
Grizzly Tom Selleck looks almost unrecognizable as he grows out signature mustache and ditches the suave to indulge his ultimate guilty pleasure
The transformation from the iconic mustached man's man to the grizzly and disheveled post-retirement look was starkly apparent during his recent outing.
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The Guardian
12 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Nostalgia is eating us alive. Instead of building a new world, we're regurgitating a past that never existed
There has been much talk about our hunger for a 'return to optimism'. Our world has been too real for too long, and we all just want a bit of shelter from the storm. We look back in patronising nostalgia at Obama's Hope poster in the same way we insist music hasn't been real music since about 1986 (or since 1966, or since the Great American Songbook, or since Mozart, depending who you talk to). Movie theatres are propped up by two monolith tent poles: DC's umpteenth Superman and Marvel's Fantastic Four reboot, both attempting a full factory reset of their flagship properties. It offers a return to the originals – AKA, the 'good old days'. But this isn't so much a yearning for a new optimism as it is a resuscitation of an old one. The Fantastic Four is even set in a 1960s Jetsons-style alternate reality (the first comic was published in 1961). Remember this? This is Things As They Should Be™. The great irony in this regurgitation of old aesthetics is that, they themselves looked forward. The joy and optimism of the space age showcased the marvellous and fantastic possibilities of technology and science, before we knew that those same industries would slowly start choking our own atmosphere. We want to go back to that time, when we could feel good about driving our big shiny bubble cars and tease our hair up guilt-free – without thinking about the ozone or whatever. This perceived collective optimism was never real, of course. But now, after decades of doom storytelling and hope erosion, we want the dream back. What's happening in the culture is more than the good honest fun of theme park recreations, 1950s diners and old west camera filters. This is an earnest but somehow deeply sad defibrillation of dead worlds, built around a hollow craving that can never ever be filled. We are birds constantly regurgitating and eating our own upchuck. Same flavour but different colour, different flavour but same chunks. Its passion looks inspirational, but its sniff is grief. It works, but not quite — as fresh as microwaved leftovers. It's the cultural equivalent of Maga – the lie that there was some glorious past where things were flourishing and wholesome and if we can just get back there we'll be on track again. But there never was that past. It's a distortion of immature childhood memories and historical rewriting by big corporations. This is the multiverse made real by an increasingly small cabal of conglomerates leveraging their various assets, stuffing each storytelling turducken full of old money-makers to reduce the risk in anything new. It's not so much the multiverse as the IP-verse. Every brand everywhere all at once. Over time this starts to feel like a photocopy of a photocopy. The AI boom is quite literally sampling and recycling things that already exist. When I see a brand-new building proudly inspired by the art deco movement of 100 years ago, I wonder if the great deco designers knew way back then that they were on the blind precipice of the future, or were they recreating their own nostalgic past? I wonder, as typography and graphic design trends cycle through recreations of past 'vintage' ideas, what the concept of 'vintage' meant to people back when it was, to them, modern? Having lost hope for the future, we have always looked back for comfort. We have to be cautious of the reasons why. Why did Nazi aesthetics have such a fetish for ancient Rome? Why did Soviet culture idolise modern industrial style? Even in The Handmaid's Tale's Gilead, they revere the natural and organic by insisting on non-GM and high-fat foods. The world around us tells us a lot about our beliefs. We are all potential victims of this ideological myth-making. It's invisible but everywhere, and it's difficult to tell if people in power aim to manufacture a world that matches their values or if it's some kind of naturally developing, laissez-faire attraction. We're all dreaming of a better time from the past, since there is no future. We've stopped dreaming about building – now we dream of recreating. It's not recreating the actual thing that we want, it's the yearning to recreate the feeling we had back then. In my local city centre, I drive past heritage-protected sandstone buildings with the names of the original shopfronts still carved at the top. The mason etching that date in the rock was doing it for the future, so as time stretched on his mark would stay there, even for me now as I whip past the exact same building in a space shuttle machine he could never even dream of. Imagine a shop front named something like, 'Nolan and Sons Merchants, est. 1861.' And on the shop front awning below it, computer-printed on laminate in an deliberately old-timey font, 'Buzz'd Cafe, est. 2025.' Take a sledgehammer to the wall of this cafe. Pierce the membrane of lino wallpaper printed to look like rustic bricks and find sterile chalk-white plasterboard from the previous shop, which was itself once added to modernise and cover the rustic brick walls beneath. You can find these rings of a tree in everything: generations on top of generations of us each trying to make our own existence matter and either cover or recover the ones before us. So, do we seek comfort in the baby blanket of our past myths – or do we try to create our own new ones? Martin Ingle is a writer and film-maker


The Sun
19 minutes ago
- The Sun
WWE SummerSlam 2025 LIVE RESULTS: CM Punk vs Gunther headlines Night 1, Paul and Reigns feature
WWE SummerSlam is HERE - and for the first time ever, the event will take place across TWO nights! CM Punk looks to win a world title for the first time since his electric return on Night 1 as he faces Gunther for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. Logan Paul and Roman Reigns also feature on the star-studded opening card in New Jersey. On Night 2, defending champion John Cena will meet Cody Rhodes in a street fight for the WWE Undisputed Championship. The American Nightmare gets a shot at redemption after losing the title to Cena at WrestleMania 41. Follow ALL of the latest from SummerSlam below...


