Category: 5. Entertainment

  • Rita Ora Shares How Beyoncé Was Her ‘Protector’ Amid ‘Becky With The Good Hair’ Speculation | Beyonce Knowles, Rita Ora | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip

    Rita Ora Shares How Beyoncé Was Her ‘Protector’ Amid ‘Becky With The Good Hair’ Speculation | Beyonce Knowles, Rita Ora | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip

    Rita Ora is looking back at finding herself in the middle of the “Becky with the good hair” controversy.

    On her 2016 album Lemonade, Beyoncé appeared to reference the woman at the center of the Jay-Z cheating rumors on the song “Sorry.” After the album was released, many believed that Jay, 55, and Rita, 34, had an affair.

    In a new interview, Rita shared how Beyoncé, 43, came to her defense during that time.

    Keep reading to find out more…While appearing on the Begin Again with Davina McCall podcast, host Davina McCall brought up the “Becky with the good hair” controversy, to which Rita said that she’d been “affected worse” by other things over the years.

    “Because it wasn’t real,” Rita said. “I wish I had good hair.”

    “None of that was real. That was the first time I experienced what it means to be in a messy situation, I guess,” she added.

    Rita also noted that “behind closed doors,” Beyoncé was her “fairy godmother.”

    “She was my protector. That’s what’s insane because there was nothing but love,” Rita emphasized. “And, you know, again, being signed to Jay-Z, her husband, she being my biggest inspiration, she came to my first show in New York at The Box.”

    At the time Lemonade was released, Rita was filming Fifty Shades of Grey and said she was “so confused” as to why she was being associated with the “Becky” rumors.

    “I was like, ‘Why is this happening to me?’ What have I done?’” she asked herself.

    Rita and Beyoncé then officially put the “Becky” rumors to rest by taking a selfie together at the 2016 Met Gala.

    “Then it was gone,” Rita said. “Because there was never anything there in the first place.”

    Rita also recalled being 21-years-old and performing “Say My Name” by Destiny’s Child in front of Beyoncé.

    “I was actually genuinely upset because that’s my big sister protector. She took it upon herself to really look after me,” Rita shared. “And I still see her to this day and she’s always been so, so nice and proud, checking in on my family and friends that I’ve had since childhood and remembering their names.”

    Back in April, Rita was one of the many stars in attendance at Beyoncé‘s Cowboy Carter Tour stop in Los Angeles!


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  • 'Superman' returns to screens with 'kindness, flying dogs and space battles' – Reuters

    1. ‘Superman’ returns to screens with ‘kindness, flying dogs and space battles’  Reuters
    2. Superman figure levitates from the peak of London’s Shard  BBC
    3. Rachel Brosnahan stuns in a glittering cut-out red dress as her co-star David Corenswet sweetly kisses her hand at Superman fan event in London  dailymail.co.uk
    4. “Superman” World Tour Lands in London with Electric Fan Event in Leicester Square  Superman Super Site
    5. Rachel Brosnahan Embraces Bold Cutouts in Armani Privé for ‘Superman’ Fan Event in London  WWD

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  • Discover the 2025 exhibitors – Announcements

    Discover the 2025 exhibitors – Announcements

    Paris Photo is delighted to announce the list of 224 exhibitors selected for its 28th edition, which will take place from November 13–16, 2025 at the Grand Palais. This year, the event will be bringing together 183 galleries and 41 publishers from 33 countries, with 59 who are participating for the first time.

    With this edition, Paris Photo is reaffirming its role as an international platform dedicated to photography and the image-based art. The fair brings together, in the nave of the Grand Palais, the market’s leading names, accompanied by new voices from the emerging scene as well as committed curatorial projects.

    “This 28th edition of Paris Photo affirms our desire to provide the market with a rigorous and open artistic vision. Bolder, more diverse and more international, this edition brings together galleries and artists from every continent, confirming Paris’s central role as a place for showcasing, reflecting on and promoting the medium.” Florence Bourgeois, director of Paris Photo

    Main and Voices sectors
    This year, the Main sector features 138 galleries and the Voices sector 12 galleries. This edition welcomes major new galleries as well as returning ones, including Eva Presenhuber (Zurich, Vienna, New York), Peter Kilchmann (Zurich), Richard Saltoun (London), Rose Gallery (Los Angeles), Papillon (Paris) and Poggi (Paris). These will be joined by Vadehra Art (New Delhi), Ayyam Gallery (Dubaï) and Hafez Gallery (Jeddah), which will help to broaden artistic representation in the nave. Paris Photo’s loyal galleries will also be present, including Pace (New York, London, Seoul), Fraenkel (San Francisco), Thomas Zander (Cologne), Taka Ishii (Tokyo), christian berst art brut (Paris), Luisotti (Los Angeles), MEM (Tokyo) and Yancey Richardson (New York), confirming the fair’s well-established central role in the photography market. Scattered throughout the nave are Prismes projects, which feature wide-ranging propositions like those of Poggi and Klemm’s (Berlin). After its inaugural edition in 2024, the curated Voices sector is this year being located at the heart of the nave. Entrusted to Nadine Wietlisbach, director of the Fotomuseum Winterthur, and Devika Singh, art historian and curator, Voices has two main axes: exploring relationships and forms of kinship as well as the critical reflection of the ambivalent dynamic between photographer and portrayed; and reflecting on the social, political, ecological and personal dimensions of landscape. Conceived as a separate curated space, Voices reaffirms the desire of Paris Photo to place bold curatorial visions at the heart of the venue.

