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  • Razzies 2025: ‘Joker 2,’ ‘Madame Web’ And ‘Megalopolis’ Big ‘Winners’

    Razzies 2025: ‘Joker 2,’ ‘Madame Web’ And ‘Megalopolis’ Big ‘Winners’

    Joker: Folie à Deux, Madame Web and Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis were among the top films dishonored by the Golden Raspberry Foundation in its 45th Razzies announcement on Friday.

    The Sony Marvel flop Madame Web won the Razzie for Worst Picture, while its star Dakota Johnson was named Worst Actress. Jerry Seinfeld won the Worst Actor Razzie for the comedy Unfrosted, while Joker: Folie à Deux stars Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga were named Worst Screen Couple.

    Joker: Folie à Deux also won the Razzie for Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel.

    The awards, per a press release in January from the Razzies, were originally supposed to be revealed on Saturday. However, the Golden Raspberry Foundation moved the announcement to Friday, possibly to accommodate Coppola’s Instagram post to accept his Razzie award for Worst Director.

    In the post, Coppola wrote, “I am thrilled to accept the Razzie award in so many important categories for @megalopolisfilm, and for the distinctive honor of being nominated as the worst director, worst screenplay, and worst picture at a time when so few have the courage to go against the prevailing trends of contemporary moviemaking!

    Coppola expressed no regrets in making his self-funded Megalopolis, a sci-fi drama that was a flop at the box office. In fact, the Oscar-winning filmmaker behind such classics as The Godfather trilogy and Apocalypse Now chided Hollywood in his Razzie acceptance post for not taking risks.

    “In this wreck of a world today, where ART is given scores as if it were professional wrestling, I chose to NOT follow the gutless rules laid down by an industry so terrified of risk that despite the enormous pool of young talent at its disposal, may not create pictures that will be relevant and alive 50 years from now,” Coppola wrote.

    Pamela Anderson was also awarded the Razzie Redeemer award for her acclaimed SAG Award-nominated turn in The Last Showgirl.

    Per a press release from the Golden Raspberry Foundation, “Results were determined by emailing ballots to 1,217 Razzie Members (movie buffs, film critics and journalists) from 49 U.S. States and about two dozen foreign countries who chose the ‘winners’ in nine categories. The Redeemer award was decided by the Razzie Board of Governors.”

    See the full list of the 2025 Razzie nominees and “winners” below:

    Any Two Obnoxious Characters (But Especially Jack Black) – Borderlands

    Dennis Quaid & Penelope Ann Miller (as “Ronnie and Nancy”) in Reagan

  • David Johansen, singer from the seminal punk band the New York Dolls, dies at 75

    David Johansen, singer from the seminal punk band the New York Dolls, dies at 75

    NEW YORK – David Johansen, the wiry, gravelly-voiced singer and last surviving member of the glam and protopunk band the New York Dolls who later performed as his campy, pompadoured alter ego, Buster Poindexter, has died. He was 75.

    Johansen died Friday at his home in New York City, according to Rolling Stone, citing a family spokesperson. It was revealed in early 2025 that he had stage 4 cancer and a brain tumor.

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    The New York Dolls were forerunners of punk and the band’s style — teased hair, women’s clothes and lots of makeup — inspired the glam movement that took up residence in heavy metal a decade later in bands like Faster Pussycat and Mötley Crüe.

    “When you’re an artist, the main thing you want to do is inspire people, so if you succeed in doing that, it’s pretty gratifying,” Johansen told The Knoxville News-Sentinel in 2011.

    Rolling Stone once called the Dolls “the mutant children of the hydrogen age” and Vogue called them the “darlings of downtown style, tarted-up toughs in boas and heels.”

    “The New York Dolls were more than musicians; they were a phenomenon. They drew on old rock ‘n’ roll, big-city blues, show tunes, the Rolling Stones and girl groups, and that was just for starters,” Bill Bentley wrote in “Smithsonian Rock and Roll: Live and Unseen.”

    The band never found commercial success and was torn by internal strife and drug addictions, breaking up after two albums by the middle of the decade. In 2004, former Smiths frontman and Dolls admirer Morrissey convinced Johansen and other surviving members to regroup for the Meltdown Festival in England, leading to three more studio albums.

    In the ’80s, Johansen assumed the persona of Buster Poindexter, a pompadour-styled lounge lizard who had a hit with the kitschy party single “Hot, Hot, Hot” in 1987. He also appeared in such movies as “Candy Mountain,” “Let It Ride,” “Married to the Mob” and had a memorable turn as the Ghost of Christmas Past in Bill Murray-led hit “Scrooged.”

    Johansen was in 2023 the subject of Martin Scorsese and David Tedeschi’s documentary “Personality Crisis: One Night Only,” which mixed footage of his two-night stand at the Café Carlyle in January 2020 with flashbacks through his wildly varied career and intimate interviews.

    “I used to think about my voice like: ‘What’s it gonna sound like? What’s it going to be when I do this song?’ And I’d get myself into a knot about it,” Johansen told The Associated Press in 2023. “At some point in my life, I decided: ‘Just sing the (expletive) song. With whatever you got.’ To me, I go on stage and whatever mood I’m in, I just claw my way out of it, essentially.”

