
Kylie Jenner fans convinced she's ENGAGED to Timothee Chalamet after spotting red carpet clue
KYLIE Jenner fans are convinced she might be engaged to Timothee Chalamet after spotting a red carpet clue.
Beauty mogul Kylie, 27, and Hollywood actor Timothee, 29, finally made their official red carpet debut as a couple on May 7.
7
7
7
7
The smitten pair, who have been dating since 2023, attended the 70th David di Donatello Awards in Rome, Italy together.
At the event, Timothee was honored with the David for Cinematic Excellence.
The awards president praised the movie icon as "one of the most unpredictable and talented protagonists of international cinema today".
But despite being Timothee being the man of the night, his girlfriend quickly caught the attention of the entire world when she attended the event with her man.
Kylie looked stunning on the night as she wore a floor-length black gown with a plunging neckline.
The dress had a crystal pattern embellished throughout the fabric and she kept her hair up in a tight bun.
But it was her accessories that really turned heads and got tongues wagging.
Kylie wore an ornate Schiaparelli earring, which had a ring on its fourth finger.
The strange earring was of a gold hand which cupped her ear and on that hand was a diamond engagement ring.
Reacting to the telling clue on social media, one Reddit user said: "Do we think Kylie is engaged?"
Kylie Jenner's 'embarrassing' and 'cringe' moment caught on live TV as Timothee Chalamet wins at Italian awards show
While another said: "Bling on that gold hand has me thinking..."
Kylie was also wearing another piece of jewelry that fueled rumors.
She could be seen wearing a rather large teardrop shaped diamond engagement ring.
But despite donning an engagement ring, it was worn on the wrong finger to mean she is engaged.
The sparkler was on her pinky finger and not her wedding finger.
This comes after Kylie was caught up in an awkward moment.
Things turned cringe for the starlet when her A-list actor partner was announced as the winner of the award he scooped on the night.
Although the pair shared one congratulatory kiss, Kylie seemed to want a second from her man as she leapt up towards him.
However, Timmy was far more interested in shaking the hands of his friends who sat behind him.
She was forced to sink back down into her seat as he appeared to snub her for a second snog before he made his way onto the stage.
Fans couldn't help but notice the apparent gaffe as one Reddit user posted: "The ICK I felt during this video."
7
7
7
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
43 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Blake Lively fiercely slammed over her beauty brand's latest PR move
Blake Lively has been fiercely slammed online over her beauty brand's latest PR move. The actress, 37, has been embroiled in a bitter battle with her It Ends With Us costar Justin Baldoni since December, and the messy and ongoing legal saga has resulted in her receiving immense backlash in recent months. Most recently, the Gossip Girl alum found herself in hot water again after her hair care line Blake Brown enlisted a popular influencer to promote its products. Social media star and fashion guru Danielle Pheloung uploaded a video of Blake doing her hair to TikTok on Thursday. It showed Blake - dressed in a black tank top and high-waisted trousers - spraying Danielle's wavy blonde locks with some hairspray. The mother-of-four then ran her hands through the TikToker's hair and styled it before they hugged each other. 'POV: Blake Lively transforms your hair in seconds with her magic tough and Blake Brown products,' Danielle wrote in a text overlay. She added in the caption, 'Best day ever and these products are incredible,' while tagging Blake's brand. The actress, 37, has been embroiled in a bitter battle with her It Ends With Us costar Justin Baldoni since December, and it has resulted in her receiving immense backlash Most recently, the Gossip Girl alum found herself in hot water again after her hair care line Blake Brown enlisted a popular influencer to promote its products But the 14-second video - which contained a sound byte from the show Gossip Girl in the background - resulted in more fury for Blake, as hoards of viewers rushed to the comment section to bash her. Some criticized her hair products and styling, while others urged Danielle to 'run.' 'Hair literally looks the exact same lol,' one user wrote. 'The way it did nothing,' agreed another. 'How much were you paid for this vid?' quipped someone else. 'Blake is looking for new friends after Taylor [Swift] kicked her to the curb,' read a fourth comment, while a fifth simply said, 'Justice for Justine.' 'Oh this is interesting marketing,' a different user added. 'No run for the hills don't look at her too long or even hug her… you don't wanna get sued,' someone else sarcastically penned. But the 14-second video resulted in more fury for Blake, as hoards of viewers rushed to the comment section to bash her 'Let's be on the right side of the history girls please,' urged another viewer. Blake and Justin starred in the movie It Ends With Us together last year, and the blonde beauty filed a lawsuit against her costar in December, in which she accused him of sexual harassment and creating a 'hostile work environment on set.' He retaliated with his own $400 million filing against the blonde beauty, along with her husband, Ryan Reynolds, 48, with the brutal melee now scheduled for a trial on March 29, 2026. All parties have denied the claims. The messy feud has completely captivated the nation, and has resulted in Blake facing immense criticism; there's rumors that it also strained her relationship with Taylor Swift. Back in April, fans threatened to boycott the National Geographic docuseries Secrets of the Penguins after she narrated it. Viewers branded her as 'horrific' and claimed she 'ruined' the show.


