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Junior H Will Bring His ‘$ad Boyz Live & Broken' Tour to Arenas Across the U.S.

Junior H Will Bring His ‘$ad Boyz Live & Broken' Tour to Arenas Across the U.S.

Yahoo19 hours ago
A closing show at the Hollywood Bowl sounds like a fitting way to conclude Junior H's biggest tour yet. On Wednesday, the Mexican star announced the dates for his upcoming $ad Boyz Live & Broken Tour, which builds on the success of his main-stage Coachella set.
The música mexicana star will kick off his tour in Chicago on Aug. 31, before stopping in cities such as Charlotte, Atlanta, Laredo, Austin, San Bernardino, Dallas, and Phoenix, before a November show at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles on Nov. 7.
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Tickets for the run are set to go on sale on Aug. 1 at 10 a.m. local time through Live Nation, with fans being able to access VIP packages that include access to special lounges, VIP items, and early entry to venues.
The new tour follows his pair of collabs with Oscar Maydon on 'Top Model' and 'Baja Beach.' The star has focused on collaborations for the last two years after dropping $ad Boyz 4 Life II in 2023, featuring 'Rockstar,' 'Y Lloro,' and 'Piénsalo.'
Earlier this summer, Junior paired up with New Era to release a limited-edition hat to benefit CHIRLA, an immigrant rights organization helping those affected by the ICE raids. 'We're living through tough times,' Junior H said at the time. 'We can't stay silent while our communities are being attacked. This is my way of giving back and standing with the people who've always stood by me.'
$ad Boyz Live & Broken Tour Dates
Aug. 31 – Tinley Park, IL @ Credit Union 1 AmphitheatreSept. 5 – Bristow, VA @ Jiffy Lube LiveSept. 6 – Wantagh, NY @ Northwell at Jones Beach TheaterSept. 7 – Camden, NJ @ Freedom Mortgage PavilionSept. 11 – Charlotte, NC @ PNC Music PavilionSept. 12 – Raleigh, NC @ Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut CreekSept. 14 – Atlanta, GA @ Lakewood AmphitheatreSept. 19 – Laredo, TX @ Sames Auto ArenaSept. 20 – Edinburg, TX @ Bert Ogden ArenaSept. 21 – Austin, TX @ Germania Insurance AmphitheaterOct. 3 – Rogers, AR @ Walmart AMPOct. 4 – Houston, TX @ Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion Sponsored by HuntsmanOct. 10 – Chula Vista, CA @ North Island Credit Union AmphitheatreOct. 11 – San Bernardino, CA @ Glen Helen AmphitheaterOct. 12 – Fresno, CA @ Save Mart CenterOct. 17 – Wheatland, CA @ Toyota AmphitheaterOct. 18 – Mountain View, CA @ Shoreline AmphitheatreOct. 25 – Dallas, TX @ Dos Equis PavilionOct. 31 – Phoenix, AZ @ Talking Stick Resort AmphitheatreNov. 1 – Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile ArenaNov. 2 – Albuquerque, NM @ Isleta AmphitheaterNov. 7 – Los Angeles, CA @ Hollywood Bowl
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Scheana Shay sees the beauty in turning 40. But she's 'trying to look 25 forever.'
Scheana Shay sees the beauty in turning 40. But she's 'trying to look 25 forever.'

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Scheana Shay sees the beauty in turning 40. But she's 'trying to look 25 forever.'

