
27 Genuinely Fascinating Photos Of Pope Francis You've Probably Never Seen Before
Pope Francis passed away on Monday at the age of 88. Though he held the most powerful position in the Catholic Church for 12 years, there are some pretty fun and fascinating pictures of him that were seen much less often in the press. Here are 27 genuinely interesting photos of the pope you've probably never seen before:
1. This is a young Pope Francis with his family; his mother is in the chair, his father is seated on the arm, and his sisters and brothers are surrounding him.
2. This blurry photo was taken early in his career, while he was still known by his birth name, Jorge Bergoglio.
3. Another photo of a younger Pope Francis, after he'd been promoted to Archbishop Jorge Bergoglio.
4. Pope John Paul II officially named Jorge Bergoglio a cardinal in 2001, seen here in his red zucchetto (hat).
5. Looking very studious as Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, during a visit to Vatican City.
6. And as Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, he took a ride on Line A of the underground in his hometown of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
7. Here, Cardinal Jorge Bergolio attended the special "pro eligendo summo pontifice" — the official conclave — to elect a successor to John Paul II in April 2005. Little did he know then that the next vote would be for him!
8. Pope Francis could apparently spin a basketball on the point of a pencil, which he did during the 70th anniversary celebrations of the Italian Catholic Sports Center in 2014.
9. He actually met with Spider-Man (or at least, a person who visited children in pediatric wards in costume).
10. He blew out the candles on his birthday cake in December 2014 in St. Peter's Square.
11. Pope Francis posed for a very serious-looking photo with the members of the Trump family in 2017. I do understand the expression, though.
12. He did seem to have had a bit more fun with President Obama in 2015. (Me too, Pope Francis.)
13. He's smiling here with President Zelenskyy, too. Interesting.
14. During the Celebration of the Lord's Passion on Good Friday in 2019 at St. Peter's Basilica, Pope Francis laid on the floor to pray.
15. On a flight back to Rome in December 2024, Pope Francis excitedly received a cake complete with a tiny Pope cake topper.
16. While in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, Pope Francis met with the President Khurelsukh Ukhnaa inside a ger set up inside the State Palace.
17. Pope Francis wore his green regalia to represent hope during a General Ordinary Assembly of the Synod of Bishops in 2023.
18. He visited Philadelphia during the Festival of Families in 2015 in his popemobile.
19. He gestured dramatically while speaking with Cardinals in 2015.
20. During a visit to Maskwacis, Canada, Pope Francis wore a traditional headdress gifted to him by Indigenous leader Wilton Littlechild.
21. His pellegrina (the mini-cape on his jacket, aka cassock) seemed to get caught in the wind a lot.
22. Like, a lot.
23. Like, flying around his head in the wind... a lot.
24. And he seemed to be less than concerned about it.
25. He also sipped from a large chalice during communion at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida in Aparecida, Brazil, in 2013.
