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‘X-Men’ Concept Trailer Casts Henry Cavill, Dwayne Johnson & More in the MCU Reboot

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A new concept trailer imagines what the MCU reboot of The X-Men might look like, and brings back former Superman and Witcher Henry Cavill

as Wolverine. After years of being one of the top fan casting choices, Cavill wielded the spiky hair and adamantium claws of Logan for real in last year’s MCU sequel Deadpool & Wolverine. And while it was just a multiversal cameo, many fans are hoping that the actor will be chosen to play the character when The X-Men are folded into the Marvel franchise. You can check out the X-Men concept trailer below.

Should they bring Henry Cavill back for the MCU reboot, this concept trailer, which has been created by YouTube user stryder HD using footage from previous movies and controversial A.I. technologies, shows what that decision might look like. Alongside Cavill, the concept trailer casts a series of A-listers as The X-Men and supporting characters, including Top Gun: Maverick star Glen Powell as Cyclops, Kingsman’s Mark Strong as Charles Xavier, Lord of the Rings alumni Viggo Mortensen as Magneto, and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson as Apocalypse.

The footage also brings back Channing Tatum as Gambit who, much like Henry Cavill, finally got to play the role of the Cajun with explosive-charging hands in Deadpool & Wolverine after trying for years to get a solo movie off the ground. He just wants to make a name for himself, and now he does, alongside DeWanda Wise as Storm, Joel Edgerton as Beast, and Reacher star Alan Ritchson as Colossus.

‘Avengers: Secret Wars’ Will Lead To a New Age of Mutants in the MCU

Following the completed purchase of 21st Century Fox by Disney, The X-Men can finally be brought into the MCU alongside the likes of Spider-Man, Doctor Strange, and Captain America. The emergence of the beloved characters has already begun, with Hugh Jackman reprising the role of Wolverine alongside Ryan Reynolds in Deadpool & Wolverine, as well as the aforementioned Channing Tatum version of Gambit.

But that’s not all! Kelsey Grammer reprised the role of Beast for a post-credits scene cameo at the end of The Marvels, while Patrick Stewart returned as Professor Xavier in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Regarding Wolverine, the latest MCU outing, Captain America: Brave New World introduces adamantium, which plays a major part in the creation of the fan-favorite X-Men character, to the universe.

Related


Everything We Know About the MCU X-Men Movie

Everyone’s favorite mutants are set to make their MCU debut and here’s everything we know about it.

Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige, meanwhile, has revealed when we will start to see more of The X-Men and their mutant brothers and sisters enter the MCU. Speaking during a live virtual appearance at the Disney APAC Content Showcase back in November, Feige revealed that the multiversal madness of Avengers: Secret Wars will be the beginning of “a new age of mutants.”

“I think you will see that continues in our next few movies with some X-Men players that you might recognize. Right after that, the whole story of Secret Wars really leads us into a new age of mutants and of the X-Men. Again, [it’s] one of those dreams come true. We finally have the X-Men back.”



This story originally appeared on Movieweb

I Still Can’t Believe Buffy the Vampire Slayer Is Tied to Playboy of All Things

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The Buffy the Vampire Slayer franchise – Angel included – has always been linked with celebrities. The original series had numerous celebrity cameos – including the likes of Ashanti and John Ritter – while also providing a career jumping off point for future stars like Pedro Pascal and Amy Adams. Meanwhile, numerous celebs have been mentioned in its lore, such as Billy Idol canonically taking inspiration from Spike for his iconic look.

Perhaps the strangest celebrity cameo in the history of the franchise comes in Angel: After the Fall #2 by Joss Whedon, Brian Lynch, and Franco Urru, a canonical comic book continuation of Buffy the Vampire Slayer that shows how Spike officially replaces Hugh Hefner, the Playboy founder.

In an arc that is further elaborated on two years later in the Spike: After the Fall prequel, Spike takes residence at the Playboy Mansion, surrounded by a bevy of women, who worship him as the Lord of Beverly Hills. Seeing how Spike gains this mantle highlights how some of the franchise’s most whimsical moments come from delivering unique takes on real-world celebrities.

