Category: 5. Entertainment

  • David Dastmalchian ‘The Accessories’ Horror Comic First Look

    David Dastmalchian ‘The Accessories’ Horror Comic First Look

    David Dastmalchian is continuing his budding career as a comics author with a brand new horror title for upstart publisher Panick Entertainment.

    The actor, who can currently be seen in The Life of Chuck as well as Dexter: Resurrection, is working on The Accessories, a five-issue mini-series that he co-created and is co-writing with longtime creative associate Leah Kirkpatrick. The comic and details will be unveiled at Dastmalchian’s Saturday panel at San Diego Comic-Con.

    Patrick Piazzalunga is illustrating the books which Panick will publish next year. Panick is the horror and science fiction venture that launched last year and was founded by a cadre of entertainment and comics industry veterans, including several from the world of DC.

    Accessories focuses on the classic side characters that have supported some of horrordom’s most vile villains — Igor, the assistant to many mad scientists; Renfield, the lackey to Dracula; and Mrs. Hyde, the wife of dual personality-challenged Dr. Jeckyll/Mr. Hyde.

    The logline and premise reads:

    After lifetimes in the background, three of history’s greatest horror sidekicks finally say what they’ve never dared to before: Enough is enough!

    Igor, Renfield and Mrs. Hyde have aided their masters’ diabolical missions for decades but today is the day they stop being loyal. Today the real horror walks out the front door. The looming question is…what do they do now? These three discarded servants find each other in the fallout, forming a band of gawky but determined anti-heroes caught between angry villagers, vengeful monster-hunters and furious former employers. Their survival will take more than just guts, luckily, they know where to procure more.

    In a darkly comic descent into revenge and rebirth, the hench finally claim the title they never asked for…The Accessories!!

    Dastmalchian has built a notable career working with directors such as James Gunn, Christopher Nolan and Denis Villeneuve, with many of their movies falling directly into the geek sphere bullseye. And he next shoots the villain role of Mr. Bison in video game adaptation Street Fighter.

    But he is also birthing a body of comic writing work. Among the highlights is his horror creation Count Crowley, which is published by Dark Horse.

    Panick is focused on genre storytelling, beginning in the field of comics and graphic novels, and then aims to platform that into films, television, games and other media. So Accessories has plans beyond the printed page.

    The first issue is due to hit shelves on June 2, 2026. Check out the first look below.

    Courtesy of Panick Entertainment

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  • British Jazz Singer Dies at 97

    British Jazz Singer Dies at 97

    Cleo Laine, whose husky contralto was one of the most distinctive voices in jazz and who was regarded by many as Britain’s greatest contribution to the quintessentially American music, has died. She was 97.

    The Stables, a charity and venue Laine founded with her late jazz musician husband John Dankworth, said Friday (July 25) it was “greatly saddened” by the news that “one of its founders and Life President, Dame Cleo Laine has passed away.”

    Monica Ferguson, artistic director of The Stables, said Laine “will be greatly missed, but her unique talent will always be remembered.”

    Laine’s career spanned the Atlantic and crossed genres: She sang the songs of Kurt Weill, Arnold Schoenberg and Robert Schumann; she acted on stage and on film, and even played God in a production of Benjamin Britten’s Noye’s Fludde.

    Laine’s life and art were intimately bound up with band leader Dankworth, who gave her a job and her stage name in 1951, and married her seven years later. Both were still performing after their 80th birthdays. Dankworth died in 2010 at 82.

    In 1997, Laine became the first British jazz artist to be made a dame, the female equivalent of a knight.

    “It is British jazz that should have received the accolade for its service to me,” she said when the honor was announced. “It has given me a wonderful life, a successful career and an opportunity to travel the globe doing what I love to do.”

    Laine was born Clementina Dinah Campbell in 1927. Her father, Alexander Campbell, was a Jamaican who loved opera and earned money during the Depression as a street singer. Despite hard times, her British mother, Minnie, made sure that her daughter had piano, voice and dance lessons.

