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  • Roseanne Barr tries to start beef with Eminem in awful pro-Trump rap song: ‘Granny’s going bad’

    Roseanne Barr tries to start beef with Eminem in awful pro-Trump rap song: ‘Granny’s going bad’

    She also flips off the camera and at one point shakes her butt at it.

    Prepare your eyes and ears, because Roseanne Barr, a.k.a “this Granny,” is “going bad” in a new pro-Donald Trump rap music video. (Hey, at least she warned us.)

    In the bizarre video with Canadian rapper Tom MacDonald, titled “Daddy’s Home,” Barr dons blond box braids, gold chains, and sunglasses to gloat about the election with MacDonald. (The song features lyrics such as “We won, you mad, it’s done, too bad, boo hoo, so sad … you cry, we laugh” alongside MAGA iconography.)

    Barr then gets her own verse, rapping, “They try to cancel me and say I’m a racist. I got a mean hook, they can’t get me with that jam. Trying to take away my right to go and say this. Well, listen up, cuz this Granny’s going bad.”

    She appears to take a dig at her former show Roseanne or its spinoff The Conners, by then adding, “Why they trying to turn Becky into Dan?” (Both of which are characters in the franchise.) Then Barr attempts to start beef with a real rapper, by saying, “Screw Eminem, I’m Roseanne.” She also flips off the camera and at one point shakes her butt at it.

    As for her grievance about being canceled, Barr is likely referring to her briefly rebooted show, Roseanne, being canceled at ABC in 2018 hours after she made a racist tweet attacking former President Obama senior adviser Valerie Jarrett. Barr used Jarrett’s initials and wrote, “Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby.”

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    “Roseanne’s Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values, and we have decided to cancel her show,” ABC Entertainment President Channing Dungey said at the time.

    Prior to ABC’s decision, Barr tried to do damage control by tweeting, “I apologize to Valerie Jarrett and to all Americans. I am truly sorry for making a bad joke about her politics and her looks. I should have known better. Forgive me-my joke was in bad taste.” Within three weeks, the show was revived without Barr — whose character was killed off — in the spinoff The Conners.

    In recent years, Barr, a vocal Trump supporter, has aligned herself with conservative figures and stirred controversy for bizarre remarks, including the claim that “nobody died in the Holocaust.” (Barr is Jewish.)

  • Severance, TV’s most mind-bending show, returns: ‘Even my landlord asked what’s going on with the goats’

    Severance, TV’s most mind-bending show, returns: ‘Even my landlord asked what’s going on with the goats’

    Who is in charge? What are they working on? And why is there livestock in the office? The deliciously weird workplace drama has finally returned, but can it live up to expectations and answer its many mysteries? The show’s cast and creator (try to) reveal all

    A month before Severance first aired in February 2022, billboards emblazoned with huge images of Adam Scott wearing a thousand-yard stare began to spring up around Los Angeles. “You always think it’s going to be this joyful moment when you see something like that,” says Scott, the show’s star and one of its producers. He appeared on the posters alongside the tagline “We’re all different people at work”, a wink to the premise of the series, a twisty, darkly comic thriller about office workers who have an experimental chip implanted into their brains in order to forget their work lives outside the office, and vice versa.

    Scott had, he adds, “been waiting a long time for that moment – but I had this immediate adverse reaction. I got nauseous and my palms started sweating, because we had no idea how this thing would be received.” He had found Severance “fascinating and sad and funny” and thought it was something special, but it had been filmed in a Covid bubble and, he adds, “you never know”. Despite a TV career that has included the likes of Parks and Recreation and Big Little Lies, he was worried that he was about to become the face of a flop. “This is a weird show,” he says. “I thought maybe people were going to think we were weirdos.”

    Luckily, he couldn’t have been more wrong. In the years since, Apple’s series has become one of the most talked-about TV shows around, the definition of a slow-burn hit in an increasingly fragmented and fickle streaming era. It is also one that seamlessly marries a cast of screen veterans such as John Turturro, Patricia Arquette and Christopher Walken with exciting up-and-comers. At its heart a dystopian take on modern work, it follows four employees: Mark S (Scott), Irving B (John Turturro), Helly R (Britt Lower) and Dylan G (Zach Cherry). They are innies, condemned by their “real” (outie) selves to work at the shady Lumon Industries with no clue what their apparently very important job is for. What the Macrodata Refinement, or MDR, team does at Lumon is one of many unanswered questions in the show (others include: who is “the Lumon board”? And why is there livestock in the office?) but it’s possibly the most pivotal of them all.

    “That core question of identity, especially in relation to work, was really at play for so many people when the show first came out,” says Lower (a thoughtful interviewee, more mellow than the frequently wired Helly) of the show’s fortuitous timing. “It just happened to hit the zeitgeist at a time when we as a collective were confronted with questions about our work-life balance, during and after the pandemic.”

