Category: 5. Entertainment

  • Ayo Edebiri’s Publicist Thought She Had ‘Breakdown’ Amid Irish Joke

    Ayo Edebiri’s Publicist Thought She Had ‘Breakdown’ Amid Irish Joke

    Ayo Edebiri revealed that her publicist thought she was having a “mental breakdown” after she committed to a bit claiming that she was Irish.

    “I remember talking about this with a friend. I was like, ‘My favorite type of joke lowkey might be a lie.’ Like, something where it’s almost not even funny, it’s mostly just funny to me,” Edebiri told Conan O’Brien about the origin of the now-viral joke during the Monday episode of his Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend podcast.

    The joke began when Edebiri was interviewed by Letterboxd at South by Southwest in March 2023. After she joked that she played the donkey in the 2022 film The Banshees of Inisherin, Edebiri began speaking with an Irish accent and jokingly said that she lived in Ireland for four years in order to get “into character.”

    While reflecting on the origin of the joke, Edebiri explained that she caught her publicist appearing visibly confused when she first starting speaking with an Irish accent during the red carpet interview at SXSW.

    “I remember in that moment I saw my PR. She was at the corner of my eye and she was kind of like, ‘No, no, no, no, no, no,’ because I was just, it was nonsense,” Edebiri shared. “It was just me being like, ‘Oh yeah I was up in Ireland,’ and I was kind of chilling and she was like, ‘Okay, mental breakdown on the horizon.’ I don’t know, it just kept going. But then other Irish people too have been like, ‘What’s up?!’ and I’m like, ‘Yeah, what’s up.’”

    While Edebiri’s publicist seemed confused by the bit, O’Brien applauded the actress for her commitment to the joke.

    “Now it has resonated so much that the people of Ireland have accepted you as one of their own, which they will not do with me,” O’Brien, who is of Irish descent, told the guest. “You got a day in Boston and you’re revered by the Irish people. I am rightfully loathed by the Irish and never a day in Boston.”

    Edebiri then encouraged O’Brien that he still had a chance to win over the Irish population. “I think your day could come is what I’ll say about that,” she said.

    The topic of Boston came up because both Edebiri and O’Brien are from the Massachusetts city. While Boston has a large Irish population, Edebiri’s mother is Barbadian and her father is Nigerian.

    Fans grew both smitten and confused by the joke as Edebiri continued to claim she was Irish in interviews and social media posts after the initial SXSW interview.

    Edebiri previously brought the bit to center stage when she subtly joked about being Irish while accepting the Critics Choice Award for best actress in a comedy for her work in The Bear in January 2024.

    “To everybody in Boston, Barbados, Nigeria, Ireland in many ways,” she told the crowd during her acceptance speech at the Barker Hanger at the Santa Monica Airport. “Thank you so much.”


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  • Superman review: ‘Bursting with geeky weirdness’

    Superman review: ‘Bursting with geeky weirdness’

    Gunn’s most striking idea is to start his story not at the beginning, but somewhere around the middle, as if this were the third or fourth film in the series. When we first meet Superman, played by the suitably handsome and wholesome David Corenswet, he’s already been protecting Metropolis from supervillains for three years. He’s already dating his go-getting colleague at the Daily Planet newspaper, Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan), and he’s already loathed by a fanatical bald billionaire, Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult). What’s more unusual for a Superman franchise-starter is that he’s not the world’s only superhuman – or “metahuman”, to use the in-universe jargon. DC’s other A-listers – Wonder Woman, Batman, The Flash, Aquaman – are apparently being saved for their own films, but Superman is helped and hindered by the ethically murky Justice Gang, consisting of the arrogant Green Lantern (Nathan Fillion), the unflappably cool Mr Terrific (Edi Gathegi) and the sullen Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced).

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  • Alyssa Milano Pays Tribute To Former ‘Charmed’ Co-Star Julian McMahon

    Alyssa Milano Pays Tribute To Former ‘Charmed’ Co-Star Julian McMahon

    Alyssa Milano honored her former “Charmed” co-star and on-screen husband, Julian McMahon, with a moving tribute on Instagram.

