George Lowe, Voice of Space Ghost, Dead at 67
George Lowe, a veteran voice actor whose credits include the title role in Space Ghost Coast to Coast, has died at age 67, a spokesperson confirms for TVLine.
Lowe reportedly passed following a long illness, his longtime friend 'Marvelous' Marvin Boone shared on Facebook.
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Back in July 2023, Space Ghost Coast to Coast contributing writer MC Chris shared with fans concerned about Lowe's conspicuous absence from social media that the actor had been suffering health problems including an aortic dissection that required intubation twice, and had a nurse looking after him at his home in Florida. 'We came close to losing him,' Chris said.
An alumnus of the Radio Engineering Institute of Sarasota, Lowe began his career in the 1980s with occasional voiceover work, before landing the title role in Cartoon Network's Space Ghost Coast to Coast. A send-up of talk shows that featured live-action celebrity guests, the animated series would run for 10 years and more than 100 episodes, including a move to Adult Swim and a brief revival via Turner Broadcasting's GameTap online video game service.
Watch Space Ghost interview Talking Heads front man David Byrne:
Lowe also voiced Space Ghost in the 1995 spinoff Cartoon Planet, the 2007 movie Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters and in the 2011 video game Cartoon Network: Punch Time Explosion.
His voice acting credits also include The Brak Show, Robot Chicken, Squidbillies and American Dad.
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Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
‘Materialists' is a smart and funny all-star love triangle with its own commitment issues
Dakota Johnson is my favorite seductress, a femme fatale of a flavor that didn't exist until she invented it. A third-generation celebrity, she toys with interviewers who come on too strongly (especially about the 'Fifty Shades' movies, her trilogy of BSDM blockbusters), coyly enticing them to trip over their own tongues. Onscreen, she excels at playing skeptics who are privately amused by the shenanigans of attaching yourself to another person. She shrugs to conquer. Which makes Johnson the perfect avatar for a time when it's hard to commit or keep swiping right. 'Materialists,' Celine Song's follow-up to her Oscar-nominated debut 'Past Lives,' casts Johnson perfectly as an advertisement for taking the romance out of love. When her Lucy gets checked out on the street, she hands the guy a card introducing herself as a professional Manhattan matchmaker. She can peg a person's height at a glance and sum up their prospects in a pitiless snap judgment. Hearing that a friend of a friend is getting serious with a nude webcam model, she says coolly: 'He's a 5-foot-7 depressed novelist who's never been published — he couldn't do better.' Lucy likens her job to being a mortician or life insurance broker. She can reduce someone to a few simple stats: height, weight, education, parentage and bank balance. And you should hear the terrible things she says about herself. 'If anything, I have a negative dowry,' Lucy admits, insisting that she has zero intention to wed herself unless the groom is very rich. But she's also a marriage-minded mercenary who can pitch one potential client on soppy platitudes about till death do you part, and immediately pivot to assuring a bride that it's just a business deal. We're infatuated with this minx. So are two suitors from opposite sides of the tracks: Harry (Pedro Pascal), a private equity Prince Charming, and John (Chris Evans), a cash-strapped actor and cater-waiter whom Lucy already dumped for being poor. The way Song phrases their breakup is insightful: Hating his poverty makes Lucy hate herself. Meanwhile, when Harry invites Lucy up for a nightcap, she kisses him with her eyes open so she can appraise his $12-million loft. Will Lucy choose either man or neither? Once again, Song uses a love triangle plot to explore her ideas about self-actualization. 'Past Lives,' her lightly autobiographical breakthrough, tasked a writer to choose between her South Korean childhood beau and her hapless and less successful American husband — that is, to decide whether to keep chasing youthful dreams or settle for adult reality. I liked chunks of the film, but it rankled me that she framed the spouse as such a consolation-prize loser to make her heroine come off as sacrificial. Let her be selfish; it's more interesting. Here, Lucy is weighing comfort versus struggle. For good measure, Song has also saddled Evans with the worst haircut and scruff of his career. But tilt 'Materialists' at an angle and it's the same film as 'Past Lives,' only bolder and funnier. Really, Song wants to know whether a sensible girl can justify