
Pop Culture Facts Might Not Know And Are Surprising
"...Baby One More Time" has the somewhat confusing "Hit me, baby, one more time" lyrics. Well, that was actually a mistake. The Swedish songwriters of the song, who didn't really speak English well, Max Martin and Rami Yacoub, thought that "hit" was brand new American slang for "call" (likely confusing "hit" with the phrase "hit me up"). So, Britney is actually singing about begging her ex-boyfriend to call her on the phone.
Martin and Yacoub wrote the song for TLC (who famously turned it down) because they were inspired by the group's single "Baby-Baby-Baby."
Tickle Me Elmo was almost Tickle Me Taz — as in the Tasmanian Devil from Looney Tunes. The creators of Tickle Me Elmo, Greg Hyman and Ron Dubren, initially created a chimp that laughed as a prototype toy for Tyco, and thought it would make a great Elmo toy. Tyco liked the idea of the toy. However, they didn't have the rights to make Sesame Street plush toys (only plastic toys), but they did have the rights to make Looney Tunes plush toys, and thought Taz would work great for it.
Six months later, while Tickle Me Taz was still in development, Tyco got the rights to create Sesame Street plush toys, and they pitched Tickle Me Elmo as a toy they could create if they had the rights.
The first handbag famously named after a celebrity is the Hermès "Kelly" bag, inspired by Grace Kelly. In the 1950s, she was photographed using a Hermès Sac à Dépêches (a bag first introduced in the 1930s) to discreetly hide her baby bump, and the image became iconic. Public demand for the style grew, and in 1977, Hermès officially renamed it the "Kelly" in her honor.
Kelly was reportedly first introduced to the bag by costume designer Edith Head, who styled her with Hermès accessories, including the bag, for the film To Catch A Thief. It's considered the original celebrity-named designer bag that paved the way for others like the Birkin, the Jackie, and the Diana.
Our use of the phrase "flying saucers" started on June 24, 1947, after Kenneth Arnold, an amateur pilot from Idaho, saw nine lit-up "circular-type" objects flying in formation near Mount Rainier, Washington. When Arnold (center) landed, he reported what he saw, calculating that they were flying at around 1,700 mph and that they moved like "a saucer if you skip it across water." News of the sighting spread quickly, and when the newspapers picked up the story, they accidentally described them as "flying saucers."
The sighting over Mount Rainier — which happened a couple of weeks before the supposed Roswell crash — started a rash of alleged sightings across the US and was the most well-known UFO sighting of the 1940s.
Steve Jobs wanted to call the iMac MacMan. In fact, according to Ken Segall, who was the creative director at Apple's ad agency, TBWA\Chiat\Day, and came up with the name iMac, Jobs really liked the name MacMan and was "fixated" on it. Jobs did approach the agency just to see if they had any better suggestions, saying, "I have a name that I really like, we're going to go with it, but if you guys can do better we need you to do better within the next two weeks."
Segall said that a week later, they met with Jobs and presented him with five names, saving iMac for last because he thought "it was the killer name." However, Jobs hated the name iMac, too. A week later, Segall presented Jobs with three more names and also brought up that he still liked iMac as a name. Jobs hated the three new names, but said about iMac, "I don't hate it this week, but I don't like it either, so now you've got two days." Segall said that the next day, a friend at Apple called him to tell him Jobs had used iMac on one of the models and that it was getting good reactions. The rest was history.
In 2008, at its peak, Apple sold over 54 million iPods just that year alone. This accounted for around 40% of Apple's revenue. Sales of iPods didn't see a dramatic drop until 2011, when they dropped to 42 million. By 2014, sales had dropped to just slightly above 14 million.
Though it had been released in 2001, it truly wouldn't dominate the market until Apple launched the iTunes Music Store in 2003.
The iPhone was not the first phone with a capacitive touch-screen. It was actually a Prada (yes, as in the design house Prada) phone released in collaboration with LG. The phone was released in January 2007, and, in fact, a few days before Steve Jobs would announce the iPhone.
As this GQ article points out, designers releasing cell phones were a thing in the '00s — most notably Kimora Lee Simmons's Baby Phat phone with Motorola, and Versace's gold flip phone with Nokia.