    “By integrating the curated Voices projects into the heart of the nave this year, including large-scale projects in the galleries with Prismes and consolidating the presence of the Digital sector, we are reaffirming our desire to make Paris Photo a space for reflection and experimentation centred on photography and the image-based art.” Anna Planas, artistic director of Paris Photo

    Digital sector
    For the third year running, Nina Roehrs has curated the Digital sector, which is bolstered by a selection of 13 exhibitors, including Heft (New York), Nagel Draxler (Berlin, Cologne, Meseberg), and Office Impart (Berlin). Rolf Art (Buenos Aires) and Anita Beckers (Frankfurt), also present in the Main sector, are enriching their participation with specific projects which reflect their desire to explore new digital formats.

    Emergence sector
    Situated on the first floor of the Grand Palais, the Emergence sector features 20 projects by galleries promoting new approaches and singular voices on the international scene. This year, the emphasis is placed on powerful artistic projects with artists such as Bérangère Fromont (Bacqueville, Lille), Suwon Lee (Sorondo Projects, Barcelona), Mia Weiner (Homecoming, Amsterdam), Atong Atem (Mars Gallery, Amsterdam) and Louis Porter (Chiquita Room, Barcelona). Boasting a diversity of visions and origins, from South Sudan to Mexico and Venezuela, the selection testifies to the dynamic nature of emerging scenes.

    Book sector
    This year, the Book sector features 41 publishers and offers a panorama of contemporary international publishing with publishers such as RVB Books (Paris), TBW Books (Oakland), and RM (Mexico City, Barcelona). The contemporary offerings of the sector are enriched by such new participants as Witty Books (Turin), Artpaper Editions (Brussels) and Perimeter Editions (Melbourne).

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  • Rock’s wildest frontman prepares for one last show

    Rock’s wildest frontman prepares for one last show

    Ian Youngs

    Culture reporter

    Getty Images Ozzy Osbourne holding a microphone on stage, drenched in sweat and with a maniacal smileGetty Images

    Fans are waiting to see what state Ozzy Osbourne is in on stage on Saturday

    Ozzy Osbourne has somehow made it through decades of drink, drugs and debauchery – not to mention jail, life-threatening accidents and Parkinson’s disease – but is now preparing to perform for devoted fans one last time.

    Black Sabbath made an indelible mark on music by forging the sound that became known as heavy metal – and on top of that, Ozzy practically invented the image of the wild rock star.

    Swigging, snorting and shagging his way around the globe in a semi-conscious daze in the 1970s, 80s and 90s, he ensured his place in the rock ‘n’ roll hall of infamy by biting the heads off some poor unsuspecting creatures along the way.

    Then in the 2000s, he and his family were catapulted to a new form of fame when they unwittingly pioneered reality TV as cameras captured the foul-mouthed (but affectionate) dysfunction of their home life.

    The “Prince of Darkness” has threatened to retire before – but with health problems taking an increasing toll, Saturday’s farewell gig really does look like being his swansong.

    Ross Halfin A recent photo of the four original Black Sabbath members posing togetherRoss Halfin

    The original Black Sabbath members will perform together for the first time in 20 years

    The 76-year-old will reunite with his original Sabbath bandmates to headline an all-day stadium show featuring groups they have influenced over the years – including Metallica, Slayer and members of Guns N’ Roses and Rage Against the Machine. It has, not unjustly, been described as the greatest heavy metal line-up ever.

    Titled Back to the Beginning, the show at Villa Park in Birmingham will really take the band back to their roots.

    The football ground is a stone’s throw from Ozzy’s childhood terraced home in the suburb of Aston. On match days, the young Ozzy and his friends would charge match-goers half a shilling to “mind” their cars.

    He has joked that his first job in the music industry was as a car horn tuner in a factory in the area, before getting work in a slaughterhouse, which allowed him to play practical jokes in pubs by putting cows’ eyeballs in peoples’ pints.

    But he wanted to escape the drudgery of a day job so put an advert for a band in a record shop. That eventually led him to form Black Sabbath with schoolfriend and guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist and lyricist Geezer Butler, and drummer Bill Ward.

    Other groups had summoned up a sound similar to heavy metal, but Sabbath really set the template with their combination of pounding rhythms, deep rock riffs and imagery of fantasy and horror.

    A fan in a Black Sabbath T-shirt taking a photo of a large colourful Black Sabbath mural on a wall in Birmingham
    A large colourful mural showing Black Sabbath members on a wall in Birmingham

    Black Sabbath murals have been painted in Birmingham in the build-up to the gig

    “They started from absolutely nothing to be global superstars,” says fan Joe Porter, 47, from Birmingham, while admiring murals of the band that have been painted in the city in advance of the gig.

    “If you watch their early concerts, they’ve got basic [equipment] – one PA, one small drum set, a bass and a guitar and that’s it. The sound they could make from those four instruments was like there’s 20 people on stage.

    “And Ozzy’s like a madman on stage, but really he’s just a normal bloke.”

    Their appeal crosses generations, judging by the crowd at Ozzy Osbourne: Working Class Hero, a new exhibition in Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.

