he's gonna become a husband too! The "Better Now" rapper shared the big life updates Monday, appearing on Howard Stern's radio show and subtly dropping the news into an answer about what time he woke up to go to the recording studio. We've learned she was born in Los Angeles last month. The Howard Stern Show/SiriusXM TMZ broke the story ... Posty told us last month his girlfriend was pregnant and he was the happiest he's ever been in his life and it was time to take care of his body, family and friends. Post also clarified to Howard that his girlfriend is now his fiancé. PM has yet to reveal his partner's name publicly ... remember, we're told she's not someone who has spent any time at all in the spotlight, and the couple has been building their relationship, and family, in private. Waiting for your permission to load the Instagram Media. It's a big summer for Post ... in addition to the baby girl and engagement, he recently dropped a new album, "Twelve Carat Toothache," and just announced a new tour.
Celebrity
Entertainment June 13, 2022 / 3:56 PM / AP Philip Baker Hall, the prolific character actor of film and theater who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson's first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in "Seinfeld," has died. He was 90.Holly Wolfle Hall, the actor's wife of nearly 40 years, said Monday that Hall died on Sunday surrounded by loved ones in Glendale, California. She said Hall had been well until a few weeks earlier, and spent his final days in warm spirits, reflecting on his life."His voice at the end was still just as powerful," said Wolfle Hall. Her husband, she added, never retired from acting. In a career spanning half a century, Hall was a quintessential character actor, a ubiquitous hangdog face whose doleful appearance could shroud a booming intensity and humble gravitas. His range was wide, but Hall often played men in suits, trench coats and lab coats."Men who are highly stressed, older men, who are at the limit of their tolerance for suffering and stress and pain," Hall told the Washington Post in 2017. "I had an affinity for playing those roles." Actor Philip Baker Hall attends the premiere of Focus Features' 'Bad Words' at ArcLight Cinemas Cinerama Dome on March 5, 2014, in Hollywood, California. Imeh Akpanudosen / Getty Images Born in Toledo, Ohio, Hall initially devoted himself more to theater in Los Angeles, after moving out in 1975, than to TV and movies. While shooting bit parts in Hollywood (an episode of "Good Times" was one of his first gigs), Hall worked with the L.A. Actor Theatre. In 1983, he played Richard Nixon in the play "Secret Hour," a role he reprised in Robert Altman's film adaptation. Hall made an impression in small roles in other films, like 1988′s "Midnight Run." But outside of theater, Hall was mostly doing guest roles in television. That changed when he was shooting a PBS program in 1992. Hall then encountered a production assistant in his early 20s named Paul Thomas Anderson. The two would hang out, smoking cigarettes and drinking coffee between scenes. Anderson, believing Hall hadn't gotten his due in film, asked him to look at a script he had written for a 20-minute short film titled "Cigarettes & Coffee.""I'm reading this script, and I truly had trouble believing that that kid wrote this script," Hall told the AV Club in 2012. "I mean, it was just so brilliant, resonating with nuance all over the place, like a playwright. Certainly, as a film, I'd never really seen anything like it. It was staggering."After the $20,000 short made it into the Sundance Film Festival, Anderson expanded it into his feature debut, 1997′s "Hard Eight," which catapulted Hall's career. In it, Hall played a wise and courteous itinerate gambler named Sydney who schools a young drifter (John C. Reilly) on the craft. In one indelible scene, Philip Seymour Hoffman's first with Anderson, a hot-shot gambler chides Hall as "old-timer."Anderson would cast Hall again as adult film theater magnate Floyd Gondolli who warns Burt Reynolds' pornography producer about the industry's future in "Boogie Nights." In Anderson's "Magnolia," Hall plays the host of a kids game show. "I have a particular fascination with character actors, with wanting to turn them into lead actors," Anderson told The Los Angeles Times in 1998. "I see Philip Baker Hall, he's just . . . an actor that I love. There's no one else with a face like that, or a voice like that."To many, Hall was instantly recognizable for one of the most powerfully funny guest appearances on "Seinfeld." In the 22nd episode of the sitcom in 1991, Hall played Lt. Joe Bookman, the library investigator who comes after Seinfeld for a years-overdue copy of "Tropic of Cancer." Hall played him like a hardboiled noir detective, telling Seinfeld: "Well, I got a flash for ya, Joy-boy: Party time is over."Hall was brought back for the "Seinfeld" finale and by Larry David on "Curb Your Enthusiasm." David once said no other actor ever made him laugh more than Hall. Actor Phillip Baker Hall and Larry David arrive to the premiere of HBO Films' "Clear History" at ArcLight Cinemas Cinerama Dome on July 31, 2013 in Hollywood, California. Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images Among Hall's many other credits were Michael Mann's "The Insider," as "60 Minutes" producer Don Hewitt, and Lars von Trier's "Dogville." Hall appeared in "The Truman Show," "The Talented Mr. Ripley," "Zodiac," "Argo" and "Rush Hour." Hall played the neighbor Walt Kleezak on "Modern Family." His last performance was in the 2020 series "Messiah."Hall, who was married to Dianne Lewis for three years in the early 1970s, is survived by his wife, four daughters, four grandchildren and his brother. Notable Deaths in 2022 54 photos In: Death Obituary Thanks for reading CBS NEWS. Create your free account or log in for more features. Please enter email address to continue Please enter valid email address to continue
Movies
Peter Kramer/NBC/NBC Newswire/NBCUniversal via Getty Images By Aliya Chaudhry An eponymous album marks a major moment in an artist's career. For women, owning one's work, body, and artistry can be especially powerful, even political. Throughout Women's History Month, MTV News is highlighting some of these iconic statements from some of the biggest artists on the globe. This is Self-Titled. “Singing Radiohead at the top of our lungs,” Avril Lavigne belts at the start of "Here's to Never Growing Up," the lead single off her self-titled album, expressing both her love of the band and her devotion to rock music. The Radiohead song in question, Lavigne revealed to Billboard in 2013, was “Creep.” Later in the same track, she sings, “We live like rock stars / Dance on every bar / This is who we are / I don't think we'll ever change” — a promise to stay young, but also to keep true to Lavigne’s alternative roots. Ironically, it’s a pop song, accentuated by acoustic guitar strumming and bright percussion, but the evidence shows Lavigne can be both a pop artist and a rock star. Her eponymous album takes that stance proudly. Lavigne makes her case on album opener “Rock N Roll,” a love letter to the genre. An energetic pop-rock stomp reminiscent of her early material, it boasts a crunchy electric guitar solo and a chorus beat calling back to Queen’s “We Will Rock You.” The lines “Don't care about a reputation / Must be living in the wrong generation” reference Joan Jett, and Lavigne’s cover of “Bad Reputation” appeared on the extended editions of this album and 2011’s Goodbye Lullaby. The music video for “Rock N Roll” shows Lavigne playing her guitar solo in front of a church in the desert, the same way Slash did in the music video for Guns N’ Roses’s “November Rain.” These nods place the singer in the lineage of classic rock, which bolsters the collection’s argument that her peers aren’t solely the pop stars of the 2010s or the pop-punk bands of the 2000s, but the stadium rockers of previous generations, and that her influence may very well stretch for decades to come. Spoiler alert: It definitely did. Released in November 2013, 11 years after her debut and 9 years before her most recent album Love Sux, Avril Lavigne arrived at the midpoint of her now 20-year career. It took the artist’s name, since Lavigne felt it was so varied that there was no unifying theme or style to tie it together. “The record is so diverse and it’s all over the map stylistically and lyrically,” she told Rolling Stone around the time of the drop. “I couldn’t really find something to really sum it up. It just felt right with it being a decade and my fifth record. I think it was just time for a self-titled record.” Avril Lavigne has summery bass-driven pop like “Sippin’ on Sunshine” and electro pop-rock like “You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet” but also contains a surprising number of ballads. The piano-led “Hush Hush” and sweeping “Let Me Go” erupt into full-scale orchestral choruses. The latter is one of the album’s most unexpected and compelling tracks, and features Lavigne’s former partner, Nickelback’s Chad Kroeger. Delicate “Falling Fast,” country-tinged “Bitchin’ Summer,” and darker “Give You What You Like” are built around acoustic picking. Even the songs with slower starts build to big pop choruses, like bittersweet “Hello Heartache,” which combines sorrowful lyrics and a resigned melody with more upbeat, energetic instrumentation. Overall, Avril Lavigne strikes the pop-rock balance consistent across Lavigne’s career. But her self-titled record showed Lavigne investing in her own style by mixing the sounds of her previous releases with newer ones. She references her bombastic tongue-in-cheek hit “Girlfriend” on “Rock N Roll” (“I am the motherfuckin' princess”), and the album’s emphasis on slower songs matched Goodbye Lullaby. “Here’s to Never Growing Up” and nostalgic “17” — titled after the age Lavigne was when she released her debut album — have shades of Let Go (Lavigne even replicates her early skater look in the “Here’s to Never Growing Up” video). It didn’t feel like Lavigne wanted to keep up with contemporary trends, but instead, to stick to the brand of pop-rock she pioneered the previous decade, even though it had fallen out of style. “I don't care if I'm a misfit / I like it better than the hipster bullshit,” she sings on “Rock N Roll.” “They don't play rock songs on the radio anymore. It's all very, very pop and dance,” Lavigne told Digital Spy in 2013. “For me, my music's always been heavy pop-rock... I've always experimented but at the same time remained true to my roots.” In fact, Lavigne named nostalgia as one of the running themes on the release. The album’s rock influences are also clear in the collaborators Lavigne chose to work with. Kroeger (a “Rockstar” in his own way) co-produced and co-wrote several songs, including “Here’s to Never Growing Up.” Lavigne in turn covered Nickelback’s “How You Remind Me” on the extended edition of this album, which she reimagined as a stripped-back, haunting piano ballad. Boys Like Girls frontman Martin Johnson and Evanescence’s David Hodges also worked alongside Lavigne on the project. Marilyn Manson contributed vocals to the track “Bad Girl,” a team-up born out of their friendship at the time — and one that doesn’t play well now, given that in the past year, several women, including actress Evan Rachel Wood, have come forward against Manson with allegations of sexual assault, harassment, and abuse, as well as physical assault. Avril Lavigne’s release was indeed marked by controversy, but not about Manson. “Hello Kitty” and its accompanying music video were criticized for fetishizing and objectifying Japanese culture, and for perpetuating racist stereotypes of the country and its people, particularly when it came to the backup dancers. Outlets and Twitter commentators called Lavigne out for using women of color “as props.” Lavigne’s response was underwhelming. She tweeted, “RACIST??? LOLOLOL!!! I love Japanese culture and I spend half of my time in Japan. I flew to Tokyo to shoot this video specifically for my Japanese fans, WITH my Japanese label, Japanese choreographers AND a Japanese director IN Japan.” This incident tends to stick out when fans think of this album, which hasn’t made the same impact as her other records. It also happened at a time when conversations around cultural misappropriation were particularly active, as other pop stars including Miley Cyrus, Taylor Swift, and Selena Gomez similarly faced backlash for taking from other cultures and objectifying people of color, acts of which many artists across genres remain guilty today. Despite the controversy, Lavigne continued to perform the song, even as recently as 2019. And she continues to live the brand, which was the inspiration behind the track. “Obviously it's flirtatious and somewhat sexual, but it's genuinely about my love for Hello Kitty!” she told Digital Spy ahead of Avril Lavigne’s release. This year, she told Vogue one entire bedroom in her house is dedicated to Hello Kitty merch. “​​I have this huge pink couch that has all these Hello Kitty stuffed animals on it, from tours and from fans as gifts,” she said. Nearly a decade later, Avril Lavigne’s core thesis has become fact: She is a rock icon. While her influence spans genres, she is known for perfecting the brand of pop-rock that proved foundational to generations of artists including Olivia Rodrigo, Billie Eilish, Snail Mail, Willow, and Rina Sawayama. She has been especially important for the recent pop-punk revival, which she is both an influence on and a part of. Love Sux, which was released last month, sees Lavigne not only sticking to the commitment to rock music she expressed on her self-titled album, but going further into it than ever before. “I was just like, ‘Let's make a pop-punk record,’” she told Entertainment Weekly. “We used live guitars and live drums and didn't hold back, and just got to do exactly what I wanted and what I feel like I've probably wanted to do for a long time. It's fast. It's fun. It's just pure rock and roll from front to back.” As this year’s Grammy nominations attest, rock music is still often seen as a stereotypically masucline enterprise — even amid breakout stars riding waves of big guitar sounds. Women like Lavigne, who deftly strike a balance between pop and rock, are readily grouped into the former category more easily than the second. But with her self-titled album, she proved once and for all she can be a part of both worlds. Now, decades since she was crowned a pop princess, she’s still a rock star. Rock Pop Music Avril Lavigne
Music
Lucy Bronze has revealed how Declan Rice and Kieran Trippier have been encouraging the Lionesses to embrace the pressures of a home Euros – but that the women won’t settle for losing the final on penalties.The England men’s and women’s teams have both been training at St George’s Park during the former’s Nations League campaign and the latter’s preparations for the European Championship to be staged in this country next month.Bronze, who recently announced she is leaving Manchester City, starred in the World Cups in Canada in 2015 and France three years ago. But now Sarina Wiegman’s team will be among the favourites when they kick off the finals against Austria at Old Trafford on 6 July.Gareth Southgate’s side face Hungary on Tuesday at Molineux where the Lionesses will play Belgium on Thursday. The two squads have been mingling informally when at the National Football Centre in Staffordshire, as well as for a formal talk at the end of last week.“Trippier and Declan Rice came in last week,” Bronze said. “Trippier had a lot of things to say because he’s a player that has a been at a lot of tournaments before and has had a bit of stick from the media, [having] played out of position last year.“We were talking about blocking out the outside world and I think that’s something that I’ve probably had to deal with more than most players in this England squad over past years. It was nice to be able to speak to someone who has had these issues and how they deal with these moments.“We’ve been in and around St George’s Park with them over the past couple of weeks. We’ve chatted to a lot of them. They’re just human beings. They sit and play cards, we can sit with them [and] it’s a nice atmosphere because I think both teams have gelled really well. They see us [as] the same.”Moving the GoalpostsSign up to our new women’s football newsletter.Wiegman led the Netherlands to glory in her own country in the 2017 Women’s Euros in which England reached the semi-finals. Southgate’s team went one better last summer, only to lose the final to Italy on penalties.Bronze quipped that she would not be satisfied with such a feat. “I wouldn’t settle for that,” she said with a chuckle. “I wouldn’t take it to penalties – we’d win the game in normal time.”Bronze does not think hosting the tournament will bring any undue pressure. “I’ve been in so many tournaments, and Champions League finals, big games where you have a lot of perceived pressure,” she said. “But the best players and the biggest players want to play in those games, with the full crowds. And I think we’re trying to see it as just a lot of support. It’s our 12th man, hopefully.“We’ve seen what a difference it made to the men’s team last year, kind of being that home nation. And obviously they made the final. So I think that’s something that we kind of want to replicate and use it to our advantage.”
Soccer
Holders France failed to qualify for the final four of the Nations League when they slumped to a 1-0 defeat at home to Croatia as they stayed winless in the competition on Monday.The world champions, who have now lost two and drawn two, are bottom of Group 1 on two points, five adrift of Croatia who prevailed thanks to an early Luka Modric penalty.Denmark beat Austria 2-0 in Copenhagen to stay top on nine points and cannot be caught by France, who are in danger of being relegated, with two games left in the group. Austria are third on four points.France coach Didier Deschamps reshuffled his team again as he looked to rest players at the end of the season and in all four matches this month never fielded the best possible lineup.Croatia grabbed the early lead after five minutes when Modric converted a penalty after Ibrahima Konaté fouled Ante Budimir. It was Modric’s 22nd goal in 152 games for Croatia.Kylian Mbappé had two opportunitites but it was the visitors who threatened most in the 17th minute through Josip Brekalo.Deschamps made two changes at halftime, bringing in Aurelien Tchouameni for Boubacar Kamara in midfield and Benjamin Pavard for Jules Kounde on the right flank of the defence.Mbappé had another couple of chances but Ivica Ivusic saved comfortably as Croatia controlled the pace of the game. Antoine Griezmann replaced Matteo Guendouzi with 10 minutes left in a last-ditch attempt by Deschamps to salvage a point.But it proved in vain as France failed to score for the first time after netting in their 23 previous games.“It was a difficult month of June in terms of results. We did not have the energy and the strength against teams who had more than us,” said Deschamps.Jonas Wind opened the scoring for Denmark against Austria in the 21st minute and Andreas Skov Olsen netted the second with a cool side-footed finish after Wind found him in the box with a clever pass nine minutes before the break.Denmark midfielder Christian Eriksen received a raucous ovation when he came on in the second half a year and a day after collapsing on the Parken pitch due to a heart problem in a Euro 2020 group game against Finland and he almost scored with an 87th-minute shot that was palmed onto the post
Soccer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — NBA Commissioner Adam Silver canceled plans to attend Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the Golden State Warriors and Boston Celtics on Monday night because of the league’s health and safety protocols. Silver typically attends all Finals games. The league did not say if Silver had tested positive for COVID-19 or been deemed a close contact of someone who had, nor released any details about his health. Also unclear is when Silver will be able to resume attending games. Part of his role as commissioner involves handing out the league’s championship trophy, which one team will be awarded either Thursday in Boston or Sunday in San Francisco. The league shortened the minimum isolation period for players and staff in December from 10 days to six days, contingent on those individuals being asymptomatic and testing data showing they are no longer infectious. Silver has been the NBA’s commissioner since February 2014. This is the ninth championship series the league has held during his tenure, including the 2020 season that resumed inside a bubble at Walt Disney World in Florida in the early stages of the pandemic. The Warriors have been involved in six of the NBA Finals series overseen by Silver. Here’s who Magic interviewed at combine, hosted or will host for workouts Heat focus shifts from reflection to inspection as NBA draft (and No. 27) looms next week
Basketball
"By the time we made the third one, we proved that it wasn't such good commerce." Tom Hanks just defended two of his biggest roles; his work as Robert Langdon in "The Da Vinci Code" and its sequels and "Forrest Gump." In a new interview with the New York Times, the "Elvis" star was asked whether he considered it "a little cynical" to make the two followup films to 2006's "The Da Vinci Code," referring to "Angels & Demons" in 2009 and "Inferno" in 2016. The first film was a massive success, pulling in $760 million against a $125 million budget. Its sequel earned around $485 million against a $150 million budget, while "Inferno" paled in comparison with $220 million. The third film's budget, however, was only $75 million. Overall, they were all box office successes, but even Hanks can admit it was a case of diminishing returns. Getty Tom Hanks Officiates Pittsburgh Wedding, as He Continues to Crash Local Nuptials View Story "Oh, God, that was a commercial enterprise. Yeah, those Robert Langdon sequels are hooey. 'The Da Vinci Code' was hooey," he said when asked the "cynical" question. "I mean, Dan Brown, God bless him, says, 'Here is a sculpture in a place in Paris! No, it's way over there. See how a cross is formed on a map? Well, it’s sort of a cross.'" "Those are delightful scavenger hunts that are about as accurate to history as the James Bond movies are to espionage. But they're as cynical as a crossword puzzle. All we were doing is promising a diversion," he continued. "There's nothing wrong with good commerce, provided it is good commerce. By the time we made the third one, we proved that it wasn't such good commerce." He further defended his experience by explaining how he celebrated his "40-something" birthday on set. "We were shooting in the Louvre at night. I changed my pants in front of the Mona Lisa! They brought me a birthday cake in the Grand Salon! Who gets to have that experience?" he exclaimed. "Any cynicism there? Hell no!" Twitter Chet Hanks Quadruples Down on Jamaican Accent in Deliciously Awkward Interview With Ziwe View Story The actor was also asked about "Forrest Gump" beating "Pulp Fiction" at the Oscars in 1995. The film took home Best Picture, Best Actor for Hanks, Best Director for Robert Zemeckis, Best Visual Effects, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Film Editing, while "Pulp Fiction" only picked up Best Original Screenplay. "Your movie was held up as this totem of boomer nostalgia and the other movie was the fresh new thing," noted NYT's David Marchese -- which Hanks agreed was "not inaccurate." The actor, however, also said he believes the film "overcame its nostalgic impulses." "The problem with 'Forrest Gump' is it made a billion dollars. If we'd just made a successful movie, Bob and I would have been geniuses. But because we made a wildly successful movie, we were diabolical geniuses," he explained. "Is it a bad problem to have? No, but there's books of the greatest movies of all time, and 'Forrest Gump' doesn't appear because, oh, it's this sappy nostalgia fest." "Every year there's an article that goes, 'The Movie That Should Have Won Best Picture' and it's always 'Pulp Fiction.' 'Pulp Fiction' is a masterpiece without a doubt," he continued, before pointing to the "undeniable heartbreaking humanity" of the scene in which Gary Sinise's Lieutenant Dan walks into Forrest and Jenny's wedding with his "magic legs." "I might get weepy thinking about it now. Forrest and Lieutenant Dan in those four words — 'magic legs'; 'Lieutenant Dan' — understand all they had been through and feel gratitude for every ounce of pain and tragedy that they survived," said Hanks. "That's some intangible [expletive] right there. That is not just running along to Duane Eddy's 'Rebel Rouser.'" Hanks' latest, "Elvis," hits theaters June 24, 2022. Getty Austin Butler Talks 'Excruciating' Illness After Elvis Filming, Vanessa Hudgens Split View Story
Movies
Soccer Football - World Cup - Concacaf Qualifiers - Costa Rica v United States - Estadio Nacional, San Jose, Costa Rica - March 30, 2022 Costa Rica's Keylor Navas with teammates line up during the national anthems before the match REUTERS/Mayela LopezRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comDOHA, June 13 (Reuters) - The last place at this year’s World Cup will be decided on Tuesday in Doha when Costa Rica face New Zealand in their intercontinental playoff.The match at the Ahmed bin Ali Stadium pits the fourth- placed finishers in the CONCACAF qualifying group against the top team in the Oceania confederation and the winners will play in Group E at the finals in Qatar along with Germany, Japan and Spain.Costa Rica, looking to qualify for a third successive World Cup, reached the quarter-finals in Brazil eight years ago and having had substantially more competitive matches over the last four years will be favourites to advance.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comSince the last World Cup, they have played 30 competitive games compared with five for New Zealand which have all been against low-ranked Pacific island nations."Costa Rica have played a lot together and have a lot of caps," said New Zealand coach Danny Hay, whose side played Peru and Oman in warm-up matches over the last week."We don’t really get enough opportunity to test ourselves against top quality opposition."Hay admitted the behind closed doors draw with Oman on Friday was not the greatest performance by his team."But that said, I think everybody's got half an eye, if not a full eye, if not two eyes on Costa Rica,” he added.Costa Rica defender Francisco Calvo warned his side will need to be wary of complacency."We have to be focused for the 90 minutes, because they shoot from wherever they can. We’ll have to defend to the death and keep Chris Wood under control," he told reporters in Doha.Newcastle United striker Wood is the Kiwis’ key attacker."A good team builds on defensive strength, and usually the champion teams are the ones that concede the fewest goals. If we keep a clean sheet, I'm convinced that we'll score a goal and qualify for the World Cup," added Calvo.New Zealand, who competed at the 1982 and 2010 World Cups and lost out in playoffs for the two last tournaments, have concerns over the fitness of captain Winston Reid but Hay said he expected the former West Ham United central defender to play.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comEditing by Ed OsmondOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Soccer
Gareth Southgate has dropped a strong hint that Kyle Walker will be fundamental to England’s World Cup campaign, praising the Manchester City defender’s leadership qualities and emphasising his influence.Walker has 67 caps and, at 32, is perhaps nearing the winter of his international career. He can operate on the right of a defensive three but faces competition from Reece James, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Kieran Trippier at right-back if Southgate goes with his preference of a back four in Qatar. The manager was asked about leaders within his squad and, unprompted, spoke of Walker in terms that suggested he will be hard to dislodge from any starting XI.“You notice players maturing,” he said. “For example Kyle Walker, who isn’t captain of his club but is such a man within the group, on the pitch, off the pitch and I think he’s matured a lot over the last two or three years. He’s won the league four times so he’s got confidence from what he’s done as a player. He’s been in a World Cup semi-final with us and a European final, so he’s got a lot of big-match experience.”Although his competitors are up to a decade younger, Walker’s speed and athleticism have not waned. He was England’s most impressive starter in last week’s draw against Germany, playing at right-back, and Southgate pinpointed a moment from that night as an example of his qualities.“He doesn’t have to be really vocal but [it’s] his manner, his determination in the way he works,” he said. “There was a chance Germany had where Trippier got up at the far post and defended it really well but if you look at Walker, his desire to stop the cross, it means the guy’s got to loft it rather than just be able to whip it in.“They are little things that the majority of the stadium probably don’t give a second thought, but when you are looking at what wins football matches they are the things that win football matches. That hunger, that drive, he brings that; and he brings that on the training pitch.”Gareth Southgate speaks to Kyle Walker during the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy. Photograph: John Sibley/AFP/Getty ImagesWalker is likely to return to the lineup for Tuesday night’s rematch with Hungary, who beat England in Budapest this month, at Molineux. Given England are winless from their past three games and without a goal from open play there would appear an added element of pressure, even before their position at the bottom of National League group A3 is accounted for. Relegation from the competition’s top tier would mean they risk a tougher qualifying group for Euro 2024 but Southgate emphasised the short-term issue of managing his players’ health had to be the priority in a gruelling schedule.“That [relegation] is another consideration within everything but it’s not primary to me,” he said. “What I don’t want to do is put a team out, and we end up with a serious injury, and we’ve lost a player for the World Cup because I’ve put them in at the wrong time.”Southgate feels that, while England have spluttered in the past 10 days, most of their rivals for the World Cup are in the same boat. “I don’t think anyone around Europe is in that position where they will be really happy and thinking they are the standout favourites,” he said. The Fiver: sign up and get our daily football email.Harry Kane will spearhead England after appearing from the bench against Hungary. Phil Foden has missed the past three matches due to Covid-19 and, although he is training, his return remains in doubt.