After a challenging year, the "My Good Side" author says she's embraced therapy, medication and self-care. Scheana Shay has been on our screens for over a decade, but it's only in the pages of her new book that the reality star says she's giving us the full picture — unfiltered, unedited and, at times, very raw. "I think that reality TV is more nuanced than people are led to believe. I wanted to write this book to put the rest of it out there that was either left on the cutting-room floor or has never been a part of my story," she tells me, describing her just-released memoir, My Good Side, not as a tell-all but a tell-it-right. "I'm opening up about it all." In a conversation for Yahoo's Unapologetically series, Shay and I are Zooming from our respective California homes. Throughout our nearly 30-minute chat, the Vanderpump Rules alum proves she really is an open book — "almost to a fault where I may talk a little too much," she says at one point. But putting truth to paper meant confronting the hardest moments of her life, including one she'd kept hidden from the public. Shay surprised fans earlier this month when she revealed her husband, Brock Davies, cheated on her in 2020 when she was pregnant with their child, Summer Moon. It's something she went "back and forth" on deciding to include in her book. Shay tells me she hopes this revelation will give VPR fans more context about what she was going through during Season 11 — the season of Scandoval. In the spring of 2023, while friend and costar Ariana Madix was grappling with the fallout from her longtime partner Tom Sandoval's affair, Shay had just discovered her own husband's infidelity. That particular season was brutal for Shay, both on- and offscreen. She was frustrated by Madix's decision not to film with Sandoval and found herself criticized in some corners of the internet for her reaction. Shay says she 'was struggling to express my actual feelings because I was bottling them up.' "I had misplaced anger, mostly at Tom Sandoval, which was also deserved. But I think with Ariana, I was just like ... I have to film with my husband. I was just trying to survive at that point," she says. "I was trying to keep my head above water when I felt like I was drowning." Turning 40 in May helped bring Shay a new level of clarity and perspective. For the reality star, reaching the milestone was more than just about aging — it was a wake-up call for taking control of her mental health. 'I went into 40 figuring out what milligram of medication I needed to be on,' she says, acknowledging a period of depression leading up to her birthday. She says not being included in the Vanderpump Rules reboot and getting kicked off The Masked Singer first contributed to feeling down and not good enough. But she didn't stay stuck in that slump. 'I upped my meds, I've upped my therapy, I've started working out again." Here, Shay reflects on everything from learning to navigate her relationship with anxiety, to facing public scrutiny over her past — including her affair with Eddie Cibrian — and how being a mother has shifted her perspective on life. You've said that you've been misunderstood or mislabeled at times. What do you think is the biggest misconception people have about you? I think one of the biggest misconceptions people have about me is that I was [Eddie's] mistress. Because to be a mistress, I would have had to have been complicit in the affair, and I wasn't. I had no idea when I was 21, fresh out of college and met this really good-looking guy with dimples who said he was an actor [that he would be married]. Why would I enter into a relationship with someone who is married and has a pregnant wife at home? I would never do that. I don't care how young, old, naive, intelligent, whatever I am. I would never do that. You point out in the book that social media didn't exist in the same way when you started your relationship in 2006. It's not like they were posting family photos together and matching pajamas under the Christmas tree. I didn't know there was a family because I didn't even have a laptop to Google [him]. I'm not going to go walk down to the internet café while I'm printing out [headshots] for auditions and be like, 'By the way, that guy I went out with last night, let me Google him.' It was never even a thought in my mind. Do you think your book will give his ex-wife, Brandi Glanville, any peace? We've had several conversations over the years about it. The first one was on camera for the world to see, which made for the best transition in reality TV ever. But with Brandi, she and I have kept in touch over the years. I think she now understands that he was the one who lied. I never would have entered into a relationship, even a situationship, even hooking up, nothing with a man who was married. ... That's just not something I would do. What was the hardest part for you to write in this book? The hardest part for me to write in the book was definitely [Brock's affair]. When I met with publishing houses, I had a very vague description of what this chapter could look like in my proposal, because I was still deciding, Do we take this to the grave? After going back and forth through couples therapy and several conversations with my husband, we both decided that it needed to go in the book. This was a part of my story that I wanted to tell. I did not feel that my book would be complete or authentic if I did not put this chapter in. Making the decision was really difficult, but then actually writing it … I read him the first draft. He did not like it. He's like, "If you're going to put it out there, why are you trying to be vague? Why are you trying to scoot around it? You may as well write it all." So I did. I asked him if he wanted to read it before the final draft was due, and he said [no]. Then once we got the books printed and he read it, he goes, 'Oh, you really went all in.' I was like, 'You told me to add more detail, so I added every detail.' I think it was just hard for him to read because he didn't understand the magnitude of the hurt that I felt. He knew obviously it was devastating, but I think