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YouTuber Austin McBroom breaks his silence as Catherine Paiz's memoir exposes his cheating and ACE family's dark side
YouTuber Austin McBroom breaks his silence as Catherine Paiz's memoir exposes his cheating and ACE family's dark side

Time of India

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

YouTuber Austin McBroom breaks his silence as Catherine Paiz's memoir exposes his cheating and ACE family's dark side

Welcome back to another round of internet drama, starring none other than the ACE Family. This time, it is Austin McBroom vs. Catherine Paiz in what might be the most public online divorce fallout we have seen in a minute. Grab popcorn. It is messy. Sam Frank Reacts to the Austin McBroom situation 👀 After years of silence and glossy Instagram facades, Catherine Paiz has officially blown the influencer fairytale sky-high with her new memoir Delores, where she names names, drops truth bombs, and confirms the rumour mill's worst-kept secret: Austin cheated. And not just once. She writes about the emotional gut punch of discovering his infidelity during her third pregnancy, a moment that, according to sources close to the book, shattered everything she thought was real. Austin McBroom fights back after Catherine Paiz reveals he cheater on her But Austin? Oh, he is not staying quiet. In a series of Snapchat posts that felt more like a mini docuseries than a response, McBroom claimed he was "blindsided" by the book. He accused Catherine of cashing in on their past and even shared throwback footage and private messages as evidence of… what, exactly? Damage control? Nostalgia? A plea for sympathy? In true plot-twist fashion, Austin then pivoted to calling out Catherine for allegedly hosting ayahuasca retreats in their home, strongly implying that he had concerns about their children's safety. Fans are now split harder than a TikTok comment section. Some are praising Catherine for finally telling her truth; others are suspicious about the timing and motivations behind the book. AUSTIN MCBROOM CALLS OUT CATHERINE PAIZ (admits he cheated + more) via @YouTube Austin is notorious for being really dramatic and trying to earn sympathy when he doesn't deserve it/The way he's trying SO hard to squeeze out a tear while "crying" is And in the recent turn of events, looks like, fans are now supporting Austin and not Catherine, just two days ago X was filled with Catherine's supporters and today everyone is saying how they get why he "cheated." I completely understand why Austin McBroom cheated on Catherine😭 shid if I was austin mcbroom I'd cheat on Cathrine ass too, wym you don't wanna have sex with ur husband and u the reincarnation Virgin Mary💔 While there were some followers still who were out there in support of Catherine. Can we all agree that Austin Mcbroom is trying to manipulate everyone? Like how are y'all not seeing what he's doing? Obviously we don't know all the facts but his delivery is wild and very telling already. Catherine Paiz's memoir is about what? Meanwhile, Catherine's memoir is already being hailed as more than a tell-all. With themes of betrayal, identity, and healing, she is not just spilling tea, she is rewriting her narrative and reclaiming her power after years of living for the 'like' button. The real question is: is this closure or the first episode of a new saga? Either way, with Austin defending his character, Catherine finding her voice, and fans playing referee, one thing is certain, the influencer curtain has officially been pulled back. And spoiler alert: not everything behind it is picture-perfect.