Soccer
HBO By Alissa Godwin The record-breaking HBO series Euphoria has kept fans talking for the entirety of Season 2’s eight-week run, which concluded with a shocking finale last night (February 27). It was so hyped, in fact, that HBO Max experienced streaming issues right around 9 p.m. presumably due to the sheer number of viewers tuning in. Aside from its critically acclaimed performances, the starpower of its actors, and gripping storylines, one element in particular has captivated audiences: the music. For that, fans can largely thank award-winning singer-songwriter and producer Labrinth, the show’s composer. “I knew it was a teen drama, but I knew it was gnarly,” he tells MTV News about signing onto the show ahead of its 2019 premiere. “I knew it was definitely on the darker side of things. But I was like, if I'm going to do any music for TV, I would want it to be crazy or as intense as what I would want to make musically. So it felt like the perfect fit for what I wanted to do.” Since then, his work has spanned two seasons of original music, two Emmy nominations for the score, and an Ivor Novello Award for Best Television Soundtrack. Sunday’s finale also featured a powerful new collaboration with star Zendaya — the single “I’m Tired,” which came out Monday at midnight. Labrinth himself performed it on the show in the fourth episode, “You Who Cannot See, Think of Those Who Can,” in an instantly memorable church scene. But for the finale, it had to be revamped. “I didn’t love the version we released, so I took it offline because I wanted to make it sound better, and also, I heard Zendaya sing it… and I was just like, I actually like her version better,” he says. After a call from Zendaya fielding an idea she had, the two assembled in the studio along with show creator Sam Levinson to record an entirely new rendition of the track. “Me, Sam, and Zendaya wrote the song together, and I think it was fun to actually write with people and not be stuck in a room, bashing my head against the wall. Zendaya was like, ‘Lab, we need some of your weird vocals,’ and then I started recording my little choir vocals that I do.” Zenday’s emotional contributions to this new take on “I’m Tired” feel reminiscent of Rue’s journey itself. “We all know Zendaya is the multi-talented mad genius that she is, so it was just nice to hear her in such a raw, intimate vocal that she sang.” That powerful church scene Part of Rue’s journey found her grieving her late father in a church midway through the season, with Labrinth singing soulfully in the center of the scene. His manager pitched the idea of putting Labrinth, who is not an actor, into the show to Levinson, who was all for it. “Sam orchestrated this idea of me singing in the church and Rue coming down the aisle,” he says. “It felt like an out-of-body experience, but a realization, all of these different emotions going on at the same time.” Labrinth compares the emotional connection he felt in that scene with Zendaya to the creative connection they share in the studio. “She's my sister in music. And same with Sam. He's my brother in creativity. So to do a scene with her and to almost show the physical version of our relationship as creatives, it felt like me, Sam, and Zendaya almost had this hug. You can see our creativity, like, this is what it is together. So for me, it felt poetic to the way we create together. And then, it being the song that we all wrote together, it feels like just all of our hands clasping together. I think I was proud of that scene because it meant more than just what it was for Rue in that scene.” Eddy Chen/HBOLabrinth in 2022's episode "You Who Cannot See, Think of Those Who Can" Making music to match moods As a Grammy- and Golden Globe-nominated producer, Labrinth’s success in the realms of pop, gospel, and R&B music is clear. But creating music for television was a whole new feat he was eager to take on. “I think composers do incredible stuff that I can never do,” he says. “But for me, I'm a producer as well as a composer, so I'm like, I know when a track makes my neck snap. So I'm like, why can't TV music have music that makes your neck snap and makes you feel like, oh, I could listen to this without seeing the show?” Labrinth and the team behind Euphoria have used both the score and outside music additions to add an intensity to the show’s already exhilarating story, amplifying its hold on viewers. That exhilaration often comes about spontaneously for Labrinth. He explains the creative inspiration for how a piece of music for the score comes to fruition, like “Nate's internal anger that's slowly piercing out, especially in Season 1. I would write to just that energy, or I would write to Cal trying to hide in the dark and trying to keep this perfect appearance in the public.” Or he’d vibe with Zendaya walking into the studio and explain how Rue is feeling and what she’s going through. Additionally, Labrinth credits Levinson with helping him find his “rawest self” and points out how many times the music was a result of an idea Levinson had or was inspired by. “Sam is really instrumental in going, ‘I really think this is a vibe. I need more pressure, Lab. I need more anger. I need more rage.’” “Sometimes, me and Sam have a talk, and he would send me music from his playlist or things he enjoys and music that's inspiring scenes that he's written to,” he continues. “Or I would get music sent from editorial, and they would be like, this specific cue, that specific cue. And then sometimes, especially on Season 2, me and Sam actually sat in the studio and worked some of the music out together.” Looking ahead to Season 3 A huge driving force of the show’s success and the timely release of songs like “I’m Tired” is its fans. Euphoria has seen show-themed music trends, like Maddy/Cassie makeup tutorials, go viral on TikTok, and every week, new memes explode online. The overwhelming reception has validated that what Labrinth is doing in the studio makes sense. “To actually make a song is internally so intense. It actually affects your health sometimes. And especially when you're scared of having to share what you are doing with an audience, it can really mess with you — and also not to compromise your music, compromise what you actually want to say because of what you think the world might need or what's going to be popular.” “I've learned to not give a shit about what anyone's going to think musically,” he says. “This validates that mentality, where I just go, I'm going to say whatever my soul wants to say, and the fans are saying keep doing that.” Whether it’s a parade of tweets from fans begging for the release of the songs they’ve heard in the episodes, like “I’m Tired” and “Yeh I Fuckin’ Did It,” or even friends and creative counterparts reaching out to offer their praise, Labrinth remains focused on his mission of creating compelling music and working with the powers behind Euphoria. “I feel like I just do my part and I make sure I feel it. That's all it is,” he says. “When I'm writing a piece of music or when I'm producing something for the show, I'm just like, what would make me excited if I saw this with this scene?” As for the newly greenlit third season, Labrinth admits he has not thought about it at all. But he’s eager for a little more assistance. “This season has been insanely hard, and it's been very difficult to get through. But I'm just going to go and sleep. If they want me to do Season 3, I will have to hire some more people to help me because this is hard,” he says with a laugh. In the meantime, Labrinth says his plans are to release the official score, then his own album, and to enjoy what has come out of the smash hit that was Season 2 of Euphoria. Looks like he might not be getting much sleep after all. Hip-Hop Pop R&B Music Labrinth
Music
Holders France failed to qualify for the final four of the Nations League when they slumped to a 1-0 defeat at home to Croatia as they stayed winless in the competition on Monday.The world champions, who have now lost two and drawn two, are bottom of Group 1 on two points, five adrift of Croatia who prevailed thanks to an early Luka Modric penalty.Denmark beat Austria 2-0 in Copenhagen to stay top on nine points and cannot be caught by France, who are in danger of being relegated, with two games left in the group. Austria are third on four points.France coach Didier Deschamps reshuffled his team again as he looked to rest players at the end of the season and in all four matches this month never fielded the best possible lineup.Croatia grabbed the early lead after five minutes when Modric converted a penalty after Ibrahima Konaté fouled Ante Budimir. It was Modric’s 22nd goal in 152 games for Croatia.Kylian Mbappé had two opportunitites but it was the visitors who threatened most in the 17th minute through Josip Brekalo.Deschamps made two changes at halftime, bringing in Aurelien Tchouameni for Boubacar Kamara in midfield and Benjamin Pavard for Jules Kounde on the right flank of the defence.Mbappé had another couple of chances but Ivica Ivusic saved comfortably as Croatia controlled the pace of the game. Antoine Griezmann replaced Matteo Guendouzi with 10 minutes left in a last-ditch attempt by Deschamps to salvage a point.But it proved in vain as France failed to score for the first time after netting in their 23 previous games.“It was a difficult month of June in terms of results. We did not have the energy and the strength against teams who had more than us,” said Deschamps.Jonas Wind opened the scoring for Denmark against Austria in the 21st minute and Andreas Skov Olsen netted the second with a cool side-footed finish after Wind found him in the box with a clever pass nine minutes before the break.Denmark midfielder Christian Eriksen received a raucous ovation when he came on in the second half a year and a day after collapsing on the Parken pitch due to a heart problem in a Euro 2020 group game against Finland and he almost scored with an 87th-minute shot that was palmed on to the post.In group B2, Israel remain top after twice fighting back to draw 2-2 with Iceland in Reykjavik. Daniel Gretarsson’s own goal cancelled out Jon Dagur Thorsteinsson’s early header and after the hosts regained the lead through Thorir Johann Helgason, Dor Peretz headed Israel’s equaliser.Kazakhstan extended their unbeaten start to the campaign to four matches as they won 2-1 against Slovakia in Astana to move four points clear at the top of group C3.Azerbaijan secured their first group C3 win by beating Belarus 2-0 in Baku and now sit two points behind second-placed Slovakia.
Soccer
Brittney Griner State Dept. Meets With Mercury ... Over Superstar's Release 6/13/2022 2:56 PM PT As Brittney Griner remains in Russian custody, U.S. State Department officials met with the Phoenix Mercury (her current team) on Monday to discuss steps to safely return the WNBA superstar to America. The meeting reportedly included officials from an office within the State Dept. that advocates for Americans who've been wrongfully detained ... as well as representatives from the Mercury. The State Dept. confirmed the meeting took place, but did not name who was in attendance or specify what was discussed during the forum, according to the Associated Press. Brittney, a 7-time All-Star and WNBA champion, has been in Russian custody since February when authorities claimed the hooper tried to smuggle hashish oil into the country. In May, the State Dept. demanded Russia allows American officials to see Griner -- who could be facing up to 10 years in prison if ultimately convicted -- as she awaits her drug trial. On Saturday, Penny Taylor -- a 13-year WNBA veteran -- used her Hall of Fame induction speech as an opportunity to put pressure on the Biden administration ... with hopes they'll expedite the release of Griner. "BG is our family," Taylor said. "She's yours too. The entire global sport community needs to come together to insist that she be a priority." Trevor Reed, a former Marine who spent nearly 3 years detained in Russia, recently attended a rally for Griner in Houston. While there, he talked about the horrid conditions he was exposed to as a prisoner, and stressed how urgent it is to bring Brittney back home.
Other Sports
Astronaut Tim Peake poses for pictures, as he arrives for the UK premiere of 'Lightyear' in London, Britain June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Maja Smiejkowska/File PhotoRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comLOS ANGELES, June 13 (Reuters) - Fourteen Middle Eastern and Asian countries will not show Walt Disney Co's (DIS.N) new Pixar movie "Lightyear" when it hits theaters this week, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday.The United Arab Emirates said it banned the film because the movie includes a same-sex relationship and violated the country's media content standards. read more Homosexuality is considered criminal in many Middle Eastern countries.Representatives of other countries, including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, Malaysia and Lebanon, did not immediately respond to requests for comment on why they would not allow the film to be exhibited.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com"Lightyear" is a prequel to Pixar's acclaimed "Toy Story" franchise. Chris Evans voices the lead character, Buzz Lightyear, a legendary space ranger.In the film, Buzz's close friend is a female space ranger who marries another woman. A scene showing milestones in the couple's relationship includes a brief kiss."Lightyear" producer Galyn Susman said she assumed the movie would not be shown in China either, though Disney has not yet received an official answer from authorities there. China has rejected other onscreen depictions of homosexuality in the past."We're not going to cut out anything, especially something as important as the loving and inspirational relationship that shows Buzz what he's missing by the choices that he's making, so that's not getting cut," Susman told Reuters at the movie's red-carpet premiere in London.Any objections to "Lightyear" over LGBTQ issues were "frustrating," Evans said."It's great that we are a part of something that's making steps forward in the social inclusion capacity, but it's frustrating that there are still places that aren't where they should be," Evans said."Lightyear" is set to debut in theaters in the United States and Canada on Friday.In May, Disney refused requests to cut same-sex references in Marvel movie "Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness." Saudi Arabia and a handful of other Middle Eastern countries did not show the film.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comReporting by Lisa Richwine and Dawn Chmielewski; Additional reporting by Kristian Brunse in London; Editing by Richard ChangOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Movies
Schwartzman is among the 240 new characters featured in the Spidey sequel alongside Oscar Isaac and Issa Rae. The “Into the Spider-Verse” animated sequel has revealed its new villain. “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” in theaters June 2, 2023, stars Jason Schwartzman as baddie The Spot, inspired by an ink blob on canvas. Co-directors Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, and Justin K. Thompson unveiled the character, voiced by Jason Schwartzman, during an Annecy presentation that included 15 minutes of progress footage screened for the first time. “For those who are not hardcore cannon nerds, The Spot is one of the deepest cuts in Spider-Man’s rogue gallery,” co-director Kemp said, as first reported by Variety. “But he has a super-power that really excited our entire team: His entire body is covered in little inter-dimensional portals that can send him anywhere he wants to go.” Those portals will be used as weapons against Miles Morales, voiced by Shameik Moore, and Gwen Stacy, played by Hailee Steinfeld. New “Spider-Verse” heroes (out of the 240 characters!) also include Oscar Isaac’s Spider-Man 2099 and Issa Rae as Jessica Drew. The Spot (Schwartzman) is purposefully drawn to look like an unfinished sketch, including blue construction lines to show a comic book artist’s rough drawing before going to an inker. Kemp added, “We thought it would be really cool if the portals felt like living ink that had spilled or splattered on the comic artist’s drawing. His very simple power provided endless exciting challenges and permutations for our team.” “Across the Spider-Verse” executive producers and co-screenwriters Phil Lord and Chris Miller previously revealed that the sequel film will have its own unique art style. “We didn’t want to just sort of do the same thing again,” Miller said of the “ambitious” follow-up feature. “And so the idea that we’d be going to different dimensions really opened up an opportunity artistically to have each world have its own art style.” Miller added that “the development of new groundbreaking art techniques being done for the next ‘Spider-Verse’ movie are already blowing me away. It’s going to make the first movie look quaint.” The first film, 2018’s “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,” grossed more than $375 million worldwide and won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Meet The Spot, Miles Morales's most formidable foe yet. 🕳 Voiced by Jason Schwartzman, see him in action in Spider-Man: Across the #SpiderVerse, exclusively in movie theaters June 2, 2023. pic.twitter.com/1aAmMjMcpX — Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse (@SpiderVerse) June 13, 2022 Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.
Movies
Harry Kane is discussing his summer break, which will begin after England’s Nations League tie against Hungary at Molineux on Tuesday night, and last for a little over three weeks. It is plainly not long enough.The striker will make his 62nd appearance of the season for club and country against Hungary and, on 9 July, he will be on a flight to South Korea for Spurs’s pre-season tour when, as an aside, he will be assailed by Son Heung-min mania.The new season will resume with indecent haste – the Premier League kicks off on 5 August, a week earlier than last year – and it will be a relentless churn of weekend-midweek-weekend fixtures until the World Cup in Qatar, which starts on 21 November.What will Kane do with his precious three weeks off? How can he draw the maximum value from it? By getting away, first and foremost. “I’ll be abroad for the three weeks,” he says. By kicking back with his wife and children and by keeping on top of his fitness in the gym, even if he does not think “you can lose too much in three weeks”.One other thing – golf. Kane will fit in a round whenever he can and he will also compete in the two-day Icons Series at the Liberty National club in New Jersey, which begins on 30 June. “It’ll be good fun, playing under pressure in front of a crowd,” Kane says, nonchalantly. At which point, it is fair to assume he is simply addicted to competing.Kane describes it as a Ryder Cup-style showpiece, sports stars from the United States going up against a Rest of the World team. He runs through a couple of the players on his side: the Liverpool midfielder James Milner; the boxer Canelo Álvarez. Kane does not mention another teammate, the Manchester City manager, Pep Guardiola. Imagine this had happened last summer …Quick GuideNations League: England v Hungary – probable teamsShowEngland (3-4-3) Pope; Walker, Coady, Guéhi; James, Phillips, Bellingham, Saka; Bowen, Kane, SterlingHungary (3-4-2-1) Dibusz; Lang, Orban, At Szalai; Fiola, Schafer, A Nagy, Z Nagy; Szoboszlai, Sallai; Ad SzalaIn contrast to back then, when Kane tried and failed to drive a move to City, he feels settled at Spurs, who have been revitalised under Antonio Conte and returned to the Champions League.“First and foremost, I’m looking forward to getting away [on holiday] but the plan is to get back [for pre-season] on 8 July and head to Korea with the boys,” Kane says. “I look forward to another season [at Spurs]. I got on really well with Antonio in the time he was there and I’m looking forward to next season and what’s to come.”Back to golf. Kane name-checks a couple of the US team: the swimming legend Michael Phelps and the NFL Hall of Famer Michael Strahan, who he is friends with.Kane plays off scratch and he said on the Friday before last that, when his football career was over, he would love to win the Green Jacket at the Masters. “You never know! I’m doing all right,” he adds now.Harry Kane describes golf as a great hobby away from the serious business of football. Photograph: Dan Jones Images/Paddy Power/PAWould Kane seriously consider becoming a professional golfer? “That’s a long way away,” he replies. “You never say never in anything. I’m way off what the pros are at – I know that for sure. I’m concentrating on football. Golf is a great hobby to have to get away from football – especially during the season. That’s what I use it for at the moment.”Kane’s juices are going because of Hungary, when England want to record a first win of the Nations League campaign. They opened with a loss to Hungary in Budapest on the Saturday before last before drawing with Germany in Munich and Italy at Molineux. A goal in open play is overdue. England’s only reward so far has been Kane’s penalty equaliser against Germany.The performances have been mainly stilted and they have led to the usual frustrations, the criticism of the manager, Gareth Southgate; the progress under him overlooked. The goalscoring burden has come to rest heavily on Kane, with Southgate saying the load had to be spread more evenly away from the captain and Raheem Sterling. Not that Kane seems unduly flustered. By that or the three results so far.“Being an England player, you’re always going to have criticism when maybe you don’t win for a couple of games,” Kane says. “But within this squad and the staff and manager, we have a bigger vision of where we want to go and, of course, the World Cup is the most important thing for us this year. It’s been important to use these Nations League games to prepare for that.”The Fiver: sign up and get our daily football email.All the while, Kane edges closer to the England goalscoring record. His penalty against Germany was his 50th – three short of Wayne Rooney’s mark. Kane’s mind goes back to the game in which Rooney overtook the previous record holder, Sir Bobby Charlton – the 2-0 Wembley win over Switzerland in 2015. Kane scored the first that night, on his fourth England appearance, before Rooney added a late penalty.“I remember when he broke the record, how much it meant to him and even for me – being a part of it,” Kane says. “I kept my shirt from that day and I have it up in my house. Not for any reason but maybe looking at that every day gave me the motivation to one day try to achieve that.”
Golf
Daniel Suárez, NASCAR’s Cup Series winner, became the first Mexican-born driver and the second Latin American driver to ever win the race.Daniel Suarez celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway on June 12, 2022 in Sonoma, Calif.Chris Graythen / Getty ImagesJune 13, 2022, 7:12 PM UTCIn a historic win, Daniel Suárez became Sunday the first Mexican-born driver to win NASCAR's Cup Series Toyota Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway in California.The 30-year-old from Nuevo León held off Chris Buescher for the final 23 laps to earn his first career win at the highest NASCAR level in his 195th start.Suárez, who drives for Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet, which is co-owned by Cuban musician Pitbull, celebrated by punching a taco piñata. He was cheered by his fan club, known as "Daniel's Amigos," whose members were all wearing red T-shirts in support."It’s been a rough journey in the Cup Series, and these guys believed in me. I have a lot of people to thank in Mexico. My family, they never gave up on me," Suárez said in an interview with the Associated Press. He joins Colombian Juan Pablo Montoya as the only Latin American-born driver to win a NASCAR Cup Series race.Suárez moved to the United States 11 years ago and received his U.S. residency in 2018. His win is a boost for NASCAR's Drive for Diversity program, which is designed to develop and train female and minority drivers on and off the track.In 2016 he became the first Mexican to win NASCAR's "minor league" Xfinity Series race. He was then promoted to NASCAR's highest level.Addressing his supporters in attendance, Suárez said in Spanish the win would be "the first one of many."“All the people wearing red shirts today, those are my people,” Suárez said in an interview with Insider. "Coming from Mexico, not knowing the language, trying to find an opportunity, having goals, just trying to find that dream or trying to make that dream happen. These are my people. I feel extremely lucky to be the one that can represent all of them."“Hopefully, the success that we have had, that we’re having, can fuel them as well to continue to push in whatever they want to do — [whether] that is racing, mechanic, engineering, business, whatever that may be — to continue to fuel them to know that they can do it. They just have to work hard and put on the table what they have to do," he told Insider.Follow NBC Latino on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Edwin FloresEdwin Flores reports and produces for NBC Latino and is based in Anaheim, California.
Other Sports
SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors switched up their starting lineup Friday night for the first time since Game 6 of the Western Conference semifinals. But swapping Kevon Looney for Otto Porter Jr. in Game 4 of the NBA Finals did not predicate a lesser role for Looney in their victory. Quite the opposite. This is the perfect matchup for Looney. Looney’s 26 minutes in Game 4 were the most he’s played yet in these Finals, and that number should stay high going forward. Golden State needs Looney playing as much as possible, especially when Boston’s shot-blocker extraordinaire Robert Williams is on the floor. Playing him just 16 minutes in their Game 3 loss was costly. “He’s irreplaceable for us,” said Kerr after their Game 3 loss. “He’s played in every game, and he’s a guy we count on. I didn’t play him enough in Game 3. That was my mistake.” The Warriors tend to lose when they’re out-rebounded, as they were by 16 in Game 3. In Looney’s 155 Finals minutes, the Warriors are collecting 58 percent of their rebounding opportunities and hold a 98.4 defensive rating with him on the court. In 212 minutes with him off the court, the Warriors are rebounding just 47 percent and hold a 117 defensive rating. But keeping Looney on the court is easier said than done. Looney creates a rotation conundrum with Draymond Green’s minutes. The Warriors’ strongest defensive lineups feature both Looney and Green, but playing the pair together leaves the Warriors without much scoring punch on the offensive end. Kerr manufactured a solution in the fourth quarter of Game 4, deciding to keep Looney in for most of crunch time while alternating Jordan Poole and Green for offensive and defensive possessions. Holding Green on the bench for portions of crunch time of a Finals game would have been unheard of in the Warriors’ previous playoff runs, but the offense-defense substitution nudged them to victory in Boston. Those 10 extra Looney minutes gave the Warriors a rebounding edge in Game 4 they severely lacked in Game 3. Though Looney is a key part of the series, he may be more valuable as a closer than as a starter. Porter is a scoring threat beyond the arc, so sliding him into the starting lineup over Looney opens up the opportunity for a hot scoring start. The coaching staff sees that he’s been part of the Warriors’ most impactful offensive lineups, shooting 40% from 3 on 2.5 attempts per game to keep Boston’s defense honest. Lineup changes in the Finals could indicate trouble — shouldn’t the Warriors have this figured out by now? — but the tweaks and experimentations are a product of injuries. Gary Payton II went from playing zero minutes in Game 1 after recovering from his elbow fracture to playing 15 minutes on average over the next three. Andre Iguodala played 12 minutes returning from a neck injury in Game 1 but hasn’t seen a competitive minute since. “Part of this series for us, and part of the whole playoffs, frankly, has been trying to figure out rotations,” Kerr said. “We didn’t have our whole team together until Game 1 of the Denver series, and then Gary got hurt. Andre got hurt. So it feels like almost every series, we have had to search a little bit for combinations and for substitution patterns.” The Warriors just need that search to yield two more wins.
Basketball
NEW YORK (WABC) -- A bus load of champions returned home to Manhattan after an epic run at the Special Olympics USA Games in Orlando.Among the athletes were the City Hawks - a high school soccer team that took home the gold.The team is made up of players from two schools - Harvest Collegiate and P721M. It is a unified team - meaning half have a disability and half do not. '"It felt special, I haven't been on a team like this, so it was a new learning experience," said Alexander Carbajal."We showed teamwork strategy and confidence," said Special Olympics partner Zion Dillard.Unified Partner Player Genesis Duran says the chemistry was there all the time on the field.What is so remarkable about the team is that many of the players had never played soccer. When it came to training, they didn't have a gym, let alone a field - they trained in the school lobby or courtyard, and still managed to win."When you see our team play, you just see a soccer team. You don't see differences or forced inclusion. Everybody has a role, everyone contributes on our team," said Coach Joe Stewart.The team is about heart as much as it is about skill."I'm so proud of them, they even taught me so much. I taught them how to play soccer, but they taught me about life and skills and just being together - it was amazing," added Coach Oscar Vicente.They are young champions - on the field and off.----------* Get Eyewitness News Delivered * More Manhattan news* Send us a news tip* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts * Follow us on YouTubeSubmit a tip or story idea to Eyewitness NewsHave a breaking news tip or an idea for a story we should cover? Send it to Eyewitness News using the form below. If attaching a video or photo, terms of use apply. Copyright © 2022 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Olympic Sports
The Socceroos are heading to a record fifth consecutive FIFA World Cup after a nail biting contest against Peru with the Aussies coming out victorious in a tight and tense penalty shoot-out.The Socceroos have beaten Peru in their final qualifier to book themselves a spot at the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.The close match was forced to a shootout after the score was still locked at 0-0 after 120 minutes of regular and extra time.In nail-biting scenes, both teams missed a penalty each before the Socceroos emerged victorious 5-4 to book their place at a record fifth consecutive FIFA World Cup.Australia entered Tuesday morning's must-win match at Al Rayyan Stadium as the heavy underdogs but it was the final opportunity for both teams to qualify.Peru held the majority of the ball but Australia managed to create more chances during the game but neither was able to capitalise before the final whistle was blown.Coach Graham Arnold then made the major decision to sub off Socceroos captain and goalkeeper Mat Ryan in the 119th minute to give Andy Redmayne the responsibility of the penalty shootout.Arnold's decision proved to be a masterstroke as Redmayne would go on to save two penalties en route to the Socceroos' victory."Andrew Redmayne is a very good penalty saver, and to try to get him on the mental aspect while we were making that change, to add that bit of uncertainty in their brains," Arnold told Network 10 of the decision after the match.The coach praised the players for their tenacity throughout the mega qualifying game which saw the Socceroos play 20 matches with only four at home."I'm just so proud of the players, you know. No one knows what those boys have been through to get to here," he said."It was so hard, the whole campaign, and the way they've stuck at it and committed themselves to it, incredible."The Socceroos were behind from the beginning of the shoot-out after Martin Boyle missed the first shot.Peru scored their first two penalties with Australia's Aaron Mooy and Craig Goodwin slotting theirs leaving the score at 2-2 with Peru having a kick to come.Australia saved the next shot tying it up with the next three Socceroos tucking their penalties away and taking it to a sudden death.Then Redmayne managed to keep his cool and stopped Peru's sixth penalty with a brilliant diving save to seal the match and take the Socceroos to the World Cup.After the match the goalkeeping hero refused to take the credit for the victory and thanked those who have worked behind the scenes during the qualifying campaign."I can't thank the team enough, the staff enough. You know, I'm not going to take credit. The boys ran out 120 minutes, and it not only takes 11 on the field but the boys on the bench, the boys in the stands," Redmayne told Network 10."I'm no hero. I just played my role like everyone else did tonight. Not even the 11 on the pitch, it was much more than that, it is a team effort."MORE TO COME.