    She began performing at local events at age 3, and at age 12 she got a role as a movie extra in The Thief of Bagdad. Leaving school at 14, Laine went to work as a hairdresser and faced repeated rejection in her efforts to get a job as a singer.

    A decade later, in 1951, she tried out for the Johnny Dankworth Seven, and succeeded. “Clementina Campbell” was judged too long for a marquee, so she became Cleo Laine.

    “John said that when he heard me, I didn’t sound like anyone else who was singing at the time,” Laine once said. “I guess the reason I didn’t get the other jobs is that they were looking for a singer who did sound like somebody else.”

    Laine had a remarkable range, from tenor to contralto, and a sound often described as “smoky.”

    Dankworth, in an interview with the Irish Independent, recalled Laine’s audition.

    “They were all sitting there with stony faces, so I asked the Scottish trumpet player Jimmy Deuchar, who was looking very glum and was the hardest nut of all, whether he thought she had something. ‘Something?’ he said, ‘She’s got everything!’”

    Offered 6 pounds a week, Laine demanded — and got — 7 pounds.

    “They used to call me ‘Scruff’, although I don’t think I was scruffy. It was just that having come from the sticks, I didn’t know how to put things together as well as the other singers of the day,” she told the Irish Independent. “And anyway, I didn’t have the money, because they weren’t paying me enough.”

    Recognition came swiftly. Laine was runner-up in Melody Maker’s “girl singer” category in 1952, and topped the list in 1956 and 1957.

    She married Dankworth — and quit his band — in 1958, a year after her divorce from her first husband, George Langridge. As Dankworth’s band prospered, Laine began to feel underused.

    “I thought, no, I’m not going to just sit on the band and be a singer of songs every now and again when he fancied it. So it was then that I decided I wasn’t going to stay with the band and I was going to go off and try to do something solo-wise,” she said in a BBC documentary.

    “When I said I was leaving, he said, ‘Will you marry me?’ That was a good ploy, wasn’t it, huh?”

    They were married on March 18, 1958. A son, Alec, was born in 1960, and daughter Jacqueline followed in 1963.

    Despite her happy marriage, Laine forged a career independent of Dankworth.

    “Whenever anybody starts putting a label on me, I say, ‘Oh, no you don’t,’ and I go and do something different,” Laine told The Associated Press in 1985 when she was appearing on stage in New York in The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

    Her stage career began in 1958 when she was invited to join the cast of a West Indian play, Flesh to a Tiger, at the Royal Court Theatre, and was surprised to find herself in the lead role. She won a Moscow Arts Theatre Award for her performance.

    Valmouth followed in 1959, The Seven Deadly Sins in 1961, The Trojan Women in 1966 and Hedda Gabler in 1970.

    The role of Julie in Jerome Kern’s Show Boat in 1971 provided Laine with a show-stopping song, “Bill.”

    Laine began winning a following in the United States in 1972 with a concert at the Alice Tully Hall in New York. It wasn’t well-attended, but The New York Times gave her a glowing review.

    The following year, she and Dankworth drew a sold-out audience at Carnegie Hall, launching a series of popular appearances. Cleo at Carnegie won a Grammy award in 1986, the same year she was a Tony nominee for The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

    A reviewer for Variety in 2002 found her voice going strong: “a dark, creamy voice, remarkable range and control from bottomless contralto to a sweet clear soprano. Her perfect pitch and phrasing is always framed with musical imagination and good taste.”

    Perhaps Laine’s most difficult performance of all was on Feb. 6, 2010, at a concert celebrating the 40th anniversary of the concert venue she and Dankworth had founded at their home, during which Laine and both of her children performed.

    “I’m terribly sorry that Sir John can’t be here today,” Laine told the crowd at the end of the show. “But earlier on my husband died in hospital.”

    Laine said in an interview with the Boston Globe in 2003 that the secret of her longevity was that “I was never a complete belter.”

    “There was always a protective side in me, and an inner voice always said, ‘Don’t do that — it’s not good for you and your voice.’”

    Laine is survived by her son and daughter.

