Drake And Sexyy Red Throw Back Shots At 9 A.M. During 'Wealth And Hellness' Retreat
Clips surfaced online of the duo attending Drizzy's Wealth and Hellness retreat. He shared photos and videos on Instagram showing the St. Louis star and her friends dancing by a bar, internet comedian BenDaDonn, former NFL player Johnny Manziel, and others having a large group dinner under a tent, Chubbs having a drink on a boat, and Zack Bia DJing a function.
Red and Drizzy's early morning turn up confirmed his lyrics from 'Signs' in 2017, where he sang, 'You can't drink all day if you don't start in the morning.' The group showed off their shot glasses and called for a cheers in the first clip, but the 6 God wasn't holding one. In the second clip, he finally retrieved one and said 'I'm about to be f**ked up, man, it's like 9 o'clock.' Nonetheless, he obliged and their festivities continued. Watch below.
It takes a special friend to get somebody to start their day with shots, and the Toronto superstar emphasized how close he is to the 'Get It Sexyy' artist this weekend at Wireless Festival in London. She was a surprise guest during his headlining set on day two (Saturday, July 12) and performed 'Get It Sexyy,' 'SkeeYee,' 'Pound Town,' and their collaboration 'Rich Baby Daddy.'
At one point, the 'What Did I Miss?' artist called Red one of his best friends and thanked her for constantly checking on him. Despite everyone who seemingly betrayed him last year, Red has consistently and proudly maintained her loyalty.
She received the first Drake feature following his beef with Kendrick Lamar, their viral love song 'U My Everything,' in May 2024. He also joined her in the 'Get It Sexyy' music video a few months prior. Watch below.
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New York Times
a few seconds ago
- New York Times
What Tom Brady has taught Birmingham City… and what he thought of Wayne Rooney
Tom Brady is a winner. Any of his former New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers team-mates, or the fans of teams he dismantled on the way to seven Super Bowl rings during a 22-year NFL career, could tell you that. To rise from the 199th pick in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL draft to be considered by many (including The Athletic's team of NFL writers) as the greatest quarterback in the sport's history indicates he's not afraid of a challenge, either. But how much of that journey to the pinnacle of American football could prepare Brady for a non-playing role in the lower divisions of the English soccer? Advertisement 'What's different between soccer and football?' Brady asks. 'Nothing. Nothing.' Amazon Prime's Built in Birmingham: Brady & the Blues, which launches globally on August 1, is executive-produced by Brady himself. It chronicles his first two seasons involved with the ownership of Birmingham City, a club formed back in 1875. Birmingham had been playing in the Championship, English football's second tier, since suffering relegation from the Premier League in 2011. As much as the show's main narrative arc is Birmingham's prospective return to elite football, with Brady's co-owner and club chairman Tom Wagner admitting their target is 'to play Premier League football against Villa' and 'make some money', it's really about Brady and how he is working to transmit the winning values and practices he developed during his playing career onto a club failing to maximise its potential. 'I'm not in there on an operational role,' he said. 'I'm here in a visionary role.' If that's the case, Knighthead Capital's first season as the club's controlling shareholders suggests his crystal ball may need polishing. Birmingham started strongly, with three wins and two draws from the opening five matches of 2023-24. They then suffered a wobble, failing to win in their next four. Despite back-to-back victories against Huddersfield Town and West Bromwich Albion that left Birmingham sitting sixth in the table, the final play-off spot, the board sacked head coach John Eustace after 11 games of a 46-game season. Given that in recent seasons Birmingham had been more accustomed to fighting relegation than competing for promotion, the decision caused a stir. One fan on the documentary suggested Eustace's replacement, England and Manchester United legend Wayne Rooney, was appointed 'to put a load of eyes on Birmingham City'. It's not clear how involved Brady was in the decision to fire Eustace, but his first trip to the training ground to watch Rooney in action provides an insight into the mind of this seven-time champion. Advertisement When asked what he could offer Birmingham that nobody else could, Brady replied, 'I think there's a feel I have with what I see, what I watch, what I hear, how we're training and preparing and evaluations of our own team,' setting up his day at the club's practice facility, which is clearly in need of repair. Brady has a tour of the facility before sitting down with Rooney, who tells the American how he would show up to training at 9am during the summer's pre-season preparations. Brady subtly responds by telling Rooney he would get to the team's facility at 6 am. Whether intentional or not, it demonstrates Brady's competitive edge. 'I treated practice like it was the Super Bowl,' he said to Rooney. 