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First Steps to ruin: Is Marvel's Fantastic Four finally about to let the bad guys win?

First Steps to ruin: Is Marvel's Fantastic Four finally about to let the bad guys win?

The Guardian6 hours ago

What if Thanos really had finger-snapped away half of all life in the universe and then kicked back on his scorched Titan homestead like a giant, purple Cincinnatus? What if Ultron had succeeded in uploading himself into the cloud, turning every smart fridge and Fitbit into a genocidal death bot? What if Loki had kept the Tesseract, conquered Earth, and turned Avengers Tower into a golden skyscraper shaped like his own smirking face?
These are the Marvel sliding‑doors moments we are secretly relieved that we will never see – too bleak, too bonkers, or too off‑brand to survive outside the whiteboard of producer and Marvel boss Kevin Feige.
But what if the Disney-owned studio actually went there? What if the universe did end in tears, ash and the soft whirr of a retro‑futurist espresso machine sputtering out its final cortado as Galactus devours the sun?
This may be the queasy promise behind The Fantastic Four: First Steps – a film that appears to revel in retro‑futurist utopian aesthetics but also looks likely to end in cosmic obliteration. Its latest trailer, out this week, certainly leaves us wondering if, this time, the bad guys may win.
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Early glimpses of the film read like a love‑letter to a future that never was, all soft lighting, swooping mid‑century rocket ships and wholesome family dynamics. Reed Richards is busy tinkering with gadgets that run on vacuum tubes and barely repressed genius. Ben Grimm lurks in a letterman jacket, looking like a walking pile of regret. Sue Storm floats weightlessly in a zero‑gravity kitchen that wouldn't look out of place in a SpaceX commercial directed by Don Draper's artier younger brother, while Johnny Storm radiates cocksure charisma and combustion.
All that Apollo‑era optimism curdles fast. We cut to trembling ground crews, misbehaving solar flares and giant shadow‑objects looming towards Earth – before Julia Garner's Silver Surfer glides in like a chrome‑plated herald of doom to announce that this planet is toast, and you may as well give up now.
In any other Marvel movie, that would be the cue for a heroic fightback and Galactus being packed off to the nearest celestial naughty‑step. The end‑credits would show the team curing their hunger pangs in an all‑night diner. But there is something so downcast about this new trailer that you can't help wondering if everything is going to work out for the best this time.
After all, this isn't the Marvel Cinematic Universe we have come to know and love. It may be a sleek, chrome‑plated utopia built on jetpacks and optimism, but as it is one of maybe a million universes, it is also eminently dispensable, instantly rebootable and narratively nonbinding. Could all those soaring space bridges, apple‑cheeked children and pastel dioramas be a plot device to show how easily the studio can destroy the visual playground in front of it – as long as it has 999,999 other realities to plunder for future episodes?
Perhaps the biggest concern – for those who stayed through Thunderbolts* to its startling second post‑credits scene – is that the Fantastic Four's retro rocket ship is shown hurtling toward Earth‑616 like a vinyl‑wrapped harbinger of doom. Feige insists this may not be that ship, but if it is, then all those efforts in First Steps may just have been in vain. The opening moments of next year's Avengers: Doomsday could yet show the Four crash‑landing into the MCU, bruised, broken, and with apocalypse on their ash‑flecked lips.

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Doechii's Glastonbury slot is all part of her five-year plan
Doechii's Glastonbury slot is all part of her five-year plan

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Doechii's Glastonbury slot is all part of her five-year plan