Soccer
Courtesy Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group By Aedan Juvet The quintessential horror franchise Scream is back after 11 years of silence and 25 years since the conception of director Wes Craven and writer Kevin Williamson’s incomparable terrors. The fifth entry of the film series, released on January 14, enlists the extraordinary trio of legacy characters that fans have come to love: Neve Campbell’s Sidney, Courteney Cox’s Gale, and David Arquette’s Dewey. But this re-envisioned Scream simultaneously opens the door for a whole new crop of Woodsboro’s suspects. By taking on a new challenge in a genre that has gone through unprecedented change, Scream presents perfect symmetry of multiple generational cinematic desires, successfully keeping the movies’ blood pumping. One of these new characters is played by the versatile rising star Jenna Ortega (You, Babysitter: Killer Queen), who prior to the release of the film, finds herself humbled by the early buzz surrounding her emotionally charged performance as Tara Carpenter, in addition to the project’s positive reception. “Oh, it’s been insane for sure!” Ortega shares with MTV News over Zoom, days before the theatrical relaunch of the grisly title. The franchise isn’t new to carving out admiration from critics and viewers, as the 1996 original film, the brainchild of Craven and Williamson, was labeled a vital rebirth for the genre. What particularly sets this new film apart from its four predecessors is that there has once again been a directional genre shift. The return to Scream sharply acknowledges the current popularity of so-called “elevated horror,” like that of Hereditary and Get Out, before going full-throttle into its classic slasher roots with new levels of meta dialogue and visceral brutality. “To do something like this, over 10 years after the last installment, it’s important to keep people interested and keep things new and fresh,” Ortega explains. “So yes, ‘pay your respects, pay homage, it’s necessary! But how is this going to be different from the rest?’ And I tried to keep that in mind during filming.” In the movie, Ortega’s Tara is the younger sister of Melissa Barrera’s Sam Carpenter, someone with significant secrets that inadvertently places others, including Tara, in great danger. Ortega goes through some of the most ambitious and shocking moments of the new film, giving her firsthand knowledge of how the modern iteration of the killer Ghostface is depicted. “I hope people take away the intensity of Ghostface this time around. He’s a lot more aggressive and he’s very intimidating,” she says. “It gets graphic in a way that Scream hasn’t seen before, and it gets gory, which makes this killer stand out and shift into a bigger and better horror from the brutality to the score.” Courtesy Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media GroupThough Scream has a long-standing following that formed in the ’90s, it has since charmed Gen Z viewers, a trend apparent on YouTube and TikTok. Apart from general ’90s fascination and nostalgia, what is it about Scream that appeals to a new audience? “I think the incredible thing about Scream is that it’s always relevant and it’s always speaking to a new generation, and what’s happening in the world.” Ortega says. “It’s really self-aware, and I think that’s a special quality to this franchise because of that spontaneity with the films, especially that whodunit aspect. It’s kind of like a game for the audience, and I think that leads to a really fun experience.” Its bone-chilling original opening sequence, shocking killer reveals, and the debut of timeless scream queen Sidney Prescott have made Scream a classic, and have helped it develop and maintain a fresh audience with each new generation. “The crazy thing about Scream is that it always goes back to the original,” Ortega says with a laugh. “So for the returning audience, it’s nostalgic, which is something we crave. … But for newer audiences, we kind of sum up Woodsboro in a way that even if this is the first time you’ve seen a Scream film, you are told enough information to understand the story, and I think that’s a great way to allow for a wider audience.” “It’s kind of the same thing: naive teens not understanding the severity,” she continues. “I think with anything traumatic, people don’t understand the weight or gravity until it happens to them. For some characters, that history of Woodsboro means more than others, and for others, it’s like a folk tale or something.” Just like her character, Ortega wasn’t even born when the original film was released. In fact, Ortega, who is 19, finally watched it just six years ago, despite knowing the instantly recognizable Ghostface mask for much longer. “I think my first memory of Scream was my older brother dressing as Ghostface for Halloween when I was maybe 6 or 7,” she recalls. “I knew that it was such a common costume and that Scream was pretty iconic, but that was probably my first exposure. I didn’t watch the film until I was 14, but I knew of the characters like Casey Becker and Stu Macher.” Courtesy Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media GroupKnowing those characters, and knowing how beloved they are, can provide challenges when stepping into the franchise’s latest chapter. “It adds a lot of pressure,” she says. “Not only was every prior character played to perfection, as well as the perfect scripts, but also understanding that Scream is a very well-loved franchise and its peoples’ babies. It’s my baby! I have so much love for it.” Speaking on behalf of the film’s outstanding blend of talent, including other newcomers Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding, and Barrera, Ortega reiterates, “We just want to do the franchise justice, so just getting to insert yourself in Woodsboro and put your foot in the door, it brought a certain level of passion.” As her time in Woodsboro comes to an end, Ortega has cemented herself as a next-gen scream queen for her pivotal role in the evolution of an electric franchise. Even with so many gifted individuals bringing something unique to the table, a project like Scream requires the collective energy of all involved to succeed. “Something I learned is the importance of chemistry. The entire cast got along so well that when it came to actually working together, things flowed really naturally,” she says. “Then seeing the original cast work was a great learning experience to watch them just flip into these characters they’ve played for 25 years just like that.” “But also, when Ghostface is in front of you, there’s an added pressure that you don’t get at every job,” she concludes. “When you feel that pressure, I kind of want to take that everywhere I go because I kind of love that.” Movies Jenna Ortega Scream
Movies
Actor Philip Baker Hall, known for films such as Magnolia and Boogie Nights, has died at the age of 90.The news was initially shared by his neighbour and Los Angeles Times writer Sam Farmer on Twitter. “My neighbor, friend, and one of the wisest, most talented and kindest people I’ve ever met, Philip Baker Hall, died peacefully last night,” he wrote. “He was surrounded by loved ones. The world has an empty space in it.”His wife Holly Wolfle Hall later confirmed the news to Associated Press. She said he had been well until relatively recently and spent his final days reflecting on his life in warm spirits. “His voice at the end was still just as powerful,” she said.Defined as a storied character actor, Hall started out on stage in New York before embarking on a Hollywood career in the 1970s with small roles in Coma and on TV shows such as M*A*S*H and Good Times. “When I first came out here, I was totally naive. I didn’t know where to start,” Hall said to the Washington Post. “Television really had no meaning for me. We never had a television. I didn’t see myself doing a movie. Ever. It didn’t seem possible or likely.”But Hall continued to find work throughout the 80s with roles in Ghostbusters II, Midnight Run and Say Anything and in the 90s with Air Force One, The Rock and The Truman Show.He became friends with Paul Thomas Anderson when the young director was working as a production assistant on a PBS movie. Anderson then gave him roles in Hard Eight, Boogie Nights and Magnolia, which led to even more work for Hall in the following decades.Philip Baker Hall in Magnolia. Photograph: Cinetext Collection/Sportsphoto/AllstarLarry David also used him in both Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm. “Philip has made me laugh harder than any actor I’ve worked with,” David once said.In 2012, Hall said that his Seinfeld character, library cop Joe Bookman, was arguably his best known with most people. “Bookman is the one that everyone remembers,” he said. “People will say forever, at the supermarket or wherever, it doesn’t matter where, ‘Oh, you’re Bookman, right? I really loved that Bookman. Now, I know you’ve done a lot of other things, but I loved that Bookman character.’ When they say, ‘I know you’ve done a lot of other things,’ it’s like, ‘You don’t know the half of it!’ But Bookman? Bookman hits a response button. And I’m not ungrateful for that.”Hall’s big-screen credits also included Dogville, The Insider, Zodiac, Argo, Bruce Almighty and The Amityville Horror while on the small screen he was also seen in The Newsroom and Modern Family and his voice was heard in Bojack Horseman.
Movies
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Joe Gorga exclusively told Fox News Digital he was acting out of pure frustration following an explosive incident in which he confronted a tenant who he claims owes him $50,000 in unpaid rent.In a video exchange of their heated argument, Gorga could be heard telling the tenant: "Pay your f---ing rent. Stop selling drugs in my f---ing building!"The tenant denied selling drugs and argued back, "You're spitting in my face!"Gorga said he initially allowed the tenant, who he says is a former employee, to move into an apartment in a complex he owned, and waived a security deposit and credit check as the employee allegedly "had no credit and couldn’t get an apartment." The "Real Housewives of New Jersey" star filmed a verbal altercation with an alleged tenant who he claims owes thousands of dollars in unpaid rent. (Theo Wargo)"The Real Housewives of New Jersey" star, who has been featured on the show for more than a decade with wife Melissa, said he initially received "two, three months rent" before the tenant allegedly completely stopped paying, according to Gorga. ‘REAL HOUSEWIVES’ STAR TERESA GIUDICE ‘ADMITTED TO THE HOSPITAL’ FOR 'NON-COSMETIC EMERGENCY PROCEDUREGorga claimed the issues with the tenant started before COVID began, but the tenant allegedly continued to evade him and Gorga "finally filed" suits against him to recover some money, the reality star said. "So, then he stayed through COVID," Gorga said before alleging: "So, for four years, he hasn't paid rent, not even attempted… not $100."The father-of-three told Fox News Digital he owns "thousands" of apartments, which range anywhere from "$1,450 per unit" to luxury buildings with rents above "$4,700." Joe and Melissa Gorga have starred on "Real Housewives of New Jersey" for more than a decade. Pictured at the Tribeca Film Festival opening of "Halftime" in June. (Theo Wargo)Gorga claimed, at one point, the tenant owed him upwards of "$89,000" in unpaid rent on a $2,000 unit."I gave him an opportunity," Gorga said. "I gave him a roof over his head, and he doesn't even answer my call. So I'm frustrated, aggravated."He also claimed the tenant has received "state help through COVID" assistance programs.He described finally seeing the tenant who had allegedly evaded him for years, the argument then ensued and was captured on camera cellphones. TMZ also shared footage from the incident."I pull up to the building and I see him," Gorga said. "I go right up to him, and I wanted him to feel what I felt for four years. You know how hard it's been for me as a landlord through COVID, to carry all my buildings?CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER Teresa Giudice, Luis Ruelas, Melissa Gorga and Joe Gorga of The Real Housewives of New Jersey attend the 2021 Battle for Brooklyn celebrity softball game at Maimonides Park, Coney Island on August 12, 2021 in New York City. (Rob Kim)"It's been so difficult. I'm frustrated. I'm aggravated. I’ve got so much pressure on me. COVID was so hard for me." He added: "I was really angry. I saw him and I went up to him. I just started acting the way I act, you know, you didn't pay rent, and I was square, and I was being vulgar because I wanted him to feel terrible. I really did."However, in the video, the tenant argues to Gorga that he got "paid." The tenant claims, "You just spent the money on other s--t."Meanwhile, Gorga explained he’s waiting on paperwork for an approved "scheduled lockout" with local sheriff’s officials "any day now" where the tenant has "one day to remove all of his stuff" from the unit. Joe and Melissa joined the Housewives franchise in 2010 after his sister, Teresa Giudice, became a star of the show. Their family drama has aired out for 12 seasons as Joe and Melissa attempt to keep the peace with Teresa, even most recently as she plans her wedding to fiancé Luis Ruelas. Teresa Giudice was previously married to Joe Giudice for 20 years before the couple divorced in 2020 following his 41-month prison stint for federal fraud, and he was also deported to his home country of Italy. Teresa also served a year in a federal correctional institute in 2016.Fox News' Larry Fink contributed to this report.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Tracy Wright is an entertainment writer for Fox News Digital.
Celebrity
Britney Spears Gets 3 Year Restraining Order Against Ex-Husband ... His Bail Set at $100K 6/13/2022 3:25 PM PT Britney Spears' ex, Jason Alexander, cannot contact or bother the singer in any capacity for at least the next 3 years, a judge just granted a restraining order against Britney's ex-husband ... and also hit him with a felony stalking charge. Alexander pled not guilty at his arraignment Monday on charges stemming from last week's wild incident -- in which he filmed himself sneaking onto the Ventura-area compound where she was set to get hitched ... only to be detained following a scuffle with security/law enforcement. The judge also added a felony stalking charge to Alexander's case and set his bail at $100,000 ... and he'll have to surrender any firearms he may have in his possession. 6/9/22 As we reported, cops say JA was armed with a knife during the episode, and an emergency protective order was issued on Britney's behalf -- ordering him to steer clear of her and Sam. He was booked for trespassing, vandalism and battery, for which he could possibly enter a plea Monday. And, he still has another case against him from Northern California ... where he's alleged to have committed grand theft. In that case ... a woman claims he jacked a pricey bracelet of hers while crashing at her pad in 2015, listed as being worth $2,000. The Napa County Sheriff's Office issued a warrant for Alexander's arrest shortly thereafter in 2016 -- but he's dodged it thus far, it seems. After he was arrested at the wedding the warrant popped up. So, he has to deal with that too. Unclear how the cases might be presented order-wise, but both are on the table.
Celebrity
Errol Spence Jr. Pleads Guilty To DWI ... In 2019 Ferrari Crash Case 6/13/2022 10:42 AM PT Star boxer Errol Spence Jr. has pleaded guilty to DWI ... nearly three years after he was accused of driving drunk when he horrifyingly crashed his Ferrari in Dallas. 32-year-old Spence Jr. entered the plea last week, according to the Dallas County District Attorney's Office, and was sentenced to three days in jail, though he was given credit for three days time served, a D.A. spokesperson tells TMZ Sports. #BREAKING Exclusive video from a nearby security camera shows the crash that injured Championship Boxer Errol Spence Jr when he lost control of his Ferrari and it rolled multiple times ejecting him. Fortunately he survived and expected to be ok pic.twitter.com/2Z1xh9DDiA— J.D. Miles (@jdmiles11) October 10, 2019 @jdmiles11 In a statement following the disposition of the case, Spence Jr. admitted to drinking before getting behind the wheel on the night of the 2019 crash, and vowed to warn others of the dangers of drunk driving going forward. "Don't drink and drive," he said in a statement. "Not one drink. It's not worth it." As we reported, Spence Jr. nearly died during the Oct. 10, 2019 incident ... losing control of his Ferrari and flipping it several times in the wild crash. Spence Jr. was ejected from the vehicle -- but somehow suffered no broken bones or serious ailments in the wreck. 10/10/19 KDFW Fox 4 "I was hanging out and having some drinks with some friends and ended up wrecking my car and nearly killing myself," Spence Jr. said of the crash following his plea. "Fortunately, no one else was involved in the accident and I am most grateful for that." Spence Jr. has fought two times since the accident, beating Danny Garcia in 2020 and Yordenis Ugas in April.
Boxing
"Unbearable Weight" and "Downton Abbey" also scored on PVOD, but the staying power of Daniels' multiverse hit stands out 11 weeks after theatrical release. A trio of new titles gained traction in their initial week on VOD, but it’s the staying power of Daniels’ surprise multiverse hit, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (A24/$19.99), that stands out from the pack. The Michelle Yeoh-starring film took in a totally unexpected $63 million box office and had one of the longer recent windows, particularly for a non-major distributor. Its next stop: VOD, where it arrived after its eleventh weekend in theaters. The film did arrive later than most new releases, including competitor “Downton Abbey: A New Era” (Focus/$19.99, coming far its third week in theaters), but this strong response signals that its heft isn’t just contained to the box office. The “Everything Everywhere” result is particularly revealing. A24 often makes its wide releases available for home viewing in under a month. The decision to delay as long as they did turns out to have been a ten-strike. And while they had no reason to assume that the film would have such a far-above-average hold in theaters, it performed. The film actually grossed 10 times its $6 million fourth weekend — its first wide one — in its full run. That’s an incredible result. And though there is no certainty in assessing this, its initial strong home response suggests waiting didn’t hurt them. How long the film sustains itself will help gauge this better, but so far, so good. Also out on VOD after its eleventh week in theaters: the Nicolas Cage-starring “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent” (Lionsgate/$19.99), though the film took in a lesser initial response, consistent with the films’s overall box office replacement. “Everything Everywhere” took #1 at Google Play and Vudu, second at iTunes. “Downton Abbey” is #1 at iTunes (which usually has the quickest response), #3 at Vudu, and tenth at Google Play. “Everything Everywhere” earlier had been #1 at iTunes for five days. “Unbearable Weight,” which took in $20 million in theaters, ranked as high as #2 at Vudu and is #4 at iTunes. The often-lagging Google Play top ten has yet to show it. “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent”Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate The delay for “Unbearable Weight” seemed more unexpected than that of “Everything Everywhere,” particularly in regards to Cage’s normal strong appeal at home. As a lower grossing film, it wasn’t expected to compete for #1, but its release date put it in competition with more new films that appeal to older audiences, compared to what it would have faced over many, other earlier weeks. Along with “Everything Everywhere” and “Downton Abbey,” only two other titles, both of which saw further price reductions this week, placed on all three lists. “The Lost City” and “Sonic the Hedgehog 2” (both Paramount at $4.99, both also streaming on Paramount +) are the best of the lower-priced VOD entries, including each having a #2 and #3 slot. Adam Sandler, whose combined originals and library titles are often strong on the VOD charts, returns to #1 on Netflix’s movie chart with “Hustle.” The very well-reviewed basketball story, which played nationwide to no reported response for a few days in theaters before its Wednesday debut, has taken the top spot since then. Number two at the streamer is another original, “The Interceptor,” which led last week. The Elsa Pataky-starring (“Fast and Furious” series regular) military thriller is sustaining interest above what many Netflix originals due. The rest of Netflix’s list is studio retreads, other than the new-this-week animated original “Chickenhare and the Hamster of Darkness.” The French/Belgian film comes from a Dark Horse comic, and is currently #4. iTunes and Google Play rank films daily by number of transactions. These are the listings for June 13. Distributors listed are current rights owners. iTunes 1. Downton Abbey: A New Era (Focus) – $19.99 2. Everything Everywhere All at Once (A24) – $19.99 3. The Lost City (Paramount) – $4.99 4. The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (Lionsgate) – $19.99 5. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Paramount) – $4.99 6. The Batman (Warner Bros.) – $ 7. Uncharted (Sony) – $5.99 8. Top Gun (Paramount) – $3.99 9. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (Universal) – $3.99 10. Spider-Man: No Way Home (Sony) – $5.99 Google Play 1. Everything Everywhere Always All at Once (A24) – $19.99 2. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Paramount) – $4.99 3. Spider-Man: No Way Home (Sony) – $5.99 4. Uncharted (Sony) – $5.99 5. The Lost City (Paramount) – $4.99 6. The Bad Guys (Universal) – $19.99 7. Morbius (Sony) – $19.99 8. Jurassic World: Forbidden Kingdom (Universal) – $3.99 9. Top Gun (Paramount) – $2.99 10. Downtown Abbey: A New Era (Focus) – $19.99 Vudu Vudu ranks by revenue, not transactions, which elevates Premium VOD titles. This list covers June 6-12 1. Everything Everywhere All at Once (A24) – $19.99 2. The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (Lionsgate) – $19.99 3. Downton Abbey: A New Era (Focus) – $19.99 4. The Bad Guys (Universal) – $19.99 5. The Lost City (Paramount) – $4.99 6. Last Seen Alive (Vertical) – $19.99 7. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Paramount) – $4.99 8. The Batman (Warner Bros.) – $5.99 9. Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore (Warner Bros.) – $19.99 10. Morbius (Sony) – $19.99 “Hustle” Netflix Movies Most viewed, current ranking on Netflix’s daily chart on Monday, June 613 originals include both Netflix-produced and -acquired titles it initially presents in the U.S. Netflix publishes its own weekly top 10 on Tuesdays based on time viewed. 1. Hustle (2022 Netflix original) 2. Interceptor (2022 Netflix original) 3. Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol (2011 theatrical release) 4. Chickenhare and the Hamster of Darkness (2022 Netflix animated original) 5. The Amazing Spider-Man (2012 theatrical release) 6. Titanic (1997 theatrical release) 7. Brahms: The Boy Part II (2020 theatrical release) 8. 10,000 B.C. (2008 theatrical release) 9. The Hurt Locker (2009 theatrical release) 10. Dumb and Dumber (1994 theatrical release) Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.
Movies
BERLIN (AP) — The European Space Agency released a trove of data Monday on almost 2 billion stars in the Milky Way, collected by its Gaia space observatory in an effort to create the most accurate and complete map of our galaxy.Astronomers hope to use the data to understand better how stars are born and die, and how the Milky Way evolved over billions of years.The new data includes new information such as the age, mass, temperature and chemical composition of stars. This can be used, for example, to determine which stars were born in another galaxy and then migrated to the Milky Way.“This is an incredible gold mine for astronomy,” said Antonella Vallenari, who helped lead a consortium of 450 scientists and engineers who spent years turning the measurements collected by the space probe into usable data.Gaia was also able to detect more than 100,000 starquakes, which the ESA likened to large tsunamis that ripple across stars. They appear to make the stars blink and allow scientists to deduce their density, interior rotation and inside temperature, astrophysicist Conny Aerts said.Although it has only collected information on about 1% of the Milky Way’s stars, the Gaia mission is already providing the basis for around 1,600 scientific publications a year.Project scientist Timo Prusti said the sheer number of stars observed makes it more likely that scientists will make very rare discoveries. “You have to observe a lot of objects in order to get the needle in the haystack,” he said.ESA chief Josef Aschbacher said having more data also allows astronomers to understand some of the forces at play in the galaxy, such as the way our own solar system is being thrown about inside the Milky Way.“It is enabling things that would never be possible without this large number of data,” he said.The Gaia data now being released also includes information on 800,000 binaries — stars that move in tandem with each other — as well as several new exoplanets, hundreds of thousands of asteroids in the solar system and millions of objects beyond our galaxy.
Space Exploration
It's been more than a year since Resident Evil Village brought us on a dark journey and introduced the beloved Lady Dimitrescu, so we're overdue for another helping. It's coming in the form of downloadable content Shadows of Rose, developer Capcom revealed in its livestreamed showcase Monday.It follows Rose Winters, the superpowered daughter of Village protagonist Ethan, years after Village's main story. Unlike the main game, Shadows of Rose will be playable in third person.We're also getting a remake of beloved classic Resident Evil 4, which comes out March 24, 2023.
Video Games
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Britney Spears' ex-husband, Jason Alexander, has pleaded not guilty after attempting to crash the pop singer's wedding to Sam Asghari last week. Alexander, who was not in court and appeared via video wearing his inmate uniform with an orange undershirt, entered the plea on Monday. A judge has set his bail at $100,000. The judge also ordered that Alexander must turn in any firearms. It is unclear if he has any. Alexander was arrested Thursday at 2:32 p.m. PST and booked the same day at 7:32 p.m. In addition, an emergency protective order was requested by Spears and Asghari's representatives at the time, and it was forwarded to a Ventura County superior judge who previously issued a no contact order. On Monday, the judge ordered Alexander to stay 100 yards away from Spears. The order is in place for three years. Authorities previously confirmed to Fox News Digital that Alexander was arrested on "two counts of misdemeanor battery, one count of misdemeanor vandalism and one count of misdemeanor trespassing, in addition to the out of county warrant," which involves grand theft. The judge also hit Alexander with a felony stalking charge. BRITNEY SPEARS' EX-HUSBAND: WHO IS JASON ALEXANDER?Last week, Spears' ex-husband live-streamed his attempt to crash the "Toxic" singer's wedding. In the video, Alexander is walking through Spears' home before security tells him he has to leave. Britney Spears' ex-husband live-streamed his attempt to crash the "Toxic" singer's wedding. In the video, Alexander is walking through Spears' home before security tells him he has to leave. (Getty Images)BRITNEY SPEARS' MOM LYNNE SPEARS SHOWS SUPPORT AFTER NOT BEING INVITED TO THE SINGER'S WEDDING"Don't put your hands on me. Please don't put your hands on me," Alexander told security before asking, "Hey, where's Britney?"He then walked into the tent being set up for the event and said, "I'm her first husband. I'm here to crash her wedding."Alexander and security did get into a physical altercation at some point, according to the Ventura County Sheriff's Department.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Britney Spears married Sam Asghari on Thursday. The two have been together since 2016. (Getty Images)Spears went on to marry Asghari on Thursday. The two have been together since 2016.Spears and Alexander tied the knot on a whim in the early morning hours on Jan. 3, 2004, during a ceremony at the Little White Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada. They were both 22 years old at the time. As for Alexander, Spears tied the knot with him in the early morning hours on Jan. 3, 2004, during a ceremony at the Little White Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas, Nevada. They were both 22 years old at the time. Their marriage was annulled 55 hours later. (Photo by Kevin Winter)Their marriage was annulled 55 hours later, which Alexander later claimed was forced by Britney’s mother, Lynne, and Britney’s management.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTERThe annulment stated that the pop star "lacked understanding of her actions, to the extent that she was incapable of agreeing to the marriage."Fox News' Tracy Wright contributed to this report Mariah Haas is an entertainment editor for Fox News Digital.