Top Gear
an hour ago
- Top Gear
Formula Legends' ‘F1 across the eras' is so good, you wonder why nobody did it already
Gaming With a playable demo out now, TG checks in with one of our most anticipated racing games Skip 10 photos in the image carousel and continue reading Formula One's best asset isn't the Netflix show or the upcoming movie. It isn't even the audio library of Kimi Raikkonen's best team radio lines, which will surely sustain the next century of meme creation. It's the heritage. The 75 years of history, iconic machinery, immortal heroes and feats of unfathomable bravery. Odd, then, that indie simcade racer Formula Legends is something of an outlier for encapsulating the sport's various historical eras in one experience. When we first saw the reveal trailer and digested the concept – an accessible, cartoonised take on circuit racing featuring unlicensed takes on F1 cars from the 1960s to present – we got quite excited. Having taken a deeper look at the game, which now has a playable demo live on Steam from 6 June, that excitement is now veritably bubbling. Advertisement - Page continues below The first thing that stands out about the racing is the quality of AI opponents. They jostle with each other in braking zones and take varying lines through turns, which really shouldn't be a rarity in the modern genre but somehow is. 3D Clouds founder Francesco Bruschi explains: 'We don't have a learning AI. It's very simple, but very tuned for the feeling that the player's in a real race. What you've seen is our first pass at that, we're not at the finish yet. I want a clean race with maybe some [AI] mistakes and different strategies. My first priority is to bring my racing experience to our development.' You might like And that might be the secret sauce that makes Formula Legends stand out: this isn't a studio having a stab at what the community might want from a game like this. It's members of that community making the game they want to play. This might be a friendly and approachable looking title, but it's the hidden depths like tyre wear and pit strategies that elevate it, and they've found their way into this game because Bruschi has been modding racing games since the days of the venerable Geoff Crammond's Grand Prix 2 in 1996. He's also a former racer who's competed against Sebastian Vettel in Formula Renault, among other accolades. Advertisement - Page continues below Structurally, it works like you'd imagine. Career mode takes you from the cigar-shaped deathtraps of the 1960s right through to modern energy-harvesting machinery, all in unlicensed but very recognisable form. There are over 100 different vehicles to span those seasons, and their liveries are instantly recognisable nods to their real-life counterparts. Likewise the drivers, whose names have had their letters jumbled in early '90s console racer style, but remain easy to decode. Each era of vehicle has its own handling behaviour and is built around a different physics model. The older cars will step out around corners and prompt your brain to provide a quick supercut of your life before the tyres find traction again, while the modern ground effect cars will reflect the greater downforce and turn-in speed. You really notice the sound differences between historical eras, too. The turbos sound like turbos, with that same musical roar that soundtracked many a Prost-Senna tussle. Details like that all contributed to Formula Legends ' warm reception when it was revealed, and that reception confirmed what Bruschi's team suspected: there's a gap in the genre for this exact experience. 'About a year ago we were thinking about Art of Rally ,' says producer Francesco Mantovani, 'which is our main reference at this point. Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Look out for your regular round-up of news, reviews and offers in your inbox. Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox. 'It has received a big response from the market, and we wondered why nobody made this kind of game about the F1 world. We started working on it, we had some doubts along the way, but when we first saw the first prototype we realised there was something huge there.' That positive reception at reveal also spurred 3DClouds on, and fuelled the team's motivation to create a playable demo before launch. 'When we shared the trailer, says Bruschi, 'I knew that we had something good in our hands. We caused all sorts of praise and discussion, everybody was enjoying this game. We'll share something new in the next month, and also the demo.' Of course the hands-on experience will make or break Formula Legends , but with the team's experience on and off the track, it stands a better chance than most.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Mark Hamill has finally ruled out a return as Luke Skywalker. Can Star Wars survive without him?
