Category: 5. Entertainment

  • Harrison Ford shares secret to his marriage to Calista Flockhart

    Harrison Ford shares secret to his marriage to Calista Flockhart

    Harrison Ford reveals secret to his 15-year marriage

    Harrison Ford is getting candid about the key to his lasting marriage to Calista Flockhart.

    The Indiana Jones star, who celebrated 15 years of marriage with Calista in June, shared his thoughts during a recent appearance on NPR’s Wild Card with Rachel Martin.

    “Old people can love, too,” the 82-year-old actor joked with the host. “You know, you think about falling in love and all of that business.”

    “You think it’s the business of youth or something, you know, and staying in love is the issue. Maintaining, nurturing, basically, not f****** up,” Ford continued.

    The Shrinking star added that while relationships require effort, he takes a lighthearted approach. “With some days off for bad behavior,” he quipped.

    The actor and Flockhart, 60, first met at the Golden Globe Awards in 2002 and began dating soon after. Ford later proposed over Valentine’s Day weekend, and the couple married in New Mexico in 2010.

    Looking back on his past, Ford admitted he first married too young. “I was married at 23, which should be illegal,” he said. He was previously married to Mary Marquardt from 1964 to 1979, and later to screenwriter Melissa Mathison from 1983 until their divorce in 2004.

    The 1923 star is also dad to sons Benjamin, 58, and Willard, 56, whom he shares with Marquardt, along with son Malcolm, 37, and daughter Georgia, 35, whom he welcomed with Mathison.

    He began dating Flockhart after meeting at the 59th Golden Globe Awards in 2002. The following year, Ford declared, “I’m in love,” in an interview with Hello! magazine.

    Ford then adopted Flockhart’s son, Liam, whom she welcomed via adoption in 2001, as the couple married in 2010.


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  • Indiana Math Teacher Performs Viral Cover of Drake’s ‘Nokia’ in Class

    Indiana Math Teacher Performs Viral Cover of Drake’s ‘Nokia’ in Class

    Drake’s music cracks pockets of society he probably didn’t think were possible. Indiana math teacher Natalie Kaczmarski, or Miss Kacz, went viral on TikTok for her academic-themed cover of Drake’s “Nokia.”

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    “Who’s ready for class?” she raps in Drake’s cadence, ad libs included. “Is it geometry, is it honors, is it algebra, is it math lab, is it SRT. Who’s awake to function?”

    She then goes into how good she is at teaching math and her ban on ChatGPT and using cell phones in class. “You want some good grades, then lock in some,” she concludes in her cover.

    The video has more than 135,000 likes on TikTok and mixed reviews in the comments. “No but fr deep down we know even tho it’s a bit cringe it takes a teacher that cares enough to try and relate to our interests no im not a teacher in disguise this is coming from,” one person wrote.

    Another chimed in coming to her defense: “Nah she’s cooking why y’all hating?”

    “Nokia” landed on Drake and PARTYNEXTDOOR’s $ome $exy $ongs 4 U project in February, and went on to reach No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    According to Complex, Miss Kacz has been covering Drake songs since 2019, while performing tracks like “Rich Baby Daddy.”

    After one of her videos went viral, she joined Good Morning America in 2024, where she explained the inspiration behind her covers.

    “I just kind of wanted them to think, like OK, she’s this cool quirky lady,” she said. “I absolutely love my job and I think the best way to have an impact on students is to show them that you care, they feel comfortable in your room, and they can relate to you. So if I want to be an effective math teacher, I want them to at first feel comfortable in my room and think that they can relate to me.”

    Watch the clip of Miss Kacz performing her version of “Nokia” below.


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  • Megan Thee Stallion’s Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    Megan Thee Stallion’s Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

    Megan Thee Stallion is and has always been an anime fan.

    From whipping up creative cosplays of characters such as Satoru Gojo and Bruno Bucciarati, to bingeing the best of the best series out right now, Megan has been very vocal about her love of the Japanese animated genre over the years. The musician has even referenced some of her favorite anime series in some of her music videos and songs in tracks such as “Hiss” or “Otaku Hot Girl.”

    As if all that wasn’t enough, in a 2020 interview with GQ, the rapper spoke on her love of anime in a video titled 10 Things Megan Thee Stallion Can’t Live Without. “I literally begin my day watching anime and I end my day watching anime,” the rapper began. “When I’m doing my makeup, I’ll have it playing in the background, and then before I go to sleep at night, it’s what I fall asleep to.”

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    To further prove her devotion to the genre during her GQ interview, Megan divulged some of her recent watches while showing off a manicure inspired by the anime Blue Exorcist.