Celebrity
The reporter shares the e-mail he sent to Wilson's reps -- and admits "the things I got wrong." A reporter being accused of attempting to "out" Rebel Wilson's relationship with Ramona Agruma is speaking out, admitting he "made mistakes" with how he and his publication handled the situation in a new op-ed. After the "Pitch Perfect" star revealed her new relationship, The Sydney Morning Herald reporter Andrew Hornery wrote a column explaining that the publication reached out to the actress' team before the announcement and gave her "two days to comment on her new relationship with another woman ... before publishing a single word." The reporter went on to call that move a "big mistake," as Wilson "opted to gazump the story" by posting it herself -- and said "her choice to ignore our discreet, genuine and honest queries was, in our view, underwhelming." That column got a ton of backlash, as it made it seem like the outlet was planning to "out" the actress if she didn't respond to them. Wilson also tweeted that "it was a very hard situation" for her, adding she was "trying to handle it with grace." Waiting for your permission to load the Instagram Media. In a new post shared Monday, Hornery wrote that he has learned "some new and difficult lessons from this and want to be upfront with you about the things I got wrong." "I genuinely regret that Rebel has found this hard. That was never my intention. But I see she has handled it all with extraordinary grace," he continued. "As a gay man I'm well aware of how deeply discrimination hurts. The last thing I would ever want to do is inflict that pain on someone else." Hornery said that, after seeing a ton of photos of the two on Rebel's Instagram account and learning she was in a new relationship, he "assumed there was a good chance she might be happy to discuss" the romance. Admitting he and the publication "mishandled steps in our approach," Hornery then explained what they did wrong. He said that her team asked him to put his questions in an email and said it's "standard procedure" to include any deadlines when working on a piece. "It is always up to the subject whether or how they want to engage," he wrote, before revealing what the e-mail allegedly said in its entirety. Getty Rebel Wilson Comes Out, Reveals Her 'Disney Princess' View Story "Good morning. I am a journalist from The Sydney Morning Herald and I was hoping I could get a comment from Rebel regarding her new relationship. While I realise Rebel's partner has not been mentioned as yet, I have several sources who have confirmed their status and I have enough detail to publish," he said. "However, in the interests of transparency and fairness, before publishing I am reaching out to Rebel to see if she will engage in what I believe is a happy and unexpected news story for her, especially given the recent Pride celebrations. My deadline is Friday, 1pm Sydney-time. Regards, Andrew Hornery." He said that Rebel's response "would have largely determined" what was written and claimed there had been no decisions from the publication on whether anything would be published at all. "I received no reply, which was entirely Rebel's right," he continued. Shortly after that, Rebel came out about the relationship on her own. Getty Rebel Wilson Says Desire to Have Kids Ignited Health Journey View Story "My email was never intended to be a threat but to make it clear I was sufficiently confident with my information and to open a conversation," said Hornery, who said it's not the publication's "business to 'out' people and that is not what we set out to do." He added, "But I understand why my email has been seen as a threat. The framing of it was a mistake." He promised he and the Herald as a whole will "approach things differently" going forward, especially when it comes to sexuality, and vowed to "make it clear that a deadline is not an ultimatum." He went on to admit the "tone of my column ... was also off" and "allowed my disappointment to cast a shadow over the piece." The original column has since been taken down by the Herald, with this new one taking its place. Over the weekend, one of the Herald's editors, Bevan Shields, corroborated Hornery's assertion that there had been "no decision" made "about whether or what to publish" -- confirming that "the Herald's decision about what to do would have been informed by any response Wilson supplied." Shields also said "We would have asked the same questions had Wilson's new partner been a man" and added, "To say that the Herald 'outed' Wilson is wrong." Getty Rebel Wilson Recalls Agents Turning Her Down Over Her Weight View Story
Celebrity
CelebrityPete DavidsonFor every person admitting to a crush on him, there is another genuinely demanding to know why. Let’s break down Pete Davidson’s appeal.Posted 7 hours ago Since 2015, Saturday Night Live comic Pete Davidson has been linked to a string of beautiful women. Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images His first high-profile relationship was with actor Carly Aquilino, and he then dated Larry David’s daughter, Cazzie David, for two years before she asked to go on a break. C Flanigan / Getty Images Cazzie herself admitted that she quickly realized her mistake and wanted to reconcile with Pete, but it was too late — he’d already been snapped up by Ariana Grande. Kevin Mazur / WireImage Pete’s whirlwind romance with Ariana catapulted him into the mainstream. The two famously got engaged just weeks after going public with their relationship, and their five-month romance inspired songs across two hit albums from the singer. Robert Kamau / GC Images But if Ariana put Pete’s name on the map, it was Kim’s seal of approval that established him as one of the most desirable male celebrities of our time — a position that some just can’t wrap their heads around. While women have been swooning over Pete for years, there is a well-publicized disconnect when it comes to men understanding his appeal. Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue And for every social media post calling Pete the perfect man, there’s another genuinely demanding to know why. Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images In one viral TikTok, a man asked, “What is Pete Davidson’s secret?” as he reeled off his list of past girlfriends, adding in the caption: “Did he crack the da Vinci code?” And women have admitted to men actually getting angry over their attraction to Pete. “I love these grown ass people sliding in my DMs SOOOOOOO ANGRY with my love for Pete Davidson, like, attacking me about it,” one person tweeted in December. Another wrote: “I love how angry men get about Pete Davidson.” I love these grown ass people sliding in my DMs SOOOOOOO ANGRY with my love for Pete Davidson 😂 like, attacking me about it 😂 “you like toxic men?” “This is why you’re alone” “no wonder you were never into me” BRUH. Y’all need to calm the fuck down 😂😂😂😂 07:37 PM - 10 Dec 2021 Twitter: @princessmeems_ In fact, it’s arguable that no other celebrity has endured such a differing reaction from men and women, and one social media user theorized: “Any man who is confused why women find Pete Davidson attractive literally do not understand the difference between the female gaze and the male gaze.” Any man who is confused why women find Pete Davidson attractive literally do not understand the difference between the female gaze and the male gaze 10:30 PM - 17 Nov 2021 Twitter: @maybemiiia And this appears to be a common theme, with another tweet agreeing: “Men confused about the appeal of Pete Davidson don’t understand women at all.” Twitter: @e11enLN Another person claimed that Pete riles men up so much because he “disproves” their theory about what women want, and that his popularity ultimately suggests that personality is key. Kevin Winter / Getty Images “I think men hate Pete Davidson because he disproves all their shallow theories about what women want and validate that what we want is a decent human being who gets us and is funny,” they wrote in a now-viral tweet. I think men hate Pete Davidson because he disproves all their shallow theories about what women want and validate that what we want is a decent human being who gets us and is funny. 07:01 PM - 11 Apr 2022 Twitter: @RansdellLiz So what exactly is it about Pete that has captured the hearts of so many women? While somebody’s physical attractiveness is, of course, subjective, he has previously described himself as looking like a “crack baby” and quoted a troll who said he has “butthole eyes” during his standup. Jeff Kravitz / Getty Images for Triller It’s this level of self-deprecating comedy that has captured the hearts of his fans, with one writing: “People being surprised that Pete Davidson could get someone like Kim, Kate Beckinsale, Ariana or Kaia Gerber… as if comedians haven’t been able to pull beautiful women since the beginning of time. Women like funny men. Period.” People being surprised that Pete Davidson could get someone like Kim, Kate Beckinsale, Ariana or Kaia Gerber… as if comedians haven’t been able to pull beautiful women since the beginning of time. Women like funny men. Period. 01:19 PM - 31 Oct 2021 Twitter: @takeyourzoloft And Pete’s seamless ability to make fun of himself is even more of a turn-on, with the comic even managing to roast himself as he called Ariana out for discussing intimate details about their sex life. Kevin Mazur / Getty Images During a 2018 Twitter Q&A ahead of her album’s release, a fan had asked Ariana how long the track titled “Pete Davidson” is. Ariana cheekily replied at the time: “Like 10 inches?….oh fuck….I mean….like a lil over a minute.” She quickly deleted the message, but it had already been screengrabbed and immediately caused a stir online. Despite the comment ultimately being a compliment, Pete later admitted that he didn’t like the fact that she’d discussed his body as he tried to downplay his size. FilmMagic “Everything is huge to her,” he joked before adding that it was actually a cruel ploy from Ariana, saying: “Why would she tell everyone that I have a huge penis? So that every girl who sees my dick for the rest of my life is disappointed.” Gilbert Carrasquillo / GC Images But his reputation ended up preceding him, and in a recent episode of The Kardashians, Kim admitted that it was Pete’s “BDE” — which stands for “big dick energy” — that first attracted her to him. Paul Morigi / Getty Images “I wasn’t even thinking, like, ‘Oh my god, I’m gonna be in a relationship with him,’” she said in a confessional. “I was just thinking, ‘Heard about this BDE, need to get out there…’ I was just basically DTF [down to fuck].” Hulu And while she didn’t give away too many details about their sex life, the 41-year-old star didn’t completely shy away from it as she told her sisters: “When I turned 40, everyone said it’s the best sex of your life. Grandma kept on telling me, '40 is the best sex.' And I was like OK, I’m ready. And so far…” she trailed off with a cheeky wink. Hulu This narrative fits another popular reason behind Pete’s appeal, with one social media user pointing out: “Pete Davidson has dated Kate Beckinsale, Ariana Grande, Phoebe Denver and now Kim Kardashian. All his exes have praised his 🍆 and called him the ‘best human ever’. Still men are like, ‘how?? what do women want???’ be good in bed and be a good person. that’s literally it.” Pete Davidson has dated Kate Beckinsale, Ariana Grande, Phoebe Dynevor and now Kim Kardashian. All his exes have praised his 🍆 and called him the “best human ever”. Still men are like, “how?? what do women want???” be good in bed and be a good person. that’s literally it. 08:06 PM - 04 Jun 2022 Twitter: @BridgieCasey But there’s so much more to Pete than his abilities in the bedroom, and Kim has also revealed that Pete warned her that in four months she’d be “obsessed” with him, before going on to praise how “thoughtful” and “genuine” he is. Mega / GC Images In fact, Kim and Pete’s entire relationship is centered around the little things, which is a welcome change from the “extravagance” of Kim’s marriage to Kanye, who focused on grand gestures. Gotham / Getty Images During last week’s show, Kim was blown away by Pete surprising her with a tub of her favorite frozen candy, Dibs, for her flight to the Dominican Republic. Previously, she recalled a sweet story where Pete put acne cream on her pimple while she slept after she forgot to do it herself before drifting off. Hulu “Even little things that he’s gotten me that are just really thoughtful,” Kim says in the episode. “Pete is such a good, good person, I can’t even explain it. He just has the best heart and always thinks of the small things.” Hulu And this marries up to what Pete said about himself as a boyfriend during a 2019 interview with Paper magazine. “My love language, when I’m in a relationship, is I treat the person I’m with like a princess,” he said at the time. Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue “I try and go as above and beyond as possible,” he said. “Because that’s what you’re supposed to do if you’re in a relationship with someone, you’re just supposed to make that person feel as special as possible.” But Pete’s big heart isn’t just limited to romance, with his incredibly close relationship with his mom, Amy, also drawing people in. Pete bought a $1.3 million house in Staten Island for his mother and turned the basement into an apartment so that he could live with her. “I live with my mom, kinda, so I have, like, a basement that’s mine that’s like an apartment. I live underneath her,” Pete previously explained. “I’m getting like a little arcade set up down there trying to make it mine.” Amy has also appeared on Saturday Night Live alongside her son, and their loving relationship has been a factor in the way women view him. Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images “I don’t understand why dating Pete Davidson has become a meme,” one fan tweeted. “He’s funny, successful, got his mama a house & lived in it with her for a bit, and clearly isn’t intimidated by beautiful, smart, powerful women. I’ve dated at *least* a dozen worse dudes.” I don’t understand why dating Pete Davidson has become a meme. He’s funny, successful, got his mama a house &amp; lived in it with her for a bit, and clearly isn’t intimidated by beautiful, smart, powerful women. I’ve dated at *least* a dozen worse dudes. 11:38 PM - 17 Jan 2022 Twitter: @AmandaBecker And this is a stance that Emily Ratajkowski also stands by, with the model quizzed on Pete’s appeal after she worked with him on a campaign. “Obviously women find him very attractive,” she said at the time. “Guys are like, ‘Wow, what’s that guy got.’ And I’m like, I mean, he seems super charming. He’s vulnerable. He’s lovely.” Gotham / WireImage Emily then added that Pete has a “good relationship with his mother. We love it, that’s hard to find.” Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank / NBCUniversal via Getty Images The vulnerability that Emily mentioned stems from the fact that Pete has endured more than his fair share of tragedy and illness over the years, which only made his bond with his mom stronger. Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images His firefighter father, Scott Davidson, tragically died in 9/11 when Pete was 7 years old, and he has been open about how that impacted his ability to form relationships. In a 2018 interview, the star said that his dad’s death made it hard for him to trust people aside from his mom and sister, Casey. “My big thing is trust,” he said at the time. “One day [my father] was here, and the next day he was gone.” Pete has also been candid in speaking out about his mental health struggles over the years, having been “in and out” of inpatient treatment facilities due to his depression since he was 9 years old. When he started to have episodes of intense rage and bouts of severe depression in 2016, he sought help and was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder the following year. Michael Tran / FilmMagic In fact, the star — who also suffers from Crohn’s disease — has won praise for helping to destigmatize mental illness, especially among young men who are statistically less likely to ask for help. Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank / NBCUniversal via Getty Images And Pete has repeatedly acknowledged how hard he has worked to educate himself on the best ways to live with his mental illness, and reinforced the importance of being self-aware and taking accountability. He famously stated in 2018: “Being mentally ill is not an excuse to act like a jackass.” Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank / NBCUniversal via Getty Images Although he struggles with his depression and BPD at times, his proactive approach to finding coping mechanisms that work for him does appear to have helped. In 2020, Pete said that he’s “always depressed, all the time,” but he now knows the steps that he has to take to “bring [himself] out of it.” He said: “I have to go outside and be in the sun for a little bit or go for a walk. It’s all just programming yourself to trick your brain.” Gotpap / GC Images He also goes to therapy to help him cope, previously saying: “My therapists are really on the ball, and I’m really lucky to have them in my life. I recommend that everyone go to therapy.” Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images And in 2018, Pete deleted his social media accounts. He said that it helped to improve his mental health, writing at the time: “Everybody is different, and there are a lot of treatments for mental illnesses and I have done/am doing all of them. And I encourage those who struggle to seek help as well; it has changed my life for the better.” Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank / NBCUniversal via Getty Images In addition to various interviews, Pete has used his prime time slot on Saturday Night Live to speak about his personal experience with mental illness in a lighthearted and accessible way for viewers. “Pete Davidson talking about Borderline Personality Disorder on #SNL is an amazing step towards raising mental health awareness,” one person previously tweeted. Pete Davidson talking about Borderline Personality Disorder on #SNL is an amazing step towards raising mental health awareness. 04:25 AM - 08 Oct 2017 Twitter: @WheresMyArk_23 “Men, a big part of Pete Davidson’s appeal is that he goes to therapy,” another wrote. While someone else commented on TikTok: “He has his issues too but he actually acknowledges it and he finds ways to cope. He’s emotionally strong. He’s capable of loving people. Selfless.” Twitter: @letsdivethru All things considered, one social media user best summed up Pete’s appeal when they tweeted: “People going to all these lengths to explain the ‘mystery’ of why so many women are attracted to Pete Davidson is hilarious to me. Like, he’s hot, funny, and nice, what else is there to explain?” people going to all these lengths to explain the “mystery” of why so many women are attracted pete davidson is hilarious to me like he’s hot, funny, and nice what else is there to explain 02:44 PM - 04 Sep 2021 Twitter: @littlelordpmd A sentiment that I couldn’t agree with more.
Celebrity
Errol Spence Jr., a welterweight boxing champion from DeSoto, pleaded guilty Friday to a charge of driving while intoxicated and said he would use his platform to warn others of the dangers of driving drunk.“As I recovered, I thought of how much I could have lost and how blessed I was to have a second chance at life, but I also know with this platform I can spread a very powerful message,” Spence, 32, wrote in a statement issued through the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office. “Don’t drink and drive. Not one drink. It’s not worth it.”Spence was ordered to spend three days in jail, court records show.This photo taken from video provided by KDFW Fox 4 shows the scene after welterweight boxing champion Errol Spence Jr. crashed a speeding Ferrari in Dallas early Oct. 10, 1019. (KDFW FOX4 via AP)(Uncredited)Spence was speeding at about 3 a.m. Oct. 10, 2019, after a night of bar-hopping, according to a news release from District Attorney John Creuzot. Spence’s Ferrari veered over a median in the 500 block of South Riverfront Boulevard and flipped several times. He was not wearing a seatbelt and was thrown from the car.Court records do not reveal Spence’s speed or intoxication level. Defense lawyer Barry Sorrels declined to comment on facts of the case.“He deserves credit for the way he’s turned this into an opportunity to be an example to others in a positive way,” Sorrels said.Related:Errol Spence Jr. says he’s only improved since car accident — but Yordenis Ugas’ trainer disagreesSpence was taken to the intensive care unit at Methodist Dallas Medical Center. He has said he suffered soft tissue damage, broken teeth and scratches, but no broken bones or fractures.“Fortunately, no one else was involved in the accident and I am most grateful for that,” Spence said. “It was an incident that would profoundly change my life.”Spence recently clinched a meaningful win in an April 16 fight at AT&T Stadium in Arlington.Creuzot praised Spence for taking responsibility for his actions and using his platform for awareness.“While it would have been easier to hide from the truth,” Creuzot said, “it is refreshing to see this world-class athlete step up and use his lapse in judgment as an opportunity to spread the message that it is never okay to get behind the wheel of a vehicle while intoxicated.”Krista M. Torralva, Staff writer. Krista Torralva first joined The Dallas Morning News as an intern on the business desk in 2013. She returned to The Morning News in 2021 as a reporter covering primarily Dallas County criminal courts. Krista graduated from the University of Texas at Arlington with a major in journalism and a minor in criminal justice. [email protected] @KMTorralva
Other Sports
It’s been nearly 50 years since the Viking 1 lander snapped the first image from the surface of Mars. And yet, until recently, that landscape remained silent to the human ear. Now, thanks to two microphones aboard the Perseverance rover, researchers can tune in from more than a million miles away to probe the Red Planet’s alien atmosphere and unique sound propagation patterns.Fields such as astronomy and astrophysics have long surveyed outer space using the electromagnetic spectrum — from gamma rays to radio waves and everything in between. By contrast, the acoustic exploration of the universe has only just begun. Although we use sound waves here on Earth to map the ocean floor, infer wind patterns, track lightning, and accomplish other tasks, NASA has only ever equipped a few missions with dedicated microphones. The first bound for Mars in 1999 literally crashed and burned, and the second, launched in 2007, had technical issues. It wasn’t until early 2021 when Perseverance touched down that the researchers listening in could start to piece together the Martian soundscape. (Anyone can listen to the eerie audio recordings on NASA’s site.) They shared their findings in a study published on April 1 in the journal Nature.Capturing Martian SoundIt took some coaxing to convince NASA that the microphones were a worthwhile addition to Perseverance’s payload, says Baptiste Chide, one of the study’s lead authors and a postdoc at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.Chide completed his Ph.D. in 2020 at the University of Toulouse with planetary scientists Sylvestre Maurice and David Mimoun, who collaborated with a team at Los Alamos to build an instrument called SuperCam. SuperCam is mounted on Perseverance’s mast and houses one of the rover’s two microphones; the other mic is located in a camera on the rover’s side. It was Chide’s job as a Ph.D. student to devise the scientific rationale that would persuade NASA that the mics were indeed a valuable asset. And the stakes were high: Chide’s entire thesis project hinged upon getting those mics into space. “It was a risky bet,” he says — but one that paid off.(Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Shutterstock)Without the bustle of humans and animals, Mars is nearly silent, save the gusty wind. So, the SuperCam team also decided to analyze the sounds coming from their own scientific equipment.Part of SuperCam’s job is to zap nearby rocks with a laser and record the acoustic and optical signals that reverberate back, in order to determine hardness and chemical composition. The mic was also able to pick up farther away sounds, including the whir of the blades on NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter — the first aircraft to make a powered, controlled flight on another planet.Read More: Chasing Life on MarsInterpreting the NoiseBased on the noises coming from the laser and the helicopter, the researchers were able to determine that the speed of sound is much slower on Mars than it is on Earth. Moreover, different frequencies travel at different speeds. On Earth, sounds typically disperse at about 767 mph. On Mars, however, high-pitched sounds move at 559 mph and low-pitched ones move even slower at 537 mph. A similar phenomenon occurs on Earth as well, but only at frequencies outside our hearing range, so we don’t usually notice the discrepancy.Chide says that this difference in speed between low and high frequencies would be most apparent at long distances. If you were to attend a concert on Mars, for example, and stand a few hundred feet away from the stage, you would receive the high frequencies a few milliseconds before the low ones, which would lead to sound distortion. The band would also have to play quite loud in order for the music to reach you because sounds on Mars don’t carry nearly as far as they do on Earth.These otherworldly acoustic patterns are due to the peculiar atmosphere on Mars. Unlike Earth’s atmosphere, which is primarily oxygen and nitrogen, the Martian atmosphere is 96 percent carbon dioxide (CO2), and extremely cold and thin. This combination of factors causes the CO2 molecules to vibrate in such a way that they absorb higher-frequency sounds, preventing those noises from traveling long distances.Given that temperature has such a drastic effect on sound propagation, Chide and his colleagues suspect that the speed of sound on Mars will vary by season and even time of day. As the dust storm season approaches, the researchers anticipate their microphones will detect additional wind and temperature changes. SuperCam’s mic has unprecedented sensitivity, and can detect pressure fluctuations at scales 1,000 times smaller than ever before recorded on Mars. As a result, the mic can sense tiny eddies of wind called “micro-turbulence,” which whisk up dust — sculpting the planet’s surface, mixing chemicals and aerosols in the atmosphere, and controlling the temperature by absorbing solar radiation.Beyond the TheoreticalPrior to these sound recordings (which totaled just under six hours), models of the Martian soundscape were purely theoretical and offered conflicting predictions. Andi Petculescu, a physicist from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette who studies acoustic properties of planetary atmospheres and was not involved in the research, considers the new study to be “a breakthrough” that will help develop more consistent acoustic models.Given that the cold, thin, CO2-rich atmosphere renders Mars acoustically “unfriendly,” Petculescu was impressed that the researchers were able to obtain such clean signals from their microphones. He advocates equipping future spacecraft with acoustic sensors in order to learn more about the sound properties of other atmospheres. For example, Saturn’s largest moon Titan has a denser atmosphere and a wealth of background noises to record, including methane rainstorms. In 2027, NASA is scheduled to launch its Dragonfly mission, which will carry two microphones on its meteorological experiment, complementing previous recordings from the Huygens Probe.“The study of acoustics is coming of age in planetary science, and we are learning new things about the way sound propagates in different atmospheres,” explains Roger Wiens, a co-author on the recent study and principal investigator of SuperCam.The physics of sound will be important to understand in advance of humans setting foot on the Red Planet, he adds, in order to deduce information like wind direction and speed — and even gauge the health of scientific instruments by listening to the sounds they make as they operate. When humans finally get there, we’ll likely have to use devices like radios to communicate because sound won’t travel very far. As Wiens puts it: “You can't yell to somebody at the other side of the block.” Not to mention, you’d be shouting from inside your space helmet.
Space Exploration
Published June 13, 2022 2:42PM Updated 4:21PM article John Cena attends the WWE Monday Night Raw at the Frank Erwin Center on April 6, 2015 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Suzanne Cordeiro/Corbis via Getty Images) AMSTERDAM - A teen fan got the surprise of a lifetime when he met his favorite WWE superstar John Cena. The wrestling champion traveled to Amsterdam last week to meet him. Misha, the teen fan, and his mom Liana escaped Ukraine after their Mariupol home was destroyed in the Russian invasion. To flee the war, the teen's mom encouraged him to travel across Europe to escape the war by telling him they were on their way to find Cena. In a video posted on YouTube, Misha, who has Down syndrome, met the superstar actor and wrestler on June 5 outside of Amsterdam. The teen was in disbelief as Cena stepped out of a car and walked up to his home. The WWE star embraced Misha and his mom with hugs. RELATED: Ukraine: 100-200 soldiers die daily, new plea for more arms "When I read about Misha’s story, it reached out to me, not just his story, but the story of his mom as well, I had three days off from work right at the time when I read this story being an hour away by air (a plane ride) it turned immediately into...we’re going," Cena confirmed in the video. Cena and Misha enjoyed the afternoon hanging out, eating cake, and building blocks. The wrestler then gifted the teen with his signature apparel, a green and yellow hat and t-shirt that read "respect" and "never give up." Misha even got to hold Cena’s WWE championship belt. RELATED: 15-year-old Ukrainian boy dubbed a hero after using drone to help defeat Russian forces: report "I think Misha and his mom are two great examples of how persistence can lead to joy even in the toughest of times," Cena concluded. "What a wonderful way to spend a Saturday. Misha and his mother, Liana define #NeverGiveUp. Thank you to the @WSJ and @WWE who helped make this special visit possible," Cena tweeted on June 7. This story was reported from Washington, D.C.
Celebrity
Jiri Prochazka Brings UFC Belt To Czech Republic ... Huge Crowd Goes Crazy! 6/13/2022 11:13 AM PT Jiri Prochazka made history Saturday night -- becoming the first Czech fighter to win a UFC championship -- and thousands of delirious fans showed up to greet the home country hero on Monday. 29-year-old Prochazka was losing his UFC 275 title fight with Glover Teixeira ... but somehow, someway managed to get the 42-year-old champ's neck and force the tap-out with 28 seconds left in the 5-round fight. The win made Jiri the first Czech-born champ ... and when the newly crowned champ arrived back in his hometown in Brno, there was a huge crowd waiting to give him a hero's welcome! What's more impressive ... this was only Prochazka's 3rd fight in the UFC. He previously beat Volkan Oezdemir (July 2020) and Dominick Reyes (May 2021). But, he's been fighting MMA (and other combat forms) for a long time ... going back professionally to 2012. Jiri's overall record is 29-3. The champ's home, and the party is on!!
MMA
To view the live updates on your mobile device click here. GAME ESSENTIALS: Celtics (51-31) vs. Warriors (53-29), at 6 p.m. (PT). TV: ABC ODDS: Warriors -4. OVER/UNDER: 210.5. FINALS SERIES UPDATE: Series tied, 2-2. LAST PLAYOFF MEETING: Celtics won 1964 NBA Finals 4-1. The Warriors had the whole weekend to bask in the glory of Stephen Curry’s legendary Game 4 effort to get an NBA Finals-tying win in Boston. It’s now Monday and it’s go-time for Golden State, back on their home floor for Game 5 against the Celtics. And now, the Warriors have to hope that either Curry can do it again … or someone can step up to ease the burden on their all-time great. Golden State will be relying on Andrew Wiggins and Kevon Looney to continue to impact the game in massive ways, just as they did in Game 4. It would also be a welcome sight to the Warriors if Draymond Green can get out of his funk and start to provide the type of energy, tenacity and ferocity that they’ve come to know and love over the years. And perhaps Klay Thompson’s big fourth quarter on Friday night can carry over to his best playoff series game. Even though he carries the “Game 6 Klay” nickname proudly, Thompson actually averages more points per playoff series game in Game 5s (22.15 in 20 games) than in Game 6s (20.7 in 12 games). The Celtics carry a perfect 7-0 record in games after a loss in this postseason onto the road, where they’ve won 8-of-11 games during these playoffs. The Warriors, meanwhile, are 10-1 on the Chase Center floor. Something will have to give. Can Curry give a repeat of his marvelous Game 4? Can any other Warrior – or multiple Warriors – make it so he doesn’t have to? Do we see a Thompson explosion? Can the Dubs win back-to-back games and set themselves up for a shot at clinching their fourth NBA title on Thursday? Follow along as reporters Madeline Kenney, Shayna Rubin and Cam Inman and columnist Dieter Kurtenbach break down those questions and more in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
Basketball
Theron credited her love for Seth Rogen as the real reason she signed on for that scene-stealing "The Boys" Season 3 appearance. Charlize Theron is a nonstop action star. The Oscar winner detailed how “The Boys” cameo came to be, with her satirical turn as a superhero predating another cameo — her MCU debut as wizard Clea in “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.” “Seth [Rogen, ‘The Boys’ executive producer] asked me a while back, and I will lay my body over broken glass for that guy and all of his partners at Point Gray, I absolutely love them, and we look after each other,” Theron said of former “Long Shot” co-star Rogen to Variety. “I love the show. I think it’s really smart.” It was only after filming the “Boys” Season 3 Prime Video cameo as a replacement for Stormfront that Kevin Feige called her to participate in “Doctor Strange 2.” “I was very transparent, and they were just like, ‘This is great,'” Theron said of sharing her “Boys” role. “I mean, [‘The Boys’ is] a satire. I think there’s room for everything, and it doesn’t mean anything other than people are interested in these kind of worlds right now.” Theron’s Clea was teased in the post-credits scene for “Doctor Strange 2.” In the comics, Clea eventually marries Doctor Strange and later becomes Earth’s Sorcerer Supreme. Aside from donning capes for comic book adaptations, Theron reprises her villainous role of Cipher in the “Fast and Furious” franchise with the upcoming installment “Fast X.” The plot for the 10th film has been mostly kept under wraps as longtime “Fast and Furious” director Justin Lin parted ways with the franchise mid-production. “Lupin” director Louis Leterrier now helms the film. Theron has already shared a behind-the-scenes first look opposite franchise newcomer and fellow superhero star Jason Momoa, while mainstays Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Sung Kang, Ludacris, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson, and Nathalie Emmanuel all return for “Fast X.” Diesel has previously hinted at a possible Cipher spinoff for Charlize Theron. Theron joked, “Listen, the man has pulled off this incredible franchise, so I wouldn’t put on anything past him. But he’s gotta hurry up because I need a hip replacement.” Theron is also leading “The Old Guard 2,” opposite Henry Golding Jr. and Uma Thurman; Theron produces the film. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.
Movies
VENTURA, Calif. (AP) — A man once briefly married to Britney Spears was charged Monday with felony stalking after showing up at the pop star’s wedding to longtime boyfriend Sam Asghari. Jason Alexander was also charged with misdemeanor counts of trespassing, vandalism and battery, Ventura County court records show. He has yet to enter a plea, and was set to appear in court for arraignment on Monday afternoon. Alexander was Spears’ first husband. The two were married for less than three days in 2004 before an annulment. Spears, 40, and Asghari, 28, were married Thursday at her home in Thousand Oaks, California, in front of several dozen guests including Selena Gomez, Drew Barrymore, Paris Hilton and Madonna. Spears and Asghari obtained an emergency protective order in court against him the day after the wedding, Spears’ attorney Matthew Rosengart said. Alexander, who was a childhood friend of Spears, was streaming live on Instagram when he approached house. He appeared in a mostly empty but decorated room, telling security Spears had invited him. Deputies responding to a trespassing call detained him, and he was arrested when they learned he had a warrant for his arrest in another county, the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office said. It was not clear whether Alexander had yet retained an attorney Monday. Spears was previously married from 2004 to 2007 to Kevin Federline, with whom she shares two sons, ages 14 and 15.She met Asghari in 2016 on the set of the video for her song “Slumber Party.”Their wedding came nine months after Spears and Asghari were engaged, and nearly seven months after Spears won her freedom from a court conservatorship that controlled her life and affairs for more than 12 years. Spears posted about the nuptials on her Instagram and Twitter accounts the following day. “Wow !!! Holy holy crap !!! WE DID IT !!! WE GOT MARRIED !!! Gggggeeeeezzzzz !!! It was the most spectacular day !!!” Spears said in the posts along with a picture of her and Asghari from the wedding. “The ceremony was a dream and the party was even better !!!”
Celebrity
Russell Westbrrok Receives Key To Oklahoma City ... From Mayor 6/13/2022 4:05 PM PT Russell Westbrook might be a Laker, but he'll always be welcome in Oklahoma City ... which is why the point guard just received a key to the city!! The 33-year-old superstar -- who won the MVP award with the Thunder in the 2016-17 season -- was on hand at Capitol Hill High School in Oklahoma City for the honor. Russell Westbrook was given a key to the city. pic.twitter.com/HdjnJtJrvD— Joe Mussatto (@joe_mussatto) June 13, 2022 @joe_mussatto "We are so grateful for all @russwest44 has done for our city through the years," Mayor David Holt said. "And we want him to know he’s welcome here anytime." "To make sure Russ can always come back home to OKC, I gave him the Key to the City." The Mayor also cut the ribbon for a new futsal/basketball court, which was funded by Russ and his "Why Not?" foundation. "This new court at Capitol Hill HS in South OKC demonstrates Russ’s continued commitment to the kids of @okcps and the people of OKC," David said. We are so grateful for all @russwest44 has done for our city through the years, and we want him to know he’s welcome here anytime. To make sure Russ can always come back home to OKC, I gave him the Key to the City. pic.twitter.com/zrQK5yxRRf— Mayor David Holt (@davidfholt) June 13, 2022 @davidfholt Aside from his on-court accomplishments, Russ is known to have an active role in charitable work through his foundation -- which helps inspire children to achieve their dreams -- including backpack and shoe drives ... as well as handing out meals on Thanksgiving. Of course, Westbrook spent the majority of his NBA career in OKC ... where he helped the team reach the Finals in 2012, and became the franchise's all-time leading scorer. Russ, a 9-time All-Star and 2-time NBA scoring champ, departed from the Thunder after 11 seasons with the team ... and then played for the Rockets and Wizards before ending up on the Lakers.
Basketball
Image: Marvel StudiosWhen Taika Waititi took over the Thor franchise, fans began to hope that Natalie Portman would return to the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Jane Foster, especially since the two Oscar winners share similar indie dramedy sensibilities. In a new interview with Fandango, Waititi—along with Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson—discussed how Portman came to be a part of Thor: Love and Thunder.“Her character in the first few films is probably not the most exciting version of the female character we want from these films,” Waititi said. “I had to talk to her about the fact that I wanted to change that character just like we’d changed Thor’s character for Ragnarok and give her more license to be adventurous and fun and funny, ‘cause Natalie’s a really funny person. Sometimes those sort of things are not the main focus when they come up with characters in films. The characters are both in very different places to when we saw them last. It was very also very open-ended as far as what actually happened: did they break up? Who left who? We had the creative license to do what we wanted in that sense.”From the looks of the trailers, we get the sense that Thor might be on a journey to rediscover not just love for Jane, but for himself. Hemsworth teased where Thor is, romantically speaking. “There’s love in this film across the board. Everyone has a little awakening in one way or another—universal love and love for oneself, love for friends, love for the universe.”Waititi added, “You can assume some things from the title but also don’t assume,” but he also elaborated on the film’s thematic approach to love. “The picture I had in my mind was like a Mills and Boon cover of a romantic book. I want it to feel like that. You know at times some melodrama and run headfirst into the romance, into the love aspect of it and not shy away from it—which I can tend to do in my films. I was looking at things like An Officer and a Gentleman, particularly the end scene where he comes in and sweeps her off her feet. I guess the influences for me were really big over the top romances.” You can watch the full interview below.Thor: Love and Thunder opens in theaters July 8.Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel and Star Wars releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about House of the Dragon and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.
