Aimee Lou Wood & Adam Long Spark Dating Rumors Following PDA in London
Fans of The White Lotus star were quick to notice the chemistry between Aimee Lou Wood and Adam Long when the two were recently photographed enjoying a PDA-filled day in London.
On Saturday, June 7, the 31-year-old actress and her 34-year-old Happy Valley co-star were seen kissing and embracing during a casual coffee date. The couple kept their attire laid-back. Long sported drawstring shorts and Levi's T-shirt, while Wood wore a trendy all-denim outfit paired with bold red flats.
Their rumored romance began gaining traction while filming their upcoming BBC project Film Club, which Wood co-created. In the series, Wood plays Evie, who launches a film club with her best friend Noa.
This new buzz around Aimee Lou Wood's personal life comes just after she and The White Lotus Season 3 co-star Walton Goggins denied speculation of an off-screen feud. In a recent interview with Variety, Goggins said, 'There is no feud. I adore, I love this woman madly, and she is so important to me… But she's special. She is love, and I know that I am that to her. We care about each other very deeply.' Wood echoed the sentiment, adding that she had grown tired of addressing baseless internet gossip. 'Eventually, I just started to sit back and watch these people making something out of absolutely nothing,' she stated.
As of now, neither Aimee Lou Wood nor Adam Long has commented publicly on the rumored romance.
The post Aimee Lou Wood & Adam Long Spark Dating Rumors Following PDA in London appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Gary Lineker shortlisted for National Television Award after BBC exit
Gary Lineker has been shortlisted for the National Television Award for best TV presenter, just months after his exit from Match Of The Day. The former footballer will face off against Ant & Dec, who have won the prize for 23 years in a row. Lineker exited the BBC's flagship football show in May after 26 years, following a row after he shared a post about Zionism, which featured a depiction of a rat, historically an antisemitic insult. He issued an unreserved apology over the social media post, as it was confirmed he would leave his presenting role at the BBC early and would no longer front coverage of the 2026 World Cup or next season's FA Cup. Earlier this month, it was announced that he has signed up to present a new ITV game show called The Box, which will be filmed in the UK later this year and air in 2026. Lineker and Ant & Dec will compete for the television presenter prize against Alison Hammond, best known for her appearances on This Morning and The Great British Bake Off; The Traitors and Strictly Come Dancing host Claudia Winkleman; and Sort Your Life Out presenter Stacey Solomon. The NTAs will be hosted by comedian Joel Dommett at The O2 in London on September 10, where Adolescence stars Owen Cooper and Stephen Graham, who play on-screen father and son, will go head-to-head for the drama performance prize. They will compete against Tom Hardy for crime drama MobLand and Rose Ayling-Ellis for her performance as a lipreader called in to aid police in the thriller Code of Silence, while Brenda Blethyn is recognised for her final case as the eponymous detective in Vera. Adolescence, the juggernaut Netflix drama about a teenage boy who is arrested for murdering a classmate, is also in the running for the new drama prize. Also nominated are the adaptation of Jilly Cooper's Rivals, the gangster saga MobLand, Code Of Silence and the cryptic comedy drama Ludwig. The eagerly anticipated TV return of Gavin & Stacey at Christmas is shortlisted for the comedy prize, competing against stalwart Mrs Brown's Boys, crime caper Brassic and Michael McIntyre's 25th Year Stand-Up Special. Comedian McIntyre is also recognised with a nod in the Bruce Forsyth entertainment award category, for his variety show Michael McIntyre's Big Show, facing off against The Graham Norton Show, The Masked Singer and panel game Would I Lie to You? He is also in the running for the quiz show prize, with a nod for his programme The Wheel, alongside nods for Richard Osman's House of Games, The 1% Club and The Chase. Flintoff, in which former cricket star Freddie Flintoff opened up about his life-changing Top Gear car crash, is shortlisted for the authored documentary prize. It is in the running alongside There's Only One Rob Burrow, which paid tribute to the late rugby league player-turned-MND campaigner; Strictly Amy: Cancer and Me, about Strictly professional Amy Dowden's battle with cancer; and reality star Molly-Mae Hague's tell-all Molly-Mae: Behind It All as well as Boyzone: No Matter What, which chronicled the rise and tragedy of the 90s boyband. TV personality Solomon has two nominations in the factual entertainment category, where her lifestyle show Sort Your Life Out and fly-on-the-wall series with husband Joe Swash – Stacey & Joe – are both contenders. They face competition from Jeremy Clarkson's agricultural shenanigans in Clarkson's Farm, as well as Gogglebox and The Martin Lewis Money Show Live. Meanwhile, The Great Pottery Throw Down has earned its first nomination for the talent show prize, securing a nod alongside Strictly Come Dancing, The Voice UK, Britain's Got Talent and The Great British Bake Off. The National Television Awards will be broadcast live on ITV1 and ITVX from 8pm on September 10, with the final round of voting now open.