'Every day. We would do a two-minute drill at the end of the game, and I would throw a touchdown at practice — I'd be standing there like, 'F***, we've won the game'. Even though it was practice. 'And then my team-mates would be like, 'F***, OK. That's how we're gonna do it'. So then when I got to the pros, everybody would be walking around like 'Hey, you know, it's just practice', and I walked in there and said 'No. F*** this. This is real'. Put the pressure on them. Make 'em learn everything.' He talks about the ownership's priorities for the club, mentioning 'resilience', 'hard work,' and 'discipline'. As he's leaving the training ground, the camera picks up Brady saying that he is 'a little worried about our head coach's work ethic'. Questioning Rooney's dedication, a global sporting superstar as a player in his own right, and ultimately allowing that to be publicised in the documentary's final edit, is a telling decision. It undoubtedly reflects strongly on his emotional investment in the Birmingham project, but his indifference towards Rooney's prior achievements in assessing his character is unusual from a former athlete, particularly concerning someone as successful in their respective discipline. Rooney's representatives declined to comment when approached by The Athletic for this piece. Rooney was fired after two wins from 15 matches, and Birmingham were relegated to League One, England's third tier, for the first time since 1994-95. Brady assumed responsibility as part of the ownership team regarding the 'sweeping changes' made early in their first season in charge, but suggested the bulk of the responsibility lies on the players, whom he described as lazy and entitled. He promised a 'whole different environment when they step in the door for the competition next year', and episodes two, three, four and five detail their dominant run in League One, achieving promotion back to the Championship with a record 111 points at the first time of asking. The coach who led them there, Chris Davies, is much more to Brady's taste. Like Brady, Davies has had to work hard for his opportunity in management. After being forced to retire as a player at 19 due to an arthritic condition in his foot, he spent 20 years learning and developing as a coach. He was an assistant to Brendan Rodgers and then Ange Postecoglou at Celtic and followed Postecoglou to Tottenham Hotspur in 2023 before earning the head coach's job at Birmingham ahead of the 2024-25 season, with Brady involved in the hiring process. Advertisement 'He was just everything I imagined he would be,' Davies tells The Athletic of Brady. 'But there were a lot more layers to him beyond the surface. He's got real insight and depth. He cares a lot and listens and tries to give helpful advice. I've really enjoyed getting to know him and he's someone I've listened to and spoke a lot to throughout the season. 'We're lucky to have him. Most people don't get the chance to speak to someone who has been that successful.' It's apparent Brady and Davies see themselves in each other. When asked to describe Davies in one word, Birmingham's kitman (equipment manager) opted for 'intense'. Davies used 'unrelenting' for Brady. They have a strong bond, and Brady keeps in regular phone contact with the head coach. 'I feel like I have a great kindred spirit, in a way, with Chris,' Brady said. 'He was overlooked for a long time, and he had his own chip on his shoulder. He really was looking for the right opportunity to prove himself — and then he earned it.' Brady's involvement appeared to escalate last season, with Davies describing him as 'a world-class consultant — one of the greatest athletes of all time — to speak to about situations that we're in'. In one instance, Brady remarks on the junk food players are consuming after the game, suggesting it was like going back 25 years to when he was in high school. Alongside Alex Guerrero, Brady's 'body coach' who is also a shareholder and advisor on performance, nutrition and recovery at Birmingham, the pair are re-shaping the club's approach to conditioning. 'Electrolytes is a big thing. Drinking water is a big thing,' Birmingham player Ethan Laird tells The Athletic. 'I like to annoy Alex, asking him lots of questions. He says water is 70 per cent of your muscles, so if you're not feeding them, they're going to be brittle and tear. I'm a salt sweater, something that was identified in me, so I need to have a lot more electrolytes. The nutritionist gives me things full of salt and I even have salt tablets now. That has stepped up a lot.' Brady won a Super Bowl aged 43, so few can question his knowledge concerning conditioning. However, England Women, who won the 2022 European Championship powered by post-match pizzas, might point out that soccer players typically cover around 10km in matches (according to the CIES Football Observatory), while NFL players usually clock around 2km. Therefore, their need to refuel on high-calorie, energy-dense foods for recovery is greater. Advertisement Nevertheless, Brady's knowledge and expertise helped provide vital boosts throughout the season. During Davies' first poor stretch of results before Christmas 2024, Brady sent him a video of former Alabama football head coach Nick Saban reflecting on how he developed from being a 'transformational' leader rather than a 'transactional' one. Davies used it as inspiration for a team meeting ahead of a game, helping Birmingham emerge from that period as a stronger team unit. 