    If you’re interested in anime but don’t know where to start, why not take your cues from Megan? In honor of the “otaku hottie” herself, we’ve rounded up some of the rapper’s favorite anime series that you can stream right now on Hulu, Apple TV, Crunchyroll and Amazon’s Prime Video. We’re talking big names such as Attack on Titan and My Hero Academia, along with throwbacks including Hunter x Hunter and Inuyasha.

    Megan Thee Stallion's Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    Shonen/action/adventure

    ‘My Hero Academia’

    An anime adapted from a manga of the same name by Kōhei Horikoshi.

    You know it, you love it, it’s My Hero Academia. If you don’t know about this anime, it was released in the U.S. back in 2018 and became a hit from the jump. The animated series is set in a world where everyone is given “quirks” when they’re born. Some of these people will use said quirks to become superheroes.

    The story’s protagonist, Izuku Midoriya, aspires to be a hero too, but here’s the catch: He doesn’t have a quirk. You can stream this anime on Hulu, Apple TV, and Prime Video, all with a subscription. You can stream on Crunchyroll without a subscription, but you’ll have to watch ads. The show currently has seven seasons and is ongoing. The last season, season eight, is set to release in October. The anime can be streamed English-dubbed or with English subtitles.

    Megan has shared her love for the series a number of times. Back in 2019, the musician graced the cover of Paper Magazine cosplaying Todoroki, a character with a fire and ice quirk, from the series. Then in 2022, Megan shared another cosplay on her Instagram, this time of Mirko, whose quirk grants her the physical attributes and abilities of a rabbit.

    Megan Thee Stallion's Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    shonen/dark fantasy

    ‘Attack on Titan’

    An anime based on a manga of the same name by Hajime Isayama.

    Attack on Titan is another widely beloved anime that took the U.S. by storm with its launch in 2014. The series has four seasons that can be streamed on Hulu, Prime Video and Apple TV with a subscription. You can stream on Crunchyroll without a subscription, but you’ll have to watch ads. Lucky for late adopters, the show ended back in 2023, so you can stream the show in its entirety right now. The anime can be streamed with English subtitles and an English dub.

    The show is set in an apocalyptic world where humans are forced to live in walled-off cities to protect them from human-eating Titans. The anime centers around Eren Yeager, who vows to take down the Titans after one destroys his home and kills his mother. Megan showed her love for the series in her 2024 track “Wanna Be” with GloRilla by referencing the show’s Female Titan.

    Megan Thee Stallion's Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    battle shonen

    ‘Hunter × Hunter’

    An anime based off of a manga of the same name by Yoshihiro Togashi.

    Hunter x Hunter is a classic anime. The series was released in 2011 and features six seasons. The series aired until 2014. The 1998 manga that the anime was based on is still ongoing as of 2024. You can stream the 2011 anime adaptation on Apple TV and Hulu with a subscription. You can stream on Crunchyroll without a subscription, but you’ll have to watch ads.

    Quickly summarizing the story is borderline impossible. However, to put it simply, the anime is all about Hunters. These Hunters are licensed members of society who get licensed by passing the rigorous Hunter’s Examination. The anime’s protagonist Gon Freecss dreams of becoming a Hunter like his estranged father. The “Mamushi” rapper has openly spoken about her polarizing love of villain Hisoka, a character that is widely disliked in the fandom. Despite this, Megan rides for him.

    Megan Thee Stallion's Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    shonen/action/dark fantasy/supernatural

    ‘Jujutsu Kaisen’

    An anime based on a manga of the same name by Gege Akutami.

    Jujutsu Kaisen exploded onto the anime scene back in 2020, garnering widespread love for its unique animation style and striking cast of characters. The show is based on a manga of the same name by Gege Akutami that began serialization in 2018. As of now, there are two available seasons that you can stream on Prime Video, Apple TV and Hulu in English dubbed or with English subtitles. You can stream on Crunchyroll without a subscription, but you’ll have to watch ads.

    The third season is set to release in 2026. The show centers around Yuji Itadori, a high schooler who swallows a cursed object, a finger from the dangerous sorcerer Ryomen Sukuna, giving him access to powers. Yuji has to find a way to control Sukuna and free himself from the curse he’s under through an excoriation while training to become a Jujutsu sorcerer.

    Megan’s track “Otaku Hot Girl” on her 2024 album MEGAN features a sample from the Jujutsu Kaisen soundtrack along with a voice line from voice actor Adam McAurthur, who plays Yuji in the anime’s English dub. Also in 2024, Megan posted a cosplay of one of the anime’s main characters, Satoru Gojo, to her Instagram.

    Megan Thee Stallion's Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    shonen/seinen

    ‘JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure’

    An anime based on a manga of the same name by Hirohiko Araki.

    JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure is extremely popular, and it’s easy to see why. The story is beyond wacky and engaging, while the art and animation styles are unlike anything the anime world has seen before. The anime is still ongoing and was released back in 2012 and is based on a manga of the same name by Hirohiko Araki.