    David Roger Johansen was born to a large, working class Catholic family on Staten Island, his father an insurance salesman. He filled notebooks with poems and lyrics as a young man and liked a lot of different music — R&B, Cuban, Janis Joplin and Otis Redding.

    The Dolls — the final original lineup included guitarists Sylvain Sylvain and Johnny Thunders, bassist Arthur Kane and drummer Jerry Nolan — rubbed shoulders with Lou Reed and Andy Warhol in the Lower East Side of Manhattan the early 1970s.

    They took their name from a toy hospital in Manhattan and were expected to take over the throne vacated by the Velvet Underground in the early 1970s. But neither of their first two albums — 1973’s “New York Dolls,” produced by Todd Rundgren, nor “Too Much Too Soon” a year later produced by Shadow Morton — charted.

    “They’re definitely a band to keep both eyes and ears on,” read the review of their debut album in Rolling Stone, complementary of their “strange combination of high pop-star drag and ruthless street arrogance.”

    Their songs included “Personality Crisis” (“You got it while it was hot/But now frustration and heartache is what you got”), “Looking for a Kiss” (I need a fix and a kiss”) and a “Frankenstein” (Is it a crime/For you to fall in love with Frankenstein?”)

    Their glammed look was meant to embrace fans with a nonjudgmental, noncategorical space. “I just wanted to be very welcoming,” Johansen said in the documentary, “’cause the way this society is, it was set up very strict — straight, gay, vegetarian, whatever… I just kind of wanted to kind of like bring those walls down, have a party kind of thing.”

    Rolling Stone, reviewing their second album, called them “the best hard-rock band in America right now” and called Johansen a “talented showman, with an amazing ability to bring characters to life as a lyricist.”

    Decades later, the Dolls’ influence would be cherished. Rolling Stone would list their self-titled debut album at No. 301 of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, writing “it’s hard to imagine the Ramones or the Replacements or a thousand other trash-junky bands without them.”

    Blondie’s Chris Stein in the Nolan biography “Stranded in the Jungle” wrote that the Dolls were “opening a door for the rest of us to walk through.” Tommy Lee of Motley Crue called them early inspirations.

    “Johansen is one of those singers, to be a little paradoxical, who is technically better and more versatile than he sounds,” said the Los Angeles Times in 2023. “His voice has always been a bit of a foghorn — higher or lower according to age, habits and the song at hand — but it has a rare emotional urgency.

    The Dolls, representing rock at it’s most debauched, were divisive. In 1973, they won the Creem magazine poll categories as the year’s best and worst new group. They were nominated several times for The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame but never got in.

    “Dirty angels with painted faces, the Dolls opened the box usually reserved for Pandora and unleashed the infant furies that would grow to become Punk,” wrote Nina Antonia in the book “Too Much, Too Soon.” “As if this legacy wasn’t enough for one band, they also trashed sexual boundaries, savaged glitter and set new standards for rock ‘n’ roll excess.”

    By the end of their first run, the Dolls were being managed by legendary promoter Malcolm McLaren, who would later introduce the Sex Pistols to the Dolls’ music. Culture critic Greil Marcus in “Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the Twentieth Century” writes the Dolls played him some of their music and he couldn’t believe how bad they were.

    “The fact that they were so bad suddenly hit me with such force that I began to realize, ”I’m laughing, I’m talking to these guys, I’m looking at them, and I’m laughing with them; and I was suddenly impressed by the fact that I was no longer concerned with whether you could play well,” McLaren said. “The Dolls really impressed upon me that there was something else. There was something wonderful. I thought how brilliant they were to be this bad.”

    After the first demise of the Dolls, Johansen started his own group, the David Johansen band, before reinventing himself yet again in the 1980s as Buster Poindexter.

    Inspired by his passion for the blues and arcane American folk music Johansen also formed the group The Harry Smiths, and toured the world performing the songs of Howlin’ Wolf with Hubert Sumlin and Levon Helm. He also hosted the weekly radio show “The Mansion of Fun” on Sirius XM and painted.

    He is survived by his wife, Mara Hennessey, and a stepdaughter, Leah Hennessey.

  • Jessica Lange’s Ice-Cold Rejection Haunts American Horror Story Fans

    Jessica Lange’s Ice-Cold Rejection Haunts American Horror Story Fans

    Darlings, when Jessica Lange says “no,” she means it with every Oscar-winning fiber of her being. The legendary actress — who graced American Horror Story with her electrifying presence for five deliciously dark seasons — has just delivered a response so delightfully blunt about returning to the series that it might just give Ryan Murphy’s devoted fans their own horror story.

    While promoting her latest venture at the Glasgow Film Festival — a sumptuous adaptation of Long Day’s Journey Into Night — Lange was asked about the possibility of returning to the FX anthology series that turned Wednesday nights into a masterclass in theatrical terror. Her response? “Oh Christ, no!” A statement delivered with such crystalline clarity that it practically deserves its own Emmy.

    But wait, there’s more! When pressed about whether the show’s rumored final season — lucky number 13 — might tempt her back into Murphy’s macabre playground, Lange doubled down with a laugh that could freeze hell itself and a simple, devastating “No.”