    Severancemania is in full flow in early December, as the cast Zoom in to meet with international press to discuss season two. An official podcast hosted by Scott and executive producer Ben Stiller has just been announced; Vanity Fair have released exclusive on-set pictures that have sent Reddit into meltdown; and dedicated fans are wondering how and where additions such as Game of Thrones’ Gwendoline Christie will slot in to the new episodes. The fanfare is all the more impressive when you consider that Severance has been off screen far longer than it has been on it. Indeed, we are only just now – in January 2025 – being treated to that second season, with production delays (including rumoured tension between its showrunners) and the Hollywood writers’ strikes having left the series adrift for the best part of three years. It would be tough for fans of any hit show to wait so long, but with one this good – and which ended season one on a cliffhanger – the wait has been nothing short of torture.

    An unexpected consequence of that unbearable wait, however, is that it has become a true word-of-mouth hit, prompting a fervent online following, much fan art (“That’s when you know people are very, very invested,” says Cherry, who shares an easy chattiness with his character) and a rumoured $200m budget for these 10 new episodes, a figure that puts it into TV’s big leagues alongside the likes of Netflix’s Stranger Things and HBO’s House of the Dragon. These days, production emails are written in code, and scripts are under lock and key. “Ideas were closely guarded [for season two],” adds Scott, who, like Mark, is warm and slightly self-effacing. “Which was also weird, because we had been working on the show for years, and nobody gave a shit at all. And suddenly it was this thing!”

    Creator Dan Erickson describes himself as “a locked box” when it comes to letting details slip, even to his family. It doesn’t stop people from trying. “My landlord will occasionally come by to do a repair, and he’ll be like: ‘So, you know – what’s going on with those goats?’”

    If all the waiting around has been tough for fans then it’s worth remembering that cast and creator have had to be patient, too. Scott first got a call about the series from Stiller back in 2017, while Erickson had had it percolating in his brain for years before – perhaps as early as 2012, he says – inspired by previous temp job drudgery (when he was first contacted by Stiller, he was employed as a courier for the food delivery service Postmates, having sent the show’s pilot out as a writing sample while working on the outer fringes of the TV world).

    While much of the mystery box series comes straight from Erickson’s impressive brain, fans of the show do give him a run for their money with the creative – and occasionally prescient – predictions they post online. “It’s wonderful [to read the theories],” Erickson says. “I love people’s creativity. It’s not only that they’re taking the time to watch the show – in some cases, multiple times – but that they’re putting their own stamp on it. It adds to the life of it.” However, he says, he does have to be careful not to lean too far into fan fiction. “It can be a little overwhelming, because I’ll read all these theories that are different from what we’re actually going to do. But I’ll be like: ‘Damn it, that’s pretty good. I wish I could make that show, too.’”

    In a previous interview with the Guardian, Erickson said that he was keen to avoid some of the errors committed by another ambitious, high-concept drama that left some fairly gaping plot holes over its six-season run. When we speak, he wants to be clear that he doesn’t see Lost as a cautionary tale, but more as a pioneer that had its flaws. “I understand the challenges that that show faced,” he says. “They were learning how to do it as they went, with many, many more episodes a season than we have. But for me, it’s really about planning it in advance. If we set the rules of the world, and we know what the company’s intentions are, and we know what the end game is, that frees us up to play. We can have these funny, strange little diversions, but we know we’re not going to go so far off track that we can’t come back”.

    In the six episodes released to press, we get a few possible diversions, not least the fact that Mark’s entire team has been replaced by a brand new gang in the first episode, among them Arrested Development’s Alia Shawkat. There’s also a much younger colleague on Lumon’s severed floor, Miss Huang, played by 18-year-old newcomer Sarah Bock (“She hit the ground running,” says Cherry, adding that he’s “excited for people to discover her”). But, for the most part, we continue to follow the original crew, going to deeper, more perilous places, and seeing allegiances and friendships put under new pressure. It is, says Erickson, “the Empire Strikes Back thing, where you want to bring more danger into the mix in chapter two”.

    That also means visiting a mysterious and very cold location away from the Lumon office, identified only in those Vanity Fair images as “a frigid new locale”. Cherry says it was a “bonding experience” for the cast to be in such a challenging environment, not to mention the heavy coats and mountain climbing. Erickson, meanwhile, was in LA doing “other stuff for the show, but we got a live feed. So I’m sitting there with a lemonade [going] like: ‘Oh man, Britt looks really cold, I hope she’s OK.’ I felt like a little bit of a monster.”

    In keeping with this darker mood, the characters are more intense, vulnerable and volatile this time around. In trying to verify the bombshell he received at the end of season one, indicating that his late wife Gemma may not be gone for ever, Mark puts himself under intense mental and physical stress, Scott explains: “He’s putting everything – all of his resentment for Lumon, and his resentment towards the world, towards his family – everything is going into this effort. He funnels all of that grief, bitterness and anger [into it].” Also in a precarious position is the brilliantly icy Lumon supervisor Mr Milchick, who displays a few more human attributes this time around as he deals with increasing demands in the office. Tramell Tillman, who plays him (and is, in fact, smiley and rather easygoing), says this shift was “freeing … in season one, everything was so controlled. But now, Ben and Dan and I were really talking about how much we wanted to show Milchick’s emotional life.” Lower was also able to dig deeper this time around, as Helly’s innie and outtie personas clash and enter what she describes as “dangerous territory … this one person is waging a war inside of herself.” Meanwhile, Dylan’s innie, Cherry says, has been thinking of himself as this “swashbuckling playboy” up to now; in season two he learns about his struggles, “which makes him rethink who he is, and who he wants to be.”