New York Post
13 hours ago
- New York Post
From 'White Lotus' to 'Sirens': Why everyone on TV is rich
They're a dime a dozen. These days, it seems like nearly everyone onscreen is rich. The aesthetics of luxury lifestyles is all over TV – whether you're watching a murder mystery, a satire, or a drama. Jessica Kender, production designer for the Prime Video series 'We Were Liars,' exclusively told The Post that she wanted the show to look like, 'Everything that we have been bred to believe will be there, if you follow the money.' Advertisement 13 Joseph Zada, Emily Alyn Lind, and Esther McGregor in 'We Were Liars.' Jessie Redmond 13 Sam Nivola, Sarah Catherine Hook and Patrick Schwarzenegger in 'The White Lotus.' Fabio Lovino/HBO 'We Were Liars' is one of the many recent shows with moneyed characters in glam settings. Now streaming, it's a twisty thriller about Cadence (Emily Alyn Lind), a teen girl from a wealthy family with their own private island. Advertisement New Jersey native Kender grew up observing people who vacationed in Martha's Vineyard, 'where the elite go.' 'We tried to hit those notes,' she explained. 'It's everything you're shown when you open a magazine, like Architectural Digest.' She added that when a show is aiming to show off wealthy characters, 'Everyone knows what that looks like, because it's what the media shows us. The media tells us, 'you want this.' So, that's what we're trying to re-iterate onscreen.' 13 Emily Alyn Lind and Joseph Zada in 'We Were Liars.' Jessie Redmond Advertisement 13 Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood in 'The White Lotus.' Fabio Lovino/HBO HBO's hit 'The White Lotus,' is about murder and vacations, and the characters aren't staying in hostels or bargain Holiday Inns – a real-life stay at one of Season 3's Thailand villas costs thousands of dollars per night. Even if a TV show's plot doesn't directly involve wealth, chances are, the characters live in homes that would realistically cost millions. The Netflix show 'Sirens' starring Julianne Moore and Meghann Fahy was about the complicated relationship between sisters, but it also came with a large helping of 'house porn.' Advertisement 13 Nicole Kidman and Liev Schreiber in 'The Perfect Couple.' ©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection The 'Sex and the City' spinoff 'And Just Like That,' meanwhile, was ostensibly about friendship and romance — but it's full of designer clothes and impossibly large NYC apartments. In fact, Carrie's (Sarah Jessica Parker) Gramercy apartment was listed for $4,495,000 in 2019. 'Succession' followed a toxic family with a media empire, 'Yellowstone' was about a dysfunctional family with a ranching empire, 'The Righteous Gemstones' focused on a televangelist family – and they all have their own versions of mansions and armies of staffers to do their bidding. Nicole Kidman's entire recent catalogue shows are chock-full of house porn and millionaire characters, including 'Big Little Lies' and 'The Perfect Couple.' 13 Meghann Fahy in 'Sirens.' MACALL POLAY/NETFLIX 13 The home in 'Sirens.' Macall Polay/Netflix Bob Thompson, the founding director of Syracuse University's Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture and a Trustee Professor of Television and Popular Culture, told The Post that part of the appeal of these shows is, 'just the fun of seeing this stuff we don't have.' 'A lot of people used to go in the back of the New York Times Magazine and look at these ridiculously huge houses that were for sale,' he observed. Advertisement 'I find it much more interesting to watch a series about an organized crime family, 'The Sopranos' or 'The Godfather,' than I would watching a series about somebody who lived the life I live on a daily basis.' 13 Sarah Jessica Parker in 'And Just Like That.' Craig Blankenhorn/HBO Max 13 Milly Alcock and Julianne Moore in 'Sirens.' COURTESY OF NETFLIX He quipped that he enjoys his own life, 'but I certainly wouldn't want to watch somebody doing it. And I think there is a sense that TV brings us this stuff that we can't otherwise see.' Advertisement Thompson said that it's also 'easier' to have shows 'in settings of the very rich and the very privileged, because it's kind of an easy source of drama and spectacle.' The professor and TV expert pointed out that one big reason for the explosion of wealth on TV is that, 'in the last 25 years, since around the turn of the century, we've become comfortable with our principal characters being bad people.' He explained that the trend is 'relatively new,' because in the history of American TV, shows were usually, 'about heroes, good guys. There were antagonists, but the [show] was about the protagonists getting the best of them.' 13 James Gandolfini in 'The Sopranos.' Getty Images Advertisement This trend began to change with the 'golden age of TV' in the 2000s' with shows such as 'The Sopranos,' 'Breaking Bad,' 'Mad Men' and 'The Shield.' 'Oftentimes rich folks in at least a supposedly democratic culture, can be hard to portray sympathetically – because they've got all this stuff, they're so privileged,' he said. Shows that premiered during the antihero boom, 'opened the door for a lot more wealthy folks,' he told The Post. 'It would have been hard to do a show like 'Succession' in 1965, and have it be about a noble media magnate.' 