    McMahon, who portrayed the complicated and beloved character Cole Turner in the series, died on July 2 after a battle with cancer. This week, in a moment of remembrance, Milano shared a tribute rooted in respect and artistic kinship.

    “I’m heartbroken. Julian McMahon was magic,” she wrote. “That smile. That laugh. That talent. That presence. He walked into a room and lit it up—not just with charisma, but with kindness. With mischief. With soulful understanding.”

    Actors Alyssa Milano (left) and Julian McMahon (right) both starred in the hit TV show “Charmed.”

    Milano shared they were “different,” but somehow “always understood each other,” and that he “challenged,” “teased,” and “supported” her.

    “Julian was more than my TV husband,” she wrote. “He was a dear friend.”

    She described losing him as “unfair” and “unreal,” emotions that spoke to the bond they shared.

    “My heart is with Kelly, with Madison, and with Iliana—his girls, his world,” she wrote, referring to the family he left behind. “He adored them. You could feel it in every conversation, every story, every text. He was a family man above all, and he loved deeply.”

    His wife, Kelly McMahon, confirmed the death of the Australian actor in a statement to Deadline on Friday: “With an open heart, I wish to share with the world that my beloved husband, Julian McMahon, died peacefully this week after a valiant effort to overcome cancer.”


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  • Grantchester Star Rishi Nair Answers Fan Questions

    Grantchester Star Rishi Nair Answers Fan Questions



    Watching the sermons, and I think sitting in a church while those sermons were happening, and even just sitting in churches and cathedrals when no one’s performing anything… I wouldn’t class myself as someone so religious, but you do feel this sense of what people must feel when they fill in a church, or in any holy place.

    It’s funny, when I go to Grantchester and we actually film the scenes in the church, every time I walk into that church, and because I’m dressed as a vicar, it’s like I have this overwhelming sense of responsibility to portray this character truthfully, because a character like Alphy is probably very important to a lot of people out there.

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  • See The Celebrities Who Attended Oasis’s First Reunion Shows

    See The Celebrities Who Attended Oasis’s First Reunion Shows

    Oasis‘ return to morning glory drew a range of high profile fans across film, TV, fashion and music to attend this weekend’s reunion concerts at Principality Stadium in Cardiff, Wales on July 4th and 5th, marking Liam and Noel Gallagher’s first joint performance in 16 years. 

    One Direction alum Louis Tomlinson was spotted at the show on the first night of the band’s two-night stand, while Doctor Who, House of the Dragon and The Crowns Matt Smith was spotted on the second night.

    Among other celebrities were actors Sienna Miller, Anya Taylor‑Joy and model-actress Cara Delevingne. Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich was in attendance with his wife, seeing the band perform just as his band had played for Ozzy Osbourne’s Back to the Beginning farewell show in Birmingham over the weekend as well. Ulrich is a longtime fan and supporter of the band dating back to the ’90s where he attended several shows in the United States, including a night helping to run the sound board at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park.

    Television presenters Holly Willoughby (This Morning) and Vernon Kay (This Morning, Family Fortunes) attended. British entertainers Danny Dyer, known for playing Mick Carter on EastEnders and roles in The Football Factory, and Vicky McClure, known for Line of Duty and This Is England, were also in the crowd.

    Industry VIPs included Virgin Music Group America president Jacqueline Saturn, Arista Records’ recently retired CEO Dave Massey, Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino, Hipgnosis CEO Merck Mercuriadis, Sony Music Group CEO Rob Stringer, Deezer head Stu Bergen, Apple Music’s Jay Liepis, Capitol Music Group chief Tom March, IAG’s Marsha Vlasic, Q Prime’s Brant Weil and September Management’s Amy Morgan.

    Family members in attendance  included Meg Mathews, Noel’s ex‑wife; Anaïs Gallagher; and Liam’s son Gene Gallagher.