    Let’s not pretend this is shocking news, sweethearts. The acclaimed actress hasn’t graced AHS with her presence for over a decade, though she’s maintained a fascinating creative tango with Murphy through other ventures. Their collaborative pas de deux has given us the deliciously venomous Feud: Bette and Joan in 2017 — where Lange embodied Joan Crawford with savage grace — and most recently, she’s been turning heads in Feud: Capote vs. The Swans as Lillie Mae Faulk.

    The original horror story queen hasn’t exactly been twiddling her thumbs since departing the series that won her an Emmy. She’s currently mesmerizing audiences as Mary Tyrone — a morphine-addicted matriarch in Eugene O’Neill’s masterpiece brought to screen. It’s the kind of meaty, complex role that Lange has built her sterling reputation on, far from the supernatural shenanigans of her AHS days.

    Meanwhile, Murphy’s horror anthology soldiers on, though whispers in the Hollywood hills suggest Season 13 might be its swan song. The series has been grappling with dwindling viewership — a horror no amount of witchcraft or haunted houses can seem to fix. Murphy himself has mused about the show’s future, sharing with TheWrap his rather morbid vision: “Sarah Paulson and I talk about that too, like, shoot the finale at her funeral, so to speak.”

    But while some doors close — rather firmly in Lange’s case — others remain intriguingly ajar. Sarah Paulson has expressed interest in returning to the franchise, and Murphy dreams of reuniting his original horror family, including the magnificent Angela Bassett. Yet Lange’s resounding “no” echoes through the halls of this haunted house with finality.

    Perhaps it’s time to accept that some chapters of television history should remain perfectly preserved in amber — or in American Horror Story’s case, in formaldehyde. Lange’s contributions to the series — from the intrusive neighbor Constance Langdon to her subsequent iconic roles — stand as testament to what happens when supreme talent meets audacious storytelling.

    And darlings, sometimes the most horrifying thing of all is knowing when to make a gloriously definitive exit.

  • Man eating Chinese takeout walks into police station to confess to ‘worst thing’

    Man eating Chinese takeout walks into police station to confess to ‘worst thing’

    Mark Donovan hands himself at a police station in east London

    A jealous thug who strangled and battered his estranged wife to death confessed to the attack after walking into a police station while eating a Chinese takeaway.

    Mark Donovan, 39, left the battered body of Elise Mason, 37, in his home before visiting a local pub and two massage parlours. He gave himself up to police just hours after the attack when he walked into the police station in Ilford, Essex, while eating a Chinese takeaway, and told officers that he had done “the worst thing”.

    Donovan denied murder and claimed that he acted in self-defence after being emotionally abused and threatened with a knife by Ms Mason on April 25, 2023.

    Officers later made the “grim” discovery of her heavily bloodstained body lying on a floor under a blanket near the front door of Donovan’s home which she used to share with him in Rothmans Avenue, Great Baddow near Chelmsford, Essex. She had more than 70 injuries to her face, head, neck, upper body, arms and legs, and blood spots were found on the nearby walls and furniture.

    Prosecutors said that a love letter from her new boyfriend was found next to her body, suggesting that Donovan had flown into a “jealous” rage after finding it and had attacked her. The letter had been neatly folded which suggested it had been in her handbag.

    Donovan’s defence team argued that he had a personality disorder which meant he had an abnormality of mind at the time, and was therefore only guilty of manslaughter due to diminished responsibility.

    But jurors took under three hours of deliberation to reject the claim and find him unanimously guilty of her murder after a three-week trial at Chelmsford Crown Court.

    Donovan had refused to enter the dock while the judge was summing up the case and was in prison when the verdict was returned this afternoon.

    Judge Christopher Morgan adjourned sentencing until Wednesday next week, saying he wanted to give Donovan a chance to attend court again.

    He thanked jurors for their service, and told them: “There is only one sentence that can be passed, and that is a life sentence. But I have to consider various factors in setting a minimum term before he can be considered for a release on licence.”

    The trial heard how the couple had been teenage friends before beginning a romance in 2010 and living together until their relationship fell apart in 2022.

    Ms Mason had acted as a carer to Donovan who was partially sighted, epileptic and a Type One diabetic, and had ensured he took his medication, jurors were told.

    Prosecutor Andrew Jackson KC said Mr Donovan had “bombarded” her with “manipulative” texts and phone calls to try and win her back before her death.

    Mr Jackson said the injuries to her body had been caused by a fist and a “blood-stained table lamp that was found close to her body”.

    He added that Ms Mason was last seen entering Donovan’s house on the afternoon of April 25, 2023. Mr Jackson said that Donovan left the house with her phone and bank card around two hours after killing her.

    He went to The Blue Lion pub in Great Baddow, where he was seen drinking at the bar, and disposed of her phone in the pub’s toilets before leaving in a taxi.

    Donovan went to his grandmother’s home in Chelmsford, before going to a massage parlour in the city, but found it closed. He then went to another massage parlour in Romford, east London, before handing himself in at Ilford police station at 2:31am the following day while he was tucking into his Chinese meal.

    Mr Jackson described how Ms Mason’s body was found, saying: “She had her coat on and her shoes with her handbag around her neck, looking like she was about to leave.”

    He told the jury: “Found next to her was a love letter from her new boyfriend. You can readily conclude that she had been carrying it in her handbag which was found nearby.