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  • Bend It Like Beckham sequel in the works, director tells BBC

    Bend It Like Beckham sequel in the works, director tells BBC

    Emma Vardy, in Basel, & Emily Atkinson

    BBC News

    Sundance/WireImage and Getty Images Parminder K. Nagra and Keira Knightley in an iconic scene from the 2002 movieSundance/WireImage and Getty Images

    Bend It Like Beckham is set for a sequel more than 20 years after its release, its director has confirmed to the BBC.

    Gurinder Chadha teased the revival in Basel on Saturday, where England’s Lionesses are preparing to face world champions Spain in Sunday’s Euro 2025 final.

    The 2002 film, which starred Keira Knightley and Parminder Nagra, is credited with inspiring a generation of women to take up football.

    “We’ve been part of changing the game for women, so it felt like this was a good time for me to go back and investigate the characters,” she said.

    Chadha has earmarked 2027 for the next instalment, to mark both the film’s 25th anniversary and the Fifa Women’s World Cup in Brazil.

    Director Gurinder Chadha wears a pink shirt and holds a mini England flag as she speaks

    Chadha spoke to the BBC in Basel on Saturday

    She said she was still unsure what form the sequel might take, but suggested it could either be another film or a television series.

    The director told the BBC she had been asked almost twice a week since the original film was released to come up with a sequel.

    “A lot has changed since the original movie, but I think that people still don’t think that women should play football,” she said.

    “There are people who still don’t take it seriously, although the Lionesses are riding high.”

    “I’ve left it a while, but I thought: look at the Euros, look at the Lionesses.”

    Chadha said she hoped not only to reunite the original cast, but that members of the current England squad would be “queuing up” to take on cameo roles.

    Grossing almost £60m on a budget of £3.5m, Bend It Like Beckham was a surprise hit that told the story of a young British-Indian girl with a passion for football.

    Chadha told the BBC that she had not expected the original to be so successful.

    Her intention, she said, had been to “uplift girls, girls who grew up like me, who were always being told how to dress, how to look, what to say, what not to say”.

    “What I did was say you can do what you want, and you can have it all, and I think that’s a really great message to put out again. I think there’s still stuff to say, and stuff to challenge.”

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  • Gwyneth Paltrow Stars in Astronomer Ad After Coldplay Kiss Cam Scandal

    Gwyneth Paltrow Stars in Astronomer Ad After Coldplay Kiss Cam Scandal

    Gwyneth Paltrow is stepping in — temporarily — to help clear the air about Astronomer.

    On Friday (July 25), the Academy Award-winning actress and Goop founder appeared in a humorous new video for the tech company. The ad follows a viral incident involving former CEO Andy Byron and HR executive Kristin Cabot, who were caught on a Coldplay kiss cam during the band’s Boston concert earlier this month.

    Shortly after Cabot’s resignation on Friday, Astronomer shared a social media video starring Paltrow — who was married to Coldplay frontman Chris Martin from 2003 to 2016 — acting as the company’s “temporary spokesperson” on behalf of its employees.

    “Thank you for your interest in Astronomer,” Paltrow says in the video, seated casually at a desk. “I’ve been hired on a very temporary basis to speak on behalf of the 300-plus employees at Astronomer. Astronomer has gotten a lot of questions over the last few days, and they wanted me to answer the most common ones.”

    As questions flash on-screen — including “OMG! What the actual f—” and “How is your social media team hold-” — Paltrow offers responses that hilariously sidestep the actual drama.

    “Yes, Astronomer is the best place to run Apache Airflow, unifying the experience of running data, ML and AI pipelines at scale,” she says cheerfully after the first inquiry. “We’ve been thrilled so many people have a newfound interest in data workflow automation.”

    When the second question begins being typed out on screen, appears the Shakespeare in Love star shifts gears again, plugging the company’s upcoming Beyond Analytics event in September.

    “We will now be returning to what we do best, which is delivering game-changing results for our customers,” Paltrow concludes. “Thank you for your interest in Astronomer.”

    The ad arrives in the wake of the July 15 Coldplay concert at Boston’s Gillette Stadium, where a jumbotron caught Byron with his arm around Cabot during a kiss cam segment. When the pair realized they were on screen, Byron ducked out of view while Cabot quickly turned away. Both were married to other people at the time and have since resigned from the company.