Movies
Chris Thomopson - Lecturer of Chemistry, Monash UniversityWe are routinely warned by earnest websites, advertisments and well-meaning popular articles about nasty “chemicals” lurking in our homes and kitchens. Many tout the benefits of switching to a “chemical-free lifestyle”.The problem is: the word “chemical” is entirely misused in these contexts. Everything is a chemical – common table salt (sodium chloride), for instance, and even water (dihydrogen oxide).The chemicals in our diet are often categorised into four broad categories: carbohydrates, proteins, fats and lipids, and everything else. This final group has no defining characteristics but includes vitamins, minerals, pharmaceuticals and the hundreds of trace chemicals each of us consume everyday.Of course, there are toxic and harmful chemicals, but just as many are completely fine for human consumption. So here’s a handy guide to the chemicals in your kitchen, and what they mean for your health.The macronutrient chemicalsProteins, lipids (such as fats) and carbohydrates are known as the macronutrients, and provide most of our daily energy needs. Despite 118 known elements in the periodic table, these three categories predominantly contain just four elements – carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen – with trace amounts of the remaining elements.Chemicals called amino acids link together to create proteins. The richest sources include meat and eggs, but significant amounts are also found in beans, legumes and wheat flour.Carbohydrates contain just carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms, all connected in very particular ways. “Carbs” include sugars, starch and cellulose, all of which are digested differently.While sugars are one type of carbohydrate, artificial sweeteners, such as aspartame and saccharin, are not actually carbohydrates.Despite concerns about the health effects of artificial sweeteners, the health spotlight has recently been placed on the natural sweeteners: thesugars.White sugar (sucrose) and high-fructose corn syrup (a mixture of fructose and glucose) have been linked to range of wide-spread health conditions.Just like carbs, fats only contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, but gram for gram release more than twice the dietary energy of either protein or the carbs. Perhaps it’s for this reason fats have copped a lot of bad press for longer than the sugars. Nevertheless, some fat is absolutely essential for a healthy diet.Acids and basesAcid sounds bad. But there are many acids sitting benignly in our pantries and fridges.Consider varieties of food and drink that are acidic. A classic example we often hear is that Coca-Cola has a pH value of about 3.2 (lower means more acidic with 7 being neutral). That’s strong enough to remove rust from metal. And it’s true thanks to the phosphoric acid in Coke. As it happens, the human stomach also contains phosphoric acid, and has an even stronger acidic pH value. Actually, apples and oranges have a similar pH value to Coke, and lemon juice is ten times more acidic.The acidic characteristics of food and drink combine with other chemicals to provide flavour, and without some acidic character, many foods would be bland.Chemically speaking, the opposite of acidic is known as basic, or alkali. While acidic substances have a pH < 7, basic foods have pH > 7. Examples of basic foods from the kitchen are fewer, but include eggs, some baked products like cakes and biscuits, and bicarb soda.Toxic chemicals in the kitchenObviously, there are also toxic chemicals lurking in our kitchen cupboards. But these are usually kept under the sink, and often have pH values at the extreme ends of the spectrum.Cleaning products such as ammonia and lye (i.e. Drano) are very basic. Soaps and detergents are also at the basic end of the scale.Acidic cleaning solutions are also common, such as concentrated sulfuric acid, which can also be used to unblock drains.Cooking is chemistryCooking itself is really just chemistry. Heating, freezing, mixing and blending are all processes used in the laboratory and the kitchen.When we cook food, a myriad of different physical and chemical processes simultaneously take place to transform the ingredients (i.e. chemicals) involved.Carbohydrates are an interesting case study. Simple sugars combine with proteins in the Maillard reaction, which is responsible for browning food when it’s cooked. Add a little more heat and caramelisation takes over, while too much heat for too long leads to burnt flavours.
Chemistry and Material Sciences
Bryce Hall Tesla Wrecked by Drunk Driver, Cops Say 6/13/2022 11:28 AM PT Bryce Hall is lucky to be standing after an alleged drunk driver plowed into his Tesla, totaling the vehicle. Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... the suspect who ran into Hall blew more than double the legal limit and was arrested for DUI Sunday night in WeHo after his SUV crashed into Bryce's Tesla. We're told no one was seriously injured, but some were complaining about aches and pains after the crash. BACKGRID Cops say the TikTok star's Tesla had its airbags deployed and ended up getting towed away ... he was pretty shaken up, telling those around him he wasn't getting the answers he wanted. 12/20/21 TMZ.com As we reported, Bryce had an incident last December with a man named Joshua Shakill who was arrested on suspicion of burglary ... the guy broke into his West Hollywood home while Bryce was there. Bryce -- who fought against Austin McBroom in a boxing match in June 2021 -- accused the man of having followed or approached him before ... though it's not clear why he continues to allegedly follow him. Bryce and another man kept him detained in his driveway until cops arrived.
Celebrity
NEWARK, New Jersey (WABC) -- Newark is hoping a new transformative residential complex with some star power backing will be a slam dunk for the city.NBA legend, entrepreneur and Newark native Shaquille O'Neal was back in his hometown Monday to reveal two projects to improve the community.First, the Shaquille O'Neal Foundation announced the refurbishment of the existing public basketball courts at David L. Warner Park on Hawthorne Avenue, dubbed the Comebaq Court."Shaquille O'Neal is a Newark native who has brought this city glory and fame on the NBA court and given back to us through community commitment and investment," Newark Mayor Ras Baraka said. "The new Comebaq Court is another example of these works, that will greatly benefit our youth. It will rapidly become part of our state-of-the-art recreation programs that keep our youth engaged and healthy."ALSO READ | Family searching for answers after 21-month-old dies at NJ day careAccording to the Aspen Institute, local athletic programs that typically serve youth at scale won't be able to recover from the struggles of the past few years at the same pace as larger, organized, student sports teams with private resources.The "Comebaq Courts" project seeks to mitigate such inequities by offering updated spaces for athletes to resume community sports activities."Giving back through this Comebaq Court in my hometown is really special," O'Neal said. "This effort will have a lasting impact on a community near and dear to my heart."Shortly After, Governor Phil Murphy joined the celebration for a topping-off ceremony for a new 33-story mixed income residential tower on Edison Place."Newark has proven to be a city of opportunity within our state of opportunity, and with the many upcoming developments in this area, I am proud that the top priority remains for there to be quality affordable housing for the residents who call this city their home," Murphy said. "I applaud Mayor Baraka, Boraie Development, and the many community leaders who have made affordable housing available to the families of Newark."The building will provide 370 affordable apartments to the community, making it the largest mixed income project in New Jersey.Informally called "Shaq Tower 2," a penthouse apartment in 777 McCarter will become Shaq's home."When I first met Mayor Baraka, we talked about restoring my favorite city to its past glory," O'Neal said. "Today, looking around Newark, you can see what teamwork and commitment looks like under true leadership - and that's why Mayor Baraka is my favorite mayor."The building will have a range of amenities, including a roof deck lounge, fifth-story gym and outdoor pool, 24/7 concierge, and 12,000 square feet of retail space for fine restaurants.The ceremony marked an important milestone in fulfilling Baraka's vision of making Newark's business district a 24/7 walkable and environmentally sustainable downtown, with mixed income residential and retail spaces that are active day and night, infusing downtown with life."Today, when we have billions in development going on, it may be easy to forget that not so long ago, Newark was a city where developers feared to come and invest, where the entire city had a heavy red line around it," Baraka said. "This is a time to honor those who had the vision to invest in Newark when others did not. Today is a day to salute Boraie Development, Shaquille O'Neal, Goldman Sachs, Prudential, and our new finance partners to the City of Newark, Citibank and Bridge Development Group for their continued investment in our city."The project is expected to create approximately 500 construction jobs and 50 permanent jobs.The project received New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency tax credits awarded in 2018 and a 30-year tax abatement awarded in 2020 from the city of Newark.ALSO READ | Subway surfers caught on video walking atop Brooklyn J train----------* Get Eyewitness News Delivered * More New Jersey news* Send us a news tip* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts * Follow us on YouTube Submit a News Tip Copyright © 2022 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Basketball
Britney & Sam Ironclad Prenup in Place ... He Doesn't Get a Dime 6/13/2022 11:42 AM PT Britney Spears and Sam Asghari are officially Mr. and Mrs. -- but it didn't happen before some very serious legal legwork -- to make sure Britney's millions are protected down the road. Sources close to the newly married couple tell TMZ they have an ironclad prenup in place where Sam doesn't get a dollar from the fortune Brit's made up to this point. The move isn't all that surprising, as we told you ... lawyers were called shortly after the couple got engaged to start figuring things out. Britney's worth a reported $60 million, and obviously there's a potential for serious earning moving forward ... but she'll retain her entire fortune if things go south for her and Sam. TMZ.com You'll remember, Asghari joked that HE was the one who wanted the prenup -- to protect his jeep and shoe collection -- but our sources tell us it was obviously Brit's team who got the ball rolling on the legal discussions. Britney also had a prenup in place before she got married to Kevin Federline. As we reported, Sam and Britney got married Thursday in Los Angeles at the singer's home. Madonna, Paris Hilton and Selena Gomez were among those in attendance. No one from Britney's family made it to the celebration. 6/9/22 Of course, the day wasn't without some serious drama ... Britney's ex-husband, Jason Alexander, crashed the event hours before it started and was arrested. There's currently a protective order against him to keep him away from Britney and Sam.
Celebrity
Lyric soprano Nicole Cabell, who will sing Léontine in “L’Amant anonyme (The Anonymous Lover),” says the character reminds her of several Mozart heroines.Devon Cass He was such a champion swordsman at the French court of King Louis XV that John Adams once said he could hit “any Button on the Coat or Waistcoat of the greatest rivals.” And none other than Marie Antoinette admired him as a virtuoso violinist, conductor and composer.Today he is known as Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, often referred to as the Black Mozart, and an outstanding composer in his own right, if little-known.“There is definitely a stylistic similarity between Bologne’s music and the Mozart heroines I’ve sung,” says lyric soprano Nicole Cabell, who takes the leading role in Bologne’s 1780 jewel of a chamber opera, “L’Amant anonyme (The Anonymous Lover),” to be staged June 17-19 by Chicago’s Haymarket Opera.Cabell’s rapid rise to stardom began with training at Lyric Opera of Chicago’s Ryan Center,and just weeks after graduating she won the 2005 BBC Singer of the World competition. She has since sung major roles at the Metropolitan Opera and other great houses including the Lyric. Her Chicago ties include a former teaching stint at DePaul University, home of Jarvis Opera Hall, where “L’Amant anonyme” will be performed.Bologne’s ethnicity was part of the appeal to Cabell, who is African American, although at the time her career took off, as she put it, “people were already shining a light on diversity in the field. So I got into this business doing operas from the central canon of the repertoire. Specific to my ethnicity, though, I have been involved in the performances of works by Black composers in addition to Bologne, such as the opera ‘Highway 1, U.S.A.’ by William Grant Still at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis, and ‘Lilacs’ by George Walker with the London Symphony.“ Designer Stephanie Cluggish’s rendering for a costume to be worn by soprano Nicole Cabell in Haymarket Opera’s production of “L’Amant anonyme (The Anonymous Lover).” |Haymarket Opera Company “L’Amant anonyme” tells the bittersweet tale of a wealthy young widow, Léontine, who is unaware that the anonymous love letters she’s receiving are from someone she actually knows. Bologne’s gem was written when Mozart, 11 years younger, was making occasional visits to Paris. It will be re-created in the authentic period style that is Haymarket’s specialty. Chicago-based Cedille Records plans a recording.“The fire and spirit of Donna Elvira from Mozart’s ‘Don Giovanni’ is present in several of Léontine’s arias, particularly the instrumental color in the vocal line,” says Cabell. “Léontine is initially reluctant to fall in love, and this steadfastness shows in dramatic minor-key passages.” Léontine also reminds her of other great Mozart heroines. Léontine’s wild leaps — sometimes up to a high C — are not unlike Fiordiligi’s in “Così fan tutte,” she says. And Léontine’s sense of longing is similar to the Countess’ in “The Marriage of Figaro”: “The Countess has suffered the infidelity that is implied in Léontine’s story, and while Léontine doesn’t long for love the same way as the Countess, they both eventually soften to its powers. ‘L’Amant anonyme’ is light and charming, very enjoyable in its own right.”This production will not be a modern take on an old story, says Haymarket’s general director Chase Hopkins. The goal is to come as close as possible to the kind of experience its original audiences enjoyed. “None of us alive today saw an opera in the 18th century,” says Hopkins. “But many pieces of information are coming to light about how they did things then. Chase Hopkins, general director of Haymarket Opera.Randall Kahn “The stage would have been lit in front, with footlight candles, which would give the hand-painted scenery a glow. We can’t use candles, of course. But our lighting designer told us about a trick they used with water, refracting the light through water to spread it further. The sounds will be different, too. These are not the clarinets and horns you hear in the Chicago Symphony. These are the ancestors of those instruments.”Director-choreographer Sarah Edgar plans to utilize dancers to fill out what’s implied but not sung. “In ‘West Side Story’ the characters are meant to be both singing and dancing, but that’s not the case in this opera,” she says. “Bologne’s music only suggests a happy ending. It’s the dancers who make the wedding clear.”Production designer Wendy Waszut-Barrett was inspired by imagery in “The Swing,” an oil painting by Fragonard in distinctive pastel colors. “It was the look that called to all of us,” she said. She has begun to design new opera productions of her own, using the old materials, colors and techniques of traveling company shows dating back to Bologne’s time.“They took pure color, mixed it with a binder, and diluted it with glue so it didn’t have a sheen,” Waszut-Barrett said. “A smaller opera house might have used these flat painted scenes interchangeably from show to show. There’s a proud tradition of Chicago artists who would ship a package of 14-50 painted settings for a theater, depending on its size. You’d have a country garden, a baronial hall, a gothic interior, a kitchen, a landscape with a castle. The traveling circuses used that technique for their spectacles, too. That was an inspiration to us.”
Music
SAN FRANCISCO — NBA commissioner Adam Silver canceled plans to attend Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the Warriors and Celtics Monday night because of the league’s health and safety protocols.Silver typically attends all finals games.The league did not say whether Silver had tested positive for COVID-19 or been deemed a close contact of someone who had, nor released any details about his health.Also unclear is when Silver will be able to resume attending games. Part of his role as commissioner involves handing out the league's championship trophy, which one team will be awarded either Thursday in Boston or Sunday in San Francisco.Silver has been the NBA’s commissioner since February 2014. This is the ninth championship series the league has held during his tenure, including the 2020 season that resumed inside a bubble at Walt Disney World in Florida in the early stages of the pandemic.
Basketball
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Philip Baker Hall, who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson's first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in "Seinfeld," died on Sunday in Los Angeles, California. He was 90.Holly Wolfle Hall, the actor's wife of nearly 40 years, on Monday said Hall was surrounded by loved ones when he passed in the Glendale suburb of Southern California. It's unclear how Hall died, but his wife suggested he had been well until a few weeks earlier and spent his final days in warm spirits, reflecting on his life."His voice at the end was still just as powerful," said Wolfle Hall. Her husband, she added, never retired from acting.In a career spanning half a century, Hall was a ubiquitous hangdog face whose doleful, weary appearance could shroud a booming intensity and humble sensitivity. His range was wide, but Hall, who had a natural gravitas, often played men in suits, trench coats and lab coats. Philip Baker Hall died at the age of 90 on Sunday. The actor attended the premiere of Focus Features' 'Bad Words' at ArcLight Cinemas Cinerama Dome on March 5, 2014 in Hollywood, California. (Imeh Akpanudosen)"Men who are highly stressed, older men, who are at the limit of their tolerance for suffering and stress and pain," Hall told the Washington Post in 2017. "I had an affinity for playing those roles."Hall initially devoted himself more to theater than film or television upon moving to Los Angeles in 1975 from his hometown of Toledo, Ohio. TONY AWARDS 2022: JOHN STAMOS ‘DISAPPOINTED’ BOB SAGET LEFT OUT OF 'IN MEMORIAM' SEGMENTWhile shooting bit parts in Hollywood (an episode of "Good Times" was one of his first gigs), Hall worked with the L.A. Actor Theatre. He portrayed Richard Nixon in the one-act play "Secret Honor," a role he reprised in Robert Altman's 1984 film adaptation.His resume up until then mostly included guest roles on television and a small part in 1988's "Midnight Run," all of which changed when he was shooting a PBS program in 1992, when he had an interaction with a production assistant in his early 20s named Paul Thomas Anderson. The pair would hang out, smoking cigarettes and drinking coffee between scenes. Anderson, believing Hall hadn't gotten his due in film, asked him to look at a script he had written for a 20-minute short film titled "Cigarettes & Coffee.""I’m reading this script, and I truly had trouble believing that that kid wrote this script," Hall told the AV Club in 2012. "I mean, it was just so brilliant, resonating with nuance all over the place, like a playwright. Certainly, as a film, I’d never really seen anything like it. It was staggering." April Grace, actor Tom Cruise, actress Julianne Moore, and actor Philip Baker Hall. The film is directed by Paul Thomas Anderson and also stars Julianne Moore. (Lucy Nicholson)JERRY SEINFELD'S MANAGER AND ‘SEINFELD’ PRODUCER GEORGE SHAPIRO DEAD AT 91After the $20,000 short made it into the Sundance Film Festival, Anderson expanded it into his feature debut, 1997's "Hard Eight," which catapulted Hall's career. Hall played a wise and courteous itinerate gambler named Sydney who schools a young drifter (John C. Reilly) on the craft. In one indelible scene, Philip Seymour Hoffman's first with Anderson, a hot-shot gambler chides Hall as "old-timer."Anderson would cast Hall again as adult film theater magnate Floyd Gondolli who warns Burt Reynolds' pornography producer about the industry's future in "Boogie Nights." In Anderson's "Magnolia," Hall played Jimmy Gator, the host of a kids game show."I have a particular fascination with character actors, with wanting to turn them into lead actors," Anderson told The Los Angeles Times in 1998. "I see Philip Baker Hall, he’s just… an actor that I love. There’s no one else with a face like that, or a voice like that."To many, Hall was instantly recognizable for one of the most powerfully funny guest appearances on "Seinfeld." In the 22nd episode of the sitcom in 1991, Hall played Lt. Joe Bookman, the library investigator who comes after Seinfeld for a years-overdue copy of "Tropic of Cancer." Hall played him like a hard-boiled noir detective, telling Seinfeld: "Well, I got a flash for ya, Joy-boy: Party time is over."CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER Philip Baker Hall played crotchety old neighbor, Mr. Kleezak in season three of 'Modern Family.' ( Peter "Hopper" Stone)Hall was brought back for the "Seinfeld" finale and by Larry David on "Curb Your Enthusiasm." David once said no other actor ever made him laugh more than Hall.Among Hall's many other credits were Michael Mann's "The Insider," as "60 Minutes" producer Don Hewitt, and Lars von Trier's "Dogville." Hall appeared in "Say Anything," "The Truman Show," "The Talented Mr. Ripley," "Zodiac," "Argo" and "Rush Hour." Hall played the neighbor Walt Kleezak on "Modern Family." His last performance was in the 2020 series "Messiah."Hall, who was married to Dianne Lewis for three years in the early 1970s, is survived by his wife, four daughters, four grandchildren and his brother.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThe Associated Press contributed to this report. Tracy Wright is an entertainment writer for Fox News Digital.
Celebrity
NBA's Montrezl Harrell Charged W/ Felony Allegedly Had 3 Lbs. Of Weed During Traffic Stop 6/13/2022 4:41 PM PT NBA forward Montrezl Harrell has been charged with drug trafficking after cops say they found three pounds of weed in his car during a traffic stop in May ... and is now facing time behind bars. According to the Charlotte Observer, the 28-year-old was pulled over by a Kentucky state trooper around 10 AM on May 12 for driving a 2020 Honda Pilot rental too close to the car in front of him ... and during the stop, cops claim they smelled marijuana. The report says Harrell admitted to having weed on him and pulled a "small amount" from his sweatpants ... but when cops searched the vehicle, they claim to have found a backpack filled with three pounds of weed in vacuum-sealed bags. Harrell's arraignment was scheduled for Monday morning. Harrell -- who played college ball at the University of Louisville -- was charged with trafficking less than five pounds of marijuana ... a Class D felony for first-time offenders that could result in up to five years behind bars and a fine. Harrell -- an upcoming free agent -- averaged 14 points and nearly 7 rebounds a game for the Charlotte Hornets this past season.
Basketball
Lizzo I'm Changing Harmful Song Lyric ... I Listened To Backlash 6/13/2022 4:48 PM PT Lizzo's changing a controversial lyric in new song after online backlash ... acknowledging words have power and saying she doesn't want to promote derogatory language. Here's the deal -- Lizzo dropped her new single, "Grrrls," Friday and caught a ton of flak on social media for including the term "sp*z" in the lyrics. Lizzo's original opening verse went like this ... "Hold my bag, bitch/ Hold my bag/ Do you see this s***?/ I'm a sp*z/ I'm about to knock somebody out/ Yo, where my best friend?/ She the only one I know to talk me off the deep end." Waiting for your permission to load the Instagram Media. After getting tons of heat over the weekend, Lizzo announced Monday she'd heard the concerns, listened and made a change. Lizzo says she's had tons of hurtful words directed as her over the years because she's a self-proclaimed "fat black woman in America" ... and says she understands the power words can carry. She maintains there was no harmful intention behind the original lyrics and says she's proud to make a change for a new version of her song, which samples "Girls" from the Beastie Boys. Lizzo adds ... "As an influential artist I'm dedicated to being part of the change I've been waiting to see in the word."
Music
“I think we’re all excited for the test that this golf course provides — it looks to be that it’s going to be a brutal test of golf, and that’s what this championship is all about,” said Phil Mickelson in one of his non-LIV Golf answers on Monday.Mickelson, who played here in the 1999 Ryder Cup, said “The course is in pristine shape. It’s a remarkable golf course. A number of tees have been lengthened since ‘99 since I remember, but it seems like it plays the same.”With knee-high fescue, shaggy rough, slick greens hidden by rolling, svelte fairways, and puddingstone outcrops vying for space with gnarly, amoeba-shaped sand traps, the course is designed to test golfers at every skill level.Combine that with the majority of golfers being brand-new to the course or at least several years removed from their last visit, and the degree of difficulty only increases.“It’s a cool place, it’s very in front of you, it’s old school,” said Justin Thomas, who missed the cut at the US Amateur Championship here in 2013. “I’m sure it’s going to be long rough and firm and fast greens.”Thomas flew into Boston last Monday specifically to get in a practice round before heading to Toronto for the RBC Open.“I did not remember this amount of undulation and slope on the greens,” said Thomas. “I love the addition of the short par-3 [No. 11, 131 yards]. I think every golf course should have a short, little hole like that, and it’s got a diabolical green where they can put some tough putts, you can make 2 or 4 kind of in a heartbeat.”Matt Fitzpatrick returns to the course as a champion of the same 2013 US Amateur where Thomas did not make the cut.“Back in 2013 it was — you had to hit fairways and greens,” said Fitzpatrick, who will get in his first practice round on Tuesday. “The fairways were really, really tight and the rough was thick, and that’s why we really did well that week, as well as scrambled really well. I think by the looks of it from what I can see, it’s the same again, which is nice.”Grass is greenerDating back to the winter, through this spring and including the forecast for this week, the New England weather has been very, very good to The Country Club’s grass.And that bodes well for making the course setup for all 18 holes of this week’s tournament as challenging as possible.“From the agronomic side, it’s a matter of being able to get the golf course firm, being able to get good putting green speeds and with the cooler weather that we’ve had, that’s actually overall a beneficial thing because it doesn’t put stress on the grass but it’s warm enough that the grass is growing,” said Darin Bevard, director of championship agronomy at the USGA. “And, putting a premium on accuracy, growing the rough is very important. The weather had been pretty good for the rough to begin with but that little shot of rain that we got Friday morning helped to really spruce things up.”The rough was cut on Monday, with the primary rough getting cut every day from here on out to stay at 3 inches.The greens?They’ll be mowed at least three times a day to play as fast as possible.“From tee to green, roughs, everything, it’s really healthy out there, which is a good place to start from when you have to put the screws to it a little bit, you know, with a little extra maintenance and that type of stuff,” said Bevard. “But, no, the weather has been great.”Bevard was unfamiliar with The Country Club until he began his preparation for this event four years ago.“You don’t train to run a marathon the week before it starts, you start a long time out,” said Bevard. “People don’t realize that there’s a lot of planning that goes into getting ready and peaking for this one week.”And is the course at its peak, thanks to the weather on top of the four years of planning?“We’re there,” said Bevard. “We’re fine tuning now but that’s by design. We don’t need to peak on Monday, we want to peak on Thursday, so that’s what we’re working towards.“Everything is really, really good.”Gallery godsMickelson, who is caught up in the LIV Golf Tour controversy more than any other LIV golfer here, professed excitement about whatever he hears from the gallery.“I think the Boston crowds are some of the best in sports, and I think that they have given me a lot of support, and I’m very appreciative of that over the years,” said Mickelson. “I think that their excitement and energy is what creates such a great atmosphere, so whether it’s positive or negative towards me directly, I think it’s going to provide an incredible atmosphere to hold this championship.”Quick witThe 27-year-old Fitzpatrick, who was the first Englishman to win the US Amateur, is now ranked 17th in the world. He’s also a top-tier quipster.Asked about getting a spot on the list of press conference subjects, Fitzpatrick said, “It’s because everyone is leaving the PGA Tour. That’s why. They’re digging up the dregs.”Fitzpatrick is staying with the same Jamaica Plain family he stayed with nine years ago and whom he also visited that November for his first Thanksgiving.“I don’t really like Thanksgiving food, it’s not for me,” said Fitzpatrick, who called out green beans as the “worst thing ever invented.”How about clam chowder?“Also terrible. Never tried it, but probably terrible, yeah.”Numbers gameThe 156 golfers will tee off in the first round on Thursday in groups of three, 26 groups from the first hole, the other 26 from No. 10.The first group begins at 6:45 a.m., the last at 2:42 p.m.A few notables from No. 1: Jon Rahm (7:18 a.m.), Jordan Spieth (7:29 a.m.), Justin Thomas (1:14 p.m.) and Mickelson (1:47 p.m.). From the 10th: Rory McIlroy (7:40 a.m.), Sergio Garcia (1:03 p.m.), Bryson DeChambeau (1:47 p.m.).Michael Silverman can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @MikeSilvermanBB.
Golf
Published June 13, 2022 2:27PM Updated 2:33PM article FILE - The Strawberry Moon rises above the skyline of lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in New York City on June 25, 2021, as seen from Verona, New Jersey. (Gary Hershorn/Getty Images) Skywatchers can look out for an extra sweet treat in the night sky on June 13-14: a strawberry super moon. A super moon is basically a full or new moon when it’s within 90% of its closest point to Earth, according to EarthSky.org. So, you can have your telescopes handy but you won’t really need one to see the spectacular strawberry moon. EarthSky estimates the strawberry moon will be about 222,089 miles away from Earth. June’s super moon is called a strawberry moon because traditionally, this time of year is when many species of berries are ready for harvest and are at their ripest, particularly sweet strawberries, according to EarthSky.org. Where to watch This year’s strawberry moon will reach peak illumination at 7:52 a.m. ET, or 11:52 UTC, on June 14. In North or South America, EarthSky notes, the fullest moon hangs in the West before sunrise on Wednesday. "Note that all full moons rise about an hour later each day. And note that the moon will look full and round the day before, and the day after, the crest of its full phase. So the moon will look full and bright on both June 13 and June 14," EarthSky.org said. FILE - The Full Moon, known as the Strawberry Moon, is seen as vehicles are on their way on a highway at early morning in Ankara, Turkey on June 25, 2021. (Ismail Duru/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images) Strawberry, mead, rose or honey moon The name "strawberry moon," does not necessarily mean the moon is red, although it does appear pinkish when rising or setting. NASA said that the moon – also known as the mead moon, rose moon or honey moon – marks the last full moon of spring or the first full moon of summer. An old European name for the full moon is the mead moon or honey moon. Mead is created by fermenting honey and mixing it with water and other fruits, spices, grains or hops. "In some countries, mead is also called honey wine (though in others honey wine is different). Some writings suggest that the time around the end of June was when honey was ready for harvesting, which made this the ‘sweetest’ moon," NASA explained. The term "honeymoon" may be tied to this full moon. Another European name for this full moon is the rose moon, which originates either from the color of the moon or the roses that bloom during the season. Other names include the flower moon, hot moon, hoe moon and planting moon. Other full super moons of 2022 There will be another two full super moons this year, according to EarthSky.org. The next super moon will be on July 13. This moon is also known as the buck moon, thunder moon or hay moon. This particular super moon will be the closest one to Earth this year. Another super moon will happen on August 12, also known as the green corn moon or grain moon. FOX News contributed to this report. This story was reported out of Los Angeles.
