Ana de Armas Caught Liking Shady Post About Nicole Kidman
The post in question is from February 6, comes from the account @celebmess, and implies that Nicole's claims that she's never used Botox are a lie (they even employed the classic "Sure, Jan" meme). Meanwhile, Ana's like is still on the post as of reporting this.
As for what's going on with Tom and Ana, they're starring together in an upcoming thriller. And while it's definitely possible that they're just friendly coworkers, they have been on multiple vacations together recently—prompting speculation that there's something more going on.
That said, a source recently told People that Ana is single, and that "Tom is crazy hardworking and she's very excited to work with him. She calls it an opportunity of a lifetime. Tom is an incredible mentor to Ana. She has nothing but amazing things to say about him."
Meanwhile, another insider told the Daily Mail that "Tom has been showering Ana with gifts ever since they met, it's his thing, he is thoughtful. First it started with her favorite flowers then books he thought she would want to read because she's an avid reader. The more they got to know each other, the bigger the gifts became. There has been jewelry like gold bracelets and designer clothing, things like that, things every girl would love. Probably the biggest gift he has given her is being able to go anywhere in the world at a moment's notice, not many people can do that. She loves to travel."

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Yahoo
6 minutes ago
- Yahoo
14 LGBTQ+ disability activists who are changing the world one fight at a time
Happy Disability Pride Month! Footage still via Instagram @talialewis;; footage still via Instagram @jendeerinwater From left: Disability activists TL Lewis, Andrew Gurza, and Jen Deerinwater. There are queer disabled celebrities who are using their fame to advocate for more rights and better representation in media and shows that are starting to do a better job of including queer disabled characters, but it's the LGBTQ+ disabled activists who are fighting for years on end to help improve the lives of queer disabled people across the country. Intersectionality is so important, and these queer and disabled activists and advocates have a deep and intrinsic understanding of just how true that is. So to celebrate Disability Pride Month, which coincides with the anniversary of the passing of the Americans with Disabilities Act, we're shouting out the trailblazing activists who have spent their careers fighting for the rights of the queer and disabled communities. Nicole Adler Nicole Adler has been a trailblazer since she was a teenager. At just 19 years old, she was the youngest governor-appointed council member to serve on the California State Council on Developmental Disabilities. As a gay woman with Down syndrome, she has spent her life as a fierce advocate for the LGBTQ+ and disability communities. Then, at 29, she made history again as the first San Francisco Pride Community Grand Marshal with Down syndrome in 2024. 'It's a huge honor to represent both the disability and LGBTQ communities. I get to carry the torch and show others that anything is possible if you believe in yourself,' Adler said at the Pride celebration that hosted over 400,000 attendees, KGET reported. Corbett O'TooleCorbett O'Toole Corbett O'Toole has been a disability rights activist since the '70s, when she helped to run the Disabled Women's Coalition and worked as a staff member at the Center for Independent Living. O'Toole, who calls herself a 'queer disabled elder,' was a pioneer in the disability rights movement, including being one of the participants of the 25-day-long 504 Sit-In, where disability activists stormed into the federal Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, which resulted in the Carter administration signing the 504 regulations which prohibited entities receiving federal funds from discriminating against disabled people. She has continued her work as an activist and advocate in the decades since and in 2016 wrote Fading Scars: My Queer Disability History. Morénike Giwa Onaiwu Morénike Giwa Onaiwu is a disabled nonbinary woman of color who focuses her activism work on autism and HIV advocacy, and disability justice and inclusion. She is an editor of All the Weight of Our Dreams, an anthology of art and writing by Austin people of color, and is the founder and principal consultant of Advocacy Without Borders, a grassroots non-profit collaborative offering capacity development, research, DEIA activities, and related projects. She also serves as a public appointee on the Interagency Autism Coordinating Center, which is the US federal advisory committee on autism, and was also the first Black executive board of directors member of both the Autistic Self-Advocacy Network and Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network. Jen Deerinwater As a journalist and founder of Crushing Colonialism — an organization dedicated to uplifting indigenous voices — Jen Deerinwater's activism is deeply rooted in her identity as a disabled, Two-Spirit, disabled Cherokee woman. Deerinwater's work sheds light on the unique challenges faced by marginalized communities and the pervasive impacts of colonialism and discrimination in our society. Julia Bascom Julia Bascom is a queer autism rights activist who worked as the executive director of the Autism Self Advocacy Network from 2017 to 2023. Bascom has spent her career advocating for allowing autistic people to speak for themselves and make decisions about their health, rights, well-being, and sexual lives. During her time with ASAN, she helped to fight for disabled people's control over their own services, to save the Affordable Care Act, addressed police violence and structural racism, and fought against the school-to-prison pipeline, and against the use of electric shock devices to modify the behavior of disabled people. Bascom was one of the experts consulted to create the autistic character Julia for Sesame Street and founded the Loud Hands project that resulted in the groundbreaking anthology of essays written by autistic people, called Loud Hands: Autistic People, Speaking. 