Daily Mail
40 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Hulk Hogan's divided family reveal how they plan to heal from estranged WWE icon's death at 71
The estranged family of WWE icon Hulk Hogan have revealed how they plan to heal after his tragic death. The wrestling legend died at the age of 71 last month after suffering a cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida - with tributes quickly pouring in for the WWE icon. One of those tributes included a candid statement from his daughter Brooke, who opened up on her troubled relationship with the WWE icon in the wake of his death. By the time Hogan died, he had gone years without speaking to Brooke, 37, and, according to her partner, had 'no interest' in meeting his daughter's twins. Despite the fractured relationship, the passing of the WWE icon hit hard for Hogan's estranged family and now they have revealed how they plan to deal with his death. Brooke's husband, Steven Oleksy, told People: 'We believe family is created, and through these trying times, great people have come into our life or come back into our life, and it's brought us some great relationships and a great support system that we look at as family'. In January, the couple welcomed their twins, Oliver Andrew and Molly Gene, whom Oleksy has called 'absolute bundles of joy.' He continued: 'I'm looking forward to getting back and shifting our focus on our own family, and just taking the lessons that we've learned through these situations and just incorporating them into our own family and making sure that our son and daughter feel the love that we have for them each and every day'. In the days that followed Hogan's death, Oleksy revealed that he did in fact try to resolve their feud but that attempt was rebuffed by the WWE icon. According to People, Oleksy said: 'I sent text messages once again to kind of gauge where he was at, but there was no interest.' 'She [Brooke] was there for every surgery leading up to the last two years. She would fly down on her own dime, take care of her dad, and it just made a lot of sense. 'No one understood his body, procedures, medications and everything else more than my wife,' he said. Meanwhile, according to Us Weekly back in April, Oleksy had been 'proactively trying to foster peace for years'. The outlet claims that he had requested a 'man-to-man conversation' with Hogan but his efforts were rebuffed by the wrestling icon. The report quotes a source close to Oleksy and Brooke who claimed that the couple's 'hurt is very, very heavy'. Oleksy offered a public defense of his wife at the time, saying he wouldn't 'stand by and allow anyone to continue to hurt' Brooke. Hulk welcomed Brooke as well as son Nick, 35, with ex-wife Linda - whom he was married to from 1983 to 2009. He later tied the knot with Jennifer McDaniel in 2010 until their divorce in 2021. Two years later, the WWE legend said 'I do' to Sky Daily and the pair were married up until his death on Thursday. Brooke and her father last spoke nearly two years ago in September 2023 only weeks before he married his third wife Sky. On that call, Brooke expressed love and concern for her father - telling him that he shouldn't be working so hard due to his declining health. Despite her pleas for him to enjoy more of his life, those requests fell on deaf ears. The pair didn't speak again. Despite their fractured relationship, Brooke was recently left frustrated after being snubbed of an invite from the WWE as they paid tribute to her late father. 'For those of you giving me c*** for not attending my Dad's tributes, @WWE did not extend an invite,' she wrote on her Instagram story Wednesday. Daily Mail has contacted WWE for comment. Meanwhile, her brother Nick honored his 'best friend' and father in a heartbreaking statement as he joined the WWE's poignant tribute ahead of Monday Night Raw. He looked visibly emotional as he stood alongside WWE stars past and present for a 10-bell salute to his father. His wife Tana Lea was also seen wiping away tears after joining her husband on stage for the event in Detroit.