    The visual language of Severance is as important as ever, and the claustrophobia imparted on the audience by the retro-futuristic, maze-like Lumon headquarters doesn’t abate. It’s also a crucial element of how the cast get into character, says Scott. “You walk in and the set does half the work for you,” he says. “Because you’re in a completely different, off-kilter world, under those fluorescent lights”. Walking down those endless corridors for 12 hours a day on set, says Tillman, you can almost start to feel like an innie. Lower agrees, looking pained: “We’re in these sterile environments with low ceilings and pharmaceutical lighting and golf green carpet.” Luckily, though, the mood on set is never low. “I think there’s an incredibly healthy balance of hard-working people who also really like to play,” she adds. “There’s a lot of levity on set.”

    Milchick and co could definitely take a leaf out of their book, but maybe there are things they could also borrow from their fictional overlords. Although he’s not prone to dropping hints about where the series is heading, Erickson admits that he’s “a naturally careless and forgetful person. I’ll print out a document that has some big spoiler, and then I’ll have to remember, like: Oh, I can’t leave that out, it’s got to go in the shredder. We could learn a thing or two from Lumon in that way.”

  • David Lynch, Visionary Filmmaker And Creator Of ‘Twin Peaks,’ Dead At 78

    David Lynch, Visionary Filmmaker And Creator Of ‘Twin Peaks,’ Dead At 78

    Lynch was dubbed “the first populist surrealist — a Frank Capra of dream logic.”

    David Lynch, the writer-director whose hallucinogenic films and television shows such as “Eraserhead,” “Mulholland Drive,” and “Twin Peaks” reveled in dreams and darkness, in revealing the mysterious and the sinister teeming just below the surface of ordinary white-picket-fence America has died. He was 78.

    New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael called David Lynch “the first populist surrealist — a Frank Capra of dream logic” for his keen ability to bridge mainstream filmmaking and arthouse success.

    Lynch’s family announced his death on his Facebook page on Thursday. “There’s a big hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us,” they wrote. “But, as he would say, ‘Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole.’ It’s a beautiful day with golden sunshine and blue skies all the way.”

    Lynch revealed in an interview with Sight and Sound in 2024, that he was suffering from emphysema after many years of smoking, was housebound, and could only direct any future films remotely. He later posted a statement on X amid speculation about his health and career, writing, “I am filled with happiness, and I will never retire.”

    Lynch’s smoking habit was almost literally lifelong. A native of Missoula, Montana, Lynch grew up in rural Idaho and Washington and began smoking at the age of 8. He stopped smoking in 2022 after needing supplemental oxygen for anything more difficult than walking across a room and in an interview with People Magazine last year, Lynch said although the consequences of smoking have been “a big price to pay, I don’t regret it. It was important to me. I wish what every addict wishes for: that what we love is good for us.”

    A painter turned avant-garde filmmaker, Lynch debuted his first feature “Eraserhead” in 1977. Shot over several years, the black-and-white surrealist horror film tells the story of a bewildered man grappling with the anxieties of fatherhood after the birth of his sickly, grotesque child — a mutant being that scarcely resembles a human infant.

    Initially debuting to limited fanfare, “Eraserhead” gradually built a devoted following through extended runs as a midnight movie, solidifying its status as a cult classic.

    Released three years before Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror classic “The Shining,” “Eraserhead” left an indelible mark on the influential director, who cited Lynch’s debut feature as one of his favorite films. So captivated was Kubrick by Lynch’s unnerving vision that he required his actors and film crew to watch “Eraserhead” before filming started on “The Shining” so that everyone on set was on the same tonal page.

    Another enthusiastic fan was comedian Mel Brooks, who, after seeing “Eraserhead,” hired Lynch to direct his first true Hollywood picture, “The Elephant Man” in 1980. Brooks called Lynch “Jimmy Stewart from Mars,” for his spectrum of wild ideas and dressing as if he had stepped right out of the 1950s, with a messy pompadour and simple outfits of slacks and white dress shirts worn without a tie, buttoned all the way to the top.

    “The Elephant Man” proved to be Lynch’s mainstream breakthrough. A poignant film (also in black-and-white) starring Anthony Hopkins and John Hurt, and based on the true story of a severely deformed British man, the movie garnered widespread acclaim and became a hit at the box office. It was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including two for Lynch.

    Lynch’s films were not always successful, however, or well received. After receiving several directing offers post “Elephant Man” and turning down an opportunity from George Lucas to direct “Return of the Jedi,” Lynch opted instead to make an adaptation of the space opera “Dune” from the science-fiction novel by Frank Herbert. The attempt to make a ‘Star Wars for adults’ was a $40 million fiasco and the movie was named by Roger Ebert as the worst of 1984. Plans for two sequels were quickly scrapped.

