
Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz share first photos of romantic wedding vow renewal amid family feud
The ceremony was officiated by Nicola's billionaire father Nelson - but Brooklyn's parents David and Victoria were absent as their family feud rumbles on.
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Brooklyn and Nicola said 'I do' again on Nicola's family estate on August 2 in Westchester County, New York.
Three years after they first tied the knot, the couple decided to have a low key ceremony to reaffirm their love for each other.
Brooklyn captioned the snaps "Only love" alongside a white heart emoji.
He also referred to Nicola as "Forever my girl."
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Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trailer for With Love, Meghan season 2 drops after the Sussexes revealed 'downgraded' Netflix deal
The Netflix trailer for season two of Meghan Markle's critically-challenged show With Love, Meghan has dropped today - hours after she and Harry signed a 'downgraded' new deal with the streamer. The Duchess of Sussex 's lifestyle show, where she hosts guests in a rented house near her Montecito mansion for privacy reasons, will return in - just as Netflix loosened its ties with the Sussexes. Guests on the new season include Chrissy Teigan and Jamie Kern Lima. With Love, Meghan was renewed for a second season just as season one was released in March. All the episodes were filmed at the same time, it is understood. Meghan's lifestyle show failed to break into Netflix 's top 300 programmes for the first half of 2025 and was even thrashed by multiple seasons of Suits. The numbers watching were 'dismal', an insider at the streamer reportedly said. Meghan has also filmed a Christmas special for broadcast in December, in a potential clash with the Princess of Wales ' annual carol concert at Westminster Abbey. The first series showed the former Suits star, 44, inviting friends and famous guests to a California estate, where she shared cooking, gardening and hosting tips. But it was panned by many reviewers who called it 'sensationally absurd and trite' with the Duchess of Sussex called 'tone-deaf' and punting a show that 'vibrates with vacuous joylessness'. It has an IMDB rating of 3.2 out of 10 and a 38% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, indicates that the TV show is considered 'rotten'. Meghan was also lampooned for putting pretzels from the packet into a plastic bag, chiding one guest for using Markle as her surname instead of Sussex and one viewer threatened to sue claiming her recipe for homemade bath salts burned her skin. With Love, Meghan was renewed for a second season just as season one was released in March It came as experts claimed that the Sussexes' new Netflix deal is a 'downgrade' on their previous $100million five-year tie-up and more 'we'll call you' than 'here's the chequebook'. The couple signed a new 'multi-year, first look deal for film and television projects' with the streaming giant - understood to be worth less for the pair than their previous contract. The 'first-look' arrangement means Netflix can say yes or no to new film or television projects before anyone else - allowing them to pick and choose what they invest in. PR expert Mark Borkowski described the new deal as a 'downgrade', claiming it falls a long way from the jackpot figure of Harry and Meghan's original contract in 2020. He told the Daily Mail: 'I think Netflix has done a very neat job of pivoting away from two very expensive people who didn't deliver, and they've taken that deal off the table, and they've given them a modest one. 'It's not like they're gradually uncoupling – it's a downgrade. Netflix are not going to expose themselves to those budgets again. It's Netflix saying, 'Let's have a look at your content, but we'll pick and choose, mate'.' He believes the pair will be paid for each production selected by Netflix rather than receiving an overall fee, such as the reported $100million of their first deal. 'I would be surprised if it's not pay-as-you-go and it's well, well below that first mark,' he added. The couple's new output will include a second season of the Duchess's 'With Love, Meghan' lifestyle show later this month, as well as a Christmas special in December. The Sussexes are also working on 'Masaka Kids, A Rhythm Within' - a documentary about orphaned children in Uganda, where the 'shadows of the HIV/Aids crisis linger'. There is also 'active development' on other projects with Netflix which 'span a variety of content genres', including an adaptation of romantic novel Meet Me At The Lake. But Mr Borkowski said the couple will not be granted the same budget as they were under their previous contract with the streaming service. 