In 2023, Doechii announced she was three years into her five-year plan for becoming one of the biggest names in music."By year five I want to be at my peak," she told Billboard magazine."I want to be in my Sasha Fierce era, the top of my game with still a long way to go - but I want to reach my prime and never leave it."Back then, it felt like a bold claim. The Florida-born rapper and singer had scored a couple of viral hits - most notably Persuasive, an ode to marijuana that ended up on Barack Obama's summer playlist - but nothing that had crossed over to the mainstream jump-cut to 2025 and Doechii is a Grammy Award-winning "woman of the year", who's about to play one of the most hotly-anticipated sets at Glastonbury hard to identify the turning point. Some people say it was her mesmerising performance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert last her hair carefully braided to her backing dancers, she delivered a meticulously-choreographed performance of Boiled Peanuts and Denial Is a River - a cartoonish character piece, in which she confides to her therapist that her boyfriend's been cheating on her with another man. Others pinpoint her Tiny Desk Concert, released on YouTube two days later. The 15-minute set bursts with joie de vivre, simultaneously soulful and fiery, as the star rattles through jazzy, full-band recreations of her mixtape, Alligator Bites Never Heal. She won even more fans at the Grammys in March, where she won best rap album, making her just the third female artist to win in the her speech, she spoke directly to young, black, queer women like her: "Don't allow anybody to project any stereotypes on you, to tell you that you can't be here, that you're too dark or that you're not smart enough or that you're too dramatic or you're too loud."She capped off her win with an ultra-physical performance that referenced Michael Jackson, Missy Elliott and Bob Fosse - and ended with her pulling the splits while being held aloft by five male dancers. With three "star-is-born" performances in just four months, Doechii became the most talked-about new rapper of her generation... just like she planned. So where did it all start? Doechii was born Jaylah Ji'mya Hickmon in Tampa, Florida and raised in a "heavily Christian" single-parent household by her mother, Celesia Moore.A studious kid who loved writing poetry, she invented her alter-ego at the age of 11, after being viciously bullied in school."I was in a position where I thought about killing myself because the bullying was so bad," she told Dazed magazine in February."Then I had this realisation: I'm not gonna do that, because then they're gonna all get a chance to live and I'm gonna be the one dead."Overnight, her attitude shifted."Jaylah might've been getting bullied, but I decided Doechii wouldn't stand for that," she recalled in an interview with Vulture. "And then," she told The Breakfast Club, "I went to school in a tutu and I started doing music." As a teenager, she spent four years at Tampa's Howard W. Blake School of the Arts, after winning a place on the choral programme by performing Etta James' At Last. The school unlocked her creativity, allowing her to take classes in everything from nail design and hair, to ballet, tap, cheerleading and stage production. However, it was gymnastics that left the biggest impression."The way that gymnasts train is really, really tough. It's brutal and hard and difficult," she told Gay Times. "But at some point in my gymnastic career I learnt how to embrace and really love pain. To view pain as me getting stronger and better. That caused a deep discipline that has never left me."The school also helped the teenager accept her sexuality."Even though I was aware [that I was queer], I didn't feel as comfortable until I started surrounding myself with more gay friends at my school. "Once I had gay friends it was like, 'OK, I can be myself, I'm good, I can feel safe, this is normal, I'm fine.' I have those same friends today and will have them for life."That's not all they gave her: Those same friends convinced Doechii to give up her ambitions of becoming a chorister, and start writing and releasing her own music. Initially called iamdoechii, she uploaded her first song to Soundcloud in 2016, and released her debut single Girls two years later. It already bore the hallmarks of her best work: Rhythmically and lyrically dextrous, and chock full of personality. "Taking nudes / None of them for you," she chided over a mellow electric