    You can stream JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure right now in English dubbed or with English subtitles via Apple TV, Prime Video and Hulu with a subscription. You can stream on Crunchyroll without a subscription, but you’ll have to watch ads. As of 2025, there are six seasons of the anime available. The seventh season, titled “Steel Ball Run,” is currently in production. Both the anime and manga are situated into parts, like an anthology, with different characters and plots that all interlock in one way or another.

    The key unifier in every story is the Joestar bloodline stemming from the series’ first-ever protagonist, Jonathan Joestar. Every main character is a part of the Joestar lineage, signified by a star-shaped birthmark. Although the plot is much too complicated to explain properly, all you need to know is that all the characters in the series have powers of some kind, whether that be with fighting ghosts called Stands, featured in the later seasons, or through a fighting technique called Hamon in the first two seasons.

    As for Megan’s love of the anime, well, it goes pretty deep. While in attendance at the Crunchyroll Anime Awards 2024, the rapper paid homage to one of the series’ main characters, Bruno Bucciarati, by cosplaying as the character on the red carpet. Megan has also cosplayed Jolyne Cujoh and Trish Una from the series.

    Megan Thee Stallion's Favorite Animes: How to Stream Them

    Shonen/fantasy

    ‘Inuyasha’

    An anime based on a manga of the same name by Rumiko Takahashi.

    Inuyasha might be one of the oldest entries on this list, but it’s still just as popular as the rest. The anime first aired back in the 2000s and ran until 2004. The series is comprised of seven seasons that can be streamed in English dubbed or with English subtitles on Hulu and Prime Video with a subscription. You can stream on Crunchyroll without a subscription, but you’ll have to watch ads.

    The anime centers around Kagome Higurashi, a modern-day schoolgirl who is transported back in time to feudal Japan. Kagome discovers that she is the reincarnation of the priestess Kikyo and accidentally summons a half-demon named Inuyasha. The pair then embarks on a journey to find the scattered fragments of the Shikon Jewel, which is a powerful jewel that can grant immense power.

    In an interview with Polygon back in 2024, Megan spoke about the definitive “hot girl” in anime. Her answer? Inuyasha’s main protagonist Kagome. “She got all the boys fighting over her; she’s running around with her jewelry around her neck trying to put it all back together, and she just always comes out on top,” Megan told Polygon. “Also, she has good hair. That’s important.”


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  • Columbia, Universal Studio Chief Was 95

    Columbia, Universal Studio Chief Was 95

    Frank Price, the writer-producer who emerged from the world of TV Westerns to preside over the television and movie divisions at Universal and serve two terms as the head of Columbia Pictures, died Monday. He was 95.

    Price died in his sleep of natural causes at his home in Santa Monica, his son Roy Price, the former president of Amazon Studios, told The Hollywood Reporter.

    As a movie boss, Frank Price had a hand in such critical successes as the Oscar best picture winners Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), Gandhi (1982) and Out of Africa (1985) and huge money-makers including Tootsie (1982), Ghostbusters (1984), The Karate Kid (1984), Back to the Future (1985), Boyz n the Hood (1991) and A League of Their Own (1992).

    Earlier, Price had spent nearly two decades as a writer, producer and then head of Universal Television. His idea put The Virginian — one of TV’s longest-running Westerns — in motion, and he executive produced Ironside and It Takes a Thief. He also greenlighted Kojak, The Six Million Dollar Man and Battlestar Galactica and helped develop provocative made-for-TV movies and miniseries like That Certain Summer and Rich Man, Poor Man, respectively.

    Price spent a formative TV season learning from Roy Huggins — the creator of such series as Maverick, 77 Sunset Strip, The Fugitive and The Rockford Files — while working alongside him on The Virginian. Price then married Huggins’ daughter, actress Katherine Crawford, in 1965. She also survives him.

    Price, in fact, was one of the few Hollywood executives to come from a writing background. His philosophy was to pay top talent big bucks to ensure box-office success, a philosophy that confounded many of his peers.

    In the early 1980s, Price realized that making a three-hour period piece about Mahatma Gandhi would be a risky proposition. “Nobody under 40 would know who he was, which was true,” he told Josephine Reed in a 2013 interview for the National Endowment for the Arts podcast Art Works. “And I was given the other line, which was, ‘Nobody’s going to care about a little brown man wandering around in a diaper.’ But we did undertake it.”

    Price held up the release of Gandhi to build interest in its subject — he noted that Columbia got “six major articles out of [The New York Times] over the next year on various aspects of India, Gandhi and so on.” The film, produced and directed by Richard Attenborough and starring Ben Kingsley, went on to capture eight Oscars.

