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John Mayer debuts mature makeover at star-studded Vogue event

John Mayer debuts mature makeover at star-studded Vogue event

Daily Mail​4 days ago

John Mayer turned heads at a Vogue event in Los Angeles on Wednesday night, showing off graying hair — a far cry from the fresh-faced heartthrob who once dated half of Hollywood.
Now 47, the Grammy-winning singer-songwriter has racked up an impressive romantic resume over the years, including rumored flings with Jennifer Love Hewitt, Jessica Simpson, Taylor Swift, and Katy Perry.
Perhaps most famously, he had an on-and-off relationship with Jennifer Aniston between 2008 and 2009, reportedly reconnecting again in 2019 before calling it quits for good that same year.
But Mayer's A-list dating streak appears to have cooled in recent years, despite ongoing speculation linking him to Chilling Adventures of Sabrina actress Kiernan Shipka since 2022.
And while age may be slowing down his wild romances, Mayer doesn't seem to be hiding it.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop.
At the starry event celebrating luxury watchmaker Audemars Piguet, he confidently embraced his salt-and-pepper temples, pairing his silver strands with a laid-back look and a stylish pair of glasses.
Still handsome — just a little more seasoned — and clearly still a magnet for Hollywood's leading ladies, as he posed with Hailey Bieber.
Back in 2020, Mayer and Aniston made headlines for flaunting their platonic bond, trading likes and friendly comments on social media.
Of course, their original split in 2009 wasn't exactly smooth.
Mayer raised eyebrows with some blunt remarks about their age difference, telling Playboy at the time: 'I'll always be sorry that it didn't last. In some ways I wish I could be with her. But I can't change the fact that I need to be 32.'
'One of the most significant differences between us was that I was tweeting,' he noted. 'There was a rumour that I had been dumped because I was tweeting too much.
He added: 'The brunt of her success came before TMZ and Twitter. I think she's still hoping it goes back to 1998.'
He went on: 'If Jennifer Aniston knows how to use BitTorrent, I'll eat my f**king shoe. One of the most significant differences between us was that I was tweeting...
Mayer and Taylor Swift are rumored to have written songs about each other; (pictured in 2009)
'There was a rumour that I had been dumped because I was tweeting too much. That wasn't it, but that was a big difference...'
Speaking herself to Vogue about their split, Jennifer said: 'He had to put that out there that he broke up with me. And especially because it's me. It's not just some girl he's dating. I get it. We're human.'
'It doesn't take away from the fact that he is a wonderful guy. We care about each other,' she said at the time.
She concluded, 'There was no malicious intent. I deeply, deeply care about him; we talk, we adore one another. And that's where it is.'
Since her split from John Mayer in 2009, Aniston has had only one confirmed relationship and several rumored romances.
Her most significant relationship was with Justin Theroux.
They met in 2011 while filming Wanderlust, got engaged in 2012, and married in a private ceremony at their Los Angeles home in 2015.
The couple announced their separation in 2018 but have remained on friendly terms.

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Parks and Recreation star Nick Offerman breaks silence about death of castmate Jonathan Joss
Parks and Recreation star Nick Offerman breaks silence about death of castmate Jonathan Joss

Daily Mail​

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Parks and Recreation star Nick Offerman breaks silence about death of castmate Jonathan Joss

