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Nathan Fillion Based Guy Gardner From SUPERMAN on a Character From THE GOLDEN GIRLS — GeekTyrant
Nathan Fillion Based Guy Gardner From SUPERMAN on a Character From THE GOLDEN GIRLS — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Tyrant

Nathan Fillion Based Guy Gardner From SUPERMAN on a Character From THE GOLDEN GIRLS — GeekTyrant

In James Gunn's Superman movie, there's one character who's already stealing scenes before the film even drops, Green Lantern's loudmouth wildcard, Guy Gardner. Nathan Fillion is playing the character, and he seems to be having the time of his life channeling one of DC's most chaotic, lovable jerks. We've seen bits and pieces of Fillion's Guy Gardner in the trailers and he's snarky, cocky, rocking that unapologetic bowl cut, and it's clear he's nailing the vibe. But in a recent appearance on the DC Studios Showcase Official Podcast, Fillion revealed something that threw fans for a delightful loop, his performance is inspired by… Sophia from The Golden Girls . Sophia is Estelle Getty's no-nonsense, zero-filter queen from the classic sitcom. He explained: 'You know, I took my inspiration from the oldest cast member from Golden Girls, where she just, whatever she wanted to say, just there was no filter. 'She just said, Thank you, Estelle Getty. Thank you. Just whatever it is, there it is, he's just gonna say it. Part of his origin was he was at one point hit by a bus, and was in a coma. 'So I just say that's the thing that flipped the switch. That's the thing that caused a little bit of brain damage. Now he's just… off a little bit.' It's a fun and hilarious choice, but it works. Guy Gardner has always been the lantern who says the quiet part loud, often to the dismay of teammates and fans alike, and Fillion clearly gets that. He's giving the character dimension, layering the bravado with something both bizarre and endearing. As for the character's look, particularly the bowl cut, Fillion wasn't about to let it go. He said: 'There was some talk about different hairstyles. There was some talk about some different types of things we were going to go. I was team bowl cut the whole way. It's canon. It's set. 'I said, If we don't do a bowl cut, we're going to hear about it,' he said. That's the kind of comic book loyalty we respect. When asked if taking on a lesser-known character came with added pressure, Fillion didn't see it that way. In fact, he saw it as a creative gift. 'I think if anything else there's a freedom. I think the real stakes and that kind of stress would probably be on David. You know, you're playing Superman. Good luck. 'People have a lot of expectations. But if you're coming in with something that's a little fresh for some people, it's all on you. Like, hey, I get to decide how this is gonna go.' And for those wondering if we'll see Gardner's infamous Green Lantern constructs, Fillion gave a big 'Absolutely'—before immediately pulling a classic Guy move and dodging the details. 'Exactly what you'd expect from Guy Gardner. I mean, if you said, 'Hey, there's an emergency. We need a Green Lantern,' Guy Gardner is the guy you hope you don't get. 'There's thousands of them out there, all over the universe. 'God, please not Guy. Not Guy.' You got Guy. 'Damn it! Damn it!'' Whatever he's bringing to the table, one thing's for sure, Fillion's Guy Gardner is going to be one of the wild cards to watch when Superman hits theaters on July 11.

Rick Caruso Confirms 2026 Reopening of Palisades Village, New Elyse Walker Flagship Boutique
Rick Caruso Confirms 2026 Reopening of Palisades Village, New Elyse Walker Flagship Boutique

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Rick Caruso Confirms 2026 Reopening of Palisades Village, New Elyse Walker Flagship Boutique

