Look: Behati Prinsloo takes center stage in Maroon 5's 'All Night' video
The video, released on YouTube, is inspired by the music videos of Robert Palmer and features Prinsloo lip syncing to the vocals recorded by the band's actual frontman -- and Prinsloo's husband -- Adam Levine.
Prinsloo wears a bright red dress, while the band members sport black suits and sunglasses.
The band teased "All Night" with a pair of Instagram posts introducing Prinsloo as the band's "new lead singer" and "new front woman."
One of the posts features a video of Prinsloo introducing herself as "Adam Levine from Maroon 5."
"All Night' is the second single to debut from Maroon 5's forthcoming album, Love is Like, set for release Aug. 15.

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New York Post
26 minutes ago
- New York Post
I tried to be the perfect wellness influencer — and it almost killed me
Being a wellness influencer nearly killed Lee Tilghman. From 2014 to 2019, she shared her rainbow-hued smoothie bowls, eight-step skincare routine, #selfcare rituals and thirst-trappy fit pics on her Instagram, @LeeFromAmerica, which had more than 400,000 followers — a significant number for the time. At her height she made $300,000 a year via sponsored posts, and nearly every item in her light-filled Los Angeles apartment was gifted from a brand. Yet, behind the scenes Tilghman was not well at all. Advertisement 8 In her new memoir, Lee Tilghman opens up about the toll being a wellness influencer took on her health. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post She suffered from disordered eating. She was anxious. She was lonely. A critical comment on a post could send her into a spiral of depression and paranoia. She spent 10 hours a day tethered to her iPhone 'It was soul-killing,' Tilghman, 35, told The Post, taking in the New York City skyline from the Brooklyn Heights Promenade. Advertisement She chronicles it all in her wild, self-aware, new memoir, 'If You Don't Like This Post, I Will Die' (Simon & Schuster, out now). Tilghman recalls growing up in suburban Connecticut, getting her first AOL username at 12 years old and downloading Instagram the summer before last year of college, in 2011. Her first photo — of herself at a flea market in London during study abroad — got zero likes. After college, she moved to Manhattan and became a 20-something party girl, documenting her exploits on Instagram. She worked as a waitress at the trendy Chalk Point Kitchen, but, for the most part, she opted for drugs over food. Advertisement Then, one morning, after waking up from a cocaine bender, she opened Instagram and came across an account from an Australian named Loni Jane. This gorgeous, fit specimen had 'ombre-blonde hair,' a 'year-round tan' and a vegan, raw diet. 'I wanted that life,' Tilghman recalls in the book. 8 Tilghman was initially a party girl, posting sexy snaps of nights out to Instagram. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram She stopped drinking and began exercising. One morning, after a run, she made a smoothie with avocado, banana, coconut and kale that was so thick, she couldn't drink it from a glass. She poured it into a bowl, sprinkled some seeds on top, and posted it on the 'gram. Advertisement The likes rolled in. She began posting these 'smoothie bowls' nearly every day, in every color of the rainbow, with a bounty of toppings arranged like works of art. The clothing brand Free People interviewed her about her culinary creations for its blog. 'I was like, 'Okay, this thing is popping off.'' Tilghman recalled. 'Every time I posted a smoothie bowl, my following would grow. The comments would be crazy. People had never seen them before.' She left NYC for LA, to chase Instagram stardom. The term 'influencer' had just begun bubbling, and savvy millennial brands had just started seeing pretty young women as inexpensive ambassadors for their products. 8 Then, after a cocaine bender, she changed her ways and focused on healthy content. She started posting images of colorful smoothie bowls that quickly took off. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram Tilghman went all-in. When a follower DMed her and told her that fluoride caused 'brain damage,' she stopped using toothpaste with it — and promptly developed six cavities. When her roommate told her that bananas had a ton of sugar, Tilghman cut them from her diet. (She still made her smoothie bowls with them, since the bananas helped make the liquid thick enough to hold all the toppings; she just threw it out after snapping a picture.) Tongue-scraping, dry-brushing, double-filtered charcoal water, body oiling, fasting: Tilghman tried it all. 