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'Golden Bachelor' Mel Owens sets strict age limit for contestants despite producer pushback

'Golden Bachelor' Mel Owens sets strict age limit for contestants despite producer pushback

Fox News6 hours ago
The newest star of "The Golden Bachelor" has some strict criteria when it comes to choosing a life partner.
During an appearance on the "In The Trenches" podcast, Mel Owens - who was cast as the ABC show's newest "Golden Bachelor" in April - admitted that he plans to cut any woman who is "60 and over" and was adamant that producers refrain from casting anyone with "artificial hips" and "wigs."
"It's blind up until they get out of the limo. But they asked me, 'What's your preferences?' So, I just said 45 to 60, just being honest," Owens, the 66-year-old NFL veteran, said. "And then the process went, and I was selected, right? And then we had lunch with the executive producer. I said, 'You know, if they're 60 or over, I'm cutting them.' 'Oh Mel, you can't, you know, this is not the 'Silver Bachelor.' It's the 'Golden Bachelor.' He goes, 'but they're going to be hot, don't worry about it. Don't worry about it.'"
Additionally, Owens said he expects the contestants to all be in good shape.
"I had no resume, but they asked me, what is my, like, my profile?" Owens said. "Well, they got to be fit because I stay in shape, should work out and stuff. And I told them, you know, try to stay away from the artificial hips and the wigs, you know, that kind of stuff, right."
"Well, I don't think there are going to be artificial hips or wigs there, right? Because I know there's amazing women out there," Owens added.
The first "Golden Bachelor," Gerry Turner, was 72 at the time of his appearance on the show. He met and married Theresa Nist, 70, but they divorced three months after tying the knot.
The age range for the 22 contestants on the first season ranged from 60 to 75.
Representatives for "The Golden Bachelor" did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
According to the show's press release, Owens was married for 25 years and has two sons. He hopes to find a love "rooted in the simple joys of companionship — sharing life's everyday moments, making plans for the future and growing stronger together as a couple."
"As the Golden Bachelor, he's eager to meet someone who shares this vision and finally find that perfect teammate he's been waiting for in his golden years," the press release reads.
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Sean 'Diddy' Combs' lawyers say he is a changed man. Will that spare him from more time behind bars?
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' lawyers say he is a changed man. Will that spare him from more time behind bars?

Associated Press

time7 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Sean 'Diddy' Combs' lawyers say he is a changed man. Will that spare him from more time behind bars?