    Ghostbusters, meanwhile, cost $25 million to make and raked in $295.2 worldwide ($745.2 million today). “I’d had hits before, but [with] Ghostbusters, I was reminded of the movie Boom Town when they hit the gusher,” Price told Vanity Fair in 2014. “Oil is just raining down: they’re rolling in it. That’s what it felt like with Ghostbusters.”

    Not every decision worked out, of course; Price infamously put Steven Spielberg‘s E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) in turnaround at Columbia because he thought the $10 million budget was too pricy.

    Born on May 17, 1930, in Decatur, Illinois, Price spent some of his early years on the Warner Bros. lot, where his mother was a waitress in the commissary. When he was a teenager, he and his family moved to Flint, Mich., and he was editor of the Central High School newspaper and president of the drama club. He also served as a copy boy at The Flint Journal.

    After a year in the U.S. Navy, Price attended Michigan State and then moved to New York — not back to Los Angeles — to continue his studies at Columbia University.

    “The whole experience of being around Warner Bros. drove me away from it, because it loomed too large. That was unreal,” he said. “The people on the screen were, you know, 30 feet high or whatever. I understood actors on a stage; that made sense to me.”

    Price searched for a newspaper job but couldn’t land one, but he did get hired as a clerk in the story department at CBS Television — because he was an excellent typist — in 1951.

    “One of the key things that was done in that department was reading, looking for story material,” he recalled. “I said, ‘Well, I can do that.’ So I moved from clerk/typist/receptionist to reader. And that was very good, because I started writing out of that.”

    Price sold a story for an early live TV show, Casey, Crime Photographer, then wrote and produced for NBC’s Matinee Theatre, a whirlwind 60-minute live drama that aired five days a week out of Burbank, starting in 1955.

    After working as a story editor and analyst for Columbia’s TV subsidiary, Screen Gems, Price moved to MCA’s Universal Television in 1959 as a writer and producer. He worked on several Westerns, including Overland Trail, starring William Bendix, and The Tall Man, featuring tales of Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid.

    When NBC lost the popular Wagon Train to ABC in 1962, MCA sought to create another Western that the network could run. Price recommended that Owen Wister’s 1902 novel The Virginian — which was in the public domain — serve as the basis for the series. (The book also had been adapted for a 1929 movie starring Gary Cooper.)

    NBC wanted a name producer for the show and brought in Huggins, who was working on his doctorate in political science at UCLA after creating Maverick and 77 Sunset Strip for Warner Bros. Television.

    “Roy was offered the role of executive producer on it and said he would take it if I worked with him,” Price said in the Art Works interview. “So what happened was he went to school all day, and I would run the show. Roy would come in about 5 o’clock and I would then work until about 2 o’clock in the morning with him. So we had a long day.”

    Set in the late 1890s in Medicine Bow, Wyoming, The Virginian starred James Drury and Doug McClure and was television’s first 90-minute Western.

    “I felt that I was a ranch owner in Wyoming because I immersed myself in it and I loved telling the stories,” he said. “It was a wonderful form.”

    In that first season, Price cast Bette Davis in an episode shortly after she had taken out an ad in The Hollywood Reporter as an actress seeking work. “In subsequent interviews, she referred to it as shit, as I recall,” Price said in the 2006 book, A History of Television’s The Virginian, 1962-1971. “No good deed ever goes unpunished.”

    Price took over for Huggins as exec producer starting with The Virginian‘s second season and stayed with the series through 1967. It ran nine seasons, until March 1971.

    At his father-in-law’s eulogy in 2002, Price said his time with Huggins on The Virginian proved invaluable. “Those few months turned out to be incredibly important to me,” he said. “He made it clear that his goal was to please the top 10 percent of the audience — the thinking, critical 10 percent.”

    In 1973, Price was named head of Universal Television and soon was pushing the envelope with such telefilms as That Certain Summer, with Hal Holbrook and Martin Sheen playing a gay couple, and A Case of Rape, starring Elizabeth Montgomery. He also supervised the start of NBC’s 12-episode, 26-hour Centennial, based on the James Michener novel.

    “I was running the biggest, most successful television operation that had ever existed,” he said. “I built it to where we had one-third of all network programming, back when there were just the three networks. But then HBO suddenly came into being. I looked at that and said, ‘Whoops, television is going to change radically, that’s going to start taking away the audience.’ Where should I be? Because I don’t want to ride this down.”

    So Price resigned and joined Columbia in June 1978, stepping in for the scandal-plagued David Begelman. He became president of the motion picture division in March 1979 and subsequently was named chairman and CEO. He was known around town as “The $10 Million Man” for his contract.

    “The idea that I had Harry Cohn’s job was a real kick,” Price, talking about the legendary Columbia mogul, told the Los Angeles Times in 1994. “Though there was certainly some ego-stroking, the best part of the job was the ability to buy the best — directors, scripts, talent. The worst was spending your day saying no, telling people you don’t share their dreams. You’re making subjective decisions in a very amorphous realm and have to wait 18 to 24 months before you know if you guessed right.”