Space Exploration
Philip Baker Hall attends a film premiere in 2004.Doug Benc/Getty Images Philip Baker Hall, the prolific character actor of film and theater who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson’s first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in “Seinfeld,” has died. He was 90.Holly Wolfle Hall, the actor’s wife of nearly 40 years, on Monday said Hall died Sunday surrounded by loved ones in Glendale, California. She said Hall had been well until a few weeks earlier, and spent his final days in warm spirits, reflecting on his life.“His voice at the end was still just as powerful,” said Wolfle Hall.Born in Toledo, Ohio, Hall had been a well-traveled stage actor and bit-part presence in films and TV before a then-little-known Paul Thomas Anderson sought him out to star in his 1993 short film “Cigarettes & Coffee.” After the short, with Hall playing a gambler, made it into the Sundance Film Festival, Anderson expanded it into his feature debut, 1997’s “Hard Eight,” which catapulted Hall’s career. Anderson would cast him again in “Boogie Nights” and “Magnolia.”To many, Hall was instantly recognizable for one of the most intense guest appearances on “Seinfeld.” In the 22nd episode of the sitcom in 1991, Hall played Lt. Joe Bookman, the library investigator who comes after Seinfeld for years-overdue copy of “Tropic of Cancer.” Hall played him like an old-school noir detective, telling Seinfeld: “Well, I got a flash for ya, Joy-boy: Party time is over.”Hall’s other credits included playing Richard Nixon in Robert Altman’s 1984 drama “Secret Honor.” He had parts in “The Truman Show,” “The Insider,” “Zodiac,” “Argo” and “Rush Hour.”Hall is survived by his wife, four daughters, four grandchildren and his brother.
Movies
SAN FRANCISCO — The NBA Finals is tied at 2-2 as it shifts back to the West Coast. Can the Celtics escape with a win?We’re offering live updates and analysis from Game 5 at the Chase Center. Follow along with insights from Nicole Yang and Chad Finn.Tipoff is at 9 p.m. EDT/6 p.m. PDT. You can watch on ABC.After a resounding victory in Game 3 at TD Garden, Boston let Game 4 slip away. It didn’t help that Stephen Curry scored 43 points in the Warriors’ win — his second-best career high in the NBA Finals.Regardless of how tonight goes, this series will go at least six games. Game 6 is back at TD Garden on Thursday.Click here to refresh | Sign up for Court Sense, our Celtics newsletter | Read more Celtics stories from the GlobeTatum 🤝 Tiger — 7:55 p.m.Just take a look at Jayson Tatum’s shirt today. Did he (OK, his stylist) get that at a thrift store? Get Court SenseBounce around the NBA with our Celtics-centric look at the latest happenings on and off the court.Jim Davis/Globe StaffIf it were easy to guard Steph Curry, someone would have figured it out by now — 7:50 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachSteph Curry was all smiles in Game 4.Jim Davis/Globe StaffThe thing about guarding Stephen Curry is that if a simple formula existed, someone would have done it by now. But year after year, game after game, possession after possession, the Warriors superstar manages to find just enough time and space to make life miserable for whoever tries to stop him.During the regular season, the damage inflicted is not quite as glaring because Curry just moves on to his next city to humiliate his next victim. But over the course of a long, grueling NBA playoff series, when teams become both familiar with and sick of each other, the Curry conundrum truly stands out.Fans don’t understand why their team isn’t doing something about him. The team insists that it is trying.“Yeah, Steph Curry is pretty good, if you guys haven’t noticed,” Celtics forward Jaylen Brown said. “He can shoot the ball unbelievably. Even watching it, playing against it and even in the Finals, I feel like he’s taking it up a notch.”Read Himmelsbach’s full story here.The Celtics need Jayson Tatum to save the series — 7:35 p.m.By Gary WashburnThe Celtics players may not say they hear the narrative, but they do. They are of the social media generation, the one that has labeled Boston as chokers for its Game 4 collapse.The Celtics lack the experience and consistency to win a championship. Jayson Tatum is a good player, but still lacks the fortitude for greatness. Ime Udoka is not making the adjustments to keep Stephen Curry from dominating the series with his dazzling offensive arsenal.These are labels that will be difficult to shake if the Celtics lose this series.The Celtics have to be better.They have no other choice. For Tatum, this is the biggest game of his career, and one that could define his legacy.Read Gary Washburn’s full On Basketball column here.We’re back at the Chase Center for Game 5 👋 — 7:20 p.m.Hello from San Francisco! The Celtics are back in town for Game 5.We just found out that Robert Williams will be available for the Celtics. (Read more about his ongoing saga from Gary Washburn here.)Nicole Yang can be reached at [email protected] her on Twitter @nicolecyang. Chad Finn can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn. Katie McInerney can be reached at [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter at @k8tmac.
Basketball
SAN FRANCISCO — The Boston Celtics don’t exactly have a secret strategy in trying to slow Steph Curry’s dominance in these NBA Finals. So, what is their strategy for Game 5, after Curry’s 43 points sparked the Warriors’ Game 4 win to even the series 2-2? “At times we’re allowing our guards to kind of dictate where they want to pick him up,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said 90 minutes before tipoff. “Some of those things are creating some space and opportunity for him to get downhill with some of the picks that they’re setting around half court. “We have to be a little bit more deliberate about that, understand he can stretch the floor. We don’t want to bring our bigs that far off where he has a ton of room to operate. But we do want to impact him, not just let him get a head of steam coming down.” Curry is averaging 34.3 points in the Finals on 50-percent shooting from the floor (47-of-94), and nearly just as sharp from 3-point range (25-of-51, 49 percent). “He’s obviously one of the best at it,” Udoka added. “With his range, ball-handling ability, play-making ability it puts you in certain predicaments that are tough for you.” Udoka wants his team to “see the big picture” and not get blinded by “just Curry getting loose.” If the Celtics can cut down their turnovers and avoid offensive struggles, their coach likes their chances, with a return trip to Boston already on the itinerary for Game 6 on Thursday night. THREE-PEAT TALK When Warriors coach Steve Kerr got asked before Game 5 about the challenges of a three-peat, it wasn’t meant as a cruel reminder how his Warriors failed at that feat in 2019. Instead, Kerr was asked about a three-peat because of the Tampa Bay Lightning’s quest in the Stanley Cup Finals. “I just think the accumulation of emotion and the physical wear and tear that you deal with over time,” Kerr said of the challenges. “I think you go from the first year where it’s kind of fresh and new, you know, by the third year you’ve been hunted by every other team and everyone’s building their team to try to beat you. “You’ve had short offseasons for a couple years in a row. It just wears you out, for sure. So I think winning three in a row in any sport is a pretty incredible accomplishment.” Maybe that’s a quote to file away for 2024, if the Warriors prevail in this series and next year’s Finals. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY Kerr not only was part of the Chicago Bulls’ three consecutive title runs in 1996-98, he hit the game-winning shot to clinch the 1997 NBA Finals — 25 years ago to the day. “Somebody sent me that (highlight) this morning. An incredible memory obviously,” Kerr said. “Something every young basketball player dreams of. So to be able to live that was pretty amazing. And then the fact that it’s 25 years ago just makes me feel old, of course.” HEALTH UPDATES Both Otto Porter and Andre Iguodala were listed as questionable for Game 5, and “they’re good to go,” said Kerr, adding that neither player will be restricted in their minutes if on the floor. Kerr wouldn’t reveal his lineup 90 minutes before tipoff, but he did praise Kevon Looney, who came off the bench to help key their Game 4 win. “This year he had his best season of his career,” Kerr said. “He’s grown into an elite rebounder. Played in every game. So we have a ton of faith in Loon. He’s done an incredible job for us.”
Basketball
Substitute goalkeeper Andrew Redmayne was the reluctant hero as Australia stunned Peru to clinch a place at a fifth straight World Cup with a dramatic 5-4 penalty shootout victory in the intercontinental playoff in Qatar.The Sydney FC keeper, brought off the bench by coach Graham Arnold moments before the end of extra-time following 120 goalless minutes at Al Rayyan Stadium, made a decisive dive, low down to his right, to deny Alex Valera with the 12th kick of the shootout.The defining moment of the game marked the end of a long and winding route to the finals in Qatar for the Socceroos who, despite a wobble earlier in the campaign, managed to secure their place at the tournament later this year in the most dramatic of circumstances.“I’m not going to take credit,” Redmayne told Channel 10 after full-time in Qatar. “The boys ran out 120 minutes, and it not only takes 11 on the field but the boys on the bench, the boys in the stands. The boys that missed out in their squad as well. It is a team effort, team game, so I can’t take any more credit than any of the others.”Redmayne – whose distinctive style when facing penalties involves dancing along the goalline and waving his arms about, earning himself the nickname “the grey Wiggle” – replaced captain Mat Ryan in a move that was specifically made to unsettle the Peruvian team.“This idea was floated pre-selection, that this might happen in these kind of circumstances, and for the two or three weeks we have been here, I have had that in my mind,” Redmayne said. “I’ve been working on a few things in training, but at the end of the day, it is either right or left, the homework has been done and I’m just grateful to the other boys for running at 120 minutes.“I’m no hero. I just played my role like everyone else did tonight. Not even the 11 on the pitch, it was much more than that, it is a team effort.”Arnold confirmed the switch with Ryan was pre-planned and made in an attempt to unsettle the opposition.“Andrew Redmayne is a very good penalty saver, and to try to get him on the mental aspect while we were making that change, to add that bit of uncertainty in their brains, that was the reason,” Arnold said.Andrew Redmayne makes the winning save. Photograph: Matthew Ashton/AMA/Getty ImagesThe Socceroos got off to the worst possible start when Martin Boyle saw the first kick of the shootout saved by Pedro Gallese but Redmayne got Australia back on to level terms at 2-2 with a save to deny Luis Advíncula. Aaron Mooy, Craig Goodwin, Ajdin Hrustic, Jamie Maclaren and Awer Mabil all scored to set the stage for the dramatic denouement.“I’m just so proud of the players,” Arnold said. “No one knows what those boys have been through to get to here. It was so hard, the whole campaign, and the way they’ve stuck at it and committed themselves to it is incredible.“They have been through so much, 20 World Cup qualifiers, 16 away from home, it has been tough but we did it.”Arnold’s job had been the subject of speculation amid a disastrous run earlier this year that threatened to derail his team’s qualification campaign, but after overseeing the win over Peru, who are ranked 20 places above Australia by Fifa, the coach said “the doubters don’t bother me”.Aziz Behich said “we love being backs against the wall” and alluded to an “Aussie spirit” that helped the team get over the line, while teammate Bailey Wright said the victory would inspire generations “for years to come”.“Going to a World Cup is massive,” Wright said. “You can’t underestimate what we have just achieved today for ourselves and the whole country, because a lot was riding on it today.“It means a lot for the generations to come through and to look up to is what it is all about, it really is a dream come true.”Hrustic went closest for the Socceroos in regulation time with a curling effort that went just wide just before the full-time whistle, while Edison Flores nearly broke the deadlock for Peru with a header that struck Ryan’s upright in the 109th minute.The full World Cup draw will be completed on Monday when Costa Rica and New Zealand meet for the final place still up for grabs.
Soccer
Britney Spears' ex Jason Alexander was charged on Monday with felony stalking after crashing the pop star's wedding at her home in Thousand Oaks, California, last week.Alexander, 40, a childhood friend who was briefly married to Spears in 2004, was also charged with misdemeanor trespassing, vandalism, and battery, according to Ventura County Superior Court records.Ventura County Supervising Deputy District Attorney Erin Meister told BuzzFeed News the stalking charge stemmed from a "potential pattern of conduct of coming to the property.""I have reasons to believe this was not the first time he had come to the property," Meister said.Ventura County Sheriff's deputies arrested Alexander Thursday afternoon after responding to a report of a trespasser at Spears' mansion. He was initially booked on a Napa County warrant relating to felony grand theft and buying/receiving stolen property charges from a 2015 incident, according to online court records.Meister said Alexander entered not guilty pleas on all four counts during a court appearance Monday. A representative from the public defender's office has been appointed to represent him, she said. His bail was set at $100,000.An Instagram Live video shared online by fans who rallied to the #FreeBritney cause regarding her conservatorship showed Alexander making his way into Spears' home, which was decorated for her wedding to longtime partner Sam Asghari.In a statement provided to BuzzFeed News on Monday, attorney Mathew Rosengart, who has been representing Spears in proceedings over her now-defunct conservatorship, thanked the sheriff's and district attorney's offices "for their prompt and professional work," saying that authorities have been "very responsive."Sheriff's officials said previously that the battery allegation was related to an altercation Alexander had with Spears' private security team, which made the trespasser report.Alexander is due to return to court Wednesday for a bail review hearing.
Celebrity
In a span of nine days, a Stanford baseball team that won the Pac-12 regular season title and the inaugural conference tournament played five elimination games. The Cardinal has yet to fold. With a 10-5 victory on Monday at Sunken Diamond, Stanford defeated the UConn Huskies in Super Regional play and advanced to the College World Series for the 18th time in program history. And after the No. 1 team in the country, the Tennessee Volunteers, were ousted in shocking fashion by Notre Dame, the Cardinal will head to Omaha as the favorite to bring home a third national title. After an epic six-run ninth-inning rally on Saturday night came up just short in a 13-12 loss to the Huskies, the Cardinal needed to win back-to-back games to advance. David Esquer’s team scored six runs in the second inning on Sunday en route to an 8-2 win that forced a winner-take-all Game 3 on Monday. For the third time this series, a high-powered Stanford offense produced a six-run inning as the Cardinal came back from an early 3-0 deficit to defeat the Huskies. Sophomore starting pitcher Joey Dixon didn’t record an out as UConn’s first four hitters reached base, but lefty Drew Dowd (Serra High, San Mateo) entered and threw some of the most important innings of Stanford’s season. Despite allowing a RBI double to kick off his outing, Dowd quieted the Huskies offense, induced an inning-ending double play and didn’t allow a run over three innings. His efforts coupled with strong work from fellow relievers Ryan Bruno and Quinn Mathews gave the Cardinal lineup the chance to engineer a comeback. In the fourth inning, the game-winning rally materialized. Adam Crampton (Oakland Tech) gave the Cardinal the lead with a two-run single before catcher Kody Huff launched a grand slam that broke the game open and put Stanford back on the path to Omaha. After playing its way out of the loser’s bracket in last weekend’s regional with a win over UC Santa Barbara and back-to-back wins over Texas State, the Cardinal won consecutive games against the Huskies to earn a College World Series berth, which begins on Friday.
Baseball
Jun 13, 2022; Brookline, Massachusetts, USA; Phil Mickelson addresses the media during a press conference before rounds of the U.S. Open golf tournament at The Country Club. Mandatory Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY SportsRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comBROOKLINE, Mass., June 13 (Reuters) - Phil Mickelson said he had the "deepest of sympathy" for those who had lost loved ones on Sept. 11, 2001 after a coalition of families whose relatives died in the attacks criticised his move to the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Invitational Series.The PGA Tour last week suspended Mickelson and other members who joined LIV Golf, with Commissioner Jay Monahan saying they had "decided to turn their backs" on the tour. read more Last week, advocacy group 9/11 Families United sent an open letter to American Mickelson and others who joined LIV Golf, condemning their participation.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comFifteen of the 19 hijackers on Sept. 11 were from Saudi Arabia. The kingdom has long denied a role in the attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people."I would say to everyone that has lost loved ones, lost friends on 9/11 that I have deep, deep empathy for them. I can't emphasise that enough," Mickelson told reporters on Monday ahead of this week's U.S. Open."I have the deepest of sympathy and empathy for them."Terry Strada, the national chair of 9/11 Families United, responded in a statement on Monday, saying Mickelson and his fellow LIV golfers "should be ashamed."They are helping the Saudi regime 'sportswash' their reputation in return for tens of millions of dollars," he said.'ONE OR BOTH'Mickelson was a long-time fan favourite but faced a barrage of disapproval after remarks were made public earlier this year in which he criticised the Saudi government for its "horrible" human rights record but said he would use the prospect of LIV Golf to gain economic leverage over the PGA Tour. read more Mickelson apologised for his remarks and announced in February that he was taking time away from the game, opting out of the Masters and his title defence at the PGA Championship. read more Saudi Arabia's government denies accusations of human rights abuses.Mickelson also suggested he was hopeful that he could compete on the PGA Tour again, despite his suspension."(I'm) very appreciative of the many memories, opportunities, experiences, friendships, relationships PGA Tour has provided, and those are going to last -- those will last a lifetime, but I'm hopeful that I'll have a chance to create more," he said.Mickelson, who has finished runner-up six times at the U.S. Open and will get another shot at completing the career Grand Slam on his 30th attempt at the Country Club in Brookline, said he respected those who have "strong opinions." read more The American said he planned to compete in next month's Open Championship at St Andrews and would prefer to have the option to play "one or both" tours."I gave as much back to the PGA Tour and the game of golf as I could throughout my 30 years here and through my accomplishments on the course I've earned a lifetime membership," he said."I intend to keep that and then choose going forward which events to play and not."Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comReporting by Amy Tennery in New York; Editing by Ken FerrisOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Golf
SAN FRANCISCO — Walking up the tunnel to the Giants clubhouse Monday afternoon, Brandon Belt ran into a couple reporters. “Here’s an inside scoop,” he said, “I’ll be back soon.” When? “Probably this series.” Belt, however, wasn’t activated for San Francisco’s series opener Monday night against the Kansas City Royals. It was the 23rd game he has missed with inflammation in his right knee. The Giants host the Royals for two more after Monday, then hit the road for a seven-game swing through Pittsburgh and Atlanta. Manager Gabe Kapler hedged a bit on Belt’s timeline but struck an optimistic tone about his work over the past few days. “I think he’s getting really close to giving us a chance to activate him,” Kapler said. “We just have to decide when the best time for that is. It could be these last couple games with the Royals (or) could be when we go on the road. But we’re not far away.” Belt has ramped up the intensity of his baseball activities recently, and Kapler called the last couple days “his best in a really long time.” Before Monday’s game, Belt took part in a live BP session with Matthew Boyd on the mound (more on that later). Part of the reason for Belt’s extended absence has been working on his conditioning — primarily strengthening his quad — to ensure knee issue don’t continue to pop up this season. Belt also missed the majority of spring training with knee inflammation, and he’s missed more time this season with a neck issue and time on the COVID list. “Several things have been at play for Brandon,” Kapler said. “Number one, how well he’s recovering. Number two, and equally important, is building up the strength in his quad to protect the knee.” Belt has missed 34 of the Giants’ 60 games this season following Monday. When healthy, however, the 34-year-old still provides an important middle-of-the order bat. He hit four home runs in his first 39 at-bats during a torrid start to the season but cooled off since the calendar turned to May and was homerless in his past 62 at-bats before landing on the IL. Boyd’s live BP shut down The Giants have two starters’ returns on the horizon — Alex Cobb and Anthony DeSclafani — and they were hopeful about a third when left-hander Matthew Boyd stepped on the mound Monday afternoon at Oracle Park. Boyd, who signed an incentive-laden $5.2 million contract this offseason, was set to throw his first live BP session since undergoing surgery on the flexor tendon in his left elbow last September. It marked a step forward from the bullpen sessions he has been ramping up since spring training. The session, however, was cut short when Boyd felt discomfort in his surgically repaired elbow. “That’s not necessarily of any setback or long-term thing,” Kapler said. “He just didn’t feel particularly comfortable on the mound really letting it go, so we stopped that and cut that short.” Boyd, who had a 3.89 ERA in 15 starts before being shut down last season, was eying a July return to the big leagues. Kapler said the Giants still view him as a potential member of their rotation this season. “That doesn’t mean he can’t fill other roles, but that’s the vision for him right now,” Kapler said. Notable Belt and LaMonte Wade Jr. took part in Boyd’s live BP, however Belt was the only one to swing a bat. Wade (left knee inflammation) stood in and is still at least a few days away from embarking on a rehab assignment. He was scheduled to report to Triple-A Sacramento last Thursday but felt his left hamstring tighten up while running the bases. Players and coaches were happy to see Steven Duggar in the clubhouse Monday afternoon. He received hugs and enthusiastic greetings from Darin Ruf, Joc Pederson, Brandon Crawford and first-base/outfield coach Antoan Richardson, who bear-hugged him and hoisted him into the air. Duggar (left oblique strain) was merely making a pitstop before catching Sacramento’s team flight to Tacoma as he continues his rehab assignment. Duggar has played eight games so far, with six hits in 25 at-bats (.240) and a stolen base. On Sunday, Alex Cobb (neck/back tightness) threw a “really good bullpen,” according to Kapler. He is scheduled to throw a live BP session Tuesday, which would set him up to possibly start Sunday in Pittsburgh, the day he is eligible to be activated. Anthony DeSclafani (right ankle inflammation) will make his second and potentially final rehab start Thursday, also setting him up to potentially start on the day he is eligible to be activated, next Tuesday in Atlanta.
Baseball
Eli White has made his last highlight-worthy catch for a while.And now it is officially time for the Rangers to look at the revamped swing of Leody Taveras.As expected, the Rangers placed White on the 10-day injured list Monday after X-rays and an exam by team medical director Dr. Keith Meister confirmed a fracture of the right wrist. White, playing center field, collided with Charlie Culberson after the latter lost a fly ball in the sun in the 11th inning of Sunday’s 8-6 win over Chicago.Taveras will play center field tomorrow. White will have no baseball activities for about six weeks. I wouldn't expect him back until September at earliest. https://t.co/OaF1wQ6HQR— Evan Grant (@Evan_P_Grant) June 13, 2022 To replace White, the Rangers recalled Taveras, their athletic 23-year-old outfield prospect, who has struggled in two previous major league auditions. He posted a .570 OPS in parts of 2020 and 2021 with the Rangers. Taveras, however, has been a different player at Triple-A Round Rock this season. He was slashing .294/.335/.485/.820 in 49 games at Round Rock.Taveras hit .377 in April, but went into a significant May slump, heightened by some minor injuries. He hit only .200 for the month with a .589 OPS. But he rebounded in the last week, going 9 for 21 with three extra base hits and three walks in five games. Rangers officials had indicated they wanted to see him bounce back from the May slump before recalling him. And once recalled, he was expected to play regularly.He profiles most as a center fielder, and it will be his primary position during this stint at the MLB level. Other options for Texas would have included moving Adolis García to right field regularly and switching Kole Calhoun from right to left. In 11 major league seasons, Calhoun has played only 19 innings in left field. Another option would have been to simply insert Taveras into left and keep the status quo at the other positions.+++Find more Rangers coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.Click or tap here to sign up for our Rangers newsletter.Evan Grant, Rangers beat writer/insider. Evan has covered the Rangers since 1997. He has twice been named one of the top 10 beat writers in the country by the AP Sports Editors. His passions outside of covering baseball are his wife, Gina, his two step kids, two crazy dogs & barbecue. Let's not discuss the cat. Evan graduated from Georgia State University, but oddly is a Georgia fan. [email protected] @Evan_P_Grant
Baseball
AEW Star Jeff Hardy Arrested For DUI ... Cops Say He Had .294 BAC 6/13/2022 12:16 PM PT UPDATE 1:53 PM PT -- According to the Florida Highway Patrol, Hardy had a BAC of .294 following his arrest early Monday morning. UPDATE In police documents, obtained by TMZ Sports, officers say they pulled over Hardy after claiming he was driving a white Dodge Charger erratically on Volusia County highways. UPDATE In the documents, police say they received four separate calls regarding the Charger's "poor driving pattern." Cops say when they finally caught up to the vehicle, it was "traveling significantly under the speed limit, weaving across travel lanes, and running off the shoulder of the roadway." UPDATE Cops say during the stop, the 44-year-old wrestler "appeared to be in a stupor and confused." UPDATE Officers say when they finally got Hardy out of his vehicle, he reeked of booze, and, during field sobriety tests, displayed multiple signs of being impaired. UPDATE They arrested him on the scene, and say when they took him back to the station, two of his breath samples yielded BAC readings of .294 and .291. The legal limit in Florida is .08. UPDATE Cops also noted in the docs Hardy's license was suspended following his two previous convictions for driving under the influence. They also noted he "had a driving restriction which required him to have an interlock device in his vehicle," which they said his Charger did not have. AEW star Jeff Hardy has been arrested again, TMZ Sports has confirmed. Jail records show he was booked in Volusia County, Fla. on Monday morning ... and took a mug shot. Details surrounding the specific allegations against Hardy are unclear ... but court records show he's been charged with felony DUI, misdemeanor violating restrictions placed on driver's license, as well as misdemeanor driving while license canceled, suspended or revoked. The records show he's due in court Tuesday for a hearing on the matter. It's the third time since 2018 that Hardy has been accused of driving while under the influence. In March 2018, he was charged with DWI in North Carolina after getting into a car wreck. He was arrested again for DWI in North Carolina in Oct. 2019. APRIL 2020 WWE/After The Bell with Corey Graves In the months following the 2019 arrest, Hardy admitted he had problems with substance abuse on the "After The Bell" podcast with Corey Graves ... saying on the show that he was receiving professional help. Hardy was slated to wrestle with his brother, Matt Hardy, on AEW Dynamite later this week. It's unclear if that match will still go on. Story developing ... Originally Published -- 12:16 PM PT
Other Sports
SAN FRANCISCO — The NBA Finals is tied at 2-2 as it shifts back to the West Coast. Can the Celtics escape with a win?We’re offering live updates and analysis from Game 5 at the Chase Center. Follow along with insights from Nicole Yang and Chad Finn.Tipoff is at 9 p.m. EDT/6 p.m. PDT. You can watch on ABC.After a resounding victory in Game 3 at TD Garden, Boston let Game 4 slip away. It didn’t help that Stephen Curry scored 43 points in the Warriors’ win — his second-best career high in the NBA Finals.Regardless of how tonight goes, this series will go at least six games. Game 6 is back at TD Garden on Thursday.Click here to refresh | Sign up for Court Sense, our Celtics newsletter | Read more Celtics stories from the GlobeA special anniversary for Steve Kerr — 8:05 p.m.Today is the 25th anniversary of Steve Kerr’s series-winning shot for the Bulls in 1997. Get Court SenseBounce around the NBA with our Celtics-centric look at the latest happenings on and off the court.He was asked about it before the game. Here’s what he said:“Yeah, somebody sent me that this morning. An incredible memory obviously. Something every young basketball player dreams of. So to be able to live that was pretty amazing.“And then the fact that it’s 25 years ago just makes me feel old, of course.“Yeah, I think coaching, I mean, the Finals are the Finals, whether you’re playing or coaching. It’s the ultimate competition in the world of basketball. So there’s a lot of nerves and a lot of excitement and a lot of stress and all that stuff.“I think my experience as a player has definitely helped me prepare to coach a team in the Finals because I know what these guys are feeling.”Tatum 🤝 Tiger — 7:55 p.m.Just take a look at Jayson Tatum’s shirt today. Did he (OK, his stylist) get that at a thrift store? Jim Davis/Globe StaffIf it were easy to guard Steph Curry, someone would have figured it out by now — 7:50 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachSteph Curry was all smiles in Game 4.Jim Davis/Globe StaffThe thing about guarding Stephen Curry is that if a simple formula existed, someone would have done it by now. But year after year, game after game, possession after possession, the Warriors superstar manages to find just enough time and space to make life miserable for whoever tries to stop him.During the regular season, the damage inflicted is not quite as glaring because Curry just moves on to his next city to humiliate his next victim. But over the course of a long, grueling NBA playoff series, when teams become both familiar with and sick of each other, the Curry conundrum truly stands out.Fans don’t understand why their team isn’t doing something about him. The team insists that it is trying.“Yeah, Steph Curry is pretty good, if you guys haven’t noticed,” Celtics forward Jaylen Brown said. “He can shoot the ball unbelievably. Even watching it, playing against it and even in the Finals, I feel like he’s taking it up a notch.”Read Himmelsbach’s full story here.The Celtics need Jayson Tatum to save the series — 7:35 p.m.By Gary WashburnThe Celtics players may not say they hear the narrative, but they do. They are of the social media generation, the one that has labeled Boston as chokers for its Game 4 collapse.The Celtics lack the experience and consistency to win a championship. Jayson Tatum is a good player, but still lacks the fortitude for greatness. Ime Udoka is not making the adjustments to keep Stephen Curry from dominating the series with his dazzling offensive arsenal.These are labels that will be difficult to shake if the Celtics lose this series.The Celtics have to be better.They have no other choice. For Tatum, this is the biggest game of his career, and one that could define his legacy.Read Gary Washburn’s full On Basketball column here.We’re back at the Chase Center for Game 5 👋 — 7:20 p.m.Hello from San Francisco! The Celtics are back in town for Game 5.We just found out that Robert Williams will be available for the Celtics. (Read more about his ongoing saga from Gary Washburn here.)Nicole Yang can be reached at [email protected] her on Twitter @nicolecyang. Chad Finn can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn. Katie McInerney can be reached at [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter at @k8tmac.