    “They started the year my mum was born, in ’68,” says 21-year-old Byron Howard-Maarij. “I’m a massive metal fan, so the fact that the originators are coming back to where it all started, it’s really exciting.”

    Another fan, Riley Beresford, 25, from Nottingham, has inherited a copy of Sabbath’s 1970 single Paranoid as a family heirloom from his grandmother. “She got Paranoid on seven inch and it got passed down to my mum, and now it’s passed down to me. It’s going through the family.”

    He adds: “They made heavy metal, didn’t they? Obviously the music’s great, but him being wild, it just adds to it even more. There’s no-one else like him, really, is there?”

    A fan making the rock sign with one hand, standing next to a large photo of Ozzy Osbourne

    Fan Byron Howard-Maarij is among those who have visited the new exhibition dedicated to Ozzy

    “I think the reason people love Ozzy is he’s still very genuine,” says Toby Watley, director of collections at Birmingham Museums.

    “He sees himself as a working class lad from Aston. He hasn’t really changed. What you see is what you get. It’s not going through a Hollywood lens and being glamorised in any way. People really love that and respect it. And it’s something that Birmingham can be really proud of.”

    The exhibition features artefacts loaned by Ozzy and wife Sharon, including gold discs and awards such as his three Grammys and two Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame trophies (one for being inducted with Sabbath, the other as a solo artist).

    They reflect his musical success, while pictures and videos of him on stage give a small glimpse of that wilder side.

    “You never quite know what’s going to happen next, and I think people like that,” Mr Watley adds. “He’s not someone who attempts to stick to the rules. He will do it his own way, in his own style. I think that’s a big part of the appeal.”

    Getty Images Ozzy Osbourne with his arms in the air on stage with Tony Iommi in 1976Getty Images

    Some of his antics have become legendary.

    The most notorious was biting the head off a live bat while on stage in Iowa in 1982. He had been catapulting raw meat into the audience on tour, which prompted fans to throw things on stage in return. He claims he thought the bat was fake before he took a bite.

    He has not attempted to use the same excuse about the two doves whose heads he bit off during a record label meeting the previous year.

    His other exploits included being arrested for urinating on Texas war monument the Alamo while wearing one of Sharon’s dresses; getting thrown out of the Dachau concentration camp for being drunk and disorderly while on a visit during a German tour; pulling a gun on Black Sabbath’s drummer while on a bad acid trip; blacking out and waking up in the central reservation of a 12-lane freeway; and massacring the inhabitants of his chicken coop with a gun, sword and petrol while wearing a dressing gown and pair of wellies.

    Getty Images Black Sabbath on stage in 2016 in front of the giant words "The End"Getty Images

    Black Sabbath suggested their 2016 tour would be The End

    That all added to Ozzy’s legend, but in reality most of his behaviour was not very appealing or glamorous. He was a wreck, and the drink and drugs gave him a Jekyll and Hyde personality.

    In 1989, he woke up in jail to be told he had been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder for strangling Sharon. He could not remember anything about it. She dropped the charges.

    In 2003, by now supposedly off drink, he broke his neck after falling off a quad bike, and was diagnosed with Parkinson’s the same year. In 2019, he suffered a spinal injury in a fall.

    Fans are waiting to see what state he is in on stage on Saturday.

    When he was inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame as a solo artist last year, he had to sit on a large black throne – suitably adorned with skulls and a giant bat. The same throne has appeared in photos of rehearsals for this weekend’s gig in Birmingham.

    His body has survived more abuse than virtually anybody else’s on the planet – but age and medical realities are catching up with him.

    Sharon has said the concert will definitely be his final show.

    He and his fans are likely to be forced to accept that is the case, although in the past he has found it impossible to stay out of the spotlight for long.

    “You know the time I will retire?” he said in a 2020 documentary. “When I can hear them nail a lid on my box. And then I’ll do an encore.”

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  • Miley Cyrus, Timothée Chalamet to get Hollywood Walk of Fame stars

    Miley Cyrus, Timothée Chalamet to get Hollywood Walk of Fame stars

    A few new stars are set to appear on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

    Miley Cyrus, Timothée Chalamet and Demi Moore were among the 35 honorees announced this morning by Eugenio Derbez and Richard Blade.

    Inductees were selected across five categories: motion pictures, television, live theater and live performance, recording and sports entertainment. There were no radio honorees. Others who made the class of 2026 include actors Emily Blunt, Rachel McAdams, Molly Ringwald, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Rami Malek and Noah Wyle; former NBA star turned sports analyst Shaquille O’Neal; and “Good Morning America” co-anchors Robin Roberts and George Stephanopoulos, who will have a double ceremony. Italian special effects artist Carlo Rambaldi and director Tony Scott will be posthumously honored.

    Cyrus, who released her ninth studio album, “Something Beautiful,” in May, rolled around the Walk of Fame for the music video for her aptly titled single “Walk of Fame,” later revealing on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” that she developed an infection on her kneecap from the bacteria on the famed Hollywood Boulevard sidewalk. Still, the singer shared some of the footage on Instagram shortly after her star was announced.

    “When I first came to LA from Nashville as a little girl, my family would stay at a hotel on Hollywood Blvd, and I would go on late night walks with my dad when no one would recognize him. We’d have the gift shops to ourselves & buy knock off Oscars and Marilyn Monroe merchandise,” she wrote. “To now be cemented on this legendary boulevard, surrounded by the icons who inspired me, feels like a dream.”