13 Jeremy Strong in 'Succession.' HBO/IMDB Advertisement To convey the right aesthetics of luxury, Kender explained that the 'We Were Liars' production 'tried to be on the same wavelength as a Ralph Lauren polo ad, that makes you feel very aspirational.' 'That's the aesthetic we were aiming to give the audience – this idea of this perfect wealth. And food porn,' she noted. 'Not only did you want to live in their house, but eat in their house.' Aside from high-end clothes, a home that could be featured in a magazine, and 'food porn' like 'towers of seafood,' Kender had another key marker to signify moneyed characters. 'I was talking with someone who was telling me that they had been an assistant for a very wealthy family. And one of the things the wealthy family did every other day was have their fresh flowers refreshed.' So, when Kender worked on 'We Were Liars,' she said, 'I was like 'these are the type of people who have their flowers refreshed in their home every other day…Not by the people who live there – it's almost like elves come in and refresh them.' 13 Emily Alyn Lind, Esther McGregor, Joseph Zada and Shubham Maheshwari in 'We Were Liars.' Jessie Redmond/Prime There are still some shows featuring characters who have modest homes and jobs, however — such as 'Abbott Elementary.' But shows about blue-collar lives such as 'Roseanne' and its spinoff 'The Conners' are increasingly dwindling. 'Especially when things are so tenuous right now with our economy, with our world – for the TV viewer [part of the appeal] is seeing the rich being flawed,' Kender said. 13 Reese Witherspoon in 'Big Little Lies.' HBO 'You're sold this American dream. We're showing you on TV what you want to be.' But, on many of these shows, including 'We Were Liars' and 'The White Lotus,' when the show dives into the dark parts of characters' lives, 'you realize how tragic that life can be, as well,' she said. She explained, 'In the time we live in, it's almost refreshing to know, 'even if I hit that point, this is not what's going to make me happy. I'm going to be able to find happiness with where I am now.''
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
What we know about Strictly 'cocaine' scandal as police investigate
The Met Police and the BBC are investigating after two of the show's stars were accused of taking the class-A drug The Met Police is investigating allegations of drug use on Strictly Come Dancing. It was "widely known" that two stars of the BBC show allegedly took the class A substance, The Sun on Sunday reported. The Met has now said it had "received an allegation about drug-related offences". In a statement, it added: "Police are assessing the information and further enquiries are taking place to establish whether there is evidence of a criminal offence being committed." The drug-taking allegations first emerged in a legal submission to the BBC from law firm Russells on behalf of former celebrity contestant Wynne Evans, according to the newspaper. Evans's own time with Strictly wasn't without controversy; he was forced to quit the tour after he made an "inappropriate and unacceptable" comment during its launch, and consequently, BBC Radio Wales didn't renew his contract. Who are the Strictly stars accused of drug taking? The Sun on Sunday reported that there were two Strictly stars accused of drug taking. Those two stars in question have not been named by the newspaper. It was reported that the two stars will be offered professional support behind the scenes. BBC offered no comment on this. What has the BBC said? BBC News reported that the broadcaster is understood to have enlisted the help of a law firm to support the investigation into the allegations of drug taking. External law firms report back to internal teams in cases like this, Yahoo UK understands. The investigation is being led by the BBC, not the law firm. A BBC spokesperson said: "We have clear protocols and policies in place for dealing with any serious complaint raised with us. We would always encourage people to speak to us if they have concerns. It would not be appropriate for us to comment further." The Sun reported the possibility of random drug tests being implemented into the Strictly tour. However, Yahoo UK understands that there are no plans to introduce further measures at this time. Changes to Strictly Come Dancing BBC made a number of changes to Strictly Come Dancing's welfare last July, behind the scenes. Chaperones now attend every rehearsal room, and there were two new welfare producers appointed as part of the new measures. Additional training is now provided for the dancers, production team and crew. New measures were put in place after allegations were made about some of the professional dancers. Strictly's pro dancers Giovanni Pernice and Graziano Di Prima left the show in the wake of allegations about their behaviour toward their dance partners Amanda Abbington and Zara McDermott. Former dance partner Abbington made allegations of bullying and harassment claims against Pernice, who had denied the claims; some of the complaints were upheld, but not all of them. Strictly Come Dancing will return in the autumn with two new professional dancers and celebrities taking part in the show. Yahoo UK has reached out to the BBC and Wynne Evans' representatives for further comment. Solve the daily Crossword