NEW YORK (AP) — In rejecting Sean 'Diddy' Combs' release on bail, a federal judge confronted the hip-hop impresario with a disturbing aspect of his criminal case that his lawyers couldn't deny: his history of violence. Combs' defense lawyers claimed he is a changed man. But Judge Arun Subramanian on Wednesday let the Bad Boy Records founder know that his hopes for freedom soon are slim — even after the jury acquitted him on racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking charges that could have put him in prison for life. Subramanian's words signaled how he may approach sentencing Combs for his convictions on two lesser prostitution-related charges, which each carry a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison. The judge, citing a now-infamous video of Combs beating a former girlfriend and photographs showing injuries to another ex-girlfriend, made clear that he plans to hold Combs accountable for the years of violence and bullying behavior that were exposed at his eight-week trial. Combs' punishment is Subramanian's decision alone, and the judge will have wide latitude in determining a sentence. While judges often adhere to the federal judiciary's formulaic guidelines meant to prevent disparity in sentences for the same crimes, they are not mandatory. Combs' lawyers want less than the 21 to 27 months in prison that they believe the sentencing guidelines recommend. Prosecutors contend that the guidelines, when properly calculated to include Combs' crimes and violent history, call for at least four to five years in prison. After tentatively setting Combs' sentencing for October, the judge said he is open to a defense request that it happen as soon as possible, with further discussions expected at a conference Tuesday. Combs' violent past keeps him locked up for now Combs, his family and his defense team were overjoyed by the verdict, some of them tearing up at the result. Combs pumped his fist in celebration and mouthed 'thank you' to jurors. He hugged his lawyers and, after the jury exited, fell to his knees in prayer. But, by the end of the day, Combs was deflated — his dream of going home after more than nine months in jail thwarted by a judge throwing his own lawyers' words back in their faces. 'We own the domestic violence. We own it,' Subramanian said, reading from a transcript of Combs lawyer Marc Agnifilo's closing argument to the jury last week. 'If he was charged with domestic violence, we wouldn't all be here having a trial, because he would have pled guilty, because he did that.' The judge noted the jury had seen a video of Combs viciously attacking then-girlfriend Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel in March 2016. He also noted that another former Combs' girlfriend — a woman who testified under the pseudonym 'Jane' — was left with visible evidence of bruises and injuries after Combs hit her repeatedly in June 2024. That was a few months after federal agents raided two of his homes and 'when he should have known that he needed to stay clean.' The judge said that the beating, which Jane said happened before Combs forced her to have a sexual encounter with a male sex worker, was part of the prostitution-related offenses — violations of the federal Mann Act — that resulted in a conviction. 'This highlights a disregard for the rule of law and the propensity for violence,' he said. Combs is 'working on himself,' lawyer says Agnifilo, who had asked the judge to release Combs on a $1 million bond, insisted to Subramanian that Combs had changed dramatically in the last year. As he pleaded with the judge, Combs sat by his side and scribbled notes on small pieces of paper, occasionally handing them to the lawyer. The attorney said Jane had written a supportive note to get Combs into a domestic violence intervention program. At sentencing, he said, the defense plans to have someone from the program tell the judge how Combs did. 'He is a man who's in the process of working on himself,' the lawyer said. 'He's been a model prisoner.' Agnifilo said Combs had 'been given his life back' by the jury and 'would be nothing short of a fool' to do anything to spoil that. The prospect of a life sentence, the maximum if Combs were convicted of racketeering or sex trafficking, prompted 'all sorts of the darkest conversations one can imagine about what your life could have been and what your life became,' Agnifilo said. But Subramanian was unmoved by what Agnifilo called his 'heart strings' argument. 'Having conceded the defendant's propensity for violence in this way, it is impossible for the defendant to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that he poses no danger to any other person or the community,' the judge said. Prosecutors also want violence factored into sentencing Agnifilo indicated the defense will argue at sentencing that Combs' violent acts are not part of the charges for which he was convicted and shouldn't factor into his punishment. Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey made it clear that prosecutors will argue the opposite. Combs is 'an extremely violent man with an extraordinarily dangerous temper,' Comey told the judge Wednesday. He 'has shown no remorse and no regret for his violence toward multiple victims.' Subramanian noted that Combs will be credited for the time he has already served. But by rejecting bail, the judge indicated that he will likely reject a defense request for Combs to be freed in the next year. Witnesses implore judge to keep Combs locked up Deonte Nash, a former stylist for Combs and Cassie who reluctantly testified during the trial, told the judge in a letter that bail would 'send a dangerous message: that wealth and influence can shield someone indefinitely from accountability.' Cassie, through her lawyer, also encouraged Subramanian to keep Combs in jail. 'Ms. Ventura believes that Mr. Combs is likely to pose a danger to the victims who testified in this case, including herself, as well as to the community,' Cassie's lawyer, Douglas Wigdor, wrote.

Cole Swindell Celebrates Release Of New Album 'Spanish Moss'
Cole Swindell Celebrates Release Of New Album 'Spanish Moss'

Forbes

time12 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Cole Swindell Celebrates Release Of New Album 'Spanish Moss'