shackling herself to a broke creative. Song doesn't merely fold money into the mix. She's made it so intrinsic to her plot, for so many believable reasons, that it's also the icing and the cherry on the wedding cake. The script lets Lucy say and do all the crass things that usually belong to the rom-com villainess — the shallow snob who is supposed to lose out to a sweeter heroine — telling Harry that her favorite thing about him is how confidentially he picks up the check. (I gasped to see her walk out of a bar, tactlessly ordering him to cover the tab.) Nearly every line in the film's ferociously hilarious first hour is like Jane Austen reborn as a shock jock, until Song runs out of material and starts repeating herself. Love should be simple, 'Materialists' believes. It opens (and closes) with an ideal couple: two cave people who pledge their commitment with a fistful of daisies. Unknown millennia later, you'll spot dried daisies on Lucy's dresser, along with more exotic blossoms and puffs and powders that show how overly elaborate courtship has become. Those primitive sweethearts couldn't imagine the need for a shepherd to steer every step of their relationship. What are they, troglodytes? Well, Lucy's 21st century clients are. The requirements they foist on her are superficial and soul-crushing (and the bit players who deliver them are hilarious). New York City, with its high concentration of Wall Street finance bros, is a perfect setting to caricature people who score their dates on a spreadsheet. No wonder Lucy eventually snaps and spits out a venomous monologue straight to the camera. (The cinematographer Shabier Kirchner knows when to hold still and when to sashay around a room.) Even Lucy's favorite customer, Sophie (Zoe Winters), isn't that noble. Upon learning her last match isn't interested, she hisses, 'He's balding!' Lucy tries to mark up her clients' value to each other, next selling Sophie on a strapping 5-foot-11 bachelor while leaving out that her personal assessment of him is that he's charmless and boring. She maintains that opposites don't attract. Harry counters that she might be comparing the wrong data points. Yes, she's poor and he's rich, but they're both hustlers — one way he flirts is telling Lucy he sees potential in her intangibles. It's impossible not to be won over by the way Pascal gives Lucy a tiny smile as he kisses her knuckles. For balance, there's also a scene where Lucy and John stand so close to each other without touching that their chemistry is suffocating. A friend recently gave me a book of the first-ever newspaper advice columns from the 1690s. One questioner asked, 'Are most marriages in this age made for money?' The response was curt: 'Both in this age and in all others.' Fair enough, but in our age, it's refreshing to hear someone admit it. Which makes it a shame when Song feels compelled to slap on a happy ending that you simply don't think she believes. Two films into her career, she still writes scenes better than full scripts. For the sake of one great moment, she'll ask us to forget all the other ones it obliterates. Here, she literally follows up an argument about the impossibility of finding parking in Manhattan by cutting to a shot of the same people in the same car magically pulling up to a spot in front of Lucy's apartment. That's a silly example, but a more pointed one would give away the plot. The final stretch is so absurd that I turned into a jilted lover who kept score of every minor sin to vindicate why the film had broken my trust. I even got ticked off at the clothes Lucy packs for a trip to Iceland. Maybe on her third film, Song will tell us what she really thinks for the full running time. I respect how she writes women who fear that their hearts run too cold to ever feel truly fulfilled. As Pascal's Harry might say, her blunt and brutal parts have a special appeal. Exiting the film, I had the same surge of feeling I did after 'Past Lives.' I wanted to drag Song straight to a couple's therapist and say: I want to commit, but she cheats.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Diddy trial recap: Jane says seeing photos of Sean Combs with Yung Miami was 'very hurtful'
