
Clarkson, Legend, Levine returning for 'Voice' Season 29
July 22 (UPI) -- Kelly Clarkson, John Legend and Adam Levine are returning as coaches for Season 29 of The Voice on NBC.
Season 29 of the musical competition series is set to kick off in the spring of 2026.
Michael Bublé, Snoop Dogg, Niall Horan and Reba McEntire will serve as coaches for Season 28, premiering this fall.
Carson Daly is the show's host.

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WWE 'Raw': Roman Reigns, Jey Uso fall to Bron Breakker, Bronson Reed
July 29 (UPI) -- Roman Reigns and Jey Uso were decimated during a wild brawl with Bron Breakker and Bronson Reed on WWE Raw. Chaos erupted as Uso faced off against Reed in a one-on-one match in the main event of Raw on Monday. Breakker made his way to the ring after Uso had gained the upper hand following a Suicide Dive from the ring. Breakker wasted no time in delivering a Spear to Uso on the entrance ramp, which ended the match in a disqualification. Breakker and Reed started to beat down Uso until his cousin, Reigns, ran down to the ring to even the odds. Reigns successfully cleared the ring despite not being able to lift up the over 300-pound Reed. The tables were turned, however, when Reigns and Uso decided to continue the fight outside the ring where their rivals were waiting. Breakker and Reed proceeded to quickly lay waste to the cousin duo. Reed performed a Tsunami on both men from the top rope, while Breakker ended things with a Spear that sent Reigns and Uso crashing through the side ring barrier. Breakker and Reed are a part of Seth Rollins' new cabal alongside manager Paul Heyman. Rollins, who holds the Money in the Bank briefcase, is currently out with an injury. Reigns and Uso will be teaming up to take on Breakker and Reed in a Tag Team match at SummerSlam this weekend, which takes place Aug. 2 and 3 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. Rapper Cardi B serves as the host. SummerSlam will also feature Undisputed WWE Champion John Cena defending his title against Cody Rhodes and World Heavyweight Champion Gunther defending his title against CM Punk.