Singer/songwriter Cole Swindell Over the past eleven years, singer/songwriter Cole Swindell has made an indelible mark on country music. His expansive catalogue of music has racked up billions of streams and 13 No. 1 hits, so far. Familiar songs incudes 'Chillin' In,' 'You Should Have Been Here,' 'She Had Me At Heads Carolina,' and many more. The Georgia-native, who got his start as a songwriter, has also co-written a number of songs for other artists including the Florida Georgia Line and Luke Bryan mega-hit 'This Is How We Roll.' Swindell has just released his fifth studio album and can't wait for fans to hear it. Spanish Moss offers an ambitious collection of songs Swindell either wrote, co-wrote, or collected from other songwriters – all of which reflect where he currently finds himself in life. Cover of Cole Swindell's album "Spanish Moss" 'It's been a crazy process of trying to make the best album we can,' he says. 'But I knew when it was right, the whole team did, and now it's a complete album and here it is. I'm very proud of the whole thing, all twenty one songs. It's the most songs I've ever put on an album.' Tracks include 'Kill a Prayer,' 'Dirty Dancing,' 'Left to Get Right,' 'Take Me Down,' 'Heads Up Heaven,' and more. Many are deeply personal like 'Forever to Me,' a song he wrote for his wife, Courtney, on their wedding day. Another is 'Dale Jr,' inspired by Swindell's first time meeting with Dale Earnhardt Jr. At first glance, it might seem to be a song about two men at the top of their respective fields (country music and NASCAR), but it touches on a more emotional connection between the two. Both men lost their dads when they were far too young. 'People might see the title and think it's some kind of race car song, but it has nothing to do with that,' Swindell explains. 'It's me talking about the night I met a guy I'd always cheered for, whose dad was special to me and my dad. It's a true story about a common bond nobody wants to have. My dad was Keith Swindell, and his dad was Dale Earnhardt, but just Dad to him. So, Dale Jr and I didn't talk about entertainment or racing, we just talked about our dads.' Swindell has shown a true gift for tapping into his own life to write songs that resonate with others. He wrote his 2016 hit, 'You Should Be Here,' as a tribute to father who died unexpectedly when he was on tour. And while his 'She Had Me At Heads Carolina' was a re-worked version of Jo Dee Messina's 90s hit 'Heads Carolina' (with the help and permission of the original songwriters), it was inspired by Swindell listening to the song with his mom as a young boy. 'I legit remember riding around with my mom when the original version of 'Heads Carolina' came out,' he recalls. Swindell ended up sharing the stage with Messina as they performed 'She Had Me At Heads Carolina' at both the CMA and ACM Awards in 2022. It ended up winning 'ACM Song of the Year.' 'To be able to collaborate with her on those awards shows and for it to become one of the biggest songs of my career, has got to be one of the most full-circle moments of my life and career.' Spanish Moss comes three years after Swindell's last album. He says he might have liked to have come back around with something sooner, but he wanted to take the time needed to find the right group of songs. 'I'm proud of every album but that last one (Stereotype) did a lot of big things. 'She Had Me At Heads Carolina" and 'Never Say Never' with Lainey Wilson. So, to follow it up, there was some pressure and I think that's what made this one what it is." Swindell wrote or co-wrote just under half of those on the album and worked with Nashville's songwriting community for the rest. But all are close to his heart. 'A song has to be absolutely perfect for me,' he explains. 'It's got to make me feel something or wish I had written it. People ask, how do you know it's for you? And the answer is - if I wish I'd written it. It's a lot easier for me to tell my story, but, man, there's something special when somebody else tells it almost better than you could have told it yourself.' While Swindell is excited about the album, it comes as he and his wife, Courtney, prepare for the arrival of their first child, a baby girl. 'I'm so excited to be a dad, I'm tearing up just thinking about it,' he says. 'I'm telling you, I'm so emotional about this kid. I know I'm going to look at things a lot differently. You know, you always talk about your songs and albums being your babies and now I've got a real one coming. It's an exciting time in my life for both of them to be coming at the same time.' The baby is due in early August. Swindell will have some time off to spend with his family, then gear up to head out on his headline Happy Hour Sad Tour in September. Opening acts include Priscilla Block, Logan Crosby and Greylan James. He says it's hard to believe so much has happened since he left Georgia and headed to Nashville all those years ago. At 42, he's grateful for his incredible success in music. And now, over the past few years, having met his wife and now getting ready to start a family, he considers himself blessed beyond measure. 'I'm so proud of everything I've accomplished in my career, obviously. But finally getting my personal life in line, I think that's what I'm most proud of. And now having somebody to share all of this with.' Cole Swindell performs at The Big 98's Friendsgiving at The Grand Ole Opry on November 25, 2024 in ... More Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by)

‘Stranger Things' Hellfire Club Catch-Up: Season One
‘Stranger Things' Hellfire Club Catch-Up: Season One