'Neurodiversity says people have different kinds of brains, and that's OK. But it goes a step further. People with different brains have rights. We have a right to be here,' Bascom told The 19th. 'We have a right to decide how we feel and how we should be treated. We have a right to [disability] accommodation. Neurodiversity isn't just a biological fact. It's an idea with teeth.' Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer nonbinary disability activist, educator, and poet. They have been performing spoken word since 1998, and in 2001 Piepzna-Samarasinha started Browngirlworld after being frustrated by the racism that was present in queer and trans poetry spaces and the homophobia that was running rampant in the poetry scene from people of color. Piepzna-Samarasinha has published nine books, including Beyond Survival: Strategies and Stories from the Transformative Justice Movement, and has written for publications like Autostraddle, Bitch, and Vice. Maxfield Sparrow Maxfield Sparrow is a transmasc autism rights activist and artist who facilitates peer support groups for autistic adults through the Association for Autism and Neurodiversity, wrote The ABCs of Autism Acceptance, and edited the anthology Spectrums: Autistic Transgender People in Their Own Words. Sparrow also participated in the flash blog campaign called Autistic People Should… which was an act of activism meant to raise alarm bells about Google's autocomplete feature that would complete that sentence with phrases like 'die,' 'be exterminated,' and 'be killed.' Lady Francesca Lady Francesca has been changing hearts and minds and challenging people's perception of drag, as the world's first Black drag queen superstar with Down syndrome. Lady Francesca is a member of the internationally renowned drag troupe Drag Syndrome, which challenges societal perceptions and promotes inclusivity within the drag community. As a member of the troupe, Lady Francesca is helping to advocate for disability awareness and celebrate the beauty, diversity, and limitless possibilities of artistic expression. Andrew Gurza Andrew Gurza, who has cerebral palsy and came out as gay when they were 15, is a disability awareness consultant and activist who has spent their career focused on the intersection of disability and sexuality. Gurza has written about the need for disability-inclusive sex education, ableism in the queer community, and the barriers to healthcare faced by disabled people that can impact access to STI testing, in publications like HuffPost, Everyday Feminism, Men's Health, Out, and them. Gurza is also well known for starting the #DisabledPeopleAreHot hashtag on X (formerly Twitter), and was featured in the documentary Picture This, which follows Gurza as they plan the Second Annual Deliciously Disabled Sex Positive Fully Accessible Play Party. In 2016, Garza started the podcast Disability After Dark, which focuses on disability and sexuality and has been going strong for more than 300 episodes now. TL Lewis TL Lewis is a Black queer disabled nonbinary artist and activist. Lewis has been working for the last two decades to abolish the medical-carceral-impoverishment industrial complex, show the links between ableism and all other forms of oppression and violence, and build solidarity across multiply-marginalized communities. Lewis also founded HEARD, an organization run by deaf and disabled people who are supporting and advocating for deaf/disabled incarcerated people, and is one of the only people in the world who has worked on the wrongful conviction cases of deaf/disabled people. Eli Clare Eli Clare is a genderqueer, trans man with cerebral palsy who is an activist, advocate, and author who works on the intersections between race, class, gender, sexuality, disability, and environmental justice and imagines a world without psych wards, group homes, and nursing homes. His books Brilliant Imperfection: Grappling with Cure, Exile and Pride, and The Marrow's Telling are so well regarded they are used in classrooms across the country. Clare has also coordinated a rape prevention program, helped organize the first-ever Queerness and Disability Conference, and traveled through the U.S. and Canada, giving speeches and teaching. Cal Montgomery Andrew Dell'Antonio Cal Montgomery is a trans, autistic, physically disabled activist and nonspeaking adult who writes and fights against institutionalized abuse of disabled youth, the need for greater support for students with cognitive disabilities, and for arming disabled kids with the skills to help them reduce their risk of harm when they are out in the world. Noor Pervez As a former student organizer