This page reflects the news from Sean "Diddy" Combs' trial on Wednesday, June 11. For the latest updates from Diddy's trial, read USA TODAY's live coverage for Thursday, June 12. This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing. Attorneys for Sean "Diddy" Combs returned to the courtroom June 11 to elicit testimony from his ex-lover, "Jane," that indicates she'd freely participated in, and even encouraged, the sexual performances for Combs that she'd previously said made her feel "disgusted with myself." On the fifth day of testimony for Jane, who's testifying under a pseudonym, was again cross-examined by Combs' lawyer, Teny Geragos. Jane explained messages from the Grammy-winning rapper that appeared to give his then-girlfriend options when it came to their "hotel nights," or sexual performances Combs allegedly orchestrated between Jane and various sex workers. But Jane has repeatedly testified she didn't feel she had a choice but to do what she knew would make Combs happy if she wanted to keep their relationship alive. "I was just adapting to my circumstances and my environment," and adjusting to "the pressures of my lover," Jane told the court, responding to messages where she'd agreed to sex acts. "I was going along with something I really didn't feel I could say no to." Diddy on trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges. The online content creator, who previously said she still loves Combs to this day, admitted she also harbors negative feelings: "I resent him for all of it," she told Geragos. The testimony comes after Jane confirmed that when she moved homes in April 2023, Combs paid approximately $40,000 to cover rent and other costs. When Geragos asked Jane if she believed Combs would stop paying her rent, she alleged he used the payments as a control tactic. On June 11, the possibility of a shake-up within the 12-person jury arose as prosecutors reportedly asked Judge Arun Subramanian to oust one of the jurors. Combs, 55, was arrested in September and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty. Before jurors were dismissed for the day, the prosecution and defense discussed the upcoming schedule. Prosecutors expect to rest their case, or finish going through their witnesses, by Friday, June 20 – or June 18 at the earliest. The defense doesn't yet know how long their witnesses will take once it's their turn to present their case on Combs' behalf. As Geragos presented more texts between Jane and Combs from 2023, the witness was visibly emotional and started crying on the stand. "The feeling you are the reason for my child's joy" means more than she could explain, one of Jane's messages read. She'd added, "You are my friend, my lover, my boyfriend – even though you don't like that word – LOL but you are LOL." It was during the reading of this message that Jane began crying, with Geragos going on to read more of Jane's texts that expressed her affection for the music mogul. At one point, Geragos asked Jane whether Combs ever talked about his former longtime partner, Cassie Ventura Fine. Jane replied, "Here and there." Geragos then asked Jane whether she remembers Combs calling Ventura Fine "one of his greatest loves" and also writing Ventura Fine love letters while he was high. Jane replied "yes" to both questions. Jane mentioned that Gina and Combs "constantly had a lot of problems" – "a lot of public problems," she added – and that it caused Combs a lot of stress. Geragos asked, "'Hotel nights' really put him at peace?" Jane replied, "Yes." Geragos then asked, "That's part of why you did them with him? To bring him that peace?" "Yes, Jane replied. Discover WITNESS: Access our exclusive collection of true crime stories, podcasts, videos and more Reviewing a text exchange between Jane and Combs ahead of their 2023 "sobriety party" – a "hotel night" at L'Ermitage Beverly Hills that allegedly lasted 12 to 18 hours and involved having sex with three escorts – Geragos asked whether she'd agreed to do this. "Unfortunately, yes," Jane testified. Geragos replied, "You keep saying 'Unfortunately', but didn't you agree to it?" Jane clarified, "I resent him for knowing how much I loved him and knowing I couldn't say no to him." She added, "I resent him for all of it." Asked whether she regrets doing that freak-off, Jane said, 'I believe resent and regret lie in the same feelings.' Jane told the court she was jealous of Yung Miami, a rapper Combs started dating around the same time he was seeing Jane. She said Combs took Yung Miami on her "dream vacation" to Turks and Caicos, days after Jane had spent her birthday having an alleged freak-off. "I think after being made to have sex with three men on my birthday," it was "very hurtful" to see him taking a "beautiful" trip with another woman, Jane said. "I was extremely heartbroken." In a message Jane read aloud in court, she alleged she was forced to participate in the sexual performance. "I didn't wanna do all that on my birthday. I was tired and put on a good face," she said. Geragos continued to press Jane for testimony about the time she spent with Combs outside of the alleged freak-offs at "hotel nights." After the defense pulled up text threads in which Combs appeared to give Jane a choice of escorts – or ask whether she even wanted to have a "hotel night" – Jane indicated her actions were still not entirely voluntary. "I was just adapting to my circumstances and my environment," and