
17 Famous AAPI Child Actors Then Vs. Now Photos
Here's Brenda Song in The Suite Life of Zack of Cody, age 17:
Here's Brenda Song now, age 37:
Here's Ke Huy Quan in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, age 12:
Here's Ke Huy Quan now, age 53:
Here's Lana Condor in X-Men: Apocalypse, age 18:
Here's Lana Condor now, age 28:
Here's Hailee Steinfeld in True Grit, age 13:
Here's Hailee Steinfeld now, age 28:
Here's Vanessa Hudgens in Thunderbirds, age 15:
Here's Vanessa Hudgens now, age 36:
Here's Auli'i Cravalho (voice of Moana) when Moana was released, age 16:
Here's Auliʻi Cravalho now, age 24:
Here's Maitreyi Ramakrishnan in Never Have I Ever, age 18:
Here's Maitreyi Ramakrishnan now, age 23:
Here's Hudson Yang in Fresh Off the Boat, age 11:
Here's Hudson Yang now, age 21:
Here's Devon Aoki in 2 Fast 2 Furious, age 20:
Here's Devon Aoki in 2023, age 40:
Here's Ian Chen in Fresh Off the Boat, age 8:
Here's Ian Chen now, age 18:
Here's Arden Cho in Teen Wolf, age 19:
Here's Arden Cho now, age 39:
Here's Sydney Park in That's So Raven, age 8:
Here's Sydney Park now, age 27:
Here's Malese Jow in Unfabulous, age 14:
Here's Malese Jow now, age 34:
Here's Forrest Wheeler in Fresh Off the Boat, age 8:
Here's Forrest Wheeler in 2023, age 19:
Here's Anna Cathcart in To All the Boys, age 14:
Here's Anna Cathcart now, age 21:
Here's Avan Jogia in Victorious, age 17:
Here's Avan Jogia now, age 33:
And finally, here's Olivia Rodrigo in Bizaardvark, age 13:
Here's Olivia Rodrigo now, age 22:
Did any of these transformations surprise you? Let us know in the comments below!
Check out more AAPI-centered content by exploring how BuzzFeed celebrates Asian Pacific American Heritage Month! Of course, the content doesn't end after May. Follow BuzzFeed's A*Pop on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube to keep up with our latest AAPI content year-round.
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Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Funerals Bring Out The Absolute WORST In People, And These 21 WILD Stories Prove It
As we all know, funerals are an emotional event. Of course, everyone processes grief differently, but there are some people who simply want to make the entire event about themselves, causing the day to become more difficult than it already was... That's why when TikTok user @madixfinn asked, "I work in a funeral home. Give me your most unhinged funeral stories..." Thousands of people shared stories from funerals that went COMPLETELY off the rails. From arrests to mishaps with ashes — here are 21 stories that prove funerals bring out the worst in people: If you've ever attended a WILD funeral, you can tell us about it using this anonymous form! 1."My grandfather's affair partner of 25 years came to his funeral, and my granny started firing a pistol at her in the MIDDLE of the service. Granny exited the funeral in handcuffs, and his affair partner left on a stretcher." —rosemaryfuhreal 2."My uncle was in a biker gang. When we were spreading his ashes at his funeral, a biker walked up to me, my mom, and my sister and said, 'I want him to always be with me,' then proceeded to eat a SCOOP of the ashes." —britwit3 3."My husband had a funeral director friend who got caught wearing the shoes that had been dropped off for the deceased. He proceeded to put his old shoes on the body." —pamelachandler965 4."Around the time one of my friends died, I was obsessed with AC/DC's 'Highway to Hell,' I even had it set as my ringtone. Normally, I keep my phone on silent, but the one time I didn't was at the funeral..." "While I was sitting there, my mom called and 'Highway to Hell' started blaring in the middle of a moment of silence." —gammydrew22 5."A funeral attendee grabbed the body out of the coffin and danced with it. I kid you not. We had to call the police." —triggerman375 6."We were doing a service for a lady, and her son gave me a CD to play with his original rap songs. Then he stood in front of the casket and gave a 10-minute performance." —budweiser_frog Related: 13 Tweets From Women This Week That Made Me Laugh So Hard I Might Need Medical Attention 7."Helped with a celebration of life on a schooner I used to work on. I told the mourners not to spread the ashes on the leeward side, but of course, they didn't listen." "Suffice it to say, the deceased's ashes blew in the wind, and a few seconds later, I heard someone scream, 'Grandma's IN my eye!' I tried so hard not to laugh." —poopsaget 8."My 75-year-old grandma showed up at her ex-husband's mother's funeral (who was a very religious woman) in a super tight black dress that barely covered anything and neon pink high heels." —emrm00 9."My ex tried to get me to have sex with him in a bathroom stall at his grandmother's funeral, so that was something..." —rainaalison 10."When my ex-husband died, his wife of two years (they were also separated when he died) wanted some of his ashes. My adult children despised her, so they gave her ashes out of the fireplace." —user8858476137158 Related: 18 People Who Took A Picture Of Something That — Oops — Is Super Dangerous 11."I once went to a funeral where a woman was shaking the casket, crying, and