piano, before the beat switched up and her rapping became more frenetic. By the closing bars, she barely had time catch breath as she listed her accomplishments. "Making money from my phone, huh / Doechii finally in her zone."The lines were more prophecy than reality. Doechii had a solid following on YouTube, but she was still working at Zara to make ends meet. In 2019, she was booked for a showcase in New York City and hopped on a bus - without the money for her return trip. "The night after, I slept at a McDonald's," she recalled in a 2022 interview. "And then I had to call one of my mom's friends... and, like, beg her to let me sleep at her house. And I ended up living there until I got back on my feet." 'Drowning in vices' Things started to turn around with the release of 2020's Yucky Blucky Fruitcake, named after Junie B. Jones's children's book, in which Doechii sketched out her own to the lyrics, she was precocious ("I try to act smart 'cause I want a lot of friends"), competitive ("I get a little violent when I play the game of tag") and frequently broke ("My momma used stamps 'cause she need a little help").The song marked a breakthrough in her writing."I was lacking this sense of vulnerability and honesty in my music," she told Billboard, until "I learned accuracy and just saying exactly what it is, like on Lucky Blucky Fruitcake".The song went viral, winning her a record deal with Top Dawg Entertainment - the label that launched Kendrick Lamar and SZA. She followed it up with the effortlessly hooky Persuasive, earning praise from SZA (who jumped on a remix) and former President Barack Obama."I can't imagine Obama just jamming my song," she exclaimed. "I just don't believe it, but if he really does – that's crazy." Doechii next collaborated with Kodak Black on the 2023 single What It Is (Block Boy), earning her first Top 40 hit. Then, everything stalled. Subsequent singles flopped, and Doechii was, as she later wrote on social media, "drowning in my own vices, battling differences with my label and a creative numbness that broke me".Initially, her Alligator Bites Never Heal mixtape looked set to repeat the pattern. Released last August, it entered the US charts at number 117 and vanished a week reviews were ecstatic. Critics loved the acerbic, funny lyrics, that saw Doechii unpack the trials and tribulations of the last two years; and heaped praise on bars that recalled greats such as Q-Tip, Lauryn Hill and Slick Rick, while keeping pace with contemporaries like Kendrick Lamar. After a period dominated by the mumbled bars of Souncloud rap, her precision was a breath of fresh air."One of the year's most fully-realized breakout albums," wrote Rolling Stone. "If this is the sound of Doechii pushing against constraints, a little friction might not be the worst thing," added Pitchfork. As word spread, she was booked to play the Colbert show and Tiny Desk. Those performances lit a rocket under her career. By April, Alligator had chomped into the US Top 10, and the UK Top 40. Around the same time, she bowed to fan pressure by releasing her 2019 YouTube song, Anxiety, a pop-rap crossover based on a sample of Gotye's Somebody That I Used To Know. With an eye-catching video that recreated a full-on panic attack, it hit number three in the UK, and even earned Doechii a citation in medical journal Psychology Today."The song and accompanying video work so well in showing exactly how anxiety feels in our bodies and minds," wrote Professor Sandra Chafouleas. "Think about quick and short breaths, racing thoughts, and worrying about things that haven't happened yet. Anxiety feels like 'Anxiety' sounds, with brilliant mirroring of how the experience can hijack us."Since then, Doechii's been hard at work on her debut album. There'd been rumours she'd release it in time for her Glastonbury slot on Saturday night, but perfectionists have got to perfect. At the time of writing, she's still in the to Dazed, she dropped a few hints of what's in store. "In Alligator Bites Never Heals, the archetype was a student of hip-hop. For this next project, I'm thinking about how this student develops. "Who does she develop into? What has she learned? I'm still unpacking how that character develops into this next project."Despite the delay, Doechii's headline set remains one of Glastonbury's biggest draws. She might only be performing for 45 minutes, but she'll make every one of them the star boasted on her single Nosebleeds: "Will she ever lose? Man, I guess we'll never know."