'I did two twenty-one-day cleanses back-to-back,' she writes in her book. 'I got rid of gluten, dairy, soy, peanuts, and sugar. I paid [a Reiki-certified healer] the first half of an $8,000 coaching package, which included breathwork, moon circles, and unlimited text support.' The more she tried — and the realer she got, posting about her struggles with PCOS (a hormonal condition that can cause bloating and irregular periods) or her past struggled with anorexia — the more followers, and brand sponsorships, she got. And the more brand sponsorships she got, the more time she had to spend posting. And the more time she spent posting, the more time she spent on the app, and the more she hated herself. Advertisement 8 Soon, she was getting attention from brands and posting smoothie bowls daily. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram She would often take 200 photos before finding one where she looked thin enough to post on the grid — often with some caption about self-acceptance and self-love. Her self-absorption and food phobias eventually alienated her from the rest of the world. She was so terrified of gluten, of soy, of sugar that she couldn't go out to eat. She once dragged her mom all over Tokyo — during a sponsored trip — in search of a green apple, because the red ones in her hotel had too much sugar. She was so obsessed with getting the perfect Instagram photo that she couldn't have a conversation. Advertisement 'I put my health [and Instagram] above everything, including family and relationships,' she said. 'If your body is a temple and you treat it super well and you eat all the right foods and do all the things, but you don't have anyone close to you because you're trying to control your life so much, it's a dark place.' 8 She left NYC for LA to pursue wellness influencing. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram It all came crashing in 2018, after she announced she was hosting a wellness workshop — and charging $350 for the cheapest was accused of white privilege, and her apology post only elicited more scorn. Some sponsors pulled out. Shortly after, her apartment flooded. She looked around and noticed that with the exception of her dog, Samson, every single thing in her place — including her toothbrush — had been gifted by brands looking for promotion. Advertisement 'I was a prop too—a disposable, soulless, increasingly emaciated mannequin used by companies to sell more stuff,' she writes. 'We all were—all the billions of us who thought we were using Instagram when really it was the other way around.' 8 Followers loved her fitness content, but behind the scenes, Tilghman was struggling. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram 8 One day, she realized that every item in her apartment, save for her dog, had been gifted by a brand. Lee Tilghman/ Instagram In 2019, she got rid of it all, deleted Instagram and went to a six-week intensive treatment center for her disordered eating. There, she had to throw out all her adaptogens and supplemental powders. Advertisement 'I felt like an addict when they're so done with their drug of choice that they can't wait to throw it away,' she recalled of her first day without the app. 'It was amazing.' Though she did admit that she couldn't stop taking selfies. 'I would be at a red light and just take 15 selfies — it was weird!' During the pandemic, she moved back to New York and did social media for a couple companies, including a tech and a perfume brand. She sporadically updated her Instagram in 2021, but really came back in earnest this past year, to do promotion for her memoir. 'I've been gone for so long that I have this newfound creativity and appreciation for it,' she said of her new, goofy online persona. 'The whimsy is back.' She also has a Substack, Offline Time, and has just moved to Brooklyn Heights with Samson and her fiance, Jack, who works in finance. 8 Tilghman is no longer an influencer, though she has used Instagram to promote her new book. And, she says, she would consider doing sponsored posts in the future. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post She says that her book feels even more timely now than when she started working on it four years ago. Despite all she's been through, she doesn't rule out influencing completely. 'I mean, listen, living is expensive,' she said. 'I'm not opposed doing a sponsored post in the future. I actually said that to my audience, a couple months ago. I was like, 'Guys, I know I just wrote a book about not influencing anymore. But, rent be renting.''