    Lynch roared back in 1986 with his one of his signature movies, “Blue Velvet,” an erotic detective story that peels back the placid exterior of a sweet-as-cherry-pie small town in North Carolina to reveal a seething underworld of dark surreal violence and depravity.

    The movie plays as if directed by a psychopathic Norman Rockwell and polarized critics for its unsettling blend of innocence and white-picket-fence whimsy, brimming over with sexual violence and perverse evil.

    Mr. Lynch’s follow-up, the highly controversial albeit forgettable, “Wild at Heart,” a sexed-up, graphically violent road movie starring Laura Dern and Nicolas Cage as a young couple on the run in the American Southwest, won the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 1990. It struck many critics as erratic, cartoony, self-indulgent and, despite some inspired moments, pointless.

    In 1990, Lynch with co-creator Mark Frost ushered in a network TV revolution with their cutting-edge series, “Twin Peaks.” The show is an eerie mystery drama about the murder of high school student Laura Palmer and the investigation by an eccentric FBI agent played by Kyle MacLachlan. It is the spiritual spinoff of “Blue Velvet” with Lynch again illuminating the sinister underbelly of Apple Pie America, pitting ordinary good people against depraved and supernatural evil — Andy Griffith vs. Charles Manson — in perhaps Lynch’s most popular work.

    After 1991, however, it seemed as though Lynch could do nothing right. Viewership for season two of “Twin Peaks” fell off a cliff after the ABC Network insisted on an early season reveal of Laura Palmer’s killer and as Lynch himself seemed to lose interest in the show. Throughout the early 90s, he continued to produce multiple TV shows that were unsuccessful and disappeared from television almost immediately.

    Lynch then made “Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me,” a 1992 film companion to the television series, which was ravaged by critics, with Vincent Canby of the New York Times writing, “It’s not the worst movie ever made; it just seems to be.”

    Lynch’s lackluster 1997 neo-noir thriller “Lost Highway” a few years later didn’t fare much better.

    A turn came in 1998 when Lynch improbably took on the challenge of directing a G-rated Disney movie and created what he called “my most experimental movie”, saying “Tenderness can be just as abstract as insanity.”

    “The Straight Story” is a one of Lynch’s finest films. Based on the true story of 73-year-old Alvin Straight, who in 1994 rode his lawnmower more than 300 miles from Iowa to Wisconsin to reconcile with his ailing and estranged brother. It is a profoundly spiritual film about family, forgiveness and healing that celebrates America and the simple, unsentimentalized beauty of the rural Midwest. Perhaps the least likely to do it, Lynch shows the flip side of “Blue Velvet” and reframes America’s heartland as wholesome and its people as good and caring and true in a supremely moving triumph.

    Then came “Mulholland Drive,” Lynch’s much-heralded masterpiece regarded as one of the greatest films of all time, a poison-pen letter to Hollywood wrapped in Nancy Drew mystery.

    That the movie became anything was something of a miracle itself, having started as yet another TV series that was killed by ABC. The pilot was filmed in 1999 and a year and a half later, Lynch cobbled together the original cast, shot additional footage and rounded out his twisted plot.

    Lynch again used his favorite film structure, a mystery and an investigation. “Mulholland Drive” follows a budding actress who’s just arrived in Los Angeles as she forms a friendship with another young woman, who has become an amnesiac following a horrific car accident that left her for dead. The two women attempt to learn about the amnesiac’s mysterious past, leading them into an ever-stranger world of mobsters, actors, cops, singers and filmmakers.

    In this, his most artistically and philosophically complex work, Lynch portrays “the Hollywood golden dream turning rancid, curdling into a poisonous stew of hatred, envy, sleazy compromise and soul-killing failure. This is the underbelly of our glamorous fantasies”, as Michael Wilmington wrote in the Chicago Tribune.

    Following “Mulholland Drive,” Lynch’s filmic output sputtered in the final decades of his life and seemed to halt for lengthy stretches following his descent into near self-parody with his enigmatic last feature, “Inland Empire.” In 2017, he revived the “Twin Peaks” franchise with a baffling yet acclaimed season 3 for Showtime, which he described as an 18-hour movie.

    After that, Lynch then largely devoted himself to his paintings, his comic strip, his coffee-making business and transcendental meditation, the Buddhist practice he first embraced in his late 20s. He continued to frequent and praise the restaurant Bob’s Big Boy in Burbank, California.

    It is now very quiet out in David Lynch land and all the dreams have floated off into the dark. The dancing dwarfs are idle and The Log Lady no longer shares clairvoyant visions transmitted by The Log. David Lynch has crossed over the River Styx. Requiescat in pace.

    * * *

  • Cameron Diaz reveals real reason she returned to acting after 10 years

    Cameron Diaz reveals real reason she returned to acting after 10 years

    Cameron Diaz is back in a blockbuster movie for the first time in a decade, and now she’s revealing why she came out of retirement for the film Back in Action.

    The actress, 52, who dazzled in white at the London premiere of the film, said the answer for her was simple.

    It was co-star Jamie Foxx, 57.

    ‘I had 10 years of not paying attention to anything; not accepting any advances, and then I got this script and thought that maybe it was time,’ the actress said Friday on The Graham Norton Show.

    ‘If I was going to leave my family for 10 hours a day I wanted to do it with the most talented man in the entertainment business,’ she explained.

    ‘It is a privilege to make films, and we are all so lucky to do what we do,’ she told the audience.

    ‘That the door was even open for me after a decade was amazing. I loved those 10 years for me and my family, but I thought, ‘If I let this go away, if I don’t engage again, and if I don’t give it a chance, I am a fool.’ It might be the beginning of something, but it’s here now and I am grateful for it.’

    Cameron Diaz, 52, returned to acting for the first time in a decade to appear in the new action comedy Back in Action, which debuted on Netflix Friday. But why did the actress come out of retirement?

    The veteran star has worked with Foxx twice before in 1999’s Any Given Sunday and 2014’s Annie.

    The Charlie’s Angels star credited her husband of 10 years, Benji Madden, with supporting her decision.

    Read More Cameron Diaz and Benji Madden pose in rare selfie for 10th anniversary

    Diaz who shares daughter Raddix, five, and son Cardinal, about 10 months, with the Good Charlotte rocker, said the musician told her ‘”You’ve been supporting us and building the family,”‘ the actress explained, adding she had also been supportive of his musical career and business promoting other artists.

    ‘He’s like, “It’s time for us to support you and let Mommy ascend and do her thing,”‘ she said at Fortune magazines Most Powerful Women Summit, per E! News.

    Whether another project she likes will come her way is up in the air, the There’s Something About Mary star told Empire magazine in December 2024.

    ‘I don’t know how I view it. It’s hard to say,’ she explained.

    ‘If I say it then it becomes this thing. I reserve the right to say no to doing a movie ever again, and I reserve the right to say yes if I decide to,’ the Bad Teacher leading lady declared.

    ‘I’m not defining anything,’ she added, admitting, ‘I’m just open to whatever makes sense for me and my family at any given moment.’

    For the actress, the answer was simple – co-star Jamie Foxx, 57. ‘If I was going to leave my family for 10 hours a day I wanted to do it with the most talented man in the entertainment business,’ she explained on the Graham Norton Show

    Diaz and Foxx have been friends for some 25 years. The veteran star has worked with Foxx twice before in 1999’s Any Given Sunday and 2014’s Annie (Pictured in Berlin Wednesday)

    The actress said she is uncertain if she will accept more acting jobs. One thing is for sure. ‘No more romcoms, only momcoms.’ she told Empire (Pictured in London on Wednesday)

    One thing is for sure. ‘No more romcoms, only momcoms.’ she said.

    In Back in Action, Diaz and Foxx stay as former CIA agents whose lives are endangered with their identities are exposed.

    Reviews for action/comedy, which debuted on Netflix Friday have been less than stellar. The thriller received an abysmal 24-percent rating from the critics at Rotten Tomatoes.

    The Daily Beast called it an ‘eye-rolling abomination,’ while The Hollywood Reporter was less severe, calling it ‘starry, frothy, cute, harmless.’

  • New ‘Anaconda’ Movie Ensnares Thandiwe Newton, Steve Zahn (Exclusive)

    New ‘Anaconda’ Movie Ensnares Thandiwe Newton, Steve Zahn (Exclusive)

    Thandiwe Newton, who starred in HBO’s acclaimed Westworld, and Silo actor Steve Zahn have been swallowed up by Anaconda, Columbia’s comedic reimagining of the 1997 horror movie that launched a mini-franchise.

    Selton Mello, who appears in Brazilian awards season hopeful I’m Still Here, and Ione Sky have also joined the feature that stars by Paul Rudd and Jack Black. Mello will be making his English-language debut with the action comedy.

    Tom Gormican, who directed the Nicolas Cage meta movie The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent, is co-writing with collaborator Kevin Etten and will direct the feature.

    The original movie starred Jennifer Lopez, Owen Wilson, Ice Cube and Jon Voight, and followed a National Geographic film crew hunting for the world’s largest and deadliest snake, only to find the tables turned.

    The new story involves a group of friends facing mid-life crises who are remaking their favorite movie from their youth. They head to the rainforest, only to find themselves in a fight for their lives against natural disasters, giant snakes and violent criminals.

    Black will play an erstwhile director, a man stuck in his job as a wedding videographer, while Rudd will play an actor who did a stint on a cop show but sees his Hollywood dreams slipping further and further away.

    Newton and Zahn are other childhood friends that join the two on the ill-fated adventure, while Mello will play a Brazilian animal wrangler. Skye is playing Black’s wife.

    The movie is now shooting in Australia, where it being supported by the Queensland Government through Screen Queensland’s Production Attraction Strategy.

    Fully Formed, the banner run by producers Brad Fuller and Andrew Form, is producing the movie, which has a Dec. 25 release date.

    Newton, who won an Emmy for her work on Westworld, can currently be heard as part of the voice cast of Mufasa: The Lion King. She is repped by WME and Independent Talent.

    Zahn, who appeared in the first season of HBO’s The White Lotus, will next be seen opposite Glen Powell in Hulu’s upcoming series Chad Powers. He is repped by UTA, Principal Entertainment LA, and Sloane Offer.

    An actor since childhood in his native Brazil, Mello now stars opposite Fernanda Torrers in Walter Salles’ I’m Still Here. The political drama scored a major and surprise boost in the awards race earlier this month, when Torres won the Golden Globe for best actress. The movie also had a best foreign language film nomination and is Brazil’s entry into the Oscar race.

    Mello, who additionally last year starred in Brazilian movie Bury Your Dead, is also a director, with one of his movies, The Clown, serving as his country’s submission for the best foreign language film at the 2013 Oscars. He is repped by Danielle Robinson at ColorCreative and Lucy Popkin at GGSSC.

  • Roseanne Barr tries to start beef with Eminem in awful pro-Trump rap song: ‘Granny’s going bad’

    Roseanne Barr tries to start beef with Eminem in awful pro-Trump rap song: ‘Granny’s going bad’

    Roseanne Barr tries to start beef with Eminem in awful pro-Trump rap song: ‘Granny’s going bad’

    EW Staff

    January 18, 2025 at 3:58 AM

    Prepare your eyes and ears, because Roseanne Barr, a.k.a “this Granny,” is “going bad” in a new pro-Donald Trump rap music video. (Hey, at least she warned us.)

    In the bizarre video with Canadian rapper Tom MacDonald, titled “Daddy’s Home,” Barr dons blond box braids, gold chains, and sunglasses to gloat about the election with MacDonald. (The song features lyrics such as “We won, you mad, it’s done, too bad, boo hoo, so sad … you cry, we laugh” alongside MAGA iconography.)

    Barr then gets her own verse, rapping, “They try to cancel me and say I’m a racist. I got a mean hook, they can’t get me with that jam. Trying to take away my right to go and say this. Well, listen up, cuz this Granny’s going bad.”

    She appears to take a dig at her former show Roseanne or its spinoff The Conners, by then adding, “Why they trying to turn Becky into Dan?” (Both of which are characters in the franchise.) Then Barr attempts to start beef with a real rapper, by saying, “Screw Eminem, I’m Roseanne.” She also flips off the camera and at one point shakes her butt at it.

    Related: Kathy Griffin recalls Republican guest at party mistaking Rosie O’Donnell for ‘real conservative’ Roseanne Barr

    As for her grievance about being canceled, Barr is likely referring to her briefly rebooted show, Roseanne, being canceled at ABC in 2018 hours after she made a racist tweet attacking former President Obama senior adviser Valerie Jarrett. Barr used Jarrett’s initials and wrote, “Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby.”

    Sign up for Entertainment Weekly’s free daily newsletter to get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more.

    “Roseanne’s Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values, and we have decided to cancel her show,” ABC Entertainment President Channing Dungey said at the time.

    Related: Sandra Bernhard calls Roseanne Barr’s pivot to ‘anti-woke’ show ‘heartbreaking’

    Prior to ABC’s decision, Barr tried to do damage control by tweeting, “I apologize to Valerie Jarrett and to all Americans. I am truly sorry for making a bad joke about her politics and her looks. I should have known better. Forgive me-my joke was in bad taste.” Within three weeks, the show was revived without Barr — whose character was killed off — in the spinoff The Conners.

    In recent years, Barr, a vocal Trump supporter, has aligned herself with conservative figures and stirred controversy for bizarre remarks, including the claim that “nobody died in the Holocaust.” (Barr is Jewish.)

    Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly

  • Echoes of Justice and Nostalgia: India’s Courtroom Battle and Canada’s Candy Farewell

    Echoes of Justice and Nostalgia: India’s Courtroom Battle and Canada’s Candy Farewell

    In a nation where stories echo, painting the streets with both outrage and reflection, a recent verdict in India has rekindled debates on women’s safety. The harrowing incident—a grim tapestry of violence, missteps, and societal uproar—unfolded in Kolkata, a city now grappling with the shadows of a crime that transcends borders.

    The central figure, a 31-year-old physician, was not just another statistic in police files. Her life, snuffed out within the walls of RG Kar Medical College, was a call to arms, awakening the conscience of a nation. The accused, Sanjay Roy, a police volunteer, stands guilty—not merely in the eyes of the law, but in the court of public opinion—as the man who allegedly turned a place of healing into a scene of horror.

    Amidst the cacophony of protests and demands for justice, the legal process was anything but routine. Fast-tracked, thrust into the limelight by the sheer force of public indignation, it was a case that refused to be buried under bureaucratic apathy. The judiciary, compelled by the zeitgeist, ensured that this trial did not languish in the archives of unresolved mysteries. Nonetheless, the final word on Roy’s fate—whether life behind bars or the ultimate penalty—remains suspended in a moral and judicial balance.

    The discovery of the doctor’s body set off a chain of reactions—a visceral reminder of the systemic issues plaguing India. Victims often remain voiceless, their stories lost amidst societal stigma and a distrust that festers within communities, especially in rural heartlands. In a poignant statistic, the National Crime Records Bureau unveils a 20% rise in reported rapes in 2022—a grim reminder of the path still unpaved.