adjusting to "the pressures of my lover," Jane said. "I was going along with something I really didn't feel I could say no to." When reminded by Geragos that Combs had gifted her a bracelet and necklace from the luxury brand Van Cleef & Arpels for her 2023 birthday in Miami, Jane claimed she'd do things to earn Combs' favor. "I'm receiving my gift, I've taken a pill and I'm waiting for the entertainer," Jane said. "Any type of affection at this point in my life that I get from Sean, I welcome with open arms." Jane testified that she tried to take their relationship outside of alleged escapades with escorts. In 2023, during their stop in Miami for a make-up birthday trip for Jane, she recalled Combs made a dinner reservation at the Japanese restaurant Nobu. It was "conveniently" downstairs from the room where they were staying. "I asked if he can please romance me outside of hotel rooms," Jane said on the stand. She asked him to consider other swanky restaurants like Carbone or Papi Steak, but he insisted on Nobu. "Papi Steak is a good restaurant, right?" Geragos asked. "I wouldn't know," Jane said flatly. "I'm sure it is." Reports have emerged that the prosecution is moving to have a juror removed. Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey told Judge Arun Subramanian there "appeared to be a lack of candor with the court" from Juror No. 6, according to CNN and NBC News. Alexandra Shapiro from Combs' team reportedly accused the prosecution of trying to get a Black juror dismissed. Both sides are expected to file letters detailing their respective arguments. The issue was first brought to the judge's attention while court was in session on June 10. BET Awards host Kevin Hart alluded to the music mogul during his opening monologue as he joked about why the show was happening on a Monday night. Hart called for "no afterparties" on a work night and said those are were things get "slippery, at them god damn afterparties." After dropping the reference to Combs' propensity for baby oil, Hart added, "We're learning a lot about people, ain't we?" As Combs' lawyers have questioned Jane in recent days, their cross-examination has been markedly different from Mia's cross-examination, even borderline friendly. Mia was the first woman who testified using a pseudonym in Combs' trial and also alleged sweeping abuse. To note, Jane met with Combs' attorneys prior to the trial starting, as recently as April. However, Jane's testimony did turn sharp at one point, when she shared she felt Combs gave other women more gifts and quality time during their relationships. Combs' lawyer, Geragos, asked Jane how much a purse from the luxury brand Bottega Veneta costs – an apparent reference to the thousands of dollars Combs gave Jane during their relationship – and Jane shot back "How much does my body cost?" 50 Cent is looking to give President Donald Trump his two cents about Combs. In an Instagram post on May 30, the "In da Club" emcee said he would reach out to Trump after the president said he would "look at the facts" in Combs' case, suggesting a pardon could be on the table. The rapper shared a clip of the president's comments in his post and wrote that Combs "said some really bad things about Trump," adding that he will "reach out so he knows how I feel about this guy." A team of experienced lawyers is helping Combs defend himself against sex crimes charges. Nicole Westmoreland of Westmoreland Law LLC, filed a notice of attorney appearance with the court last month. Combs' defense team was already being led by attorneys Marc Agnifilo and Geragos. Agnifilo is a founding partner at Agnifilo Intrater and, according to the firm's website, has tried more than 200 cases in his 30-year career. He is a former Manhattan Assistant District Attorney. Geragos is also a founding partner at Agnifilo Intrater and is "particularly experienced in defending and investigating allegations of sexual misconduct," according to the firm's website. Despite videos circulating online, which appear to show artificially generated court sketches of Eddie Murphy testifying at the Combs trial, the actor hasn't been in the courtroom and isn't expected to be called as a witness. While a specter of celebrity hangs heavy over the proceedings, many of the big names roped in have merely been name-drops from the stand by lesser-known witnesses from Combs' inner circle. The only true "celebrities" to testify thus far have been Casandra "Cassie" Ventura Fine and Kid Cudi. More: Who is 'Jane'? Witness faces battle for anonymity in Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial You may have seen major celebs like Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio named during Combs' trial. But the A-list actors aren't accused of anything − they've only been mentioned in the background of events Combs