logo
#

Latest news with #OutoftheDarkness

Aaron Rodgers' ex Olivia Munn accuses his family of toxic behavior in fiery truth bomb
Aaron Rodgers' ex Olivia Munn accuses his family of toxic behavior in fiery truth bomb

Time of India

time16 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Aaron Rodgers' ex Olivia Munn accuses his family of toxic behavior in fiery truth bomb

Olivia Munn is setting the record straight about her relationship with Aaron Rodgers (Getty images) For nearly a decade, actress Olivia Munn was wrongly cast as the villain in one of the NFL 's most private family dramas. Now, the former partner of Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers is finally speaking out—firmly, honestly, and with surprising grace. Olivia Munn finally clears the air on Aaron Rodgers' family feud Appearing on the Armchair Expert podcast with Dax Shepard , Olivia Munn directly addressed the long-standing narrative that she was the cause of Aaron Rodgers' estrangement from his family during their 2014–2017 relationship. 'There's this whole big narrative that stayed with me for so many years,' Munn shared. 'But there was just this dynamic in the family that had nothing to do with me.' While fans and tabloids speculated for years, Munn now confirms that Rodgers' fractured ties with his family predated their relationship. 'They didn't speak for months before we started dating,' she said. In fact, she even urged Rodgers to reach out to them. Her encouragement, however, didn't stop the world from unfairly blaming her for a situation she had no control over. Aaron Rodgers publicly defends Olivia Munn in new biography The real twist came recently when Rodgers himself finally spoke on the matter in Ian O'Connor's book Out of the Darkness. He made it crystal clear that his personal family issues were 'deep-rooted' and had 'nothing to do with' Munn. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Uncover The Latest 2025 SUV Prices List In The Philippines SUV Deals | Search Ads Search Now Undo For Olivia, the moment of vindication was powerful—even though she was quietly battling breast cancer when those words surfaced. 'I was really grateful that he did that. Even if people didn't want to hear it, it made me feel good,' she said. Adding complexity to the story were clashes with Rodgers' family values—especially with his mother, Darla. Munn recalled how her candid, sometimes provocative comments—like joking 'I try to have s*x as much as I can' on live television—didn't sit well with the deeply religious Rodgers family. Also post: NFL Rumors: Steelers ready to dump Aaron Rodgers if he flops, claims James Harrison Now married to comedian John Mulaney and focused on family and health, Munn appears content and unapologetic. By finally breaking her silence, she has reclaimed her narrative and brought long-overdue clarity to a chapter many thought they understood. In the end, she dropped the truth with calm conviction—and walked away with her head held high. Game On Season 1 continues with Mirabai Chanu's inspiring story. Watch Episode 2 here.

Former Green Bay Packers star Aaron Rodgers leaves fans guessing on retirement plans
Former Green Bay Packers star Aaron Rodgers leaves fans guessing on retirement plans

Time of India

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Former Green Bay Packers star Aaron Rodgers leaves fans guessing on retirement plans

The future of the former four-time NFL MVP and New York Jets quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, in this year's NFL season has sparked numerous debates among fans and the media alike. With an NFL career spanning over two decades, the 41-year-old veteran star's next move remains uncertain. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now With Rodgers yet to respond to the Jets' one-year deal as a starting quarterback, he remains a free agent being linked to potential deals amid the offseason roll. Ahead of the NFL 2025 season, with uncertainty surrounding his next NFL career move, fans are growing restless as a retirement plan might be on the list for Rodgers. Is Aaron Rodgers' next destination to be the Pittsburgh Steelers? As one of the hot topics swirling in the NFL world, Aaron Rodgers is one of the big names wandering as a free agent. With the offseason trades playing a crucial role in each team's gameplay elevation, a seasoned player like Rodgers might be on the lookout to become a suitable fit while looking at retiring soon from the big league. With numerous accolades and records, Rodgers is one of the biggest names in the NFL. Recently, during the Q&A with American rapper Mike Stud, the QB was asked to weigh in on his view about having a game day in Chicago. As a response, Rodgers stated, "No, but I believe there's a team that might play in Chicago this year on a road trip. I don't know, not sure. Got to check it out. I love Chicago, though. Way more than they love me. It's been a great relationship. All one way." Despite performing incredibly last season for the Jets after returning from an Achilles injury in 2023, the veteran star is on the lookout to land probably a last worthy deal within the game. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The author of Rodgers' autobiography, "Out of the Darkness," Ian O'Connor, recently gave a substantial clue as to which team the future Hall of Famer might be signing with. In a recent interview with the 93.7 The Fan podcast, O'Connor teased Rodgers' next power move: 'I do think there will be a happy ending, at least for him, and we will find out for the Steelers and their fan base. If I had $100 to put down, my feeling is he will be in uniform June 10th for the start of the mandatory minicamp.' With hints of Rodgers retiring soon, fans remain hopeful to see the veteran star play this season before stepping away from the game. As the offseason proceeds with full thrust, stay updated on the latest NFL updates. Also Read:

Aaron Rodgers to Steelers a done deal already? The man who wrote veteran QB's story thinks it's very possible
Aaron Rodgers to Steelers a done deal already? The man who wrote veteran QB's story thinks it's very possible

Time of India

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Aaron Rodgers to Steelers a done deal already? The man who wrote veteran QB's story thinks it's very possible

Aaron Rodgers' biographer believes the legendary quarterback could soon join the Pittsburgh Steelers, sparking major buzz and speculation across the NFL. (Credit: Getty Images) The Pittsburgh Steelers might be on the cusp of one of the most fascinating quarterback acquisitions in recent NFL memory. As the Aaron Rodgers saga unfolds, fans and insiders alike are bracing for what could be a transformative chapter in both the franchise's future and Rodgers' storied career. According to Out of the Darkness author Ian O'Connor—Rodgers' biographer and longtime friend—there's a strong belief that a deal is imminent, and it could all culminate before the start of the Steelers' mandatory minicamp. Insider who penned Aaron Rodgers' life says Pittsburgh could soon land the legendary QB 'I do think there will be a happy ending, at least for him and we will find out for the Steelers and their fan base,' O'Connor shared in a recent appearance on 93.7 The Fan. 'If I had $100 to put down, my feeling is he will be in uniform June 10th, for the start of the mandatory minicamp.' by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Salinas: Un segundo ingreso para ecuatorianos: prueba Amazon CFD (Inicia hoy). Empezar ahora Registrarse Undo O'Connor's insights carry weight. He interviewed more than 250 individuals for his 2024 biography on Rodgers and maintains close ties with the quarterback. His conviction about the move isn't rooted in guesswork—it's shaped by Rodgers' own behind-the-scenes messaging to Pittsburgh. O'Connor mentioned that Rodgers has signaled his intent to play for the Steelers but has been delaying the official move due to unresolved personal matters. 'He's told [the Steelers], 'Listen, I'm gonna play for you. I just don't want to go there and then miss part of mandatory minicamp because of my personal issues. I'm pretty sure they're gonna be solved by the end of May, at least in my satisfaction where I can give you my all,'' O'Connor explained. These personal issues, which Rodgers acknowledged in his only public remarks this offseason, reportedly involve someone close to him. While O'Connor opted not to reveal specifics, he clarified, 'The sense I got was, I think I have a pretty good sense of what it is, and I don't think it's something that would prevent him from playing football.' From a football standpoint, Rodgers would be a clear upgrade for the Steelers, especially over Mason Rudolph. While Pittsburgh's offense may not be overflowing with elite talent, Rodgers is the type of quarterback who can elevate the players around him. With weapons like DK Metcalf, Pat Freiermuth, Calvin Austin, and Robert Woods, the veteran's presence could unlock a new dimension for the Steelers' attack. O'Connor is optimistic—not just about the fit, but about the outcome. 'Do I think the Steelers are going to win the Super Bowl? No, but if you told me 11-6 with at least one playoff victory, the first with that franchise since 2016, I think that's realistic. I think that this could be a success story, and certainly a worthy ending for him.' For Rodgers, a move to Pittsburgh wouldn't just be about chasing a Super Bowl. It would be about redemption. His brief, injury-marred stint with the Jets was widely viewed as a disappointment. 'He knows it was an embarrassment in New York largely, and he's the face of that embarrassment,' O'Connor said. A strong run in Pittsburgh could rewrite the narrative and offer Rodgers a satisfying final act—one that proves Act II wasn't his final bow. With OTAs set to begin in just over a week and the 2025 NFL schedule now revealed, timing seems to be aligning perfectly. If the deal materializes, expect a press conference in Pittsburgh soon—ushering in what might be Rodgers' last, and potentially most poetic, NFL chapter. Also Read: Eagles star calls Ivanka Trump 'beautiful,' and she responds with a special locker room message Get IPL 2025 match schedules , squads , points table , and live scores for CSK , MI , RCB , KKR , SRH , LSG , DC , GT , PBKS , and RR . Check the latest IPL Orange Cap and Purple Cap standings.

