
Pete Davidson breaks silence on becoming a dad after Elsie Hewitt pregnancy announcement
The model, 29, publicly announced her pregnancy on 16 July, sharing a video of an ultrasound scan and pictures of the couple.
Describing fatherhood as his "dream", the Saturday Night Live alum, 31, told Jimmy Fallon on Tuesday (22 July): 'Elsie's excited. I'm excited to see her be a mom, so we're stoked."
Davidson and Hewitt went public with their relationship in March 2025.
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Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
JD Vance offers hot take on Sydney Sweeney's 'attractiveness' amid woke jeans ad drama
Vice President JD Vance chimed in on the furious debate over an American Eagle ad campaign featuring actress Sydney Sweeney. 'My political advice to the Democrats is continue to tell everybody who thinks Sydney Sweeney is attractive is a Nazi. That appears to be their actual strategy,' Vance joked in an interview published Friday. Speaking on The Ruthless Podcast, the vice president ridiculed the left and Democrats for their reaction to the ad campaign that featured Sweeney and the slogan 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.' Critics on the left accused the ad's message as racist and compared it to 'Nazi propaganda' because of the pun using jeans with genes. One MSNBC producer wrote that the ad showed 'an unbridled cultural shift toward whiteness.' Vance joked that the Democrats had not learned anything from the previous election in their loss to Donald Trump. 'It actually reveals something pretty interesting about the Dems, though, which is that you have like a normal, all-American beautiful girl doing like a normal jeans ad, right?' he said. 'To try to sell, you know, sell jeans to kids in America, and they have managed to so unhinge themselves over this thing,' he added. In the ad, Sweeney wears all denim and says, 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color.' 'My jeans are blue,' she adds in the viral ad campaign. Vance said he thought Democrats would try to be 'less crazy' in the future. 'The lesson they have apparently taken is we're going to attack people as Nazis for thinking Sydney Sweeney is beautiful. Great strategy, guys,' he joked. 'That's how you're going to win the midterms.' Especially young American men.' The White House also criticized the left's backlash to the ad, describing it as 'cancel culture run amok.' 'This warped, moronic and dense liberal thinking is a big reason why Americans voted the way they did in 2024. They're tired of this bullshit,' wrote White House communications manager Steven Cheung on social media earlier in the week. Ashley Schapiro, Vice President of marketing at American Eagle revealed on LinkedIn after the ad campaign went viral that Sweeney was 'game' to 'push' the campaign into controversial territory. 'Syd's sentiment guided every frame, every stitch and every unexpected twist of The 'Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans' campaign,' Schapiro revealed, ' Infusing our own personal cheeky energy and making us laugh as we envisioned how the world would experience the launch,' she said. Schapiro heralded the team behind the spot for creating 'a moment in culture ... a wink.'


Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kim Zolciak ADMITS she used daughter Ariana's money... and reveals new romance amid Kroy Biermann divorce
Kim Zolciak fessed up to stealing her daughter Ariana Biermann's money on Thursday — and her daughter watched her admission from the front row of the audience. The 47-year-old former Real Housewives Of Atlanta star claimed to using all of her daughter's modeling income from her teen years to host Andy Cohen, but she insisted that she only used it to pay bills out of desperation amid her home foreclosure drama and her ugly divorce from her estranged husband Kroy Biermann, 39. Elsewhere in the interview, Kim revealed that she had moved on with a new man after splitting from the former NFL star, though she kept his identity a secret. While speaking of turning to her children for financial supporting, Kim claimed that 'the rug was pulled out from the Zolciaks.' 'I was left holding the bag for the family, and yeah. . . ' she said on a defensive note. Zolciak also confirmed that it wasn't just 23-year-old Ariana's money that went to paying for necessities, as her daughter Brielle, 28, also pitched in money 'for the bills and stuff,' though it sounded as if she at least had the option to consent to giving up her money. The former RHOA star claimed to using all of her daughter's modeling income from her teen years to host Andy Cohen, but she insisted that she only used it to pay bills out of desperation — all while Ariana watched her from the front row Ariana previously claimed on her reality series Next Gen NYC that her mother and stepfather didn't tell her that they had used all of the money she had earned from modeling gigs and influencer jobs. However, Zolciak appeared to have worked things out with her daughter, as Ariana didn't look overly angry with her mother during the segment, and she beamed widely when Zolciak and Cohen talked about more upbeat topics. The Don't Be Tardy star added that she had already repaid Ariana's money that had gone toward bills, and she suggested that she had 'spreadsheets' of what her daughter had made over the years to balance further down the road. But Cohen didn't buy that Zolciak had done full due diligence on her debts to her second-oldest daughter. 'I don't imagine you have any spreadsheets,' he said to laughter from the audience. 'I don't have — I don't even know how to do it!' Zolciak admitted. She was more animated during her appearance when the reality star admitted she was seeing a new man after splitting from Biermann. 'He's just great. You know, I sat in the house and just worked and tried to take care of everything for 20 months, and then I finally met somebody great,' she said warmly. Kim also gushed about a new mystery man in her life, and she admitted that she wished she and her estranged husband Kroy communicated more about the four children they share She didn't reveal her new man's identity, but she did say that a mutual friend had introduced them. Zolciak also indicated that things were tense with her estranged husband, though the pressure seemed to have gone down a bit after she had moved out of their mansion outside of Atlanta into her own home. 'I would definitely prefer to communicate more regarding the children, but it's just not there right now,' she said somberly. The exes share four minor children: Kroy 'KJ' Jr., 14; Kash, 12; and fraternal twins Kane and Kaia, 11.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
