
Gwyneth Paltrow leaves fans horrified after gross action during cooking video
The Goop founder posted a clip whipping up an intricate, gourmet breakfast for husband Brad Falchuk over the weekend - but it wasn't what she was making that had people talking.
In the post the actress made a lobster benedict for her husband of seven years but it was her disposal of the egg whites that infuriated her followers.
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Gwyneth was seen cracking eggs into a strainer before then appearing to tip the whites directly on to the floor and nonchalantly carrying on with poaching.
In her caption for the divisive video, she wrote that she was making a 'paleo lobster benedict for a Hamptons-inspired #boyfriendbreakfast this morning' and accompanied her post to the tune of Phoenix's song Girlfriend.
Fans were shocked by the star's apparent mess making - taking to the comments section to share their thoughts.
'Did I just see Gwyneth empty the remnants of the egg whites on to the floor? Tell me I didn't just see that.'
'Where did the whites go? It looked like she threw them on the floor.'
'Totally pour my egg whites on the floor too.'
'She may have a servant on standby for cleanup.'
But others came to her defense, guessing there must be a trash can underneath the counter.
'It must be the under-the-counter bin, nevertheless I was entertained.'
The Goop founder has been married to Brad, a television writer known for co-creating massive hits like Glee and American Horror Story, since 2018.
The actress regularly shares 'boyfriend breakfast' posts on her social media.
In one, she was seen crying as she cut up some onions as part of her meal prep; in another she was accused of making fun of Meghan Markle's breakfast video but days later the women were seen sharing a joke together putting an end to rumors of a feud.
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Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Texas torn apart over A-listers' attempt to make it 'the new Hollywood' as bizarre rules directors must follow are revealed
In many ways deep red Texas could not be further from the liberal movie sets of Hollywood. But now a gaggle of A-listers and lawmakers believe the it is the perfect place to set up a film industry which could not only rival Tinseltown's, but topple it altogether. Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson and Renée Zellweger are among the actors leading the charge. They have recently helped secure a bill that will inject $300 million into the Texas film industry over the next two years and provide tax incentives for the next decade. However the new law, which comes into effect on September 1, does contain some distinctly Texan stipulations when it comes to who can qualify for the cash. Officials plan to be far more selective about who gets taxpayer money than their Californian counterparts, with Governor Gregg Abbott given veto powers under the new law. But despite the strict parameters, the decision has been heavily criticized by conservatives in Texas, who described the bill as an 'abomination' and fear it will turn the Lone Star State into a new La La Land. Subsidy Rules Supporters of the new Texas law say they want to be as influential as Hollywood, but without the same liberal cultural values. As a result, they have created a series of hoops filmmakers must jump through if they want to secure any state cash. 'We are not trying to make Texas the next Hollywood - we don't like Hollywood. We want to export Texas values,' Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, one of the biggest proponents of the scheme, recently said in a campaign update. Patrick is a staunch conservative who despite his opposition to legal marijuana, gambling and abortion, wants to make Texas 'the film capital of the world'. He and other legislators have devised a system which will reward films with, 'export Texas values', according to Patrick. For projects that spend at least $1.5 million in Texas, the new law offers tiered grants worth 25 percent of that in-state spending. Films that are faith-based, shoot in historic sites or employ a percentage of crew who are Texas-based military veterans can get a grant as high as 31 percent. Additionally, the governor's office has broad powers in determining which projects do and do not get funding. If films are deemed to have content that is 'inappropriate,' has obscene content or portrays Texas negatively - they won't get a dime. Celebrity backing None of this would have been possible without the support of several towering figures in the entertainment industry. In January, Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson, Renée Zellweger and several others appeared in a video that campaigned for Texas officials to bring increased film incentives so people can make movies in the state without breaking the bank. The four-minute video begins with Harrelson and McConaughey barreling down a highway in a sedan as they're deep in conversation about this very issue. 'You ever wonder if this industry of ours is just chasing its own tail?' Harrelson asks. 'No, I don't wonder. Restrictions, regulations, nickel and diming productions, political lectures,' McConaughey replies. The video had a surprising level of credibility, considering the fact that McConaughey, Harrelson, Zellweger and Dennis Quaid (who also appeared) were all born in Texas. McConaughey, whose social media feed focuses almost exclusively on Texas sports, attended a March hearing with state legislators and had the final word. 'If we pass this bill, we are immediately at the bargaining table for shooting more films and TV and commercials in our state,' he said while wearing a cowboy hat. 'That is money that's going to local Texas restaurants, hotels, coffee shops, dry cleaners, street rentals, home rentals ― even Woody's barber,' in reference to Harrelson, who was also in attendance. Two months after McConaughey's overture, the Senate voted 23-8 in favor of the bill and it became law by June. The Opposition But these restrictions weren't enough for the many conservatives who opposed the law when it was being debated over the last few months. Some were concerned that the bill would allow Texas to go down a path of unrighteousness, while others thought the subsidies were taxpayer theft. 