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Here's Why Sabrina Carpenter Has Got Miley Cyrus Worried

Here's Why Sabrina Carpenter Has Got Miley Cyrus Worried

Yahoo5 hours ago

recently got real about how she often gets worried about . The latter grew up looking up to the former as a fellow child actor, with them reuniting at the 2025 Grammy Awards. However, Carpenter has left Cyrus concerned due to her hectic schedule, with the 32-year-old feeling the urge to ask the pop star 'if she's OK.'
In a recent interview with the New York Times, Miley Cyrus revealed that she notices when someone is 'working too hard,' and she believes Sabrina Carpenter is one of them. The singer noted that she has had the opportunity to meet the 26-year-old 'a couple of times.' However, every time, she feels worried for the former child actor's health and overall well-being. Cyrus told the outlet, 'Every time I see her I have the urge to ask her if she's OK.'
She revealed that she had gone to see her perform in Ireland. The songwriter expressed her surprise to learn that she had a show scheduled for the very next day in Kansas. She opened up to the New York Times that she was left thinking, 'I don't know how that could be physically OK.' In addition, Cyrus touched upon how once she, too, was in a similar situation. She said, 'I know what it feels like to fry yourself.'
Since she is all too familiar with the predicament, the singer doesn't want anyone to stretch themselves thin. She also agreed with Ariana Grande's call for providing child actors with therapy. Cyrus suggested young stars should have someone checking in on them weekly. The singer revealed she has been 'very consistent' with therapy since her late teens. This has, in turn, 'cleared up a lot of the feelings that I had about being a child star.'
Miley Cyrus ended the segment, stating that she loves the 'new girls,' Sabrina Carpenter being one of them. She said, 'I think they're all unique and are very found. That's what I like to see.' She noted that she loves to see the current 'it' girls have 'found themselves,' since she didn't have herself 'totally figured out' when she first started.
Originally reported by Namrata Padhee on Reality Tea.
The post Here's Why Sabrina Carpenter Has Got Miley Cyrus Worried appeared first on Mandatory.

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Today's Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Saturday, June 7, 2025
Today's Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Saturday, June 7, 2025

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Today's Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Saturday, June 7, 2025

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Can Gaelic football finally have its video game hit?
Can Gaelic football finally have its video game hit?

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Can Gaelic football finally have its video game hit?

It was 20 years ago that video-gaming Irish sports fans had their prayers answered. Fifa, Pro Evolution Soccer, Madden NFL – back in 2005, these were the sports games dominating living rooms. Indeed, some still are today, helping to make the sports video game industry a £17bn-per-year behemoth. But while most sports, from snooker to bizarre basketball superstar kung-fu tie-ins, had a title to offer, fans of Ireland's national sports - Gaelic football and hurling - had never seen their heroes in pixelated glory. That is until Gaelic Games: Football dropped in November 2005. The highly anticipated release, which saw eager gamers queued outside one store in Belfast, became one of Sony's biggest selling games in Ireland. And, as was the pre-peak online gaming style at the time, those who wanted to beat their mates had to invite them over and gather around a defiantly non-flat screen TV. One of those was Peadar McMahon, then a student in Belfast, who remembers "big sessions playing the game, having a laugh with friends". The game was not well-received. "Seriously flawed" declared the Sunday Times in a dismayed 3/10 review. "Devastatingly awful" condemned Irish culture website in a 2018 lookback piece. Peadar is a little more diplomatic – "not a great game" he recalled – but he has reason for diplomacy since, poor or not, Gaelic Games: Football gave him an idea: What more could a game like this do? "I took the game as impetus to go and do something about it because I'm doing computer science, loved games from no age - and maybe I could do something?" Two decades, one career in financial software and a £30k Kickstarter later, Belfast studio Buck Eejit Games, formed four years ago by Peadar, is set to be the first to dive back into the Gaelic games market since that ill-fated series. 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There will be no online mode and, despite about 18 months of conversations with the Gaelic Games Association (GAA), no official licences meaning no real player names. Inspired by Pro Evolution Soccer's approach in decades past, the game will instead feature extensive editing capabilities so players can change names and counties as much as they want. Huge thanks to everyone who stopped by to see us at Gamerfest!We're incredibly grateful for all the feedback and excited to keep refining things to make the game the best it can tuned! 🏐🫶#GaelicFootball #Gaming #GameDev — Buck Eejit Games (@BuckEejitGames) May 31, 2025 These decisions can be revisited via updates or, if things go well, sequels - in the meantime, said Peadar, the focus is on finishing the game for a summer release. Is he feeling any pressure? There's a lot riding on the team, he acknowledged, but if he's fazed by the prospect the game "gets panned and nobody buys it", it doesn't show. 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