'They have shot the golden goose of 2020 - more of a 'we'll call you' than 'here's the chequebook',' he said. 'It's a first-look deal, which means Netflix gets first dibs but no obligation to bankroll every semi-royal whim. 'I reckon Netflix is trimming fat industry-wide, so this is less carte blanche, more curated cameo. 'They're still in business together - Meghan's. As ever brand and seasonal specials keep them in the Netflix shop window but make no mistake, this is a slimmed-down sequel to the blockbuster original. So Harry and Meghan's new Netflix chapter [is] less champagne budget, more Prosecco by the glass.' Netflix has already released the first series of With Love, Meghan as well as Polo, Heart of Invictus, Live to Lead and the couple's bombshell documentary Harry & Meghan as well as being a business partner on Meghan's lifestyle brand, As Ever. Five years ago, Harry and Meghan secured a lucrative contract thought to be worth $100million (£74million) with Netflix after quitting as senior working royals in 2020. The renewed deal was described by the Sussexes - who made the announcement with Netflix - as 'extending their creative partnership' through Archewell Productions. But the new terms are understood to be worth less for Harry and Meghan than their previous contract, according to a person familiar with the deal, and represent Netflix loosening its ties with the couple. In a statement, Meghan said: 'We're proud to extend our partnership with Netflix and expand our work together to include the As Ever brand.' Netflix chief content officer Bela Bajaria said: 'We're excited to continue our partnership.'


The Sun
3 minutes ago
- The Sun
Meghan shares trailer for new series of critically savaged Netflix show – after she & Harry struck ‘downgraded' deal
MEGHAN Markle's heavily criticised Netflix show has been renewed for a second season as a new trailer dropped. Footage showed the Duchess of Sussex alongside a host of famous guests ahead of the release of the second series of With Love, Meghan on August 26. 3 3 3 The first season of Meghan's eight-part Netflix show saw her bee-keeping, making homemade candles and cooking with celeb pals, including Mindy Kaling and make-up artist Daniel Martin. It comes after Harry and Meghan announced yesterday they had signed a new "multi-year, first look deal" with the American streaming giant to produce " film and television projects". The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have previously released a number of shows on the platform, including a 2022 documentary on their lives and lifestyle show With Love, Meghan this year. They had secured a lucrative five-year contract - thought to be worth more than $100 million (£74 million) - with Netflix after quitting as senior working royals in 2020. However, this new deal has been signed for "much less", an insider told Page Six. Meghan said in a statement: 'We're proud to extend our partnership with Netflix and expand our work together to include the As Ever brand. "My husband and I feel inspired by our partners who work closely with us and our Archewell Productions team to create thoughtful content across genres that resonates globally, and celebrates our shared vision.' Netflix will only pay for projects they want to screen, rather than pay in a single multi-million pound agreement like the one signed in 2020, The Sun understands. The Sun can also reveal, however, that the streaming giants will cover Archewell Productions's overheads, including all costs for its offices and staff. The new deal was also described as a "downgrade" by PR expert Mark Borkowski. He told the Mail: "I think Netflix has done a very neat job of pivoting away from two very expensive people who didn't deliver, and they've taken that deal off the table, and they've given them a modest one. "It's not like they're gradually uncoupling – it's a downgrade. Netflix are not going to expose themselves to those budgets again. It's Netflix saying, 'Let's have a look at your content, but we'll pick and choose, mate'." On top of Season 2 of With Love, Meghan - which will drop later this month - the couple will also film a "Holiday Celebration" Christmas special. "Join Meghan in Montecito for a magical holiday celebration," the announcement read. "Together, friends and family deck the halls, create holiday feasts, craft