    Meanwhile, Chalamet is coming off the success of the Bob Dylan biopic “A Complete Unknown.” He earned an Oscar nomination for his role as the legendary singer-songwriter. He’s set to begin filming the third installment of the “Dune” film franchise, titled “Dune: Messiah,” this summer, according to Deadline.

    Moore, who rose to prominence with the 1985 film “St. Elmo’s Fire,” earned her first Oscar nomination this year for her role in “The Substance,” in which she starred opposite Margaret Qualley. She and Ringwald will be the latest of the Brat Pack to join the Walk of Fame, following Rob Lowe in 2015. It’s also a family affair for Blunt and brother-in-law Stanley Tucci, who appeared in “The Devil Wears Prada” together and are set to return for the sequel.

    Once selected, honorees are expected to cover an $85,000 sponsorship fee to pay for the creation and installation of the star, as well as maintenance of the Walk of Fame. Recipients have up to two years to schedule their ceremonies before the offer expires.

    Motion Pictures
    Demi Moore
    Emily Blunt
    Timothée Chalamet
    Chris Columbus
    Marion Cotillard
    Keith David
    Rami Malek
    Rachel McAdams
    Franco Nero
    Deepika Padukone
    Molly Ringwald
    Stanley Tucci
    Carlo Rambaldi (posthumous)
    Tony Scott (posthumous)

    Television
    Greg Daniels
    Sarah Michelle Gellar
    Lucero
    Gordon Ramsay
    Melody Thomas Scott
    Bradley Whitford
    Noah Wyle
    Robin Roberts and George Stephanopoulos (double ceremony)

    Recording
    Air Supply
    Bone Thugs-N-Harmony
    Paulinho da Costa
    The Clark Sisters
    Miley Cyrus
    Josh Groban
    Intocable
    Angélique Kidjo
    Lyle Lovett

    Live Theater and Live Performance
    Lea Salonga
    Gabriel “Fluffy” Iglesias

    Sports Entertainment
    Shaquille O’Neal


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  • Remembering William Cran, Prolific and Acclaimed Documentary Filmmaker

    Remembering William Cran, Prolific and Acclaimed Documentary Filmmaker

    William Cran, a prolific filmmaker who produced more than 20 acclaimed FRONTLINE documentaries — including the series’ first two episodes in 1983 — died on June 4 at age 79.

    Starting with an investigation probing the National Football League and then 88 Seconds in Greensboro, which examined the murder of civil rights demonstrators, Cran’s films for FRONTLINE would go on to explore topics ranging from the assassination of John F. Kennedy, to the global AIDS epidemic, to how Jesus became Christ.

    The New York Times called the latter documentary series, From Jesus to Christ, “a revelation of what television can be.”

    Whether he was examining an Ambush in Mogadishu, the secret life of J. Edgar Hoover, the hidden reality of rape on the job for immigrant women, or the evolution of apocalyptic beliefs across centuries, Cran explored complicated subjects with depth, vigor and compelling narratives.

    “What was so particular about Bill was that each one of his films is different,” said the founder of FRONTLINE, David Fanning. Cran first caught Fanning’s attention when he was recruiting filmmakers for a new international series for public television called “World,” which would later become FRONTLINE.

    “I invited Bill to visit us in Boston,” Fanning said,”but he arrived in a snow storm, which turned into the ‘Blizzard of ’78! We were trapped in my apartment for three days, so we had lots of time to get to know each other.”

    ​Years after Cran produced FRONTLINE’s first two films, Fanning recalls being in a Hollywood meeting with Steven Spielberg: “He came into the room and exclaimed, ‘FRONTLINE! That’s 88 Seconds in Greensboro!’” Fanning said Spielberg “could remember sequences,” from Cran’s film.

    In addition to his work with FRONTLINE, Cran produced several multi-part public media series that also probed complex subjects, including the 9-part series The Story of English, which aired on PBS and the BBC and also became a bestselling book. Cran also produced the 8-part series The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power, with Pulitzer Prize-winning author Daniel Yergin.

    Over the course of his storied career, Cran won honors including two Peabody Awards, four duPont-Columbia University awards, four Emmy Awards and an Overseas Press Club Award.

    Cran also mentored several generations of documentary filmmakers and journalists who went on to have their own successful careers.

    “Bill had an incredible nose for storytelling. He made me focus on the narrative arc of a story and insisted there should always be three acts and a climax,” said Marcela Gaviria, who first worked on the FRONTLINE documentary Godfather of Cocaine with Cran and went on to produce many films for the series. “He wasn’t just a storyteller; he was a demanding journalist and an inspired teacher.”

    Watch a selection of Cran’s landmark films for FRONTLINE below.

    Part I:

    Part II:


    Patrice Taddonio, Senior Digital Writer, FRONTLINE

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  • ‘I looked after Sean Connery, David Lynch and Tarantino for work’

    ‘I looked after Sean Connery, David Lynch and Tarantino for work’

    BBC Angela Freeman - a woman with long hair, sits in a cinema seat and looks to the camera - the screen is visible behind herBBC

    Angela Freeman has retired after 34 years at the Glasgow Film Theatre

    With surreal films like Blue Velvet and his mind-bending TV series Twin Peaks, David Lynch often left audiences scratching their heads.