attended. For example, Mia alleged that she witnessed a 2012 discussion between Combs and Ventura Fine escalate at the premiere of a Pitt film during the Cannes Film Festival in France. She claimed she saw Combs grit his teeth while digging his nails into Ventura Fine's arm, and he eventually insisted that Ventura Fine leave. Mia also referenced a high-stakes poker game between Combs and DiCaprio in texts she sent him around 2020. In one message, she wrote that Combs said, while cursing: "That 'Titanic' (guy) doesn't know (anything). He won $10,000, I won $650,000." During cross-examination on June 10, Combs' lawyers asked Jane about times she willingly participated in hotel nights and other alleged sexual performances. In one text exchange, Jane offered up her house for a "freak off" because she wanted to "spend time with my favorite person." In response, Combs offered for him and Paul, an escort, to "stop by."On the stand, Jane said she wanted alone time with Combs, but "that's the only option I was given. I wanted to see my lover, so I was accepting that." More: Britney Spears, Michael B. Jordan, Rihanna: All the celebs mentioned during the Diddy trial Jane previously testified that she recruited sex worker Sly Williams to join their alleged hotel nights after watching him in adult films. During the June 10 hearing, she explained that she and Combs watched Williams on a pornography site in October 2021. When Jane messaged Williams, Combs was "surprised and really happy because he had never had a girl pick the guy before," she said. Jane also found another sex worker named Anton through the same site. She alleged Williams later threatened to sell a tape of the two of them having sex and extorted her not to release it. Jane said Combs was "livid" and told her to call the police, but she didn't out of fear. On June 10, Jane said she, Combs and one of the escorts they allegedly hired used the nickname "trifecta" when they had sex. Jane claimed she was Kobe Bryant; Paul, the entertainer, was Shaquille O'Neal; and Combs was Michael Jordan. Jane said she frequently called Paul, the escort, her "boyfriend" and called Paul and Combs her "boys." While being cross-examined on June 10, Jane said she became worried Combs was struggling with substance use early in their relationship while they were on a trip to Turks and Caicos. She said Combs' eyes were jaundiced, his gums were gray from alleged drug use and his hands were shaking from what she believed was alcohol withdrawal. Jane said she suggested they go to Thailand, where there was a facility with a 30-day program, to which Combs allegedly responded, "What the hell, you think I need rehab?" "I felt that I encountered somebody that was overdoing the partying," Jane said, adding she would now call Combs a drug addict. She said she wanted "him to get back to his natural form and natural state." Combs' attorneys have once again had their push for a mistrial in his sex-crimes case denied. The embattled music mogul's legal team's latest request for a mistrial has been rejected by Judge Arun Subramanian. Combs' lawyers had renewed a motion for a mistrial due to alleged prosecutorial misconduct in a letter to the judge dated June 7. Combs' lawyers' latest push for a mistrial centered around testimony from Bryana "Bana" Bongolan, a friend of Ventura Fine. Bongolan testified about an incident where Combs allegedly held her up on a balcony in Ventura Fine's Los Angeles apartment in September 2016. Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling case that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry. He was arrested in September 2024 and later charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. The rapper has pleaded not guilty to the five counts against him. Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity. Using RICO law, which is typically aimed at targeting multi-person criminal organizations, prosecutors allege that Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in "freak offs" — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors allege they have video of. The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings. USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom. Sign up for our newsletter for more updates. Contributing: USA TODAY staff If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at (4673) and and en Español If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or text "START" to 88788. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Diddy trial recap: Jane testifies he forced her to have sex with 3 men
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Diddy trial live updates: Jane says she was sick over 2016 video of Diddy attacking Cassie
