logo
Alec Baldwin's lawsuit against New Mexico prosecutors over 'malicious' Rust shooting prosecution is THROWN OUT

Alec Baldwin's lawsuit against New Mexico prosecutors over 'malicious' Rust shooting prosecution is THROWN OUT

Daily Mail​2 days ago
Alec Baldwin 's lawsuit against New Mexico prosecutors who put him on trial for the deadly shooting on the set of his Western film Rust has been dismissed by a judge.
Documents obtained Wednesday by DailyMail.com indicate that the case was thrown out because there had been no progress on it in months.
According to the judge overseeing the case, there had been 'no significant action has been taken in 180 or more days in connection to any and all pending claims.'
DailyMail.com has contacted Baldwin's representative for comment but hasn't yet received a response.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Justin Bieber offers a rare glimpse inside his and wife Hailey's $26M Beverly Hills mansion
Justin Bieber offers a rare glimpse inside his and wife Hailey's $26M Beverly Hills mansion

Daily Mail​

time12 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Justin Bieber offers a rare glimpse inside his and wife Hailey's $26M Beverly Hills mansion

This week Justin Bieber gave his Instagram followers a peek inside the $26 million Beverly Hills mansion he shares with wife Hailey Bieber. On Friday the 31-year-old pop star shared a brief reel as he joined the 'slide city' internet challenge inspired by a lyric from his hit song Yukon. Justin was dressed in red basketball shorts and a white T-shirt as he slid across his hardwood kitchen floor in a pair of knit socks. While fans have been posting themselves gliding across the floor to his catchy track, off his latest album Swag, his video did not include music. Hailey, 28, made a cameo appearance as she was shown in the background wearing black leggings and a black pullover sweatshirt. The Biebers' abode boasts seven bedrooms and 10 bathrooms with heated floors, according to They bought the sprawling residence, which is located in an exclusive guard-gated community, in 2020. Per the real estate outlet, its original listing noted that it is situated 'in the middle of park-like grounds' stretching over 2.5 acres. Justin recently posted photos in the couple's pristine entryway, which is punctuated with a piano. The home also offers a spacious living room, dining room, theater room, and chef's kitchen. Windows throughout permit lots of natural light into the love nest, where they're raising their son Jack Blues, who turns one this month. Outside there is a swimming pool, tennis court, and outdoor rooms featuring a barbecue, pizza oven, and koi pond. Meanwhile, the master suite has dual closets and a sitting area. In addition to their Los Angeles home base, the husband and wife purchased a $16.6 million house in La Quinta in 2023, using it as a vacation home. And their real estate portfolio also includes a property in Ontario, Canada. Justin released his surprise seventh studio album, Swag to great fanfare on July 11. Several songs make mention of his public persona, personal struggles, and his commitment to his wife Hailey and their baby son. There is also a theme of interludes featuring comedian Druski, during which Justin engages in candid 'therapy sessions' with the social media star. Rumors have recently circulated that the music sensation will tour Australia following the album release. Justin has not yet confirmed whether he will be touring, nor has Frontier Touring, who told Rolling Stone it had no information on any potential Australian tour dates. The hitmaker previously cancelled his Justice world tour in 2022 for health reasons.

Richardson arrested for domestic violence in Seattle, report says
Richardson arrested for domestic violence in Seattle, report says

Reuters

time14 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Richardson arrested for domestic violence in Seattle, report says

Aug 2 (Reuters) - Reigning 100 metres world champion Sha'Carri Richardson was arrested for domestic violence at a Settle airport four days before the start of the US Track & Field Championships, USA TODAY Sports reported on Friday. The 25-year-old, who won Olympic silver in the 100 at the Paris Games, allegedly pushed her male companion who then fell into a nearby column after an argument, according to a police report obtained by USA TODAY Sports. The report said she was detained on the evening of July 27 and released the following day. Reuters has contacted Port of Seattle Police Department, Richardson's agent and US Track & Field for comment. Richardson withdrew from the 100 semi-finals in Eugene, Oregon on Friday after participating in Thursday's heats. She is guaranteed a spot in the 100 at the world championships in September due to her win at Budapest in 2023.

Authority: Essays on Being Right by Andrea Long Chu review
Authority: Essays on Being Right by Andrea Long Chu review

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Authority: Essays on Being Right by Andrea Long Chu review

