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Ashley Tisdale fans can't figure out what she has done to her face during rare sighting in Malibu

Ashley Tisdale fans can't figure out what she has done to her face during rare sighting in Malibu

Daily Mail​23-07-2025
Ashley Tisdale fans could not figure out why she looked so different in recent photos as they took to X to discuss her metamorphosis.
The images were taken while the High School Musical actress stepped out in Malibu on Monday.
The 40-year-old actress was makeup-free with her hair down as she dressed casually in a black T-shirt paired with oversize, blue jean overalls.
'She might just look different because she gave the glam team the day off,' wrote one fan as another chimed in, 'Day off from the paint.'
Others thought maybe she had just gotten lip filler: 'Bigger lips, went to doc,' remarked a fan.
Several came to her defense adding, 'She looks great with no makeup on, good for her, a natural beauty' and 'Leave her alone, she is perfect.'
Ashley Tisdale fans could not figure out why she looked so different in recent photos as they took to X to discuss her metamorphosis. The images were taken while the High School Musical actress stepped out in Malibu on Monday
This comes after the mother-of-two — who shares daughters Jupiter Iris, four, and Emerson Clover, 10 months, with her husband Christopher French — made a surprising revelation about her beliefs surrounding aging a few months ago.
In late April, she shared a TikTok video of herself with an age filter on her face to make herself appear older.
Alongside the video, she explained that she used to think she'd look a lot older at age 40 than how she looks now.
'Almost 40 and still feeling 25,' she wrote in the caption of the clip.
Over the video, she said herself with and without the filter represented 'how I thought I'd look at 40 versus how I actually look.'
Many fans were left in disbelief as they shared their reactions in the comments. The general consensus was shock that she is 40 as many assumed she was much younger.
Earlier this year, Tisdale also revealed why she was drawing back her social media presence and becoming more private with her personal life compared to the past.
This comes shortly after the High School Musical alum left her fans in disbelief over her appearance when she made a surprising revelation when she put a filter over herself in a TikTok video
In a since-deleted Instagram Story from February, the former Disney star said she felt the need to separate her private life from social media because of her young children.
The High School Musical star also blamed digital spaces for being dominated by and cultivating 'judgment' and 'assumptions.'
'As the world is getting loud, I find myself wanting to share less and less,' she shared.
'Maybe it's because I don't feel I can contribute in my positive way when everything feels so negative.'
The mother-of-two — who shares daughters Jupiter, three, and Emerson, five months, with husband Christopher French — said her decision was prompted by attempts 'to protect my peace while navigating life with work and kids.'
'I've been loving putting my phone down and being in the moment,' the Disney Channel alum added.
'Social media is such a blessing when you want to connect with everyone but can also be so noisy when used with judgment and assumptions,' she finished the lengthy note.
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The return of the spoof: can comedy's silliest subgenre make a comeback?
The return of the spoof: can comedy's silliest subgenre make a comeback?

The Guardian

time12 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

The return of the spoof: can comedy's silliest subgenre make a comeback?

The Naked Gun, a sequel/reboot to the old movie series of the same name, represents the first of its kind in a long time. No, not a legacy sequel, nor a Liam Neeson movie; the in-demand Irish actor still does two or three of those a year. Like its predecessors, The Naked Gun is a spoof – part of a comedic subgenre with astonishing versatility, in that it can lay claim to some of the very best and very worst comedies of all time. Maybe that's why these movies, despite relatively low budgets and decent success rates, will sometimes disappear for years at a time. Now, in a period when a pure comedy hasn't crossed the $100m mark in the US in almost a decade, The Naked Gun seems to be leading a revival. A sequel to the rock-doc spoof This Is Spinal Tap arrives next month, follow-ups to Scary Movie and the Mel Brooks Star Wars spoof Spaceballs are on the way, and there have even been whispers of a fourth Austin Powers film. The leader of the latest comeback has a connection to some high-water marks: the original Naked Gun, yes, but more importantly 1980's Airplane!, a feature-length spoof of the then-popular disaster movies from comic film-makers David Zucker, Jim Abrahams and Jerry Zucker. ZAZ, as the team was known, didn't invent the idea of parodying familiar genres in a barrage of intentional (and subverted) cliches, sight gags, puns and other stupid-clever jokes. But Airplane! took on movies like Airport with such a deadpan density, and such a shockingly high hit rate, that it wrested the spoof crown from previous king, Mel Brooks (whose Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddles are still standard-bearers for loving genre parody). Brooks often appeared on camera in his films, while the ZAZ boys did not; instead, Leslie Nielsen became the face of their efforts, and an unlikely catalyst for a youth-driven trend in the process. Following his flawlessly deadpan role in Airplane! as a doctor ('I am serious … and stop calling me Shirley'), Nielsen starred in the team's failed (but hilarious) TV procedural spoof Police Squad! which was eventually turned into the 1988 big-screen comedy The Naked Gun. The odd thing about the original Naked Gun is that, unlike Airplane!, it's not a particularly close parody of a classic or trendy film genre. It mostly takes the framework of the Police Squad! show, which was more akin to 60s cop dramas, and throws in some elements of neo-noir crime thrillers. (There's also a grab-bag of other assorted movie references throughout the trilogy.) Nevertheless, or perhaps because it didn't require any specific genre knowledge, The Naked Gun was a big enough hit to inspire a pair of sequels – and plenty of knockoffs. A spoof boom lasted for most of the 90s, peaking in 1993 with National Lampoon putting their name on Loaded Weapon 1, veteran film-maker Carl Reiner contributing the erotic-thriller goof Fatal Instinct, Abrahams himself directing the Rambo-inspired Hot Shots! Part Deux, and Mel Brooks returning with Robin Hood: Men in Tights. A later entry, a spoof of urban dramas with the omnibus title of Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood, kickstarted the next generation of spoofs when writers/stars Marlon and Shawn Wayans moved on to savage resurgent horror movies with Scary Movie. A spoof built around a movie as self-aware and self-satirizing as Scream should not have worked – the Scream characters crack jokes, while The Naked Gun and its ilk tend to goof on seriousness – but it actually outgrossed its target. 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Ozzy and Sharon's love story: Fans share heartwarming clips of the Osbournes as rocker calls wife his 'soulmate'and says he would've been 'dead long ago' without her
Ozzy and Sharon's love story: Fans share heartwarming clips of the Osbournes as rocker calls wife his 'soulmate'and says he would've been 'dead long ago' without her

Daily Mail​

time12 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ozzy and Sharon's love story: Fans share heartwarming clips of the Osbournes as rocker calls wife his 'soulmate'and says he would've been 'dead long ago' without her

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My husband's openly gay but we still have a great sex life – people are confused but it works & we're trying for a baby
My husband's openly gay but we still have a great sex life – people are confused but it works & we're trying for a baby

The Sun

time12 minutes ago

  • The Sun

My husband's openly gay but we still have a great sex life – people are confused but it works & we're trying for a baby

HEADING off stage Samantha Greenstone beamed with delight. She'd just auditioned for a part in Fiddler on the Roof and it had gone excellently but if the directors had any doubts, she had already secured one fan. 6 6 'A fellow actor approached and told me that if I didn't get the part they were crazy,' Samantha, 38, recalls. 'He introduced himself as Jacob and we wished each other luck. ' Auditions were often cold and competitive environments, so it stuck out to me that he'd been so sweet.' Not long after Samantha received the news she was hoping for, she had secured the part and much to her delight so had Jacob. A month later they began rehearsals and Samantha and Jacob became fast friends. 'A few days into rehearsals, we went out for drinks with another cast member,' Samantha says. 'While they headed off after a couple of rounds, Jacob and I kept chatting till 4am, and he ended up sleeping on my sofa. 'From then on, we hung out whenever we could, grabbing dinner or going to the gym. 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She says: 'None of our friends were surprised, and plenty of them asked what had taken us so long. 'I'd met his parents before, and when Jacob called his mum to tell her we were dating, she was so happy she cried.' The couple moved in immediately and began building their life together. 'Jacob was such a care-taker, always bringing me coffee or cooking us dinner,' Samantha says. 'But as the honeymoon period faded, we both began to worry whether the relationship would work long-term. 'I worried I was trapping him or taking him away from a man but he always assured me he wasn't missing out. 'Yet he was still feeling anger and frustration from not having fully come out to his parents.' One afternoon when Samantha was visiting her family she had a call from Jacob. He explained that he had come out to his dad but was still in a relationship with Samantha. 'His dad was confused but accepting and Jacob said it was a huge relief,' she says. 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'We have a great sex life, and we have sex the traditional way,' she explained to her followers. 'If you need us to tell you about the birds and the bees, then that's not our problem.' "We don't have an open marriage either - we're 100% monogamous to each other." The couple received messages from others in mixed-orientation relationships too. 'It just shows it's more common than you'd think,' she says. 'Now we've been married for six months, and we're trying for a baby. 'My husband may be gay, but I'm 100 per cent sure he's the man for me.' 6

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