Jessica Biel jokes husband Justin Timberlake is one of her 'chosen sisters'
Jessica Biel has joked about how her husband Justin Timberlake is "one of my chosen sisters".
During an interview for InStyle published on Monday, the actress promoted her upcoming TV series, The Better Sister.
Though Jessica doesn't have any biological sisters, she gushed over five women whom she considers to be "chosen sisters" in her life - and humorously added her husband into the mix too.
"I'm really lucky, because I have amazing groups of women kind of scattered throughout the country that have really been my rocks as I've grown up," she said, adding with a laugh: "I would also consider my husband one of my chosen sisters. He's also my best friend."
Jessica went on to praise her support network.
"All of them together have gotten me through my life. I don't know how I would have survived life without them," the 43-year-old smiled.
Jessica and Mirrors hitmaker Justin, 44, married in 2012 and share two sons: Silas, 10, and four-year-old Phineas.
Elsewhere in the conversation, The Sinner star reflected on how she tries to shield her children from the public eye.
However, she made an exception last year when she took Silas to watch a US Open tennis match.
"My son was nine at the time, and he's a huge tennis fan - that's his sport, that's what he plays. We had this opportunity, and we talked about it. We talked about photographers. You know, 'Are you comfortable with that?'" she recalled. "You really want to give your kids every experience. I don't know if it was the right decision, to be honest with you, but he and I had a good time... It's scary every time. But it's also their life. And so it's this really tricky, tricky thing to figure out, what's appropriate."
The Better Sister, also starring Elizabeth Banks, is set to premiere on 29 May.

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New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
What is Oakmont's church pew bunker? History behind distinctive U.S. Open course feature
OAKMONT, Pa. — He didn't even want to set foot in it. The year was 2007. Tiger Woods was scouting Oakmont Country Club, seeing the property for the first time outside of TV highlights and photographs. A group of 82 American Express cardholders walked along, watching Woods, jaws open. A 'small' fee of $900 got those AmEx customers onto Oakmont for the day, but little did they know they'd get to spend it with the then 13-time major champion. Woods helped execute the surprise as a cardholder perk, inviting them for a stroll around that year's U.S. Open venue as he strategized for the tournament ahead. Advertisement When they arrived at No. 3, Woods striped a 3-iron off the tee, splitting the fairway with ease. When the group approached his ball, one onlooker curiously asked, 'Can you hit one from the church pews?' 'No,' Woods replied, according to the AP. Woods eventually agreed to stand in the infamous 108-yard-long bunker, smiling momentarily only for a photo-op, before climbing out again: 'I only practice from where I expect to play.' The monstrosity sits between the third and fourth fairways. It now occupies more than 28,000 square feet of Oakmont real estate. And it lives rent-free in the psyche of any golfer who steps up on that tee box. The bunker creeps into your peripheral vision, even if you don't anticipate playing from it. Oakmont's church pew bunker, one of the most recognizable golf course features in the world, is just as beautiful as it is maddening. So is its history. 'Where Augusta National has Amen Corner, and TPC Sawgrass has the 17th, and Pebble Beach has No. 7, the church pews, that's us. That's our signature feature,' says David Moore, Curator of Collections at Oakmont. The church pews, as they are configured today — 13 long, grassy tufts that act as islands within a seemingly endless pit of sand — were never part of the original Oakmont design. Henry Fownes, a big-time steel mogul, built Oakmont in 1903 when his obsession with golf reached the point of setting out to design his own course. 'A poor shot should be a shot irrevocably lost,' Fownes famously said of his design philosophy. Oakmont was soon constructed by a team of 150 people and a dozen horses. It's the only course Fownes ever designed. There were more than 350 bunkers marked in the original Oakmont layout. The church pew bunker was not one of them. But a peculiar detail emerged in aerial photographs of the club taken in 1927, the year it hosted the U.S. Open for the first time. Six separate bunkers, each long and skinny and not particularly deep, lined the left side of the third hole. Check back on those aerial photos about eight years later, for the next U.S. Open hosted here, and you'll find the point of evolution that made the pews what they are today: Those six individual bunkers had morphed into one, with six floating berms. Whether you were stuck between the berms or your ball somehow managed to get caught up in one of them, the gigantic sand trap acted as a true avoid-at-all-costs hazard from there on out. Advertisement The concept of the church pews, however, was not born until a few decades later. After the debut of the grass berms, the bunker configuration came to be known as the 'snake mounds.' The sections of grass weren't built with straight edges. Their sizing was rather irregular. 