Basketball
Lefthander Chris Sale faced hitters for the first time since February on Monday, throwing live batting practice in the Red Sox’ extended spring training facility in Fort Myers, Fla. According to an MLB source, the session went “extremely well,” with another noting that Sale’s fastball topped out at 96 miles per hour.Sale is now scheduled to fly to Boston to join the Red Sox Tuesday at Fenway. He’ll continue his rehab with the team.Sale, 33, has been sidelined since suffering a stress fracture in his right rib cage while throwing live batting practice to college hitters in late February, during the owner-imposed MLB lockout. While he initially had been on track to return to the rotation by early June, an as-yet-unidentified personal medical issue (described by the Sox as neither baseball- nor COVID-related) delayed his rehab by weeks, and a stomach malady last week further delayed his return.Get 108 StitchesAn email newsletter about everything baseball from the Globe's Red Sox reporters, in your inbox on weekdays during the season.The Sox have not specified a timetable for his return, or for the start of a rehab assignment. Given that he’s just started facing hitters and has yet to pitch in a game since last October, a buildup of several weeks seems likely. Still, the fact that he has progressed to facing hitters represents progress for Sale, currently in the third season of his five-year, $145 million extension.Over the last several weeks, team officials have not ruled out the possibility that Sale would return as a short-inning pitcher depending on both team need and the overall state of the pitching staff, though as of Monday, one team source said that no determination has been made about Sale’s role whenever he is ready to return.Enough steps remain before he is ready to contribute — and enough uncertainty exists about the Red Sox rotation, with Nate Eovaldi and Garrett Whitlock both on the injured list — that such a decision is likely premature.Alex Speier can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter at @alexspeier.
Baseball
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Sharon Osbourne and pregnant daughter Kelly were seen visiting Ozzy Osbourne at the hospital amid Ozzy's "major operation" on Monday afternoon.It’s unclear the medical procedure Ozzy had to undergo, but Sharon indicated it would be a difficult surgery, and she was flying back to the West Coast to be by his side."He has a major operation on Monday, and I have to be there," she told her fellow TalkTV panelists last week. "It’s really going to determine the rest of his life." Both Sharon and Kelly wore protective face masks as they entered the hospital to see the Black Sabbath frontman, with Sharon wheeling luggage behind her while also carrying an oversized purse.Kelly, 37, is currently pregnant with her first child with musician boyfriend Sid Wilson of SlipKnot. Kelly and Sharon Osbourne visit Ozzy Osbourne at the hospital amid his "major" surgery on Monday. (Backgrid)OZZY OSBOURNE DISCUSSES SLOW RECOVERY FOLLOWING SPINAL SURGERY, PARKINSON'S DIAGNOSIS"I’m just waiting on some more surgery on my neck," he told Classic Rock magazine in May. "I can’t walk properly these days. I have physical therapy every morning. I am somewhat better, but nowhere near as much as I want to be to go back on the road."When asked if he ever thought about his own mortality, Ozzy said he felt optimistic about his future as he looked back on the past."At f—ing 73, I’ve done pretty well," he said. "I don’t plan on going anywhere, but my time’s going to come."He also addressed another challenging topic for the family — sobriety. After decades of alcohol and drug issues, Ozzy faced his substance abuse issues head on, and chose to get sober eight years ago.OZZY OSBOURNE'S DAUGHTER ESCAPES FATAL STUDIO FIRE"I hope so," he said when asked if he's sober for life now. "I take it one day at a time. If I drink, I’ll drink. But I don’t want to drink today. I don’t want to smoke tobacco today. I don’t want to take drugs today. So today’s going to be okay, I suppose. I don’t know about tomorrow." next It’s unclear the medical procedure Ozzy had to undergo. (Backgrid) prev next However, Sharon indicated it would be a difficult surgery, and she was flying back to the West Coast to be by his side. (Backgrid) prev next "He has a major operation on Monday, and I have to be there," she told her fellow TalkTV panelists last week. "It’s really going to determine the rest of his life." (Backgrid) prev next Both Sharon and Kelly wore protective face masks as they entered the hospital to see the Black Sabbath frontman, with Sharon wheeling luggage behind her while also carrying an oversized purse. (Backgrid) prev next Kelly, 37, is currently pregnant with her first child with musician boyfriend Sid Wilson of SlipKnot. (Backgrid) prev next The Black Sabbath singer has previously discussed battling neck and back problems from quad biking injury in 2003. (Backgrid) prev next "I’m just waiting on some more surgery on my neck," he told Classic Rock magazine in May. "I can’t walk properly these days. I have physical therapy every morning. I am somewhat better, but nowhere near as much as I want to be to go back on the road." (Backgrid) prev When asked if he ever thought about his own mortality, Ozzy said he felt optimistic about his future as he looked back on the past. (Backgrid)Ozzy and Sharon's son Jack Osbourne, 36, has 18 years of sobriety under his belt, and while Kelly had a minor slip up in her sobriety journey last year, she's due to give birth to her first child this year.Ozzy and Sharon also have a daughter Aimee, 38, who recently survived a fatal fire at a recording studio in Hollywood. Aimee escaped from the building unharmed with her producer. The Osbournes became a household name in the early 2000s when MTV shined a light into their lives as famous stars — and the children of rock royalty — with an unscripted show about the family. The series premiered in 2002 and ran for four seasons, with a final curtain call in 2005. CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTERIn 2019, the Osbourne family spoke with Robin Roberts on "Good Morning America" about Ozzy's incident where he fell in the shower and dislodged metal screws in his spine (from the quad collision in 2003), requiring neck and back surgery. "When I had the fall, it was pitch black," he recalled. "I went to the bathroom and I fell. I just fell and landed like a slam on the floor and I remember lying there thinking, ‘Well, you’ve done it now,’ really calm. Sharon [called] an ambulance. After that, it was all downhill."The family also opened up about Ozzy getting diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, a neuro-degenerative disorder which can cause tremors and balance issues, as well as slowness of movement. There is no known cure for the disease. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP"It's PRKN 2," Sharon told GMA. "There's so many different types of Parkinson's; it's not a death sentence by any stretch of the imagination, but it does affect certain nerves in your body. And it's — it's like you have a good day, a good day, and then a really bad day." Tracy Wright is an entertainment writer for Fox News Digital.
Celebrity
Just last week a sequel to Joker, was officially announced. Now reports are swirling that Lady Gaga is in early talks to star in the movie. Both The Hollywood Reporter and Deadline are reporting that Gaga will potentially star alongside Joaquin Phoenix in the upcoming movie, which has been titled 'Joker: Folie à Deux'. Perhaps more incredibly: Early reports say the movie is a musical. If that's the case, the Gaga casting could make a lot of sense. Gaga is apparently in talks to play Harley Quinn, who was famously played by Margot Robbie in the Suicide Squad series. Gaga's portrayal, if it comes to fruition, will take place in a different universe to that one.We know very little about 'Joker: Folie à Deux' at this point, but Todd Phillips is set to return as director. The first 'Joker' was not just a massive success at the box office, it also was widely loved critically. Joaquin Phoenix won a Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal of the Joker.
Movies
Photo by Dia Dipasupil via Getty ImagesNo one had a better Sunday night than Jennifer Hudson. The 40-year-old actor and singer took home a Tony Award for her role as producer of Michael R. Jackson’s musical A Strange Loop, and it wasn’t just any Tony Award: The honor meant that Hudson has officially achieved EGOT status, meaning she’s racked up an Emmy, Oscar, Grammy, and Tony. The achievement is all the more impressive given that the play took home the award for Best Musical, as well as Best Book of a Musical. (In his acceptance speech, Jackson—who won a Pulitzer Prize for the play—summed it up as “about a young Black gay man named Usher who works as an usher at a Broadway show who is writing a musical about a young Black gay man named Usher who works as an usher at a Broadway show.”) At 40, Hudson also made history as the youngest-ever EGOT winner.Just 16 people had hit the awards gram slam before Hudson—Audrey Hepburn, John Legend, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and Rita Moreno among them. And that list has become a little more diverse now that she’s joined their ranks: Hudson is only the second Black woman (following Whoopi Goldberg) and third Black person (following Goldberg and Legend) to achieve EGOT status.Hudson first became a major award winner in 2007, when she was awarded that year’s Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance in the musical Dreamgirls. Next came a Best R&B Album Grammy for her eponymous record in 2009, and a Daytime Emmy for her role as executive producer of the animated fairytale Baby Yaga last year. Along the way, she picked up another Grammy, when The Color Purple was awarded Best Musical Theater Album in 2017. Hudson has yet to post about her EGOT, though it’s clear she knows that winning the Tony marked a major milestone: Last year, she posted a photo of herself wearing a gold ring in the shape of the letters E, G, and O, celebrating the fact that she’d won an Emmy. Looks like it’s time to get a new ring.
Celebrity
If the multi-hyphenate star takes the role, she'll be playing opposite Joaquin Phoenix as the Clown Prince of Crime's longtime love interest. Lady Gaga performs a medley at the 64th annual Grammy Awards.Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP Don’t rain on their parade. Just one week after the news that Todd Phillips’ long-expected “Joker” sequel was indeed moving right along, complete with a script and a title for the followup to the blockbuster feature starring eventual Oscar winner Joaquin Phoenix as the Clown Prince of Crime, we’ve already got more details about the project. And what details they are. The Hollywood Reporter shares the news that not only has Phillips allegedly found his leading lady — very necessary for a film currently titled “Joker: Folie à Deux” — in no less than the multi-talented Lady Gaga, who is currently in “early talks” for the role of Harley Quinn, Joker’s iconic (and equally as crazy) lover. THR reports that “this new Quinn exists in a different DC universe than the Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn, which most recently appeared in 2021’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ as well as several other films,” including the Robbie-starring spinoff “Birds of Prey.” And what would a Lady Gaga-starring feature be without a musical component? THR also reports that — big gasp! — the sequel is being set up as a musical. Given the wild affection for Phoenix’s dance moves during the first film and the full force talent of the multi-Grammy-winning Gaga, this wild pairing actually makes a bit of sense? But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. While Gaga is still in early talks for the gig, THR also reports that sources tell them the studio has also yet to close a deal with Phoenix, “with the two sides deep into it.” We’re guessing they’ll figure it out, especially as this news lights up the internet. “Joker,” the sixth highest-grossing film of 2019, was the first R-rated movie ever to gross over $1 billion worldwide. By most measures, it’s the most profitable comic book movie ever, with a budget somewhere between 55 and 70 million dollars and a final worldwide gross of $1.074 billion. The film not only won Phoenix the Best Actor prize at the 92nd Academy Awards but Hildur Guðnadóttir the Best Original Score statuette for her moody, string-heavy music. The film received 11 Oscar nominations overall. Gaga was most recently nominated for a Best Actress nod for her work in “A Star Is Born,” in addition to two Best Song nods for the film, including the eventual winner, “Shallow.” There’s no word on when “Joker: Folie à Deux” will hit theaters, but this sudden rush of major news about the project signals Warner Bros. Discovery’s apparent interest in keeping its off-kilter superhero spinoff going, even during fraught times at the studio, which has struggled to duplicate the success of Phillips’ smash hit. IndieWire has reached out to Warner Bros. for comment. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.
Movies
Chris Pizzello/The Associated Press Rebel Wilson attends the premiere of the Netflix film “Senior Year” in West Hollywood, Calif. An Australian journalist has issued an apology to actress Rebel Wilson after being accused of trying to reveal her sexuality, The Guardian reported on Monday. Andrew Hornery, a gossip columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald, reportedly messaged Wilson’s team last week, giving them two days to provide comment for a story about Wilson’s relationship with a woman, which was not yet public knowledge. Wilson beat Honrnery to the punch and took her relationship with fashion designer Ramona Agruma public via Instagram on Thursday before his story was published. “I thought I was searching for a Disney Prince … but maybe what I really needed all this time was a Disney Princess,” the Australian actress captioned her post, adding, “#loveislove.” Hornery then published a different column, this one complaining about her move. He had reached out to her representatives with “an abundance of caution and respect,” he claims. “Big mistake,” he added. Hornery’s response to the alleged snub sparked backlash from readers, prompting the Herald to remove the column. Hornery has since apologized, saying, “My email was never intended to be a threat.” He added, “It is not the Herald’s business to ‘out’ people and that is not what we set out to do. But I understand why my email has been seen as a threat. The framing of it was a mistake.” Tags andrew hornery Prince rebel wilson rebel wilson sydney morning herald
Celebrity
Tipoff is at 9 p.m. EDT/6 p.m. PDT. You can watch on ABC.After a resounding victory in Game 3 at TD Garden, Boston let Game 4 slip away. It didn’t help that Stephen Curry scored 43 points in the Warriors’ win — his second-best career high in the NBA Finals.\Regardless of how tonight goes, this series will go at least six games. Game 6 is back at TD Garden on Thursday.Click here to refresh | Sign up for Court Sense, our Celtics newsletter | Read more Celtics stories from the GlobeGet Court SenseBounce around the NBA with our Celtics-centric look at the latest happenings on and off the court.Tip is approaching, and the boos are raining down — 9:02 p.m.The Celtics’ starting lineup has been introduced. Tip is 5 minutes away.Boston is lit up to celebrate the Celtics:Adam Silver skipping Game 5 — 8:55 p.m.Via the AP:NBA commissioner Adam Silver canceled plans to attend Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the Warriors and Celtics Monday night because of the league’s health and safety protocols.Silver typically attends all finals games.The league did not say whether Silver had tested positive for COVID-19 or been deemed a close contact of someone who had, nor released any details about his health.Also unclear is when Silver will be able to resume attending games. Part of his role as commissioner involves handing out the league’s championship trophy, which one team will be awarded either Thursday in Boston or Sunday in San Francisco.Silver has been the NBA’s commissioner since February 2014. This is the ninth championship series the league has held during his tenure, including the 2020 season that resumed inside a bubble at Walt Disney World in Florida in the early stages of the pandemic.Starting lineups — 8:45 p.m.WarriorsWiggins, Porter Jr., Green, Curry, ThompsonCelticsTatum, Horford, Williams, Brown, SmartNo US Open in Brookline for Steph Curry this week — 8:35 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachWarriors star Stephen Curry, an avid golfer, said he doesn’t plan to stop by The Country Club in Brookline for any US Open festivities when the Warriors return to Boston on Tuesday in advance of Thursday’s Game 6. But he’ll be watching closely, and said he wouldn’t be surprised if some of his friends on the PGA Tour reach out to him for Finals tickets on Thursday night if they have a late tee time on Friday.“Obviously, all of my attention is on rest and recovery, getting ready,” he said. “I’ll pop in front of the TV and make sure I watch as much of it as possible, though … I’ve never been to The Country Club at Brookline, so send me some pictures if you get out there.”Curry played in the Ellie Mae Classic in 2017-18, has appeared in several celebrity tournaments, and recently announced the formation of the Underrated Golf Tour for juniors from underrepresented backgrounds.The Celtics had 32 players on the roster this season. Who gets a ring? — 8:25 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachThe Celtics enter Game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Warriors Monday night just two wins from their first championship since 2008. All of the players from that team have been gone for years, of course, and no player on the current roster has ever won a title; they would be winning their first championship rings.For much of this unusual season, the Celtics roster was a revolving door. In all, 32 players have been on the team. So would those who have departed be in position to secure the splashy jewelry, too? Well, maybe.Officially, league rules stipulate that a player must be a member of the roster at season’s end to be eligible for a ring. Ultimately, though, the decision essentially rests with the team.Read Adam Himmelsbach’s full story.A special anniversary for Steve Kerr — 8:05 p.m.Today is the 25th anniversary of Steve Kerr’s series-winning shot for the Bulls in 1997.He was asked about it before the game. Here’s what he said:“Yeah, somebody sent me that this morning. An incredible memory obviously. Something every young basketball player dreams of. So to be able to live that was pretty amazing.“And then the fact that it’s 25 years ago just makes me feel old, of course.“Yeah, I think coaching, I mean, the Finals are the Finals, whether you’re playing or coaching. It’s the ultimate competition in the world of basketball. So there’s a lot of nerves and a lot of excitement and a lot of stress and all that stuff.“I think my experience as a player has definitely helped me prepare to coach a team in the Finals because I know what these guys are feeling.”Tatum 🤝 Tiger — 7:55 p.m.Just take a look at Jayson Tatum’s shirt today. Did he (OK, his stylist) get that at a thrift store?Jim Davis/Globe StaffIf it were easy to guard Steph Curry, someone would have figured it out by now — 7:50 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachSteph Curry was all smiles in Game 4.Jim Davis/Globe StaffThe thing about guarding Stephen Curry is that if a simple formula existed, someone would have done it by now. But year after year, game after game, possession after possession, the Warriors superstar manages to find just enough time and space to make life miserable for whoever tries to stop him.During the regular season, the damage inflicted is not quite as glaring because Curry just moves on to his next city to humiliate his next victim. But over the course of a long, grueling NBA playoff series, when teams become both familiar with and sick of each other, the Curry conundrum truly stands out.Fans don’t understand why their team isn’t doing something about him. The team insists that it is trying.“Yeah, Steph Curry is pretty good, if you guys haven’t noticed,” Celtics forward Jaylen Brown said. “He can shoot the ball unbelievably. Even watching it, playing against it and even in the Finals, I feel like he’s taking it up a notch.”Read Himmelsbach’s full story here.The Celtics need Jayson Tatum to save the series — 7:35 p.m.By Gary WashburnThe Celtics players may not say they hear the narrative, but they do. They are of the social media generation, the one that has labeled Boston as chokers for its Game 4 collapse.The Celtics lack the experience and consistency to win a championship. Jayson Tatum is a good player, but still lacks the fortitude for greatness. Ime Udoka is not making the adjustments to keep Stephen Curry from dominating the series with his dazzling offensive arsenal.These are labels that will be difficult to shake if the Celtics lose this series.The Celtics have to be better.They have no other choice. For Tatum, this is the biggest game of his career, and one that could define his legacy.Read Gary Washburn’s full On Basketball column here.We’re back at the Chase Center for Game 5 👋 — 7:20 p.m.Hello from San Francisco! The Celtics are back in town for Game 5.We just found out that Robert Williams will be available for the Celtics. (Read more about his ongoing saga from Gary Washburn here.)Nicole Yang can be reached at [email protected] her on Twitter @nicolecyang. Chad Finn can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn. Katie McInerney can be reached at [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter at @k8tmac.
Basketball
Socceroos coach Graham Arnold has called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to give Aussies the day off to celebrate after the squad qualified for a record fifth consecutive FIFA World Cup.Socceroos coach Graham Arnold has called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to give Australians a day off in the wake of the squad's thrilling World Cup qualifier.Arnold, who spoke to media after the victory to Peru in a wild penalty shootout, revealed he had called out the Prime Minister in the days before the match to ask for a public holiday.“I called out Anthony Albanese the other day to give everyone the day off to celebrate this because I believe this is one of the greatest achievements ever,” he told Network 10.“To qualify for this World Cup the way we’ve had to go through things you know, 20 World Cup qualifiers and we’ve played 16 away from home, it’s been tough but we did it.”Stream more sports news live & on demand with Flash. 25+ news channels in 1 place. New to Flash? Try 1 month free. Offer ends 31 October, 2022.The request is similar to that of former Labor prime minister Bob Hawke, who famously declared Australians should get the day off after winning the America’s Cup in 1983.“I tell you what, any boss who sacks anyone for not turning up today is a bum,” the then-prime minister declared.Mr Albanese is yet to respond to Arnold’s request but wished the Socceroos well ahead of their match on Tuesday morning and congratulated the team after the victory.“World Cup here we come. #AllForTheSocceroos,” the Prime Minister tweeted.The Socceroos won their final sudden death qualifying match against Peru in a tense affair which concluded with a penalty shootout.Australia entered Tuesday morning's (AEST) must-win match at Al Rayyan Stadium as the heavy underdogs against the 22nd ranked Peru.In nail-biting scenes, both teams missed a penalty each before the Socceroos emerged victorious 5-4 to secure their place at a record fifth consecutive FIFA World Cup.Arnold’s decision to sub captain and goalkeeper Mat Ryan off in the 119th minute to give Andy Redmayne the responsibility of the penalty shootout proved a masterstroke as the replacement saved two shots in the shootout."Andrew Redmayne is a very good penalty saver, and to try to get him on the mental aspect while we were making that change, to add that bit of uncertainty in their brains," Arnold told Network 10 of the decision after the win.The goalkeeping hero refused to take the credit for the victory and thanked those who have worked behind the scenes during the qualifying campaign."I can't thank the team enough, the staff enough. You know, I'm not going to take credit. The boys ran out 120 minutes, and it not only takes 11 on the field but the boys on the bench, the boys in the stands," Redmayne told Network 10."I'm no hero. I just played my role like everyone else did tonight. Not even the 11 on the pitch, it was much more than that, it is a team effort."Australia will now be placed in Group D at FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 in November with reigning champions France, Denmark and Tunisia.
Soccer
Astronaut Tim Peake poses for pictures, as he arrives for the UK premiere of 'Lightyear' in London, Britain June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Maja Smiejkowska/File PhotoRegister now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comLOS ANGELES, June 13 (Reuters) - Walt Disney Co (DIS.N) has been unable to obtain permission to show its new Pixar movie "Lightyear" in 14 Middle Eastern and Asian countries, a source said on Monday, and the animated film appeared unlikely to open in China, the world's largest movie market.A "Lightyear" producer told Reuters that authorities in China had asked for cuts to the movie, which Disney declined to make, and she assumed the movie would not open there either. The animated film depicts a same-sex couple who share a brief kiss, which prompted the United Arab Emirates to ban the film.The United Arab Emirates said the couple's relationship violated the country's media content standards. read more Homosexuality is considered criminal in many Middle Eastern countries.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comRepresentatives of other countries, including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, Malaysia and Lebanon, did not immediately respond to requests for comment on why they would not allow the film to be exhibited."Lightyear" is a prequel to Pixar's acclaimed "Toy Story" franchise. Chris Evans voices the lead character, Buzz Lightyear, a legendary space ranger.In the film, Buzz's close friend is a female space ranger who marries another woman. A scene showing milestones in the couple's relationship includes a brief kiss.Disney has not received an answer from Chinese authorities on whether they would allow the film in cinemas, "Lightyear" producer Galyn Susman said. But she said filmmakers would not make changes to the movie. China has rejected other on-screen depictions of homosexuality in the past."We're not going to cut out anything, especially something as important as the loving and inspirational relationship that shows Buzz what he's missing by the choices that he's making, so that's not getting cut," Susman told Reuters at the movie's red-carpet premiere in London.China is not a "make or break" market for Pixar, one theater industry source said. It contributed a mere 3% to the global box office for "Toy Story 4," which grossed more than $1 billion in worldwide ticket sales in 2019, according to Comscore.Any objections to "Lightyear" over LGBTQ issues were "frustrating," Evans said."It's great that we are a part of something that's making steps forward in the social inclusion capacity, but it's frustrating that there are still places that aren't where they should be," Evans said."Lightyear" is set to debut in theaters in the United States and Canada on Friday.In May, Disney refused requests to cut same-sex references in Marvel movie "Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness." Saudi Arabia and a handful of other Middle Eastern countries did not show the film.Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.comReporting by Lisa Richwine and Dawn Chmielewski; Additional reporting by Kristian Brunse in London; Editing by Richard ChangOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Movies
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum gave a peek into his mindset heading into a pivotal Game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors on Monday night.Tatum entered the Chase Center wearing a Tiger Woods T-shirt. Heading into the game with the series tied 2-2, Tatum is averaging 22.3 points, 7.8 assists and 7 rebounds and is going to need to play even harder to steal another game from the Warriors on the road.CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics arrives to the arena prior to the game against the Golden State Warriors during Game Five of the 2022 NBA Finals on June 13, 2022 at Chase Center in San Francisco, California. (Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)He scored 23 points, grabbed 11 rebounds and dished out 11 assists in Game 4. But Boston picked up a loss at home to Golden State 107-97."I mean, I give [the Golden State Warriors] credit. They're a great team. They're playing well. They got a game plan, things like that," Tatum said after the loss Friday night, via ESPN."But it's on me. I got to be better. I know I'm impacting the game in other ways, but I got to be more efficient, shoot the ball better, finish at the rim better. I take accountability for that."WARRIORS' KLAY THOMPSON FOCUSED ON THE PRESENT AMID ANNIVERSARY OF ACL TEAR: 'I JUST WANT TO FRIGGING WIN' Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics looks on during practice and media availability as part of the 2022 NBA Finals on June 12, 2022 at Chase Center in San Francisco, California. (Mercedes Oliver/NBAE via Getty Images)On Sunday, Tatum got big praise from Warriors star Draymond Green for how he’s been able to handle the pressure in his first Finals appearance."It’s tough. You’re experiencing something for the first time," Green said Sunday. "I think he’s handled it well. He’s maybe not shot the ball as well as he’d like or everyone else would like. But overall, I think he’s been playing well, and that’s why it’s a 2-2 series coming back for Game 5. I think he’s handling it all extremely well. He’s taking what the defense gives him, and that’s what great players do. But I think he’s doing a good job."Tatum said he’s just been trying to stay in the moment and ignore some of the criticism he’s received. Jayson Tatum #0 and Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics walk off the court against the Golden State Warriors during Game Four of the 2022 NBA Finals on June 10, 2022 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. (Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images)CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPGame 5 is set for 9 p.m. ET. Ryan Gaydos is the sports editor for Fox News and Fox Business. Story tips can be sent to [email protected].