reading it a couple of years later really put it in a new perspective for him. And honestly I think our relationship has gotten so much stronger because of being honest about this. How are you doing now that it's out in the world? I'm doing OK, honestly. I have therapy scheduled for tomorrow and I had therapy last week. I think it's important to stay consistent with that for my mental health. It's a safe outlet for me to express how I'm feeling. I've tried to stay out of the comment section for the most part … I don't need to go and read what everyone's saying. I get the highlights from my manager or my publicist, things that I know I'm gonna have to address. But overall I've just been trying to let it all be out there, let people have their opinions. I expect people to have strong opinions about what I have to say in this book. That's OK. You mention anxiety for the first time when you are writing about your involvement with the Hooters lawsuit. You were secretly filmed changing in 2004. Anxiety wasn't something people really talked about back then. When did you finally realize, ? When I was going through that, I don't know that I completely understood the magnitude of what I was feeling. I've always had anxiety since I think I was a kid. I was always a perfectionist. I was finally diagnosed with anxiety toward the end of my [first] marriage, because in 2016 was when I got on [antidepressant] Wellbutrin for the first time. Prior to 2016, it was not something I talked about. I just kept that inside, the feeling that I had which was an anxious feeling. I buried it, like I did with a lot of things. How do you deal with anxiety now? Now I am being so much better about not burying my feelings. ... There are a lot of things around mental health now that are being talked about that weren't talked about when I was in school. I want to advocate for that. I want to be a person in the public eye who is not afraid to talk about these things because it helps people feel less alone and it helps them feel just seen and heard and understood. That's really important to me. Looking back on your time on , are there moments you see differently now? There are so many moments that I look back on and reflect on and wish I did things differently, wish I handled myself better. But that is the beauty and the curse of reality TV. You get to see yourself sometimes at your best, often at your worst, but then you can grow. You can learn. There's nothing normal about being able to go back in time. That's not a real thing. I'm going to mess up. I'm going to make mistakes. That is just a part of life. But the difference is: What do you do after you make that mistake? Do you learn and grow or do you make it again? The pressure for women in the public eye to look 25 forever — how do you deal with that? So trying to look 25 forever is something I'm trying to do. I have done Botox since I was 25 because it is preventative. I don't have wrinkles on my forehead. Now at 40, these smile lines are starting to stick. So I do the CO2 lasers. I do Cotrini eye patches that I put on my smile lines. I moisturize. I cleanse my skin. I take very good care of my skin because I would like to look 25 without having to inject fillers. I've done that before. I've reversed my lips because it just migrates, and I don't want that stuff in my face. There is a pressure to look young, but there's also a beauty in getting older. So trying to find that balance, trying to accept that I'm going to have some smile lines that maybe aren't going to completely go away, but that's OK. It's a part of life, and it's because I've laughed a lot. So trying to see it from that perspective instead of just harping on lines on my face. That's still a work in progress. Did turning 40 feel like a milestone for you? I had the most amazing party with no drama, no cameras other than the photographers I hired. So many of my Valley and Vanderpump Rules castmates and a ton of friends from my daughter's school. It was the perfect way to ring in 40. I was a bit depressed from November until May. I've upped my meds now, and I am feeling better. I was a combination of things that were putting me in a slump: getting kicked off The Masked Singer first, feeling like I'm not good enough. Then Vanderpump Rules gets rebooted, and as happy as I was, it was still a huge change in my adult life and career. It was just like so many little things: turning 40, new hormones coming through your body. I'm like, am I in perimenopause? What is this? But I did up my meds. What's something that you love about yourself now that you didn't when you were younger? All of the things that I think are wrong with me — my anxiety, my OCD, things that I just battled with in my head as a kid and adolescent and even an adult. I appreciate those things now on a different level. I think at times my intrusive thoughts suck, but my OCD does keep me safe. My anxiety shows me, Here are the potential threats and things that can go wrong. I do appreciate that I am cautious. How has becoming a mom changed how you see yourself? I have always known I'm a strong person. But this just extra shows me how strong I am. I was terrified to become a mom. I have to keep this human alive every single minute of the day? Then, when they go to school or there's a nanny, and you have to release control. It was a total battle for me. But now she can tell me when her tummy hurts and we can communicate like that, it has gotten easier. But it's really made me realize that I am a good mom. I am a strong person. I just want to give her the best life. I had an incredible childhood growing up, and I want her to have the same thing. And I feel like I've changed in a way where I look at friendships and relationships differently. If someone hasn't asked about my kid, if they have no interest in how she's doing, I have no interest for you in my life. When you become a mom, you really learn who your real friends are, who care not just about you and themself, but care about your kid. So that's been really eye-opening for me as well. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Solve the daily Crossword

