
Seattle Chefs and Restaurants Miss Out at the 2025 James Beard Awards
The Beards are the country's most prestigious food world prizes, often compared to the Oscars. (Like the Academy Awards, there's a swanky ceremony attended by cultural luminaries.) Every year Seattle chefs and restaurants earn some sort of recognition from James Beard judges in the form of semifinalist nods and nominations.
In 2025, three Seattle-area chefs and restaurants scored nominations: Atoma for Best New Restaurant, Archipelago for Outstanding Hospitality, and Jay Blackinton of Houlme on Orcas Island for Best Chef: Northwest and Pacific Region. While it's true what they say, it is an honor to be nominated, none of the three wound up winning.
This constitutes something of a drought for the city. In the 2010s a few Seattle chefs won Beards in the Northwest and Pacific category, most recently Brady Williams in 2019 (when the Tomo owner was still working at Canlis). In 2020 Rupee won a Beard for its design, and that same year Oriental Mart won an America's Classics Award, which are given out through a separate process. Since then, however, there's been nada.
For a full list of James Beard Award winners from 2025, go here.
Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Awards. Eater is partnering with the James Beard Foundation to livestream the awards in 2025. All editorial content is produced independently of the James Beard Foundation. See More:
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19 Oscars Scandals From Throughout The Years
The Oscars are meant to be a yearly celebration of achievements in film, but sometimes, the drama that unfolds during or around the ceremony is way more intense than anything in the award-winning movies. Here are 19 major Oscars scandals and controversial moments from throughout the years: At the 2022 Academy Awards, host Chris Rock made a joke about Jada Pinkett Smith's shaved head. Moments later, her husband, Will Smith, infamously got onstage and slapped Chris across the face. Later that night, Will took home the Best Actor award. Watch the full clip below, with this part starting at the 1:05 mark: While presenting the Best Picture Award at the 2017 Oscars, Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty accidentally announced the winner as La La Land instead of Moonlight. However, midway through the cast and crews' acceptance speech, producer Jordan Horowitz was reportedly shown an envelope with the correct winner's title, so he interrupted the speech to ensure Moonlight got their big moment. Here's the full clip: When Billy Crystal hosted the Oscars in 2012, his opening included a pre-filmed skit parodying the Best Picture nominees. In the video, he played Sammy Davis Jr. in blackface. Here's the clip: At the 2000 Oscars, Angelina Jolie won Best Supporting Actress. In her acceptance speech, she said she was "so in love with" her older brother, James Haven. Later in the night, as they were being photographed ahead of the Vanity Fair afterparty, Angelina and James briefly kissed. It was actually their second red carpet kiss, following a moment from the Golden Globes a few months earlier (which is pictured below). Watch the full video of Angelina's acceptance speech below: During the 2013 Oscars, host Seth MacFarlane performed an ill-received opening number called "We Saw Your Boobs," in which he named actors who'd done nude scenes. He also mentioned Scarlett Johansson's nude picture leaks. As he sang, the camera occasionally panned to the women he named, capturing their uncomfortable reactions. Here's the full video: In 1974, as host David Niven was introducing presenter Elizabeth Taylor, a completely nude streaker ran across the stage behind him, threw a peace sign, then disappeared. Here's the full clip: When host Will Rogers announced the Best Director winner at the 1934 Academy Awards, he called out, "Come up and get it, Frank!" So, Lady for a Day director Frank Capra began making his way to the stage — but Will had actually meant Cavalcade director Frank Lloyd. The walk back to his seat was "the longest, saddest, most shattering walk in [his] life." At the 2003 Academy Awards, Halle Berry presented Adrien Brody with Best Actor. Onstage, he kissed her suddenly and unexpected, and she "just fucking went with it." Here's the full clip: In 2023, Andrea Riseborough was nominated for Best Actress for To Leslie, which is an indie movie, but her campaign had some people calling for her nom to be rescinded. Mary McCormack, who's married to the movie's director, Michael Morris, reportedly "emailed and called tons of members of the Academy's actors branch, begging them to see the little-watched alcoholic drama and post online about Riseborough's searing performance," according to Puck. Mary Pickford's first adult role as Norma Besant in Coquette was poorly received, as was the film itself. So, she invited the five Board of Judges members (who chose Oscar winners at the time) to have tea at her legendary Beverly Hills estate, Pickford. In exchange, they named her Best Actress at the 1928–29 Academy Awards. When Bette Davis turned town the titular role in Mildred Pierce, her longtime rival Joan Crawford jumped at the chance