Flappers wearing fringe dresses in the 1920s is a bit of a myth. Fringe wasn't very common, and most dresses would have been embellished with beadwork or embroidery. The reason we associate fringe with flapper dresses is that in the 1950s, Hollywood started making period movies set in the '20s, and studio costume designers didn't go for period accuracy because, for audiences at that time, real 1920s clothing would have appeared drab and too old-fashioned. So, costume designers for films like Singin' in the Rain added fringe to dresses; they also played with silhouettes (making dresses shorter and tighter) and used colors that would not have been used in the '20s.
The tradition of stars putting their handprints and footprints in front of the Chinese Theater in Hollywood was sort of a happy accident. As the story goes, in 1927, actor Norma Talmadge accompanied the theater's owner, Sid Grauman, to see how the construction was progressing when she accidentally stepped in wet cement. As a 1958 LA Times article recounted, "When Grauman saw this, it gave him the idea of creating his own special hall of fame."
The first stars to put their handprints in front of the theater were Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks (seen above with Grauman standing behind them).
Big, glitzy, star-studded Hollywood premieres are almost as old as Hollywood itself. The very first one was for 1922's Robin Hood, starring Douglas Fairbanks, and was held at the Egyptian Theatre. Sid Grauman, who also owned the Egyptian, had the idea to put together the huge premiere.
When YouTube originally launched in 2005, it was meant to be a video dating site. The founders of it even had a slogan for it: "Tune in, hook up."
YouTube's founders — Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim — thought that people would be really interested in video dating. They imagined people uploading videos of themselves giving bio information and what they were looking for. However, they couldn't get anyone to upload dating videos (even after putting up ads on Craigslist that they would pay women $20 to upload one), so they decided to open it to all types of videos.
The term "fast fashion" was first coined in 1989 by the New York Times when the writer of an article about the opening of the first Zara store in New York was describing what Zara's business model was like.
Walt Disney almost built his second theme park in St. Louis. In the early '60s, the city asked Walt to create a historic film about St. Louis for a 360-degree theater they were planning to build. However, Walt thought the city would be the perfect place to build a theme park, though this one would be a very large, multi-story indoor park called Riverfront Square. While it would've featured some classic Disneyland attractions like Peter Pan and Snow White, it also would have had attractions not yet built for the Anaheim park, like Pirates of the Caribbean. Reportedly, the deal fell apart in 1965 over the cost and how much the city (already financially drained from constructing The Gateway Arch and Busch Stadium) would have to put in for the park's construction.
Walt, by then, was also already interested in building Disney World in Florida.
When CDs first came out, manufacturers knew that people would be slow to adopt them. They were expensive, and most people were unlikely to replace decades worth of vinyl collections. So instead, they decided to market it toward classical-music lovers who would be more affluent and care about sound quality.
Dolly Parton refused to let Elvis Presley record a cover of "I Will Always Love You" because his team demanded half the publishing rights in exchange for him doing it. This was a common practice for songs Elvis recorded. Dolly's friends told her she was being silly for passing up the chance to have the legendary singer sing one of her songs, but she knew the song was too personal and valuable to give up ownership. Of course, her decision, though difficult, proved to be very smart after Whitney Houston's 1992 version became a massive, massive hit. Dolly has since said she was thrilled at the idea of Elvis singing it and cried when turning him down, but never regretted protecting her work.
Contrary to popular belief, Michael Jackson did not own the rights to all the Beatles' songs. It's a bit complicated, but he purchased ATV Music Publishing in 1985, which controlled about 250 Beatles songs. However, purchasing the music publisher did not grant Jackson ownership of the songs themselves; he owned only the publishing rights, which entitled him to a share of income. The Beatles' primary songwriters, Paul McCartney and John Lennon's estate, continued to receive their full 50% songwriter royalties on all Lennon/McCartney compositions. Additionally, ATV did not own the rights to songs written by George Harrison, because his songwriting contract with Northern Songs (which was later bought by ATV) expired in 1968.
In case you were wondering why the Beatles gave up their music publishing rights, here's why: They were advised to put their music royalties into a public company (which they created in 1963 and was music publisher Northern Songs) because they were losing about 90% of their income to taxes — this way, they would make their earnings on capital gains rather than income and would be taxed at a lower rate. They then lost control of it when music publisher and Northern Songs co-founder Dick James and Charles Silver (the company's chairman), sold their shares of the company to ATV in 1969.
And lastly, a Twitter user invented the hashtag. It was created by Chris Messina, a tech product designer who ran an internet consulting company. Messina was an early adopter of Twitter and found it frustrating that you could not filter tweets by subject. He had the idea that if people put the hashtag with a word or phrase that it would "create an instant channel that anybody can join and participate in." Messina even pitched the idea to Twitter in person at their offices, but it wasn't a priority for them to develop. However, he kept promoting their use (even if they didn't work), and other users also began to use them organically, especially during major events. Seeing its popularity, Twitter integrated hashtag hyperlinking in 2009 — it would then become standard on all social media platforms.
Messina left Twitter in 2023 over Elon Musk's handling of blue check verifications.
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Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
‘King of the Hill' co-creator says Hollywood often treats southerners ‘as a sort of caricature'
During an interview with Texas Monthly on Monday, "King of the Hill" co-creators Mike Judge and Greg Daniels explained how they aimed to portray their Southern characters with 'dignity,' rather than relying on the typical caricature of Southern Americans. Judge, who grew up in New Mexico, right next door to Texas, explained how he and Daniels wished to break from the stereotypical portrayal of Southerners when they created "King of the Hill" back in 1997. "From the beginning, Greg and I wanted to like these characters. We're on their side. A lot of Hollywood treats anyone with a Southern accent as a sort of caricature. We were real conscious of treating these characters with dignity," he told the outlet. Daniels noted that people tend to feel "seen" when creators actually do their research on the group of people they are portraying in their shows, and accurately depict the subtle nuances of their lives. When Daniels began his work on another hit television show, "The Office," he was met with skepticism from the people of Scranton, Pennsylvania, where the show is based, fearing that the show would simply make fun of the blue-collar city and its residents. "People feel seen when you've done the research. I took that spirit into The Office," he noted. "The people of Scranton were worried in the beginning, because they were used to being made fun of. And I was like, 'No, I'm coming off of King of the Hill. We try to do stories that get it right.'" Saladin K. Patterson, the showrunner for the upcoming "King of the Hill" revival, recalled an interview with a voice actor from Singapore — who was also a huge fan of the show — and shared his thoughts on the creators' portrayal of Southerners. "We were interviewing a voice actor who grew up in Singapore and was a big fan of 'King of the Hill,' and he said it was one of the few American shows that the Singapore government would let them watch," he explained. "We asked him, 'Did that give you a particular view of Southern America?' And he was like, 'We didn't know they were Southern. We just thought they were American.' To people outside of the country, King of the Hill actually represents America." With many of the TV shows in the late 90s and early 2000s casting fathers as clueless and out of the loop, the "King of the Hill" creators decided to take their TV dad, Hank Hill, in a different direction. "Certainly when we were doing it, every TV dad was the fat dummy. And we were like, 'Let's jump back to 'Father Knows Best,'" Daniels recalled. This philosophy wasn't just applied to the show's father figure, it was also applied to the show's mother, Peggy Hill, according to Judge. "It seemed a little rebellious, and then when [voice actor Kathy Najimy] started playing Peggy in a certain way, it became fun to have her be wrong sometimes, and go a little crazy," he said. "King of the Hill" ran from 1997 to 2010 and is being revived with a new season in August.


Time Business News
2 hours ago
- Time Business News
How to Style a Spider in 2025 and Where to Buy Yours
You are seeing it everywhere. From Instagram scrolls to late-night pop-ups downtown, Spider clothing is crawling its way into closets across the States. But how do you wear it? More importantly, where do you even buy it without falling into fake traps? This guide breaks it all down. From fit checks to colour drops, we are showing you how Spider fits into the USA streetwear game in 2025. Streetwear changes every few years, but now and then, a brand hits different. Spider is not about loud hype. It is about showing up bold, owning space, and blending streetwear with design that tells a story. In American fashion history, we have seen this before, like when Supreme came through in the early 2000s or when A Bathing Ape made camo mainstream. Spider is the new wave. And this time, it is homegrown and heat-packed. The Spider logo is not just a visual, is a vibe. That stretched spider emblem feels risky and raw. It often drops in reflective ink, glow-in-the-dark prints, or puff details on cotton fleece. From front-chest designs to full-back spins, it keeps things sharp. People instantly know when you walk by: that is Spider. Most collections keep the logo clean but big. Think hoodie centre chest or oversized on the back. Some come stitched; others are printed. Either way, it hits hard. The biggest flex in 2025? Colour combos. Spider keeps you guessing every season with fresh palettes. This year, the talk is all about: Grey and green Spider tracksuit (earthy tones, perfect for fall) (earthy tones, perfect for fall) Red Spider tracksuit (power play, city runner vibes) (power play, city runner vibes) Brown Spider tracksuit (minimalist street style) (minimalist street style) Spider pink tracksuit (bold, not soft—Miami-core) (bold, not soft—Miami-core) Spider hoodie grey (goes with everything, wear daily) (goes with everything, wear daily) Camo Spider pants (urban jungle energy) (urban jungle energy) Spider camo sweatpants (a streetwear essential) Colour choice is not just a look. It is the mood. One piece, and you are in the style lane. Spider usually runs true to size, but that depends on your style goal. Want it snug? Stick to your regular size. Want that oversized, runway-feel? Go one up. Hoodies and jackets? Thicker than average. Expect drop shoulders, kangaroo pockets, and length that hits below the waist. For tracksuits like the Atlanta Sp5der tracksuit, expect a wider leg and elastic ankles—easy to pair with high-top kicks or even slides. Hoodies : Oversized with front-and-back prints. Check the 555 555 hoodie or the official Spider hoodie lines for classics. Oversized with front-and-back prints. Check the or the lines for classics. Tracksuits: Famous pieces like the Sp5der tracksuit , Spider tracksuit red , and grey and green Spider tracksuit are hot drops. Some include zip-ups; others pullover fits. Famous pieces like the , , and are hot drops. Some include zip-ups; others pullover fits. Pants: Heavy cotton or fleece joggers . From tree Spider pants to camo Spider sweatpants , they balance comfort and edge. Heavy or fleece . From to , they balance comfort and edge. T-Shirts: Simple cuts. Some carry the logo big, others drop it subtly. Check for Spider t-shirts when the weather heats up. There have been whispers—and some drops—about Spider teaming with Atlanta creatives and underground rappers. One collection even dropped under the label Spider Atlanta tracksuit, pushing bold graphics with city codes. A rumoured mix with graffiti artists also sparked during the early spring line. The colours? Straight from street murals. Designs? Limited release. The message was clear: Spider is not just fashion. It is a movement. Year Brand Trends Popular Piece Streetwear Influence 2005 Bape Shark Hoodie Tokyo–NYC Fusion 2010 Supreme Box Logo Tee Skate-Influenced 2015 Off-White Diagonal Hoodie Luxe Street Crossover 2020 Fear of God Essentials Hoodie Athleisure Rise 2025 Spider 555 555 Hoodie Raw Identity We are now watching Spider take its seat at the table. No gimmicks. Just statement wear. Spider gear holds up if you treat it right. Always wash inside-out. Stick to cold water to protect dyes and print. Avoid tumble drying, hang dry to keep the fit intact. Especially for pieces like the sp5der tracksuit, you do not want heat messing up the webbing detail. Wash colours separately. Red bleeds. Pink fades. And metallic inks crack if you use bleach. Be smart. Air it out, fold neatly, and your Spider will last. You can search 'what is the official Spider hoodie website' but we already got you. It is linked directly on the Spider official Instagram bio. That leads to the Spider website, where you find new arrivals and newsletter links. Bookmark it. You do not want to miss the next Atlanta sp5der tracksuit launch. You do not need fake reviews. Real people talk. 