NYX PROFESSIONAL MAKEUP REIMAGINES BACK-TO-SCHOOL WITH AN INTERACTIVE BEAUTY EXPERIENCE ON ROBLOX
NYX PROFESSIONAL MAKEUP REIMAGINES BACK-TO-SCHOOL WITH AN INTERACTIVE BEAUTY EXPERIENCE ON ROBLOX

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

NYX PROFESSIONAL MAKEUP REIMAGINES BACK-TO-SCHOOL WITH AN INTERACTIVE BEAUTY EXPERIENCE ON ROBLOX

LOS ANGELES, July 31, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- NYX Professional Makeup is once again transforming the way beauty shows up in digital culture, returning to Roblox with an immersive, gamified experience timed for the back to school season. As the first beauty brand to fully take over Bayside High School – Roblox's top high school themed experience with more than 23 million monthly users – NYX Professional Makeup is reaching consumers at scale by merging technology, creativity and self-expression in-game. With Gen Z now spending more of their free time gaming than scrolling — 25% of their leisure time is spent on video games* — NYX Professional Makeup is meeting them where they are, turning beauty into something you don't just wear, but play. The partnership brings NYX Professional Makeup to the heart of Roblox culture, meeting consumers in the virtual spaces they love most and providing them an experience to experiment with beauty. "This is what the future of beauty looks like - interactive, community-driven and rooted in creativity and fun," said Yasmin Dastmalchi, General Manager of NYX Professional Makeup. "We are building experiences that invite players to explore, express and glamify whether digital or in-person." In this new iteration, NYX Professional Makeup transforms Bayside High into a beauty-infused playground, guiding players through beauty-themed mini-games led by Gluey and Misty, digital characters inspired by the brand's viral Face Glue Gripping Primer and Setting Spray. Players can immerse themselves in four creative beauty games: Smushy Track Race: Race through a vibrant obstacle course filled with mochis and hurdles, inspired by the new Smushy Matte Lip Balm, infused with mochi rice powder Dessert Pairing Game: A dessert shop match mini-game in which players are challenged to match the right flavors of the NEW Smushy Matte Lip Balm to hungry customers. Face Glue Scavenger Hunt: A scavenger hunt where players must find all The Face Glue Gripping Primer bottles hidden across campus. Makeup Class: A high-school style makeup class where players design their own NYX Professional Makeup looks and vote on their classmates' favorite looks Players can unlock exclusive virtual beauty rewards, including a UGC Mochi Shoulder Pet, a Gluey Backpack, and an iconic pink Baseball Cap with Hair. This campaign builds on NYX Professional Makeup's digital strategy of blending beauty and tech to reach next-gen consumers. The brand has previously launched initiatives in iHeartLand on Roblox, celebrated Pride with "Game Out Loud," and partnered with ULTAverse on Roblox for Halloween-themed experiences. NYX Professional Makeup's takeover of Bayside High School will take place from July 18 through August 29. To learn more, visit About NYX Professional MakeupNYX Professional Makeup is a modern, digitally native makeup brand at the forefront of today's emerging beauty trends. A leader in the global color cosmetics industry, NYX Professional Makeup is an affordable professional makeup line, offering every shade, color, and tool needed to create makeup artistry at every level. Rooted in a professional artistry heritage, NYX Professional Makeup boasts a successful multi-channel approach at the forefront of digital and retail. A social media pioneer, NYX Professional Makeup is one of the most influential and top-ranked brands, followed by top beauty vloggers, Instagram stars, and their millions of fans. Headquartered in Los Angeles, NYX Professional Makeup is a global brand available in more than 70 countries at thousands of retailers, including specialty beauty and fashion stores, freestanding shops, and beauty supply stores, as well as online at *2021 Study by WARC View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE NYX Professional Makeup