    “That was the bag that she was carrying over her shoulder as she took the fatal walk to Rothmans Avenue that day. The prosecution say that you can readily conclude that he [Donovan] saw that letter and it was that and her texting him that afternoon that probably caused that anger and murderous violence towards Elise.”

    The trial heard that Ms Mason had texted her current partner while at Donovan’s home, asking: “You okay babe’. He replied ‘course babe’ seven minutes later at 4.49pm, but his message was never marked as read, suggesting that Donovan had already murdered her.

    Mr Jackson said: “It tells you that at 4.42pm, half an hour after she went in, she appears to be capable of sending a message, but something happened between then and 4.49pm that meant she could not read his response.”

    Dr Raman Deo, a consultant forensic psychiatrist acting for the Crown, found that Donovan had a personality disorder, but he told the court that he did not believe that he had an abnormality of mental functioning at the time of the killing.

    Dr Nadji Kahtan, a forensic psychiatrist called by the defence, said that Ms Mason’s new relationship might have contributed to him suffering such an abnormality.

    But jurors appeared to side with evidence given by Dr Deo and the prosecutor’s explanation that the killing was due to Donovan being “simply unable to deal with the breakdown of the relationship leading to anger and violence.”

    Donovan did not give evidence in his trial, but told psychiatrists that he had gone upstairs to get a present for Ms Mason only for him to point what he thought was a knife at him.

    He also claimed she had bitten him, stabbed him, put in a dog cage and pushed him down the stairs on previous occasions. Ms Mason’s mother paid tribute to her after her death, saying: “I have not only lost my daughter, but I have lost my best friend too. Elise was a fantastic mother to her children and she was loved by everybody.”

    Detective Inspector James Holmes, senior investigating officer for Essex Police, said: “I want to express my heartfelt sympathy to Elise’s family and in particular her two children, who have tragically been left without their mother because of Donovan’s destructive and utterly heartless actions.

    “I hope that the jury’s verdict will bring some closure for them, and they can move on with their lives to some degree. Mark Donovan is clearly a dangerous, selfish and manipulative man.

    “Never content with accepting responsibility for the horrific attack he carried out against Elise, he instead decided to tell officers, medical professionals and a jury a series of awful lies about his victim in a bid to shift the blame onto her. Thankfully, due to the evidence we managed to gather, a jury saw through this despicable ploy.

    “In reality, Donovan’s warped and self-centred mind could never accept that Elise had moved on from their relationship. He killed her in a fit of rage, only handing himself in after enjoying a drink at a pub, a massage and a takeaway meal. That behaviour shows the kind of man he is. He can expect to spend the rest of his life where he belongs.”

  • Oscars 2025 everything to know: How to watch, who is hosting, predictions and more

    Oscars 2025 everything to know: How to watch, who is hosting, predictions and more

    Conan O’Brien is set to host the event, which airs Sunday on ABC at 7 p.m. ET.

    The road to the 97th Academy Awards has been filled with twists and turns.

    “Emilia Pérez,” a seriocomic musical about transgender identity, started Hollywood’s awards season as a top contender. But controversial tweets from the film’s lead actress hurt its Oscar chances, providing an opening for a trio of acclaimed titles all vying for front-runner status: “Anora,” “The Brutalist,” “Conclave.” The ultimate best picture victor is anyone’s guess.

    Meanwhile, Los Angeles is still reeling from devastating wildfires that decimated whole neighborhoods, including areas where entertainment professionals live and work. The long economic fallout from the pandemic, the 2023 writers strike and growing competition from nontraditional media have also put the industry on rockier footing.

    But the film academy is hoping to lighten the mood — at least for one night. Here’s your one-stop guide to the show.

    The telecast will air live on ABC starting at 7 p.m. ET — and in a big first, the ceremony will stream in real time on Hulu. Expect to see stars begin to arrive on the red carpet around 3:30 p.m. ET, around when much on-air coverage will also begin.

    Follow live updates on NBCNews.com starting at noon ET.

    Conan O’Brien is set for his first outing as Oscars emcee. But he’s no stranger to the world of awards, having previously hosted the Emmy Awards in 2002 and 2006. He also helmed the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in 1995 and 2013.

    In an interview with The New York Times, O’Brien said he relished the opportunity to celebrate the year in cinema.

    “I still think the Oscars has meaning. Really good cinema — especially when it’s from different countries, different points of view — has an incredible amount of resonance and importance right now, and this is the night that celebrates that,” O’Brien said.

    “To be a part of it is meaningful to me. I don’t think of it as a thankless task — even if I just do it once, and no one’s interested in me doing it again, it will have been a meaningful experience for me,” he added.

    The race for best picture was scrambled after “Emilia Pérez” star Karla Sofía Gascón drew intense scrutiny for old social media posts. The scandal created new momentum for the madcap romantic dramedy “Anora,” the postwar immigration epic “The Brutalist” and the papal thriller “Conclave.”

    All three of those movies have done well on the pre-Oscars awards circuit. “The Brutalist” nabbed best drama film at the Globes. “Conclave” snagged top honors at the British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs) and the best ensemble trophy at the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards.

    Meanwhile, “Anora” won marquee prizes from Hollywood’s producers, directors and writers guilds, plus the Critics Choice Awards. Gold Derby, an awards prediction website, gives “Anora” 5-to-1 odds of claiming best picture when all is said and done.