'You feel the weight. This ain't fast fashion,' says Tre from Dallas, rocking his third official Spider hoodie. Tasha from Oakland says, 'My Spider hoodie grey is my go-to for travel. Gets compliments every time.' Another fan from Miami dropped this: 'It gives early Travis Scott, but more street than fashion week.' Keep your eyes peeled for: 20% off promos during Memorial Day Bundle deals on hoodies + pants Seasonal sale pages on the Spider official website Early access drops for email subscribers Free shipping for orders over $120 Follow the official store's newsletter to never miss a code. Let us be honest: Spider vs Supreme : Supreme is old guard. Spider is louder, newer, and more design-forward. vs : Supreme is old guard. Spider is louder, newer, and more design-forward. Spider vs Off-White : Off-White is higher price, often luxury-styled. Spider stays closer to the street. vs : Off-White is higher price, often luxury-styled. Spider stays closer to the street. Spider vs Fear of God Essentials: Essentials are clean and simple. Spider is graphic, edgy, and statement-heavy. If you want quiet fits, go with them. If you want people to stop and stare? Spider all day. You now know how to wear Spider. You know how to choose the right colours, how to care for your gear, where to buy legit items, and what people think about it. Remember, it is more than just putting on a tracksuit. It is about being bold without asking for attention. That is the vibe of Spider in 2025. What is the official Spider hoodie website? Visit the official Spider hoodie website or the Spider clothing official website for real drops. How often do they drop new colours? About every season, 4 times a year. Is the 555 555 hoodie limited? Yes. Limited runs. Once sold out, rarely restocked. Do Spider sizes run small or big? They run true to size, but go up one if you want a loose fit. Where is Spider based? USA roots. Heavy presence in Atlanta, NYC, and LA. Let your style speak. Let Spider be the voice. TIME BUSINESS NEWS
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Manny Jacinto Is Not Your Handsome Dope: 'I Love Proving People Wrong'
'Freakier Friday' co-star Manny Jacinto is the love interest Millennial moms need this summer. But his chiseled jawline is just one reason why. The shirt was a poly-blend boa constrictor—jet-black with tourniquets for sleeves. It was giving Danny Zuko from Grease! or Johnny Castle from Dirty Dancing … if either of those guys shopped in the children's section of Target. Manny Jacinto was worried it would send the wrong message. Sure, he was playing the DILF in a hotly-anticipated summer rom-com opposite Lindsay Lohan. But this was a family-friendly movie produced by Walt Disney Pictures. Surely, that company has some standards to uphold, no? So Jacinto asked Nisha Ganatra, the director of said film, Freakier Friday, if his costume for a scene in which his and Lohan's characters are taking a dancing lesson was inappropriate. She told him it was perfect. Jacinto may have questioned it, but that shirt could be a metaphor for his career: Hook the audience with cheekbones and chest muscles, then keep them there with charisma. Despite his bachelor's degree in civil engineering and his work as a competitive hip hop dancer (cards on the table: The Freakier Friday dance scene was Jacinto's brain child), the actor's breakout role was playing the ultimate Florida Man, Jason Mendoza, on the Kristen Bell-fronted NBC comedy The Good Place. This led to parts like the maybe-too-zen-to-be-believed Yao in Nine Perfect Strangers, Hulu's dismantling of the wellness industrial complex starring Nicole Kidman, and the mysterious Qimir in The Acolyte, the first female-centric Star Wars series for Disney+. Although he does do more macho work—all of his lines were famously cut from Top Gun: Maverick and he just wrapped the Old West comedy The Stalemate—Jacinto will happily concede that he owes his career to women-led stories. 'Women have been a huge champion for me. It's always been women who have been able to look past what I have done and see the potential of what I can do,' he says, name-checking Kidman, Ganatra, and The Acolyte's Leslye Headland. 'Thank God I get to do this during this day and age when there are so many women at the top … who see my potential and are not afraid to explore that.' By this point in his career, Jacinto knows both what's expected of him and how to still surprise us. 'I love proving people wrong,' he says. Freakier Friday hits theaters August 8 and is a long-awaited sequel to the 2003 Jamie Lee Curtis-Lindsay Lohan comedy Freaky Friday about the mother-daughter duo Tess and Anna who get stuck in each other's bodies. Jacinto will certainly win hearts as Eric Davies, the dashingly charming British chef and single dad, who is engaged to Lohan's Anna. Anna has her own teenager, and—the stakes needing to be ever higher in a sequel—the two girls along with Anna and Tess undergo a bizarre quadruple body swap right under Eric's nose. Jacinto is not British; the fake accent is part of his charm offensive. ('I apologize to all of the U.K. readers,' he quips.) And Jacinto admits that it was a bit of a gut punch that, at 37, he's hit the age at which he can believably be cast as the father of someone old enough to apply for a learner's permit. But he sells us on the idea that Eric is a guy for whom Anna would uproot her life and move herself and her child to another country. After years of playing the comic relief or interesting side character, Jacinto has convinced audiences (and casting directors) that he can be not just a leading man, but one who is confident enough in his own abilities to step aside and let the women get the laughs. 