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Kelly Osbourne gets engaged at dad Ozzy's final show

Kelly Osbourne gets engaged at dad Ozzy's final show

Yahoo5 days ago
Kelly Osbourne has confirmed her engagement to her long-term partner, rock musician Sid Wilson.
TV personality Osbourne posted a video on Instagram of the moment that Wilson, who is part of heavy metal band Slipknot, got down on one knee and proposed in front of various family members and friends, including her father Ozzy and mother Sharon Osbourne.
In the footage, Wilson can be heard saying: 'Kelly, you know I love you more than anything in the world.'
Ozzy then interjects: 'F**k off you're not marrying my daughter.'
The assembled crowd laughs before Wilson continues: 'Nothing would make me happier than to spend the rest of my life with you. So, in front of your family and all of our friends, Kelly, will you marry me?'
The couple, who have been together since at least 2022 and share a young son, Sidney, then embraced as people clapped and cheered.
Osbourne is a former 'View' panelist while Wilson is best known for being Slipknot's turntablist.
The pair confirmed they were dating in February 2022, when Osbourne posted a photo of the two of them to Instagram on Valentine's Day, calling him her best friend and 'soulmate,' saying she couldn't believe this was where the couple had ended up after '23 years of friendship.'
The proposal took place backstage at what was billed to be Ozzy Osbourne's last ever live show.
Osbourne, along with original Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler, drummer Bill Ward and guitarist Tony Iommi, appeared on stage together for the first time in two decades in Birmingham, England on Saturday during a concert event called 'Back to the Beginning,' which was said to be Osbourne's 'farewell performance,' according to Black Sabbath's official website.
Osbourne – who performed while sitting in a black, throne-like chair with a bat on top – revealed in 2020 that he has Parkinson's disease.
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Marc Cucurella interview: Chelsea adaptation, a year of non-stop football and Club World Cup reflections
Marc Cucurella interview: Chelsea adaptation, a year of non-stop football and Club World Cup reflections

New York Times

time38 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Marc Cucurella interview: Chelsea adaptation, a year of non-stop football and Club World Cup reflections