EXCLUSIVE Cobra Kai villain Martin Kove looks disheveled on shirtless stroll as he dodges biting scandal questions
EXCLUSIVE Cobra Kai villain Martin Kove looks disheveled on shirtless stroll as he dodges biting scandal questions

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Cobra Kai villain Martin Kove looks disheveled on shirtless stroll as he dodges biting scandal questions

Martin Kove, who played the iconic villain of the Karate Kid films and sequel Cobra Kai series, was spotted on Friday for the first time since his costar accused him of assault. He was seen looking disheveled while out on a walk in photos obtained by and he didn't respond to questions about the incident, in which his Cobra Kai costar Alicia Hannah-Kim accused him of biting her at a fan convention last week. The 78-year-old actor and martial artist — who admitted to biting Hannah-Kim in police bodycam footage of the aftermath obtained by — created a bizarre image as he puffed on a cigar while taking a stroll in Franklin, Tennessee, which is near Nashville. Kove was shirtless for his walk, though he wore a pair of weathered gray athletic shorts and black trainers. He appeared to be having an animated chat on his phone while walking. The strange sighting comes as Kove has been engulfed in a sexual harassment scandal after his conduct on the set of Cobra Kai was investigated by Sony last year. Kove has adamantly denied the accusation, telling Deadline on Thursday: 'It wasn't true then, and it isn't true now.' The accusations resurfaced in the wake of the shocking biting incident last week. Kove, who played John Kreese in the Netflix drama, ignited outrage when he sank his teeth into Hannah-Kim, 37, while attending the Washington State Summer Con in Puyallup, Washington, last weekend. The actress reported to a police officer that Kove bit her so hard he almost drew blood, causing her to scream in pain, and he offered up a strange justification for the assault in police bodycam footage. Hannah-Kim shouted at the Karate Kid villain: 'You cannot bite people, that is not OK! 'You have left a mark on my body, which in your 80-year-old brain, you think is play,' she continued. 'Sir, were you raised in a ditch? You yelled at me! You had the audacity! How dare you, sir.' After Hannah-Kim and her husband, actor Sebastian Roche, confronted Kove following the incident, he reportedly became 'furious and outraged and visibly angry.' The 78-year-old actor and martial artist created a bizarre image as he puffed on a cigar while taking a stroll in Franklin, Tennessee, near Nashville. Kove was shirtless for his walk but wore weathered gray athletic shorts and black trainers while chatting on his phone The strange sighting comes as Kove has been engulfed in a sexual harassment scandal after his conduct on the set of Cobra Kai was investigated by Sony last year Kove has adamantly denied the accusation, telling Deadline on Thursday: 'It wasn't true then, and it isn't true now.' The accusations resurfaced in the wake of the shocking biting incident last week Sources told Deadline that she complained that he had been 'leering' and 'verbally overt' toward her on the Atlanta set of the adapted film franchise. In response to the investigation, producers reportedly dressed down Kove and urged him to remain in his trailer and apologize Kove was filmed apologizing for getting 'angry' and blamed his actions on being overtly playful with Hannah-Kim because he portrayed a male sensei on screen. He told police: 'I tried to say that, and I, you know, to try and find her the moment I arrived in the green room just to say, "I'm sorry, darling, I apologize and I didn't mean to hurt you," you know, because we play all the time, we pop, we hit, we do stuff all the time because she's a female sensei. 'I'm a male sensei. We have a lot of scenes together and we have a lot of fun. 'I really apologize. I was just playing because we're very playful together, and I bit down too hard.' The officer responded: 'So it's emotions. We all have them and sometimes they get the better of us.' Hannah-Kim showed off faint teeth marks on her upper left bicep and told police: 'I would like it to go on his record, on the record between me and him, so that he cannot ever do this to me again.' When officers informed Kove he had committed a crime by biting his costar, Kove responded that he 'didn't interpret the bite as a crime.' Kim then exploded at Kove, saying: 'Its not interpreted as a crime! He can take you away in handcuffs . You committed a crime, that's why we're here! 'See that, those are your teeth you think that's OK? It's not okay. Kove said: 'I understand that I'm ashamed of my behavior. I'm ashamed that I did that and I would, I would like you to accept my apology and you know me long enough to know that my essence is not a vindictive violent essence at all. 'If anything, we have just lots of fun together,' he added. Kim said: 'I came to you in friendship and I extended I had a friendship like, "Hey mate, don't do that." And what you gave me was rage. 'That's what I know. That's why I have rage now because you gave it to me. 'Do you understand that? Can you deny that when we approached you that it was completely calm and I was like, hey, you just can't bite me. 'I didn't lose my s**t 'til you got rageful at me, which only gives me rage back.' Kove said: 'I — I didn't intend your rage and I'm sorry you picked up on it. It wasn't, I know what I did.' Kove was informed that Kim is not pressing charges but is warned to never repeat his actions. Kove was banished from the convention, and recently broke his silence on the incident in a statement to Deadline. 'I deeply regret and apologize for my actions regarding the incident with Alicia [Hannah-Kim], a genuinely kind and wonderful person who didn't deserve to be put in this position,' Kove said in a statement from Jaffe & Company PR & Crisis Management. 'I've always respected her and considered her a highly professional and talented co-worker on Cobra Kai,' he added, before addressing the incident. 'I was being playful in the moment but went too far and there is absolutely no excuse for my behavior,' Kove continued. 'I regret my actions for which I take full responsibility for what I did, and again I apologize to her and her husband. I'm committed to learning from this and it will never happen again,' he concluded. The report from the incident revealed that Kove did apologize to Hannah-Kim and her husband Roche, though he has since done so publicly. Photos were also taken of Hannah-Kim's arm, which showed a, 'very noticeable bite mark on her arm that was already turning blue and bruising.' Kove was told to leave the convention, and the officer instructed him never to do something like that again. Hannah-Kim played Kim Da-Eun, a powerful South Korean sensei who is also the granddaughter of Kim Sun-Yung, the master who taught taught Kove's character John Kreese in his youth. Kove played the Cobra Kai sensei Kreese in the 1984 classic The Karate Kid, as well as in its 1986 and 1989 sequels, The Karate Kid Part II and The Karate Kid Part III. He reprised the role for Cobra Kai, which is set 34 years after the events of the original Karate Kid film. The series originally aired on YouTube Red for its first two seasons before moving to Netflix. The show enjoyed a popular run over six seasons and followed Kreese's old student Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka) and his rivalry with Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio). The series concluded in February of this year. Kove will next be seen in Killing Mary Sue with Sean Patrick Flannery, Dermot Mulroney and Jason Mewes, while Hannah-Kim is filming the South Korean TV series The North Star. In the wake of the biting incident, a past allegation of sexual harassment against Kove — which he has denied — resurfaced. A female extra on Cobra Kai reportedly said Kove made her feel uncomfortable on set with his behavior, and sources told Deadline that she complained that he had been complained Kove had been 'leering' and 'verbally overt' toward her on the Atlanta set of the adapted film franchise. The woman then complained to producers, and Sony subsequently launched an investigation into the alleged incident. has contacted Kove's representatives for comment but hasn't received a response. In response to the investigation, producers reportedly dressed down Kove and urged him to remain in his trailer between takes. They also alleged said he should apologize to the offended extra, though it's unclear if he took them up on that advice. In the wake of Kove's biting incident, a bizarre story from 2013 that the former SNL star Bill Hader told on Marc Maron's WTF podcast about his brief time working with Kove resurfaced.