How Spike Takes Hugh Hefner’s Place at the Playboy Mansion

Angel: After the Fall #2 by Joss Whedon, Brian Lynch, Franco Urru, Ilaria Traversi, Robbie Robbins, and Chris Ryall

The Buffy the Vampire Slayer television shows officially concluded with the Angel series finale, but the universe continued in the comics. While Angel turned into a dragon-taming human and Los Angeles into a literal Hell, Spike’s story begins in Spike: After the Fall. Alongside Illyria, Spike takes in a group of survivors looking for a safe haven. Along the way, Team Spike is confronted by a group of leather-clad women claiming to be followers of the Lord of Beverly Hills, Non. Upon defeating Non in Spike: After the Fall #4 by Brian Lynch and Franco Urru, the “Spikettes” become Spike’s followers, and Spike takes Non’s title.

Buffyverse fans already view Spike as a sex symbol, so having him replace the face of sex symbols in the Playboy founder is fitting.

Trying to take refuge, Spike takes his flock to the Playboy Mansion, where they’re greeted by a vampiric Hugh Hefner. After staking him, Spike takes residence there, posing as a demon lord to ward off intruding demons and training the ladies to protect themselves. It’s a natural, almost meta evolution for Spike. Buffyverse fans already view Spike as a sex symbol, so having him replace the face of sex symbols in the Playboy founder is fitting. At the same time, Spike stays true to his evolution as a vampire warrior by training his followers.

Spike Killing Hugh Hefner Pinpoints Why Buffy’s Celebrity Cameos Are Perfect

Canonizing Icons in Fun Ways

buffy-vampire-slayer-ted-john-ritter

Whether it’s naming a celebrity in reference or actually featuring them onscreen and on-panel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer has always been self-aware about celebrities’ place in pop culture. It’s why John Ritter’s innocent boy next door image from the ’70s is replaced with a menacing villain in Season 2’s episode “Ted.” This moment in After the Fall is a moment of such self-awareness, leaning into Spike’s reputation in Buffy the Vampire Slayer as an irresistible womanizer and catering to Hugh Hefner’s seductive succubus reputation by turning him into a vampire.

Related


Before Buffy the Vampire Slayer Ended, Did Angel Slay the Dragon? We Now Know

The Buffy the Vampire Slayer comics extend the universe of the franchise, including delivering on the Angel finale’s promise of battling a dragon.

In any and every iteration of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its encompassing universe, be it in the comics or televised, the creative teams have understood their audience and the wider pop culture sphere. It’s especially reassuring to anyone who has heard the news about Buffy returning thanks to a Hulu sequel, as every Buffy creative team needs to have its finger on the pulse when it comes to understanding and reflecting pop culture. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s resident heartthrob, Spike, killing the creator of Playboy is the best possible example.

Angel: After the Fall and Spike: After the Fall are available now from Dark Horse Comics.



This story originally appeared on Screenrant

Long Beach Opera mounts an all-Pauline Oliveros season

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“Here’s our slogan,” Long Beach Opera’s interim managing director proudly announces during a recent conversation about the company’s upcoming season, “We’re not the Met!”

For an art form hardly accepting of understatement, such a slogan is insurgent understatement. The oldest opera company in the Los Angeles area and America’s oldest purveyor of consistently progressive opera is about to embark on the most uncompromising season of any company of its size or supposed mission anywhere. Ever.

Marjorie Beale may be interim in her role as managing director, but she had been board president before she stepped down to help find a new course for the company, which had gone through administrative turmoil over the last few years. A former professor of European intellectual history and critical theory at UC Irvine, she is now a revolutionary opera empowerer.

I’m meeting with her, LBO artistic director and chief creative officer James Darrah and music director Christopher Rountree over a boisterous lunch, and my first question is: So whose idea was it to devote an entire season to Pauline Oliveros?

Rountree: “I don’t know the answer.”

Darrah: “I don’t know that there is an answer.”

Beale: “It’s like it came from deep inside all of us.”

Rountree: “But there was a moment where it was in the air. And then Jim said to me, ‘What if it’s all Pauline and nothing but Pauline?’ That would be a dream for me.”

Darrah: “Weirdly it felt like what we should be doing. It’s why I came to Long Beach.”

Beale: “I was overjoyed.”

Another question for Beale: So how many board members has she enraged when even a single production by so experimental a composer surely alarms even the most courageous opera board in this artistically and financially cautious day and age?

“We’ve only lost one board member,” Beale answers sunnily. She also notes that she spent the holidays sweet-talking patrons and donors with her Christmas cards. Many have apparently come around. “I would say our board is pretty hardy,” Beale adds.