    However the legendary director, who died earlier this year, was left bemused himself on a visit to Glasgow in 2007.

    “He was bewildered by the smoking ban,” recalls Angela Freeman, the front of house manager at the GFT cinema that hosted the American filmmaker.

    “He chain smoked, so I had to walk him and his main personal assistant round the block, past what was C & A at the time, so he could smoke a bit – I was thinking I can’t believe I’m walking down the road with David Lynch!”

    An encounter with Lynch – one of Angela’s favourite directors of all time – was just one of many celebrity encounters during a 34 year career at Glasgow’s main independent cinema.

    Angela finally stepped down from her role last week, having started at the film house at the tail end of the 1980s.

    David Grinly David Lynch - a man with grey/white hair autographs a poster for his film Mulholland Drive on the back of a fan. David Grinly

    David Lynch attracted a huge crowd when he appeared in Glasgow in 2007

    It was three decades that saw massive change to both the city and the cinema itself, as well as an array of A-list names visiting the cinema to promote their work.

    And it often fell to Angela to look after them when they arrived – even if that meant finding a sandwich for a singing legend.

    “Shirley Bassey came in with Sean Connery once. They’d been involved in a children’s film and they came in to watch a test screening together.

    “That was surreal – my mum absolutely adored her, but I remember someone had to go out and get a tuna and sweetcorn sandwich for her during it!”

    Alan Wylie Quentin Tarantino at the GFT - he has long hair and is smiling for the camera while sitting at a table and signing a poster for his film Reservoir Dogs. There are cups of tea next to him.Alan Wylie

    Quentin Tarantino at the GFT to promote his breakthrough film Reservoir Dogs

    Then there were the names who arrived as bright young things, before going on to achieve huge fame and fortune in later years.

    Angela recalls the GFT scoring a huge hit in 1992 by showing a brash, violent crime thriller, and securing a visit from its director to promote it.

    The film was Reservoir Dogs and the director was Quentin Tarantino.

    “He was quite young, and just delighted audiences were loving it so much. Several years later he came back, and that was a completely different experience – him coming in to do this red carpet experience, with all this security.

    “Reservoir Dogs was unique for us. It shocked audiences at the time in a way they hadn’t experienced before – it was a real coup, but I know the council got a lot of complaints over us even showing it because of the violence.

    “It made me feel that every young director we have come in here could go on to be a Tarantino.”

    It wasn’t all glamour though. When Angela joined the staff the cinema had only just opened a second screen, and buckets were deployed across parts of the Rose Street building because of water leaking in constantly.

    Angela moved from her native Liverpool to study at Edinburgh College of Art in 1985, and four years later headed west to Glasgow, going on to take a job at the GFT box office.

    “All the ticketing was done manually, so you were stamping up tickets using the old fashioned ticket machines.

    “I still remember the two ladies training me up with the box office floor just £10 or £20 notes as everyone paid cash – no-one used credit cards then. It was an amazing place.”

    Reuters Willem Defoe sits on a red carpet as his unveiling on the Hollywood walk of fame takes place - he is is on his knees, leaning over a plaque on the walkReuters

    Angela once served Willem Defoe as he popped into the cinema while passing by

    It could be amazing in other ways, given you never quite knew who would walk in off the street.

    “I was once working at the box office and Willem Defoe walked in. He was at the Tramway I think with his theatre group and he just walked in, full-length black coat on and soaking.

    “He just wanted to see what was on. I was quite respectful, and didn’t want him to feel like I was starstruck. But I did acknowledge who he was and said it was amazing to meet them.

    “There was a few like that, Ralph Fiennes and Neil Sedaka both just wandered in. Gillian Anderson came in regularly when filming House of Mirth, and Hugo Weaving was another one.”

    GFT Crowds gather outside the Glasgow Film Theatre cinema for a red carpet event during the Glasgow Film Festival. Various lights illuminate the building with purple and blue lights GFT

    The GFT is the main venue for the Glasgow Film Festival

    Angela is proud of the cinema’s charitable status, and of special screenings for people with dementia and children with autism.

    The biggest challenge came when managing the expansion of the building, as the famed Cafe Cosmo closed and a third screen was added.

    “It was a big ask to try and remain open during the building phases”, she recalls.

    “Every day I had to do a handover with the building manager, walk through it to know where the fire exits were and make sure everything was safe for the public.

    “At the end of the day we went though it, and came out the other side.”

    Getty Images Paul McCann and Richard E Grant in character on the set of Withnail & I while standing outside - Grant has a cigarette in mouth and a scarf wrapped around him, while McGann is wearing a dark leather jacket. Getty Images

    A special screening of Withnail & I will mark Angela’s retirement

    She is more circumspect when asked if any guests posed any particular challenges – though one actor, unidentified beyond the clue they starred in a massive 70s blockbuster, did give some headaches.

    “You occasionally get diva behaviour. We had a film festival guest wanting the hotel switched as it was too hot, then he wanted to fly out a day early, which would have cost us something like eight grand.”

    However, most of Angela’s memories are of the sweeter kind, while her retirement is being marked with the GFT screening one of her favourite films – Withnail & I – on Sunday.

    She estimates she helped organise 12 weddings at the cinema over the years, including one with a theme based around the films of quirky director Wes Anderson.

    The last nuptials she helped organise also proved poignant.

    “There was a couple last year who had a video played on the big screen with various memories of their relationship, and the GFT featured a few times.

    “I was sitting watching it getting emotional. It was lovely to see the impact the cinema has on people – it’s still all about bringing a group of individuals together to share in an experience.”

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  • July events – Announcements – e-flux

    July events – Announcements – e-flux

    This July, join us on the rooftop at e-flux Screening Room for Decision Moment, a four-part series that reflects on historical moments of action and inaction and examines cinematic ways of approaching them. The series features pairings of work by John Smith and Krzysztof KieślowskiBasim Magdy and Anocha SuwichakornpongTiffany Sia and Iva RadivojevićRea Tajiri and Mohsen Makhmalbaf.

    At Bar Laika, we look forward to two editions of Playback, evenings of listening with Lamin Fofana on July 9 and Abby Echiverri on July 23.

    On  July 16, join e-flux at Public Records for a summer issue launch party co-presented with BOMB Magazinen+1, and CLMP.

    We will take a pause in programming for August, returning in the fall with talks, screenings, performances, and more. We look forward to seeing you at our July events.

    Decision Moment
    e-flux Screening Room rooftop, 172 Classon Ave, Brooklyn Tuesdays after sunset, July 8–29

    I. Narratives of Chance
    Tuesday, July 8, 2025
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    Contemplating the fragile and incomprehensible boundary between causality and contingency as well as between pre-determinacy and free will, these works by John Smith and Krzysztof Kieślowski explore counter-factual worlds. Smith’s The Girl Chewing Gum (1976) upturns the supposed authority of a director’s voiceover to, in the words of A.L. Rees, “play word against picture and chance against order.” In Kieślowski’s Blind Chance (1981), three diverging timelines, triggered by the single moment of a young man running to catch a train, provide the structure for an exploration of the limits of freedom under authoritarianism. Read more here.

    II. Simultaneous Pasts
    Tuesday, July 15, 2025
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    Overcoming the inherent difficulties of an objective reconstruction of the past, and thinking along Buddhist or quantum understandings of space and time, where multiple, equally valid perspectives coexist, these films approach past events as lived experiences that become most tangible in their multiple versions. Basim Magdy’s The Many Colors of the Sky Radiate Forgetfulness (2014) operates against linear timelines with its dreamy, semi-abstract visuals of ruins and habitats bathed in surreal colors. By The Time It Gets Dark (2016) by Anocha Suwichakornpong circles around the 1976 massacre of student activists in Thailand, inhabiting a state of narrative diffraction where characters shift identities as cinema turns inward on its representational limits. Read more here.

    III. Erasure that Persists
    Tuesday, July 22, 2025
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    Approaching traumatic experiences as refrains that persistently shape personal identities, the works in this program explore cinematic ways of grappling with events that have stripped away individual agency. In A Child Already Knows (2024) by Tiffany Sia, half-remembered scenes of a historical cusp are recalled alongside a montage of appropriated early Mao-era children’s animations, assembling fragmentary memories and conjuring images in lieu of historical reenactments too costly to make. For the eleven-year old protagonist of When the Phone Rang (2024) by Iva Radivojević, one phone call erases her country, history, and identity. Through uses a mix of scripted, performative recreations, the film excavates the residue of childhood memories shaped by the dissolution of Yugoslavia and its aftermath. Read more here.

    IV. History Remade
    Tuesday, July 29, 2025
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    Can reenactments create new spaces for critique and self-reflection? The films in this final screening of Decision Moment illustrate the ethical and aesthetic implications of cinematic reconstructions of past events. Off Limits (1988) by Rea Tajiri juxtaposes the text of a near-contemporaneous film portraying Saigon in 1968 against the soundtrack and image of Easy Rider, the 1968 American production, highlighting the complex associations between 1960s hippie iconography and memories of the Vietnam War. In A Moment of Innocence (1996) by Mohsen Makhmalbaf, the filmmaker casts himself and a former adversary—a policeman he stabbed in his youth—as directors of reenactments, folding autobiography into fiction, revolutionary fervor into post-revolution disillusionment. Read more here.

    Playback
    Bar Laika, 224 Greene Ave, Brooklyn

    Playback 0016 with Lamin Fofana
    Wednesday, July 9, 2025
    Lamin Fofana joins Bar Laika for the sixteenth edition of Playback. Fofana is an artist and musician currently located in New York City. His music contrasts the reality of our world with what’s beyond, and explores questions of movement, migration, alienation, and belonging. Fofana’s overlapping interests in history and the present, and his practice of transmuting text into the affective medium of sound, manifests in multisensory live performances and installations featuring original music compositions, field recordings and archival material. Read more here.

    Playback 0017 with Abby Echiverri
    Wednesday, July 22, 2025
    The seventeenth edition of Playback features Abby Echiverri, a producer based in Brooklyn whose intense curiosity has led her to take on a variety of roles as a touring musician, sound engineer, DJ, and VJ. Her releases include her debut EP on The Bunker NY, entitled Ab Initio, as well as releases on Acid Camp, Patterns of Perception, Going In, and self-releases. Echiverri’s left-field musical influences, deft hardware manipulations, and experienced engineering meld into an inventive interpretation in her live techno sets. Read more here.

    2025 summer issue party
    Public Records, 233 Butler St, Brooklyn
    Wednesday, July 16, 2025
    Tickets
    Join e-flux at Public Records on Wednesday, July 16 for a summer issue party co-presented with BOMBn+1, and CLMP. Doors open at 8pm, and the first round of drinks is on us. The sixth issue of e-flux Index brings together 82 contributors across 580 pages, weaving long-form essays on art, architecture, and contemporary culture with exhibition and film reviews, interviews, theoretical texts, and opinion pieces—organized into eleven thematic digressions. Ranging from monuments to marionettes, climate devastation to sonic resistance, the texts in Index 6 explore the margins where new ways of thinking—and living—begin to take shape. Read about the summer issues from BOMB and n+1, and find more details here.

    Stay tuned to upcoming programs on our website, or subscribe to our Events mailing list here.

    For more information about programs at e-flux, contact program [​at​] e-flux.com; for information about Playback at Bar Laika, contact laika [​at​] e-flux.com.

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  • Beaufille Resort 2026 Ready-to-Wear Runway, Fashion Show & Collection Review

    Beaufille Resort 2026 Ready-to-Wear Runway, Fashion Show & Collection Review

    Beaufille’s sister-duo Chloé and Parris Gordon are switching things up. After years of debuting collections twice a year on the pre-season calendar, the cofounders are now releasing four carefully curated collections a year.

    “We’ve been running our own e-commerce now for about four years, and we really felt the lull between when you do two seasons a year — promoting the same collection to our audience for over six months became challenging. We started to understand ourselves why retailers want this constant newness and several drops,” Parris Gordon explained. “With running our own e-commerce, we really have the feedback of when our clients are buying the product, and what that [product is].”

    Beyond evening dressing and their popular feminine stretch lace styles, which come in a lovely burgundy hue for resort, the strategic shift also allows the duo to “take a few risks that retailers wouldn’t take,” Chloé Gordon added, noting that their initial handbag launch and higher-priced styles have performed well on their e-commerce.

    Taking this knowledge, Chloé Gordon said resort was all about offering more special, novelty styles and investment pieces designed for holiday dressing. For instance, a great selection of new leopard printed pony hair leather layers, including tailored jackets, miniskirts, jean-like pants and playfully chic handbags. The duo also started working with artisans in India to develop their new drapey silk cotton fringed layers that nicely played into their holiday mindset.

    “I think people are dressing a little less formal, and we interpreted that into a lot of looks,” Chloé Gordon said of the collection’s new takes on masculine tailoring, such as a pale pink sharp yet sexy, plunging keyhole blouse with a one-button brown suit or an intriguing shirt dress designed around the “idea of a jacket tied around your waist, but it is functional,” she added.

    For the brand’s latest jewelry, Parris Gordon said she was into designing earrings, rings and necklaces that felt easy to dress up and had a bit of a casual element to them, as seen through resort’s great beaded sterling silver or lapis lazuil chandelier tassel earrings and necklaces, oversize gemstone studs and slightly oversize hoops.

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  • Jinu’s seriously derpy tiger origin story

    Jinu’s seriously derpy tiger origin story

    Without singing a note or swinging a weapon, one character from “Kpop Demon Hunters” has entranced the audience off pure vibes alone.

    We’re talking about Derpy Tiger, an oversized blue cat with glowing yellow eyes, a snaggletooth grin and a penchant for righting overturned vessels. The breakout character is a courier, delivering messages between rival K-pop band members: Jinu, a demon seeking to drain souls from fans listening to his tunes, and Rumi, an idol by day and a hunter by night, protecting the souls of humanity.

    Co-directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans, “Kpop Demon Hunters” has quickly become a hit for Netflix, claiming the No. 1 spot on the streamer’s English-langauge Top 10 list and ranking in the Top 10 in all countries globally, with an additional 24.2 million views in its second week. Derpy Tiger has ridden this wave as well, with Netflix boasting how the character’s plushie is among its Top 5 sold items in its shop for the year already.

    We’re introduced to Derpy in a late-night scene when he emerges from a portal from the Underworld and promptly knocks over a flowerpot. Several awkward seconds pass as the stubby-legged feline attempts to set the pot back upright, but fails every time. Who knows how long the tenacious tabby would have continued with this Sisyphean task had Rumi not stepped in? And with that, he won over the hearts if not souls of the audience. Take a look:

    “When I saw the pot scene with Derpy I thought that it was genius. It’s so good,” raved story artist Radford Sechrist told Salon. “I believe the idea came from a story room and it was first storyboarded by an artist named Jessie Wong.”

    Sechrist, who happens to be married to Kang, is the veteran animator tasked with designing the cat who would be king of derps.

    “He is the creator of ‘Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts,’ so that whole aesthetic is his,” Kang said about Sechrist. “He started as a character designer and he storyboarded for the movie as well, and wrote a lot of the scenes. When you’re doing storyboards, you get a character that has no design so you also end up drawing it and designing it. The design of the cat is based on minhwa, which is a folk art that depicts this tiger and it’s always paired with a magpie.”

    Minhwa is a style of Korean folk art popular during the Chosun era, with the Hojak-do genre specializing in images of tigers, magpies and pine trees. And while these images were often hung up at entrances for the new year – tigers were seen as keeping evil at bay while magpies would deliver good news – the way these animals were depicted together evolved over time to become more satirical by the 17th century. The once powerful tiger, a stand-in for the ruling class of aristocrats, was painted to look foolish and yes, derpy, hence the nickname “idiot tiger” (바보호랑이). In contrast, the magpie was positioned over the cat and represented the common folk, cheekily flipping the hierarchy of the day.