Basketball
After a resounding victory in Game 3 at TD Garden, Boston let Game 4 slip away. It didn’t help that Stephen Curry scored 43 points in the Warriors’ win — his second-best career high in the NBA Finals.\Regardless of how tonight goes, this series will go at least six games. Game 6 is back at TD Garden on Thursday.Click here to refresh | Sign up for Court Sense, our Celtics newsletter | Read more Celtics stories from the GlobeGet Court SenseBounce around the NBA with our Celtics-centric look at the latest happenings on and off the court.We’re seven minutes in and Tatum still hasn’t taken a shot — 9:20 p.m.It’s Warriors 17, Celtics 6 with 4:54 to play in the first quarter. Eek.Bill Russell chimes in: “Just in case you need a backup” — 9:18 p.m.The Celtics legend is wearing his own signed jersey.Scoring update: 7:25, first quarter — 9:15 p.m.Warriors 12, Celtics 4Yang: Chase Center is amped up. So are the Warriors, who have jumped out to a 12-4 lead, their best start of the series. Knowing that the Celtics are 8-3 on the road this postseason and haven’t lost back-to-back games since March, the Warriors are responding accordingly.Two turnovers for the Celtics so far.Chad Finn: Three thoughts on what the Celtics need to do tonight — 9:10 p.m.Three quick thoughts before Game 5:The midrange game is not the answer for Jayson Tatum: Celtics coach Ime Udoka suggested one solution to Tatum’s shooting woes in this series is to take more floaters and midrange shots. Here’s hoping that was an attempt to mislead the Warriors. Tatum has shot well from 3 in this series (14 of 31) but has been brutal from 2 (14 of 63). He needs to play the analytics game: 3s and layups. And he needs to stop missing layups by seeking contact and adding degrees of difficulty to his shots.Keep doing what they’re doing against Steph Curry: Sounds crazy after he scored 43 points in Game 4 while playing probably the best Finals game of his six appearances in the NBA championship, but Marcus Smart and friends played him pretty well. The best shooter in basketball history just made shots, and when he’s going like that, the best defense is to pray that he misses.Figure out how to keep the Warriors bigs off the offensive boards: Andrew Wiggins had a career-high 16 rebounds in Game 4, including 3 of the Warriors’ 16 offensive rebounds. Part of the reason that happened is that the Celtics’ bigs have to come up to defend Curry, and often can’t recover in time to do their diligence on the boards. You have to send the bigs at Curry, so this is a tricky one for Udoka and his staff.And we’re off — 9:07 p.m.The Warriors are on the board first.Tip is approaching, and the boos are raining down — 9:02 p.m.The Celtics’ starting lineup has been introduced. Tip is 5 minutes away.Boston is lit up to celebrate the Celtics:Adam Silver skipping Game 5 — 8:55 p.m.Via the AP:NBA commissioner Adam Silver canceled plans to attend Game 5 of the NBA Finals between the Warriors and Celtics Monday night because of the league’s health and safety protocols.Silver typically attends all finals games.The league did not say whether Silver had tested positive for COVID-19 or been deemed a close contact of someone who had, nor released any details about his health.Also unclear is when Silver will be able to resume attending games. Part of his role as commissioner involves handing out the league’s championship trophy, which one team will be awarded either Thursday in Boston or Sunday in San Francisco.Silver has been the NBA’s commissioner since February 2014. This is the ninth championship series the league has held during his tenure, including the 2020 season that resumed inside a bubble at Walt Disney World in Florida in the early stages of the pandemic.Starting lineups — 8:45 p.m.WarriorsWiggins, Porter Jr., Green, Curry, ThompsonCelticsTatum, Horford, Williams, Brown, SmartNo US Open in Brookline for Steph Curry this week — 8:35 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachWarriors star Stephen Curry, an avid golfer, said he doesn’t plan to stop by The Country Club in Brookline for any US Open festivities when the Warriors return to Boston on Tuesday in advance of Thursday’s Game 6. But he’ll be watching closely, and said he wouldn’t be surprised if some of his friends on the PGA Tour reach out to him for Finals tickets on Thursday night if they have a late tee time on Friday.“Obviously, all of my attention is on rest and recovery, getting ready,” he said. “I’ll pop in front of the TV and make sure I watch as much of it as possible, though … I’ve never been to The Country Club at Brookline, so send me some pictures if you get out there.”Curry played in the Ellie Mae Classic in 2017-18, has appeared in several celebrity tournaments, and recently announced the formation of the Underrated Golf Tour for juniors from underrepresented backgrounds.The Celtics had 32 players on the roster this season. Who gets a ring? — 8:25 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachThe Celtics enter Game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Warriors Monday night just two wins from their first championship since 2008. All of the players from that team have been gone for years, of course, and no player on the current roster has ever won a title; they would be winning their first championship rings.For much of this unusual season, the Celtics roster was a revolving door. In all, 32 players have been on the team. So would those who have departed be in position to secure the splashy jewelry, too? Well, maybe.Officially, league rules stipulate that a player must be a member of the roster at season’s end to be eligible for a ring. Ultimately, though, the decision essentially rests with the team.Read Adam Himmelsbach’s full story.A special anniversary for Steve Kerr — 8:05 p.m.Today is the 25th anniversary of Steve Kerr’s series-winning shot for the Bulls in 1997.He was asked about it before the game. Here’s what he said:“Yeah, somebody sent me that this morning. An incredible memory obviously. Something every young basketball player dreams of. So to be able to live that was pretty amazing.“And then the fact that it’s 25 years ago just makes me feel old, of course.“Yeah, I think coaching, I mean, the Finals are the Finals, whether you’re playing or coaching. It’s the ultimate competition in the world of basketball. So there’s a lot of nerves and a lot of excitement and a lot of stress and all that stuff.“I think my experience as a player has definitely helped me prepare to coach a team in the Finals because I know what these guys are feeling.”Tatum 🤝 Tiger — 7:55 p.m.Just take a look at Jayson Tatum’s shirt today. Did he (OK, his stylist) get that at a thrift store?Jim Davis/Globe StaffIf it were easy to guard Steph Curry, someone would have figured it out by now — 7:50 p.m.By Adam HimmelsbachSteph Curry was all smiles in Game 4.Jim Davis/Globe StaffThe thing about guarding Stephen Curry is that if a simple formula existed, someone would have done it by now. But year after year, game after game, possession after possession, the Warriors superstar manages to find just enough time and space to make life miserable for whoever tries to stop him.During the regular season, the damage inflicted is not quite as glaring because Curry just moves on to his next city to humiliate his next victim. But over the course of a long, grueling NBA playoff series, when teams become both familiar with and sick of each other, the Curry conundrum truly stands out.Fans don’t understand why their team isn’t doing something about him. The team insists that it is trying.“Yeah, Steph Curry is pretty good, if you guys haven’t noticed,” Celtics forward Jaylen Brown said. “He can shoot the ball unbelievably. Even watching it, playing against it and even in the Finals, I feel like he’s taking it up a notch.”Read Himmelsbach’s full story here.The Celtics need Jayson Tatum to save the series — 7:35 p.m.By Gary WashburnThe Celtics players may not say they hear the narrative, but they do. They are of the social media generation, the one that has labeled Boston as chokers for its Game 4 collapse.The Celtics lack the experience and consistency to win a championship. Jayson Tatum is a good player, but still lacks the fortitude for greatness. Ime Udoka is not making the adjustments to keep Stephen Curry from dominating the series with his dazzling offensive arsenal.These are labels that will be difficult to shake if the Celtics lose this series.The Celtics have to be better.They have no other choice. For Tatum, this is the biggest game of his career, and one that could define his legacy.Read Gary Washburn’s full On Basketball column here.We’re back at the Chase Center for Game 5 👋 — 7:20 p.m.Hello from San Francisco! The Celtics are back in town for Game 5.We just found out that Robert Williams will be available for the Celtics. (Read more about his ongoing saga from Gary Washburn here.)Nicole Yang can be reached at [email protected] her on Twitter @nicolecyang. Chad Finn can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn. Katie McInerney can be reached at [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter at @k8tmac.
Basketball
Amsterdam concert postponed just hours before showtime after 78-year-old frontman develops coronavirus symptoms. [month] [day], [year], [hour]:[minute][ampm] [timezone] Mick Jagger sings during a Rolling Stones concert Thursday in Liverpool, England.Scott Heppell/AP AMSTERDAM — The Rolling Stones canceled their concert in Amsterdam on Monday, just hours before it was due to start, after lead singer Mick Jagger tested positive for COVID-19.The band announced the cancellation in a statement, saying the 78-year-old Jagger tested positive “after experiencing symptoms of COVID upon arrival at the stadium” on the outskirts of Amsterdam. There were no further details about his condition.“The Rolling Stones are deeply sorry for tonight’s postponement, but the safety of the audience, fellow musicians and the touring crew has to take priority,” the statement said, adding that the show would be rescheduled and tickets for the concert at Amsterdam’s Johan Cruyff Arena would be honored for the new date.Some fans were already in the stadium when it was announced that the show had been scrapped.The veteran rockers are touring Europe with a show called SIXTY to mark six decades together. Their last show was at Liverpool’s Anfield Stadium on June 9. The next scheduled concert is in Bern, Switzerland, on June 17. Considered to be the Oscars of the culinary industry, the coveted awards each year honor the best chefs, restaurants, restaurateurs, mixologists, bakers, cookbook authors, food writers and more in the nation. Casten’s congressional office released a statement Monday evening announcing that Gwen Casten, age 17, passed away. His office didn’t provide any further details about the death. By Tina Sfondeles [month] [day], [year], [hour]:[minute][ampm] [timezone] Mack, who is being held in Chicago’s downtown Metropolitan Correctional Center, has been at the center of an international legal saga ever since the gruesome discovery of her mother’s body inside a suitcase outside the St. Regis Bali Resort on Aug. 12, 2014. By Jon Seidel [month] [day], [year], [hour]:[minute][ampm] [timezone] Lamont Mathews, 23, is charged with one count of first-degree murder, Chicago police said. By Sun-Times Wire [month] [day], [year], [hour]:[minute][ampm] [timezone] Almost 300 designs were submitted from students at 40 high schools throughout the county, and an appointed flag advisory panel narrowed the selection to six flags in March. The new flag will be showcased Tuesday. By Manny Ramos [month] [day], [year], [hour]:[minute][ampm] [timezone]
Music
Lizzo has removed an offensive term for disabled people from her latest song after days of public criticism, saying she “never want[ed] to promote derogatory language”.GRRRLS, the latest track from the musician’s upcoming album Special, was released on Friday. In the opening verse, the pop star – who has become well-known for her lyrics championing acceptance and self-love – used a derogatory term for cerebral palsy, also known as spastic diplegia.The song was almost immediately criticised by fans and disability advocates, with tweets and TikToks explaining the history and offensive nature of the term being shared and liked hundreds of thousands of times.Hey @lizzo my disability Cerebral Palsy is literally classified as Spastic Diplegia (where spasticity refers to unending painful tightness in my legs) your new song makes me pretty angry + sad. ‘Spaz’ doesn’t mean freaked out or crazy. It’s an ableist slur. It’s 2022. Do better.— Hannah Diviney (@hannah_diviney) June 12, 2022 I’m disappointed in @lizzo for using the word “sp@z” in her new song “Grrrls”. There’s no excuse for using an ableist insult in a song in 2022. As someone who champions women, plus size people and others whom society treats poorly, Lizzo preaches inclusivity and should do better.— Callum Stephen (He/Him) (@AutisticCallum_) June 11, 2022 Hey @lizzo please remove the word "spaz" from your new song because it's a slur and really offensive to the disabled community From a disappointed fan 😔💔— Shelby 🖤 (@Shelbykinsxo) June 10, 2022 Lizzo released a written public apology on Monday.“It has been brought to my attention that there is a harmful word in my new song GRRRLS. Let me make one thing clear: I never want to promote derogatory language,” she wrote. “As a fat black woman in America, I have had many hurtful words used against me so I understand the power words can have (whether intentionally, or in my case, unintentionally.)”She said she was proud to release a new version of the song with a changed lyric.“This is the result of me listening and taking action,” she wrote. “As an influential artist I’m dedicated to being part of the change I’ve been waiting to see in the world.”As the song had yet to be released as a physical purchase, the previous version of GRRRLS has been replaced on streaming services and digital stores with the new lyric “hold me back”.Special is set to be released in July.
Music
Philip Baker Hall, the prolific character actor of film and theater who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson’s first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in “Seinfeld,” died on June 12, 2022. He was 90. (Toby Canham/Getty Images)Here are some of the celebrities and newsmakers who died in 2022.Philip Baker Hall Philip Baker Hall, the prolific character actor of film and theater who starred in Paul Thomas Anderson’s first movies and who memorably hunted down a long-overdue library book in “Seinfeld,” died on June 12, 2022. He was 90. (Toby Canham/Getty Images)Alec John Such Alec John Such, the bassist and one of the founding members of Bon Jovi, died at age 70 according to the band on June 5, 2022. No details on when or how John Such died were immediately available. (M. Kathleen Kelly/AP)Paul Zimbrakos Paul Zimbrakos, who influenced and trained countless young reporters at Chicago’s City News Bureau during more than four decades as an editor at the now-shuttered 24/7 wire service, died May 31, 2022 at the age of 86. (Carl Wagner/Chicago Tribune)Ray Liotta Actor Ray Liotta, best known for playing mobster Henry Hill in “Goodfellas” and baseball player Shoeless Joe Jackson in “Field of Dreams,” died May 25, 2022 at the age of 67. A representative for Liotta told The Hollywood Reporter and NBC News that he died in his sleep in the Dominican Republic, where he was filming a new movie. (Evan Agostini/Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)Andy Fletcher Andy Fletcher, keyboardist for British synth pop giants Depeche Mode for more than 40 years, died May 26, 2022 at age 60. Depeche Mode announced the death of founding member Fletcher on its official social media pages. (Owen Sweeney/Owen Sweeney/Invision/AP)Roger Angell Author Roger Angell, a longtime New Yorker writer and editor, died May 20, 2022 at the age of 101. Angell, the son of founding New Yorker editor Katharine White and stepson of E.B. White, contributed hundreds of essays and stories to the magazine over a 70-year career. (MARY ALTAFFER/AP)Rosmarie Trapp Rosmarie Trapp, whose family inspired "The Sound of Music," died at a nursing home in Morrisville, Vt., on May 13, 2022. She was 93. (AP)Fred Ward Fred Ward, a veteran actor who appeared in such films as “The Right Stuff,” “The Player,” "Sweet Home Alabama" and “Tremors,” died May 8, 2022. He was 79. (Chris Pizzello/AP)Bob Lanier Bob Lanier, the left-handed big man who muscled up beside the likes of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as one of the NBA’s top players of the 1970s, died May 10, 2022. He was 73. (Josh Reynolds/AP)Mickey Gilley Mickey Gilley, whose namesake Texas honky-tonk inspired the 1980 film “Urban Cowboy,” and a nationwide wave of Western-themed nightspots, died May 7, 2022, at age 86. (Jack Plunkett/Jack Plunkett/Invision/AP)Mike Hagerty Mike Hagerty, a character actor known for roles on TV shows including “Friends,” “Cheers,” “Seinfeld” and “Somebody Somewhere,” died May 5, 2022 at the age of 67. (Rebecca Sapp/WireImage for Mediaplacement)Ron Galella Ron Galella, the celebrity photographer whose pursuit of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis resulted in a restraining order against him after he stalked her for years, died at age 91 on April 30, 2022, at his home in Montville, N.J., of congestive heart failure. (Carlo Allegri/AP)Naomi Judd Naomi Judd, the Kentucky-born matriarch of the Grammy-winning duo The Judds and mother of Wynonna and Ashley Judd, has died at the age of 76. Her family announced Judd's death on April 30, 2022. (Josh Anderson/AP)Bob Chinn Bob Chinn, who owned the iconic Bob Chinn's Crab House on Milwaukee Avenue in Wheeling, died April 15, 2022 at the age of 99. Bob Chinn's Crab House was once ranked among the nation’s top restaurants in terms of sales. (Andrew A. Nelles/ for The Chicago Tribune)Orrin Hatch Former Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who became the longest-serving Republican senator in history as he represented Utah for more than four decades, died April 23, 2022, at the age of 88. (Andrew Harnik/AP)Guy Lafleur NHL legend Guy Lafleur, a former Montreal Canadiens star who won six Stanley Cups with the team and became the first NHL player to score 50 goals in six consecutive seasons, died April 22, 2022 at the age of 70. (Jacques Boissinot/AP)Robert Morse Robert Morse, who won a Tony Award as a hilariously brash corporate climber in “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying” and a second one a generation later as the brilliant, troubled Truman Capote in “Tru,” has died. He was 90. Morse died at his home April 20, 2022 after a brief illness, said David Shaul of BRS/Gage Talent Agency. (Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)Liz Sheridan Liz Sheridan, who played Jerry Seinfeld's doting mom, Helen, on the hit sitcom, died April 15, 2022 at the age of 93. Her “Seinfeld” role was her best known but followed decades of work on stage and screen. (Albert L. Ortega/WireImage)Marvin Chomsky Marvin J. Chomsky, the Emmy-winning director and producer who helmed episodes of beloved TV shows like “Roots” and “Star Trek,” died Monday, April 11, 2022. He was 92. He's seen here, center, during the 34th annual Emmy Awards, on Sept. 19, 1982, posing with Leonard Nimoy, left, and William Shatner, right. (Associated Press/ASSOCIATED PRESS)Gilbert Gottfried Gilbert Gottfried, a comedian who had one of the most iconic voices in Hollywood, died at the age of 67 after battling a long illness. His family announced his death on April 12, 2022. (ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images) Jim Ramsey Jim Ramsey, who was a mainstay of WGN-Channel 9's weather broadcasts for 30 years and was known for his signature deep voice, died April 8 at the age of 69 at his Island Lake home. (Leslie Ramsey)Jack Higgins Best-selling novelist Henry Patterson, who wrote 85 books, including The Eagle Has Landed, using the pseudonym Jack Higgins, died April 9, 2022 at age 92. (HarperCollins Publishers/AP Photo)Bobby Rydell Bobby Rydell, a pompadoured heartthrob of early rock ‘n roll who was a star of radio, television and the movie musical “Bye Bye Birdie,” died April 5, 2022. Rydell died of complications from pneumonia at a hospital in a suburb of his hometown of Philadelphia, according to a statement posted by his marketing and event coordinator Maria Novey. (Michael Buckner/Getty Images)Patrick Demarchelier Patrick Demarchelier, the French-born photographer known for his high fashion images of top models and celebrities, including Princess Diana, has died at age 78 according to his Instagram account on March 31, 2022. (Zacharie Scheurer/AP)Estelle Harris Estelle Harris, (right), shown with Don Rickles at the world premiere of "Toy Story 3" in 2010. Harris, who hollered her way into TV history as George Costanza’s short-fused mother on TV’s “Seinfeld” and voiced Mrs. Potato Head in the “Toy Story” franchise, died April 2, 2022. She was 93. (Katy Winn/AP)Taylor Hawkins Taylor Hawkins, the longtime drummer for the rock band Foo Fighters, died March 25, 2022. He was 50. (Al Wagner/Al Wagner/Invision/AP)Madeleine Albright Madeleine Albright, the first female U.S. Secretary of State died of cancer at the age of 84, her family said Wednesday, March 23, 2022. (Haraz N. Ghanbari/AP)John Clayton John "The Professor" Clayton, an NFL football writer and reporter for ESPN, died March 18, 2022 following a short illness. He was 67. (Ted S. Warren/AP) Merri Dee Merri Dee, who spent 43 years in Chicago broadcasting primarily at WGN-Ch. 9, died March 16, 2022 at the age of 85. (Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune) Craig Lynch Sportswriter Craig Lynch, who was blind, worked as a sportswriter for radio station WLPO-AM and the Chicago Sun-Times. He died from complications from a stroke on March 15, 2022 at the age of 72. (SCOTT STRAZZANTE / CHICAGO TRIBUNE)Stephen Wilhite Stephen Wilhite the inventor of the internet-popular short-video format, the GIF, died of COVID on March 14, 2022. He was 74. (Jane Kratochvil/AP) Marilyn Miglin Marilyn Miglin, pictured with her daughter Marlena, the cosmetics magnate and widow of murdered real estate developer Lee Miglin, died March 14, 2022 at the age of 83. (BILL HOGAN / CHICAGO TRIBUNE)Pervis Spann Pervis Spann, pictured with his daughter Melody Spann-Cooper the Chairman of WVON radio, was the voice for Black Chicago during his transformative tenure as a disc jockey and owner at WVON. Spann’s career spanned more than 60 years. He died March 14, 2022 at the age of 89. (Abel Uribe / Chicago Tribune)Scott Hall Wrestler Scott Hall, who revitalized the industry when he formed the nWo with Kevin Nash and Hulk Hogan and was known as Razor Ramon, died March 14, 2022. He was 63. (Larry Busacca/Getty Images)William Hurt William Hurt, the Oscar-winning actor of “Broadcast News,” “Body Heat” and “The Big Chill,” has died. He was 71. Hurt's son, Will, said in a statement that Hurt died Sunday, March 13, 2022 of natural causes. (Rich Fury/Rich Fury/Invision/AP)Keith Ortego Keith Ortego, a wide receiver on the 1985 Chicago Bears Super Bowl champion football team, died March 2, 2022. He was 58. (Mitch Friedman/Chicago Bears)Traci Braxton Traci Braxton, one of the sisters featured in the reality series "Braxton Family Values" on WeTV, died Saturday, March 12, 2022. She had been fighting esophageal cancer. (Charles Sykes/Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)Emilio Delgado Emilio Delgado, the actor and singer who for 45 years was a warm and familiar presence in children's lives and a rare Latino face on American television as fix-it shop owner Luis on “Sesame Street,” died Thursday, March 10, 2022. He was 81. (Zach Hyman/AP)Sally Kellerman Sally Kellerman, the Oscar-nominated actor who played “Hot Lips” Houlihan in director Robert Altman's 1970 army comedy “MASH," died Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022, at age 84. Kellerman died of heart failure at her home in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles, her manager and publicist Alan Eichler said. (Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)Julio Cruz Julio Cruz, described as an “igniter” for the 1983 American League West champion Chicago White Sox, died Feb. 22, 2022. He was 67. (PAUL BEATY/AP)Mark Lanegan Mark Lanegan, whose band Screaming Trees was an essential part of the Seattle grunge scene in the early 1990s, has died at age 57. Lanegan's twitter account says he died Feb. 22, 2022 at his home in Ireland. (Amy Harris/Amy Harris/Invision/AP)Gary Brooker Gary Brooker, the Procol Harum frontman who sang one of the 1960s' most enduring hits, “A Whiter Shade of Pale,” died Feb. 19, 2022. He was 76. (MAX NASH/AP)Lindsey Erin Pearlman Lindsey Erin Pearlman, a Chicago actor who had roles in “General Hospital,” “American Housewife” and other shows, was found dead Feb. 18, 2022 days after she was reported missing in Los Angeles. (AP)P. J. O'Rourke P. J. O'Rourke, the prolific author and satirist who re-fashioned the irreverence and “Gonzo” journalism of the 1960s counterculture into a distinctive brand of conservative and libertarian commentary, died Feb. 15, 2022 at age 74. (Brian Kersey/AP) Mary Ann Thebus Mary Ann Thebus, a much-loved Chicago actress and teacher with decades of experience on the city’s stages, died Feb. 11, 2022 at the age of 89. (Michael Courier)Ivan Reitman Director Ivan Reitman, the influential filmmaker and producer behind beloved comedies “Animal House” and “Ghostbusters,” died Feb. 12, 2022. He was 75. (Matt Sayles/AP)Betty Davis Betty Davis, the singer and songwriter whose raunchy persona, fierce funk grooves and Afrofuturistic style in the early 1970s made her a forerunner of R&B and hip-hop to come, died on Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2022, in Homestead, Pa. She was 77. (Derek Ridgers via The New York Times)Jeremy Giambi Jeremy Giambi, the former major league outfielder and first baseman, died Feb. 9, 2022, at his parents' home in Southern California, police said. He was 47. (JULIE JACOBSON/AP) Sam Lay Sam Lay, one of the most influential and esteemed drummers in the history of popular and blues music, died Jan. 29, 2022 at age 86. (ABEL URIBE / CHICAGO TRIBUNE)Howard Hesseman Howard Hesseman, who played the radio disc jockey Johnny Fever on the sitcom “WKRP in Cincinnati" and the actor-turned-history teacher Charlie Moore on “Head of the Class,” died Jan. 29, 2022 at the age of 81. (Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP) Richard L. "Dick" Duchossois Richard L. "Dick" Duchossois, chairman emeritus of Arlington Park International Racecourse and World War II veteran, died Jan. 28, 2022 at the age of 100. (Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune)Richard Christiansen Richard Christiansen, longtime former Tribune theater critic, died Jan. 28, 2022 at the age of 90. (Charles Osgood/Chicago Tribune)Thierry Mugler French designer Thierry Mugler, whose dramatic designs were worn by celebrities like Madonna, Lady Gaga and Cardi B, died Jan. 23, 2022. He was 73. (REMY DE LA MAUVINIERE/AP)Louie Anderson Louie Anderson, whose four-decade career as a comedian and actor included his unlikely and Emmy-winning performance as mom to twin adult sons in the TV series “Baskets,” died Jan. 21, 2022 at age 68. (Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)Meatloaf Meat Loaf, the heavyweight rock superstar loved by millions for his “Bat Out of Hell” album and for such theatrical, dark-hearted anthems as “Paradise By the Dashboard Light” and “I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That),” died Jan. 20, 2022. He was 74. (Richard Drew/AP)Gaspard Ulliel French actor Gaspard Ulliel, who is in the upcoming Marvel series “Moon Knight” and was the face of Chanel’s fragrance Bleu, died Jan. 19, 2022, after a skiing accident in the Alps. He was 37. (Andy Kropa/Andy Kropa /Invision/AP)Yvette Mimieux Actress Yvette Mimieux, who starred in such films as “The Time Machine,” “Where the Boys Are” and others, died Jan. 17, 2022 at her home in Los Angeles. She was 80. (Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)André Leon Talley Vogue magazine editor at large André Leon Talley has died at 73, it was announced on Jan. 18, 2022. (Mary Altaffer/AP)Lusia Harris Stewart Lusia Harris Stewart, who was the only woman to be drafted by an NBA team and scored the first points in women's basketball history at the Olympics, died Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2021 at the age of 66. (TONY KRAUSZ/AP)Les Grobstein Les Grobstein, Chicago’s sports encyclopedia and longtime radio host, most recently on WSCR-AM 670, died on Jan. 16, 2022 at the age of 69. (WLS-AM 890)Steve Schapiro Photographer Steve Schapiro, who captured the likes of Marlon Brando, Andy Warhol, Martin Luther King Jr., Jerry Garcia, Simon and Garfunkel, Barbra Streisand and Robert De Niro among others, died Jan. 15, 2022 at the age of 87. (For the Chicago Tribune / HANDOUT)Terry Teachout The cultural critic, columnist and author Terry Teachout, who wrote for The Wall Street Journal, The New York Daily News and other publications, died Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022. He was 65. (Christopher Capozziello/The New York Times)Ronnie Spector Ronnie Spector, the cat-eyed, bee-hived rock 'n' roll siren who sang such 1960s hits as "Be My Baby," "Baby I Love You" and "Walking in the Rain" as the leader of the girl group the Ronettes, died Jan. 12, 2022. She was 78. (Peter Kramer/AP)Maria Ewing Placido Domingo (left) and Maria Ewing (right) perform "Tosca" in 1992. Ewing, a soprano and mezzo-soprano noted for intense performances who became the wife of director Peter Hall and the mother of actor-director Rebecca Hall, died Jan. 9, 2022 at age 71. (LOS ANGELES TIMES)Robert Durst Robert Durst, the wealthy New York real estate heir and failed fugitive who was dogged for decades with suspicion in the disappearance and deaths of those around him before he was convicted of killing his best friend and sentenced to life in prison, died Jan. 10, 2022. He was 78. (Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times/TNS)Bob Saget Bob Saget, a comedian and actor known for his role as a widower raising a trio of daughters in the sitcom “Full House,” was found dead in an Orlando, Fla. hotel Jan. 9, 2022. He was 65. (Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)Dwayne Hickman Dwayne Hickman, the actor and network TV executive who would always be remembered by a generation of baby boomers for his role as Dobie Gillis, died Sunday, Jan. 9, 2022. He was 87. (AP)Michael Lang Producer Michael Lang, one of the co-creators and promoters of the 1969 Woodstock music festival that served as a touchstone for generations of music fans, died Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022 at the age of 77. (Jeff Christensen/AP)Calvin Simon Bass player Calvin Simon, the Parliament-Funkadelic Co-Founder and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, died Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022 at the age of 79. (VALERIE MACON/Getty)Marilyn Bergman Oscar-winning lyricist Marilyn Bergman (right) died Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022 at age 93. She teamed with husband Alan Bergman on “The Way We Were,” “How Do You Keep the Music Playing?” and hundreds of other songs. (Matt Sayles/AP)Sidney Poitier Actor Sidney Poitier, the groundbreaking actor who became the first Black actor to win an Academy Award for best lead performance and the first to be a top box-office draw, died Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022. He was 94. (Matt Sayles/AP)Peter Bogdanovich Peter Bogdanovich, the Oscar-nominated director of "The Last Picture Show," and "Paper Moon," died Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 82. (Chris Pizzello/Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)Michael Wilmington Former Chicago Tribune film critic Michael Wilmington died Jan. 6, 2022, in Los Angeles at the age of 75. (Charles Osgood/Chicago Tribune)
Celebrity
Golden State Warriors radio play-by-play broadcaster Tim Roye is missing Game 5 of the NBA Finals after entering the NBA’s health and safety protocols. A league source told this news organization that Roye entered protocols between Game 4 on Friday and Game 5 on Monday. He was replaced on 95.7 The Game’s radio broadcast by TV play-by-play voice Bob Fitzgerald. Team and league personnel who either test positive for COVID-19 or are exhibiting COVID-19 symptoms can be placed in health and safety protocols. Fitzgerald calls the Warriors’ broadcasts on NBC Sports Bay Area during the regular season, but does not typically broadcast playoff games as the playoffs air on other cable and broadcast networks. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver is also in health and safety protocols for Game 5 of the Finals and was unable to attend Monday’s game between the Warriors and Celtics. ESPN and ABC play-by-play broadcaster Mike Breen missed the first two games of the NBA Finals after testing positive for COVID-19. He was replaced in the booth by Mark Jones. Staff writer Madeline Kenney contributed to this report.
Basketball