Palisades Village — the luxury shopping and dining destination that ultimately served as a tony town square for residents of Pacific Palisades, California — is eyeing a reopening of 'early to mid' 2026 in the wake of catastrophic fires that ravaged the area. Palisades Village owner Rick Caruso and key members of his Caruso team were on site Wednesday afternoon for an official press conference to announce the news and reveal that Palisades retail guru Elyse Walker will aid revitalization efforts by bringing her namesake shop to the flagship space on the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Swarthmore Avenue. Walker, who opened her Palisades store in 1999 and expanded over the years into something of a retail empire with stores in New York, Newport Beach and Southampton, lost her shop on Antioch Street in the Palisades Fire. More from The Hollywood Reporter How Netflix's Latest 'Fear Street' Slasher Film Created a Terrifying Prom Experience for Fans Inaugural Pride LIVE! Hollywood Event Set for June With Film Screenings, Premieres, Tributes to Norman Lear, 'Golden Girls,' 'Queer as Folk' and More The Upfronts Tease the Most Coveted Luxury Real Estate Projects In the World 'Today marks an important milestone for Palisades Village as it signals not only hope, but our steadfast and unwavering commitment to the Palisades. Our future here at Palisades Village is brighter than ever,' said Caruso CEO Corinne Verdery to kick start the press conference against the backdrop of an 'active' construction zone, hard hats and all. 'Our end goal is simple, it's to bring families back, small businesses, jobs, spark economic revival and make Palisades stronger.' They plan to accomplish that by reconstructing the public park inside Palisades Village, rebuilding streetscapes around the hub to 'beautifully restore the sidewalks, lighting and landscape,' bringing back the annual Christmas tree lighting and Menorah celebration this holiday season and adding 'an exciting new dining concept,' the latter of which will be announced in the coming months, Verdery confirmed. She then welcomed her boss to the podium. Caruso, the billionaire businessman who made a bid to become mayor of Los Angeles, has emerged as a key figure in the city's rebuilding efforts. He founded Steadfast L.A., an organization led by the private sector to 'prioritize action, accountability and results over red tape.' 'When the fire hit, and obviously in the wake of that fire, it touched every corner of our city. I became a student of what it takes to bring back a city or a town or a community from a disaster,' offered Caruso in opening his comments. What he learned was that public and private partnerships become key to rebuilding efforts 'because the problems are too big for a government alone,' and that common spaces that foster community become even more crucial. 'People want to congregate. They want to shop, they want to dine, they want to gather, they want to have a cup of coffee with their friends and their family. So how do we accelerate all of this? It's not only about rebuilding a town, it's about an acceleration of the rebuilding,' he added. 'I believe you have to have an economic engine. If you look at all the examples around the country or around the world, if you have a partner — whether it's a retailer or a restaurateur that believes in the future of a community that's committed not only to great commerce but great community — you create a powerful partnership.' That thinking led Caruso to pick up the phone 'a few weeks ago' to share his big idea that called for her to move into the Palisades Village space formerly occupied by Saint Laurent. 'Elyse said, 'I am in, let's rebuild the Palisades,' recalled Caruso, who saved Palisades Village with the help of a private for-hire firefighting team. 'Then she said something that was very powerful. She said, 'We will be unstoppable.'' Caruso then welcomed Walker to the podium with quite a compliment: 'In my 35 years of being in the development business, I've done business with a lot of retailers, the best and the brightest, but let me tell you something, there is nobody better than Elyse Walker.' The Palisades resident and retail vet, who raised her two sons in the city and opened a shop there so she could walk them to school, expressed optimism about the announcement while also nodding to the destruction still visible on all the surrounding streets. 'Today is an exciting day. It's also with mixed emotion as just five months ago, we watched our beloved community of the Pacific Palisades experience incredible loss, and my team and I lost our flagship Elyse Walker Palisades store, our work home, a store that had just celebrated 25 years,' she explained of the elysewalker boutique. 'However, I have always believed that the Palisades community is strong, and that in time we would heal and rise up together. Today is the beginning of our rebuilding efforts.' She called this moment 'the most pivotal time in the Palisades community history,' and said that her new location will mirror the old one and align with what Caruso has created at Palisades Village by becoming a hub for community and something more than a place that sells clothing, handbags and designer items. 'Our goal is to create jobs and enthusiasm. Reopening in the Palisades and moving our flagship across the street to the Palisades Village is incredibly exciting and important as we focus our efforts on supporting the strong and resilient town,' she said. 'We fully intend to recreate the Elyse Walker experience at the Palisades Village and look forward to a time very, very soon when we can open our doors and our community can reunite.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More

A Steady Decrease in Migraine Episodes: Does It Mean I'm Healed?
A Steady Decrease in Migraine Episodes: Does It Mean I'm Healed?

WebMD

time4 days ago

  • General
  • WebMD

A Steady Decrease in Migraine Episodes: Does It Mean I'm Healed?