'If you looked at them from above, they kind of looked like slithering snakes,' Moore says. The term 'church pew' was first associated with the giant bunker ahead of the 1962 U.S. Open in the Pittsburgh Press's tournament preview. The bunker, now stuck with a permanent name, was tweaked and fiddled with over time. Pews were added, straightened, trimmed and tucked. Ahead of this year's championship, renowned golf course architect Gil Hanse helped put the snake back into the snake mounds, bending the pews to match original photographs. His team also added a 13th pew. 'We deconstructed all of them and used the dirt to build the new pews to more accurately reflect the old style, in an expanded configuration,' Hanse says. For an on-course obstacle so widely recognized in the sport, it is surprising that one simple question proves unanswerable: Who came up with the idea? No one wrote it down. No one thought to document it. No one expected that, almost 100 years later, the club would be hosting its record 10th U.S. Open. With the pews tracing back to the years between the 1927 and 1935 U.S. Opens, there is a working theory that they were not a creation of Henry Fownes himself, but rather his son, William C. Fownes. At the time, W.C. was one of the best amateurs in Western Pennsylvania, competing frequently. Every year, he teed it up in one particular tournament in Atlantic City, New Jersey. And en route to that event, either traveling via the turnpike or the train, he would stop in Philadelphia and stay with his sister, Amelia. Advertisement The murkiness of the story begins about 20 miles outside of Philadelphia. It is loosely believed that W.C. played a course called The Springhaven Club during his visits with his sister. The club was first founded in 1896 by three women who were exposed to golf after trips abroad, much like Henry Fownes. Aerial photographs of Springhaven from 1924 feature a very familiar sight: a series of grass mounds, lined up in a row, along the first hole. It's not a bunker, but the resemblance is striking. At Springhaven, the configuration is referred to as a steeplechase. There are several loose connections between Springhaven and Oakmont. According to Michael Hodges, Springhaven's de facto historian, Springhaven members also participated in the same tournament in Atlantic City, and perhaps even played with or against W.C. in matches. The credit for the design of The Springhaven Club has long been associated with Ida Dixon. Ron Whitten and Geoffrey S. Cornish assert in their book, The Architects of Golf, that Dixon may have been the first female golf architect in the world. She went on to serve as the president of the Women's Golf Association of Philadelphia from 1911 to 1916, and Springhaven was her only design. Mysteriously, Springhaven's pews did not survive longer than a few years. Hodges uncovered photographs documenting the evolution of the club over the years in the Hagley Museum, a small museum in Wilmington, Delaware, and the pews were nowhere to be found by 1927. There is very little evidence that proves Dixon was responsible for the construction of such a unique design, and why they were eventually removed. Multiple golf architects were brought in by Springhaven pre-Great Depression to consult on its routing. Around the time of Englishman Herb Barker's hire, Springhaven also featured several long, skinny bunkers resembling the early stages of the six individual pew bunkers. William Flynn, perhaps best known for his design of Shinnecock Hills, was hired to correct bunker drainage around the course in 1923, which may have contributed to the pews' demise. 'The committee is determined to improve the course as much as possible during the winter and spring. They have consulted with H.H. Barker, the Garden City pro., who staked out fifty pits which will be placed as rapidly as the weather will permit. Most of the new hazards guard the approaches to the greens,' reads an article from the January edition of the 1910 American Golfer Magazine, one of the few pieces of concrete evidence available about the early stages of Springhaven. Advertisement The devilish pew design eventually re-emerged at Oakmont, and they've been reinstated at Springhaven too, as part of a recent renovation. The iconic feature has since been replicated around the world, including at TPC Scottsdale, Bucknell Golf Club and Lonsdale Links in Australia. The pews are alive and well. The Springhaven Club has never claimed to be the original inspiration for the pews. But a series of coincidences and likelihoods make Moore, for one, virtually certain of it. There isn't really another explanation. The church pews were a product of the sincerest form of flattery: Imitation. Whether it was Fownes, Dixon, Barker or Flynn, whoever thought of the church pews knew how to torture a golfer. One hundred years later, as the best players in the world descend upon Oakmont yet again, they're still doing their job.