M.A. Tiesenga, center, during a dress rehearsal for Pauline Oliveros’ “Earth Ears” in December at Angels Gate Cultural Center in San Pedro.

(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

The LBO team, moreover, is convinced that since Oliveros’ death in 2016 at age 84, her relevance has grown to the point where we are in an obvious Oliveros moment. She was a pioneer composer of electronic music. She was a pioneering, shamanistic accordionist. She was a pioneering feminist and lesbian composer. She was a pioneering professor at Mills College in Oakland, at UC San Diego and elsewhere who inspired a significant number of today’s venturesome musicians. She has such acolytes as star flutist Claire Chase, who will be music director of this year’s Ojai Music Festival. A one-time outsider, Oliveros is taken seriously throughout the musical world.

But opera?

Oliveros was in no way, shape or traditional form an opera composer. She was, though, a brilliant maker of acoustic spectacle. Galvanized by sound in yawning subterranean caverns, she made her calling “deep listening” as a way to overcome the world’s ever-increasing surface noise. She discovered that once drones — be they calming or grating — resonate within our bodies they have the urgent power to alter our very sense of being. She further instructed us to tune into the little sounds of nature.

By exploring situations in which musicians share their profound awareness of how these sounds operate, how they reach others and the pleasure gained from their response, her work proves startlingly dramatic in performance. Given Oliveros’ delight in outrage, fine sense of humor, obsession with process and ability to anthropomorphize all sounds, no matter the source, it doesn’t take much to turn works, especially those with texts, into full-blown theater.

When Oliveros titled a piece “Beethoven Was a Lesbian,” as she once did, she wonderfully stimulated (and stymied) the imaginations of performers and audiences alike. The next step becomes opera, whether she called it that (only a couple of times) or not. It’s the kind of magical musical thinking, in fact, that led Rountree to form his revolutionary new-music ensemble Wild Up 15 years ago. It’s exactly what Darrah, who also heads UCLA’s opera program, believes opera needs to move forward.

Beale’s response to anyone who says this isn’t opera: “It doesn’t matter.” She says that recalling the startling, sheer beauty of Oliveros’ works at the Ojai festival nine years ago, when Peter Sellars programmed them at Meditation Mountain. She realized how much they said about healing, about coming together, about recovery. “I knew we need to do something like this right now,” Beale said.

That same sense of coming together and healing made Oliveros a favored composer among far-flung musicians for Zoom performances during the COVID-19 shutdown, as it did when Oliveros’ “Ringing for Healing” once became part of a street agitprop in New York.

What does matter to Darrah and Rountree is the discovery of potential for opera. “We need to build the Black Mountain College of opera in L.A.,” Darrah says, referring to the experimental North Carolina college that hosted noted artists such as Robert Rauschenberg and John Cage.

“It’s like Jamie Barton comes to us and doesn’t sing Azucena but Oliveros,” Darrah says. Lest LBO be mistaken for New York’s Metropolitan Opera, the Met mezzo-soprano who starred as the gypsy in Verdi’s “Il Trovatore” will sing whatever animal is needed in Oliveros’ “El Relicario de los Animales,” which will be mounted at Heritage Square Museum on Feb. 15 and 16.

A graphic score for female vocalist and 20-member instrumental ensemble invites musical gestures for channeling the sonic wonderland of animal life and nature into mystical harmonic space. Darrah has added a second singer, Brenda Rae, a soprano also noted for her performances of more standard repertory, who will double as a percussionist.

“Relicario,” which was first given as a concert work at the 1979 CalArts Contemporary Music Festival, will be the first of LBO’s so-called three Oliveros operas. As a preseason tryout of the Oliveros idea last summer, the company presented one of Oliveros’ best-known works, “bye bye butterfly,” a haunting eight-minute electronic piece from 1965 that uses a recorded bit of Puccini’s “Madama Butterfly” and is often interpreted as a metaphor for women’s place in society. Puccini’s heroine here is overwhelmed by oscillating sine waves. LBO turned this into an enthusiastically engaging group improvisation.

Vocalists Kathryn Shuman and Sharon Chohi Kim lie atop shredded paper during a rehearsal for Pauline Oliveros' "Earth Ears."

Vocalists Sharon Chohi Kim, left, and Kathryn Shuman perform during a dress rehearsal for Pauline Oliveros’ indoor-outdoor event “Earth Ears: A Sonic Ritual,” performed by the Long Beach Opera at Angels Gate Cultural Center in San Pedro on Dec. 15, 2024.

