
Machine Gun Kelly thinks he's part alien
The Don't Let Me Go hitmaker - whose real name is Colson Baker - insisted he doesn't think his age "exists" and has noticed other signs which suggested he could have otherworldly origins.
Speaking on Watch What Happens Live, he said: 'It's a weird thing, dude. I don't know if my age …I don't know if it exists. I don't know many facts about my life. My skin, if it rips open, it heals really quick. There's just things where I'm starting to be like 'Who's my dad?' You know?
'I've asked my mom. I said 'At any period of time, you went like missing? Off the earth? Ever a tall, slender creature that…'
'She told me that she felt like that she got abducted at one point.'
Elsewhere during his appearance on the show on Sunday (10.08.25), MGK - who has Casie, 16, with Emma Cannon and four-month-old Saga with Megan Fox - laughed off recent speculation that he was dating his old friend Sydney Sweeney.
Host Andy Cohen read a question from a viewer.
He said: 'MGK, Kyle P wants to know if there's any truth to the rumor that you and Sydney Sweeney were more than just friends.'
His guest shook his head and sparked laughter from Andy and the audience as he said: "Kyle P, shut up, dude."
The Cliche singer was also quizzed on his dream musical collaboration, living or dead.
He said: "I like Frank, man, Frank Sinatra. I'll do that.'
MGK has previously claimed he has seen aliens on multiple occasions and thinks they believe the people on Earth are "dumb".
Speaking on The Late Show With James Corden in 2022, he said: 'Homie, I saw life on this planet that was from another planet two nights ago over a lake in Thousand Oaks.
"A red orb came out of nowhere went, disappeared again. I was in Bora Bora a week before that whole like, Hawaiian blue orb over the Pacific. Bora Bora is also in the Pacific. Saw the same exact orb that they were talking about in Hawaii, saw the same thing where we were at.
'They're out here. By the way, they're all looking at Earth, like, 'You guys are so dumb!' Everything we're doing the past year is so dumb. We're all so dumb. This is the best reality show of all time for anyone not living on this earth."
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Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Machine Gun Kelly thinks he's part alien
Machine Gun Kelly believes he is part alien. The Don't Let Me Go hitmaker - whose real name is Colson Baker - insisted he doesn't think his age "exists" and has noticed other signs which suggested he could have otherworldly origins. Speaking on Watch What Happens Live, he said: 'It's a weird thing, dude. I don't know if my age …I don't know if it exists. I don't know many facts about my life. My skin, if it rips open, it heals really quick. There's just things where I'm starting to be like 'Who's my dad?' You know? 'I've asked my mom. I said 'At any period of time, you went like missing? Off the earth? Ever a tall, slender creature that…' 'She told me that she felt like that she got abducted at one point.' Elsewhere during his appearance on the show on Sunday (10.08.25), MGK - who has Casie, 16, with Emma Cannon and four-month-old Saga with Megan Fox - laughed off recent speculation that he was dating his old friend Sydney Sweeney. Host Andy Cohen read a question from a viewer. He said: 'MGK, Kyle P wants to know if there's any truth to the rumor that you and Sydney Sweeney were more than just friends.' His guest shook his head and sparked laughter from Andy and the audience as he said: "Kyle P, shut up, dude." The Cliche singer was also quizzed on his dream musical collaboration, living or dead. He said: "I like Frank, man, Frank Sinatra. I'll do that.' MGK has previously claimed he has seen aliens on multiple occasions and thinks they believe the people on Earth are "dumb". Speaking on The Late Show With James Corden in 2022, he said: 'Homie, I saw life on this planet that was from another planet two nights ago over a lake in Thousand Oaks. "A red orb came out of nowhere went, disappeared again. I was in Bora Bora a week before that whole like, Hawaiian blue orb over the Pacific. Bora Bora is also in the Pacific. Saw the same exact orb that they were talking about in Hawaii, saw the same thing where we were at. 'They're out here. By the way, they're all looking at Earth, like, 'You guys are so dumb!' Everything we're doing the past year is so dumb. We're all so dumb. This is the best reality show of all time for anyone not living on this earth."