    “Oh, look at these two,” Martin joked from the stage. “Oh, what? Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy.”

    Check out Astronomer’s ad starring Paltrow below on X.

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  • ‘Ozzy was the saviour of weirdos and rebels’

    ‘Ozzy was the saviour of weirdos and rebels’

    Vanessa Pearce

    BBC News, West Midlands

    James Bovill

    BBC Midlands Today

    BBC Black Sabbath fans, many dressed in black, congregate in Birmingham's Victoria SquareBBC

    Hundreds turned out in Birmingham city centre for the meet

    Hundreds of Black Sabbath fans gathered in Birmingham city centre to pay tribute to Ozzy Osbourne.

    The memorial meet-up was held in the city’s Victoria Square, before fans went to visit shrines across the city.

    Organiser Ash Farley, from Bartley Green, said he had set up the event to celebrate “being part of Birmingham and the metal community”, as well as the singer’s life.

    People had come from “far and wide,” he said, “obviously because he’s a worldwide icon”.

    ‘Dreams can come true’

    A tattooed Ashley Farley wears a leather cowboy hat with a bat insignia on the front, dark glasses and Judas Priest sleeveless t-shirt with Painkiller written on it.

    Ashley Farley organised the Birmingham city centre meet

    The response to the event had been “astronomical”, he added, with about 300 fans turning out.

    “[Ozzy] was the forefather of metal and a voice of rebellion for the outsiders,” he said.

    “And he showed you can make dreams come true, and changed people’s lives.”

    ‘Brought up on Ozzy’

    Abbigail Moore with long black and brown hair and prominent eye make-up wears a black and red Ozzy Osbourne t-shirt

    Abbigail Moore said the artist had always been a big part of her life

    One of those attending the meet, Abbigail Moore, said the artist had meant a lot to her growing up.

    “My mum and dad brought me up on him and just made me a metal head,” she explained.

    “He gave me a lot of courage to just be who I am and not be afraid of what people say about me.”

    She described the singer, who died on Tuesday, as “a man of the people”.

    “He built an entire empire, created metal, and gave people that didn’t have a platform, a platform to stand up for themselves,” she said.

    “He gave me a lot of courage to just be who I am and not be afraid of what people say about me.”

    ‘Weirdos, rebels and mischiefs’

    Kieran Merriman wears a baseball cap, glasses and headphones around his neck. He has a jacket with ACDC and Metallica badges on and a black Black Sabbath t-shift

    Kieran Merriman said Ozzy created a music genre that made people feel welcome

    Also coming into the city centre was Birmingham resident Kieran Merriman, who described the meet as a “celebration of the man that helped me realise who I am and make me feel welcome”.

    He said: “Ozzy and Black Sabbath created this genre of music so that weirdos, rebels and mischiefs alike can all have this place to come together and be themselves.

    It was an opportunity to celebrate the city as well as the artists, he added.

    “It’s so heart-warming to just be a part of that city that gave birth to metal.”

    ‘He’s always going to be there’

    Booke Moore has brown and green hair and is wearing a black t-shirt with white and purple Ozzy Osbourne lettering

    Brooke Moore said the artist’s legacy would live on

    Brooke Moore, who also attended the event, said Ozzy had “given me the courage to do a lot of things that I wouldn’t have been able to do if I didn’t have this kind of scene around me.”

    “I was really sad when he died,” she said.

    “He’s proved to a lot of people that if you come from nothing you can still make something of yourself.”

    Blonde Tina Angell wears dark glasses and a white Ozzy Osbourne t-shirt

    Tina Angell said Ozzy’s music was personal to her

    Tina Angell, who has been a fan since the age of 15, travelled from Southampton for the event.

    She said: “He’s been with me for all of my life; he’s helped me for every day of my life – through the ups and through the downs.

    “I can’t think of anything other than when I have been down his music’s on full blast and he keeps me going, and keeps me sane.

    “I feel like every song he’s made, he made for me.”