James Samuel Lagese, Youngstown, Ohio
James Samuel Lagese, Youngstown, Ohio

Yahoo

time19-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

James Samuel Lagese, Youngstown, Ohio

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (MyValleyTributes) – James Samuel Lagese, 86, passed away peacefully on Wednesday April 9, 2025, at Austinwoods with his family at his side. Jim was born January 24, 1939, in Youngstown, a son of the late Joseph and Katherine Lagese, and has been a lifelong area resident. Find obituaries from your high school He attended South High School and served in the Army from February 1956 to August 1957. He worked at the Atlantic & Pacifc (A&P) warehouse and the Austintown Road Department. He was a long-time member of Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish and served on several committees over the years. He was also involved in the Cursillo movement and a Bible study group. Jim was an avid sports fan, and coached youth baseball for 17 years at Mill Creek Baseball League with much passion. He fervently cheered on Notre Dame football, the New York Yankees, the Cleveland Browns, and Fitch Falcons. Jim was a car enthusiast and owned with pride and joy a 1958 Pontiac Star Chief, gracing car shows every weekend with friends and loved ones. Jim was a devoted and loving husband, father, and grandfather who loved going to the grandchildren's activities with his wife Delores. He had countless friends and their couples club put on the La Gents dance at the Idora Park Ballroom for 14 years and it became the biggest dance in town, with the proceeds going to various organizations. You never had to wonder if Jim was around at any holiday or gathering, as he was always the vocal one with an infectious laugh. Jim will reunite with his high school sweetheart and wife of 55 years, Delores, whom he married June 27, 1959, and preceded him in death in 2014. He will be greatly missed by his two children, his daughter Renee (Joseph) Gugliotti of Boardman and his son Joseph (Amy) of Austintown, his sister Pauline Antronica of Boardman, his four grandchildren, Adrianna Gugliotti (Philip Ciprian), Marisa (Ryan) James of Canfield, Jimmy Lagese of St. Petersburg, Florida, and Jason Lagese of Austintown. He also had two great-grandchildren, Justin and McKenzie James. Family and Friends may call from 4:00 – 7:00 p.m. Friday April 25, 2025, at Fox Funeral Home. There will be a Mass of Christian Burial at St. Blaise Parish, Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, 4490 Norquest Blvd. Austintown, at 11:00 a.m. Saturday April 26, 2025, celebrated by Very Rev. Gregory Fedor. To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of James 'Jim' Samuel Lagese, please visit our floral 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

At this year's Sundance Film Festival, disconnection reigns and rabbits rule
At this year's Sundance Film Festival, disconnection reigns and rabbits rule