This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing. Sean "Diddy" Combs' ex-girlfriend "Jane," who has pulls back the curtain on their allegedly volatile sexual relationship, is set to conclude her time on the stand in the high-profile criminal trial. The woman, who is testifying under a pseudonym in the sweeping federal sex-crimes case, returned to Manhattan court on June 12 to wrap up cross-examination. Attorneys for Combs have attempted to elicit testimony that indicates she freely participated in, and even encouraged, the sexual performances she took part in during her on-and-off romance with Combs. During cross-examination on June 11, Jane was asked to explain messages from the Grammy-winning rapper that appeared to give his then-girlfriend options when it came to their "hotel nights," or sexual encounters Combs allegedly orchestrated between Jane and various sex workers. "I was just adapting to my circumstances and my environment," and adjusting to "the pressures of my lover," Jane told the court, responding to messages where she'd agreed to sex acts. "I was going along with something I really didn't feel I could say no to." The online content creator, who previously said she still loves Combs to this day, admitted she also harbors negative feelings: "I resent him for all of it," she told Combs' attorney Teny Geragos. Combs, 55, was arrested in September and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty. Diddy on trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges. After CNN published surveillance footage of Combs beating his then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura Fine at a Los Angeles hotel, Jane said she was lost her appetite and was sick. She said Combs had never laid a hand on her at that point in their relationship. 'That was just not the man that you knew?' Geragos asked. 'Right,' Jane friends told her to break up with him amid the public outcry over the video, but Jane said she wanted to support Combs at the time. 'You felt this was another example of how complicated he was?' Geragos said.'Like in his past?' Jane answered. 'Yes.' In the final hours of Jane's cross-examination, Combs' lawyers asked the anonymous witness about her relationship with the rapper after Ventura Fine filed a bombshell 2023 lawsuit accusing him of sweeping abuse. Geragos said Jane previously found Combs 'egotistical and cold,' but 'you felt much more love from him' after the lawsuit. 'You saw a positive change from him and that he could be much more apologetic.' He 'listened better,' 'spent more time at the house' and 'didn't disappear for days.' Jane agreed with all of these sentiments, responding 'yes' and 'right' to Geragos' comments. Geragos added that after Cassie's lawsuit, Combs changed the terminology of how he spoke about his relationship with Jane. While he used to say he was 'single and polyamorous,' he started saying 'we're in a relationship and you're my girlfriend.' Combs was 'more loving and made it seem more like a relationship.' Overall, 'I felt that I could assert myself a little bit more,' Jane said on the stand. 'I felt we had some growth in our relationship.' Jane finally took the stand on June 12 after a lengthy delay. In the morning, Judge Arun Subramanian the defense, prosecution and Jane's lawyer into his chambers for a private meeting that lasted nearly two hours. Afterward, Combs' lawyer Marc Agnifolo addressed the court in cryptic terms, alluding to an event that happened "behind closed doors" in a hotel room in January 2024. 'Many other people were there,' he said, adding that while the defense had agreed to the use of a pseudonym for Jane, they objected to some other names and events not being made 'fully public.' "Other people might have information about the event," Agnifolo said. "The public can do what it does in all issues of importance." It's not clear what Agnifilo meant, but remember that the public has provided some evidence in Combs' trial. For example, one of Combs' former assistants, who testified using the pseudonym Mia, made a birthday video for him, and it was used in her cross-examination. The defense may therefore, be trying to call on the public to potentially corroborate whatever this mystery event is. Mia, who worked for Combs from 2009 to 2017, testified on May 29 that he sexually assaulted her on "more than one" occasion. The former assistant alleged the first time Combs assaulted her was at the Plaza Hotel in New York City when they were celebrating his 40th birthday in 2009. Mia recalled having two shots that were affecting her much more than alcohol typically impacted her memory and balance. She said Combs approached her in a penthouse suite and sexually assaulted her, and she woke up sitting on a chair in the morning. In later years, Combs allegedly assaulted her several additional times, including at his Los Angeles home and on a private plane. Federal prosecutors on June 5 