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  • Crunchyroll Anime Nights Movie Program Launches in the U.S. with Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid, OVERLORD Screenings – Crunchyroll

    Crunchyroll Anime Nights Movie Program Launches in the U.S. with Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid, OVERLORD Screenings – Crunchyroll

    1. Crunchyroll Anime Nights Movie Program Launches in the U.S. with Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid, OVERLORD Screenings  Crunchyroll
    2. Crunchyroll Anime Nights Coming to Theaters Monthly  Vital Thrills
    3. Crunchyroll is launching Anime Nights, a theatrical event designed to give fans “a shared experience that honors the art form” – and here are the first two movies you can watch in cinemas  Yahoo Home
    4. Crunchyroll Launches ‘Anime Nights’ Program to Screen Anime Monthly in U.S. Starting With Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid  Anime News Network

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  • ‘2001’ Inspired Film’s Retro-Futuristic Design

    ‘2001’ Inspired Film’s Retro-Futuristic Design

    “The Fantastic Four: The First Steps” takes place on Earth-828, in an alternate Marvel timeline.

    Set in Manhattan, the film stars Pedro Pascal as Reed Richards, aka Mr. Fantastic; Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm, aka the Invisible Woman; Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm, aka the Human Torch; and Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm, aka the Thing. With the timeline shift, director Matt Shakman made it clear that he saw the film being set in an optimistic future.

    Production designer Kasra Farahani took that and ran with it, turning London’s Pinewood Studios into a retro-futuristic Manhattan by drawing influences from Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey” and architects including Eero Saarinen and Oscar Niemeyer.

    TIMES SQUARE

    The Times Square set was a 15-week build and featured buildings such as the RKO Palace, Embassy Theater and other buildings that were a retro-futuristic vision of mid-century New York.

    Says Farahani, “We came to this recipe where we figured about two-thirds of New York and Times Square would look more or less exactly like you’d see if you looked at historical pictures of Times Square from the ‘60s, but about a third of it would be different. And what would that be?”

    The Forum, the RKO Palace and the Embassy Theater were faithfully recreated from history. Farahani says he created other buildings such as the Horn & Hardart automat, Leighton’s haberdashery and Whelan’s Drug Store. “All those were real things that you can see in reference to the 1960s, but then we added this layer of retro futurism,” he says.

    “There’s a monorail system with this giant parabolic structure that looks like something that Eero Saarinen may have designed,” he says, referencing the Finnish-American architect behind St. Louis’ Gateway Arch. Farahani was also influenced by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, whose vernacular of parabolic curves and fins can be seen in the film.

    Production designer Kasra Farahani combined vintage and custom-built cars.
    20th Century Studios and Marvel

    “The other huge impact on the look of New York are the historically accurate vehicles. We have all these Checker cabs. We ended up collecting over 20 Checker cabs. But the magic comes when you mix in half a dozen retro futuristic cars that we built.

    “We built two variations of a Panhard, but we added fins and retro futuristic details to it, and then we fabricated, on top of a chassis of a mobility scooter, these five bubble cars that you’ll see in the film. You have these glass domes, tiny, single-occupant cars zipping around in and amongst very familiar 1960s vehicles,” Farahani says.

    The Baxter Building

    MARVEL STUDIOS

    The Baxter Building, the Baxter apartment, and Reed’s lab within it are very much inspired by the architecture of Saarinen and Niemeyer.

    Says Farahani, “What I think is important about the work of those two architects is that their work is undeniably futurist and optimistic. Niemeyer designed and built Brasilia, which was supposed to be the utopian capital for Brazil. Saarinen famously did the TWA terminal and Dulles Airport and the St Louis Arch. All of which is so futuristic.”

    For Reed’s lab space, Farahani says Stanley Kubrick was another influence in particular “2001: A Space Odyssey.” “I think that film captures an ideal in terms of something that feels very retro futuristic and yet very sophisticated and elegant and is grounded very much in a plausible world.”

    In Reed’s lab, Farahani created defining features such as a vaulted ceiling. The lab also had three brightly colored circles, which designated different functions.

    Farahani explains, “The red-orange circle, when you first walk in, that’s the messy area where Reed builds prototypes. The yellow circle in the middle is a space for contemplation and discussion. That’s where his chalkboards are that ascend and descend. The third area, the blue area, is his mission control, and that’s where he has the heavy computing tech, is he’s monitoring the status of the Excelsior or receiving transmissions from deep space, or analyzing specimens that he’s collected from space.”

    Reed’s lab.
    Jay Maidment

    In the film, Sue Storm and Reed Richards find out they’re expecting a baby. As it turns out, the timing was “crazy” for Farahani. When he got the call for the job, he wasn’t sure he could pull it off. “We were expecting our second child, and the baby was going to be born a month after they asked me to start this job.” He almost said no, but the studio gave him the time he needed and was accommodating to his needs. “Being in that headspace of having a newborn, as I was designing the Baxter apartment and the nursery, was specifically helpful in terms of being able to get my day-to-day experience out into it.”

    Speaking of Sue and Reed, Farahani explains that the pair had made peace with the fact that maybe it wasn’t in the cards for them to have a child. So, early in the film, what later becomes the nursery is a little office that Sue uses. “It’s connected to their bedroom, and it has a partition so it can be closed off entirely. And so they’re not expecting this.” He continues, “And then the baby comes, and as people do, they adapt, and their priorities realign. She’s in a building that I imagine is the bottom half of the Baxter Building, which is essentially the Future Foundation, the organization that she heads up, so she can find an office.”

    One detail he added in that was custom-designed for the film was the wallpaper. “It’s little rockets and planets and it’s fine scale. It’s all done in a very Eames palette because there’s a lot of warmth and whimsy in that palette of colors that we wanted to combine in the nursery.”

    Overall, for the Baxter apartment, he wanted to create the feeling of a cozy nest for this family within a New York penthouse. “We brought in a lot of natural materials, as was the vibe of mid-century modern residential architecture. There are a lot of flagstones and a lot of plantings like ferns. So it’s like bringing nature in all of these things to help it to feel warm and human, as opposed to like a cold skyscraper that they’re living in.”

    The nursery wallpaper.

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  • Netflix (NFLX) Premieres K-Content Thriller ‘Trigger’ In Global Release

    Netflix (NFLX) Premieres K-Content Thriller ‘Trigger’ In Global Release

    During the last quarter, “Trigger,” a series by K Wave Media and a Netflix worldwide release, highlighted the company’s expanding global content strategy. Alongside an increase in Q2 sales and net income, Netflix announced positive earnings and revised its full-year earnings guidance, indicating robust operational growth. The company’s strategic alliances, such as its collaboration with Telefilms Ltd. and opening Netflix House locations, likely reinforced investor confidence. While Netflix’s 7% price increase outpaced the market’s modest 1% rise last week, these developments would have naturally supported the broader positive market trend, contributing to its performance.

    Buy, Hold or Sell Netflix? View our complete analysis and fair value estimate and you decide.

    NFLX Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Jul 2025

    We’ve found 17 US stocks that are forecast to pay a dividend yield of over 6% next year. See the full list for free.

    The recent news surrounding Netflix’s (NFLX) “Trigger” series and strategic collaborations like those with Telefilms Ltd. may further bolster its aggressive global expansion and content strategy. This aligns well with the broader narrative of enhancing monetization through proprietary ad tech and diversified content investment. While short-term share increases of 7% illustrate positive market response, the potential impact on revenue and earnings forecasts could be significant as these initiatives enhance user engagement and international market penetration.

    In the context of total shareholder returns, Netflix’s shares have delivered a substantial 424.9% return over the past three years. Over the past year, Netflix outperformed the US market, which returned 17.2%, and the US Entertainment industry, which returned 69.7%, demonstrating resilient long-term investor returns. With a current share price of US$1180.49 and a price target of US$1345.32, Netflix is trading at approximately 13.96% below its target, highlighting room for potential appreciation if the company meets or exceeds analyst expectations.

    Click here and access our complete financial health analysis report to understand the dynamics of Netflix.