(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

In December, as a preview to the season, LBO staged “Earth Ears” in San Pedro at the Angels Gate Cultural Center. It began outdoors, and the first thing Darrah and Rountree discovered was an amazing five-second echo in which instruments resonated from the cliffs of Rancho Palos Verdes miles away. For the performance inside, the room was decorated with shredded paper (Prairie T. Trivuth will be designer for all the Oliveros productions), and instrumentalists scattered about the room and among the audience interacted in rigorous ways indicated by the score but also with just enough freedom that anything could happen.

Rountree says he was confronted with figuring out what Oliveros’ rules allow. “Do they force musicians toward introversion and introspection or push back against that? Is that tension even allowed to exist?” he asked himself.

“At the rehearsal, everyone was doing the rules, and the effect was a kind of shimmering. It felt like night music, like the piece was going to a place. But when we finished the rehearsal, it could not go to that place. I thought, if it does, it does. If it doesn’t, it doesn’t. It would go where it wanted or always stay on the horizon.”

But during the performance, a jazz-like solo here, a different kind of response there, led to what became a grand theatrical moment. You could feel a collective awe from the audience.

“The work is about commitment and presence,” Rountree concludes, “so why not just commit completely to the work. The only way to engage is to go fully underwater.”

The other two productions will be “The Library of Maps: An Opera in Many Parts,” a collaboration from 2001 with poet Moira Roth, more a concert piece to be turned into an opera in April on the Queen Mary in Long Beach; and “The Nubian Word for Flowers: A Phantom Opera” in July (venue still to be determined). This is Oliveros’ most operatic piece and was given as a work in progress by Yuval Sharon and the Industry at the Hammer Museum in 2013, when Rountree and Wild Up participated. The LBO production will be the West Coast premiere of a chamber (or pocket) version with a libretto by Oliveros’ partner, Ione.

Oliveros with her partner, librettist Ione, in 2013.

Oliveros with her partner, librettist Ione, in 2013.

(Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)

Beyond that in the next two seasons, Beale says, the company will present the premiere of an opera by Shelley Washington as well as some traditional opera. Darrah is eager to stage Mozart’s “Così Fan Tutte.” There had been some talk of including “Cosi” this season with Oliveros additions, but the company didn’t want to compete with Los Angeles Opera’s production of Mozart’s opera in March or Yuval Sharon’s Detroit Opera staging in April. Darrah promises his own innovations.

In the meantime, Beale says she is determined to use Oliveros as “a kind of giant reset.”

Walking out of “Earth Ears” with Darrah and Rountree, she saw the sun set over the ocean, and the three of them just stood and looked.

“I thought to myself, this is the first time that we’ve done something that wasn’t in some way influenced by what was in the past,” she says. “Now we’re looking forward to what we’re going to do together.

“We’re really doing what we say we’re about. We’re not holding back. We’re not hiding in the corner. We’re just going for it.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Este Haim Shows Off Sparkly Ring, ‘I’m Taken’ Tee on Instagram

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Este Haim has an especially gleeful photo up on Instagram that hints at an engagement to reported beau Jonathan Levin, tech entrepreneur and CEO of Chainalysis.

Este, one third of sister band Haim with Danielle and Alana, posted a selfie that flashed what looks to be a diamond on her left finger on Thursday (Feb. 13). In the picture, she’s wearing a baby blue “I’M TAKEN” T-shirt and grinning with her eyes closed. While she didn’t caption the photo update, she replied to a comment that said, “Oh she’s TAKEN taken” with “TAKEN IS RIGHT,” and said “thank you” when congratulated. More congratulations messages poured in on the post.

Billboard reached out to a representative for Haim for comment on Saturday, but did not immediately receive a response.

Since posting the ring picture, Este’s followed up with a post featuring a picture of herself and one with her sisters, and a video clip of TikToker Harry Daniels crooning “No Body, No Crime” to the trio — an impromptu moment that had them grooving along and chiming in with the lyric “She was with me, dude.” (Haim is featured on the country-crime track from Taylor Swift’s Evermore album; Este is named in its verses.)

People reports that Este uploaded an Instagram Story on Valentine’s Day of a FaceTime screenshot with Levin. “happy valentine’s day i love you j” was typewritten on the picture.

While she hasn’t publicly spoken about their relationship, the couple have been photographed together at events including Kansas City Chiefs games and the U.S. Open, which they attended with Swift, and celebrating Swift’s birthday in 2023.