to take it. In 1946, she won her first and only Oscar for the role — and she famously accepted it from her bed. The very first person to decline their Oscar was screenwriter Dudley Nichols. He was an important figure in the formation of the Screen Writers Guild, the predecessor to the WGA, which sought to provide better protections for screenwriters. In 1935, studios began favoring Screen Playwrights Guild members over SWG members because their interests were more closely aligned. So, when Dudley won Best Original Screenplay in 1936, he declined it on the grounds that "to accept it would be to turn [his] back on nearly 1,000 members of the Screen Writers Guild." In 1973, Marlon Brando won Best Actor for The Godfather, but he famously sent activist and National Native American Affirmative Image Committee president Sacheen Littlefeather to decline the award on his behalf. Here's the full clip of Sacheen's speech: In 1940, Hattie McDaniel won Best Supporting Actress for Gone with the Wind, making her the first Black Oscar winner. However, the Academy Awards were held at the Ambassador Hotel, which was segregated, so producer David O. Selznick had to get special permission for her to be allowed in. She was still forced to sit in the back of the room, separated from her white costars. When the Academy announced its 2015 nominees, all 20 of the acting nominees were white. In response, April Reign created the #OscarsSoWhite movement to call out the egregious lack of diversity. She tweeted, "#OscarsSoWhite they asked to touch my hair." By lunchtime, the hashtag was trending. Then, in 2016, the acting nominees were once again all white. Many celebrities, including Lupita Nyong'o and George Clooney, joined fans in calling out the Academy. Some, including Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Spike Lee, boycotted the Oscars that year. The now-defunct Best Motion Picture Story award went to Robert Rich for The Brave One in 1957. However, he wasn't at the ceremony. The producers claimed he was a former GI they met in Germany and that they had no idea what happened to him after they bought the story from him. The Academy looked and looked for Robert. Even Life magazine published a drawing of what he might look like. But no one could find him — and that's because he wasn't a real person. When Marisa Tomei won Best Supporting Actress for My Cousin Vinny in 1993, it sparked a decades-long conspiracy theory that presenter Jack Palance had called her name by accident. However, this has been disproven. In 1938, Alice Brady wasn't able to accept her Best Supporting Actress award because she was stuck at home with a broken ankle, so a "mystery man" accepted it on her behalf. However, both the man and the Oscar disappeared after that night — or so the story goes. And finally, when Chill Wills was nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Alamo in 1960, he hired publicist W. S. "Bow-Wow" Wojciechowicz. The press agent put out a series of misguided ads, starting with a published list of every Academy member who'd gotten the actor's vote in the past.
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19 Infamous Oscars Scandals And Controversies That Make Me Wish They Had Twitter A Hundred Years Ago
The Oscars are meant to be a yearly celebration of achievements in film, but sometimes, the drama that unfolds during or around the ceremony is way more intense than anything in the award-winning movies. Here are 19 major Oscars scandals and controversial moments from throughout the years: the 2022 Academy Awards, host Chris Rock made a joke about Jada Pinkett Smith's shaved head. Moments later, her husband, Will Smith, infamously got onstage and slapped Chris across the face. Later that night, Will took home the Best Actor award. Watch the full clip below, with this part starting at the 1:05 mark: Four months later, Will addressed the incident in a YouTube video. He said, "I've reached out to Chris, and the message that came back is that he is not ready to talk — and when he is, he will reach out... I will say to you, Chris: I apologize to you. My behavior was unacceptable, and I'm here whenever you're ready to talk... I spent the last three months replaying and understanding the nuances and the complexities of what happened in that moment. I can say to all of you, there is no part of me that thinks that was the right way to behave in that handle a feeling of disrespect or insults." In her memoir Worthy, Jada said, "I thought, 'This is a skit.' ... I was like, 'There's no way that Will hit him. It wasn't until Will started to walk back to his chair that I even realized it wasn't a skit... We had been living separate lives and were there as family, not as husband and wife. But when I hear Will yell 'wife' in the chaos of the moment, an internal shift of 'Oh shit...I am his wife!' happens instantly." presenting the Best Picture Award at the 2017 Oscars, Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty accidentally announced the winner as La La Land instead of Moonlight. However, midway through the cast and crews' acceptance speech, producer Jordan Horowitz was reportedly shown an envelope with the correct winner's title, so he interrupted the speech to ensure Moonlight got their big moment. It turned out that someone had given Warren the wrong envelope, so he and Faye accidentally read the Best Actress winner, which Emma Stone had been awarded immediately prior. Behind the scenes, Warren showed director Barry Jenkins the correct envelope so that he could be confident his film Moonlight was the true winner. Here's the full clip: Billy Crystal hosted the Oscars in 2012, his opening included a pre-filmed skit parodying the Best Picture nominees. In the video, he played Sammy Davis Jr. in blackface. He'd played the singer in a similar manner several times on Saturday Night Live in the '80s. On social media, many viewers rightfully criticized the host and the Academy. Here's the clip: the 2000 Oscars, Angelina Jolie won Best Supporting Actress. In her acceptance speech, she said she was "so in love with" her older brother, James Haven. Later in the night, as they were being photographed ahead of the Vanity Fair afterparty, Angelina and James briefly kissed. It was actually their second red carpet kiss, following a moment from the Golden Globes a few months earlier (which is pictured below). Sibling actors Angelina Jolie and James Haven kiss as they attend the 57th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, Beverly Hills, California, January 24, 2000. (Photo by Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images) A few months later, Angelina told Entertainment Weekly that it was nothing "more than brotherly" between her and James. She said, "My parents really loved that moment, and that's what will always matter." A lot of people made incest jokes about them, including Jay Leno. So, when Angelina appeared on The Tonight Show, she confronted him about it. She said, "I've been waiting for this. When somebody says stuff about your family, it's just not OK. And my mom's just not been OK about the stuff about me and my brother. … Just do me a favor and read these things you've said. I highlighted the two that she really appreciated — it made her sick." Jay read the two jokes she'd highlighted and brought on a piece of paper. When he tried to defend himself, she interrupted him and said, "No, you're not the only one, and it's good of you to jump in with everybody else. Sometimes it's good to just stand up for something." Watch the full video of Angelina's acceptance speech below: the 2013 Oscars, host Seth MacFarlane performed an ill-received opening number called "We Saw Your Boobs," in which he named actors who'd done nude scenes. He also mentioned Scarlett Johansson's nude picture leaks. As he sang, the camera occasionally panned to the women he named, capturing their uncomfortable reactions. Here's the full video: 1974, as host David Niven was introducing presenter Elizabeth Taylor, a completely nude streaker ran across the stage behind him, threw a peace sign, then disappeared. The streaker, Robert Opel, later posed in the press room. He said, "It just occurred to me that it might be an educative thing to do. You know, people shouldn't be ashamed of being nude in public. Besides, it's a hell of a way to launch a career." Afterwards, some viewers had a conspiracy theory that the streaking had been a planned publicity stunt, especially with the host's quick, witty reaction. However, producer Jack Haley Jr. said there was "no way" it could've been planned. He told the New Yorker, "David wouldn't have stood for that." On The Mike Douglas Show, Robert said that he snuck through security using a press pass he got from a friend. He waited around backstage and acted helpful. Then, at the start of the broadcast, he ducked behind some scenery and stripped off his jumpsuit. He remained hidden until the final envelope of the night. Here's the full clip: host Will Rogers announced the Best Director winner at the 1934 Academy Awards, he called out, "Come up and get it, Frank!" So, Lady for a Day director Frank Capra began making his way to the stage — but Will had actually meant Cavalcade director Frank Lloyd. The walk back to his seat was "the longest, saddest, most shattering walk in [his] life." New York Times Co. / Getty Images, Bettmann / Getty Images / Via Getty In his autobiography The Name Above the Title, he wrote, "I wished I could have crawled under the rug like a miserable worm. When I slumped in my chair, I felt like one. All my friends at the table were crying… Sneaking out of the Biltmore, shame soured into bitter, galling anger. I recalled reading Oscar articles to Mama, as she blessed me and cried for joy; sending clippings to my brothers and sisters about my four nominations — which they innocently mistook as winning four awards, and sent back 'Bravo! Bravo!' letters. Big stupido — running up to get an Oscar dying with excitement, only to crawl back dying with shame." the 2003 Academy Awards, Halle Berry presented Adrien Brody with Best Actor. Onstage, he kissed her suddenly and unexpected, and she "just fucking went with it." Appearing on Watch What Happens Live in 2017, Halle said that, when Adrien kissed her, her initial reaction was, 'What the fuck is happening?' She said, "I don't know [if it was a good kiss]. I was too focused on 'What the fuck is going on right now?'' Here's the full clip: 2023, Andrea Riseborough was nominated for Best Actress for To Leslie, which is an indie movie, but her campaign had some people calling for her nom to be rescinded. Mary McCormack, who's married to the movie's director, Michael Morris, reportedly "emailed and called tons of members of the Academy's actors branch, begging them to see the little-watched alcoholic drama and post online about Riseborough's searing performance," according to Puck. In a statement, Academy CEO Bill Kramer said, "The Academy has determined the activity in question does not rise to the level that the film's nomination should be rescinded. However, we did discover social media and outreach campaigning tactics that caused concern. These tactics are being addressed with the responsible parties directly." The Best Actress award ultimately went to Michelle Yeoh. Pickford's first adult role as Norma Besant in Coquette was poorly received, as was the film itself. So, she invited the five Board of Judges members (who chose Oscar winners at the time) to have tea at her legendary Beverly Hills estate, Pickford. In exchange, they named her Best Actress at the 1928–29 Academy Awards. Her obvious bribery resulted in protests. So, as a result, the Academy changed the rules so that all members can vote for who wins. Bette Davis turned town the titular role in Mildred Pierce, her longtime rival Joan Crawford jumped at the chance to take it. In 1946, she won her first and only Oscar for the role — and she famously accepted it from her bed. She reportedly accepted the award from bed because she was "too nervous." very first person to decline their Oscar was screenwriter Dudley Nichols. He was an important figure in the formation of the Screen Writers Guild, the predecessor to the WGA, which sought to provide better protections for screenwriters. In 1935, studios began favoring Screen Playwrights Guild members over SWG members because their interests were more closely aligned. So, when Dudley won Best Original Screenplay in 1936, he declined it on the grounds that "to accept it would be to turn [his] back on nearly 1,000 members of the Screen Writers Guild." Eventually, the National Labor Relations Board had to mediate between the SWG, the SPG, and the studios. They ruled in the SWG's favor, essentially dissolving the rival guild. Several years later, Dudley finally accepted his Oscar. 1973, Marlon Brando won Best Actor for The Godfather, but he famously sent activist and National Native American Affirmative Image Committee president Sacheen Littlefeather to decline the award on his behalf. Both Sacheen and Marlon received a lot of backlash from the press and their peers. However, it was, of course, much worse for Sacheen. For example, she was plagued by false rumors that she wasn't really Apache, and Playboy dug up previously rejected pictures she'd posed for and published a three-page spread. In a 2022 interview with the Academy, she said, "[John Wayne] did not like what I was saying up at the podium. So, he came forth in a rage to physically assault and take me off the stage. And he had to be restrained by six security men in order for that not to happen... [Afterwards] a lot of cheap shots were thrown at me. And there were a lot of rumors, gossip columnists that were trying to make it something that it was not. And I was boycotted from every talk show while people talked about me. I could not and was not allowed to speak for myself. It was as though I was silenced." In 2022, the Academy released a formal apology to Sacheen. David Rubin, the then-president of the Academy, wrote, "The abuse you endured because of this statement was unwarranted and unjustified. The emotional burden you have lived through and the cost to your own career in our industry are irreparable. For too long the courage you showed has been unacknowledged. For this, we offer both our deepest apologies and our sincere admiration." Here's the full clip of Sacheen's speech: 1940, Hattie McDaniel won Best Supporting Actress for Gone with the Wind, making her the first Black Oscar winner. However, the Academy Awards were held at the Ambassador Hotel, which was segregated, so producer David O. Selznick had to get special permission for her to be allowed in. She was still forced to sit in the back of the room, separated from her white costars. After she died, she left the statuette to Howard University. Sadly, it went missing in the 1970s and was never found. However, in 2023, the Academy finally gave the university a replacement of Hattie's Oscar. the Academy announced its 2015 nominees, all 20 of the acting nominees were white. In response, April Reign created the #OscarsSoWhite movement to call out the egregious lack of diversity. She tweeted, "#OscarsSoWhite they asked to touch my hair." By lunchtime, the hashtag was trending. Selma director Ava DuVernay told the New York Times, "It was a catalyst for a conversation about what had really been a decades-long absence of diversity and inclusion." April said, "It could've been a bunch of different things — there were no women in the directors category, there were no visibly disabled people nominated — so #OscarsSoWhite has never just been about