    “The way the tiger is depicted in this art is so funny,” said Kang. “It’s very goofy, and that is the reason why we call him Derpy Tiger. Those drawings are very derpy. He’s always walleyed and weird looking.”

    Sechrist reveals that while he did draw on that traditional art for inspiration he also looked closer to home.

    “I would say 90% based on the minhwa artwork, which was incredible to reference and 10% is our cat,” he said. “For instance the shorter body and shorter legs feel like our cat. A bit of the neck as well, how our cat has this fluffy bump. We named our cat ‘Yumyan’ after Yumyan Hammerpaw, a cat character from a show I created called ‘Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts.’ But we call her ‘Fluffy’ for short because she’s a long-haired Himalayan cat.”

    Check out an early Derpy model and then swipe to check out Fluffy:

    “I was a little nervous at first to design something based in history with cultural significance, but we had an advisor who was supportive of the idea,” he added. “We wanted to include a tiger in the movie because tigers are the national animal of South Korea. Also, a lot of us on the crew are cat lovers.”

    As for Derpy’s bright blue hue, Sechrist said, “I believe that may have been [production designer] Helen Chen giving the tiger a more magical feel. I was designing it closer to the old artwork which was gray.”

    Although Derpy clearly had star potential, he didn’t initially have a defined role in the movie.

    “We were like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is such a fun character that we could have in the movie,’ but we didn’t want to just have a sidekick,” acknowledged Kang. “We didn’t want to just do that, so we put it off to the side . . . We [also] needed some way for Rumi and Jinu to communicate with each other. We wanted him to send her an invite to meet, and it felt odd for him to text her. He’s 400 years old. He doesn’t know how to use a cellphone. So at first, we were like, ‘Do we use a carrier pigeon?’

    “Our production designer, [Helen Mingjue Chen] did this really beautiful painting of a statue of a tiger turning into a real tiger, and Jinu is standing next to it and he has his shirt open for no reason. When we saw that, we were like, ‘Oh, maybe he is Jinu’s pet, and he can use this tiger to deliver messages to Rumi.’ So that’s how Derpy was integrated into the movie as a mailbox basically, and then the bird tagged along with him.”

    Check out Chen’s art that started it all:

    The bird Kang refers to is Sussy, the magpie who accompanies Derpy. (It should be noted that neither of these names are official (yet), but rather the default names given by the crew for the creatures.) Sussy has two distinguishing features. First, he has too many eyes. While most fans believe he has three eyes (which led to some conjecture of its relationship to the three-legged crows in Eastern mythology), we are only seeing one side of his head. “I can confirm it does have six eyes total, three on each side,” said Sechrist.

    Neither Kang nor Sechrist could recall who came up with the idea for the additional eyes or why he has them, but it could be similar to the decision to make Derpy blue. A six-eyed magpie is a good indicator that it’s from another realm and not your average two-eyed terrestrial bird.

    Sussy’s second defining feature is his love of hats, namely a tall, jaunty gat, similar to the ones that the Saja Boys wear in the Underworld and in their performance of “Your Idol.” Whence came this love of headgear? In the film, Jinu tells Rumi, “I made [the hat] for the tiger, but the bird keeps stealing it.”

    “We were in a brainstorm and someone asked, ‘Why does the bird have a tiny hat?’ And I just said, ‘Jinu made it for the tiger, but the bird keeps stealing it.’ It got a laugh so I suggested maybe Jinu actually says that. I always love it when everyone is just riffing ideas together, and you can actually throw some of those ideas in. The energy in a brainstorm room is really fun, especially with Maggie; she’s so funny. I still remember her pitching me corn eyes or even, ‘What if there’s a demon boy band?’”

    The success of and “Kpop Demon Hunters” has opened the audience’s eyes to how collaborative the creative process is for what we see onscreen, which especially true of animation. Fans hungry for more of the story are clamoring for a sequel, and in the meantime are finding the rich treasure trove of concept art and other story and visual elements that led up to the finished product. Secrhist has felt this love from fans of the movie as well.

    “The team elevated the tiger design and made it so cool – from Helen Chen’s color choices and [art director] Scott Watanabe’s refinements, as well as the modeling, animation and lighting,” he said. “At every step this movie was such a labor of love so I figured if we were all fans, everyone else would love it too. But I didn’t anticipate the cultural phenomenon aspect. I’ve never been part of a movie that went so viral online. It’s kind of amazing to see how much people love it.”

    In addition to dominating Netflix streaming, the film’s original soundtrack has broken through as well, entering the Billboard 200 at No. 8. This is the highest-charting soundtrack from an animated film since the OST from another Sony Animated film, “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse” ranked No. 7 on the Billboard 200 in July 2023. Over on Spoitfy, the cast soundtrack is currently No. 5 on the Weekly Top Albums on Spotify globally and No. 6 in the U.S. It also boast the most spots on Spotify’s Daily Top Songs Global list, with the anthem “Golden” the highest at No. 3.

    The post “Kpop Demon Hunters”: Jinu’s seriously derpy tiger origin story appeared first on Salon.com.

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