heartfelt gifts, and share lots of laughs – with simple how-tos to follow at home. It's a holiday wonder with warmth, tradition, and a generous dose of joy." The couple will also release a short film called "Masaka Kids, A Rhythm Within" which will look at Uganda's Masaka region and the HIV/AIDS crisis there. This has echoes of Harry's mum Diana's work, who pioneered social change on perceptions of HIV/AIDS. She famously shook the hand of a man suffering with the illness without gloves, publicly challenging the idea that HIV/Aids was passed from person to person by touch. There is also "active development" on other projects with Netflix which "span a variety of content genres", including a feature adaptation of the bestselling romantic novel by Carley Fortune, Meet Me At The Lake. Bela Bajaria, Netflix's Chief Content Officer, said: 'Harry and Meghan are influential voices whose stories resonate with audiences everywhere. "The response to their work speaks for itself — Harry & Meghan gave viewers an intimate look into their lives and quickly became one of our most-watched documentary series. 'Meghan & Harry need to come up with a hit soon' By Matt Wilkinson JUST when you thought it was safe to turn the telly on again... Harry and Meghan are back. And their multi-year renewal with Netflix means they are not going away anytime soon. There have been tense negotiations in recent weeks but Netflix is so deeply involved with Meghan's As Ever brand it was always likely that the streaming giants would want them back. Make no mistake, Harry and Meghan would have been desperate for the deal to be renewed. They will likely be opening a bottle or two of As Ever Rose in Montecito. Because they have invested heavily in Archewell Productions and getting on board with Netflix is central not only to their post-Royal endeavours but more importantly crucial to their bank accounts. If they lost their Netflix money then how could they afford their life in the US? While the length of the deal or how much the couple are getting paid is vague we do know that Meghan will appear in a 'holiday special' in December that will likely clash with the Princess of Wales's annual Christmas carol concert at Westminster Abbey. And finally, two years after I revealed in The Sun the couple had bought the rights to the book Meet Me At The Lake, production is in active development. Sources close to the couple are coy about whether Harry or Meghan will appear on screen for the production of Masaka Kids, A Rhythm Within which will air later this year. But perhaps the best piece of news from the announcement is no repeat of the six-part documentary which dumped on the Royal Family. However, 'Harry & Meghan' was a ratings dream and none of their projects since have been anywhere as successful. They need to come up with a hit soon. And this 'first look' deal means Netflix has the first option on new projects from the couple without any guaranteed commitment. But remember the Sussexes are not the only Royals to be in bed with Netflix. The King will feature in a documentary on The King's Foundation with Idris Elba. "More recently, fans have been inspired by With Love, Meghan, with products from the new As Ever line consistently selling out in record time. "We're excited to continue our partnership with Archewell Productions and to entertain our members together.' It was previously thought that the Sussexes' £74million deal with the streamer was not going to be renewed. Harry's vanity project, Polo, about the sport, was watched by just 500,000 people. But it was also understood that bosses were mildly infuriated by Meghan making her As Ever brand a priority. The With Love, Meghan viewing figures have reportedly been "dismal". Lifestyle and cookery show With Love, Meghan only ranked at number 383 in Netflix's six-monthly engagement report this year, with just 5.3million viewers across the globe. Described by one critic as an 'exercise in narcissism', it was beaten by reruns of the first four seasons of legal drama Suits, which also starred the Duchess in her pre-royal days. Once judged by some as Britain's greatest soft power asset since Princess Diana, Meghan was filmed for her show making ladybird-shaped canapes from cherry tomatoes and mozzarella balls. In truth, the show is a smash hit compared to her husband's vanity docuseries Polo, blasted as 'a dull indulgence about a rich person's pursuit'. In the first six months of the year the programme attracted a disastrous 500,000 views globally, ranking it at number 3,442 out of around 7,000 shows.