    Oasis delivered 24‑song sets spanning hits, album tracks, and B‑sides over the weekend. The performances included “Morning Glory,” “Cigarettes & Alcohol,” “Supersonic,” “Half the World Away” “Don’t Look Back in Anger,” “Wonderwall,” and “Champagne Supernova.” Notably, they performed the B-Side “Whatever,” which was released in 1994 as a stand‑alone and clocks in over six-minutes long. 

    Given Noel and Liam Gallagher’s famously volatile relationship that lead to Oasis’s breakup over 15 years ago, the band’s reunion tour quickly became one of the most-anticipated tours in years. With Wales done, Oasis will hit Manchester next, starting July 11th. The tour’s North American leg will start in Toronto on August 24th.

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  • As fest absolves Lauryn Hill, Stephanie Mills has thoughts

    As fest absolves Lauryn Hill, Stephanie Mills has thoughts

    The Essence Festival has taken responsibility for a Lauryn Hill performance that saw the hip-hop legend take the stage at 2:30 in the morning.

    “Let’s be very clear — WE don’t play about Ms. Lauryn Hill. Not for clicks. Not for headlines,” organizers wrote Sunday on Instagram. “She arrived on schedule, stepped on that stage, and delivered the kind of performance only a legend can.”

    The 31st annual New Orleans-based event, which ran Friday to Sunday, was peppered with issues from the beginning. According to the news site NOLA, Hill was quietly added to the already inflated lineup just two days before opening night.

    “Does Lauryn know about this?” one fan quipped in comments on an Instagram post announcing the addition. Others riffed on her well-known history of tardiness.

    The festival was reportedly already running behind when contemporary R&B trio Psyrin opened the first day. At the halfway point, GloRilla finished 45 minutes after the next act was supposed to start, NOLA said. So it was little surprise that headliner Hill didn’t get onstage until 2:30 a.m. Saturday. She performed to a nearly empty Caesars Superdome — hundreds of people were left instead of tens of thousands — closing with “Fu-Gee-La” more than an hour later.

    Though Hill is notorious for starting her shows late, even telling a 2023 audience “Y’all lucky I make it,” Essence Festival organizers quickly took the blame for this one.

    “Family is family and around here we protect our own no matter what the PEOPLE have to say,” the organizers said.

    “The delay? Not hers. We will take that. The moment? One for the books. The legacy? Still unmatched. Put some respect on her name. Keep the takes, but keep her out of them. All love and deep profound admiration for Ms. Lauryn Hill,” they added.

    Comments celebrated Essence’s “accountability.” The social media post even received love from Saturday headliner and legend Erykah Badu, who contributed some applause emojis.

    However, not everyone was over the moon. In an open letter to the Essence Festival on Tuesday, Grammy-winning artist Stephanie Mills voiced her grievances about the event’s “overall level of professionalism.”

    “While I remain grateful for the opportunity to have participated, my overall experience was unfortunately marred by significant production issues that negatively impacted both my performance and the artist experience as a whole,” wrote Mills, who performed Sunday.

    “The schedule and time management were severely lacking, creating a chaotic and stressful environment backstage … the technical difficulties, specifically concerning the sound system, proved deeply problematic,” she continued.

    She closed out the letter by calling for a “vastly improved experience” for artists and fans of the festival in future installments.


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  • Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron says he’s leaving the band after nearly 30 years

    Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron says he’s leaving the band after nearly 30 years

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  • The Strad news – Stradivari violin looted in Nazi-era Berlin believed to have been found in Japan

    The Strad news – Stradivari violin looted in Nazi-era Berlin believed to have been found in Japan

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    A 1709 Stradivari violin that was stolen at the end of World War Two may have been unearthed in Tokyo, according to a US academic. Carla Shapreau, who runs the Lost Music Project, which traces instruments and other cultural objects looted in Nazi Germany, claims to have identified the 1709 ‘Mendelssohn’ Stradivari violin, which has been missing since 1945.