acting a fool before she realized she was at the wrong place." —lindsassiter 12."I hate to admit this, but when my pawpaw died, I was at the gravesite and there was an awful smell. Without thinking, I said, 'It smells like something dead out here!'" — 13."I purchased a cheap ring for my deceased mother because I knew one of my siblings would try to steal it from the casket. Sure enough, my brother tried to take the ring, and when he did, it broke. We caught it all on camera." —angelgirlie7 14."My aunt tried to start a fist fight with me at my grandpa's viewing because I refused to sing a Mormon children's song at his funeral. He famously HATED Mormon children's songs." —em_treas 15."When my uncle was attending his son's funeral, he got a call in the middle of the service, stood up, and walked out..." "Come to find out, he was on the run from the cops with a warrant and got a call saying they knew he was at his son's funeral, so he fled." —71eaneryenial 16."I went out to open up the mausoleum for a funeral, when I walked in there, I found the funeral director's son and the deceased's granddaughter were 'involved.' Meanwhile, the family was already there, getting the casket out of the hearse." —celticblue2u_services 17."My mother let her pastor turn my dad's funeral into a full-blown church service. The typical asking for tithes, you're going to hell service. My dad rarely went to church. She just wanted attention for doing the 'right' thing." —chermypartyof4 18."Once everyone was seated at my grandfather's wake, my uncle stood up and started taking photos of him in his casket. You could hear the camera clicking and the horrified gasps of attendees. My uncle said, 'What? He looks good in his uniform!'" —kaoskit 19."At my great-grandmother's after-funeral gathering, my aunt was being bossy and telling everyone what to do, so my dad turned around and said, 'Who died and made you queen?'" —momma_mac_4 20."When my little sister and I went to my paternal grandmother's funeral, we had a random screaming match and kept shouting 'I didn't die, you died' at each other. Our mom had to remove us from the church." —sheoutherereadin 21."The deceased's girlfriend showed up inebriated, in short shorts and a tube top, kissed the corpse, climbed INTO the casket, sang, recorded a TikTok video, then got into a fist fight with the deceased's WIFE and daughter. Cops were called!" —mamacat62 Did any of these WILD stories surprise you? Have you ever attended a funeral that went off the rails? Tell us in the comments or answer anonymously using the form below! Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. Also in Internet Finds: The History We're Taught Is Wildly Sanitized, So Here 28 Disturbing Historical Events Everyone Should Be Aware Of Also in Internet Finds: Tattoo Artists Are Sharing The Tattoos They Felt REALLY Uncomfortable Doing, And I Have No Words Also in Internet Finds: "I've Worked In Various Prisons. I Will Take A Men's Over Women's Any Day Of The Week. Shit Is Scary": Former Female Inmates Are Sharing Their Most Disturbing Prison Experiences, And My Jaw Is Literally On The Floor


Buzz Feed
37 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Unhinged Funeral Moments TikTok
As we all know, funerals are an emotional event. Of course, everyone processes grief differently, but there are some people who simply want to make the entire event about themselves, causing the day to become more difficult than it already was... That's why when TikTok user @madixfinn asked, "I work in a funeral home. Give me your most unhinged funeral stories..." Thousands of people shared stories from funerals that went COMPLETELY off the rails. From arrests to mishaps with ashes — here are 21 stories that prove funerals bring out the worst in people: "My grandfather's affair partner of 25 years came to his funeral, and my granny started firing a pistol at her in the MIDDLE of the service. Granny exited the funeral in handcuffs, and his affair partner left on a stretcher." —rosemaryfuhreal "My uncle was in a biker gang. When we were spreading his ashes at his funeral, a biker walked up to me, my mom, and my sister and said, 'I want him to always be with me,' then proceeded to eat a SCOOP of the ashes." "My husband had a funeral director friend who got caught wearing the shoes that had been dropped off for the deceased. He proceeded to put his old shoes on the body." "Around the time one of my friends died, I was obsessed with AC/DC's 'Highway to Hell,' I even had it set as my ringtone. Normally, I keep my phone on silent, but the one time I didn't was at the funeral..." "While I was sitting there, my mom called and 'Highway to Hell' started blaring in the middle of a moment of silence."—gammydrew22 "A funeral attendee grabbed the body out of the coffin and danced with it. I kid you not. We had to call the police." "We were doing a service for a lady, and her son gave me a CD to play with his original rap songs. Then he stood in front of the casket and gave a 10-minute performance." "Helped with a celebration of life on a schooner I used to work on. I told the mourners not to spread the ashes on the leeward side, but of course, they didn't listen." "Suffice it to say, the deceased's ashes blew in the wind, and a few seconds later, I heard someone scream, 'Grandma's IN my eye!' I tried so hard not to laugh."