Los Angeles Times
2 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
What's the matter with men? The year's most-talked-about TV shows have answers
They've hurt people in sudden fits of rage and calculated, premeditated attacks. They've blackmailed, threatened, lied and seduced. Now, they're starting to face the consequences. After years of showing toxic male behavior onscreen, this TV season has seen plenty of badly behaved men — well, at least the fictional ones — receive retribution. Netflix's 'You' ends with white-knight-in-his-own-mind Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) behind bars. During the final season of Hulu's 'The Handmaid's Tale,' Nick Blaine (Max Minghella) and Joseph Lawrence (Bradley Whitford), onetime functionaries of the fundamentalist post-America known as Gilead, realize that oppression based on one religion's beliefs may not be a good idea. 'Black Mirror' sequel episode 'USS Callister: Into Infinity' showed just how deep the toxicity of an abusive captor can run. And after four episodes of Netflix's 'Adolescence,' baby-faced teen killer Jamie Miller (Owen Cooper) finally admits fault. 'Handmaid's,' the 2017 drama series Emmy winner that many saw as a coded message about President Trump's first term, is a particularly potent example of the shift. 'There's no such thing as a good commander,' says Yahlin Chang, who with Eric Tuchman serves as this season's showrunner. 'If you are commander in Gilead, then you are by definition this toxic, poisonous force that needs to be rooted out from top to bottom.' In a world where the powerful increasingly act with impunity, taking fictional villains to task makes sense, a form of Hollywood wish fulfillment for those who feel stuck or hopeless. Programs such as Prime Video's 'The Better Sister' and Apple TV+'s 'Bad Sisters' further the conversation by showing the domino effect male toxicity has on others. The first season of creator and star Sharon Horgan's dark comedy 'Bad Sisters' is about a family of women who hate their sister's emotionally and physically violent husband almost as much as they want to save her from him. In the second season, which premiered last November, the sisters learn there's more to it than simply removing him from the situation. 'Something I was really drawn to write about is that, in the end, they didn't save her,' Horgan says of the battered Grace, played by Anne-Marie Duff. Instead, with years of trauma to work through, she retreats into herself — exactly the outcome her sisters hoped to prevent. 'She couldn't reach out to her sisters, who were heroes to her, and who she knew, deep down, would have done everything for her,' Horgan says. 'But she couldn't quite save herself. And it, structurally, gave us this journey for them.' With 'The Better Sister,' creators Olivia Milch and Regina Corrado look at all the people affected by Corey Stoll's Adam, a husband and father who's only perfect in the public eye. This isn't just about the abuse he inflicts on his wife, Chloe (Jessica Biel), a media personality known for her cutting feminist wit. It also includes Adam's mockery of teen son Ethan (Maxwell Acee Donovan). 'Ethan is at this intersection of childhood and adulthood, and he has this innocence as well as this somewhat complex understanding of adult relationships because he's been witnessing this tension unfold with his parents,' Milch says. Like a lot of teens, Ethan seeks guidance in the online manosphere, going down a rabbit hole of misogynistic comments about his stepmother. Ethan could easily label Chloe a hypocrite in these forums or at home. Instead, the other users disgust him. 'We wanted to talk about how there was a healthy aspect to it for him … that he needed to get it out … and that this was something that was cathartic for him,' adds Corrado. By contrast, the British series 'Adolescence' delves into the ways the internet can push boys in the wrong direction. But co-creator Jack Thorne stresses that collaborator Stephen Graham, who stars as Jamie's father, didn't want this to be the only factor. 'I know that, when I was 13, if I'd read or been told '80% of women are attracted to 20% of men' — a common misogynist talking point online — 'I'd have said, 'Yes, I believe that,'' says Thorne, who is in his 40s. He adds that he also would have acted on the idea that 'your job is to make yourself attractive; your job is to get yourself fitted; your job is to learn how to manipulate the situation.' Thorne says he, Graham and director Philip Barantini weren't just concerned with younger men, though: 'We wanted to examine ourselves in this a bit.' 'We're three men, all of the same age,' Thorne explains. 'We've had different lives, but we've all exhibited cruelty. We've all behaved in ways that were less than perfect. We've all got a relationship with our own shame.' The reason 'You' worked for five seasons is that Badgley's love-obsessed stalker has the charisma to gaslight himself and others into believing he's a good guy. He is incapable of self-examination. 'Performatively, he's a feminist,' says co-showrunner Michael Foley, noting that Badgley's Joe sees himself as a lover rather than a killer — albeit a lover who will kill anyone who keeps him from the object of his infatuation. 'You' premiered in 2018. Co-showrunner Justin Lo says that, if it premiered now, 'Joe would have started off a lot meaner.' 'The toxicity would be more unapologetic, more front and center,' Lo continues. 'Our Joe's toxicity began in a way that was more buried, more covert. And as the series and our culture has progressed, it's gotten more pronounced.' In fact, Joe's final words to his viewers are that he isn't to blame for his actions. You are — for watching.

Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Golf fans can get a taste of Pittsburgh's favorite foods during the U.S. Open
Fans from all over the world are getting a taste of Pittsburgh favorites during the U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club. Those iconic foods are found in the Fan Central tent. The spread features a Primanti's inspired Steel City hot dog, Mancini's pepperoni rolls, Eat'n Park's famous Smiley cookies and an Oakmont shaved kielbasa sandwich (of course made on Mancini's bread). Advertisement 'It's super cool and I know it's bringing a lot of revenue to Pittsburgh," one fan said about the nod to local favorites. And for Mancini's, they're presence will be noticed throughout the course. They're providing thousands of buns and rolls for concessions. Download the FREE WPXI News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Channel 11 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch WPXI NOW