'I'm not gonna lie; I love dunking the ball,' Jacinto says. 'Getting the ball and getting to shoot and make people laugh … but another reason why this character appealed to me was just [to show that] I can be the heart of this story. I can be the straight man.' Sipping on an Arnold Palmer while reclining in an untucked blue button-down and baggy jeans, Jacinto seems relaxed but not aloof. He's attentive to my needs, insisting on buying my Topo Chico and moving my recorder closer to him when decibels rise in the bustling north Los Angeles coffee shop where we're meeting. But his cadence remains even; his voice staying below any octave that would draw attention to himself. 'It's wild that I get to do this. I never would have thought I'd play the love interest to Lindsay Lohan; I watched Lindsay Lohan as a kid,' he says with genuine awe. 'It's wild what you can do if you put your mind to it.' After The Good Place, Jacinto says he was offered roles similar to the adorable meathead he played in that comedy, but that the 'good looking dope thing—it's never comfortable for me.' He loves that Freakier Friday, which he describes as a celebration of Lohan's work in its predecessor as well as The Parent Trap (1998), lets him plumb other ranges of comedy. (Judging by the end-of-film outtakes, a lot of improv was involved.) Initially, Jacinto's role wasn't as central to the story, but it grew as the creatives realized what a gold mine they had in the actor. 'He is just one of those rare artists that can do this earnestness that you believe,' Ganatra, the director, tells me. 'He can do comedy and he can do drama and when I realized the breadth of his talent, we just kept asking him to do more and more and more.' Just as the first film kept Anna's incoming step-dad (Mark Harmon) in the dark, Jacinto's character is never made aware that his fiancée has swapped places with her daughter, though he does sense that there's something amiss. Even more complicated than Harmon's tight-rope walk is that Jacinto also had to play that he doesn't know his own daughter and his future mother-in-law have switched bodies, too. 'He does the perfect look away at the right moment, or look into their eyes in the right moment, where you see that he kind of knows something's wrong, but he's just trying to keep everyone happy,' Ganatra says. 'And I think he ends up stealing your heart at the end of the movie, because he is just trying so hard to buoy everybody up. Manny has a lot of that in him; he has a big, huge heart.' Now, if we're being fair, Jacinto isn't the only eye candy that Freakier Friday serves up to the Millennials in the audience. Chad Michael Murray, who played Anna's boyfriend Jake in the first film, is back for the sequel, too. And Ganatra also makes the most of his scenes, such as a slow-mo exit from a motorcycle that includes a helmet removal and casual hair toss. 'I think I even had a crush on Chad Michael Murray when I was younger,' Jacinto says, laughing off any potential #TeamJake versus #TeamEric wars brewing within the fandom. Off-screen, the two bonded over their shared love of fitness. 'He had some amino acid protein powder,' Jacinto says. 'I was like, This is my guy…We're gonna be best friends.' Of his own looks, Jacinto seems both nonchalant and ambivalent. Ganatra tells me that she had to sequester her actor to his own tent between takes of a beach scene because the crew couldn't stop staring. But Jacinto says he pitched the Freakier Friday dance scene not so much to show off as because he felt he might as well get it on camera now 'while my lower back is still functioning.' 'There's nothing like knowing that you might be shirtless on-screen to motivate you to hit the gym,' he jokes. Jacinto still takes dance classes on his off time; just that morning he tried to con his wife, Grey's Anatomy and The Descendants actress Dianne Doan, into joining him at one. But even when he's mastering a skill, he questions if he could be learning something more. 'I had a conversation with a few friends the other night about how I can't read fiction because in the back of my head I'm like, I could be learning something, I could be doing something more productive,' he admits. 'But the point of reading fiction, or watching TV, or watching movies, is to just be in the moment and to enjoy the art.' So his immediate goals are along those lines. He and Doan are planning to travel to Japan. He's in the process of producing a Filipino story that he's passionate about. Although The Acolyte only lasted a season, Jacinto says he's keen to do more franchise work. He likes a challenge, so he's up for acting in a different language ('I speak French and a little Tagalog'). Perhaps try to do a musical? 'Dirty Dancing 2,' he jokes, 'that's the long game.' In earnestness, though, Jacinto feels he's just getting started. And whatever route he takes next, he's certain, like any good Disney Prince, to enchant audiences all along the Photographer Ryan Pfluger Stylist Ilaria Urbinati Grooming Kim Bragalone using Kypris Beauty and Bumble and Bumble at Redefine Representation Set Stylist Amy Jo Diaz Styling Assistants Rajina Dusara & Rum Brady Location 1 Hotel West HollywoodRead the original article on InStyle Solve the daily Crossword