'The Bible warns us of the consequences of the government wrongfully taking money from some and handing it out to others,' Texans for Fiscal Responsibility said in one of its papers against the bill. Republican State Rep. Brian Harrison has emerged as the main enemy of the bill, calling it an abomination. 'And shame on everybody who voted for it,' he has said. 'This is big government liberal redistributive socialism,' Harrison told the LA Times. 'The governor and lieutenant governor of the supposedly Republican-controlled state of Texas chose to keep property taxes billions of dollars higher so that you can subsidize a rich liberal Hollywood movie industry - how embarrassing.' He plans to introduce legislation at a special hearing later in July that would repeal the law. Exodus from California The bill deepens the growing rivalry between California and Texas, which has already poached several major companies once based in the Golden State, including Tesla and Hewlett-Packard. These businesses were largely lured by lower taxes and a business-friendly environment, both things the bill signed by Abbott seeks to address with the film industry specifically. It couldn't come at a worse time for California, a state that is already bleeding talent and expertise. When Hollywood writers and actors went on strike in 2023, California lost roughly 40,000 film and TV jobs that year alone, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. California also has to worry about the tax subsidies being offered in the other states, not just Texas, and even other nations. That's why in late June, California legislators doubled their own tax incentive ceiling to a staggering $750 million a year. While Texas isn't spending nearly as much tax money as California on movies and TV, experts believe that this could be the start of a real competition. 'Texas now has a program that is going to be competitive,' Fred Poston, the executive director of the Texas Media Production Alliance, told the Los Angeles Times. 'When you really take a close look at it, you realize this is a big deal. We have this new level of funding to start building more industry around it.' A Return to the Glory Days Proponents of the law feel that without the incentives, Texas is leaving tons of economic growth on the table. Texas, while not Hollywood, has been the filming location for many highly-celebrated pieces of media, including but not limited to the 1956 western 'Giant', the 1974 slasher film 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre' and the high school football drama TV series 'Friday Night Lights.' By the early 2000s, nearby states became more attractive to film because of better incentives being offered to producers. 'Texas had been highly competitive, we had all of these ingredients,' Rebecca Campbell, CEO of the Austin Film Society, told the LA Times. 'Then all of a sudden, Texas stories were getting shot in New Mexico and Louisiana.' Texas introduced its first program for film incentives in 2007, earmarking $20 million for it. Because of how underfunded it became over the years, the producers of 'Fear the Walking Dead' decided to move production in 2021 from Austin to Georgia. Richard Linklater, a Houston-born director, filmed his 2024 romantic crime thriller 'Hit Man' starring Glen Powell in his hometown. But because there wasn't enough incentive funds, he had to move the operation to New Orleans. 'We're completely surrounded by states that have very active film incentive programs,' he said on the podcast 'Friends on Film.'


Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
WNBA star Caitlin Clark hands teammate a mystery drink during three-point contest, after night out
Caitlin Clark looks delighted as she hands Indiana Fever teammate Lexie Hull a drink during the three-point contest. Clark, who's not competing in All-Star events due to a groin injury, had a fun night out on Thursday as she and her WNBA peers descended on Indianapolis nightclub INVY. She seemed to keep the party going on Friday as she offered Hull a thirst quencher at least twice while sat courtside, which was seen in a video from the WNBA X account. Clark tried to give Hull a sip of her drink before she competed in the event, but the former Stanford star playfully turned her friend down. However, Hull later took Clark up on her offer - seemingly after her performance in the three-point contest - as her pal clapped her hands and pumped her fist in the air. Hull, who replaced Clark in the game due to a groin injury, scored a respectable 20 points but did not advance to the final round. On Friday morning, Clark said on Good Morning America that she would be 'active on the sidelines' during the All-Star events, and that rang true later on as she cheered alongside Sophie Cunningham, Kelsey Mitchell, and Aliyah Boston. The night before, Boston was seen discreetly taking a drink out of Clark's hands after noticing her teammate's actions were being caught on StudBudz's livestream. Fans on social media praised Boston, who was drafted with the No 1 overall pick by the Fever the year before Clark, for looking out for her younger teammate and her image. At one point on their night out, Clark found her way behind the DJ booth with her arm wrapped around the emcee. When he thrust the mic in her face and asked if she was 'ready to turn up', Clark shouted 'Woo!' and hoisted her can, which appeared to be a hard seltzer, into the air. Nonetheless, she appeared to be doing OK the next day when she and her Fever teammates appeared on GMA. She told GMA host Robin Roberts when asked about being ruled out of the game: 'I'm feeling good. Obviously, a lot of this cheers me up. 'It's good to see everybody out here having a really good time … I'll be there.' She then gestured to Boston and Mitchell and said: 'I'm gonna be active on the sidelines. I gotta cheer these two on.' Clark's endured an injury-plagued season for the Fever, and missed ten regular season games, and she hurt herself again on Tuesday while facing Connecticut Sun. The Fever star, who had already missed time with injuries to her left groin and quad, hurt her right groin, later announced that she'd be sitting out the All-Star Weekend. Clark was supposed to be in the three-point contest as well as the All-Star Game, where she was voted to captain her own team. She posted: 'I am incredibly sad and disappointed to say I can't participate in the three-point contest or the All-Star Game. 'I have to rest my body. I will still be at Gainbridge Fieldhouse for all the action and I'm looking forward to helping [Liberty coach Sandy Brondello] coach our team to a win.' caitlin happy af she got lexie to drink 😭😭 — leys (@caitisland) July 19, 2025


Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Host of Decorating Cents reveals what she really thought about the outrageous makeovers... and the one design a homeowner demanded she change
She was the leading leading lady at the forefront of HGTV's hit budget makeover show Decorating Cents for ten years. Now almost 20 years later, Joan Steffend has reemerged as the face of the show's viral internet fame. The beloved show was known for its zany design ideas and off-the wall execution. With an experienced designer leading the way, Steffen would help make over one room in each contestant's home from $500 or less. The results were, well, mixed. Decades later people have taken to TikTok to rehash some of the more controversial DIYs from the show, and Steffend is taking the heat in stride, categorizing the internet's reactions as 'happily horrified'. 'I just don't want people to think I'm offended,' she told Daily Mail. 'I'm completely baffled by it, but I'm enjoying it.' Among the designs getting the most attention are a cowboy themed bachelor pad, a makeshift mosaic end table, and a rug painted directly onto the hardwood floor. Even at the time, Steffend admitted that not everything was in her taste. 'It was part of my job to be enthusiastic about everything,' she said. So no matter how out of the box the designer's ideas were, she happily went along. For every idea she was unsure about, there were many she loved. 'I think if you look at the book of what we did, some of them were wildly creative and transferable in people's homes,' Steffend said. But one of the ones that horrified her the most was when she had to get down on her hands and knees and paint on fresh hardwood floor. 'I was shocked by it. I think it was pretty near to the start and I was shocked by a lot of the things that we would do. I'm the daughter of a construction guy,' she said. 'My dad would come back and haunt me if I did that.' She said she might consider recreating it, only if it would never see the light of day. 'I would do that but I would only do it in certain circumstances, like the wood was about to be redone, just to be creative,' Steffen added. Commenters online were with her on that one. As one viewer said, 'Those poor hardwoods didn't deserve that.' Another creation which raised eyebrows is a mosaic end table comprised of jagged pieced. More than one user on TikTok made fun of this masterpiece for being, 'difficult to clean and a little dangerous', concerns which Steffend shared. 'I was thinking it was dangerous for sure, because I had young children at the time,' she noted. 'We did a lot of those kinds of mosaic break-up things. We definitely got better at them.' For the most part, she remembered people being happy with their redesigns, even if Steffend herself found them questionable. However she revealed there was one at the very beginning that went completely sideways. Steffend and her crew were tasked with a cowboy-themed bachelor living room. They created the manliest space they could, complete with cow-hide rugs, printed throws, and a hand mod-podged TV stand adorned with ancient Native American prayers. Over the years, that particular piece had gotten a lot of flack and it turns out, the contestant wasn't the biggest fan either. 'I do remember that was one of the few times the homeowner came home and said put it back,' she said. 'We had worked a really long day and we stayed and put it back. If they don't love it we still feel like they're in their homes and we'd change it.' Another design a lot of TikTok commenters expected the owner to hate was an Italian-themed kitchen. One of the more heinous decorating choices was a hand-painted, wall border made from sheets of yellow paper adorned with Italian words and phrases. The design saw comparisons on TikTok to everything from an 'an English classroom,' to an Olive Garden. Despite the backlash from modern day viewers, Steffend said the contestant, a friend of hers, loved it. 'The guy was really Italian,' she said. 'He loved his Italian heritage.' Steffend revealed that the whole project was almost thrown into jeopardy however. After a long day of work, they accidentally spilled a bottle of red wine all over their new design and had to stay through the night to it all over again. Steffend revealed was often surprised when makeovers she wouldn't consider for her own home became favorites among the guests. 'I would look at it and go, okay not for me. But some of the stuff where I thought it wouldn't fit in my home, they would get the best responses,' she said. Some contestants were choosier than others. Production did a lot of hard work figuring out what would work for the space, according to the former host. Steffend said the process was longer than a lot of people realized. The design team would go into the home weeks before filming and do measurements and planning to ensure even just the camera crew would fit in the space. Only then, would they ask the potential contestants what they were hoping to have done with their space, even then, the designers had to make sure they could find what they were looking for all while keeping it under $500. 'You can say that you want a room a certain way. The truth is they wanted to follow both what they wanted and what we could find,' Steffend said, adding that she and her team were real sticklers for the budget. They refused to take discounts or donations, because they wanted each makeover to be truly attainable for the viewers. So they searched dumpsters, discounts, and thrift stores to find pieces that would best fit within the budget and what they were looking for. Steffend said there was, 'a lot of serendipity'. 'We never got the chance to try anything out beforehand. We would show up at like 9 AM and we had to just do what we had,' she explained. Steffend said that's part of what she loved so much about the show. 'It was all about being frugal and really being wildly creative. ' Steffend is now retired, occasionally doing appearances in her home state of Minnesota. She said she hasn't thought much about the show over the years, but she loved it so much at the time and has been completely delighted by its resurgence. 'It was really a gift to me,' she said. 'If it [going viral] leads anyone else to try and fail then I'm all for it.'