    Public outcry is not new to India. The country still bears the scars of the 2012 Delhi bus gang-rape—a brutal incident that fuelled legislative changes and saw the birth of fast-track courts. Yet, questions remain: are these measures mere band-aids on a haemorrhaging wound? For many, the safety promised by such reforms remains elusive.

    Meanwhile, a different type of storm brews in Canada. Cherry Blossom candies, those beloved—or loathed—treats, are poised to vanish from shelves, stirring emotions as varied as their fan base. The announcement from Hershey cast a bittersweet pall over the Canadian psyche, even as some rejoiced at the departure of what they considered an acquired taste.

    The candies, known for their maraschino cherry and syrup centre wrapped in a chocolate dome, have been a staple since the late 1800s. Their discontinuation is more than just a change in the candy aisle; it represents a cultural shift, a farewell to nostalgia. Social media platforms became battlegrounds of opinion, with some stockpiling the treats while others waved them goodbye with glee.

    As these stories weave through public consciousness, one thing becomes clear—whether it’s justice sought in the courts of India or the cultural waves stirred by a candy in Canada, the underlying themes of change, resistance, and reflection are universal. How societies respond to these echoes defines not just their headlines, but their essence.

  • Cherry Blossom Candy’s Farewell: A Bittersweet Goodbye to Canada’s Nostalgic Treat

    Cherry Blossom Candy’s Farewell: A Bittersweet Goodbye to Canada’s Nostalgic Treat

    In a bittersweet twist that leaves Canadian candy lovers amidst memories and melancholy, Hershey’s Canada has drawn the curtain on its beloved yet polarizing Cherry Blossom candy. As the world spins on, unyielding, the bright yellow boxes that adorned countless convenience store shelves are set to become relics of a sweet past.

    Cherry Blossoms—with their distinctive maraschino cherry embedded in syrup, hugged by coconut flakes, roasted peanuts, and a chocolate embrace—have long been a staple of Canadian confectionery folklore. Yet, like all good things, this too must end.

    The reason behind this decision remains a mystery, shrouded in corporate silence. A spokesperson for Hershey’s merely suggested, “Buy them now if you can and enjoy what’s left,” leaving fans to savor the final taste of nostalgia.

    For some, the news is akin to “losing a grandma,” as one Quebec-based artist poignantly expressed. These candies were more than just a treat; they were untouchable objects that bridged generations, harboring memories tucked away in each bite. The Cherry Blossom wasn’t just a snack; it was a tradition wrapped in yellow and sold for a modest $1.60.

    But not everyone is lamenting the departure. The candy’s unique flavor profile—once a treasured niche—isn’t universally adored. “I always thought they were old in every gas station,” quipped a Reddit user, questioning the candy’s appeal. Yet, even those who rarely indulged confess a looming void, a sense of something sweet lost to time’s relentless march.

    Historically, the Cherry Blossom’s journey began in the late 1800s with the Walter M. Lowney Company in Boston, eventually finding its way north to Canada, where it became an emblem of Canadian sweets. A testament to its roots, the candy was first introduced in Montreal and later manufactured across various Canadian cities, a testament to its widespread reach and cultural significance.

    However, the looming shadow of change finally catches up, as Hershey’s decision coincides with regulatory shifts—the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s ban on red dye No. 3. This controversial ingredient, long a staple in the Cherry Blossom’s vibrant allure, now faces the regulatory axe.

    As stores deplete their Cherry Blossom stocks, Canadians are left to grapple with a bittersweet farewell. Social media is abuzz with nostalgia and opinions, as devotees share memories while skeptics rejoice the candy’s impending curtain call. Hershey’s decision marks the end of an era—an era flavored with syrupy sweetness and childhood memories.

  • TikTok Schemes and Schoolyard Dreams: The Great Smartphone Standoff

    TikTok Schemes and Schoolyard Dreams: The Great Smartphone Standoff

    In an era where smartphones are practically glued to the hands of teens, a new TikTok sensation has stirred the pot—going viral and giving school administrators across the nation a reason to scratch their heads. The protagonist? A crafty hack designed to outwit those pesky school phone bans.

    Without further ado, the star of the show is none other than TikTok user Belle Hesse, whose inventive video showcases a simple yet cunning trick: Place a phone-sized piece of cardboard inside a black phone case, slap on an opaque screen protector, and voilà—a faux phone ready to fool any school official. Belle cheekily captions her video, “The school ain’t takin’ my phone this semester 💀”—much to the delight of over 16 million curious eyes as of mid-January.

    This cardboard charade has left audiences both amused and intrigued. Teens, quick to jump on the trend, chimed in with their own takes. “I would give them my old iPhone 6 instead of my new one, no questions asked,” one TikTok user commented, echoing a sentiment shared by many who simply hand in outdated devices instead of their current electronics. “TURN IN UR OLD PHONE,” another user urged, succinct in their advice.