    This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

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  • Can chefs create recipes simple enough for home cooks?

    Can chefs create recipes simple enough for home cooks?

    Here is the challenge we set out for the chefs of some of our favorite restaurants: Come up with a recipe that demonstrates chef skills and creativity but is still simple enough for an average home cook to make.

    That’s not necessarily easy for chefs with regular access to specialty ingredients, a team of prep cooks and dishwashers to do the chopping and cleanup, plus years of training that enable them to handle complex kitchen tasks with ease. But with a little persistence we were able to get some of L.A.’s best chefs plus a few others to answer the call. You can watch the results in our ongoing “Chef That!” video series — as in chef that grilled cheese sandwich or date night pasta or ice cream sundae.

    Collected here are some of the best summertime recipes from our “Chef That!” series along with tips we learned when the chefs cooked for us in The Times Test Kitchen. Sang Yoon of Helms Bakery and Father’s Office, for instance, shows us the best way to peel a jammy egg. Andrew and Michelle Muñoz of Moo’s Craft Barbecue show us how to make ribs with outdoor smoker flavor in a home oven. Vespertine and Meteora chef Jordan Kahn gives us advice on brining meat. Dave Beran, chef of Seline and Pasjoli, shows us the best way to caramelize onions. And Anajak Thai’s Justin Pichetrungsi shares the secret ingredient that makes his fried food so good.

    We also gain insights into how chefs bring restaurant touches to classic recipes. Kismet chefs Sara Kramer and Sarah Hymanson use pickles to add a pop of acidity to a cheesy dip. For macaroni and cheese pie, Bridgetown Roti’s Rashida Holmes changes up the noodles, cheeses and spices. 88 Club’s Mei Lin uses not only cilantro leaves but the blossoms and stems in her cold mung bean noodles. And chefs Brian Bornemann of Crudo e Nudo and Brian Dunsmoor make the case that shrimp stock should be a home cook staple.

    These recipes — for ceviche, sandwiches, noodles, ribs and luscious desserts — will not only make your summer entertaining easier, they show off the best of restaurant and home cooking.

    —Laurie Ochoa

    Cook-along chef demos

    Watch this space for more chef and cookbook author video demos this summer from Andrew and Michelle Muñoz of Moo’s Craft Barbecue, Sang Yoon from Father’s Office and Helm’s Bakery, 88 Club’s Mei Lin and more.

    The recipes

    Time 20 minutes plus several hours unattended resting and cooking times

    Yields Serves 4 to 6

    Time 1 hour 30 minutes plus overnight curing time

    Yields Makes 1 rack of ribs

    Time 1 hour 15 minutes

    Yields Serves 10 to 12

    Time 30 minutes plus several hours chilling time

    Yields Serves 8

    Time 35 minutes

    Yields Makes 4 sandwiches

    Time 1 hour 20 minutes

    Yields Makes 2 sandwiches

    Time 2 hours 25 minutes

    Yields Makes 2 (7-inch) sandwiches

    Time 50 minutes

    Yields Serves 4

    Time 30 minutes

    Yields Serves 2

    Time 2 hours 30 minutes

    Yields Serves 6 to 8

    Time 2 hours 25 minutes plus brining time

    Yields Makes 4 large sandwiches

    Time 15 minutes

    Yields Makes 3 or 4 milkshakes

    Time 25 minutes

    Yields Serves 4

    Time 1 hour 10 minutes

    Yields Makes 8 rolls

    Time 1 hour 10 minutes

    Yields Makes 8 rolls

    Time 1 hour plus chilling time

    Yields Makes about 1 1/2 cups

    Time 1 hour

    Yields Makes 4 burgers

    Time 2 hours (includes 90 minutes curing)

    Yields Serves 4

    Time 1 hour 45 minutes

    Yields Makes 2 toasts

    Time 25 minutes plus 1 hour curing time

    Yields Serves 2

    Time 20 minutes

    Yields Serves 4

    Time 30 minutes

    Yields Serves 4 to 6

    Time 1 hour

    Yields Serves 4 to 6

    Time 1 hour 30 minutes plus up to overnight chilling time

    Yields Makes 1 (9-inch) pie

    Time 45 minutes plus chilling time for the dough

    Yields Makes 12 large cookies

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  • Bend It Like Beckham follow-up in pipeline more than 20 years after original film was released | Women’s football

    Bend It Like Beckham follow-up in pipeline more than 20 years after original film was released | Women’s football

    More than two decades after the release of Bend It Like Beckham, writer and director Gurinder Chadha OBE has announced she is planning to revive the hugely popular story.