26. And this sick "Dark Pope" picture on Good Friday in 2022.
27. And finally, gave this candid, kind smile while riding in the back of a car.
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USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Minnesota exhibit uplifts Two-Spirit and LGBTQ+ voices in Indigenous art
Minnesota exhibit uplifts Two-Spirit and LGBTQ+ voices in Indigenous art Arnold Dahl-Wooley, who grew up in northern Minnesota's small towns and is a member of the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe, realized as early as kindergarten that he wasn't crushing on girls like other boys his age. When he got older and heard his voice played back on a cassette tape for the first time, he panicked. He didn't want his voice giving away his secret. School history textbooks referred to Indigenous people as 'savages' and discussed them in the past tense. The Catholic Church, which ran mandatory Indian boarding schools into the 1960s to eliminate Indigenous culture and language, considered homosexuality an abomination. To be Native and Queer invited harm and ostracization, and the likely loss of friends and family. Dahl-Wooley, who's now 54 and an advocate for others who are Indigenous and LGBTQ+, wasn't ready to risk that. 'I changed the way I talked. I made sure I walked right, sat right and did what was typical heterosexual male,' he says. That included dating girls and joining school sports. He graduated from Cass Lake High School, but pretending to be someone else was exhausting, and he felt like he was breaking until he came out to his family at age 19. 'This is who I am, and I'm ready to walk away if you're going to stop loving me,' Dahl-Wooley remembers telling them. 'It was one of the most freeing moments of my life.' Learning more about Ojibwe heritage at Bemidji State University changed the colonial and Christian narratives he had been taught. Most notable was discovering that long before Europeans arrived, Indigenous nations across North, South America and the Caribbean had roles for people who didn't identify as exclusively male nor female. The term 'Two-Spirit' (2S) term was decided in 1990 during the Annual Intertribal Native American, First Nations, Gay and Lesbian American Conference in Winnipeg, Canada to cover these historically honored and respected tribal citizens who often served in roles such as healers, medicine people and visionaries. 'The Two-Spirits are people who can see through the eyes of more than gender,' says October, he opened an office in Bemidji, Minnesota for Two-Spirit Advocacy, a grassroots organization that helps other Indigenous 2SLGBTQ+ members to find community resources, make connections and to see their strengths and gifts. Find your medicine Artist and activist Penny Kagigebi, who just turned 60, lives in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota, about 80 miles from Bemidji and close to the White Earth Reservation where she grew up. It's one of 11 tribal nations in the state. Like most of them, it's in a largely rural area. Like Dahl-Wooley, she had no community supports or role models for being anything other than a heterotypical female while growing up. She always felt out of step with peers, she says, and then had her first relationship with a woman at age 26. They were open about their relationship, and Kagigebi faced workplace discrimination. When what became a four-year legal battle took a toll on her health, she found vital support through PFLAG in Fargo, North Dakota, and turned to Native knowledge for healing. In the 2000s, she learned to make Ojibwe porcupine quillwork and birchbark basketry with elders. She puts her own twist on her baskets and containers with designs that tell of finding your own path, and depicting rainbows of color through quills, beads and ribbon. On one birchbark basket, she depicts her tribe's origin story with blue and red ribbon representing the men and women who came from the stars. In between those, she has other ribbons representing Two-Spirits who also came from the stars. She's realized the importance of being visible as an 2SLGBTQ+ elder for others who crave role models or someone to talk to. In Native culture, it's important for each person to find and share the gifts they have. 'What is that medicine and superpower each of us has in us?' she asks. For her, it's being able to collaborate with others. She uses her art and workshops to spark meaningful conversations and to connect with people. Kagigebi curated what may be the first show of its kind in the country. Called 'Queering Indigeneity,' it opens Sept. 18, 2025 at the Minnesota Museum of Art in St. Paul and runs through Aug.16, 2026. The exhibit brings together visual art, videos and other works from 16 Indigenous artists ages 20 to 73 from the Upper Midwest and Manitoba. Each explores identity and shares perspectives as Two Spirit, gender fluid or Native Queer creators. 