A particular set of skills: how Liam Neeson went from ‘master actor' to deadpan Naked Gun spoofery
Liam Neeson may have gained pop-culture immortality for his gravelly growl of a certain line of dialogue in the 2008 hostage thriller Taken – 'I don't have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills' – but the release of his new film, a reboot of the classic spoof cop movie The Naked Gun represents another remarkable turn in Neeson's distinguished career, which has taken in heavyweight prestige dramas, historical biopics, blockbusting science fiction, superhero epics and head-cracking action cinema. In The Naked Gun, Neeson has for the first time taken the lead role in an out-and-out comedy. He plays Frank Drebin Jr, the police-detective son of Leslie Nielsen's Frank Drebin in the original. Created by the celebrated comedy team of David Zucker, Jim Abrahams and Jerry Zucker, The Naked Gun was released in 1988, with Nielsen featuring in two sequels, The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear from 1991 and Naked Gun 33⅓: The Final Insult in 1994, as well as the preceding TV series Police Squad!, which aired in 1982. Neeson's intense, unflappable acting style has been acclaimed by critics as a perfect match for Nielsen's celebrated stone-face delivery; the Guardian's chief film critic Peter Bradshaw said that Neeson 'deadpans it impeccably', while the Telegraph's Robbie Collin writes that Neeson 'delivers his dialogue with a gravelly matter-of-factness that only compounds its lunacy'. At the age of 73, Neeson's current status as the star of a hit mainstream comedy – augmented by rumours of a romance with his co-star Pamela Anderson – is a world away from his emergence as a bona fide leading man in the early 1990s, when he put his teenage proficiency in boxing to good use in the Scotland-set drama The Big Man, bagged an Oscar nomination for playing Oskar Schindler in Schindler's List, and nobly donned plaid, kilt and sporran as 18th century highlander Rob Roy. Neeson's ability to project a weighty sense of gravitas in these wildly differing roles was compounded by his casting as Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins, in Neil Jordan's 1996 biopic, the most politically sensitive – and closest to home – of his early leading roles. Born in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, Neeson was raised Catholic but later said he was, ironically, inspired to become an actor after watching the firebrand Protestant leader Rev Ian Paisley preach, saying: 'It was incredible to watch this 6ft-plus man just bible-thumping away.' Neeson's career took its first unexpected deviation in the late 1990s when he was cast as Jedi master Qui-Gon Jinn in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, George Lucas's return to the Star Wars universe in 1999, with Lucas describing Neeson as 'a master actor, who the other actors will look up to'. This excursion into fantasy-blockbuster moviemaking was cemented with a role as principal antagonist Ra's al Ghul in Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins in 2005, and lending his voice to Aslan the lion in the three Narnia films from the same period: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Prince Caspian, and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. Neeson's standing in the industry also allowed him to take smaller roles in landmark films in the same period, including Gangs of New York and Love Actually. He had, however, lost his leading-man status in Hollywood, and it was the success of Taken – a French production, written by Luc Besson and directed by Pierre Morel – that returned him to the spotlight. Neeson later said he was 'stunned' by its impact, adding: 'I really thought it would be kind of a little side road from my so-called career. Really thought it would go straight to video.' Taken's box office receipts amounted to nine times its $25m (£19m) budget and virtually inaugurated the 'dad action' movie, thrillers featuring leads in late middle age; it is also the film with which Neeson is arguably now most identified with. Neeson went on to make a string of dad action films, including Unknown, Non-Stop, The Ice Road and Retribution. Neeson's reinvention as an action star coincided with a period of personal tragedy, after the death of his wife, Natasha Richardson, in a skiing accident in 2009. The pair had met in 1993 while co-starring in a Broadway production of Eugene O'Neill's play Anna Christie, and married a year later. Neeson later said that grief over her death was partly responsible for his withdrawing from the lead role in Steven Spielberg's biopic of Abraham Lincoln, released in 2012, in which he was replaced by Daniel Day-Lewis. More recently Neeson was heavily criticised, and subsequently apologised, for saying that, in his youth, he had gone out looking to 'kill' a random black man in revenge for a sexual assault on a friend. Neeson had mentioned the incident in 2019 during the press tour for another action film, Cold Pursuit, later saying: 'The horror of what happened to my friend ignited irrational thoughts that do not represent the person I am. In trying to explain those feelings today, I missed the point and hurt many people.' Neeson's career, however, appears to have been relatively unaffected by the controversy, as well as his comment in 2018 that the recent wave of sexual misconduct allegations in the entertainment industry was 'bit of a witch-hunt'. With The Naked Gun commanding significant media attention – as much for speculation on Neeson's personal life as for the film itself – the actor's stock is as high as it has ever been.