Mark Hamill's Luke Skywalker has been Star Wars' ultimate backup plan for at least half a decade. The original trilogy has faded into the distance, and the movies set in that galaxy far, far away have become so poor in recent years that we'd all rather watch Andor. But there was always the option of plugging in Hamill – a sort of human Star Wars USB stick, primed to conjure up 1970s vibes as required. Not quite getting your fill of Force nostalgia? Here's Luke tutoring Baby Yoda in The Book of Boba Fett. And here he is again, whinging about past mistakes in The Last Jedi. It may not quite have been Binary Sunset, or Yoda lifting the X-wing on Dagobah. But for a few shimmering, quite-possibly-digitally-retouched moments, it felt like we were back in the real Star Wars again. Back in 2023, I wrote about the weird emotional whiplash of falling for digi-Luke: the plasticky but strangely compelling CGI version of the Jedi master who turned up in those Disney+ TV shows like a hologram from a smoother-skinned age. At the time, Hamill had sounded lukewarm on returning to Star Wars, but left just enough ambiguity to keep the dream alive. That was all before this week's revelation, in an interview with that Hamill has definitively closed the book on ever playing Skywalker again. Not even as a Force Ghost – the role he had been tipped to play in the forthcoming, utterly dreadful sounding Daisy Ridley-led film about a new Jedi order. 'And by the way, when I disappeared in [The Last Jedi], I left my robes behind. And there's no way I'm gonna appear as a naked Force ghost,' said Hamill. He added: 'I had my time. I'm appreciative of that, but I really think they should focus on the future and all the new characters.' And you might think: fair enough. After nearly 50 years in and around a franchise that has de-aged, re-aged and resurrected him more times than Emperor Palpatine, the man has earned the right to float off into the Force unbothered. Hamill is now 73, and there comes a time in every Jedi's life when they must hang up their lightsaber, and hope that the studio doesn't resurrect them as a digital sock puppet 30 years later. For the man who will for ever be thought of as Luke Skywalker, that moment is now – and judging by his tone, not a moment too soon. I am not even secretly hoping for more. After all, that episode of The Mandalorian – you know the one – hinted at a whole new chapter. For a brief moment, it felt like Star Wars might finally fill in the blank pages of Luke's life between blowing up Death Stars and milking alien sea cows. Perhaps we'd get Star Wars: Jedi Academy, a kind of intergalactic Dead Poets Society. Maybe it would be terrible. Maybe it would be magnificent. Either way, it would have been something. But without Hamill, the grand plan of stitching together the post-Imperial timeline starts to wobble. Because the truth is, Skywalker had become the Mando-verse's narrative gaffer tape, holding together a sprawling mess of side quests, animated spin-offs and character revivals. Whenever things got too niche, in came Luke. His absence leaves a big, Jedi-shaped hole. You can't exactly call up Rey for a cameo in the Mando-timeline (she would still be a child, and the jury is decidedly out on whether Star Wars fans will even want to see her again after the debacle that was Rise of Skywalker). Leia and Obi-Wan have joined the blue-glow retirement club. Yoda has been replaced by a mini-me. Anakin long since turned to the dark side and died in the arms of a man he'd spent three films trying to kill. Luke's departure leaves us lost in space, drifting in cosmic purgatory, wondering what the future might hold now the franchise has burned through its last original-trilogy safety net. It's a strange place to be for long-term fans of the saga, yet finally we may be able to set ourselves on a new course. If it's one that is miraculously free of Death Stars, Palpatine clones and even sand, we might one day find ourselves thanking Hamill for making a decision we should probably all have made peace with long, long ago.