
Marjorie Taylor Greene's boyfriend apologises to Zelensky over suit comments
The joke was a playful retort to a previous comment made by Mr Glenn in February, who had questioned why Mr Zelensky wore a black sweater instead of formal attire in the Oval Office.
Mr Glenn, a Real America's Voice host, apologised to the Ukrainian president for his earlier jibe during the recent encounter.
Mr Zelensky remarked that while he had changed his attire, Mr Glenn was still wearing the same suit, prompting laughter in the room.
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Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kathy Griffin, 64, continues to show off THIRD facelift as she steps out in Malibu
continued to show off her third facelift during a solo outing in Malibu on Thursday. The 64-year-old comedian - who first unveiled the latest cosmetic procedure earlier this month - was seen stopping by a gym for a Pilates session during the daytime excursion. The TV personality confirmed that she underwent the surgery on an episode of her Talk Your Head Off podcast. Kathy kept it casual wearing a pair of fitted, blue leggings as well as a short-sleeved, dark navy shirt. She additionally slipped into a pair of black, Croc flats and easily carried a vibrant blue purse in her hand. Her reddish locks fell down past her shoulders in natural waves while her bangs fell onto her forehead. Kathy flashed a cheerful smile as she made her way through a crowded parking lot towards the gym. The My Life On The D-List star recently commented on her recent taut appearance during an episode of her podcast which aired earlier this month. 'Very taut is also very true!' the actress said, before confirming she had underwent another facelift. 'It's my third. I know that's so vain! I'm so vain for no reason. 'No one has ever gone to a Kathy Griffin show to see her beautiful, youthful face. You come to hear my jokes, which is what I want.' She continued, 'I don't want you to come to care what I look like. I'm in Lululemons today for God's sake. I'm in my fat pants. I don't have dysmorphia... I have a little.' Kathy gave candid details about the procedure and shared to her fans that her facelift was done by Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Dr. Ben Talei. The comedian - who previously presented him a Daytime Beauty Award in 2023 - then gushed, 'I love him, I can't say enough good about him.' Along with the facelift, the star also got a foxy eye lift, work done on her chin as well as a blepharoplasty - which 'removes excess skin from the eyelids,' per Mayo Clinic. 'There's a stitch in my chin, which you're probably not going to see unless you're under me, but not in that way,' she explained. 'I'm going to be honest. It's painful. So these bi***es that are like, "It's like getting a tooth filled! It's nothing!" No, it's painful.' Afterwards, Kathy went to a 'rich lady recovery place' and then returned home. 'You get out of that place and you come home and maybe you come home with a nurse, and it's disgusting. I'm not going to lie. The first night there's drains that come out of your chin. I know it's so gross. But the vanity takes over.' And last week, the Emmy winner unveiled her facelift and wrinkle-free appearance during an outing in Malibu. One month earlier in July, the actress l ooked nearly unrecognizable as she sported a wild hairstyle in L.A. Kathy - who had half of her left lung removed during a 2021 cancer battle - has opened up about ageism in the entertainment industry in the past, such as when she interviewed with Deadline back in 2016. 'I hear it all the time,' she said, referencing to comments she has gotten about her age over the years. 'I've been hearing it since I was 30, from managers, agents, studio heads and network executives.' Kathy continued, 'I'm sure I heard it in the last year. They really think nothing of saying to me, "You're really funny, but they've decided to go younger." It's so common for a woman to hear that. 'I don't think anyone ever told them you're not supposed to say that. They think it's still a legitimate reason for someone not to get a job...' The comedian's plastic surgery journey began back in 1986 when she had a nose job at the age of 26. Other procedures she has undergone in the past include a brow-lift, breast enlargement and near-fatal liposuction. Kathy is preparing to hit the stage later this year for two shows and referenced her latest cosmetic surgery in the tour name which is called: New Face, New Tour. On November 8, she is slated to perform in Las Vegas at the Criss Angel Theater at Planet Hollywood. And later that same month, the comedian will also hold a show in Anaheim, California on November 22. Kathy made the announcement in July and shared, 'Just when you thought I was done… I come back better than ever in classic Griffin fashion! 'I'm happy to announce two new upcoming shows this November. Find me in the glamorous Las Vegas on November 8th and Anaheim on November 22nd.'


Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
A-list movie star goes almost unrecognized on very rare outing with longtime partner at LAX
Rachel McAdams was spotted at Los Angeles International Airport with her longtime partner Jamie Linden this week. The 46-year-old Mean Girls sensation and 44-year-old screenwriter were casually dressed in coordinating denim outfits as they retrieved their luggage from baggage claim on Wednesday evening. For her part, Rachel was clad in a chambray button-up shirt, black T-shirt and tan pants. Her long, tousled locks flowed out from underneath a baseball cap and a pair of wired headphones were draped around her neck. Jamie layered a white T-shirt underneath a patterned button-up blue shirt, adding light wash jeans. The silver screen siren was nearly unrecognizable as she attempted to go under the radar while grabbing two hardshell roller suitcases. The 46-year-old Mean Girls sensation and Jamie were casually dressed in coordinating denim outfits as they retrieved their luggage from baggage claim on Wednesday evening Rachel and Jamie have been romantically linked since April 2016 and share two kids. They welcomed their firstborn child, a son, in April 2018, and their daughter was born two years later. In November 2018 the longtime actress told The Times about motherhood: 'It's the greatest thing that's ever happened to me, hands down. '[People say] your life is not your own anymore. But I had 39 years of me, I was sick of me, I was so happy to put the focus on some other person. I waited a long time.' Asked if she'd deliberately waited so long to become a mother, she shared: 'It's just how it happened. And I didn't want to do it before it was the right time.' The publication noted that Rachel was waiting to find a complementary partner. 'I just wanted to be with someone creative. We live such a gypsy life as actors, so [it's great] being with someone who can be on the road as well,' she explained. The parents-of-two have made it a point to keep both their relationship and their children out of the spotlight. In May 2022 the silver screen siren made a rare public comment about her daughter, whose name she hasn't revealed. Speaking with Access Hollywood while promoting Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret, she said, 'I'm excited for my own little girl to see it one day.' Before meeting Jamie and becoming a mom, Rachel told InStyle in 2010: 'Part of me is very attached to the idea of having children. 'It'll depend on if I find the person I want to do that with.' Before settling down with the writer, she dated actor Michael Sheen, splitting in 2013 after two years together.


Reuters
3 minutes ago
- Reuters
California lawmakers swiftly pass Democrats' congressional redistricting plan
LOS ANGELES, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The California legislature on Thursday approved a redistricting package aimed at giving Democrats five more seats in the U.S. Congress, countering a partisan advantage President Donald Trump hoped to gain from a similar Republican plan to redraw political maps in Texas. California Democrats pushed the three bills through the state Senate and Assembly in a remarkable flurry of fast-track action, ahead of a Friday deadline set for getting the newly drawn districts on the ballot in time for a special election on November 4. Swift passage of the measures marked a decisive victory for Governor Gavin Newsom, who has led the charge in pushing back against what he and fellow Democrats nationally have decried as Trump's attempt at a power grab in the Republican-led state of Texas. Newsom, who enjoys a Democratic super-majority in both houses of the California legislature, ultimately seeks voter support for his plan. If it succeeds, it would neutralize the Trump-backed Texas bill designed to flip five Democratic seats to Republican control in the U.S. House of Representatives. Republicans, including Trump, have openly acknowledged that the Texas effort is about boosting their political clout by helping to preserve the party's slim U.S. House majority in the November 2026 midterm races. That election already is shaping up as closely fought. Democrats have characterized their bid to depart from California's usual independent, bipartisan redistricting process - adopted by voters in 2008 - as a temporary "emergency" strategy to combat what they see as extreme Republican moves to unfairly rig the system. "The decks are stacked against us, so what we need to do is fight back," California Senator Lena Gonzalez, a joint author of the redistricting plan, said as the state Senate opened floor debate on the bill. Democrats say more than 70% of their newly drawn congressional districts were adopted from maps used by the independent commission in formulating the current boundaries. Republican Senator Tony Strickland objected, saying, "These maps were drawn behind closed doors." Within six hours, however, the two houses of the legislature had approved all three measures, voting along party lines to approve each bill in succession and sending it to the other body for its concurrence. Unlike the California initiative, the newly drawn district lines in Texas would go into effect without voter approval, though Democrats have vowed to challenge the plan in court. The Texas measure cleared a major hurdle on Wednesday when the state House of Representatives in Austin adopted it on an 88-52 party-line vote. The Texas Senate is expected to pass the measure next, possibly on Thursday. The two versions of the bill may then need to be reconciled before the legislation goes to Republican Governor Greg Abbott, who has said he will sign it. "Big WIN for the Great State of Texas," Trump said on his Truth Social platform. Democrats and civil rights groups say the new Texas map further dilutes the voting power of Hispanic and Black voters, violating federal law that forbids redrawing political lines on the basis of racial or ethnic discrimination. In pursuing redistricting mid-decade, both sides are breaking with long-observed political custom of generally altering political maps once every 10 years, following the U.S. Census to adjust for population changes. Most Americans believe redrawing congressional lines to maximize political gain, known as gerrymandering, is bad for democracy, a new Reuters/Ipsos poll found. Former President Barack Obama weighed in on the issue this week, supporting the Democratic effort as a necessary short-term response to Republican overreach in Texas. But he said he remained uneasy about the long-term consequences of gerrymandering. Consideration of the Texas bill was delayed for two weeks after more than 50 Democratic state House members staged a walkout that denied Republicans the legislative quorum they needed to proceed. Their collective absence sparked extraordinary efforts by Abbott and other Republican leaders to pressure the Democrats to relent, including civil arrest warrants, the imposition of fines and threats to withhold their pay. The Democrats finally returned to Austin on Monday, by which time their legislative boycott had galvanized Democratic leaders in other states, especially California, where Newsom has vowed to "fight fire with fire." "We're going to punch this bully in the mouth, and we're going to win," Newsom told reporters in a video conference call on Wednesday. "This is about the rule of Don versus the rule of law." He was joined on the call by Texas Representative Nicole Collier, one of the leaders of the Austin walkout. "These are the most segregated maps that have been presented in Texas since the 1960s," said Collier, who represents a predominantly non-white Fort Worth state district. The Texas-California clash may be just the start. Other Republican-controlled states -- including Ohio, Florida, Indiana and Missouri -- are moving forward with or considering their own redistricting efforts, as are Democratic-led states such as Maryland and Illinois.