Haim’s latest studio album, Women in Music Pt. III, was released in 2020. It reached No. 13 on the Billboard 200 and received a Grammy nomination for album of the year. In 2021, Haim was honored with the international group award at the Brits.




This story originally appeared on Billboard

Common snack that may be contributing to your lack of sleep

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If you’re having trouble sleeping, your diet could be to blame, particularly if it includes a common snack that contains caffeine. Caffeine is a stimulant found in coffee, tea, and energy drinks, known for its ability to keep us alert by stimulating the brain and nervous system.

The NHS recommends avoiding such stimulants at least two hours before bedtime due to their wakefulness-inducing effects. However, as caffeine can linger in the body for up to five hours, it might be wise to avoid it well before you plan to sleep.

While steering clear of caffeinated beverages like tea or coffee before bed is straightforward, it’s also important to avoid foods containing caffeine. One surprising culprit is chocolate.

This popular treat is present in many foods and drinks, so reconsider that late-night scoop of chocolate ice cream. Different types of chocolate contain varying levels of caffeine.

Dark chocolate has the most, with 43mg per 100g, followed by milk chocolate with 20mg per 100g, while white chocolate contains no caffeine. To put this into perspective, an average cup of coffee contains more than 94g of caffeine.

But caffeine isn’t the only ingredient in chocolate that could be disrupting your sleep.

Theobromine, another stimulant found in dark chocolate that gives it its distinctive bitter taste, could also contribute to sleeplessness along with caffeine. Dark chocolate, which contains more cocoa solids, has the highest theobromine content, while milk chocolate has less and white chocolate none at all.

How much caffeine you should consume daily

The NHS recommends keeping your caffeine intake below 600mg per day. If you’re particularly sensitive to caffeine, you might want to limit this even further.

Overconsumption can lead to restlessness, anxiety, insomnia, agitation, palpitations, and diarrhoea. A 2013 study involving 12 participants found that consuming 400mg of caffeine up to six hours before bedtime resulted in disrupted sleep and reduced total sleep time by an hour.

Other food and drinks to avoid before going to bed

There are other foods and drinks containing caffeine that you might want to avoid for a good night’s sleep. These include:

  • Coffee (even decaf still contains a small amount of caffeine)
  • Tea (including green tea)
  • Energy drinks
  • Kola nuts
  • Cocoa beans
  • Guarana
  • Some chewing gums
  • Yerba Mate

Always check the label of the food or drink you purchase to see if caffeine is included in the ingredients list.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Why Tigerlily Adnan Abdelfattah Received 90 Day Fiancé Backlash

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Tigerlily Abdelfattah and Adnan Abdelfattah were a front-row couple throughout 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days Season 7. The couple seemed to have more screen time than anyone else as viewers followed Tigerlily on two trips to see Adnan. At the start of the season, Tigerlily flew to Jordan where she married Adnan the same night she met him. After leaving Jordan, Tigerlily and Adnan met in Turkey a few months later to start working toward having a family. During the Tell All, the couple introduced their son Zeyn. 

While Tigerlily and Adnan initially seemed like one of the better couples this season, they have since fallen from grace. Recent behavior from both Tigerlily and Adnan has raised red flags for 90 Day Fiancé fans.

Adnan Abdelfattah was a bully during the Tell All

Adnan had a few controversial moments during the season, but his behavior at the Tell All was simply unacceptable. From the beginning, Adnan went out of his way to cause drama with his fellow cast mates. Adnan constantly picked on Niles Valentine, who opened up about his struggles with autism during the season. During Niles’ segment with Matilda Nti, Adnan kept interrupting him to ask about his own relationship. Niles was clearly overwhelmed, which only made Adnan harass Niles more.

Another cast member who Adnan disrespected was Brian Muniz. During his segments this season, Brian opened up about the incident that led to him becoming a wheelchair user. At one point, Adnan told Brian that he wouldn’t listen to him since he was in a wheelchair. This was incredibly rude and disrespectful of Adnan and is something that should never be tolerated. 

Vanja Grbic was another target for Adnan, seemingly because of her gender. At one point during a break, Vanja started a conversation with Tigerlily and Adnan backstage. When Tigerlily had to step away, Vanja expressed that she wanted to keep talking to Adnan. Instead of politely explaining that he shouldn’t talk to women alone due to his religion, Adnan became disrespectful yet again. He asked Vanja what the point of talking to her would be, which came off as rude. Even if Adnan didn’t mean it that way, he should have explained the situation instead of getting aggressive.