Liam Neeson takes aim at his rote thriller roles in the giddy, riotous 'The Naked Gun'
Liam Neeson takes aim at his rote thriller roles in the giddy, riotous 'The Naked Gun'

Los Angeles Times

time30 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Liam Neeson takes aim at his rote thriller roles in the giddy, riotous 'The Naked Gun'

'The Naked Gun' is Liam Neeson's best career move since 'Schindler's List.' That 1993 Oscar-nominated performance put the Irish thespian on the A-list. His later pivot to the 2009 action-thriller 'Taken,' where he rescued his teen daughter from smugglers, crowned Neeson the King of the B's. Ever since, he's been skidding down the alphabet, saving even more daughters, wives, girlfriends, sons, grandsons and other people's families, as well as a train, a mine, a battleship, an airplane and a pub. Meanwhile, his own reputation has been slowly tortured to death. But comedy is reinvigorating. Especially a tough guy comedy that lets Neeson mock his lousy taste in roles. Directed by Akiva Schaffer, 'The Naked Gun' careens around, merrily smashing into things like a custom-engineered Liam Neeson vehicle. His rightness for the role is a marvelous coup, considering it's the fourth film in a four-decade-old franchise that's tightly bonded to another once-distinguished dramatic actor, Leslie Nielsen, who originated the character of Lt. Frank Drebin in the 1982 TV sitcom 'Police Squad!' and then shouldered it through three feature films. At Nielsen's funeral, the pallbearers carried his coffin to the 'Naked Gun' theme. His tombstone inscription is a fart joke. Neeson plays Frank's son, Frank Drebin Jr., who inherited his dad's job as a cocksure Los Angeles cop. Who is his mother? No clue. Schaffer, who wrote the script with Dan Gregor and Doug Mand, has correctly concluded that taking this premise seriously would insult our intelligence. This younger Drebin has mommy issues (he was breastfed until middle school) and wifey issues (he's a standard-issue widower). His father functions more like a guardian-angel-slash-gantlet. (Silver fox fun fact: Neeson is eleven years older than Nielsen was when he took on the role.) 'I want to be just like you, but at the same time completely different and original,' Neeson's Drebin prays before his dead pop's altar. Kneeling next to him at police headquarters, his colleagues Ed Hocken Jr. (Paul Walter Hauser) and Not Nordberg Jr.'s (Moses Jones) own predecessors, George Kennedy and O.J. Simpson. The latter eulogy receives all the reverence it's earned. That prayer for blessing, is, of course, Schaffer's, who seems to have to have studied the curveball punch lines of David Zucker, Jim Abrahams and Jerry Zucker — a.k.a. ZAZ, who broke into the mainstream with 'Airplane!' — as though each laugh was calculated by Archimedes. His sequel hits every touchstone in the terrific first movie: the opening melee, the motorized mayhem, the tech-glitch toilet humor, the climactic sporting event and the femme fatale Frank falls for in a loony love montage. (This one is Beth, played by Pamela Anderson.) It's even plotted cameos for Priscilla Presley and her stuffed beaver. Yet, each callback has been costumed enough not to feel like a parody of a parody. They're more like trusty gags that sidle in wearing Groucho Marx glasses. A good comedy like this one is hard to review. The English language doesn't have many natural ways to call something hilarious. ('Mirthful?' 