referred to Combs' former staffer Kristina Khorram as "an agent and co-conspirator" of Combs. That doesn't mean she's about to face charges: Instead, it indicates she's likely reached an agreement with prosecutors and will testify. Combs previously called Khorram his "right hand" in business ventures. The designation also comes as prosecutors submitted a text from Ventura Fine to Khorram about the alleged balcony incident in which Combs attacked Bongolan. The message read Combs "went at Bana, choked her, dangled her feet off the balcony. This is crazy. I have to get away." In emotional testimony during the first week of trial, Combs' ex-girlfriend Ventura Fine told jurors Combs physically and emotionally abused her throughout their tumultuous 11-year relationship and raped her shortly after they broke up for good. Ventura Fine, a pop and R&B singer, said she participated in alleged drug-fueled freak offs because she feared Combs would release sex tapes of her if she didn't, but also because she loved him. Friends and associates of Combs and Ventura have testified about Combs' alleged abuse, describing Combs as a domineering figure who relied on bodyguards and associates to enable his alleged crimes and keep victims in line. A team of experienced lawyers is helping Combs defend himself against sex crimes charges. Nicole Westmoreland of Westmoreland Law LLC, filed a notice of attorney appearance with the court last month. Combs' defense team was already being led by attorneys Marc Agnifilo and Geragos. Agnifilo is a founding partner at Agnifilo Intrater and, according to the firm's website, has tried more than 200 cases in his 30-year career. He is a former Manhattan Assistant District Attorney. Geragos is also a founding partner at Agnifilo Intrater and is "particularly experienced in defending and investigating allegations of sexual misconduct," according to the firm's website. Reports have emerged that the prosecution is moving to have a juror removed. Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey told Judge Arun Subramanian there "appeared to be a lack of candor with the court" from Juror No. 6, according to CNN and NBC News. Alexandra Shapiro from Combs' team reportedly accused the prosecution of trying to get a Black juror dismissed. Both sides are expected to file letters detailing their respective arguments. The issue was first brought to the judge's attention while court was in session on June 10. Diddy has seven children, six of whom are biological. Diddy had his first biological son, Justin Combs, with fashion designer and stylist Misa Hylton. Diddy adopted Quincy Brown, the son of ex-girlfriend and model Kimberly Porter, who died in 2018 after a battle with pneumonia. The former couple also shared three other children: son Christian "King" Combs and twin daughters D'Lila and Jessie Combs. Diddy has another daughter, Chance Combs, whom he shares with businesswoman Sarah Chapman. His seventh and last child, daughter Love Sean Combs, was born in October 2022 with model and cybersecurity specialist Dana Tran. As Geragos presented more texts between Jane and Combs from 2023 during the June 11 hearing, the witness was visibly emotional and started crying on the stand. "The feeling you are the reason for my child's joy" means more than she could explain, one of Jane's messages read. She'd added, "You are my friend, my lover, my boyfriend — even though you don't like that word — LOL but you are LOL." It was during the reading of this message that Jane began crying, with Geragos going on to read more of Jane's texts that expressed her affection for the music mogul. Discover WITNESS: Access our exclusive collection of true crime stories, podcasts, videos and more Reviewing a text exchange between Jane and Combs ahead of their 2023 "sobriety party" — a "hotel night" at L'Ermitage Beverly Hills that allegedly lasted 12 to 18 hours and involved having sex with three escorts — Geragos asked whether she'd agreed to do this. "Unfortunately, yes," Jane testified. Geragos replied, "You keep saying 'Unfortunately', but didn't you agree to it?" to which Jane clarified, "I resent him for knowing how much I loved him and knowing I couldn't say no to him." Asked whether she regrets doing that freak off, Jane said, "I believe resent and regret lie in the same feelings." Jane told the court she was jealous of Yung Miami, a rapper Combs started dating around the same time he was seeing Jane. She said Combs took Yung Miami on her "dream vacation" to Turks and Caicos, days after Jane had spent her birthday having an alleged "freak off." "I think after being made to have sex with three men on my birthday," it was "very hurtful" to see him taking a "beautiful" trip with another woman, Jane said. "I was extremely heartbroken." In a message Jane read aloud in court, she alleged