    On the eve of the final of the 2025 Euros, where the Lionesses will try to defend their crown against Spain in Basel on Sunday, Chadha has spoken of plans for a follow up to the film that starred Parminder Nagra, Keira Knightley and Jonathan Rhys Meyers. What format it takes, whether a sequel to the feature film, series or alternative, will be decided in due course.

    “I am so happy to be here in Basel for the Euros, the atmosphere is amazing,” said Chadha. “What I can share with you today is my very clear wish to bring the beloved characters from Bend It Like Beckham back to you and audiences globally very, very soon. Women’s football is more competitive, more exciting, and more global than ever. It is an honor for me to be a small part of it.”

    Chadha, who has fielded requests for a return of the story for years but has waited for the right plot to come to her so as to not tarnish the legacy of the original, added: “After 23 years and being unable to come up with a storyline that was as good as the original, I have finally found a fantastic story for a Bend It Like Beckham follow up.”

    Released in 2002, Bend It Like Beckham showed football obsessed Jesminder “Jess” Bhamra balance joining the Hounslow Harriers and finding herself on the pitch while grappling with family, cultural and societal expectations of what a Punjabi British girl should be. It was a huge box office hit and is the only film distributed in every country in the world, including North Korea.

    “The original film, for me, was about lifting up girls and saying you can do and be anything you want, even though society dictates what you can and can’t do,” said Chadha, who has also confirmed US women’s national team manager, Emma Hayes, is collaborating on the new project. “That message is still relevant today. Even though women’s football rides so high around the world, and that’s amazing and it’s wonderful that the original film has been part of that legacy, I feel there is more that I can do and so that’s what I’m writing. It will be hard hitting, of course, but it will also be incredibly joyous, how can it not be as a follow up to Bend It Like Beckham?”

    Emma Hayes will act as a collaborator on the new film. Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP

    “I’m super excited to have connected with Emma who, when I first met her, said: ‘On my god, I was Keira Knightley, that was me!’ I know all the amazing work that she is doing both in front and behind the scenes for women’s football, so have brought her on board as a collaborator as I write the script which I’m working on right now.”

    Hayes, who won seven league titles, two League Cups and five FA Cups with Chelsea before moving into international football, winning Olympic gold two months after taking up her post, said: “I met Gurinder at a chance meeting in Cannes in June. It felt like the stars aligned for us to meet. I told her the massive impact the film had had on me when I was younger and that I was Keira Knightley in Bend it Like Beckham. I cried in the cinema watching the film because I felt just like Jess and Jules.”

    Hayes moved to the US early on in her career in search of greater opportunities and professionalism in the women’s game and it played a pivotal role in her development. “There was no hope for women’s football in Britain then, so I was going to the US to try my luck there,” said Hayes. “I could never have dreamed of how much that film helped change the women’s game. Now, I have the best job in world football as head coach of the US women’s national team. Like I said, the stars aligned and now I’m helping Gurinder with all my experience and insight in the game.”

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    Lisa Nandy MP, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, who will be attending the Euro 2025 final with Chadha, described the announcement as a “brilliant moment for British film”.

    “Bend It Like Beckham captured something so special about Britain, our spirit, our diversity, and our ability to dream big in the face of challenge,” she said. “Gurinder Chadha gave us a story that resonated far beyond the screen and became part of our cultural DNA.

    “The announcement of a follow up is a brilliant moment for British film. It builds on a legacy that continues to inspire and shows the world what British storytelling can do. Productions like this help tell our national story, remind us who we are, and who we can be.”

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