'We're all meant to be different,' Kagigebi says. 'That's the joy.' Helping others feel less alone The connections and support can be vital, especially when processing experiences with homophobia, racism or both. Dahl-Wooley had moved to Oregon after college graduation, worked in a corporate career, fell in love and returned to northern Minnesota about 20 years ago to run his family's fifth-generation Big Winnie Store, RV Park and Campground At first, the move back was a shock. When they'd lived on the West Coast, medical staffs treated he and his partner, Matthew, like a couple, but when Dahl-Wooley ended up in a Bemidji emergency room, the staff wouldn't acknowledge them as such and weren't going to let Matthew, now his husband, be at his bedside when he was sick. Dahl-Wooley and Matthew were the first same-sex marriage sanctioned by the Ojibwe nation in 2013. That opened the door for other couples to follow. When he was asked to talk about his experience as a Two-Spirit person at a community center in Cass Lake, Dahl-Wooley was surprised that 30 people showed up. Invitations to talk to other groups followed, and he began speaking to health care organizations, law enforcement groups, schools and colleges, and other organizations to help them better understand and support the 2SLGBTQ+ population. The Trevor Project's 2023 report on Indigenous 2SLGBTQ+ young people showed that more than half of them seriously considered suicide in the past year. Almost half have also experienced food insecurity and more than a third have experienced homelessness. 'My goal is suicide prevention, anti-bullying, no self-harm and cultural inclusion,' says Dahl-Wooley. He keeps a database of churches, therapists, health care providers and more who are welcoming to the 2SLGBTQ+ community. He'll schedule Queer Tea events where people can come to have tea, play games, talk and be themselves. They might discuss ways to stay safe or use humor to cope with traumas many have experienced. Additional events might include an art show or gender-affirmative wardrobe clothing drives. He recalled a teen calling him one day, crying with gratitude because he saw Dahl-Wooley and his husband together in the community, laughing and living normal lives, which gave him the ability to see a future for himself. He was also recognized in an Oregon grocery store line by a young man who had needed help and found a video of Dahl-Wooley giving one of his talks online. 'People are paying attention whether you realize it or not,' he says. 'Sometimes just a little difference can save a life.' Kagigebi and Dahl-Wooley each hope that more visible 2SLGBTQ+ elders and younger 2SLGBTQ+ people such as the artists in the upcoming exhibit will make it easier for others to find their way and to better embrace the unique gifts they bring to the world. 'I want the Two-Spirit population to know how important and powerful they are — just as they are,' Dahl-Wooley says. 'We're sacred. We're honored, and we're respected. A lot of people need to hear that.' More information Two Spirit Advocacy Dahl-Wooley shares his story across the country, works with businesses and organizations to be more welcoming to 2SLGBTQ people and hosts events in Bemidji such as Queer Tea. Queer Indigeneity This exhibit opens Sept. 18 at the Minnesota Museum of Art in St. Paul and features 16 Indigenous artists who identify as Two Spirit, queer or gender expansive, including Giiwedin, a young artist and activist who made GLAAD's 20 Under 20 list of changemakers presented in Teen Vogue. The show will run through early 2026.

Miami Herald
7 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Singer Connie Francis is having a moment at 87. What she says about her ‘Baby'
Connie Francis is pop music's latest 'It Girl.' At age 87. And she's loving every second of an unexpected resurgence spurred by the social media success of a song she recorded in 1962 and had forgotten about for decades. Some hits take their own sweet time to go viral. But even by pop music's peculiarities, today's 'Pretty Little Baby' phenomenon is pretty unusual, she acknowledges from her bright and airy home in Broward County's Parkland. 'It's astounding to me that a song I recorded 63 years ago would resonate with teenagers and younger,' Francis said. 