Tigerlily Abdelfattah supported Adnan’s bad behavior at the Tell All

Photo Credit: TLC via YouTube

Throughout the season, Tigerlily was vocal and expressive. During the Tell All, however, she barely said a word. The only times she did speak were to defend Adnan’s bad behavior. She defended his disrespectful treatment of Vanja and Niles and later made even more disrespectful posts online. During a Q&A on Instagram, Tigerlily claimed that Niles wasn’t really autistic and that Brian got himself into a wheelchair. These were two very ignorant statements that Tigerlily had no right to make.

During the Tell All, Tigerlily did briefly speak up to criticize Ingrid Rezende. While discussing the moment when Ingrid revoked consent to be intimate with Brian, Tigerlily accused her of being deceptive since she was wearing lingerie. This statement was troubling, especially coming from a woman. Consent can be revoked at absolutely any time and Ingrid had every right to say no when she did.

90 Day Fiancé fans are skeptical of Tigerlily’s financial situation

Tigerlily Abdelfattah from 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days
Photo Credit: TLC via YouTube

Tigerlily’s reputation was stained even further when news recently broke about allegations that she had stolen $340,000 from her grandfather’s trust. This has since been questioned by numerous sources and Tigerlily denied it. It’s still not clear what the story is here, however, fans have had issues with Tigerlily’s financial habits long before this news.

Since the start of the season, it’s been evident that Tigerlily lives in a bubble when it comes to money. In her opening scene, she spent over $20,000 on a watch for Adnan. She explained that she funds her lifestyle from alimony from her ex-husband. Later in the season, however, Tigerlily claimed that she was hotel hopping with her kids when their lease ended. Many viewers felt that something didn’t add up in Tigerlily’s story. 

Tigerlily further infuriated fans when someone asked how they could become a handwriting specialist like her, during her Q&A on Instagram. In response, Tigerlily explained that the course was $30,000. She didn’t acknowledge the abnormally high price in any way. This rubbed some fans the wrong way, as it seems that Tigerlily is ignorant as to the average person’s financial situation.

90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days is available to stream on Discovery Plus.

TELL US – WHAT DID YOU THINK OF TIGERLILY AND ADNAN THIS SEASON? DO YOU THINK ANY OF THEIR BEHAVIOR WAS ALARMING?




This story originally appeared on Realitytea

‘Young and the Restless’ Stars Valarie Pettiford & Jermaine Rivers Shine Playing Damian Kane’s Paternity 

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Paternity reveals on daytime drama have been going on since before Bill Horton (finally) learned that his nephew Michael was, in reality, his son on Days of our Lives in the mid-1970s. The Young and the Restless has shown that classic story beats like that still work today as evidenced by the terrific performances last week given by Valarie Pettiford (Amy) and TV son Jermaine Rivers (Damian).

The stage for the great acting work that’s been acknowledged by TV Insider’s Daytime Performers of the Week began last year when fan favorite Pettiford stepped into the role of 1980s character Amy Lewis. A dying Amy informed Nate (the always solid Sean Dominic), the son of her late lover Nathan Hastings, Sr. (Nathan Purdee), that she’d given birth to Nate’s half-brother – Damian.

Fast-forward to Damian being found and coming to Genoa City. The part of Damian is Rivers’ first soap opera role, but he brings a technical expertise to the genre that makes the veteran primetime actor (Sweet Magnolias, Law & Order: SVU) seem like a daytime pro.

Damian showed up at Nate’s apartment understandably guarded given that he was estranged from his mother and he’d been offered a job by Nate under false pretenses. “I’m happy with this new life that I’ve made for myself,” Damian bluntly informed his estranged mother. “I suggest you find a way to be happy in yours.”

Damian was about to exit the room, but Amy stopped her son with the painful revelation that she was sick, dying. Throughout the scenes that followed, Pettiford had Amy summon all her energy as she tried to unite her son with his half-brother while never letting us forget that she was fighting to stay alive. Pettiford conveyed Amy’s illness, but even more painful was the hurt she felt for her son. She didn’t want him to be alone after she was gone.