    In the summer of 2024, Shapreau came across a photo of a violin known as the 1707 ‘Stella’ Stradivari as photographed for a 2018 Tokyo exhibition (the instrument was subsequently featured in The Strad’s 2019 calendar). Shapreau identified striking similarities in shape and wear marks between the ‘Stella’ and the missing ‘Mendelssohn’, and now believes they are one and the same. Her claim has been backed up by Jason Price, founder of the auction house Tarisio.

    In the 1920s, the instrument known as the ‘Mendelssohn’ was owned by violinist Lilli von Mendelssohn-Bohnke, who was part of a prominent family of German–Jewish bankers. When the Nazis came to power in the 1930s, they passed race laws banning Jews from owning property, and the family’s bank, where the violin was stored following Mendelssohn-Bohnke’s untimely death in a car crash in 1928, was liquidated in 1938. The instrument was transferred to a Deutsche Bank safe, which was subsequently plundered in 1945 during the Soviet occupation of Berlin.

    In the years following, the Mendelssohn-Bohnke family searched in vain for the violin, filing reports and posting notices, which included an advertisement in the September 1958 issue of The Strad. Shapreau mentioned the search for the missing violin in a 2009 article for The Strad.

    The Stradivari known as the ‘Stella’ is owned by Japanese violinist Eijin Nimura, who bought the instrument in or around 2005. Nimura has consistently mentioned the violin openly on his website, social media and in other public settings and there is no evidence of wrongdoing on his part, nor that he acquired the instrument in anything but good faith.

    Meanwhile on his blog on the Tarisio website, Price says he personally encountered the ‘Stella’ in 2000, when it was held by Tarisio on consignment. At the time it was valued between $1.2 and $1.5 million. He writes: ‘It lived in the Tarisio vault for several months in the autumn of 2000. But that was long before I knew – to be clear, this was long before anyone knew – that this was the stolen “Mendelssohn” Stradivari.’

    2000 ad

    He goes on to state that the violin had originally resurfaced in Paris in 1995 and was certified that year in London by the late Charles Beare, who dated it between 1705 and 1710. At the time no-one had any knowledge of the instrument’s possible connection with the stolen ‘Mendelssohn’ Stradivari.

    The violin did not sell so Tarisio returned it to the consignor, and around five years later it was sold to Nimura with a statement of provenance that it had been ‘in the possession of a noble family which has been living in Holland since the times of the French Revolution’.

    Price however writes: ‘the name “Stella” and the spurious Dutch provenance were not known to Tarisio in 2000’.

    The family of Mendelssohn-Bohnke would like the instrument back; Nimura meanwhile has stated via his lawyers that he has no obligation to the Mendelssohn heirs.

    In recent years, instrument dealers, museums and other cultural institutions have come under increasing pressure to return looted objects to the original owners and their descendants. This puts many current owners, who acquired the items in good faith and for large sums of money, in extremely difficult situations.

    Best of Technique

    In The Best of Technique you’ll discover the top playing tips of the world’s leading string players and teachers. It’s packed full of exercises for students, plus examples from the standard repertoire to show you how to integrate the technique into your playing.

    Masterclass

    In the second volume of The Strad’s Masterclass series, soloists including James Ehnes, Jennifer Koh, Philippe Graffin, Daniel Hope and Arabella Steinbacher give their thoughts on some of the greatest works in the string repertoire. Each has annotated the sheet music with their own bowings, fingerings and comments.

    Calendars

    The Canada Council of the Arts’ Musical Instrument Bank is 40 years old in 2025. This year’s calendar celebrates some its treasures, including four instruments by Antonio Stradivari and priceless works by Montagnana, Gagliano, Pressenda and David Tecchler.

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  • ‘Survivor’ winner tells all: Inside Parvati Shallow’s memoir

    ‘Survivor’ winner tells all: Inside Parvati Shallow’s memoir

    Parvati Shallow is ready to right the record on her “Black Widow” reputation. 