'I've seen videos with children 2 years of age singing the song. Adorable. And it's just astounding to me. But it's real.' Francis is enjoying one of the biggest hits of 2025 thanks to the TikTok-driven all-ages adoration for her perky 'Pretty Little Baby.' A generation that grew up in the late-1950s and pre-Beatles '60s remembers the singer-actress for her signature tunes 'Who's Sorry Now' and 'Where the Boys Are,' the Neil Sedaka-Howard Greenfield title song from a 1960 comedic movie she co-starred in with perpetually suntanned George Hamilton. That frothy film put Fort Lauderdale on the spring break map — a rowdy reputation the city has distanced itself from for decades. Living in the Sunshine State Francis is retired from the stage and lives about 27 miles northwest from where she shot her scenes for 'Where the Boys Are' on Fort Lauderdale's beach, along A1A and the Elbo Room. Francis wanted to live nearby right after 'Where the Boys Are' wrapped filming in 1960, but her parents didn't want to move from New Jersey at the time. After her father died in 1996, Francis and her mom, Ida, moved to the Parkland home she lives in now. She said her mom died in that home in 2000 surrounded by people she loved. 'My mother was the most giving soul. We had a great relationship. I don't think we ever had a serious argument,' Francis said. She credits her parents' sense of humor, a lesson that served Francis well during the tougher years in the 1980s when she battled mental illness. Francis loves living where the boys were — and are. 'Well, first of all, in the morning, when you go outside, you don't have to have a scarf on or mittens,' she said. 'The weather is a pleasure. We have hurricane season coming up now, and we're expecting a lively hurricane season, but nevertheless, it's still a place for the weather. It's called the Sunshine State, not for nothing. And I think there are a lot of retired people down here, so I can communicate with them.' Singing success On the first Friday in June, music executive Bruce Resnikoff, the chief of the global catalog division of Universal Music Group that markets Francis' recordings, flew in to present Francis with a plaque in honor of her TikTok and streaming successes with 'Pretty Little Baby.' That plaque, now placed just beyond her front door, joins a happy home in a gated South Florida community she shares with her Imperial Shih Tzu, Lexi. The house, with a sparkling rectangular pool out back and a black piano adorned with at least two dozen framed photos atop it in the living room, is filled with gold records and mementos from a career that took off in 1957 when Francis was still a teenager born Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero to a New Jersey Italian-American family. At 19 that year, Francis recorded 'Who's Sorry Now' at her father George Franconero's insistence. TV host Dick Clark turned it into a smash when he aired it on 'American Bandstand.' 'Without Dick Clark there would have been no Connie Francis,' she said. Francis has been publicly singing since she was about 4 or 5, as World War II raged, when her parents discovered there was just something special about her honeyed mezzo-soprano. Perhaps it was its distinctive catch, an emotional cry in her voice, that later inspired a generation of pop singers including ABBA's Agnetha Fältskog, Linda Ronstadt and Broadway's Gracie Lawrence, who was Tony-nominated for playing Francis in the new Bobby Darin bio musical, 'Just in Time.' A new audience for Connie Francis Now, fans as young as toddlers discover Francis through 'Pretty Little Baby,' she says, in awe, during an interview with the Miami Herald at her home. 'The song may be older, but the audience is new,' Resnikoff said, as he sat next to Francis in her TV room. 'So it's a new song to this audience, and if it's fun it doesn't matter whether it's created in 1960 or in 2020. You're selling it to your fans you've always had, which is nice. But you're bringing in the next generation of people who get to discover you. That is probably the most satisfying part.' ''Pretty Little Baby' has opened the door for people to rediscover 'Who's Sorry Now' and 'Where the Boys Are,' said Resnikoff, president and CEO of music company UMe. 'I grew up on those beach movies. Those movies have a life now on the streaming services and I think people will see the interconnection between your music, your film acting and it was a big part of the generation that grew up on the original pop music.' A pretty big little baby 'Pretty Little Baby' has been used in more than 17 million videos on TikTok where it's been the soundtrack for people to show off their new outfits, their pets and their kids. The song has had more than 27 billion views globally, according to UMe. At its peak in May, 'Pretty Little Baby' was averaging more than 600,000 daily posts on TikTok, including clips from celebrities and influencers Kim Kardashian and daughter North West, and Kylie Jenner, Brook Monk, Jarred Jermaine and Abbie Herbert. Boca Raton singer Peter Lemongello Jr., who appeared on 'American Idol' in 2019, posted a TikTok clip of himself on May 25 crooning the ditty to Francis while handing her a bouquet of flowers in her house. His video has been seen by more than 13 million users. On her living room couch after the plaque's presentation, Francis got into the spirit by lip syncing to 'Pretty Little Baby' while cuddling Lexi on her lap to inspire even more TikToks and Instagram Reels. Joining TikTok Francis just joined the TikTok platform as an octogenarian when her old tune ranked on Apple Music's iTunes Top Songs chart, a notch above contemporary country star Morgan Wallen's latest, 'I'm the Problem,' as recently as June 6. 