Travis Kelce and George Kittle belt out 'Love Story' with Taylor Swift in fresh clip that sends fans into meltdown
Travis Kelce and George Kittle belt out 'Love Story' with Taylor Swift in fresh clip that sends fans into meltdown

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Travis Kelce and George Kittle belt out 'Love Story' with Taylor Swift in fresh clip that sends fans into meltdown

Taylor Swift stole the headlines from her boyfriend Travis Kelce 's 'Tight End University' event in Nashville this week, but the singer also shared a cool moment with another one of the tight ends. Swift famously surprised those in the crowd by getting on stage and signing her hit song 'Shake It Off' with a full band behind her. More videos appeared of Swift singing and enjoying herself while Haley Cavinder, the social media star and fiancée of tight end Jake Ferguson, was next to her. Now, a few days after the event came to a close, San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle posted a video of some time that he shared with the 'Look What You Made Me Do' songstress. Kittle recorded a selfie video of him standing next to Swift as the pair belted out her classic hit 'Love Story' as the song played at the bar they were visiting. At one point, Kittle panned the camera around and appeared to show Kelce singing along as well. taylor and travis singing love story with george kittle omg this is so good — fan | veronica⸆⸉ (@thisisvertrying) June 27, 2025 Kelce's appearance in the video is a nice surprise after a week where he beamed with joy at her surprise showing at the event he started with Kittle and former tight end Greg Olsen. In a rare public display of affection for her on social media, Kelce used his adorable nickname for her, writing: 'Turn me up Tay Tay!!!' Fans, perhaps unsurprisingly, quickly noticed the comment on the official NFL post and went crazy about it on social media. 'I know a No 1 Swiftie when I see one,' one wrote, while another - presumably with much hyperbole - added: 'I am dead on the side of the road.' The comment on Instagram came just hours after Swift had returned to the stage for the first time in months to perform at Kelce's yearly Tight End University event in Nashville. It was the first time Swift had sung publicly since the end of her sold-out worldwide Eras Tour, and she performed an acoustic rendition of her hit song Shake It Off. The performance was alongside Kane Brown at 'Tight End and Friends' - a show hosted by Kelce as part of his NFL event in Music City. Kelce and S wift had earlier been pictured arriving at the Brooklyn Bowl in Nashville, where it seemed like Swift was purely just supporting Kelce for a cause close to his heart. Kelce popped up in the comments section after the NFL posted a Taylor Swift picture Singers such as Sophia Scott, Graham Barham and Chase Rice were all listed to perform at the venue, where Swift was first spotted enjoying the night in the VIP section. Jordan Davis also played and welcomed country star Luke Combs onto the stage but Swift's involvement had been kept a secret - if it was even scheduled at all. Swift told the crowd 'we planned that three minutes ago' shortly before she left the stage to huge cheers. Just when it seemed like Brown was finishing his set, Swift ignited a frenzy when she walked out for one more song and played an acoustic guitar belonging to Rice. She dedicated it 'to our favorite players' before launching into a rendition of one of her biggest hits and sending the crowd wild. Tickets had been on sale to the public and some devoted Swifties had made sure they were in the crowd for a possible sighting of the singer with Kelce. It was a gamble that seriously paid off. Nashville's Brooklyn Bowl hosts up to 1,200 people while her biggest Eras show was at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Australia, where 96,000 people went to see her. Earlier in the week, Swift stunned fans on Monday night as she doted on Kelce during the welcome night for the three-day NFL event that the Kansas City Chiefs star has hosted since 2021. Kelce and San Francisco 49ers star George Kittle run the event alongside Greg Olsen, another former tight end who is now a distinguished NFL analyst. As well as building a community among the players who play in the position that Kelce is famous for and sharing tips on performance, they also raise money for charity through the annual get-together.

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