    In the days leading up to the ceremony, “Anora” appears to be the slight favorite, but it could easily be edged out by “The Brutalist” or “Conclave” — not to mention dark horse candidates such as the Bob Dylan biopic “A Complete Unknown” or the splashy musical “Wicked.”

    The four other best picture nominees are the sci-fi saga “Dune: Part Two,” the historical drama “I’m Still Here,” the literary adaptation “Nickel Boys” and the body-horror satire “The Substance.”

    In the best actress category, Demi Moore (“The Substance”) seems to have momentum after winning best comedy actress at the Golden Globe Awards and equivalent honors at the SAG Awards and the Critics Choice Awards.

    But don’t count out Mikey Madison (“Anora”), who triumphed at the BAFTAs and the Independent Spirit Awards, or Fernanda Torres (I’m Still Here”), who won best drama actress at the Globes.

    In the best actor race, Adrien Brody (“The Brutalist”) is well positioned after taking home prizes from the Golden Globes, the BAFTAs and the Critics Choice Awards. Brody’s closest competition comes from Timothée Chalamet (“A Complete Unknown”), whose portrayal of Bob Dylan earned him a SAG statuette earlier this month.

    Meanwhile, Kieran Culkin (“A Real Pain”) and Zoe Saldaña (“Emilia Pérez”) appear to be locks for best supporting actor and best supporting actress, respectively.

    The list of screen talents lined up to present awards includes a handful of Oscar winners from previous years, including Halle Berry (“Monster’s Ball”), Robert Downey Jr. (“Oppenheimer”), Whoopi Goldberg (“Ghost”), Da’Vine Joy Randolph (“The Holdovers”), and two-time victor Emma Stone (“La La Land,” “Poor Things”).

    The ceremony will also feature presenters who appeared in some of last year’s notable releases, including Joe Alwyn (“The Brutalist”), Lily-Rose Depp (“Nosferatu”), Elle Fanning (“A Complete Unknown”), Selena Gomez (“Emilia Pérez”), John Lithgow (“Conclave”), Connie Nielsen (“Gladiator II”), June Squibb (“Thelma”) and Bowen Yang (“Wicked”).

    Also on the lineup: Dave Bautista, Harrison Ford, Gal Gadot, Andrew Garfield, Samuel L. Jackson, Margaret Qualley, Alba Rohrwacher, Zoe Saldaña and Rachel Zegler.

    In a departure from recent ceremonies, this year’s telecast won’t feature live performances of the five tunes nominated for best original song.

    However, the producers have invited “Wicked” stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande to perform a medley of numbers from the hit musical. (“Wicked” was distributed by Universal Pictures, a unit of NBC News’ parent company, NBCUniversal.)

    In addition, Queen Latifah will be on hand to pay tribute to the late music industry maestro Quincy Jones. Plus, viewers can expect performances from hip-hop stars Lisa and Doja Cat as well as British singer-songwriter Raye.

  • Man strolls into police station eating Chinese takeaway and admits killing wife – Daily Record

    Man strolls into police station eating Chinese takeaway and admits killing wife – Daily Record

    A brutal killer confessed to strangling and beating his estranged wife to death after walking into a police station while eating a Chinese takeaway,

    Mark Donovan, 39, abandoned the battered body of Elise Mason, 37, in his home before brazenly visiting a local pub and two massage parlours. He gave himself up when he strolled into a police station in Illford, Essex, while eating a Chinese takeaway, when he revealed to officers he had done the “worst thing”.

    As the Mirror reports, Donovan denied murder and claimed that he acted in self-defence after being emotionally abuse and threatened with a knife by Ms Mason on April 25, 2023.

    Stunned officers made the “grim” discovery of her heavily bloodstained body lying on a floor under a blanket near the front door of his home, which the couple used to share in Rothmans, Avenue, Great Baddow near Chelmsford, Essex

    Officers later made the “grim” discovery of her heavily bloodstained body lying on a floor under a blanket near the front door of Donovan’s home which she used to share with him in Rothmans Avenue, Great Baddow near Chelmsford, Essex. Elise had more than 70 injuries to her face, head, neck, upper body, arms and legs. Blood spots were also found on the nearby walls and furniture.

    Prosecutors said that a love letter from her new boyfriend was discovered next to her body, suggesting that Donovan had flown into a “jealous” rage after finding it and had attacked her. The letter had been neatly folded which suggested it had been in her handbag.

    Donovan’s defence team argued that he had a personality disorder which meant he had an abnormality of mind at the time, and was therefore only guilty of manslaughter due to diminished responsibility.

    But jurors took under three hours of deliberation to reject the claim and find him unanimously guilty of her murder after a three-week trial at Chelmsford Crown Court.

    Donovan had refused to enter the dock while the judge was summing up the case and was in prison when the verdict was returned this afternoon.

    Judge Christopher Morgan adjourned sentencing until Wednesday next week, saying he wanted to give Donovan a chance to attend court again.

    He thanked jurors for their service, and told them: “There is only one sentence that can be passed, and that is a life sentence. But I have to consider various factors in setting a minimum term before he can be considered for a release on licence.”

    The trial heard how the couple had been teenage friends before beginning a romance in 2010 and living together until their relationship fell apart in 2022.

    Ms Mason had acted as a carer to Donovan who was partially sighted, epileptic and a Type One diabetic, and had ensured he took his medication, jurors were told.

    Prosecutor Andrew Jackson KC said Mr Donovan had “bombarded” her with “manipulative” texts and phone calls to try and win her back before her death.

    Mr Jackson said the injuries to her body had been caused by a fist and a “blood-stained table lamp that was found close to her body”.

    He added that Ms Mason was last seen entering Donovan’s house on the afternoon of April 25, 2023. Mr Jackson said that Donovan left the house with her phone and bank card around two hours after killing her.

    He went to The Blue Lion pub in Great Baddow, where he was seen drinking at the bar, and disposed of her phone in the pub’s toilets before leaving in a taxi.

    Donovan went to his grandmother’s home in Chelmsford, before going to a massage parlour in the city, but found it closed. He then went to another massage parlour in Romford, east London, before handing himself in at Ilford police station at 2:31am the following day while he was tucking into his Chinese meal.

    Mr Jackson described how Ms Mason’s body was found, saying: “She had her coat on and her shoes with her handbag around her neck, looking like she was about to leave.”

    He told the jury: “Found next to her was a love letter from her new boyfriend. You can readily conclude that she had been carrying it in her handbag which was found nearby.

    “That was the bag that she was carrying over her shoulder as she took the fatal walk to Rothmans Avenue that day. The prosecution say that you can readily conclude that he [Donovan] saw that letter and it was that and her texting him that afternoon that probably caused that anger and murderous violence towards Elise.”

    The trial heard that Ms Mason had texted her current partner while at Donovan’s home, asking: “You okay babe’. He replied ‘course babe’ seven minutes later at 4.49pm, but his message was never marked as read, suggesting that Donovan had already murdered her.

    Mr Jackson said: “It tells you that at 4.42pm, half an hour after she went in, she appears to be capable of sending a message, but something happened between then and 4.49pm that meant she could not read his response.”

    Dr Raman Deo, a consultant forensic psychiatrist acting for the Crown, found that Donovan had a personality disorder, but he told the court that he did not believe that he had an abnormality of mental functioning at the time of the killing.

    Dr Nadji Kahtan, a forensic psychiatrist called by the defence, said that Ms Mason’s new relationship might have contributed to him suffering such an abnormality.

    But jurors appeared to side with evidence given by Dr Deo and the prosecutor’s explanation that the killing was due to Donovan being “simply unable to deal with the breakdown of the relationship leading to anger and violence.”

    Donovan did not give evidence in his trial, but told psychiatrists that he had gone upstairs to get a present for Ms Mason only for him to point what he thought was a knife at him.

    He also claimed she had bitten him, stabbed him, put in a dog cage and pushed him down the stairs on previous occasions. Ms Mason’s mother paid tribute to her after her death, saying: “I have not only lost my daughter, but I have lost my best friend too. Elise was a fantastic mother to her children and she was loved by everybody.”

    Detective Inspector James Holmes, senior investigating officer for Essex Police, said: “I want to express my heartfelt sympathy to Elise’s family and in particular her two children, who have tragically been left without their mother because of Donovan’s destructive and utterly heartless actions.

    “I hope that the jury’s verdict will bring some closure for them, and they can move on with their lives to some degree. Mark Donovan is clearly a dangerous, selfish and manipulative man.

    “Never content with accepting responsibility for the horrific attack he carried out against Elise, he instead decided to tell officers, medical professionals and a jury a series of awful lies about his victim in a bid to shift the blame onto her. Thankfully, due to the evidence we managed to gather, a jury saw through this despicable ploy.

    “In reality, Donovan’s warped and self-centred mind could never accept that Elise had moved on from their relationship. He killed her in a fit of rage, only handing himself in after enjoying a drink at a pub, a massage and a takeaway meal. That behaviour shows the kind of man he is. He can expect to spend the rest of his life where he belongs.”

  • How to watch the Oscars on Sunday night

    How to watch the Oscars on Sunday night

    Conan O’Brien (left) attends the 97th Annual Oscars carpet roll out at Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Calif. O’Brien will be hosting the 97th Academy Awards on Sunday night. Kevin Winter/Getty Images hide caption

    The 97th Academy Awards ceremony is Sunday, March 2 at 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT. It will air live on ABC and stream on Hulu. This year’s Oscar season was disrupted by devastating fires in Southern California. Academy leaders have said they plan to honor frontline responders and promote relief efforts.

    Emilia Pérez is the most-nominated film, but its star, Karla Sofía Gascón, has faced backlash over offensive tweets. What can you expect at this year’s Academy Awards? Whether you’re looking for menu ideas for your Oscars party, or need a refresher on the nominees, we’ve got you covered.

    The Academy Awards will take place at Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Calif., this Sunday, March 2. The official live red carpet show will begin at 6:30 p.m. ET / 3:30 p.m. PT and the ceremony itself will begin at 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT.

    The red carpet and ceremony will be broadcast live on ABC Network including local ABC stations, ABC.com, and the ABC App. You can also stream the show live on Hulu, YouTube TV, FuboTV, and AT&T TV.

    Watching from outside of the U.S.? The Academy has compiled a list of international networks by country that are streaming the show. You can find that list here.