    The four-time “Survivor” contestant is telling her story in far more detail than you’ve seen on TV in her new memoir, “Nice Girls Don’t Win” (out now from Penguin Random House). In this new tell-all, she goes behind her million-dollar “Survivor” victory at 25, starting from her childhood in a Florida commune run by a tyrannical female guru. 

    “Nice Girls Don’t Win” chronicles her journey to rebuild her life after public scrutiny, divorce and the death of her brother, accepting herself as more than the “villain” persona she was given on “Survivor.”

    Parvati Shallow took this skill from her commune childhood to ‘Suvivor’ 

    Shallow’s parents raised her in the Florida commune of controversial religious figure Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati. They left when she was 9, after years of enduring “indoctrination of indentured servitude,” abuse, financial demands and “love bombing” by leaders.

    It was here that Shallow confesses she learned “fawning,” a “competitive likeability” that felt like a “magic trick” to gain friendship and social status both in her school years and later on “Survivor.” 

    From a young age on the commune, she realized that fawning was a survival skill to “persuade someone to like us so we can escape danger.” The adults around her were rewarded for fawning over religious authority figures. It’s this charm that earned Shallow the nickname “Black Widow,” a contestant known for her cunning social strategy.

    “Fawning is one of the most socially rewarded survival instincts of all time – other people love it when we fawn over them,” Shallow writes. “We can amass friendships, money, coveted jobs, romances, and awards … and all you have to trade is your truth – if you even know what that is.”

    Public scrutiny after ‘Survivor’ ‘rocked’ Parvati Shallow

    Shallow came home from “Survivor” to a wave of public scrutiny, many calling her a “slut” or “vapid whore.” Viewers came up to her in person and told her how much they disliked her. She felt her time on the show was “powerfully transformative,” but realized the public didn’t feel the same about her “flirty-fawning strategy” 

    “The intensity of the backlash confused me. I’d always seen myself as a likable person. I’d been accepted and invited into diverse social groups with ease. I couldn’t make sense of the harsh criticism I was receiving from simply being myself and playing a game,” Shallow writes. 

    She “couldn’t untangle the game from real life,” she writes, which led her to a spiral of controlling relationships with men and self-hatred.

    Personal grief behind the scenes of ‘Survivor’

    Shallow returned to “Survivor” two more times after her win on her second time playing. She played in season 20’s “Heroes vs. Villains” in 2010.

    In “Heroes vs. Villains,” Shallow writes that she was a last-minute switch to the villains tribe. Shallow recalls feeling “hated” by fellow contestants and like an “underdog” for the first time. In her personal life, she was struggling even more. Just before Shallow left for filming, her 15-year-old brother Kaelan suffered a skateboarding accident and her best friend’s brother died in an alcohol-related boating accident. When she got back home, Kaelan had started abusing the painkillers he had from surgery.  

    The experience left her feeling “rejected and unlovable, like a real loser.” 

    “When the season eventually aired, it was strange to feel so far removed from the love that was being poured onto me from fans, production, and the network. … But because I was so deeply lost inside my frozen shame pit, there was nowhere for this love to land. I couldn’t feel it, receive it, or own it. I was sure they were all wrong,” Shallow writes.

    Shallow returned to “Survivor” again in 2020 because she and now-ex-husband John Fincher needed the money. Suffering from postpartum anxiety and struggling with her marriage, she writes that she knew returning to the show “would take whatever was left” of her. Later that year, her brother died of a drug overdose at age 26. They held his memorial over Zoom, which she said made her feel “numb.”

    Parvati Shallow felt ‘alone’ in marriage to ‘Survivor’ alum John Fincher

    Shallow married fellow “Survivor” alum Fincher in 2017 and had daughter, Ama, in 2018. She filed for divorce in 2021. 