Nick Offerman has broken his silence about the tragic passing of his Parks And Recreation costar Jonathan Joss. The late actor, 59, was allegedly shot and killed in San Antonio, Texas, on Sunday by his neighbor Sigfredo Alvarez Ceja during a heated argument, TMZ reported. Ceja was captured by law enforcement shortly after fleeing the scene and has been booked on suspicion of murder. He is being held on $200K bond. Joss' husband has since claimed that the star's death was a homophobia-fueled murder. Jonathan had notably portrayed the character of Chief Ken Hotate in the beloved NBC sitcom over five episodes, alongside other castmates including Offerman, Amy Poehler, Rashida Jones, Chris Pratt, Adam Scott and Aubrey Plaza. 'The cast has been texting together about it all day and we're just heartbroken,' Nick said in a statement to People on Tuesday. 'Jonathan was such a sweet guy and we loved having him as our Chief Ken Hotate. A terrible tragedy.' Joss was pronounced dead on Sunday when paramedics were unable to revive him after neighbor Sigfredo Alvarez Ceja allegedly shot him several times following an argument. The San Antonio Police Department captured the suspect in his car a block from the scene after he fled, and he's being held on $200K bond. Last Saturday, Jonathan — who boasts 9K social media followers — shared a video of himself in good spirits, urging fans to visit him at Tribe Comics and Games in Austin, TX for a signing. On Sunday morning, Joss thanked fans on Facebook for helping him secure a ride back to San Antonio. The Our Lady of the Lake University grad's last IMDb-credited gig was voicing characters for CD Projekt RED's video game Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty in 2023 alongside Keanu Reeves and Idris Elba. Jonathan also voiced the character Healing in Paul McComas and Holly Trasti's animated drama Unplugged alongside the late Louis Gossett Jr., the late Ed Asner, Christina Ricci and Jeri Ryan. But Joss is best known for voicing musician and healer John Redcorn, who embarked on a 14-year-long affair with anchorwoman Nancy Hicks-Gribble (Ashley Gardner), on the Fox animated sitcom from seasons 2–13. Last Friday, the charismatic actor of Native descent crashed the King of the Hill reunion at ATX TV Festival in Austin and with co-creators Mike Judge and Greg Daniels as well as actors Pamela Adlon, Lauren Tom and Toby Huss. The San Antonio Police Department captured the suspect in his car a block from the scene after he fled, and he's being held on $200K bond; mugshot of Sigfredo Alvarez Ceja seen above On January 23, Jonathan suffered the loss of his three beloved dogs when his childhood home, that his father built in 1957, burned to the ground. Joss also lost his car in the blaze, but the GoFundMe organized by Logan Kostroun successfully raised $10,721 from a $15K goal. But neighbors told TMZ on Monday that his house burned down because he attempted to use a BBQ pit to heat it after the city allegedly 'shut off his power when the property was deemed unsafe and uninhabitable.' On Monday, the star's widow Tristan Kern de Gonzales — whom he wed on Valentine's Day — claimed he was murdered after they were 'harassed' for two years by 'openly homophobic' individuals who 'did not accept our relationship.' 'When we returned to the site to check our mail we discovered the skull of one of our dogs and its harness placed in clear view. This caused both of us severe emotional distress,' the South Carolina native recalled on Facebook. 'While we were doing this a man approached us. He started yelling violent homophobic slurs at us. He then raised a gun from his lap and fired. Jonathan and I had no weapons.' He continued, 'We were not threatening anyone. We were grieving. We were standing side by side. When the man fired Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life.' Tristan added, 'My focus now is on protecting Jonathan's legacy and honoring the life we built together.' Tristan added, 'My focus now is on protecting Jonathan's legacy and honoring the life we built together' Jonathan is also remembered for his role as Chief Ken Hotate in five episodes of NBC's mockumentary sitcom Parks and Recreation spanning 2011–2015. Joss had small roles in TV shows like Walker Texas Ranger, Charmed, ER, Ray Donovan and Tulsa King. He also acted in films like True Grit, The Magnificent Seven, Pocahontas 2: Journey to a New World and Johnson Family Vacation. Fans have since taken to social media to mourn over the loss of Joss and also expressed their condolences. One penned on X, 'Such a tremendous loss. His talent and spirit will be deeply missed,' and another wrote, 'Rest in peace. So so sad.' 'Iconic voice, such an awful way to go. RIP,' a fan shared, while one typed, 'RIP Jonathan Joss. Voice of one of the best and funniest characters in King of the Hill.' Another commented, 'RIP to a legend, I haven't watched parks and rec for a long time but I had no idea he played the Casino owner... 'Literally one of the funniest episodes and side characters. What a legend,' they continued.

Tulsa mayor unveils staggering $100M reparations plan for black descendants of 1921 massacre
Tulsa mayor unveils staggering $100M reparations plan for black descendants of 1921 massacre

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tulsa mayor unveils staggering $100M reparations plan for black descendants of 1921 massacre

The first black mayor of Tulsa, Oklahoma has unveiled an ambitious reparations plan that would see more than $100 million invested in the descendants of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. Mayor Monroe Nichols announced on Sunday that the city is opening a $105 million charitable trust comprising private funds to address issues including housing, scholarships, land acquisition and economic development for north Tulsans. Of that money, $24 million will go toward housing and home ownership for the descendants of the attack that killed as many as 300 black people and razed 35 blocks, according to Public Radio Tulsa. Another $21 million will fund land acquisition, scholarship funding and economic development for the blighted north Tulsa community, and a whopping $60 million will go toward cultural preservation to improve buildings in the once prosperous Greenwood neighborhood. 'For 104 years, the Tulsa Race Massacre has been a stain on our city's history,' Nichols said at an event commemorating Race Massacre Observance Day. 'The massacre was hidden from history books, only to be followed by the intentional acts of redlining, a highway built to choke off economic vitality and the perpetual underinvestment of local, state and federal governments. 'Now it's time to take the next big steps to restore.' But the proposal will not include direct cash payments to the last known survivors, Leslie Benningfield Randle and Viola Fletcher, who are 110 and 111 years old. They had been fighting for reparations for years, and earlier this year their attorney Damario Solomon-Simmons argued that any reparations plan should include direct payments to the two survivors as well as a victim's compensation fund for outstanding claims. However, a lawsuit Solomon-Simmons - who also founded the group Justice for Greenwood - was struck down in 2023 by an Oklahoma judge who declared the claimants 'don't have unlimited rights to compensation.' The ruling was then upheld by the Oklahoma Supreme Court last year, dampening racial justice advocates' hopes that the city would ever make financial amends. But after taking office earlier this year, Nichols said he reviewed previous proposals from local community organizations like Justice for Greenwood. He then discussed his plan with the Tulsa City Council and descendants of the massacre victims. 'What we wanted to do was find a way in which we could take in a number of these recommendations, so that it's reflective of the descendant community, of the folks that brought forth some recommendations,' Nichols said as he also vowed to continue to search for mass graves believed to contain victims of the massacre and release 45,000 previously classified city records. No part of his plan would require city council approval, the mayor noted, and any fundraising would be conducted by an executive director whose salary will be paid for by private funding. A Board of Trustees would also determine how to distribute the funds. Still, the city council would have to authorize the transfer of any city property to the trust, something the mayor said was highly likely. He explained that one of the points that really stuck with him in these discussions was the destruction of not just what Greenwood was - with its restaurants, theaters, hotels, banks and grocery stores - but what it could have been. 'The Greenwood District at its height was a center of commerce,' he told the Associated Press. 'So what was lost was not just something from North Tulsa or the black community. It actually robbed Tulsa of an economic future that would have rivaled anywhere else in the world.' 'You would have had the center of oil wealth here and the center of black wealth here at the same time,' he added in his remarks to the Times. 'That would have made us an economic juggernaut and would have probably made the city double in size.' Many at Sunday's event said they supported the plan, even though it does not include cash payments to the two elderly survivors of the attack. Chief Egunwale Amusan, a survivor descendant, for example, said the he has worked for half his life to get reparations. 'If [my grandfather] had been here today, it probably would have been the most restorative day of his life,' he told Public Radio Tulsa. Jacqueline Weary, a granddaughter of massacre survivor John R. Emerson, Sr., who owned a hotel and cab company in Greenwood that were destroyed, meanwhile, acknowledged the political difficulty of giving cash payments to descendants. But at the same time, she wondered how much of her family's wealth was lost in the violence. 'If Greenwood was still there, my grandfather would still have his hotel,' said Weary, 65. 'It rightfully was our inheritance, and it was literally taken away.' The violence in 1921 erupted after a white woman told police that a black man had grabbed her arm in an elevator in a downtown Tulsa commercial building on May 30, 1921. The following day, police arrested the man, who the Tulsa Tribune reported had tried to assault the woman. White people surrounded the courthouse, demanding the man be handed over. World War One veterans were among black men who went to the courthouse to face the mob. A white man tried to disarm a black veteran and a shot rang out, touching off further violence. White people then looted and burned buildings and dragged the black people from their beds and beat them, according to historical accounts. The white people were deputized by authorities and instructed to shoot the black residents. No one was ever charged in the violence, which the federal government now classifies as a 'coordinated military-style attack' by white citizens, and not the work of an unruly mob.

Nepo babies' not-so-humble brag about their status and generational wealth as they embrace label in new trend - but can you guess who their famous parents are?
Nepo babies' not-so-humble brag about their status and generational wealth as they embrace label in new trend - but can you guess who their famous parents are?

Daily Mail​

time40 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Nepo babies' not-so-humble brag about their status and generational wealth as they embrace label in new trend - but can you guess who their famous parents are?

Nepo babies have really been in the hot seat over the last year - and now rather than rebuffing the identity, they are bragging about it. In a new online trend, the offspring of the rich and famous are making their celebrity-heir status known thanks to the basketball term 'air ball' - a missed basket. Among the nepo babies jumping on the trend are Ava Phillippe, the daughter of Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillippe, Francesca Scorsese and Jackson 5 star Randy Jackson's daughter Zoë. But perhaps winning the trend is Alianna Thiam - given that her dad Akon sings on the track being overlaid on the clips, Soul Survivor. The clips show the nepo babies turn the joke on you for making an 'airball' - a very wrong, and seriously underestimated, assumption about what their parents do for work. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the Daily Mail's showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Taking to TikTok, Senegalese-American singer Akon's daughter Alianna shared a picture of himself with the caption: 'Told him my dad was in the music industry.' In the next slide, Alianna could be seen taking a mirror selfie in a lavish apartment as she added a caption with her hypothetical date's response: 'He said "Oh like a manager?"' In a mic drop moment, Alianna's final slide is a sweet picture of her hugging her famous father. Holyfknairball was hashtagged to call out the date's conversational missed basket. Meanwhile Reese's daughter Ava shared a selfie writing: 'I told him my mom's a lawyer. ' The next snap showed Ava and her mum on the set of the iconic film Legally Blonde, with the hypothetical person's very incorrect response mistakenly assuming she means an actual lawyer. The caption on the clip reads 'He said "Oh what firm does she work at?",' and the third slide is the movie poster of Legally Blonde with 'air ball' written over the top. 'Her law degree may not be real... but she did go to Stanford for a bit,' Ava captioned the post. Next up was American Idol judge Randy Jackson's daughter Zoë who put her own spin on the trend by leaving it ambiguous as to what kind of judge he is. 'I told him my dad was a judge,' she said in the first clip, writing in the second: 'He said "Cool! At which court"' She then added a snap of her dad on the talent show. 'It's gonna be a YES for me Dawg,' Zoë captioned her take. And Academy Award-winning filmmaker Martin Scorsese's daughter Francesca also got in on the action - saying she was 'told to do this trend'. 'I told him "My dad is a filmmaker". He said "Oh nice like for commercials or something?",' before dropping a photo of the iconic director. The term nepo baby was coined by a Twitter user in 2022 who was shocked to learn their favourite actress had famous parents. It sparked a fierce debate on whether the children of the rich and famous have been getting an unfair leg up. But the nepo baby path to fame doesn't always run smooth, with many forced to try their hand at several showbiz careers until they find one that sticks. In stark contrast to the air ball trend, some celebrity offspring have taken issue with being branded as such, with TV presenting duo Richard Madeley and Judy Finnigan's daughter Chloe going as far as to call the phrase a 'dirty word'. Phoenix Brown, the daughter of Spice Girl Mel B, also recently slammed the 'febrile and poisonous' debate around nepo babies' success in the entertainment industry. She made headlines when she hosted an art exhibition only for it to be a ruse as part of a documentary on nepo babies. 'I told him my dad was a judge,' she said in the first clip, writing in the second: 'He said "Cool! At which court"' She then added a snap of her dad on the talent show Daughter of Spice Girl Mel B, Phoenix Brown, 25, is fronting Channel 4 documentary Born in the Limelight - Nepo Babies: Untold, which first aired in October, and returns to screens again next Thursday. In the documentary Phoenix pretends to reinvent herself as an artist, using her mother's name to stage an exhibition. She sells a painting for £2,000 - but an experts admits that without her famous name it would only be worth £30. But despite admitting that having Mel B as her mum has 'opened doors', Phoenix warns that the levels of 'hate' for nepo babies has never been so high following public obsession with the concept. Meanwhile Brooklyn Beckham's rise to nepo baby success comes after years of being the butt off the joke as he tried to launch various showbiz careers. The eldest child of David and Victoria Beckham has taken jibes in the past over his career changes, having first tried to follow in his footballer father's steps before becoming an aspiring photographer and trying his hand at becoming a chef. In 2017, the then-aspiring photographer released a book named What I See. While in 2020, he was also said to have signed to a major modelling agency, after receiving criticism over his photography. Speaking to Grazia in November, Brooklyn addressed the nepo baby criticism, as he said: 'Obviously I am one. But I couldn't help how I was born, at all.' While he understands why the public can feel irked by nepo babies, Brooklyn said he tries to ignore the 'rubbish' people say rather than dwell on it. He added: 'There's always going to be people that say rubbish. But as long as you do something that makes you happy and you're kind to people, that's all that matters. I'm always gonna get it, no matter what I do. And I'm fine with that. It makes me work harder, because I'm like, I'm gonna prove these people wrong.' When Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban 's daughter Sunday Rose, 16, made her catwalk debut for MiuMiu it didn't get quite the breathless reception the brand was expecting. The teenager's 'stomping' went viral on social media, with people critiquing her style and saying that she looked like a 'petulant child'. Her country singer father Keith, 57, jumped to her defence, and told People Magazine he is 'very proud' of his teen daughter but wants to protect her. Kate Moss's half-sister Lottie has also declared she is 'sick of people blaming nepotism for why they aren't rich and famous or successful'. Lottie signed with Storm Management when she was just 14 years old and threw herself into modelling, but decided to quit photoshoots for OnlyFans in 2021. Amid a storm of nepo baby criticism in 2022, Lottie said: 'I'm so sick of people blaming nepotism for why they aren't rich and famous or successful - obviously it's not fair that people who come from famous families are getting a leg up because of that but guess what? 'Life isn't fair - if you put your mind to something you can accomplish anything! So instead of being negative about other people's success go and try and create your own!' And while it was always her ambition to follow in her parents Richard and Judy's footsteps and go into television, Chloe Madeley revealed she 'hates' being branded a nepo baby - and went as far as to describe it as a 'dirty word'. Speaking to Olivia Attwood on the latest episode of her podcast, So Wrong It's Right, Chloe said she finds it hard when people criticise her for being a child of nepotism. She said: 'Nepo baby is such a dirty word, and people don't realise how hard it is to hear that about yourself, when you're on the receiving end of it.'

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