UPI
27 minutes ago
- UPI
Movie review: 'Nobody 2' repeats successful formula
1 of 5 | Hutch (Bob Odenkirk) finishes the elevator job in "Nobody 2," in theaters Friday. Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures LOS ANGELES, Aug. 13 (UPI) -- Nobody 2, in theaters Friday, is a prototypical sequel that provides a slightly enhanced version of what defined the original film. Since 2021's Nobody was a fun action movie in the vein of John Wick, the sequel is also fun, but does not provide exponential world building like the later Wick movies. Bob Odenkirk returns as Hutch Mansell, a special ops auditor who is back at work after exposing his violent government past in the first film. He's trying to work off the $30 million debt he now owes after destroying Russian mob money. Hutch's task is keeping him away from his family, so he suggests a vacation to PlummerVille, a touristy water park from his childhood. On their first day at the park, local bullies attack Hutch's kids, Braden (Gage Munroe) and Sammy (Paisley Cadorath). When Hutch defends them, it lands the whole family in the corrupt PlummerVille sheriff's station. Obviously, no one in the audience expects Hutch to rein in his combat prowess. Viewers came to see him overpower bullies and bad guys, so he does. There is still a poignant theme to this simplified story though: Hutch and his wife, Becca (Connie Nielsen), truly attempt to de-escalate confrontations and let the bullies save face. Yet, the world is full of bullies who will never get away with enough abuse to satisfy them. When an adult swats Sammy in the head, he's asking for Hutch to step in. What grown man hits a child in public? The corrupt Sheriff Abel (Colin Hanks) and second generation businessman Wyatt Martin (Jon Ortiz) are determined to make an example of the Mansells. The pair work for Lendina (Sharon Stone), a crime boss who uses PlummerVille as a base of operations. The police and local bullies in PlummerVille are smug because nobody has ever stood up to them before. Each of them are serving brutal masters so they lash out at their underlings, and Lendina probably fought her way to the top of that world too. That plot is a little too complicated, but is worth it to introduce Stone as the main villain. The first Nobody had Hutch intervene with some thugs on a bus, incurring the wrath of the Russian mob he had to take out to keep his family safe. Nobody 2 takes the scenic route, as it were, to essentially tell the same story: The wrong people mess with Hutch and he ultimately has to take them all out to ensure nobody attacks his family again, culminating in a showdown. The faceoff occurring at the theme park does make a fun climax. Hutch is good when he's trying to avoid fights, using evasive maneuvers and non-lethal blows, but he's awesome when he lets loose. Before every fight, Hutch checks his surroundings for ordinary objects to use as weapons, be it the emergency phone in an elevator or strapping a pipe to his hand. Odenkirk has built off his training for Nobody 2, though he's not quite where Keanu Reeves is after four Matrix movies and four and a half John Wick films. Director Timo Tjahjanto, known for the incredible Indonesian martial arts movie The Night Comes for Us, gets as brutal as an R-rated Hollywood movie will allow, but there is still at least one onscreen dismemberment for fans of Night. Stone did not train for action, so she acts hard instead. Vamping it up when she catches gamblers cheating in her casino or dancing while she waits for her army to assemble, this is the movie star Sharon Stone that Hollywood has neglected for too long. Daniel Bernhardt, who trained Odenkirk for both movies and played a bus thug in the first film, returns as Lendita's No. 2. With a blonde buzzcut and mustache to indicate he's a different character, any excuse to let Bernhardt fight again is welcome. It might be nice to let the family moments breathe a bit more. There's no way to dramatically justify including children in an action movie plot, however, so perhaps breezing through those scenes to show the Mansells supporting Hutch was smart. At every step, Hutch is determined to take the high road as long as he can assure his family's safety. But then he'll see an endangered child, and he can't very well go back to his wife and kids having let another child be hurt or killed. Giving those family members action moments is not the payoff the filmmakers, and perhaps even the actors, think they are. It's either celebrating the child endangerment, or with respect to Becca, paying feminist lip service when she's still serving a function of Hutch's story. Nobody 2 works when it's delivering more of the same as the original film. Considering the trouble it runs into when its ambitions rise even slightly, it remains entirely satisfying to keep these simple. By the way, Hutch has not paid off the $30 million yet, so there's still work to be done in Nobody 3. Fred Topel, who attended film school at Ithaca College, is a UPI entertainment writer based in Los Angeles. He has been a professional film critic since 1999, a Rotten Tomatoes critic since 2001, and a member of the Television Critics Association since 2012 and the Critics Choice Association since 2023. Read more of his work in Entertainment.


UPI
27 minutes ago
- UPI
Watch: N.C. woman recaptures world record for Coca-Cola collection
Aug. 13 (UPI) -- A soft drink superfan from North Carolina recaptured a Guinness World Records title when her collection of Coca-Cola memorabilia was tallied at 5,623 unique items. Lenoir resident Debbie Indicott was first awarded the Guinness World Records title in 2020, when her collection was tallied at 2,028 items, and by 2023 her record had increased to 5,070 items. She lost the title later in 2023 to fellow collector Jeffery S. Fouke Jr., who had amassed 5,237 items. Indicott has now recaptured the title with 5,623 items. She said her collection was initially a source of friction in her family. "My husband's father worked for Pepsi for many, many years. So, in the beginning it was kind of a no-no to have Coke and definitely to have it in his household," she told WSB-TV in 2021. "But as my collection grew and grew he finally came to accept it and appreciate it, and he enjoys looking at everything too." Indicott said her love of Coke started with a simple color. "The red is, I think, what pulls me in, there's something about that bright red. Whenever I'm looking in antique stores, anything red draws my attention," she said.