© Howard Wise/jpistudios.com

Despite – or perhaps because of – his mother telling him of her impending death, Jermaine started to leave once again. Amy stopped him from doing so by informing him that the late Jackson was not his father. The writers handed Rivers terrific material in these scenes. First, he went to denial – there was no way that Jackson wasn’t his dad. In anger, Damian blasted his mom, telling her that the chemo was affecting her brain. “It was a mistake coming here,” Damian insisted, almost willing the truth to be lies.

This is the first time that Pettiford and Rivers are playing mother and son, but their chemistry plays on-screen like they’ve been TV family members for years. “Because when I’m gone, I don’t want you to be alone,” an emotional Amy said to Damian as to why she was telling her son the truth now.

The next bombshell came when Amy informed Damian that 1) his father, Nathan Hastings, Sr. was dead, and 2) Nate was his half-brother. Exposition can often drag down a scene, grinding it to a halt, but Pettiford used the information to heighten Amy’s desperation. It’s clear that she’s a loving mother who only wants what’s best for her son.

Damian made good on his next attempt to walk out, stating he wasn’t looking for family. It was only after her son’s back was towards her that Amy allowed herself to collapse fully into tears. Barely getting the words out, Amy tearfully emoted that time was the one thing she simply does not have. It’s always more compelling to watch someone try not to try – brava, Ms. Pettiford! (Memo to Y&R writers: Can Amy please go into remission?)

Later, Damian reconnected with his pal Holden (Nathan Owens) to vent his frustrations over the truth bombs that had been dropped on him. (Sidebar: Damian and Holden? Are these names a wink to As the World Turns fans? If so, well played!)

Expository recaps are a reality of soaps, but Rivers made Damian bringing Holden up to speed on what went down interesting. We could see that deep down he was affected emotionally by his mom’s words – even if he’s not willing to admit it quite yet. “I haven’t had a chance to process the whole reality of that,” Damian told Holden about his mom’s mortality.

Holden urged Damian to focus on work issues – not his personal life. “This news can only be as big as a I make,” shrugged Damian, theorizing, “We [should] leave Genoa City and never look back.”

However, the more Damian talked about putting all this behind him, the more it appeared he was in shock. While Damian may have an agenda to leave town, we suspect that Y&R has plans to keep the character around; his bumping into Lily (Christel Khalil) all but guarantees a longer on-screen chemistry scene coming. We can’t wait to see it.

We’re also looking forward to Damian reconciling with Amy. There’s lots of drama to be mined in this mother/son dynamic and it’s clear that Pettiford and Rivers bring talent and chemistry to the screen.

Young and the Restless, Weekdays, CBS




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

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Business leaders value time as much as money, and BJ’s makes shopping seamless with multiple convenient options. With ExpressPay, you can skip the checkout line by scanning items in-club and paying through the BJ’s mobile app. Need to pick up an order quickly? Use Curbside Pickup, Buy Online Pick Up In-Club (BOPIC), or Same-Day Delivery to get what you need without disrupting your busy schedule.

This offer is available to new members only, and redeeming your BJ’s membership is simple. Purchase your redemption code today, follow the instructions in your order confirmation email, and start saving.

With 7 million+ members, 244 locations across the eastern U.S., and 175 gas stations, BJ’s Wholesale Club is the cost-effective, high-value solution for both business and personal shopping needs.

Get this 1-year BJ’s membership offer for $20 while you still can.

StackSocial prices subject to change.



This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

Quaker Oats recalls 10K boxes of Pearl Milling Company pancake mix over allergy risk

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The Quaker Oats Co. has recalled 10,000 boxes of pancake mix because it contains milk not declared on the label and could pose a risk of potentially dangerous allergic reactions.

The Chicago-based company, a unit of PepsiCo, recalled 2-pound boxes of Pearl Milling Company Original Pancake & Waffle Mix sold in stores in 11 states.

Consumers would have been able to buy the affected pancake mix as early as November 2024.

Quaker Oats Co. has recalled 10,000 boxes of pancake mix as it contains milk not declared on the label that can cause a potential risk to dangerous allergic reactions. AP

A pan of food being poured into another pan
The recall has been affected in 11 states which include: Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Utah and Wisconsin. alvarez

The boxes have a UPC code of 30000 65040 and a best-by date of Sept. 13, 2025.

The mix, formerly sold as Aunt Jemima pancake mix, was sent to stores in Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Utah and Wisconsin.

People with allergies or sensitivities to milk could develop a serious or life-threatening reaction if they consume the recalled mix.