Los Angeles Times

time27-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

At this year's Sundance Film Festival, disconnection reigns and rabbits rule

PARK CITY, Utah — It's been nine months since the Sundance Film Festival announced it was exploring the potential of a new home beginning in 2027. For some longtime attendees, the idea of resettlement hits like a snowball to the back of the neck. Mastering Park City is like learning to juggle: The curve is steep, but you move nimbly once you know whether to wait for a shuttle or walk, where to find the best legroom at the Library Center Theatre and that the grocery-store sushi by the Holiday Village Cinemas is actually pretty good. Will Sundance fans really have to start over in Cincinnati? Maybe it's just the premature homesickness in the air, but the first stretch of films I've seen this year have shared the theme of being a stranger in a strange land. Take Evan Twohy's 'Bubble & Squeak,' in which American newlyweds Declan (Hamish Patel) and Delores (Sarah Goldberg) fly to a fictional, formerly war-torn nation to honeymoon on the cheap. This country once forced its citizens to survive on cabbage. Today, the vegetable is outlawed and the punishment for cabbage smuggling is public execution. But Delores has stuffed a dozen-plus leafy heads down her pants simply because she doesn't feel obliged to respect another culture's rules. Her flippancy forces the couple to go on the run from a customs officer (Steven Yeun) and his boss, Shazbor (Matt Berry), who is locally famous for slicing off criminals' fingertips. They have a zero-tolerance policy for cabbage. The audience, on the other hand, has to be more receptive. If you took a shot of vodka every time someone says cabbage, you'd be hospitalized by the end of the first act. At one point, Declan and Delores tell their entire love story in vegetable form. It's my favorite scene of anything in this festival to date. Twohy's arch tone can make this comedy feel like 'Midsommar' minus the trauma. But as the couple attempts to escape across the border, fault lines crack open in this fledgling marriage, especially when Dave Franco appears as a fellow fugitive disguised as a bear. The natives are colorful and ridiculous, but the film's target is disaster tourism. (I'll shoulder that attack as someone who once did some sightseeing in Chernobyl and came home with a souvenir T-shirt.) Meanwhile, Justin Lin returned to Sundance with 'Last Days,' his sensationalized dramatization of true-life travel turned tragic parable. In 2018, 26-year-old American John Allen Chau died when he illegally sailed from Port Blair, India, to the forbidden North Sentinel Islands. He wanted to bring the Bible to the island's remote tribe. They were unmoved. Chau (Sky Yang) has been called a martyr, a hero and a nut job. You hear all three opinions before the end of the opening credits. Lin launched his career at Sundance 2002 with the indie heist film 'Better Luck Tomorrow' and then went on to direct five 'Fast & Furious' blockbusters. This film clumsily splits the difference: Its tiny narrative engine can't keep pace with its visual extravagance. 'Last Days' barely engages with religion or piety. Instead, it plays out like a globetrotting action film about a kid who doesn't realize he's in over his head. When Chau befriends two thrill-seeking Christians (Toby Wallace and Ciara Bravo) in Kurdistan, the tone is less 'Passion of the Christ' and more 'Point Break.' His backpacking adventures are filmed with a jaw-dropping glamour that both makes and sabotages the movie. We're conscious that the point is to lament an idealist whose life was cut short. Instead, we leave impressed by all the cool places he went. 'Rabbit Trap,' a confident debut from Bryn Chainey, is about London couple Darcy and Daphne (Dev Patel and Rosy McEwen), who decamp to rural Wales to record an experimental noise album. (It's the 1970s and Daphne's last album cover has her painted up like Ziggy Stardust.) The pair are inspired by the sonic sounds of this otherworldly land: swooping flocks of birds, squelchy moss, water drops drizzling down an ancient stone wall. Then an eerie figure (Jade Croot) appears at their door clutching a freshly killed rabbit. These city slickers will learn to respect the local myths. I've seen 'Rabbit Trap' twice now and both times I sank into the vibrations of every scene. The craft is first-rate. Still, if you asked me to explain how all the scenes fit together into a story, I'd be struck mute, just as Darcy is every night during his bad dreams. But I can call it the most optimistic of the culture-clash movies I've seen at Sundance so far. These outsiders haven't arrived to insult and evade, nor to barge in and convert. Instead, they learn to sing the local language in a lovely faerie hymnal. Katarina Zhu's 'Bunnylovr' also hinges on a gifted rabbit. (Is there a magician somewhere here in the snow pulling them out of his hat?) The giver is a Pennsylvania man (Austin Amelio) with a fetish for furry animals; the recipient is a broke New York City cam girl named Rebecca (Zhu) who is so focused on satisfying him that she's unplugged from her own wants. When her online patron asks her to dangle the rabbit by its ears while he pleasures himself, she doesn't have the backbone to refuse. (Be warned: You'll hear the rabbit scream.) Yet as confused and vague as Rebecca is, Zhu makes the character feel concrete. The debuting feature filmmaker has managed to make a sculpture of mist. Rachel Sennott, playing Rebecca's bossy best friend, groans that forming an intimate bond with her is impossible. Nevertheless, we come to care about Rebecca — even when she decides to meet her rabbit-loving admirer in person and we want to reach into the screen and grab her by the ears. Almost that exact same scene happens again in Rachel Fleit's documentary 'Sugar Babies' when a cam girl tromps into the woods for a rendezvous with a paying stranger. The film follows the teenager for several years as she flirts with online men to cover her college tuition. Bright and brazenly manipulative, Autumn graduated high school at 16 — she's no dummy. In her heavy, charming drawl, she calls herself 'a sugar baby without the sugar,' one who vows to avoid any IRL dates until she's 25. Eventually, she breaks her own rule. The film can feel like listening to a young and chronically online TikToker monologize about her big plans to get that money and get out of Louisiana, where the minimum wage has been stuck at $7.25 since she was in grade school. Alas, Autumn's struggle to leave town becomes Sisyphean. Cellphones have given her a way to make contact with the outside world — but how is she ever going to get there? Technological disconnection is a vibe at this year's festival, both onscreen and on the ground. There are three fewer Park City theaters in use than there were in 2020 as Sundance is continuing to offer attendees the option of staying home to stream the movies online. People participating in their pajamas may get an extra kick out of pressing play on Albert Birney's 'OBEX,' a cheekily lo-fi, black-and-white art-house movie. It's the kind of film with a random shot of a chicken. 'OBEX' is about a recognizable modern type: a screen-obsessed shut-in named Conor (Birney). The twist is that the movie takes place in 1987 with Conor pecking away at ASCII art and karaoke-ing Gary Numan on his Macintosh 128K. One day, he pops in a game about a soul-gobbling demon and the demon emerges to suck Conor's adorable mutt, Sandy, into the screen. As Conor enters the game to save his dog and his insular world expands, the film itself tends to amble. Still, I admired its imagination as it toggled between people and pixels, and shivered when Conor chirped, 'Maybe someday we'll all be living in computers — even dogs.' Definitely computers. Maybe even in Cincinnati — if only for a week of indie movies.

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