Just one more game. Three hundred and fifty-six days since the Chelsea squad flew to California for a five-game pre-season tour of the United States, their campaign winds up at MetLife Stadium on Sunday with the Club World Cup final, a chance to make history before a brief opportunity to rest. They have spent the past week in New York, holed up in a hotel on Fifth Avenue but occasionally allowed out to explore between training sessions. There was the wonderful juxtaposition of a social media video showing Cole Palmer wobbling along on a scooter on Times Square, largely unrecognised by the crowds, while his face stares down from a billboard. Cole Palmer on a scooter in Times Square. 🤷🏻‍♂️🥶 — Chelsea Dodgers (@TheBlueDodger) July 12, 2025 New York is the city that never sleeps. Football is the sport that never sleeps. For Palmer, this is the third consecutive summer with a tournament that stretches well into July — the European Under-21 Championship in 2023, the European Championship in 2024, the Club World Cup in 2025 — and he will hope and expect to feature at the 2026 World Cup too. A three-week break, starting on Monday, would leave them with less than two weeks to build up for the new Premier League campaign, which starts against Crystal Palace on August 17. Advertisement Marc Cucurella, who was part of the Spain team that beat England in that Euro 2024 final last July, says he is looking forward to a break — a Disney-themed cruise with his young family and a chance to switch off and 'not think about football'. But he is not among those who have dismissed the Club World Cup as a Mickey Mouse competition. Sunday brings the serious business of a final against a Paris Saint-Germain team widely regarded as the best in the world right now. He and his Chelsea team-mates would not want it any other way. The winners on Sunday will be the first world champions of the tournament's new era. 'We know that if we win it, we have the badge on the shirt for a couple of years,' Cucurella told a small group of reporters at the team hotel this week. 'I know it's difficult after a long season — the (kick-off) times that we play are a bit difficult because it's very hot — but this is the first time they've done this competition so we can be the first team to win it. That would be amazing.' It would also represent a dramatic turnaround for Chelsea and for Cucurella. For some time after his initial £56million ($75.6m) transfer from Brighton & Hove Albion in August 2022, he was cast and maligned as a symbol of the club's excesses in the transfer market. It was a turbulent period reflected by a huge turnover of players and coaches — from Thomas Tuchel to Graham Potter to Frank Lampard (on an interim basis) to Mauricio Pochettino to Enzo Maresca — but one that Cucurella feels they have left firmly behind them. Cucurella spoke candidly about the adversity he suffered along the way. The way he describes it, the first 18 months sound joyless — partly 'because the team maybe didn't have an identity or didn't have a clear way to play' but also because of the pressure that grew with every poor result. Advertisement 'I struggled a little,' he said. 'In the first months, I was like, 'Oh f***ing hell… .' I enjoyed it more at other clubs because when you win, you're happy all week and the feeling is very different: you win, you're very happy; you draw, it's another point, don't get relegated. But when you come here you feel like you need to win every game. The first games (at Chelsea) I don't feel like I enjoyed. You win? 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'I started to enjoy my journey here after my injury. In my first (second) game back, when I played against Leicester (in the FA Cup), I scored. Then that evening, the national team called me because they had an injured left-back. Everything moved forward. In the summer I played the Euros, then we won the Euros and I got a lot of confidence from that. I came here in the summer and everything was better.' Cucurella feels the turnaround began towards the end of that 2023-24 season, under Pochettino, but that things have improved further since Maresca took over. 'The manager arrived with a lot of energy and good ideas and helped me a lot,' he says. 'We had a good season. It's true that for a couple of months we lost a bit of energy and lost some confidence but in general we achieved everything we wanted: we wanted Champions League (qualification) and we did it; we won the Conference League and this is another step for us.' Advertisement At 26 he is already a European champion with Spain. He has the opportunity to become a world champion — not just with Spain again next summer but with Chelsea. From being derided in some quarters after that big-money move, he has become one of the most admired left-backs in the game, a whole-hearted, rigorous defender who makes key contributions going forward. Even so, Sunday's final looks like a step up. In wide areas, PSG have some of the most dangerous players in world football — not just Bradley Barcola, Desire Doue, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, or indeed Lee Kang-in or Ibrahim Mbaye off the bench, but also Achraf Hakimi and Nuno Mendes charging forward from full-back. Some of their performances since the turn of the year, notably in the 5-0 thrashing of Inter in the Champions League final and the 4-0 defeat of Real Madrid in the Club World Cup semi-final on Wednesday, have been irresistible. Cucurella was asked whether he feels PSG are a class above every other team in the world right now. 'I think so,' he said. 'They have shown themselves as this sort of team all season. They have a lot of good players. They play good football. But I think a final is a final and we deserve to be there against a tough team. This is an opportunity to show we have a good team, we have a profile for big things and hopefully we can win.' He looked back on Chelsea's Club World Cup experience. 'We suffered a lot because we lost against Flamengo and a lot of people criticised us,' he said. 'The Benfica game (in the round of 16) with the storm and the crazy minutes after that. But we stuck together and we knew that if we stuck to our plan, we would get better. We deserve to stay here. We (Chelsea and PSG) have shown we are the two best teams in the competition.' The tournament has had its critics, but Cucurella says it has surpassed his expectations, which it appears were not exactly sky-high. 'I think the experience was good, to be fair,' he says. 'I think I expected worse. If you get to the final, you feel better. If you get here and you lose in the knockouts or the first round, that's tough because you feel, 'Oh, I lose my holiday, I lose my time'. But yeah, I think it can be a good experience. 'It's true that it's the first time and maybe they need to adjust some things, small details. But I think in general, I enjoy it a lot. We have the opportunity to play here in America in a big competition against teams that normally you don't play against, other than friendlies. We had the chance to go out and know the city. For me it's a very good experience.' The idea has been floated in FIFA circles that the Club World Cup could be expanded further, to 48 teams, or become a biennial tournament — a suggestion FIFA president Gianni Infantino did not dismiss when The Athletic asked him about the possibility at a media event in New York on Saturday morning. Advertisement Would a Club World Cup every two years be too much? 'Maybe yes,' Cucurella said. 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Critical Mystery Studies: When fact is scarier than fiction
Critical Mystery Studies: When fact is scarier than fiction

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Critical Mystery Studies: When fact is scarier than fiction

NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – On this episode of New Mexico Strange, News 13 Host and Anchor Chad Brummett sat down with the University of New Mexico's Department of Chicano and Chicana Studies' Matthew Goodwin, Ph.D., and Ashley Martinez, Ph.D. student, to talk about the connections between New Mexico's cultural roots and fantastical mysteries. The two scholars explained how New Mexico's folktales and mysteries, like La Llorona and the Roswell UFO crash, are based on realistic fears and often come about as community members try to make sense of the things around them. Many of the state's stories are even thought to have spawned from the early days of colonization, when different societies came into contact for the first time and every side experienced surprising and, often, scary novelties. Goodwin detailed how New Mexico got its nickname, the Land of Enchantment, when settlers and tourists used the word 'encanto' to describe the desert landscape. However, newcomers disregarding the depth of New Mexico's culture and, instead, perceiving it as exotic created an underlying negative connotation and a complicated relationship with that nickname. On this episode of New Mexico Strange, Goodwin, Martinez, and Brummett discuss the idea of the desert as a space of spirituality, the connection between conspiracy theories and xenophobia, and how people of various cultures resonate with the stories or use them to pull further away from their fears. To find out more about the work being done with UNM's Critical Mystery Studies, click here. New Mexico is perceived worldwide as a mecca for the extraordinary. Whether it's the healing soil of Chimayo, the haunted trails of the Old West, or visitors from the final frontier, our state is home to countless myths and mysteries. New Mexico Strange is KRQE News 13's online exclusive web series, celebrating our unique history and shedding light on the shadows of the unexplained, unexplored, and unknown. Hosted by Chad Brummett, New Mexico Strange takes viewers through some of the Land of Enchantment's most mysterious folklore and conspiracies. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Live-Action ‘How To Train Your Dragon' New On Streaming This Week, Report Says
Live-Action ‘How To Train Your Dragon' New On Streaming This Week, Report Says

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Live-Action ‘How To Train Your Dragon' New On Streaming This Week, Report Says

Toothless and Hiccup (Mason Thames" in "How to Train Your Dragon." The blockbuster remake of How to Train Your Dragon, starring Gerard Butler, Mason Thames and Nico Parker, is reportedly coming to digital streaming this week. How to Train Your Dragon premiered in theaters on June 13. The film is a live-action remake of the 2010 animated hit How to Train Your Dragon, which is and directed by the original film's director Dean DeBlois. Butler reprises his 2010 voice role of Viking Chief Stoic the Vast for the live-action remake of How to Train Your Dragon, while Thames plays his son, Hiccup, who doesn't seem cut out for the centuries-long tradition of fighting dragons. Parker plays Astrid, a teen Viking who is part of a group, including Hiccup, that is in training to become dragon slayers. How to Train Your Dragon also stars Nick Frost, Julian Dennison, Gabriel Howell, Bronwyn James, Harry Trevaldwyn, Ruth Codd, Peter Serafinowicz and Murray McArthur. How to Train Your Dragon is expected to be released on digital streaming via premium video on demand on Tuesday, July 15, according to When to Stream. While the streaming tracker's PVOD reports are typically accurate, When to Stream noted that the film's studio, Universal Pictures, has not announced or confirmed the release date of How to Train Your Dragon and it is subject to change. When How to Train Your Dragon arrives on PVOD, the film will be available for purchase for $29.99 on such digital platforms as Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Prime Video and YouTube. Since digital rentals are generally $5 less than purchase prices, viewers can expect to rent How to Train Your Dragon for $24.99 for a 48-hour period. 'How To Train Your Dragon' Gave Its Director A Chance To Expand Upon His Original Vision In an interview before the film opened in theaters in June, How to Train Your Dragon director Dean DeBlois told The Wrap that he was thrilled to see through the vision he had for the animated film in 2010. 'In terms of grandeur and wish fulfillment, I thought we could lean into the immersive quality of what live action could bring, DeBlois told The Wrap. 'But, I think more importantly, they were just characters that felt shortchanged to me as well, and it was an opportunity to lend more nuance to those relationships and those backstories and the backstory of this tribe as a whole.' The official summary for the live-action version of How to Train Your Dragon reads, 'On the rugged isle of Berk, where Vikings and dragons have been bitter enemies for generations, Hiccup (Thames) stands apart. The inventive yet overlooked son of Chief Stoick the Vast (Butler), Hiccup defies centuries of tradition when he befriends Toothless, a feared Night Fury dragon. Their unlikely bond reveals the true nature of dragons, challenging the very foundations of Viking society. 'With the fierce and ambitious Astrid (Parker) and the village's quirky blacksmith Gobber (Nick Frost) by his side, Hiccup confronts a world torn by fear and misunderstanding. As an ancient threat emerges, endangering both Vikings and dragons, Hiccup's friendship with Toothless becomes the key to forging a new future. Together, they must navigate the delicate path toward peace, soaring beyond the boundaries of their worlds and redefining what it means to be a hero and a leader.' How to Train Your Dragon, which is still playing in theaters, earned $234.3 million in domestic sales and $302.3 million internationally for a worldwide box office tally of $536.6 million to date. The film had a $150 million production budget before prints and advertising costs, according to Deadline. The film earned a 77% 'fresh' rating from Rotten Tomatoes critics based on 233 reviews and a 97% 'fresh' score on RT's Popcornmeter based on 10,000-plus verified user ratings. Rated PG, How to Train Your Dragon is expected to arrive on PVOD on Tuesday.

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