Gizmodo

time18 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

‘Stranger Things' Hellfire Club Catch-Up: Season One

Welcome to io9's summer cram session for Stranger Things, the Duffer Brothers' Netflix phenomenon, which will return this November to Netflix for its final season. To honor the Hawkins gang's late, great, guitar-shredding Dungeon Master Eddie (Joseph Quinn), this rewatch shall be coined the Hellfire Club Catch-Up. With part one of season 5 a few months out, it seems fitting to get started now. Read on for io9's guide to everything you need to remember from the show's 2016 debut. Season one of Stranger Things was straightforward, a lean and mean horror binge. From the jump, the Amblin and Stephen King vibes by way of John Carpenter are all over the DNA of the '80s-era show. I would shy away from calling this gateway horror because season one in particular really went there in building up the horror with the Demogorgon hunting down Hawkins youth. Violence was not in short supply. At the center, we have the events unfolding around Mike (Finn Wolfhard), Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), and Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin) when their friend Will (Noah Schnapp) goes missing and a mysterious girl turns up with telekinetic powers. Rewatching this made me feel so old because they were so little when the show started—and let me tell you, the show really hits different now that I'm a parent. Right off the bat, those are my biggest takeaways: the horror and story really hold up and are even more terrifying watching as a mom. Joyce (Winona Ryder), I get it now—I thought her extremes to find Will were a little off-kilter almost 10 years ago. I was so wrong, and everything she did for those kids with Hopper (David Harbour) was absolutely justified. And there are so many details that I completely forgot about, some of which we'll go over, like Will's fake body or the fact that Hawkins has a huge bully problem. For the purposes of our club, though, here are the main things that happened that we should keep in mind as we work our way to season five. When Mike, Dustin, Lucas, and Will end their campaign in episode one, it comes down to a big choice to save them all. Will has the option to either protect his crew or attack the Demogorgon (game version), but his move to fireball backfires. It's clear he should have made the move to protect his friends, and that makes us wonder if Will's story might come down to a similar choice—where he may need to make the ultimate sacrifice. Will is barely gone for the morning period of school, but that doesn't stop Joyce from taking matters into her own hands. While other parents err on the side of thinking Will ran away, his mother knows better. Her inclination to feel something sinister is afoot lays the groundwork for her and Hopper tuning into the suspicious presence of Hawkins Lab, located near to where Will disappeared. In Stranger Things: The First Shadow, the stage prequel to the events of Stranger Things the series, audience members have shared it's now established canon that back in high school, Joyce and Hopper investigated an unusual happening in their town involving Victor Creel (Henry Creel's father), the real truth of which was left unsolved. Hopper went on to leave to become a big city cop, and in his flashbacks we see his tragic backstory of having lost his daughter to cancer. Seeing Joyce's relentlessness to find out what happened to Will is something Hopper recognizes and shares—seeing finding Will as a path to do what he couldn't and save her kid. It seems that as things get worse, the rest of the grownups in town would just rather keep ignoring the bad things happening around them. Barb (Shannon Purser) goes missing, and there's no rush to look for her from anyone but Nancy (Natalia Dyer), who, like her brother Mike, gets the sense that something is off about her friend's disappearance after Will's. From the start, Hawkins feels like a small town where most people are miserable, and it could be by supernatural design, as the apathy from the adults rivals the meanness of the kids and teens as they all gawk at Joyce. There's no justice for Barb as her disappearance is dismissed as another runaway, with the added detail of her car being planted by a bus stop. Nancy begins to run her own investigation concurrent with Joyce and Hopper's, while the younger kids go on their main character storyline. Could the Upside Down already be feeding off the energy to expand beneath their feet? It seems likely that this is what leads to the fabric between both worlds getting ripped so the Demogorgon can feed on the most vulnerable. Eleven's (Millie Bobbie Brown) escape from Hawkins Lab as Will is taken sets her up as the hero the town needs. When El joins Mike, Lucas, and Dustin on their search for Will her powers quickly get revealed. It starts off simple enough, like Carrie meets E.T. El makes a kid who picks on her friends at their friend's fake funeral pee himself, and later makes other kids fly with the wave of her hand. As she learns to channel her powers to make contact with Will in the Upside Down, it raises the stakes of the mystery. And it's not so clean-cut because Lucas is the first to question her involvement with Hawkins Lab, while Mike's protectiveness over her shadows his doubts. Her superhuman strength is dangerous and something the bad men want her back for. They figure out it's to use as a weapon, but against what? The Hawkins Lab agents, led by Brenner (Matthew Modine), attempt to cover up Will's death by staging a fake dead body that gets all the way to the morgue. Hopper gets in and cuts it open to find it's stuffed. Joyce already knows, because by then she's been in touch with Will through Christmas lights from the Upside Down. The pain of her loss, you could argue, might be what begins to lure the Demogorgon through her walls. The blinking lights become the thread of how to know something is coming through. Hopper and Joyce uncover that the kid who was described as having a shaved head near the scene of a crime could have been the child of a pregnant woman who was experimented on during Brenner's time with MK Ultra. When El/Jane was born, Brenner took the child back to Hawkins Lab, presumably to see how the psychedelics affected her child. Her powers were developed and tested in the lab, as seen in flashbacks where she refers to Brenner as Papa. In season one, things are left very vague in regard to how much MK Ultra was truly involved with Eleven's origin. Stranger Things: The First Shadow, however, fills in canon for that lore, which will likely be revealed in season five. Nancy and Jonathan (Charlie Heaton) piece together that Barb's blood is what the Demogorgon caught the scent of to pull her into the Upside Down. In Jonathan's photography, they see its slender and misshapen face lurking behind Barb, and it matches Joyce's description of the creature coming through the walls. They know blood lures it and both teens decide to fight back against it. Nancy's interest in investigative journalism is born here, and it sets her up to be more than the small town girl who stays with her high school jock sweetheart. The jock in question, Steve (Joe Keery), surprisingly goes from leading the crowd of disaffected youth to abandoning it when he begins to listen to Nancy. His lines deliver clues to the idea that the town exists in this sort of fog and when he turns on his bully friends, it's because he realizes that Nancy cares about others—and he wants to, too. When the showdown at the Byers home is getting set up Steve shows up to make amends at Jonathan's doorstep for having thought that Nancy was cheating on him. Which, thanks to the timing and the blood on his face for making fun of the Byers family earlier, is exactly what makes the Demogorgon attack them all. It's very Nightmare on Elm Street and Nancy gets an Alien-style Ripley action hero moment while the two guys vying for her attention fend off the monster. They hear Joyce and Hopper on the other side looking for Will and realize the electromagnetic veil is thinning (the lights be blinking!). Joyce and Hopper find Will, and he's absorbed onto a wall by the tendrils of the Upside Down's alternate reality Hawkins. The consequences of Hopper's trade to be let into the Upside Down from the lab give up Eleven's location at the school. There the kids had helped her tap into the Upside Down to look for Will and Barb. Sadly, Barb was discovered mostly consumed by the nightmare realm. When the agents arrive and attack Eleven and her friends, she pops the brains of those who raised guns at them, and all that blood sets off the Demogorgon's hunger. Here we see Brenner get dragged away, indicating that the Demogorgon is collecting as many people alive for the hive walls of the Upside Down. In order to close the seal, Eleven realizes she's the only one powerful enough to keep it where it belongs and goes in with it to save everyone. Hopper's guilt leads him to try to help through waffle drops , hoping the Eggo scent will lead her back. Will's recovery after his ordeal seemingly goes well for a few months after his rescue. He gets caught up on everything he's missed and seems like a normal boy. Jonathan goes over to Mike and Nancy's to escort him home, but things aren't what they appear. Will hacks out a small slug and keeps it secret that he's still somehow tethered to the Upside Down through his mind. The cliffhanger is just a tease of the places the show eventually goes—the drama of season one centered Will's disappearance and raised Eleven to main character status going forward, but the Upside Down may have sown a seed that may finally pay off in the final season. Are there any details we missed that you think will come back around in season five? Let us know in the comments below. In a month we'll be back with the next Hellfire Club Catch-Up, digging into Stranger Things season two. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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