    Television host, comedian and actor Conan O’Brien will host the ceremony. He’ll share the stage throughout the night with celebrity presenters including Joe Alwyn, Halle Berry, Sterling K. Brown, Penélope Cruz, Willem Dafoe, Robert Downey Jr., Ana de Armas, Lily-Rose Depp, Elle Fanning, Whoopi Goldberg, Selena Gomez, Goldie Hawn, Scarlett Johansson, John Lithgow, Cillian Murphy, Connie Nielsen, Amy Poehler, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Ben Stiller, Emma Stone, June Squibb, Oprah Winfrey and Bowen Yang.

    Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo will perform, and though the Academy hasn’t revealed what they’ll sing – a song (or songs) from Wicked is likely.

    Also performing on Sunday are K-pop sensation Lisa from BLACKPINK, pop star Doja Cat, singer and rapper Queen Latifah and British artist Raye. The Los Angeles Master Chorale will make a special appearance as well.

    Emilia Pérez enters the night with the most nominations at 13 total, including best picture. The Brutalist and Wicked follow with 10 nominations each; both are also nominated for best picture.

    Adrien Brody, Timothée Chalamet, Colman Domingo, Ralph Fiennes and Sebastian Stan are all nominated for best actor. Cynthia Erivo, Karla Sofía Gascón, Mikey Madison, Demi Moore and Fernanda Torres are the nominees for best actress.

  • Mark Zuckerberg wears Benson Boone’s sequined Grammys 2025 jumpsuit…

    Mark Zuckerberg wears Benson Boone’s sequined Grammys 2025 jumpsuit…

    Mark Zuckerberg borrowed Benson Boone’s viral sequined jumpsuit for his performance at wife Priscilla Chan’s 40th birthday bash.

    While hosting his wife’s black-tie birthday party, the Meta CEO jumped on stage for a surprise performance — complete with a shocking outfit change.

    Zuckerberg walked on stage in a simple black suit before two people ripped away the tux to reveal the sparkly blue V-neck onesie, as seen in a video posted to Instagram Friday.

    The tech billionaire went all out for the show, jumping on the piano and hyping up the crowd as he recreated Boone’s entire 2025 Grammy’s performance of “Beautiful Things” — aside from the singer’s famous backflip.

    However, it’s unclear exactly what Zuckerberg sang or if he was just lip-synching as he set the video to Boone’s brand-new single “Sorry I’m Here for Someone Else.”

    “Your wife only turns 40 once!” Zuckerberg captioned the clip. “Shoutout to @bensonboone for the jumpsuit and new single.”

    While social media users had a mixed reaction, his wife seemed to love the ordeal as she was seen laughing and having a blast in the crowd.

    Zuckerberg and Chan met and fell in love in 2003 while attending Harvard University. They tied the knot nine years later and have since welcomed three daughters — Maxima, 9, August, 7, and Aurelia, 2.

    The Facebook co-founder, 40, also shared a photo of his outlandish outfit to his Instagram Stories, captioned, “Full send @bensonboone.”

    Although Zuckerberg seemed to have a great time, Boone questioned his comfort in the sparkling suit.

    “I hope his nuts are okay,” the hitmaker commented under a post about the party. “That thing is so tight.”

    The 22-year-old was nominated for best new artist at this year’s awards show.

    Boone began his performance from the crowd, clad in a suit before Nikki Glaser and Heidi Klum stripped off the formal attire to reveal the tight jumpsuit.

    However, the end of his performance provided an even more viral moment when the singer adjusted his crotch as he addressed the crowd.

    The bold move took many audience members by surprise, which Boone later jokingly addressed on his Instagram Stories.

    “Sorry for adjusting my jumpsuit so aggressively on stage tonight that thing was aggressively restricting in certain areas,” he wrote.

  • Blake Lively Hires CIA Alum for Crisis PR in Legal Battle With Justin Baldoni (EXCLUSIVE)

    Blake Lively Hires CIA Alum for Crisis PR in Legal Battle With Justin Baldoni (EXCLUSIVE)

    Blake Lively Hires CIA Alum for Crisis PR in Legal Battle With Justin Baldoni (EXCLUSIVE)

    Tatiana Siegel

    February 28, 2025 at 6:18 PM

    Blake Lively has hired a PR crisis manager with deep government ties as her legal battle with Justin Baldoni escalates. The actress, who is suing and being sued by her “It Ends With Us” director and co-star, is quietly working with Nick Shapiro, the CIA’s former deputy chief of staff and senior advisor to former director John Brennan.

    “The litigation team for Ms. Lively retained Mr. Shapiro to advise on the legal communications strategy for the ongoing sexual harassment and retaliation lawsuit occurring in the Southern District of New York,” says a member of the actress’ legal team at Willkie Farr & Gallagher.

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    In December, Lively filed a letter with the California Civil Rights Department in which she claimed that Baldoni sexually harassed her during the film’s production in 2023. The CRD letter, which also included allegations of Baldoni waging a 2024 smear campaign against Lively, became the basis of a New York Times report, kicking off a legal back and forth involving a group of more than a dozen people and companies.

    On New Year’s Eve, Baldoni and nine other plaintiffs, including his crisis publicist Melissa Nathan, sued the New York Times for $250 million for libel. Lively then sued Baldoni and the group for violating federal and California state law “by retaliating against her for reporting sexual harassment and workplace safety concerns.” The director then sued Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds for $400 million for civil extortion, defamation and other actions.