As I sit here and type today, I've been without a migraine for two weeks. That is a big deal for me! There have been seasons of my life when I would have a migraine almost every day. I started to feel like I was just 'migraine Michele,' and that's just how it was going to be. But one day, I met a compassionate doctor who said I didn't have to live that way. And so began a 10-plus year journey to bring my migraines under control. You see, they were so disruptive to my life. So I went to my own migraine school. I studied, read, and interrogated doctors; if they didn't help me, I'd find a new doctor. I tried medications and a host of alternative therapies. I got acupuncture, I sought advice from a nutritionist. I got off coffee, I allowed a cup a day back in, and then I quit again. I went on a quest to limit stress. I limited the amount of time I watched the news. I upped my yoga and traded 'night murder,' as my husband calls it, for reruns of Golden Girls. And then one day, I noticed that all the things I've been trying for years were making a difference. I started writing about my experience and sharing advice with other people battling migraine. I recently wondered: 'Am I cured?' Unfortunately, there is no cure for migraine, but they can be managed to a point where it might feel like you're cured. I have some theories about why I'm benefiting from more migraine-free days. My hormones have changed. I used to get migraine attacks like clockwork a few days before my period. One of my OB/GYNs explained that it had to do with fluctuating hormones. It was often the first sign that my cycle was on the way. I didn't have bad cramps like some of my friends, but my period migraine attacks could shut me down! As I've gotten older, closer to perimenopause, my migraine episodes are less frequent. Unfortunately, lots of other symptoms (night sweats, brain fog, etc.) have taken their place. I'm transparent about them. I used to keep my migraine attacks a secret. Only those closest to me knew about them. I was a little embarrassed to be sidelined by 'just a headache.' But that approach just didn't work. I don't have to tell all my business, but I'll speak up when I need to. 'Michele, can you attend my party tonight? So sorry, I feel a migraine coming on, so I'll stay home.' 'Michele, can you pick up this extra project at work? Unfortunately, my plate is full, and I don't want to run this risk of triggering a series of migraines. Could we revisit in about a week or so?' 'Michele, we really need to discuss this controversial issue right now! It's not a good time for me. Could you give me a day to rest, and let's meet for coffee tomorrow? I'm having some migraine symptoms.' I feed myself. My migraine episodes started when I was a teen, but I was well into adulthood when I learned that skipping meals could trigger them. A nutritionist challenged me to try eating every three to four hours as recommended, and it made a huge difference in my migraine frequency and intensity. The cool thing is it didn't even have to be a meal. I could get by with a snack, too. I don't like them, but I respect them. I wouldn't wish migraine episodes on my worst enemy. For years, I thought if I ignored them, they'd go away. I would be in denial each time the typical symptoms would emerge. That type of approach led to painful, day-ruining, life-altering migraines. I would delay treating them, hoping time or simply lying down would do the trick. Oh, how naive I was! These days, the moment I feel a migraine coming on, I pay attention. I get to a quiet space. I take my medication. I begin rearranging my schedule to accommodate some downtime. While I've come to terms that I'll likely never be 'cured' of migraines, I can enjoy more and more days that are free of them.

Zimbabwe's Sean Williams: ‘It's been a rollercoaster ride of ups and downs – mainly downs'
Zimbabwe's Sean Williams: ‘It's been a rollercoaster ride of ups and downs – mainly downs'

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Zimbabwe's Sean Williams: ‘It's been a rollercoaster ride of ups and downs – mainly downs'