    But not all students are getting away with phone swaps this easily, thanks to the ever-watchful eyes of school authorities. Enter Yondr pouches—small, secure, magnetized bags that keep phones locked down in designated areas. Expensive or not, they’re becoming ubiquitous in schools across the States. As one disgruntled student pointed out, “My school can’t afford to fix my poor math teacher’s AC or get ant exterminators, but they can purchase Yondr pouches for over 2,000 students???”

    The movement to curb cell phone use isn’t confined to just a handful of institutions. Statewide bans have seen an uptick, with states like California, Florida, Indiana, and Virginia spearheading the initiative. These policies vary in severity but share a common belief influenced by figures like U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy. In a 2024 opinion piece for The New York Times, Murthy pointed to social media as a factor in youth mental health troubles—calling for warning labels akin to those on cigarettes and alcohol. “It is time to require a surgeon general’s warning label on social media platforms,” he declared, underscoring the potential dangers lying behind that seductive digital glow.

    Despite the bans and warnings, not everyone is on board with these strict measures, particularly parents who worry about communication in emergencies. “We’ve not done our job as grown-ups to try to teach our kids the skills they need to actually navigate this technology,” noted Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parents Union. The concern isn’t merely that kids have phones—it’s about what they’re exposed to when the school day ends, and screens light up away from adult supervision.

    So, while some teens cleverly evade today’s rules, a broader conversation lingers about responsibility, communication, and the delicate balance of technology in our daily lives. As schools and parents navigate this digital labyrinth, one thing remains clear: The dialogue around these pint-sized, powerful devices—and how to handle them—is far from over.

  • From Cardboard Phones to Royal Resilience: How Modern Challenges Are Redefining Ingenuity and Strength

    From Cardboard Phones to Royal Resilience: How Modern Challenges Are Redefining Ingenuity and Strength

    In an era where truth often seems stranger than fiction, today’s headlines vividly underscore the unpredictable tapestry of modern life — from ingenious student hacks to pressing public health debates, and deeply personal battles against disease within royal walls. It’s a curious tableau we’re observing, where youth ingenuity, healthcare evolution, and the intimate struggles of high-profile figures intersect, sparking conversations that resonate far beyond their primary subjects.

    TikTok, that vibrant tapestry of quirks and creativity, recently played host to a viral spectacle that may cause some school administrators to raise an eyebrow — or perhaps several. In a January post, teenage user Belle Hesse demonstrated a clever ruse designed to outsmart her school’s no-phone policy. The DIY tactic involved substituting a real phone with a meticulously crafted cardboard imitation, shielded by a phone case and opaque screen protector. As Belle cheekily declared in the video, “The school ain’t takin’ my phone this semester 💀” — a defiant sentiment that has resonated with millions, racking up views and stirring lively debate amongst students and educators alike.

    This act of youthful rebellion comes amid a growing trend of phone bans in schools across America — a phenomenon gaining traction after U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy articulated concerns about social media’s impact on adolescent mental health. But as some schools opt for drastic measures, such as Yondr pouches that lock away devices, a portion of the parent community calls for a balance, stressing the necessity of phones in ensuring direct communication during potential emergencies.

    Shifting from classrooms to clinics, nurse practitioners in Ontario are urging clarity in public funding — a conversation reignited by federal Health Minister Mark Holland’s recent declarations. As Ontario faces a looming shortfall in family doctors, NPs are stepping into the breach, capable of providing essential medical services traditionally delivered by physicians. Yet, this rise in NP-led care surfaces the pressing need for a robust funding model that reflects their critical role.

    Currently, while most nurse practitioners in Ontario are salaried, the system lacks consistency — some NPs run private clinics with out-of-pocket costs, a gap that Holland insists should fall under public health insurance. “The time to act is now,” asserts Lhamo Dolkar, president of the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, as she underscores the urgent necessity for Premier Doug Ford and Minister of Health Sylvia Jones to address this policy vacuum. With changes expected by April 2026, the path forward remains a focus of intense deliberation, while voices like Michelle Acorn of the Nurse Practitioners’ Association call for flexibility in any forthcoming funding structures.

    Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the British royal family grapples with its own tribulations — a narrative marked by the unsettling specter of cancer. In a candid interview with The Times, Sarah Ferguson — Duchess of York — opened up about her mental health battles following two separate cancer diagnoses within mere months. “Cancer is like a bomb going off in your life,” she revealed, painting a poignant picture of resilience supported by her family, mindfulness practices, and a resolve to remain positive despite daunting odds.

    The Duchess’s ordeal is but one chapter in what Prince William has distilled as a “dreadful” year for the royals. With both King Charles and Princess Kate also facing their own health struggles, the royal circle finds itself navigating a storm of personal challenges amidst the constant glare of public scrutiny.

    In this complex world, where the narratives of individuals and institutions coil and uncoil in unpredictable ways, we find ourselves bearing witness to the tenacity of the human spirit. Whether through teenage ingenuity, healthcare advocacy, or personal resilience amid adversity, each story speaks to the broader truths of our time — that change is constant, that hope endures, and that the narratives we weave today will shape the world’s tomorrows.