'Jocular?' Only if I'm playing Scrabble.) Illustrating its skill with examples gives away the jokes, which is criminal when its humor hinges on visual and linguistic double-takes, as well as escalating pratfalls that, in the original, went on for half a dozen beats. (Schaffer stops at three or four.) The verbal wordplay runs all the way through the end credits that boast a set dresser, a set bureau and a set chiffarobe. But it starts with the star. Liam Neeson wasn't hired solely because his name sounds like saying 'Leslie Nielsen' with a mouth full of banana, but the similarity had to have gotten a giggle in the casting room. Here, he's added extra gravel to his voice. Neeson gets a chuckle just growling the word 'mittens.' Us film fans have stared at his hawkish mug for eons, but I can't remember ever before seeing him flash a huge, daffy grin. He can't look like he's having too much fun. The first rule of ZAZ-style comedy is that you can't ever appear like you're in on the joke, which Anderson edges close to once when she breaks into a scatting jazz number. That scene is salvaged by the rapt expression on Danny Huston's face. His bad guy, an evil billionaire named Richard Cane, genuinely loves it. Otherwise, Anderson holds her own, cooing her one-liners with the kittenish candor of Marilyn Monroe. The key idea remains that the 'Naked Gun' directs non-comedians to deliver their lines seriously. When the chief (CCH Pounder) commands Frank to switch on his body camera, he huffs, 'Since when do cops have to follow this law?' The audience can decide where that zinger lands on the spectrum between sincere and sarcastic. But humor has changed since the '80s. Heck, it's evolved since the early aughts, the last era where mainstream blockbusters thought prison rape quips were a riot. Richard wants to rewind the culture back to pre-woke times. Like today's hip primitives who espouse paleo diets, he wants to make mankind Neanderthal again. Which, according to his logic, should ally our villain with our hero, as Frank also froze his tastes at the turn of the millennium. (Although Frank is mostly passionate about stockpiling old episodes of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' on his TiVo.) When Frank needles an ice-blond goon (Kevin Durand) that they're going to 'love you in San Quentin,' there's a near-audible sigh — must we rewind here? — before Schaffer spins the joke in a radically different direction. His 'Naked Gun' doesn't want to regress; it wants to surprise and surpass while never punching down. The film is so committed to its PG-13 rating that it manages to pull off some truly filthy, bawdy slapstick without exposing a frame of skin. The gigantic brawl at the end gets creative with its nonlethal violence, sending Neeson skidding between the legs of a line of opponents like he's in a Busby Berkeley musical, whacking each guy in the groin. The cinematography tries too hard to capture melodramatic modern police procedurals with their choking clouds of haze. But the film noir lighting on Anderson's eyes is spot-on, as are two sight gags that are built around the set's extreme shadows. Four films in, there are now as many 'Naked Gun' features as there were live-aired episodes of 'Police Squad!' before the network gave it the ax. 'The television screen is too small,' Leslie Nielsen explained. In sitcom form, the adventures of Lt. Frank Drebin crowded in more jokes than the at-home audience could absorb. Yet in public, he beamed, 'that movie screen can fall on you and you're not going to miss it.' Yet today, grand format farces like this one are seen as a risky financial bet. To cut down on costs, this 'Naked Gun' shot some of its Los Angeles scenes in Atlanta, and as a pointed industry in-joke, inserts views of downtown L.A. that become increasingly unrecognizable and absurd. Appropriately, some screenings begin with Neeson's taped PSA in support of big screen burlesque. 'Saving comedy is no laughing matter,' he soberly insists. Neeson has saved everything else. Let him rescue this genre too.

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