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NBC's Vicky Nguyen shares personal memoir ‘Boat Baby'

NBC's Vicky Nguyen shares personal memoir ‘Boat Baby'

NBC News27-03-2025

NBC News' Vicky Nguyen sits down with Tom Llamas to discuss her new memoir, Boat Baby, about her family's remarkable journey to America as Vietnam refugees.

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Kristen Bell reveals the one thing ‘Nobody Wants This' fans say to her
Kristen Bell reveals the one thing ‘Nobody Wants This' fans say to her

NBC News

time3 hours ago

  • NBC News

Kristen Bell reveals the one thing ‘Nobody Wants This' fans say to her

Kristen Bell says there's one thing that fans always tell her about her hit Netflix show 'Nobody Wants This.' While speaking about the series with NBC News correspondent Jacob Soboroff in a joint interview her co-star Adam Brody, Bell revealed the common thing people tell her when they talk about her rom-com. 'This has happened to me, I'm going to say — and I don't think I'm exaggerating — six times where I've had different women in my life... like a girl in my choir class was like, 'Oh, I'm going to start watching your show. I haven't seen it yet. My dad told me to watch it,'' she said exclusively to Soboroff, who laughed. 'I'm not joking. Everybody's dad has seen this show and is telling them to watch it, like a bunch of my friends,' she added. Brody agreed. 'Yeah, parents and grandparents,' he said. 'Dads love it!' Bell added. Brody and Bell star in 'Nobody Wants This' and play a devout rabbi and an agnostic sex podcaster, respectively, who fall in love in the most unconventional way. The series premiered on Netflix in September 2024 and then it was renewed for another season in October of that same year. Season 2 is now set to premiere this October. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Bell talked about the impact that 'Nobody Wants This' has had on fans and she said she's glad that the show became a hit. 'I've never gotten a response to any show I've ever been a part of like this show,' she said. 'It's been thrilling to hear how many people have enjoyed it,' Bell continued. 'That's kind of my main goal with any type of performance.' 'Ultimately, I just want people to have a nice escapism while watching something I've been in, and I feel like this has provided that for so many people,' she added.

ICE says it detained TikTok star Khaby Lame and told him to leave the U.S.
ICE says it detained TikTok star Khaby Lame and told him to leave the U.S.

NBC News

time9 hours ago

  • NBC News

ICE says it detained TikTok star Khaby Lame and told him to leave the U.S.

U.S. immigration officials said they detained Khaby Lame, one of the world's most popular TikTok personalities, last week and told him to leave the country after they said he "overstayed the terms of his visa." The Italian-Senegalese creator, whose real name is Seringe Khabane Lame, entered the U.S. on April 30, according to a spokesperson for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. He was granted "voluntary departure" on Friday after he was detained by agents at Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas. Lame did not respond to requests for comment made by NBC News. He has not publicly commented on the reported detainment and subsequent departure. Lame has continued to post on social media in the days since he reportedly left the U.S. His most recent Instagram story appears to have been posted from Brazil. Sharks Celebrities Mgmt, which is among the listed agency representatives for the creator, claimed the ICE report is "fake news," telling NBC News in an email that Lame "did not visit the USA this month to begin with." They said the "the name mentioned is not his birth name." It's unclear when Lame was last in the U.S. but he did attend the Met Gala in May. Lame has 162.2 million followers on TikTok, where he grew a massive following during the pandemic after being laid off from a factory job in Italy. The 25-year-old, who is also a goodwill ambassador for the humanitarian aid organization UNICEF, is known for his comedic videos that often use the hashtag, 'learnfromkhaby.' The news comes amid the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration in the U.S., including efforts to detain travelers arriving at the border, including airports. In recent months, social media users have recounted their interactions with immigration officials and shared their fears about traveling back to the U.S. during a period of heightened vigilance at U.S. entry points and borders. Lame is one of the more high-profile people to date to be detained. Last month, Hasan Piker, one of the top political pundits on Twitch, said that he was stopped and questioned by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officials at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport after a trip to France. The Turkish American streamer, who is vocal on a number of political and social issues, said he was asked about his views, including whether he supports President Donald Trump. Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said at the time that 'claims that his political beliefs triggered the inspection are baseless.' Immigration raids have also ramped up across the U.S., including in Los Angeles, where protests have continued for days as demonstrators push back on the Trump administration's aggressive round-up efforts.

King ‘told Conclave author he watched papal selection film'
King ‘told Conclave author he watched papal selection film'

Glasgow Times

timea day ago

  • Glasgow Times

King ‘told Conclave author he watched papal selection film'

Robert Harris, 68, was formally made a CBE by Charles for services to literature in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday. Harris said it was 'eerie' and 'like an out of body experience' to see his 2016 book turned into a film, and then to see the papal selection process which he had researched in so much detail play out in May after the death of Pope Francis. Robert Harris was made a CBE by the King at Buckingham Palace (Yui Mok/PA) '(It was) very odd, I suppose because I researched it very thoroughly, and really it's the sort of thing that can practically only be done in fiction because you have to have a lot of conjecture,' Harris told the PA news agency. 'And so it acted as a kind of primer for journalists and for people, so that was very strange. 'And then, of course, the extraordinary fact that the new pope watched it on the eve of the conclave.' Pope Leo's brother John Prevost told NBC News his younger sibling had watched the film before the secret vote. Harris said the King also asked about his new book. 'We talked a bit about Conclave, which he has seen,' Harris said. 'He's been reading my books for years, so it was nice to see him again.' The journalist-turned-novelist also joked about how seeing the inside of Buckingham Palace could provide him inspiration for his future books. 'There'd have to be some mystery in the throne room, yes, murder in the throne room! It's got possibilities.' Harris said it was a 'very generous gesture' to receive the honour and he had 'never thought about it' before being asked. Author Dame Jacqueline Wilson was made a Dame Grand Cross for her services to the same industry at the ceremony. The 79-year-old former children's laureate is widely known as the creator of Tracy Beaker and has written more than 100 novels. Dame Jacqueline Wilson was made a Dame Grand Cross for services to literature at the same ceremony (Aaron Chown/PA) 'It feels like a dream,' Dame Jacqueline said on receiving the honour. 'I'm so pleased, so proud. 'I was just totally taken by surprise. To be utterly truthful, I didn't even know this particular honour existed. I'm so proud and so overwhelmed. 'If little girl Jacqueline could be told that I'd be standing outside Buckingham Palace with medals and a sash, she would have been astonished.' Dame Jacqueline said the King was 'jovial' and they laughed about getting her sash on over her 'silly hat'. 'And I did thank him, and particularly also thanked Her Majesty the Queen, because she takes such an interest in children's literature, and that makes all of us writers feel very pleased,' she said. Last year, Dame Jacqueline released her first adult novel since the 1970s as she returned to her beloved Girls series. The novel, Think Again, was nominated at this year's British Book Awards.

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