race. It's about the underrepresentation of all marginalized groups." Then, in 2016, the acting nominees were once again all white. Many celebrities, including Lupita Nyong'o and George Clooney, joined fans in calling out the Academy. Some, including Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Spike Lee, boycotted the Oscars that year. April told the New York Times, "One time you could call a fluke, two times feels like a pattern." Then-Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs said, "We had already been working toward increasing diversity and inclusion, but we went from first to fourth gear." In response, the Academy announced their plans to double "the number of women and diverse members of the Academy by 2020." In a statement, Cheryl said, "The Academy is going to lead and not wait for the industry to catch up. These new measures regarding governance and voting will have an immediate impact and begin the process of significantly changing our membership composition.' now-defunct Best Motion Picture Story award went to Robert Rich for The Brave One in 1957. However, he wasn't at the ceremony. The producers claimed he was a former GI they met in Germany and that they had no idea what happened to him after they bought the story from him. The Academy looked and looked for Robert. Even Life magazine published a drawing of what he might look like. But no one could find him — and that's because he wasn't a real person. In real life, "Robert Rich" was actually Dalton Trumbo, a well-known screenwriter who'd recently been imprisoned as a member of the Hollywood Ten. His name was on the Hollywood blacklist, a list of people who were barred from working in entertainment for alleged sympathy for or membership in the Communist Party. Dalton kept the ruse up for two years. He even submitted this poem to Life: "Come back, Robert Rich, wherever you are / Return so the ghost can be shriven. / Do you live on the moon? Do you live on a star? / Is that where your legends are scriven?" The situation became a PR crisis for the Academy, who ended up dropping their rule that barred blacklisted creatives from awards nominations. Marisa Tomei won Best Supporting Actress for My Cousin Vinny in 1993, it sparked a decades-long conspiracy theory that presenter Jack Palance had called her name by accident. However, this has been disproven. Her win was a surprise for several reasons. The competition was stacked, she was a newcomer, and her movie was a comedy rather than the typical "Oscar bait." In 2017, Marisa told the New York Times, "It made me quite ashamed, actually. But on the other hand, it's a load of [expletive]. I think it had to do more with the role that I played — that it was comedic and that it wasn't upper class. I think it was more of a classist thing, frankly." She went on to be nominated for Best Supporting Actress two more times, in 2002 and 2009. 1938, Alice Brady wasn't able to accept her Best Supporting Actress award because she was stuck at home with a broken ankle, so a "mystery man" accepted it on her behalf. However, both the man and the Oscar disappeared after that night — or so the story goes. The story fascinated Olivia Rutigliano since she was 12, so, as a college student, she decided to crack the case. While studying at the University of Pennsylvania, she was able to study cases of stolen Oscars thanks to a research grant. An email to the Academy revealed that Alice's case had quietly been solved a decade prior. The "mystery man" actually turned out to be Henry King, who directed Alice in In Old Chicago, the film she was being awarded for. Following the afterparties, Alice's colleagues gave the Oscar to her, and she had to take it to the Academy to be engraved herself. However, Alice died the year after her Oscar win, and the award seemingly disappeared sometime after that. Several years after her search began, Olivia, then a PhD student at Columbia, decided to find the missing Oscar. Eventually, she found out that a Dallas auction house had sold it, though they'd wrongly labeled it as a "replacement" of Alice's original Oscar. However, Olivia was unable to get in touch with the anonymous buyer to tell them the truth. In 2018, she told Mother Jones, "My plan is to keep talking about Alice Brady's not-stolen Oscar and hope that the message gets to them." finally, when Chill Wills was nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Alamo in 1960, he hired publicist W. S. "Bow-Wow" Wojciechowicz. The press agent put out a series of misguided ads, starting with a published list of every Academy member who'd gotten the actor's vote in the past. The second ad listed every member of the Academy alongside a note from Chill, which said, "Win, lose or draw, you're all my cousins and I love you all.'' In response, Groucho Marx placed his own ad proclaiming, "Dear Mr. Chill Wills, I am delighted to be your cousin, but I voted for Sal Mineo." The final and most controversial ad in Chill's Oscar campaign placed his picture over the rest of The Alamo cast. It said, "We of the Alamo cast are praying harder than the real Texans prayed for their lives in the Alamo for Chill Wills to win the Oscar as the best supporting actor. Cousin Chill's acting was great. [Signed] Your Alamo cousins.'' At the Oscars, Bob Hope joked, "I didn't know there was any campaigning until I saw my maid wearing a Chill Wills button." Chill ultimately lost to Peter Ustinov. 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Tom Cruise's Reason For Declining Trump's Kennedy Center Lifetime Achievement Award Revealed
Tom Cruise was not among the recipients at this year's Kennedy Center Honors, and the reason for his absence has finally been revealed. President Donald Trump was instrumental in picking out the nominees after seizing control of the center upon his return to office. Meanwhile, Tom Cruise continues to set tongues wagging with his rumored romance with Ana de Armas, as the pair were seen flaunting PDA during their Vermont trip. Tom Cruise Turns Down Donald Trump's Award Tom Cruise reportedly rejected a Kennedy Center award from President Donald Trump. According to The Washington Post, a source said that the "Mission Impossible" star was offered the center's Lifetime Achievement Award, but declined it over "scheduling conflicts." Trump is understood to be at the center of it all, but Cruise is known to often distance himself from politics, choosing to use his platform to support the military, veterans, and his Scientology beliefs. Over the years, the 63-year-old actor has picked up multiple awards, including the Golden Globe Award and the PGA Lifetime Achievement Award in Motion Pictures. He's yet to win a competitive Oscar Award after being nominated 4 times, but has been selected to receive an honorary Oscar statuette at the annual Governors Awards later this year. The President Claims Americans Are Tired Of The Academy Award Because It Is 'Woke' News of Cruise's decline comes after Trump unveiled the 2025 recipients at the Kennedy Center's Hall of Nations, a list he stated he was "about 98% involved" in selecting. "I turned down plenty. They were too woke. I had a couple of wokesters," he said, referencing the proposed nominees, per the Daily Mail. This year's honorees include country music legend George Strait, rock band KISS, disco icon Gloria Gaynor, actor Sylvester Stallone, and Broadway star Michael Crawford. The billionaire politician also said that he didn't want to host the award ceremony, but was handpicked to do it by the new Kennedy Center board, especially his chief of staff, Susie Wiles. Trump seized control of the center and appointed himself as chairman while also appointing 14 new members to the board. After naming this year's recipients, he declared that the country is tired of award ceremonies like the Academy Awards because they were too "woke." "Look at the Academy Awards. It gets lousy rating. Now it's all woke. All they do is talk about how much they hate Trump, but nobody likes that," he said. No Tom Cruise, No Problem For Trump In handing out the honor to Stallone, the billionaire politician heaped praises on the actor as one of the best of his generation. "Nobody else could have done what he did. They tried and it didn't work out too well," he said, referencing Stallone's "Rambo" and "Rocky" as monumental achievements. "I'll never forget I was a young guy and I went to see a thing called 'Rambo,'" he recalled. "I said, 'This movie is phenomenal. What the heck.'" Trump praised Crawford as "an international sensation" for playing "one of the greatest roles in the history of Broadway" as the Phantom of the Opera. He then went further to describe Gaynor as "one of the most revered singers of the American disco era," praising her song, "I Will Survive" as an "unbelievable song." "I have heard it, like everyone else here, thousands of times. And it is one of those few that get better every time you hear it," he said. "And no one can sing it like her." Trump then shared that he'd always wanted a Kennedy award, calling the institution one of the "most prestigious" awards in showbiz. "Next year we'll honor Trump, okay?" he joked. Tom Cruise's Alleged Romance With Ana De Armas Cruise seemingly has a lot on his mind already, especially as his rumored romance with Ana De Armada heats up. The pair were recently spotted at an Oasis concert and also enjoyed a Spanish getaway and a Vermont holiday, where they were seen holding hands. Reports suggest the "Top Gun" actor is ready to take things to the next level in his relationship with the actress. "Tom micromanages every detail of his life; anyone close to him always has loads of paperwork and NDAs to sign," a source said, per Star Magazine. "Marriage takes it to a new level. Tom has so much to protect." Ana de Armas Is Reportedly 'Confident' She Can Make Tom Cruise 'Happier' Insiders also shared that the "Ballerina" actress is quite "confident" she can make Cruise a "happier" man, more than his exes did. "Ana's familiar with Tom's history, but it doesn't worry her," a source explained. "It actually annoys her that people judge Tom by his exes, and she's confident she'll be able to keep him happier than they did." The insider added that de Armas is "on board with a contract," and is "taking Tom at his word that he's just making a safe plan for the future," noting that the pair "will be official soon enough." Solve the daily Crossword