UPI
an hour ago
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Dusty Slay gets creative with clean comedy in 'Wet Heat'
July 29 (UPI) -- Dusty Slay's second full-length Netflix special, Wet Heat, is streaming Tuesday, and the stand-up comedian says it wasn't always clear to him that comedy was the right path. Slay, 43, told UPI in a recent phone interview that he was a fan of comedy from a young age, but his own aptitude for it came later. "I was always trying to make people laugh," he said. "But I moved to Charleston, South Carolina, from Alabama when I was 21. And about 2003, I moved with a friend and then we had some problems. So I moved out and got my own place and I didn't have any friends, so I took an improv class. And that's how I got into stand-up -- I took improv, and I did improv for a long time." He said the idea of doing stand-up professionally didn't enter the equation until around 2011. "I won a stand-up comedy competition," he recalled. "And I thought, 'Maybe I could do something with this.' So I started to take things a little more serious, and then in early 2012, I quit drinking, and things became very clear to me, and I got very good at comedy -- Well, I got good at comedy much faster. I wouldn't say I got very good right away, but I got much faster." Sober and clean Slay said giving up drinking didn't just make him better at comedy, it changed his entire approach. "Quitting drinking changed my whole life in a positive way. I never think of myself as an alcoholic, but I was most certainly a binge drinker that once I started drinking, it usually ended in some sort of a disaster. Not a tragedy, but I would black out and lose my friends and things like that," he said. Slay said he was "a bit of a maniac" when he was under the influence. "So much of my jokes were all about drinking. I would label myself an 'alcoholic' and I thought it was funny. I thought it was funny to drink too much and make bad decisions. But I was really living that lifestyle, so while I was making jokes about it, I was also falling apart in a lot of ways -- while still having fun. It just changed my life, and once I quit drinking, I no longer could make drinking jokes." Slay said quitting drinking was the first step toward becoming a clean comic -- but it wasn't the last. "I've always been on the cleaner side, but I had jokes here and there along the way that I would do that I wouldn't do now. ... I did a couple of shows where people asked me to be completely clean, and then when I would go through my set, I would be like, 'Oh, I'm losing some of my best jokes. I'm losing some of my best punchlines,'" he said. Slay said the final straw was when he got a write-up about a joke he told at a show. "I was the cleanest person on the lineup, yet I got the worst write-up because of this one joke. So I just said, 'You know what, I'll just be completely clean, but I still want to talk about the things I want to talk about, but I'll just find a new creative way to say that.'" He said being a clean comic forced him to get more inventive. "I had to find other words. I couldn't rely on shock," he said. On the road Slay said his favorite part of stand-up comedy is taking his act to different cities, but he has to strike a balance between going on the road and being around for his wife and kids. "I don't like to be gone for longer than a week, because I want to be home with my kids. But that's what comedy is to me. Now, if you live in New York, you live in LA, or maybe even Chicago ... you can get locked into a circuit where you're still getting to do a lot of comedy every night. But if you're not living in those cities, touring is what you have to do, and it is the most fun thing to me." The comedian, who lives with his family in Nashville, said two of his favorite venues are close to home: Zane's Comedy Club and the Grand Ole Opry. "I don't think it was until I did the Grand Old Opry that my dad actually took it serious, and by that point I had already done two late night [shows]," he said. Slay said he was surprised at the reception he received when he first started venturing out of the Southeast. "I remember the first time I went to Phoenix, I drove from Nashville to Phoenix to do comedy at Stand Up Live. And I thought, 'Man, this is too far out.' They're going to be like, 'Go back to the South.' And it was one of my most fun weekends. I just remember being so excited about how well it went," he said. Slay said he was shocked to find a similar reception in cities as far away as Portland, Ore., and Seattle. "I think a lot of it is because Charleston, although it's a very southern city, it is an artistic city and it's a bit of a snobby city with its art. So I had to learn to make artistic people laugh. Then when I started working the road, it was a different thing. I had to learn to make people on the road laugh, which a lot of these cities are not very artistic cities," he said. "I think I often get labeled as a 'Southern comic' when really a lot of times I do better in more artsy cities," Slay said. Comedy as music Wet Heat finds Slay talking quite a bit about one of his favorite subjects: music. He also frequently discusses his favorite artists on his podcast, We're Having a Good Time. Slay said he finds a lot of common ground between music and stand-up comedy. "I think that, in a way, our comedy bits are like our own little songs. They're our own little poems. When I do a full comedy special, I almost think about it like how someone would put out an album -- at least the older albums, where an album would be complete. You might have some themes from an earlier song that come back in a later song, and it ties the whole thing together," he said. He said his approach to putting together a special is inspired, in part, by the ways he analyzed Pink Floyd albums as a teenager. "We're very much in a phase of comedy where everybody wants clips, we all want our likes and we all want to go viral with a clip. But when I think about a special, I like to have a full-on, complete special that feels like I'm going in and out of little songs," he said. Dusty Slay: Wet Heat is streaming now on Netflix.


UPI
an hour ago
- UPI
Look: Netflix's 'Pride and Prejudice' series begins production
1 of 3 | Netflix is officially filming the limited series adaptation of "Pride and Prejudice." Photo courtesy of Netflix July 29 (UPI) -- Netflix's Pride and Prejudice limited series is now filming. The streamer shared the news Tuesday alongside an image of the Bennet women, portrayed by Emma Corrin (Elizabeth), Freya Mavor (Jane), Olivia Colman (Mrs. Bennet), Hopey Parish (Mary), Rhea Norwood (Lydia) and Hollie Avery (Kitty), in costume. "We know you've been yearning for a sneak peek," Netflix captioned the post announcing that production has "officially" started. Euros Lyn, who directed several episodes of the Heartstopper series, is directing the adaptation of the novel by Jane Austen, published in 1813. Jack Lowden is set to portray Mr. Darcy. Rufus Sewell, Jamie Demetriou, Daryl McCormack, Siena Kelly, Anjana Vasan, Sebastian Armesto, Rosie Cavaliero, Saffron Coomber, James Dryden, Justin Edwards, James Northcote, Eloise Webb, Isabella Sermon and Louis Partridge also star. The script is penned by Everything I Know About Love writer Dolly Alderton. "Dolly's fierce intelligence and enormous heart, twinned with her genuine love of the Austen novel, means she is able to bring new insights, whilst celebrating all that the generations of fans hold so dear," Netflix executive Mona Quereshi told Tudum.