'It was interesting to pick up on these things,' says Davies. '(Saban) is obviously not an ex-football player, as in our football, where we might know the same things and the same people. He's from the U.S. and a different sport. There are new things there.' If anything is apparent from the documentary, it's that Brady and Wagner's relentless attitude is pushing Birmingham forward from stasis. 'Tommy Wagner has given us something that no person has ever given Birmingham City,' says Paul Collins, a lifelong Birmingham fan. 'And that's belief.' They spent heavily to bring Jay Stansfield back to St. Andrew's permanently after the forward had an impressive loan spell during their first season in charge. After scoring 19 goals in 37 league matches, he was selected as part of England's Under-21 European Championship-winning team this summer, where he played six times and started in the final. Having lost his father, Adam, to colon cancer when Stansfield was seven, the 22-year-old has had to overcome challenges of his own. He, as well as Laird, who came through the Manchester United academy, are the kind of young, hungry and ambitious players Birmingham are targeting and developing under Knighthead's and Brady's ownership and tutelage. 'It's amazing,' Laird says on Brady's involvement. 'He's the GOAT of NFL. When you have the best around, there's always something to learn. The way they walk. The way they talk. If you want to be the best, they are the things you observe and try to take in. He was a leader— the role of a quarterback is to be a leader and get the troops going. I see the way he speaks to people, and he chooses his words on purpose. 'It's not as if he thinks about it, it's just experience. He knows why he's saying certain words. I get a feeling like, 'No, he's invoked (a feeling) because of the words he's chosen'. He knows how to get people going.' Advertisement British football supporters are cynical, and given Birmingham's decade-long stretch in the doldrums, few would excuse them for being tough to win over. But there's a buzz around St Andrews that has not been there in a long time, and having watched Brady, Wagner and Davies' relentless drive to bring success to the club, it's not hard to see why.


CNN
30 minutes ago
- CNN
Challenging time for NFL, how to elude mosquitoes, ‘Ozempic face': Catch up on the day's stories
👋 Welcome to 5 Things PM! For summertime beachgoers, the threat of sharks may loom large, but nature's deadliest predator is actually much smaller. Experts offer tips to make yourself less attractive to mosquitoes. Here's what else you might have missed during your busy day. Late July is usually filled with optimism and excitement for the NFL, but the league is reeling after a gunman targeted its offices in New York City. The shooting thrust a sensitive topic — chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE — into the spotlight just days before preseason games begin, along with a uniquely American problem. Thousands of microplastics so small they can penetrate deep into the lungs are in the air you breathe in your home and car. A new study found that they probably come from the degradation of plastic-filled objects such as carpet, curtains, furniture and textiles. Cosmetic surgeons are reporting a growing number of patients with sagging skin and facial hollowing after they shed pounds with the help of weight-loss drugs. Thanks to them, the plastic surgery business is booming. With her short hair and unshowy clothing, Fan Chunli looks every bit the middle-aged woman from rural China. Joking about her abusive ex-husband launched the unassuming comedian to stardom, but the authorities aren't laughing. Order a cold drink in Europe and you could be in for an unpleasant surprise. The beverage will probably arrive lukewarm. CNN's travel team explores why Americans' obsession with ice doesn't translate across the pond. GET '5 THINGS' IN YOUR INBOX If your day doesn't start until you're up to speed on the latest headlines, then let us introduce you to your new favorite morning fix. Sign up here for the '5 Things' newsletter. 🧑✈️ 'This is a hoot!' This year marks the 100th anniversary of the iconic Goodyear Blimp. CNN correspondent and flight instructor Pete Muntean took one out for a spin and tried a few maneuvers at a Wisconsin airshow. See how he did. Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady despite pressure from Trump Senate Democrats try to force release of Epstein files using arcane law Jury finds Colorado dentist guilty of murdering his wife 😢 A final goodbye: Thousands of fans paid their respects to Ozzy Osbourne as his hearse made its way through the streets of Birmingham, the English city where he grew up and where his band Black Sabbath formed in 1968. 🌊 How strong was the earthquake off Russia's far eastern coast that prompted tsunami warnings in the US?A. 5.5B. 6.4C. 7.2D. 8.8⬇️ Scroll down for the answer. 👋 We'll see you tomorrow.🧠 Quiz answer: D. The massive 8.8 magnitude quake is tied for the sixth strongest ever recorded.📧 Check out all of CNN's newsletters. Today's edition of 5 Things PM was edited and produced by CNN's Kimberly Richardson and Chris Good.

