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49ers star George Kittle talks golf, building camaraderie at Tight End University

49ers star George Kittle talks golf, building camaraderie at Tight End University

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Bobby Berk Says He ‘Lost Money' Being on 'Queer Eye' for First 2 Seasons: 'Paying Us Basically Nothing'
Bobby Berk Says He ‘Lost Money' Being on 'Queer Eye' for First 2 Seasons: 'Paying Us Basically Nothing'

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Bobby Berk Says He ‘Lost Money' Being on 'Queer Eye' for First 2 Seasons: 'Paying Us Basically Nothing'

Bobby Berk was on the first eight seasons of Queer Eye The interior design expert appeared on the latest edition of the Networth and Chill with Your Rich BFF podcast He candidly discussed his time on the show during the podcast appearanceBobby Berk is getting candid about his time on Queer Eye. The interior design expert, 43, appeared on the latest edition of the Networth and Chill with Your Rich BFF podcast, where he discussed the ins and outs of his time on the show. As fans may recall, Berk announced his departure from the series in November 2023 after eight seasons. Berk, who appeared on the unscripted makeover series alongside castmates Karamo Brown, Tan France, Antoni Porowski, and Jonathan Van Ness, recalled how he managed during the early seasons of the show. "The first two seasons, I definitely lost money being on the show," he said. "Because, I mean, they were paying us basically nothing." PEOPLE has reached out to Netflix for comment. "And the amount of money that I was losing from not running my company and being gone because we had to move away," he said. "We were gone for five months, and so half the year we were gone, and then we were on just constant press tours." It was not until season 3 and 4 that Berk said he finally "broke even." "To be frank, they never really paid us well. You know, compared to what they pay scripted stars, we made single digit percentage," said Berk. "Obviously, what it did, though, was open up doors for working with brands, working with companies." Berk recalled that fans often got "annoyed" with the Fab Five because they were frequently "promoting brands, promoting companies, doing brand partnerships." "They're like 'Oh, we're just so sick of this.' And we're like, 'Well, girl, we don't make money off the show. How do you think we continue to do the show?' " he said. However, the former reality star said that the exposure he got was "absolutely" worth it. "It was tough the first few seasons, but the doors that it has opened for other things — absolutely," he said. "I mean you can't pay for that type of exposure. We got really, really lucky to find lightning in a bottle, and the show came out, you know, right at a very defining moment in the world." "Donald [Trump] had just become president for the first time and people were really distraught and [at each] others' throats," said Berk. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "We were this happy feeling of five gays walking into red states and getting along and meeting people in the middle and being humans instead of political affiliations. It really became a cultural phenomenon," he continued. "I never regretted doing it." Read the original article on People

Anna Wintour to Step Down as Editor-in-Chief of US Vogue
Anna Wintour to Step Down as Editor-in-Chief of US Vogue

Bloomberg

time33 minutes ago

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Anna Wintour to Step Down as Editor-in-Chief of US Vogue

Anna Wintour, the longtime editor of Vogue magazine, said the Condé Nast publication is seeking a new head of American editorial content. The person filling the newly created position will take over daily editing duties of a magazine that's considered a trendsetter in the fashion industry. Wintour, who serves as chief content officer for Condé Nast and global editorial director of Vogue, took on expanded duties after a company reorganization four years ago, the company said in an email. Other markets, including Japan, the UK and France, already have appointed dedicated heads of editorial content. Bloomberg's Tiwa Adebayo joined Francine Lacqua to discuss Wintour's decision to step down from her role as editor-in-chief of American Vogue after 37 years. (Source: Bloomberg)

US Supreme Court poised to rule in challenge to Texas age-check for online porn
US Supreme Court poised to rule in challenge to Texas age-check for online porn

Yahoo

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US Supreme Court poised to rule in challenge to Texas age-check for online porn

By Andrew Chung WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on Friday in a challenge on free speech grounds to a Texas law that requires pornographic websites to verify the age of users in a case testing the legality of state efforts to keep minors from viewing such material online. A trade group representing adult entertainment performers and companies appealed a lower court's decision allowing the Republican-led state's age-verification mandate, finding that it likely did not violate the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment safeguard against government abridgment of speech. The Texas measure is one of 24 similar ones enacted around the United States, primarily in Republican-governed states, with some set to take effect in the months ahead, according to the Free Speech Coalition, which challenged the law. The law requires websites whose content is more than a third "sexual material harmful to minors" to have all users submit personally identifying information verifying they are at least age 18 to gain access. The case tested the limits of state powers to protect minors from explicit materials deemed by policymakers to be harmful to them with measures that burden the access of adults to constitutionally protected expression. Supreme Court precedents have protected access by adults to non-obscene sexual content on First Amendment grounds, including a 2004 ruling that blocked a federal law similar to the Texas measure. If the 2004 precedent prevents Texas from enforcing its law, then it should be overruled, the state argued, noting how the digital landscape has changed dramatically in the two decades since. The coalition, a trade association of adult content performers, producers and distributors, as well as companies that run pornographic websites including and argued that online age verification unlawfully stifles the free speech rights of adults and exposes them to increasing risks of identity theft, extortion and data breaches. Some sites like Pornhub blocked access entirely in states with age-verification laws. Steps such as content-filtering software or on-device age verification would better protect minors while respecting the rights of adults, according to the challengers. During Jan. 15 arguments in the case, the justices voiced worries about the pervasiveness of pornography online and the ease with which minors are able to access it. Conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the mother of school-age children, noted that minors can get online porn through cellphones, tablets, gaming systems and computers, and noted that there has been an "explosion of addiction to online porn." But some of the justices also expressed concern over the burdens imposed on adults to view constitutionally protected material, debating whether the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals should have applied a stricter form of judicial review to the Texas law than the one it actually used that gave deference to legislators. U.S. District Judge David Alan Ezra issued a preliminary injunction in 2023, blocking the law. The 5th Circuit ruled in 2024 that the plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed in their First Amendment challenge to the age-verification requirement, lifting Ezra's injunction on that provision. The 5th Circuit upheld Ezra's injunction against another provision requiring websites to display "health warnings" about viewing pornography. The Supreme Court last year declined to halt enforcement of the law while the case proceeded.

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