Andrea Long Chu stands accused of not playing by the rules, of appraising works of fiction as if they were essays or confessions rather than aesthetic objects. 'It is true that I tend to treat a novel like an argument', she writes in the introduction to Authority, a collection of essays and reviews published between 2018 and 2023 in outlets such as N+1, Bookforum and New York Magazine. Long Chu – who won a Pulitzer prize for criticism in 2023 – believes 'all novels refract the veiled subjectivity of their authors', and to pretend otherwise is to indulge a 'pernicious form of commodity fetishism'. In her reviews, books betray their authors, invariably revealing some kernel of inadequacy – be it immaturity, myopia or just terminal dullness. This approach borders on the psychoanalytical, and makes for fun reading. Long Chu diagnoses a case of 'Munchausen by proxy' in Hanya Yanagihara, whose bestselling novels A Little Life (2015) and To Paradise (2022) are powered by 'the misery principle': 'horrible things happen to people for no reason', and the author is 'a sinister kind of caretaker, poisoning her characters in order to nurse them lovingly back to health'. She notes a troubling tendency towards 'infantile' idealisation of mothers and girlfriends in Tao Lin's autofiction, and finds 'something deeply juvenile' about the scatological motifs in Ottessa Moshfegh's novels. Moshfegh's medieval gore-fest Lapovona (2022), fails to shock, because 'You cannot épater le bourgeois without an actual bourgeoisie'; 'the leading coprophile of American letters' is trying too hard to convince us she's not a prude. Reviewing Bret Easton Ellis's 'deeply needless' 2019 essay collection, White ('less a series of glorified, padded-out blog posts than a series of regular, normal-size blog posts'), Long Chu bemoans his descent into fogeyish paranoia, and suggests the author of American Psycho is starting to resemble his most famous creation. 'At some point,' she quips, 'one must ask if a man who sees Nineteen Eighty-Four all around him is really just stuck in the 80s.' A takedown of Curtis Sittenfeld's 2020 novel, Rodham, which imagines an alternative universe where Hillary Clinton never married Bill, is a withering indictment of hollow girl-boss feminism: this is 'an unpolitical book by an unpolitical author about … an unpolitical person'; Sittenfeld's complacency mirrors that of her protagonist, a woman whose 'true talent lies in persuading college-educated people that her ambition, and by extension theirs, is a genuine expression of competence'. A recurring figure in these essays is the successful author with a gripe about oversensitive lefty youngsters and social media mobs. These include Ellis, Moshfegh, Maggie Nelson – whose complaints about art-world censoriousness in On Freedom are dismissed with a huffily italicised 'boring' – and Zadie Smith, whose 'habit of sympathizing with the least sympathetic party in any given situation frequently drives her to the political center'. Long Chu provocatively suggests this tendency is a bit of an act, compensating for Smith's failure to produce a touchstone work of social realism: since Smith has 'never actually excelled at constructing the kind of sympathetic, all-too-human characters she advocates for', she makes up for it with a lofty bothsidesism she thinks becoming of a serious, above-the-fray liberal humanist. Long Chu is similarly unsparing in her critique of the publishing industry's patronising and counterproductive tendency to over-hype minority voices in order to atone for past wrongs. ('This is to respond to pigeonholing by overstating the value of being a pigeon.') In a refreshingly clear-sighted essay on Asian American fiction, she questions whether the experiences depicted in a glut of diaspora novels have anything significant in common beyond their 'diffident, aimless, frustrated' protagonists and a vague melancholy; the much-laboured theme of identity manifests as little more than 'a sensation, a mild, chronic homesickness', and 'the acute experience of racial indeterminacy has diffused into something more banal'. Alongside the literary essays, Authority features dissections of TV shows and video games, and a wryly funny meditation on Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical shortcomings. (His winning strategy as a composer is 'not to persuade but to overwhelm'.) There are also several personal pieces including an essay on vaginoplasty, a fictionalised account of undergoing transcranial magnetic stimulation (a treatment for depression), and On Liking Women, a widely shared 2018 essay about the author's gender transition that kickstarted her writing career. Here Long Chu draws a connecting line between the gender separatist ideology of 1970s political lesbianism and today's anti-trans activists, whom she accuses of laundering 'garden-variety moral disgust'. In another era, such personal material would have sat uneasily in a volume of criticism, and it says something about our cultural moment that it doesn't seem particularly out of place here. As Long Chu observes in the title essay, the subjectivity of the critic is an increasingly visible presence these days. Tracing the vexed debates around critical authority from the 18th century to the present day, she concludes that the concept has always been 'an incoherent, inconsistent, and altogether empty thing'. The job of today's critic is not so much to impart expertise but to become a storyteller in their own right: 'The critic has become a witness, one whose job is to offer up an event within her own experience in such a way that the reader, if she is so inclined, may experience it too.' This checks out. Though Long Chu's writing style is not as overtly chummy as that of her fellow US critic Lauren Oyler, it has a similarly disarming first-person candour, offsetting stridency with spasms of self-effacing humility, and the sort of tentative qualifications more commonly encountered in spoken discourse than on the printed page. ('Perhaps I am being ungenerous'; 'What I mean is that …'; 'My point is that …'; 'I do not mean …'; 'If it sounds like I'm saying … I suppose I am.') These tics can be a bit cloying, and the occasional adolescent turns of phrase feel jarringly regressive: Long Chu uses 'boring' an awful lot; at one point, she introduces a particularly unimpressive quote with 'The following is an actual sentence.' Sign up to Bookmarks Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you after newsletter promotion In a postscript to one of the greener pieces in this volume, Long Chu, who is in her early 30s, winces at the prose style deployed by her younger self – 'that kind of bloggy 'voiceyness' was dated even then'. Her anxiety on this score is symptomatic of a generational dilemma for a cohort of American writers who, having been raised to distrust authority – not just as a concept but perhaps especially as a register – and steeped in the highly self-conscious patter of online communities, must now work out how to be publicly clever in a non-overbearing way. In an anti-intellectual media landscape, one way to make yourself legible is to make yourself small. This is the striking thing about Long Chu's authorial tone: she combines the expert and the naif in a single voice, which chimes with a similar dualism in her reader. These essays are essentially journeys – knotty and meandering, with moments of pithy, clarifying insight. If you can hold someone's interest while figuring things out for yourself in real time on the page, you're doing something right. Perhaps the true source of authority is companionable intelligence, and what we think of as sound judgment is just a function of familiarity – comfort in another person's psychic skin. Authority: Essays on Being Right by Andrea Long Chu is published by Hutchinson Heinemann (£20). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store