turned LGBTQ+ educator, community organizer, and public speaker, Muslim nonbinary activist Noor Pervez focuses his efforts on the intersections of disability, race, gender identity, sexuality, and religion. Noor is the Community Engagement Manager for the Autism Self Advocacy Network, and is on the board as an accessibility leader at Masjid al Rabia, a queer, trans, and woman-centered and led mosque. Noor is also in the process of making an Easy Read translation of the Holy Qu'ran, designed to make learning about Islam accessible for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Finn Gardiner Finn Gardiner is a queer, Black disability activist and community organizer. Gardiner is the director of policy and advocacy at the Autistic People of Color Fund, and was part of the 2016 White House Forum on LGBT and Disability Issues and the 2019 United Nations World Autism Day event. He has focused his activism around antiracism and the intersection of gender, sexuality and disability where he fights for inclusive education, competitive and integrated employment, accessible technology, cognitive accessibility, housing justice, and community living. This article originally appeared on Pride: 14 LGBTQ+ disability activists who are changing the world one fight at a time RELATED 17 disabled LGBTQ+ celebrities who are changing Hollywood


New York Post
7 minutes ago
- New York Post
Brooke Hogan reveals true feelings about Hulk Hogan after estranged dad's death
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Fox News
8 minutes ago
- Fox News
Liberal media outlets argue Sydney Sweeney ‘Good Jeans' ad promoting ‘Whiteness,' ‘eugenics'
According to critics at outlets like The Washington Post and MSNBC, Sydney Sweeney's new American Eagle (AE) jeans ad is promoting racist and "regressive" themes. In reports published by the Post, MSNBC, GMA and Salon, journalists scrutinized whether the "Euphoria" star and fashion brand were taking digs at the body positivity movement and subtly pushing "Whiteness" and "eugenics" in the culture. "The advertisement, the choice of Sweeney as the sole face in it and the internet's reaction reflect an unbridled cultural shift toward Whiteness, conservatism and capitalist exploitation. Sweeney is both a symptom and a participant," MSNBC producer Hanna Holland wrote in an column on Monday. Sweeney's American Eagle ad campaign, titled "Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans," went viral on social media over the weekend for controversial reasons. In one promo video posted to AE's Instagram page, the 27-year-old actress walked toward an AE billboard featuring her and the tagline "Sydney Sweeney Has Great Genes." Sweeney crossed out "Genes" and replaced it with "Jeans" before walking away. AE's website also noted that a "butterfly motif on the back pocket of the jean represents domestic violence awareness, which Sydney is passionate about." "In support of the cause, 100% of the purchase price from 'The Sydney Jean' will be donated to Crisis Text Line, a nonprofit offering free, 24/7, confidential mental health support to anyone in need—just text 741741," the site says. Despite the jeans promoting a good cause, online critics were fixated on the ad's alleged White supremacist undertones. Liberal outlets like Salon piled in on the backlash, with the outlet's weekend editor CK Smith linking the tagline of Sweeney's ad to "eugenics movements." "Eugenics movements in the U.S. often promoted the idea of 'good genes' to encourage reproduction among White, able-bodied people while justifying the forced sterilization of others. Critics say those ideas still show up in modern advertising and influencer culture, often unexamined," Smith wrote on Sunday. An analysis by Washington Post fashion critic Rachel Tashjian and the Post's media and fashion writer Shane O'Neil bolstered the claims made by the ad's online critics. "For the past five or six years, it seemed like fashion and pop culture were very interested in — even dedicated to — body positivity. Now we're being fed a lot of images of thinness, Whiteness and unapologetic wealth porn, what with this campaign, influencers like Alix Earle and Sabrina Carpenter's album cover," Tashjian wrote. She added, "But it is strange to see a brand like American Eagle go in this direction. Should teenagers be served a vision of sexuality and fashion that feels so regressive?" O'Neil said the ad campaign reminded him of the Department of Homeland Security under President Donald Trump. "The first thing I thought of when I heard the tagline 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans' was the DHS Instagram account, which posted a subtly racist painting a few weeks ago and an explicitly racist painting last week," he said. "The latter depicted a gigantic blonde buxom woman chasing away Native people to make way for White settlers. When this is the imagery being promoted by our government, a pun about 'genes' hits differently." On ABC's "GMA First Look" Tuesday, the show featured a clip of Kean University professor Robin Landa linking Sweeney's "good jeans" to the eugenics movement. "The pun 'good jeans' activates troubling historical associations for this country. The American eugenics movement, in its prime between 1900 and 1940, weaponized the idea of good genes just to justify White supremacism," she said. American Eagle did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment.