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Hollywood Minute: Timothée Chalamet is a table tennis titan in ‘Marty Supreme'

Hollywood Minute: Timothée Chalamet is a table tennis titan in ‘Marty Supreme'

CNN4 hours ago
Chalamet slams in the first 'Marty Supreme' teaser, Paramount+ announces when 'Landman' season 2 will land, and 'The Grateful Dead Movie' screens in IMAX for the band's 60th anniversary. David Daniel reports.
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Reese Witherspoon Gets Candid About Balancing Her Career and Motherhood: ‘I'd Cry Working 14 to 17 Hours'
Reese Witherspoon Gets Candid About Balancing Her Career and Motherhood: ‘I'd Cry Working 14 to 17 Hours'

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Reese Witherspoon Gets Candid About Balancing Her Career and Motherhood: ‘I'd Cry Working 14 to 17 Hours'

'Someone asked me what raising three kids and building a career in Hollywood looked like," the actress wrote on Instagram, while sharing a glimpse at it NEED TO KNOW Reese Witherspoon got candid about navigating motherhood in Hollywood, in an Instagram carousel on Thursday, Aug. 14 The actress confessed that although it was "challenging at times," being a mom showed her what is "important in life" She shares daughter Ava Phillippe, 25, and son Deacon Phillippe, 21, with ex-husband Ryan Phillippe, and son Tennessee James Toth, 12, with her ex Jim Toth Reese Witherspoon is getting candid about how she balances motherhood with her career. The Oscar winner, 49, posted an Instagram carousel about parenting her children while navigating a successful career in Hollywood. The actress shares daughter Ava Phillippe, 25, and son Deacon Phillippe, 21, with ex-husband Ryan Phillippe, and son Tennessee James Toth, 12, with her ex Jim Toth. In the Thursday, Aug. 14, Instagram post, the Big Little Lies actress began with a selfie posing with all three children. The text overlay read: 'Someone asked me what raising three kids and building a career in Hollywood looked like…' 'It looked like spending a lot of time in trailers together," she wrote on top of a selfie of her and Tennessee smiling in what appeared to be a trailer together. She continued sharing images of herself with each of her children, highlighting different and unusual elements of being a mother in Hollywood. Her next photo was a throwback selfie of her with Ava and Deacon in the back seat of a car. 'It looked like always being on the road together," The Morning Show actress wrote. She then shared a screenshot of a cheeky text between her and Ava, when her daughter informed her that she 'butt-dialed an Instagram live.' Witherspoon joked, 'It looked like my kids constantly giving me career advice!' The Oscar winner then confessed that 'it looked really hard sometimes.' 'I'd cry working 14 to 17 hours, sometimes all night long and still woke up early for carpool. I was deliriously tired,' she wrote. 'It looked like trying to say something positive about work when I got home at night. So my kids would know that my work was meaningful to me and could be fun!' As she capped off the post, she included a final throwback image with Ava, and wrote, 'In conclusion, even though it was challenging at times, having kids gave me perspective about what was important in life.' 'Nothing was better than getting to come home and hug them and hear about their day!' 'Grateful to stand alongside other moms in this beautiful, messy journey.💕,' she captioned the Instagram post. 'Tag the working mom who needs this. ☺️.' Witherspoon has been open about motherhood over the years. She said in a November 2021 InStyle interview with Gayle King that her kids are her "first, most important priority.' She added, "If I told you how much space in my brain they take up every day — do you even think they know, Gayle? I don't even think they know." The year prior, she told Drew Barrymore on her eponymous talk show, that although balancing motherhood with the demands of her career hasn't been easy, it has "truly worth it." "There's a lot of compromise ... You feel like that's what makes me wake up on a Sunday, it's not movies or my job, it's my kids," the actress said in the September 2020 interview. "Being a mom is really great, it's a big part of my life. I would say it's the biggest part of my life." Read the original article on People

MMA Junkie Radio #3592: Anthony Hernandez joins, UFC 319, 2025 PFL 9 preview
MMA Junkie Radio #3592: Anthony Hernandez joins, UFC 319, 2025 PFL 9 preview

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

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MMA Junkie Radio #3592: Anthony Hernandez joins, UFC 319, 2025 PFL 9 preview

Thursday's edition of MMA Junkie Radio with "Gorgeous" George and "Goze" is here. On Episode 3,592, the boys welcome in UFC's Anthony Hernandez, who is coming off a big main event win over Roman Dolidze. The fellas also preview 2025 PFL World Tournament 9 and this weekend's big pay-per-view event, UFC 319. Tune in! This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: MMA Junkie Radio: Guest Anthony Hernandez, UFC 319, 2025 PFL 9 preview

Were Carrie Bradshaw and Her Friends the Last Nice Rich People on TV?
Were Carrie Bradshaw and Her Friends the Last Nice Rich People on TV?

New York Times

time5 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Were Carrie Bradshaw and Her Friends the Last Nice Rich People on TV?

There is a provocative synchronicity to the fact that the 'Sex and the City' franchise has come to its conclusion at such a pivotal moment in the life of New York, as a lightning rod mayoral candidate vows to return the city to the working class. In its long-running fantasia of Manhattan life, even those who served the domestic agendas of the rich managed to live quite enviably. The final season of 'And Just Like That …' (which aired its last episode on Thursday night) introduced us, for example, to Adam, Carrie's landscape architect and deep-in-the-mulch gardener who lives in a rent-stabilized artist's loft bequeathed to him by his dead hippie mother and the since vaporized generosities of New York City housing policy. Visiting Adam for the first time, Seema, the chauffeured-everywhere real estate mogul who falls for him, is pleased to discover that against all prediction, he lives in a Dwell magazine shoot. I have been an unabashed fan of the series since the first of its three seasons arrived in 2021, overlooking the St. Pauli Girl costuming and dismissing contradictory strains of criticism. On the one hand, we have been told that the show was overwrought in its realism, shepherding the characters — absent Samantha, though with new additions — through too many fun-sucking challenges and indignities of later middle age. On the other hand came complaints that the story lines were not nearly realistic or relatable enough, given all the money floating around. Older now, the women seemed richer than ever. And yet there was a transparency to the sequel that the original series refused. A clear through line existed now to Carrie's checkbook, an understanding of how she funded her extravagances — among them, in this new turn, several floors of a townhouse on Gramercy Park. She was no longer inexplicably acquiring hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of clothes via the irregular earnings of a freelance writing career but rather as the widow of a fantastically wealthy Wall Street guy who willed her just about everything. That these women lived with money but not for it is surely one of the ways they have endeared themselves to so many for so long. The new series had Miranda, top of her Harvard Law School class, having abandoned a partnership at a white-shoe firm to practice human-rights law. This season she moved into a prettily appointed but still modest apartment — small enough that the dining table is what you see when you walk in the front door. The finale rolls out over a Thanksgiving set at that table, an event that allows for the desecration of some of the show's surface perfection. Miranda has invited her son's pregnant hookup, who brings two ungracious friends committed to their reverse snobberies and not at all remorseful when one of them causes an incident in the bathroom that nearly requires Hazmat suiting. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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