    In a related suit, Baldoni’s former publicist Stephanie Jones is suing Baldoni and Nathan for breach of contract among other claims. Jones provided the text messages to Lively’s legal team sometime after parting ways with Abel in August 2024 in a move that raised eyebrows. Lively’s lawyers say they received the text messages via a subpoena to Jones’ PR firm Jonesworks. It remains unclear on what grounds Jones would have been required to turn over correspondence involving former client Baldoni or former employee Abel given that no lawsuit had been filed at the time.

    In yet another lawsuit, Texas-based digital entrepreneur Jed Wallace filed a multi-million dollar suit against Lively in federal court for defamation. He claims that he has suffered millions of dollars in reputational harm after the actress alleged he unleashed a “digital army” to malign her back in August.

    Shapiro, who launched crisis PR firm 10th Avenue Consulting in 2015 after his lengthy tenure in the federal government, would seem an unconventional choice for Lively given that the spiraling legal morass has no obvious political ties. According to his bio, Shapiro “helped lead the Obama Administration’s response to the H1N1 Pandemic, the Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting, the Gulf Oil Spill, the Boston Marathon Bombing, the Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Fukushima Nuclear Disaster, as well as numerous cyber attacks, data breaches, wildfires, floods, and hurricanes.”

    Shapiro is not without controversy. He was one of a group of 51 former senior intelligence officials who signed the widely cited and subsequently criticized 2020 open letter stating that the Hunter Biden laptop “has all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.”

    Though it is standard for celebrities like Lively and Baldoni to work with crisis PR when they are enmeshed in a conflict, the actress’ team was highly critical of the director’s use of the behind-the-scenes professionals last summer ahead of the film’s opening. At the time, news outlets and social media influencers covered a mysterious feud between Lively and Baldoni that prevented the two from appearing together at joint press events or the film’s premiere on Aug. 6.

    The Sony film, which was produced and financed by Baldoni’s Wayfarer Studios, became a runaway hit, earning $351 million at the box office globally off of a $25 million budget.

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  • Despicable Me Kicks Shrek Off The Streaming Charts

    Despicable Me Kicks Shrek Off The Streaming Charts

    Despicable Me is already the highest-grossing animated franchise of all time based on its box office gross. Now, the series is also establishing its streaming dominance.

    The franchise, which debuted in 2010, has since seen Gru’s Minions branch out with their own films. With movies in the original series and two Minion-led spinoffs, the franchise has been a major hit, passing the four Shrek films and its two Puss in Boots spinoffs at the box office. Per Tudum, Despicable Me also beat Shrek on streaming, taking over the charts globally for the week between Feb. 17 and 23.

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    Just recently, the DreamWorks Adaptations Shrek franchise took over streaming with several installments ahead of the highly anticipated Shrek 5. The first three films stayed in the global charts for two weeks. However, now it’s Despicable Me’s time to shine. The franchise had three Despicable Me and one Minions film in the Top 10 globally.

    Despicable Me 3 debuted in third place this week, with 7.9 million views, and 11.9 million hours viewed. Minions followed in fifth place with 6.1 million views and 9.3 million hours viewed, with Despicable Me 2 at number six, with 5.9 million views, and 9.6 million hours viewed. The final entry at the top was Despicable Me, with 4 million views and 6.3 million hours viewed.

    In total, for the current week, the Despicable Me franchise gathered 23.9 million views. The only films missing were Despicable Me 4 and Minions: The Rise of Gru. The Despicable Me franchise is not available on Netflix in the U.S., as the 2010 animated film and its 2013 sequel left the platform on Feb. 1. Earlier this year, Despicable Me and its sequel were back in the charts, alongside Minions: The Rise of Gru, which also spent several weeks before Shrek took over.

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    Despicable Me Beat Shrek at the Box Office

    The flagship Despicable Me films, which included 2010’s Despicable Me, 2013’s Despicable Me 2, and 2024’s Despicable Me 4, were a major hit at the box office. All four films grossed $3.52 billion worldwide (via The Numbers), with Despicable Me 3 alone grossing $1.03 billion. Its spin-off series, Minions, grossed $2.09 billion, with the first installment besting the franchise with $1.15 billion.

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    Meanwhile, the Shrek franchise, which is made up of six films, grossed $4.02 billion worldwide. The main film series, which consists of four entries, grossed $2.98 billion between 2001 and 2010. Its two spin-offs, 2011’s Puss in Boots and 2022’s The Last Wish, grossed $1.03 billion.

    The two highest-grossing franchises will have fother chances to best each other in the future. Shrek 5 is officially confirmed for Dec. 23, 2026, with several original actors confirmed to return to voice the beloved characters. So far, Universal and Illumination haven’t confirmed a Despicable Me 5, but the spin-off series will continue with Minions 3, also scheduled for July 1, 2026, Shrek 5’s original release date.

    The Despicable Me franchise is available to stream on Peacock.

    Source: Tudum, The Numbers

    Despicable Me

    Created by Sergio Pablos

    First Film Despicable Me

    Latest Film Minions: The Rise of Gru

    Upcoming Films Despicable Me 4

    Cast Steve Carell, Russell Brand, Dana Gaier, Julie Andrews, Pierre Coffin