Sky News AU
a day ago
- Sky News AU
‘I did not need to see that': Lizzo's ‘ridiculous' aim at Sydney Sweeney's ad slammed
'Brad vs Everyone' podcast host Brad Polumbo discusses Lizzo's aim at Sydney Sweeney for her American Eagle ad campaign. Mr Polumbo claims the backlash Sydney Sweeney is getting is 'ridiculous', and celebrities and social media influencers keep 'melting down about it'. 'I think … if Lizzo had done the same thing and said she had 'great jeans', all the people who were mad about it would've been like 'yes girl, slay queen', they wouldn't have been mad at all,' Mr Polumbo said. 'The whole thing really is about bashing attractive white people.'

News.com.au
2 days ago
- News.com.au
Sydney Sweeney appeared ‘annoyed' and ‘uncomfortable' according to ‘The Times' article
They say all publicity is good publicity, and Sydney Sweeney is a walking example of this as one of the most talked about and in-demand stars in Hollywood right now. 'But who is Sydney Sweeney really?' The Times UK writer Megan Agnew questions at the beginning of an insightful profile piece about the 27-year-old actress published on Sunday. The publication has attempted to crack the veneer of the headline-magnet that is Sweeney, who shot to fame in Euphoria before swiftly becoming a bona fide pop culture sex symbol and a shrewd businesswoman as the founder of her own production company. In the Times ' 50-minute interview with Sweeney, which took place back in April (prior to Sweeney being engulfed in the ongoing PR storm surrounding her American Eagle denim ad) – Agnew admits drawing meaningful insights from the star is 'hard work'. 'Sweeney was early to our interview by an hour (unheard of) when I met her in a Hollywood photo studio. I was thrilled — until I realised it was a reflection of her keenness to leave rather than her enthusiasm to arrive,' Agnew writes. What soon unravels in the article is a description of Sweeney that paints her both as a hungry go-getter 'keen to make money', and a cautious approach so as not to say anything too contentious. At times, Agnew writes Sweeney is visibly uncomfortable and regularly seeking assurance from her two publicists – even before her latest, loudest controversy. 'A petite 5ft 3in, she sat with her legs folded, fidgeting with little boxes of make-up and often talking to her publicists on the other side of the room. She pulled as far back from me as she could,' Agnew writes. 'I could feel the height of her fresh fame acutely, her words put so carefully one in front of the other that it sometimes felt she was doing everything she could to sound boring.' Agnew points heavily to the media furore surrounding Sweeney's American Eagle denim ad, which faced backlash over claims it pushed 'eugenics' and 'White supremacy' messaging. Sweeney was subsequently identified as a registered Republican in Florida as of June last year. The Anyone But You star previously come under question for her political stance after sharing photos of her mother's 60th birthday celebrations in 2022, in which guests wore 'Make sixty great again' caps in reference to President Donald Trump's election slogan. Agnew suspects the backlash Sweeney has faced to date was the reason for her 'wariness' in the interview. 'In fact, she exhibited such discomfort about being there for the 50 minutes — in order to promote a new movie as well as a number of brands — that it verged on annoyance,' Agnew writes. Elsewhere in the chat, Sweeney talks about her love of real estate, her property portfolio and collection of luxury cars. 'Each property has its own vibe,' she told the Times. 'So it needs its own cars to go with the vibe.' Agnew notes Sweeney quickly paused, before shooting a look to her two publicists in the room. 'I suspect Sweeney knew all too well, even then, the consequences of saying anything that meant very much at all,' Agnew observes. Sweeney later admitted to being uncomfortable with fame. 'Privacy [is] huge,' she said. 'You don't realise how much that means until you lose it. I see all the time, 'Oh, they sold themselves, they knew what they were signing up for'. But 18-year-old me had no idea what she was signing up for. 'I've always been guarded. Definitely more so now. You let few people in who you trust.' She said her work ethic, and desire to be financially independent, stemmed from her humble upbringing, in which her hardworking parents moved from Washington to Hollywood heartland, Burbank, so Sweeney could pursue her acting career. The trio, along with Sweeney's younger brother Trent, lived in a modest one-bedroom flat. 'We were sharing a one-bedroom hotel room — no kitchen, no balcony,' Sweeney remembered. 'A pullout sofa bed, where my dad and brother slept, my mum and me in the bed. We'd run around the different hallways and find stairwells and make friends with all the staff. 'I just knew that I'd never allow myself to fail. 'I will always want to work harder, achieve more. I love to work. There's 24 hours in a day, obviously, but I make sure that there's 26 for me.'