Refinery29
31 minutes ago
- Refinery29
JaNa Craig's Split Proves A Pattern & It's Black Women Who Pay The Price
Love Island Season 6 couple JaNa Craig and Kenny Rodriguez have broken up nearly a year after leaving the villa. As soon as the split was announced,fans immediately started speculating about what happened. Rumors about their ending began spreading like wildfire when social media users began noticing nearly all of the Season 6 cast and host Ariana Madoix had unfollowed Rodriguez. What few saw coming was that their demise was due to Rodriguez, who is Dominican, being an alleged racist and clout chaser who had been faking his relationship with the Las Vegas native the entire time. Craig confirmed the breakup on Tuesday when she shared a statement via Instagram Stories. 'As you know, Kenny and I are no longer together,' Craig wrote. 'Please know that I have seen all the breakup theories and none have matched up to how terrible, disgusting and disappointing it truly is. Discovering that someone you loved isn't who you thought they were and that the relationship you thought you were building hasn't been genuine since day one has been truly devastating.' Shortly after, Rodriguez followed with his own statement, sharing that 'the past few days have been incredibly difficult.' He continued, 'I'll always be grateful for the time we shared and the memories we created. I release this chapter with no ill will, only hope that JaNa's path forward brings her nothing but happiness.' Craig called out Rodriquez in a response on Instagram, referring to him as a 'manipulative liar.' She said, 'You not taking accountability and telling people the type of person you really are is insane to me!!' Season 6 castmates seemingly confirmed claims that Rodriguez was using Craig for brand deals and status. Serena Page called him 'a narcissist and a racist' on an Instagram post while Leah Kateb called Rodriguez a 'clout demon' under another post. Olivia Walker reposted Rodriguez's statement and said 'I hope this gives you the clout you always wanted you f*****g loser.' In another post, shared by a friend of Craig's who wasn't on the show, she suggests that Rodriguez had messages in his phone that said he doesn't like Black women, he thought he'd get more money out of their relationship and that he couldn't wait to break up so he could date other women. Since Monday, Rodriguez has lost about 100,000 followers on Instagram. He has yet to respond to the allegations. Reality TV dating shows have historically been unkind to Black women. Especially as desirability politics, tokenism and a lack of diversity in cast have long been a standard. More recently, however, Black women have found themselves in a peculiar place in the genre. Those discriminatory factors that have existed on reality dating shows have come head-to-head with the natural social capital Black women on these shows have. With more Love Island USA fans gravitating towards Black women — and the cultural fetishizing and appropriation they face — they've become central players on the show the past two seasons. But still, they experience the same misogynoir they would've otherwise and face double standards and ridicule when they stray outside of the boundaries others want to keep them in. In other words, it's cool to be a Black woman until it's time to be with a Black woman. A similar incident happened with Love Island USA Season 4 winners and fan favorites Zeta Morrison and Timmy Pandolfi. After Pandolfi refused to ride to the airport with Morrison, she said in an interview that she soon found out that he was faking his connection with her the entire time. She recounted a conversation with his sister in which his sister revealed she said, 'I told Timmy to go for a dark skin girl. America loves that.' Rodriguez seemed to have the same idea. This is not only incredibly unfair and manipulative to Craig and Morrison, but it's dehumanizing. Let's be very clear: we weren't rooting for Craig and Rodriguez because they just had stellar chemistry. We were rooting for Craig to be happy. We were rooting for a Black woman with a bubbly personality who wore her heart on her sleeve to get the treatment that she deserved after witnessing men play in her face time and time again. And Black women at home watching deserve to see someone who looks like them being loved genuinely and abundantly. Rodriguez would've been better off showing exactly how he felt about Craig — and Black women — early on. Because of his alleged stunt, he's worse than Simmons and Newsum. Craig was vocal about discussing them connecting over faith and going to church together. But Rodriguez wasn't praying for her, he was preying on her. For nearly a year, while Craig was sharing vulnerable, intimate and authentic moments with Rodriguez, he was carrying on a lie. He rode Craig's coattails to bring in brand deals and followers. He used her for capitalistic gain and clout. He took advantage of her and the social power that Black women come with. When Black women root for you, we're loud and confident about it. We rally support for our faves and that energy spreads to other demographics. As Love Island USA gains more popularity, that's become more and more evident in the reality TV genre. Black women may be the prize but we are not your meal ticket. Any breakup can be hard, but what Craig is experiencing is on another level of trauma that no one deserves to go through. JaNa Craig can do bad all by her damn self. And the same folks who were rooting for her will continue to be there to lift her up and give her community and care that is filled with real love, long after everyone has forgotten Rodriguez and the clout he so desperately chased has vanished.