The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Fixed review – Netflix's raunchy horny dog comedy wears thin
Dogs dry humping humans, and whatever else they can get between their legs, is always good for a laugh – at least when we're looking down on these adorable house pets, as they satisfy their base instincts, from above. Fixed, the filthy animated comedy unleashed on Netflix with a content warning that should apply to this review as much as the movie, both indulges in and tests our limits when it comes to that humour, largely by getting down (on all fours) and dirty with its hand-drawn canines. Here's a movie with talking pets that rarely rises above a bull terrier's vantage point. Humans remain mostly out of frame. We see their legs – a regular scene of the crime – but never their faces. In the opening minutes, we're right there with Bull (voiced by Pitch Perfect's Adam DeVine), the movie's pudgy un-neutered protagonist, as he works hard to bust a nut on his household's nana. The elderly woman is asleep on a sofa seat, her wrinkles sit still while he makes a mess of her stockings. The screen, and whatever objects are in its frame (like dog tags and dentures), rock to his rhythmic thrusting. His moans and Pornhub-rated gift for gab get louder with every back and forth, along with the squishing sound whenever he makes contact. It's a raucous bit, made all the more hilarious and uncomfortable because of how long it lasts. And it raises the question: would this behaviour be as cute and tolerable in real life if we considered how much fun dogs were having, and if we gave them human character traits and facial expressions, which in those moments can come off as downright depraved? Fixed gets as much mileage as it can out of gags that largely centre on Bull's gonads, with its entire narrative built around a wild night out when he discovers his owner's plan to finally give him the snip. But that humour, and its shock value, wears thin in less time than it takes for Bull to satisfy his urges. The movie can be a little too self-satisfied with its premise, mixing R-rated humour with the kind of quaint animation style – bright colours and defined black outlines – we remember from more innocent times. Tellingly, co-writer and director Genndy Tartakovsky (of Samurai Jack and Hotel Transylvania fame) first pitched the idea in 2009, when something like this might have felt risque and rare. That was the same year The Hangover became an R-rated blockbuster comedy hinging on a similarly debauched premise, and more than a decade into South Park's success as late-night cartoon fare explicitly made for adults. It's also long before 2016's The Secret Life of Pets and Sausage Party, the former being far more imaginative and adventurous when mapping out social hierarchies in the domesticated animal space, and the latter – with its foul-mouthed grocery items – taking raunchy feature animation to its furthest limits. The button pushing in South Park and Sausage Party also casts a wider net, regularly spilling over into socio- and geopolitics. I mean, South Park is rankling the Trump administration with far more pointed dick jokes. And who could forget the feuding bagel and lavash in Sausage Party, where the Israel-Palestine conflict was played out along shelf-space. Fixed, on the other hand, rarely breaks orbit from the fixations of pets and strays, or at least what we imagine those to be. Beyond the horny animal stuff: there's marking their territory, sniffing each other's behinds, chasing squirrels (the violence of which is yet another thing where the humour of it is met with the unsettling shock of what happens when the predators catch their prey) and philosophizing over the unending appeal of bouncy (tennis) balls. The limited scope often leaves Fixed feeling stretched and redundant, especially when we get to the umpteenth gag about Bull's testicles, which he imagines having Napoleonic personalities of their own. But at the same time, the movie's narrow obsession with Bull's balls is meaningfully consistent with the story it is telling. Bull bases his entire personality on having testes, after all, so much so that he lords it over his dog park pals – Rocco (Idris Elba, doing wonderful work as a statuesque boxer licking his emotional wounds over being abandoned by his mother), Lucky (Bobby Moynihan as a beagle who can't stop devouring cat litter) and Fetch (Fred Armisen as a dachshund dressed for Instagram likes). The loyal squadron tolerate Bull's misguided arrogance and join along as he attempts to break free. They stumble through city back alleys and into a sordid sex club, which amuses with canine answers to pole dancing and orgies, while Bull tries to finally do the deed with something other than nana's legs. As much as he derives his mojo from having balls, Bull is still so crippled with an inferiority complex that he can't go all the way with fellow canines. That's especially true when it comes to the show dog nextdoor, Honey, an Afghan hound voiced by Kathryn Hahn, who Bull adores but doesn't think he can satisfy, despite her flirtatious advances. Their inhibited and surprisingly sentimental romance actually gives Fixed a bit of heart, leading Bull on a journey of self-discovery where he learns to let go of his balls and embrace everything he could become without them. Too bad it takes so long for Bull, and the movie, to heed that very lesson. Fixed is available on Netflix 13 August