'I didn't even know what TikTok was,' Francis said. 'I heard that they were fighting over who was going to have to buy it and who was going to sell it, and that it was in Congress. But I never really saw Tiktok. Now, I'm extremely grateful to them for giving me a new lease on life. It's a happy song during chaotic times. So now I have to say, thank you, TikTok.' A re-inspired Francis, who singles out Carrie Underwood as the contemporary country-pop singer she likes these days, already has an idea for a follow-up. She'd love for TikTokkers to revive interest in an obscure novelty tune written by Sedaka and Greenfield that she recalls recording in 1959 called 'Baby Roo.' The bouncy ditty is about an obese lovable guy with lyrics such as 'He's my roly-poly little ton of fun.' You can just see that one soundtracking posts featuring chubby newborns, fat cats and bodacious boyfriends. 'It's a cute kids' song,' Francis says. Francis' chart success But the one that got Francis here, 'Pretty Little Baby,' also crossed over to streaming platforms where it has amassed more than 25 million plays in just over a month and a half on Spotify alone, music executive Resnikoff said. And in a pop music landscape where the stagnant Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 is laden with non-budging songs by Shaboozey, Teddy Swims and a Lady Gaga-Bruno Mars duet that are all more than a year old, Francis' chart newcomer is old enough to start collecting Social Security. Francis, by the way, knows from the Billboard Hot 100. She was the first female pop singer to place a song at No. 1 on that pop chart on June 27, 1960, when her single, 'Everybody's Somebody's Fool,' hit the top spot. On Sept. 26, 1960, Francis scored her second and last Billboard Hot 100 chart-topper, 'My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own.' Versions in many languages In May, Universal released seven international versions of 'Pretty Little Baby' with recordings Francis originally sang in English, Spanish, French, Italian, German, Japanese and Swedish. Francis pioneered the recording of her material in languages other than English for the world market. 'I was 14 years old. My father said, 'Now that the war's over we have to make friends with our enemies, especially Japan and Germany. If you ever do make it — and that's a long shot — but if you ever do make it, you have to sing in those languages.' So I did, and I had tremendous success with foreign language recordings, especially in Germany,' Francis said. Aside from English, singing in Italian came more or less naturally to Francis. Her most successful albums on the U.S. Billboard chart — her only Top 10s, in fact — came in 1960 via 'Connie Francis Sings Italian Favorites' and its sequel later that year, 'More Italian Favorites.' The albums peaked at Nos. 4 and 9, respectively. Singing in Japanese was also easy for the U.S. pop star. 'What you see is what you get. It's not like French where there's no rhyme or reason for it. French was my Waterloo. I had a very hard time singing in French,' Francis said. In June, Universal released a new remix of 'Pretty Little Baby' by German dance duo LIZOT. Her label publicist, Tim Plumley, holds a phone streaming the remix's swishing electronic pulse to Francis' ear while she's on the couch with her dog. 'Plays at pool parties,' he teases about its appeal. Francis smiles and nods. Gotta keep up with the kids. Not bad for a song Francis good-naturedly razzes now that she's rediscovered it. 'The lyrics make no sense,' she says of the song. 'They don't make any sense at all. 'You can ask the flowers. I sit for hours telling all the bluebirds, the bill and coo birds.' The bill and coo? I mean, what kind of lyric is that?' Recording a classic As for 'Who's Sorry Now,' the song her father insisted she record and that cemented her singing career, that single peaked at No. 4 on the pop chart in early 1958. 'Tequila' by The Champs, kept her away from the top spot, Francis said as she recounted the history of her melodramatic ballad that some aspiring young singers are still showcasing on stage at talent competitions. 