In a Zimbabwe squad not exactly packed with experience – only three of its 16 members have played as many Tests as the 21‑year‑old English spinner Shoaib Bashir – Sean Williams is the most glaring of exceptions. When Jimmy Anderson took off his England cap for the final time last summer, 21 years, six months and 27 days after his debut, Williams took over as the cricketer with the longest ongoing international career: by the final day of the one-off Test at Trent Bridge this week he will be able to look back at precisely 20 years and three months at the highest rung of the cricketing ladder. And still he is breaking new ground: England, who have not played Zimbabwe in any format since 2003, would be the 28th opponents of his international career, taking him two short of the world record held by the retired Kenyan Collins Obuya. 'Definitely for me as an individual, it makes it massive,' he says. Advertisement Williams's journey to Trent Bridge has been long and circuitous, full of dips, peaks and dizzying swerves. Perhaps this is why for all his ability and longevity, the all-rounder has played only 54% of Zimbabwe's Tests since his debut, 53% of their ODIs and 49% of their T20s. 'It's been a rollercoaster ride of ups and downs – mainly downs,' he says. Related: 'We are a passionately multiracial team': Zimbabwe return to England transformed 'I couldn't make up my mind, did I want it, didn't I want it? I'd often just pull out. And then I'd go back, and then I'd leave again. And coaching was poor – a lot of things were really poor and far from up to standard, and I disagreed with it. So I ended up saying I didn't want to play and then not playing and then serving my punishment. 'I feel like I've underachieved a little bit in my career, because of that emotion. I was a bit of a naughty boy, always fighting against things that I thought were wrong. And it was never like, 'OK, you can come back now.' I had to work hard again. I'd lose a contract and start again at the bottom, come back up again, throw it away and then come back up again. I definitely should have played a lot more, probably close to 250 ODIs [he has played 162]. But I'm very happy with the decisions I made, happy because I learned a lot through all of those little mistakes. It's like playing cricket: if I don't make any mistakes in the nets or in training I'm not going to gain anything. Trying new things, making mistakes, is the only way I'm going to learn. That's how I've looked at it.' Advertisement Of all those unexpected twists perhaps the most significant came in 2003, when he was called up to represent Zimbabwe as a full, senior international for the first time – in hockey. Though Williams's father played first-class cricket this was the real family sport: his mother, Pat, was part of the Golden Girls team that unexpectedly won the nation's first Olympic gold medal in 1980, while his father played for and later coached the national team, and both of his brothers captained it. 'I was selected to go to Nigeria for the All-Africa Games when I would have been 16 years old,' he says. 'But there was a political story [administrators had submitted the wrong names for accreditation, apparently deliberately] and three‑quarters of the team ended up pulling out and going back home. I knocked hockey on the head right there and then, and never went back. At the time I was very frustrated, but I didn't know what was to come for me in cricket.' From being on the verge of becoming an international hockey player at 16, Williams was an international cricketer at 18. 'I always enjoyed my cricket. I used to go and stand on the boundary and wait for the players – Streaky [Heath Streak], Andy Flower, Grant Flower, Tatenda Taibu, Henry Olonga, Pommie Mbangwa – to come sign my things, and then next thing I was in the changing room with all of them. It was like, 'Jeez, this has come quick.' 'I just had this natural talent of hitting a ball. It was just there. It was a gift I was given that I didn't even know I had until I got older and started to understand how to use it a little bit better. I had a lot of fear of getting hit with the ball back in the day, so I used to bat really low down the order. But then my dad started to push me more as a batsman, and then [Zimbabwe's former coach] Phil Simmons found me and I never looked back. When he found me I must have been batting about nine, 10. Then I went straight up to No 3, No 4, and yeah, never looked back.' Advertisement Williams is doing plenty of looking back now. He turns 39 in September, retired (briefly) four years ago and is unlikely to hold Anderson's record for long. 'I'm just trying to let cricket be the decider of when I go. If I can stay in the side based on performance, then there's no real need to stop playing.' But he knows he is approaching the next chapter. 'The biggest fear that I have, it's actually going back home,' he says. 'There's certain ways that I am, certain ways that I live, and my wife and children are at home and they do things very differently to how I would do them. 'It's a transition phase, really, that you've got to go through and just accept. When you're on tour things always happen for you. Everything's on time: buses on time, training from this time until this time. You can have an afternoon nap, you can head off to the gym, you can go out for dinner. When you get back home with the wife and kids a lot of self needs to be removed. It's quite difficult to be a husband and a father while still trying to be as professional as you possibly can.' Williams has two young girls, aged two and five, and if life with them entails an element of chaos that he is unused to, life without them means sacrificing shared moments and memories. 'I'm asking myself a lot these days whether it's worth that sacrifice. It's getting to the point where there's a lot of things more important than pushing on through a career in cricket that's, you know … it's cricket. My daughter actually asked me before I left: 'Do you even wanna go on tour?' And I was like: 'Jeez, that's a good question for a five-year-old.' So, yeah, she got me thinking there. I don't think it'll be too much longer now.' The appointment last year of the South African Justin Sammons as Zimbabwe's coach, working with his compatriots Charl Langeveldt and Rivash Gobind, gave Williams a fresh appetite for the game, with the three-wicket win last month against Bangladesh in Sylhet – their first in a Test for four years – evidence of a recent improvement. 'They've worked with the best in the world. Having the ability through them to tap into those people's minds is something that doesn't come around too often,' he says. 'I didn't want to miss that opportunity, not only as a player but for my future knowledge, that I could possibly pass on to other people. Our training has changed to another level. Advertisement 'Getting over the line in Bangladesh showed the change. There was a little wobble and I was like: 'Oh shit, here we go, it's going to happen again.' Getting through that was a huge thing in my eyes because I've seen us fall apart under those pressure situations many, many times. This group of players is different.' A second career in coaching beckons, with Williams hoping he has learned, in a variety of ways, from his mother. 'She coached my age group [at hockey] when I was a youngster, and she basically covered exactly what we're covering now: to remove fear. 'We're gonna go and win', that's it. But the gold medal was a huge thing in her life. I mean, that's the ultimate. I did notice something that she did after winning the gold medal and stopping playing hockey, and once us boys were finished: she let go. Like we're discussing now, the mental strain and sacrifice, eventually you just have enough. She's a little bit elderly now so she's at home, living with us, and she actually doesn't talk about hockey much, if at all. I'm hoping I don't push myself to that point.'

Celebrating the Golden Girls: 33 years after the Finale with Patrick Hinds
Celebrating the Golden Girls: 33 years after the Finale with Patrick Hinds

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Celebrating the Golden Girls: 33 years after the Finale with Patrick Hinds

Celebrating the Golden Girls: 33 years after the Finale with Patrick Hinds Jeremy Rabe visits with Patrick Hinds, Host of 'The Golden Girls Deep Dive' podcast on about the pop culture significance of The Golden Girls 33 years to the day the Finale aired. Here are some of his favorite moments and some behind the scenes stories as well. Be sure listen to both his podcasts including his 'True Crime Obsessed' podcast and his book 'Failure is Not Not and Option' is available now. Want to stay up to date and involved with Unscripted? Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok or click below! Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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