she was forced to participate in the sexual performance. "I didn't wanna do all that on my birthday. I was tired and put on a good face," she said. Jane previously testified that she recruited sex worker Sly Williams to join their alleged hotel nights after watching him in adult films. During the June 10 hearing, she explained that she and Combs watched Williams on a pornography site in October 2021. When Jane messaged Williams, Combs was "surprised and really happy because he had never had a girl pick the guy before," she said. Jane also found another sex worker named Anton through the same site. She alleged Williams later threatened to sell a tape of the two of them having sex and extorted her not to release it. Jane said Combs was "livid" and told her to call the police, but she didn't out of fear. On June 10, Jane said she, Combs and one of the escorts they allegedly hired used the nickname "trifecta" when they had sex. Jane claimed she was Kobe Bryant; Paul, the entertainer, was Shaquille O'Neal; and Combs was Michael Jordan. Jane said she frequently called Paul, the escort, her "boyfriend" and called Paul and Combs her "boys." Despite videos circulating online, which appear to show artificially generated court sketches of Eddie Murphy testifying at the Combs trial, the actor hasn't been in the courtroom and isn't expected to be called as a witness. While a specter of celebrity hangs heavy over the proceedings, many of the big names roped in have merely been name-drops from the standby lesser-known witnesses from Combs' inner circle. The only true "celebrities" to testify thus far have been Ventura Fine and Kid Cudi. Ventura Fine alleged that Combs physically, sexually and psychologically abused her for years of their relationship. Kid Cudi, whose real name is Scott Mescudi, old the court that Combs allegedly broke into his home and locked his dog in a bathroom when he found out his fellow rapper was dating Ventura Fine. He also alleged Combs was behind an explosion that destroyed his car around the same time. You may have seen major celebs like Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio named during Combs' trial. But the A-list actors aren't accused of anything — they've only been mentioned in the background of events Combs attended. For example, trial witness "Mia" alleged that she witnessed a 2012 discussion between Combs and Ventura Fine escalate at the premiere of a Pitt film during the Cannes Film Festival in France. She claimed she saw Combs grit his teeth while digging his nails into Ventura Fine's arm, and he eventually insisted that Ventura Fine leave. Mia also referenced a high-stakes poker game between Combs and DiCaprio in texts she sent him around 2020. In one message, she wrote that Combs said, while cursing: "That 'Titanic' (guy) doesn't know (anything). He won $10,000, I won $650,000." BET Awards host Kevin Hart alluded to the music mogul during his opening monologue as he joked about why the show was happening on a Monday night. Hart called for "no afterparties" on a work night and said those are were things get "slippery, at them god damn afterparties." After dropping the reference to Combs' propensity for baby oil, Hart added, "We're learning a lot about people, ain't we?" 50 Cent is looking to give President Donald Trump his two cents about Combs. In an Instagram post on May 30, the "In da Club" emcee said he would reach out to Trump after the president said he would "look at the facts" in Combs' case, suggesting a pardon could be on the table. The rapper shared a clip of the president's comments in his post and wrote that Combs "said some really bad things about Trump," adding that he will "reach out so he knows how I feel about this guy." Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling case that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry. He was arrested in September 2024 and later charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. The rapper has pleaded not guilty to the five counts against him. Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity. Using RICO law, which is typically aimed at targeting multi-person criminal organizations, prosecutors allege that Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in "freak offs" — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors allege they have video of. The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings. USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom. Sign up for our newsletter for more updates. Contributing: USA TODAY staff If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at (4673) and and en Español If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or text "START" to 88788. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Diddy trial live updates: Jane sick over video of Diddy beating Cassie