    In “Nice Girls Don’t Win,” Shallow writes that she felt “alone inside (her) marriage” and that the end of her marriage felt like she “was being held against (her) will inside an agreement or contract that was too tight and there was no room for renegotiation.” She alleges Fincher only wanted her as a trophy wife and abandoned her on trips shortly after Ama was born. 

    Shallow and Fincher’s marriage began to crumble further after she started exchanging flirtatious messages with another man on Instagram. After Fincher found the messages, they tried to repair their marriage, but Shallow still found herself sliding toward divorce. Then her brother died, and Shallow asked Fincher to financially support the family while she grieved, but she alleges he didn’t follow through on his promise. It was her breaking point.

    Then Fincher got diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer. Shallow shifted her priorities to focus on his care and support. Five months after his diagnosis, she proceeded with the divorce but still felt a “wifely duty to help him through his cancer treatment.”

    “I knew then that staying in my marriage would mean letting a part of myself die – the part of me that longed for real, honest love and partnership,” she writes.

    ‘Traitors’ helped Parvati Shallow reclaim the word ‘villain’

    Shallow appeared on Season 2 of “Traitors,” during which she was in the process of a radical self-love and acceptance to reclaim the word “villain.” At the time she was teaching an online course called “How Villains Are Made” and working on her confidence. She was also in a relationship with comedian Mae Martin, who she says was supportive and transformed her outlook on love and gender. Shallow came out as queer in an Instagram post in December 2023.

    On Alan Cumming’s reality show, Shallow started as a “Faithful” but was quickly recruited to be a “Traitor.” Because of the therapy and personal work she’d done, it was more difficult to lie without internalizing the shame and guilt that she was “being bad.” But eventually, she was able to lean into playing the part – Shallow says she saw “Traitors” as just a game, her decisions and lying not inextricably linked to her core personality like she did on “Survivor.” 

    Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY’s Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you’re reading at cmulroy@usatoday.com


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  • Lady Violet Manners Wore the Rutland Family Tiara to Marry Viscount William Garnock at Belvoir Castle

    Lady Violet Manners Wore the Rutland Family Tiara to Marry Viscount William Garnock at Belvoir Castle

    Lady Violet Manners and Viscount William Garnock met on December 30, 2023, at William’s family home of Kirkcaldy in Scotland. Violet didn’t know him, but she did know William’s sister Charlotte and brother-in-law Jamie. The married couple, known as the Duke and Duchess of Noto, extended her an invitation to a New Year’s party at Garnock’s Fife estate. Unbeknownst to Violet, they had a secret agenda: to set her up with William, an eligible yet perennial bachelor. (William, well, was in on it: “I have to admit I knew exactly who she was,” he tells Vogue.)

    Their master plan worked. Violet and William sat next to each other at dinner, where they discovered a litany of things in common: they’d both lived in Los Angeles and India, for example, and had founded their own companies. (Violet is the founder of HeritageXplore, an online platform that allows users to book tours of some of Britain’s most historic homes, whereas William founded Feragaia, a non-alcoholic spirits company.) “It did—as cheesy as it sounds—feel like we’d met, spoken, and known each other for a long time. Lots of teasing and jibbing, which I secretly always enjoy. William made me laugh pretty instantly,” Violet says. Throughout the night, she tried to repress the same thought: “I’m going to marry this man.” Little did she know William was having the exact feeling. “I fell in love with her that first night,” he says.

    What followed next can only be described as a whirlwind romance. After six months of long distance dating—William, at the time, lived in Texas—he asked Violet’s father for her hand in marriage. “I never, in my wildest dreams, thought I would meet the man I was going to marry and be engaged to him within six months. I thought that was just for the movies—and to some degree, I still do. But from the moment I met William, I knew,” Violet says of their fast-moving timeline. He proposed over the July 4 holiday amid the Rockies while the couple was offroading near Jefferson, Colorado.

    On June 21, 2025, the couple wed at Violet’s family home of Belvoir Castle in Bottesford, England. Event planner Peter Laird, as well as the staff at Belvoir, orchestrated the grand event.

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