'My father liked the song. And I said it was written in 1923. 'Was there even records sold in 1923, Daddy?' So he said, 'The adults have already made it a hit. If you put rock and roll triplets behind it, the kids can dance to it, and you should record it.' So with only 16 minutes left in the session, because I did three sides first, hoping we wouldn't get to 'Who's Sorry Now,' I said, 'There's no time, fellas. There's no time for 'Who's Sorry Now.' And my father said, 'You've got 16 minutes if I have to nail you to that microphone.' So I did it. And of course, he was right, and he was with everything except Bobby Darin,' Francis said. The Bobby Darin drama The strict George Franconero did not approve of his young daughter dating fellow rock 'n' roll star Bobby Darin, with whom she'd developed a romance after they had met in 1956. When her dad heard Darin had suggested the two elope after rehearsing together for an appearance on 'The Jackie Gleason Show' he ran Darin out of the room with a gun he had in his pocket, she said. Darin was the love of her life. Francis was devastated when he wed actress Sandra Dee in 1960. Darin died at 37 in 1973 from a lifelong heart defect. That story is recounted in the new Broadway show, 'Just in Time.' Francis married four times and adopted her son Joseph Garzilli Jr. during her third marriage in the mid-1970s. Francis says she is 'disappointed' that producers did not consult her before 'Just in Time' was written and staged. 'I don't know how authentic it is.' She plans to fly to New York this summer to see the production and find out, she says. Overwhelming success But at this moment, just in time, in a house filled with memorabilia from a career that started begun some 70 years ago, a new award joins the gold records on her walls. The 'Pretty Little Baby' plaque. 'It's a tribute to you, your music and the way music can travel around the world and around generations,' Universal's Resnikoff says to Francis before he jets back to California. 'I really am overwhelmed,' Francis responds. 'To think a song I recorded 63 years ago is on the charts and is introducing me to a brand new group of people, a generation of people that didn't know me or my music, is simply thrilling.'

a day ago
'Pretty Little Baby' singer Connie Francis joins TikTok thanks to viral success
Legendary singer Connie Francis, who sings "Pretty Little Baby," has joined TikTok following the song's viral success. Since being featured on TikTok, the 1962 song has been used in more than 17 million videos, totaling more than 27 billion views globally on the app. To celebrate, Francis, 87, joined TikTok and shared a video over the weekend, in which she thanked her fans. "I'm flabbergasted and excited about the huge buzz my 1962 recording of 'Pretty Little Baby' is making all over the world," she said. "To think that a song I recorded 63 years ago is captivating new generations of audiences is truly overwhelming for me." "Thank you, TikTok," she added. In the caption of the post, she wrote, "My thanks to you all for the huge reception you have given to 'Pretty Little Baby'. I am delighted to join the TikTok Community and share this moment with you." "Pretty Little Baby" was released on Francis' 1962 album, "Connie Francis Sings 'Second Hand Love' & Other Hits," which peaked at No. 111 on the Billboard Top LPs chart. In May this year, "Pretty Little Baby" broke into Spotify's Global and U.S. charts for the first time. Tracy Gardner, TikTok's global head of music business development, said in a statement shared in a press release that the recent viral success of "Pretty Little Baby" is an "example of the power of music discovery on TikTok." "Thanks to the TikTok community, this little-known track from the 1960s has been given a new lease of life, and has introduced Connie Francis and her incredible legacy to a whole new audience, both on and off the platform," Gardner added. Since its newfound fame, the song has been remixed by German dance duo Lizot. The song is also available digitally for the first time in French, German, Italian, Spanish and Swedish. It was previously available in Japanese. Francis was also presented with a plaque by Bruce Resnikoff, president and CEO at Universal Music Enterprises, the global catalog division of Universal Music Group, recognizing her and celebrating her music moment. The song, which includes the infectious lyrics, "You can ask the flowers / I sit for hours / Telling all the bluebirds / The bill and coo birds / Pretty little baby, I'm so in love with you," has been used by creators on TikTok including, Kim Kardashian and North West, Kylie Jenner, Ariana Greenblatt and more.