No allergic reactions related to the recall have been reported, the company said.

Consumers with such conditions should discard the product.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Inject some common sense — shut down NYC’s ‘safe’ drug sites

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In November, Donald Trump made significant electoral gains in New York’s black and Latino neighborhoods, and in the city’s least affluent communities. Now he is poised to take an important step to improve public safety in these voters’ neighborhoods.

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-SI) last week wrote to new Attorney General Pam Bondi, pleading for the administration to shut down the city’s two “safe injection sites.”

These facilities, located in East Harlem and Washington Heights, provide supervision to drug abusers as they consume harmful substances like fentanyl, meth, heroin and cocaine.

Yes, these are illegal drugs under federal law — and the aptly nicknamed federal “crack house statute” prevents individuals from retaining property for their consumption.

Indeed, Trump’s Justice Department successfully shuttered similar sites in the past.

In 2019, his first administration sued to stop a Philadelphia injection center from opening, and in 2024 a US District Court judge in Pennsylvania finally agreed that the center was not exempt from federal drug laws.

It was a massive relief to the surrounding Philly neighborhood, which was outraged by the sneaky lack of transparency around plans that would attract drug dealers into their community.

Now Trump should listen to his NYC minority constituents and close the injection sites that are harming their neighborhoods.

New York’s two centers, both run by non-profit OnPoint, were the first in the nation, opening in 2021 under then-Mayor Bill de Blasio — who never met an injurious policy he wouldn’t support in the name of racial justice.

De Blasio gambled successfully that the Biden administration wouldn’t intervene.

OnPoint claims to have saved over 1,000 lives by preventing overdoses. But as my colleague Charles Fain Lehman has pointed out, the sites do not reduce addiction — so they are likely just delaying fatalities: More than 15% of those administered naloxone are dead within a year.

Indeed, data shows that NYC overdose rates have continued to rise since the centers opened.

That’s no surprise, since a rigorous look at the data from even the most touted injection sites in other countries provide no evidence of their effectiveness.

But rigor has never been the calling card for politicians and advocates who happily sacrifice other people’s communities in the name of compassion.

State Sen. Gustavo Rivera (D-Bronx) has had the chutzpah to claim that “public drug use, syringe litter and drug-related crime goes down” around sites. In 2023, Rivera urged Gov. Hochul to expand supervised consumption sites statewide, and sponsored Senate legislation — still in committee — to do so.

In 2023, Mayor Eric Adams also proposed adding three more facilities to NYC — but he might be amenable to updating his views with some pressure from Washington.

And that pressure will come if Trump cares about the lives of local residents.

While major crimes fell 13% in northern Manhattan over the past two years, the predominantly black and Hispanic precinct around the East Harlem drug site has seen an almost 8% rise in major crime.

I’ve toured that location with the Greater Harlem Coalition. Members pointed out the large early-childhood education center directly across the street from the injection site, as parents hurried their tots into school in plain view of ongoing drug deals.

The perimeter of the block is dotted with addicts nodding off. Nearby restaurants have had to invest in private security to defend against the criminality the center attracts to the neighborhood.

What’s been keeping this site open despite four years in which the only evidenced change is neighborhood degradation?

Shameless advocacy by pompous, ideologically motivated and race-obsessed elites . . . whose kids don’t go to preschool in Harlem.

In August, Greater Harlem Coalition co-founder Shawn Hill was interviewed by one such dishonest advocate: Ryan McNeil, director of harm reduction research at Yale’s School of Medicine.

McNeil was conducting funded “research” into safe injection sites — but as a “hot mic” recording captured, he and his colleague were fully intent on biasing their findings to support the safe injection sites (and drug decriminalization, more broadly).

With no sense of irony, McNeil — who is himself Caucasian — scorned Harlemites’ concerns over open drug abuse as nothing but “white discomfort,” and derided Hill for suggesting that the Yale researchers should walk around and speak with actual local residents.

But Trump has every reason to listen to these locals, three-quarters of whom are black or Latino.

And it would behoove Adams, who faces a crowded primary race this summer, to reverse his past stance and voice support for a federal closure of the city’s two drug consumption sites.

In East Harlem, Trump won about 860 more votes last year than in 2020. Now these supporters, and their neighbors he has yet to persuade, are depending on his help.

Hannah E. Meyers is a fellow and the director of policing and public safety at the Manhattan Institute.



This story originally appeared on NYPost