—poopsaget "My 75-year-old grandma showed up at her ex-husband's mother's funeral (who was a very religious woman) in a super tight black dress that barely covered anything and neon pink high heels." "My ex tried to get me to have sex with him in a bathroom stall at his grandmother's funeral, so that was something..." "When my ex-husband died, his wife of two years (they were also separated when he died) wanted some of his ashes. My adult children despised her, so they gave her ashes out of the fireplace." —user8858476137158 "I once went to a funeral where a woman was shaking the casket, crying, and acting a fool before she realized she was at the wrong place." "I hate to admit this, but when my pawpaw died, I was at the gravesite and there was an awful smell. Without thinking, I said, 'It smells like something dead out here!'" "I purchased a cheap ring for my deceased mother because I knew one of my siblings would try to steal it from the casket. Sure enough, my brother tried to take the ring, and when he did, it broke. We caught it all on camera." —angelgirlie7 "My aunt tried to start a fist fight with me at my grandpa's viewing because I refused to sing a Mormon children's song at his funeral. He famously HATED Mormon children's songs." "When my uncle was attending his son's funeral, he got a call in the middle of the service, stood up, and walked out..." "I went out to open up the mausoleum for a funeral, when I walked in there, I found the funeral director's son and the deceased's granddaughter were 'involved.' Meanwhile, the family was already there, getting the casket out of the hearse." —celticblue2u_services "My mother let her pastor turn my dad's funeral into a full-blown church service. The typical asking for tithes, you're going to hell service. My dad rarely went to church. She just wanted attention for doing the 'right' thing." "Once everyone was seated at my grandfather's wake, my uncle stood up and started taking photos of him in his casket. You could hear the camera clicking and the horrified gasps of attendees. My uncle said, 'What? He looks good in his uniform!'" —kaoskit "At my great-grandmother's after-funeral gathering, my aunt was being bossy and telling everyone what to do, so my dad turned around and said, 'Who died and made you queen?'" "When my little sister and I went to my paternal grandmother's funeral, we had a random screaming match and kept shouting 'I didn't die, you died' at each other. Our mom had to remove us from the church." "The deceased's girlfriend showed up inebriated, in short shorts and a tube top, kissed the corpse, climbed INTO the casket, sang, recorded a TikTok video, then got into a fist fight with the deceased's WIFE and daughter. Cops were called!" —mamacat62 Did any of these WILD stories surprise you? Have you ever attended a funeral that went off the rails? Tell us in the comments or answer anonymously using the form below!


Time Magazine
an hour ago
- Time Magazine
The Best Songs of 2025 So Far
The biggest music story of 2025 remains, as it has for many years, the very fact of how music is discovered, as streaming monoliths and social-media algorithms continually overtake what we hear and what it sounds like. When TikTok virality and playlist automation saturate listeners' attention, artistic sameness threatens to rule the day—but independent artists on their own unique paths are still with us. Let this list, which mostly eschews household names, be an antidote to that crisis, surveying 2025's most notable releases thus far across pop, rock, electronic, rap, and Latin music. Wednesday, 'Elderberry Wine' The North Carolina band Wednesday, led by Karly Hartzman since forming in 2017, fuses the blistering edges of shoegaze and the twangy ache of country (shall we call it rootgaze?) into a vessel for vivid, gnarled storytelling, filled with literary detail. This heartbreaker from Wednesday's sixth full-length, due in September, is the most finely-wrought tune yet from the group, which includes the ascendant MJ Lenderman on guitar. (His cover of This Is Lorelei's 'Dancing in the Club' is another of the year's best releases so far.) The titular metaphor refers to a healing herb that becomes toxic in the wrong dosage, much as love requires the right proportions to find harmony. Jenny Hval, 'To be a rose' Ten years ago this month, the Norwegian auteur Jenny Hval released her fifth album, Apocalypse, girl, cementing her stature as a modern art-pop luminary. Also a novelist, Hval makes records that brim with presence, intelligence, and the suspended elegance of Laurie Anderson or Suzanne Vega. Like some of her best songs—'That Battle Is Over' and 'American Coffee' among them—'To be a rose,' from May's Iris Silver Mist, is an electroacoustic musical bildungsroman. It seems to braid two abstracted narratives, hers and her mother's, both in pursuit of beauty, swelling to exalted synth chords and referencing Gertrude Stein for good measure. Nourished by Time, 'Max Potential' On Marcus Brown's 2023 debut, recorded in his parents' basement during the pandemic, the Baltimore songwriter and producer, known as Nourished by Time, fused meticulously arranged club anthems with DIY textures—favoring maximal emotional impact. 'Max Potential,' the dizzying jam of a lead single from his forthcoming The Passionate Ones, is the apotheosis of his project to date. 'If I'm gonna go insane/ At least I'm loved by you,' Brown sings, stretching each syllable into a titanic hook that charts a euphoric new horizon. Marie Davidson, 'Sexy Clown' Montreal electronic producer and poet Marie Davidson writes spoken-word accompaniments that cut through the icy facades of club culture, staring listeners in the eye. Drawing inspiration from Shoshana Zuboff's The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, this electroclash banger from City of Clowns sounds like a person's digital footprint lost in a fun-house maze—like life itself in the algorithmic echo chamber of targeted advertising and calculated self-promotion. 'Sexy Clown' taunts the entire system: 'Can you feel the cutting edge/ Of my dying tenderness?' goes Davidson's earnest sing-song chorus, an invitation to log off in service of your truest self. Perfume Genius, 'It's a Mirror' For 15 years as Perfume Genius, Mike Hadreas has built one of the most consistently arresting catalogs in independent music. That streak continues with Glory, the singer and songwriter's latest collaboration with his partner Alan Wyffels and producer Blake Mills. Inside of an expressive indie-rock sound as precise, stylish, and grounded as mid-century architecture, album opener 'It's a Mirror' finds Hadreas sounding at home, even as he reckons lyrically with how to steel oneself in face of the world and the mirror alike. Mills, a longtime associate of Fiona Apple, knows this territory well: the pointed self-analysis of an extremely sensitive person. Turnstile, 'Never Enough' With 2021's Glow On, the Baltimore rock quintet Turnstile became not only the biggest band to emerge from the global hardcore scene in recent years, but one of the biggest bands to emerge from this supercharged strain of punk ever. Post-pandemic restlessness was just one feature of the perfect storm that catapulted Turnstile and their legendary, highly participatory live shows into the pop-cultural zeitgeist. 'At the right place, at the right time/ And still you sink into the floor,' Brendan Yates sings on the bracingly honest title track of Turnstile's hugely anticipated followup, a reminder that at the heart of Turnstile's whirlwind moment is unified, shared experience. Spellling, 'Alibi' The Bay Area artist Tia Cabral made her name first as a homespun R&B sorcerer, then, on 2021's The Turning Wheel, as an heir to the widescreen synth-pop idiosyncrasies of Kate Bush and the vocal audacity of Minnie Riperton. She's taken her most unexpected pivot yet on this epic kiss-off from Portrait of My Heart, with visceral riffs and overdriven melodies evoking the high-wire emo theatrics that infiltrated MTV during the 33-year-old's own teenage years. With contributions from Turnstile guitarist Pat McCrory, 'Alibi' enacts its line-in-the-sand sentiment of post-breakup clarity: 'Yeah I won't take you back this time!' she sing-screams with abandon, finding a new side of herself instead. Lana Del Rey, 'Henry Come On' Aside from flecking her lyrics with the occasional 'giddy-up' and 'hey y'all,' there's nothing especially down-home about the sound of this lead single from Lana Del Rey's next album, which is purported to be a country turn from the California fatalist whose best-loved LP included a psych sprawler titled 'Venice Bitch.' This would-be cowgirl is all Lana, chronicling her destiny alongside a tormented man with a torchy deadpan. 'Yesterday I heard God say/ I was born to the one,' she croons, 'Who holds the hands of the man/ Who flies too close to the sun.' Saba & No ID, 'How to Impress God' On this brash mini-anthem of anti-materialism, two generations of Chicago-bred rap royalty link up for a conversation with the creator, too, determining what really matters. Jewels, cars, clothes? Hard no's. Album streams? Try again. Packed arenas get a disenchanted 'Woo.' Tucked into the second half of Saba and No ID's collaborative album, 'How to Impress God' is a flash of casual brilliance from Saba's searing pen. When he finally gives voice to God, self-acceptance is the message: 'Don't you know I gave you keys before you had a piano?/ Don't you know you enough?' (Paging Turnstile.) Bad Bunny, 'DtMF' Música urbana supernova Bad Bunny has called DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, from January—the title translates to 'I Should Have Taken More Pictures'—his 'most Puerto Rican album ever,' even as recent years found him moving away from home. 'When you are far, sometimes you can see better, you can appreciate more,' he told the New York Times. This focused celebration of traditional Puerto Rican rhythms plays out stirringly on his chart-topping title track, a plena whose live instrumentation and joyfully communal hook are like a cinéma-vérité bridge between generations, on the world's stage (and, yes, TikTok).