    During his first stint atop Columbia, he oversaw Brooke Shields‘ The Blue Lagoon (1980), made for just $4 million; Stir Crazy (1980), starring Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor; Ivan Reitman’s Stripes (1981), starring Bill Murray; and the Dustin Hoffman-starrer Tootsie, which grossed $177.2 million ($433.4 million in today’s dollars).

    After Columbia was purchased by Coca-Cola in January 1982 for $750 million, Price got mired in a power struggle with Fay Vincent, chairman of Columbia Pictures Industries (and future commissioner of Major League Baseball), and resigned in October 1983.

    “It’s hard for someone like Price to confront the fact that Tootsie doesn’t make up for six bad films,” Vincent said in Hit and Run, the 1996 book written by Nancy Griffin and THR‘s Kim Masters.

    A month later, Price was back at MCA as chairman of Universal’s motion picture group. He went on to greenlight, in addition to Back to the Future and seven-time Oscar winner Out of Africa, such films as Fletch and John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club, both released in 1985.

    In September 1986, a few weeks after Universal released the legendary misfire Howard the Duck, Price exited again. Three years later, Sony acquired Columbia for $3.4 billion, and newly installed film executives Jon Peters and Peter Guber named Price to replace Dawn Steel to head Columbia in 1990.

    One of his biggest triumphs this time around was giving the go-ahead to 1991’s Boyz in the Hood and allowing John Singleton to direct the movie from his own screenplay. At age 24, Singleton became the first African-American — and the youngest person — to be nominated for best director.

    “I decided that even though he was inexperienced, a thing I’ve always believed with writers is, they’ve already directed it once,” Price explained. “If you’ve written the script, you have directed it.”

    In October 1991, Mark Canton was brought in to replace Price, who left with a production deal and 25 projects that he had in development at Columbia. He then launched Price Entertainment, the company behind Shadowlands (1993), A Bronx Tale (1993), Circle of Friends (1995), Paul Mazursky‘s troubled Faithful (1996) and HBO’s The Tuskegee Airmen (1995).

    Price served as chairman of the board of councilors at the USC School of Cinematic Arts from its inception in 1992 until 2021. And after being nominated by President George W. Bush, he was a member of the National Council on the Arts from 2007-13.

    Survivors include his two other sons, David and Will, and 14 grandchildren. Two other sons, Michael and Stephen, predeceased him.

    Duane Byrge contributed to this report.

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  • Venice sets stage for star power and big premieres

    Venice sets stage for star power and big premieres


    VENICE:

    The world’s oldest film festival lifts its curtain this Wednesday (tomorrow), welcoming Hollywood royalty Julia Roberts and George Clooney to the red carpet as the Venice Film Festival launches its 82nd edition on the sandy Lido.

    Arriving by water taxi in true Venetian fashion, a parade of A-listers – from Jude Law to Emma Stone – is set to electrify the opening days, drawing crowds of fans eager for a glimpse of their favourite stars.

    The festival, a cornerstone of the international film circuit, offers a rich blend of cinema this year: sprawling blockbusters, auteur-driven art films, and hard-hitting documentaries. Among the acclaimed directors returning to Venice are Werner Herzog, Jim Jarmusch, Kathryn Bigelow, Gus Van Sant, and South Korea’s Park Chan-wook, marking his first appearance at the festival in two decades.

    One of the splashiest entries is Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine, in which Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson portrays an ageing wrestler in a gritty drama co-starring Emily Blunt.

    Roberts, making her Venice debut, stars in Luca Guadagnino’s After the Hunt, a drama revolving around a sexual assault case at an elite American university. The film screens out of competition.

    Clooney, meanwhile, returns to the festival with Jay Kelly, a Netflix-backed comedy directed by Noah Baumbach. Clooney plays a beloved actor confronting an identity crisis, with Adam Sandler as his manager.

    Other much-anticipated titles include Olivier Assayas’s The Wizard of the Kremlin, with Jude Law portraying a young Vladimir Putin; Guillermo del Toro’s lavish reimagining of Frankenstein, starring Oscar Isaac; Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia, a reunion with Emma Stone following their Oscar-winning collaboration Poor Things; and Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite, a political thriller starring Idris Elba.

    Also competing is Jim Jarmusch with Father, Mother, Sister, Brother, a melancholic comedy led by Cate Blanchett and Adam Driver. Italy’s Gianfranco Rosi contributes Sotto le Nuvole (Below the Clouds), a black-and-white meditation on Naples.

    Beyond the main competition, several high-profile documentaries will screen out of competition. Sofia Coppola presents an intimate portrait of her long-time friend, designer Marc Jacobs; Laura Poitras turns her lens on investigative journalist Seymour Hersh; and British filmmakers Jane Pollard and Iain Forsyth profile the late singer Marianne Faithfull.

    Audiences can also expect Herzog’s Ghost Elephants, about a mythical herd in Angola, and Shu Qi’s Nuhai (Girl), a Taiwanese generational drama marking her directorial debut.

    While the festival briefly touches on geopolitics with Kaouther Ben Hania’s The Voice of Hind Rajab, which explores the human toll of the Gaza conflict, Venice’s main focus remains firmly on the art of cinema.

    Golden Lion

    The Golden Lion, Venice’s top prize, will be awarded on September 6. This year’s jury is led by Alexander Payne, the two-time Oscar-winning director of Sideways. Twenty-one films are in contention, including works from Assayas, Bigelow, del Toro, Lanthimos, and Sorrentino.

    Venice regular Paolo Sorrentino opens the festival with La Grazia, a love story set in Italy and starring his frequent collaborator Toni Servillo. Meanwhile, French director Francois Ozon adapts Albert Camus’s The Stranger, and Gus Van Sant returns with Dead Man’s Wire, based on a real-life hostage crisis.

    Over the years, Venice has cemented itself as an Oscar launchpad. Films like Nomadland, Joker, and Poor Things all began their journeys here before conquering Hollywood’s biggest stage. Streaming giants Netflix and Amazon, too, increasingly rely on Venice for their worldwide premieres.

    This year, Netflix fields three heavyweight contenders – Frankenstein, A House of Dynamite, and Jay Kelly – underscoring the platform’s ambition to finally clinch an Academy Award for Best Picture.

    The 82nd edition of the Venice Film Festival promises glamour, debate, and fierce competition, blending the world’s most celebrated talent with bold new voices – all under the spell of cinema’s most romantic setting.

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  • Pedro Pascal praises ‘Andor’ as best Star Wars franchise

    Pedro Pascal praises ‘Andor’ as best Star Wars franchise

    Pedro Pascal has joined the chorus of praise for Andor, calling the Star Wars series “the best political thriller series maybe ever?”

    The actor, who will reprise his role as Din Djarin in The Mandalorian & Grogu next year, admitted on Instagram that he was “unforgivably late to this party” but deeply impressed by the show (via Reddit).

    Pascal’s praise follows similar acclaim from Game of Thrones creator George RR Martin, who called Andor “this year’s highlight.” Martin applauded the series’ “realism and tension,” noting that such qualities were “sadly lacking” in most recent Star Wars projects.

    Since its second season, Andor has grown into one of the franchise’s most critically acclaimed entries, with viewership rising nearly 50% during its run. The show has also become the highest-rated live-action Star Wars project on Rotten Tomatoes, underscoring its success with both fans and critics.

    At the 2024 Emmy Awards, Andor secured 14 nominations, the third-highest for a Star Wars show after the first two seasons of The Mandalorian. However, fans were surprised when lead star Diego Luna and Genevieve O’Reilly were overlooked in acting categories.

    Showrunner Tony Gilroy downplayed the snubs, emphasising that their “epic, long-term character studies” across 24 episodes will be “celebrated and discussed for years to come.”

    With widespread acclaim and strong audience engagement, Andor has secured its place as one of the standout Star Wars stories. Meanwhile, Pascal is set to return to the galaxy far, far away with The Mandalorian & Grogu, slated for release in 2026, while Ahsoka season 2 is also expected next year.

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  • Julianne Moore shares biggest wedding day regret

    Julianne Moore shares biggest wedding day regret



    Julianne Moore shares her biggest wedding day regret

    Julianne Moore marked her 22 years of togetherness with husband Bart Freundlich on August 23.

    While reminiscing the memorable day, the May December actress revealed that she still thinks about her wedding dress choice for the day.

    She took to her Instagram and uploaded a post of unseen images from hr big day.

    Moore at her wedding which took place in 2003, instead of wearing the traditional white gown on her big day she donned a lavender frock.

    “Happy anniversary baby,” she began. “22 years later and I still don’t know why the theme was purple [purple heart].”

    Moore uploaded a snap of a cut out of a newspaper featuring her and her husband along with their two kids, heading for their wedding ceremony.

    In the photos she is seen carrying her now 23-year-old daughter Liv while Freundlich is scooting over now 27-year-old son Caleb.

    Moore and Freundlich have been together since 1996, when they met on the set of The Myth of Fingerprints.

    The family of four resides in New York maintaining a strong supportive familial bond over the years.

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  • Taylor Swift Inspires Rachel Platten to Re-Record ‘Fight Song’

    Taylor Swift Inspires Rachel Platten to Re-Record ‘Fight Song’

    Welcome to the Music Industry (Taylor’s Version). On Monday (Aug. 25), Rachel Platten announced that she’s taking a page out of Taylor Swift‘s book by re-recording some of her biggest hits — including 2015’s Billboard Hot 100 smash “Fight Song” — in an effort to reclaim her voice, just like the pop superstar did.

    Sharing her new project’s black-and-white cover art with the title Fight Song (Rachel’s Version), the New York native revealed in her caption that she will release a collection of new takes on a handful of her older songs on Sept. 26. The LP will also feature some live recordings, plus a “surprise from the vault” — much like Swift’s Taylor’s Version releases, each of which included previously unreleased “Vault” songs that had been scrapped from their respective albums’ original tracklists.

    “As we celebrate the 10-year anniversary of Fight Song, I had no idea when I wrote these songs in moments of vulnerability that they would go on to change my life,” Platten wrote in her caption. “For a decade, they’ve lived out in the world, carrying their own weight. They’ve been parts of your moments of strength, doubt, and connection.”

    “I’ve gone back to some of my originals, not to change them, but to reclaim them,” she continued. “This is about more than just new versions of old songs; the new Rachel’s Versions are infused with the voice I have now, the wisdom I’ve gained, and the undeniable pride of owning my own masters. I’m grateful to @TaylorSwift for bringing this conversation to light and empowering artists to take back control over their work, their stories, and their futures.”

    Released in 2015 via Columbia Records, “Fight Song” spent months climbing the charts before peaking at No. 6 on the Hot 100 that August. One person who was definitely a fan of the track just so happened to be Swift, who brought Platten out onstage with her to sing it for thousands of fans at a 1989 World Tour show in Philadelphia more than a decade ago.

    “Fight Song” has since become one of the world’s best-known anthems for perseverance in the face of hardship, serving as Hillary Clinton’s campaign song the year after it was released. It would find a home in 2016 on Platten’s album Wildfire, which reached No. 5 on the Billboard 200.

    And while Platten is just starting out on her journey to take back ownership of her life’s work, Swift recently reached the culmination of hers. In a move that wrapped up six-plus years of oftentimes tense negotiations between the 14-time Grammy winner, Scooter Braun and Shamrock Capital — during which time she re-recorded four of her first six albums, bringing discussions about artist rights and fair recording contracts into the general public’s consciousness — Swift was finally able to purchase the rights to her back catalog earlier this year.

    “To say this is my greatest dream come true is actually being pretty reserved about it,” Swift wrote in a letter on her website announcing the deal in May. “I’m extremely heartened by the conversations this saga has reignited within my industry among artists and fans. Every time a new artist tells me they negotiated to own their master recordings in their record contract because of this fight, I’m reminded of how important it was for all of this to happen.”

    See Platten’s post below.

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  • Sophie Turner reveals how social media almost destroyed her mental health

    Sophie Turner reveals how social media almost destroyed her mental health



    Sophie Turner gets candid about influence of social media

    Sophie Turner is getting candid about the influence social media has had on her in recent years, revealing how it almost destroyed her in the process.

    The actress, widely known for her role in Game of Thrones, opened up to FLAUNT Magazine about how social media proved to be damaging to her health after she was thrust into the spotlight following her breakout role in the HBO series.

    She told the outlet how she ended up suffering from depression and anxiety at an early age.

    Sophie highlighted, “I think social media was just really becoming a big thing after I started on Game of Thrones, so I got a couple of years of peace and quiet, and then I had to adjust. It had such a profound impact on my mental health, more than I could tell you. It almost destroyed me on numerous occasions.”

    In addition, she explained how she suffered from a severe eating disorder in the years that followed, stemming from unwanted social media attention.

    Despite all that she went through, Sophie is grateful for being saved by therapy afterward.

    For those who aren’t aware, the actress was photographed by Nick Thompson for the cover interview, wearing Louis Vuitton and Bulgari for the shoot.

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  • Bea and Her Business to Showcase Three Rising Artists on Australian Tour

    MELBOURNE (TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2025) – Secret Sounds is thrilled to announce the incredible line-up of supports joining rising UK popstar, Bea and her Business, for her debut headline shows in Australia this September/October.

    In Sydney, Bea will be joined by the soaring pop stylings of Carla Wehbe alongside New Zealand singer-songwriter MACEY, while the Melbourne show will feature Carla Wehbe again, this time with New Zealand’s own Harper Finn. Each act brings a unique flair to the stage, making these headline shows an unmissable celebration of fresh pop talent across both sides of the Tasman.

    Bea and her Business arrives in Australia this September as support on The Wombats OH! The Ocean Australian Tour, as well as appearing at SummerSalt Festival alongside The Wombats, DMA’s, Ball Park Music and more. Her headline shows will take place on Tuesday 23 September at Howler, Melbourne and Thursday 2 October at Oxford Art Factory, Sydney.

    Tickets on sale now at secretsounds.com

    Bea 30-04-25 AUS-Healine-Shows 1x1 (8)

    BEA AND HER BUSINESS
    AUSTRALIAN TOUR DATES 2025

    TORQUAY COMMON, TORQUAY^
    SATURDAY 20 SEPTEMBER

     AEC THEATRE, ADELAIDE*
    SUNDAY 21 SEPTEMBER

     HOWLER, MELBOURNE – with Carla Wehbe and Harper Finn
    TUESDAY 23 SEPTEMBER

     FESTIVAL HALL, MELBOURNE*
    WEDNESDAY 24 SEPTEMBER

     RIVERSTAGE, BRISBANE*
    FRIDAY 26 SEPTEMBER

     THE STATION SC, BIRTINYA^
    SATURDAY 27 SEPTEMBER

    UOW UNIBAR, WOLLONGONG^
    SUNDAY 28 SEPTEMBER

    HORDERN PAVILION, SYDNEY*
    WEDNESDAY 01 OCTOBER

     OXFORD ART FACTORY, SYDNEY – with Carla Wehbe and MACEY
    THURSDAY 02 OCTOBER

     FREMANTLE PRISON, FREMANTLE^
    SATURDAY 04 OCTOBER

     TICKETS ON SALE NOW

    *Supporting The Wombats
    ^SummerSalt Festival 

    For complete tour & ticket information, visit: secretsounds.com

     

    ABOUT BEA AND HER BUSINESS
    Drawing upon personal experiences which resonate across her generation, Bea and her Business specialises in instantly captivating pop songs which exude charisma, girl-next-door charm, and the conversational wisdom of a best friend.

    Influenced by the likes of Lily Allen, Lana Del Rey, Marina and the Diamonds and Hayley Williams, it’s a skill which has set the self-taught London musician on the road to becoming the UK’s next international breakthrough star. Having released just two EPs – ‘Introverted Extrovert’ and ’Me Vs Me’ – songs such as ‘Born To Be Alive’ (a hit in Norway which saw her make her live debut in front of 100,000 people), ‘Never Love A Liar’ and ‘Safety Net’ are connecting with a huge global audience, leading to over 350 million views at TikTok and more than 100 million streams worldwide.

    That fandom is reflected IRL too. Bea recently sold-out her biggest headline London show to date at KOKO in front of an audience approximately five times the size of her debut Omeara show almost exactly a year before. The headline tour also saw similar scenes at shows across the UK and Europe plus her first live performances in New York and Los Angeles. A wealth of tastemakers are also backing Bea’s ascent. Accolades so far have included Amazon Music’s Breakthrough Artist, Instagram’s Next Generation Artist and being named as a Spotify UK EQUAL ambassador, whilst radio support continues with Bea playing a special performance at Radio 1’s ‘New Music’ live show with English Teacher and playlisting across Europe.

    ABOUT CARLA WEHBE
    You’ve never met an artist quite as exhilaratingly odd as Carla Wehbe. An elusive trait often misunderstood but highly prized in the music world; Wehbe’s is an unconventional uniqueness of vision that has become the hallmark of the likes of Bowie and Mercury. Oddness is a quest for a singular vision, even if that vision seems to have beamed in from another universe entirely. And few pursue it quite like Carla.

    ABOUT HARPER FINN
    Harper Finn arrives with his highly anticipated debut album Silo Park; a kaleidoscopic soundscape born from his time in New York City and a period of personal transformation. Produced by acclaimed musician Sam Evian (Big Thief, Cass McCombs) in upstate New York, the record blends raw introspection with expansive, organic instrumentation.

    From the haunting opener Man or Machine to the liberating single Doves and the psychedelic closer Silo Park, the album charts Harper’s journey of identity, solitude, and self-discovery against the backdrop of one of the world’s loudest cities. Following his Breakthrough Artist of the Year recognition in 2021 and the Gold-certified single Dance Away These Days, Harper has toured globally, including supporting Twenty One Pilots across South America. Silo Park marks his true arrival as a songwriter; introspective, unflinching, and ready to be heard.

    ABOUT MACEY
    Raised in a musical family, MACEY draws inspiration from a wide range of sounds; from classical to The Beatles to Green Day and My Chemical Romance. His music blends these influences into raw, heartfelt storytelling that captures the essence of the human experience. After making his mark in New Zealand and abroad, MACEY broke through in 2023 with his debut album THE LOVERS, debuting at #3 on the NZ Album Chart and #13 on the Official Top 40. His latest EP ‘how to say goodbye’ explores love, loss, and vulnerability, with honest songwriting and captivating vocals that invite listeners into his world.

     

    CONNECT WITH BEA AND HER BUSINESS

    WEBSITE | FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | X | YOUTUBE | TIKTOK | SPOTIFY 


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