Letters: The Holocaust is a warning from history
Letters: The Holocaust is a warning from history

New European

time05-02-2025

  • Politics
  • New European

Letters: The Holocaust is a warning from history

What many Germans do and have done to come to terms with the fairly recent history of the Holocaust is admirable. I worry that we project so much of this on to Germans and Germany, and that this emphasis on that particular outrage somehow helps us to ignore other historical or current ones; that making it such a special case helps us to avert our eyes from other outrages; or helps us to ignore the ways in which today's societies are repeating the collective insanities of 1930s Germany. We should remember the Holocaust. Not as a horrific historical event that is firmly in the past, for which Germans alone were responsible; but as a warning from history that it could, all too easily, happen again, here and now. Peter English One of the most shocking things I ever witnessed was when, on Macquarie Street in Sydney, an old boy emerged from the hospital and I saw the number tattooed on his arm; it was brutally eloquent beyond words. Elon Musk and his fellow travellers should read Frank Trentmann's grimly brilliant Out of the Darkness . And now, with Gaza, universal darkness covers all. Michael Rosenthal My most tangible contact with what would have been my family is a slip of paper on which my father wrote their names, the transport number and, where known, the place where they were murdered by the Germans. Do I hate the Germans as a result? Absolutely not. Were I to do so, I would fall into the same irrationality as their hate, and that in other European nations, of the Jews. Conversely, the only lasting monument to the 1,000-year Reich is the stain of shame that is ineradicable. But it stands as a warning to all of us that some threats are persistent. Those chanting 'from the river to the sea' might like to dwell on the words 'never again'. John Tanzer Bongless bash Patience Wheatcroft was, as usual, absolutely spot-on in her column on the calamity of Brexit ('Five years on', TNE #422), with one exception: Leave supporters gathering in Westminster to celebrate our departure from the EU were, in fact, denied the chimes of Big Ben that they hoped would signal our liberation from the evil clutches of Brussels. The Elizabeth Tower was undergoing repairs at the time and, despite a truly heroic campaign on the part of several Europhobic newspapers and a fundraiser spearheaded by the ERG's Mark Francois and the group StandUp4Brexit that pulled in over £250,000, it couldn't be readied in time. However, as my book, The Conservative Party After Brexit , notes, the country's loss was charity's gain as the money was eventually donated to Help for Heroes. As for the Brexiteers, they made the best of their tragically bongless bash in Parliament Square by swinging to the strains of a jazz band playing, among other top tunes, The Final Countdown , the 1986 hit from Swedish glam-metal act Europe. Who says irony is dead? Tim Bale, Professor of Politics, Queen Mary University of London Angry young men Surely the paradox missed in Zoë Grünewald's 'The kids are alt right' is that angry young men are supporting parties that if they come to power will only guarantee the advantages of boomers – yes I'm one – and take it out on migrants or other perceived outsiders. This has just happened in the US; they put someone in the White House who will only benefit obscenely rich white men, although a few crumbs may fall off the table, and impoverished migrants will pay most of the price. As for the UK, I'd scrap the right to buy and go all out to provide quality affordable social housing as we did after the war. Give young people homes of their own! Christopher Harrison While I agree that the young and especially young men are getting a 'raw deal' and that my generation – I am 72 – are largely responsible for their situation, we only took advantage of the social and economic world we were presented with. The real question is how do we collectively change the message and provide opportunities for the young? Instead of trying desperately to balance the books, the Labour government should break the bank and spend like never before on all the broken services that for far too long have undermined us all. Adam Primhak Bouquets and brickbats 'MAGA's magic bullet' by Matthew d'Ancona was a great essay. Matthew has been on blistering form recently. RS Prior Again, I find myself baffled by Matthew d'Ancona's critical judgment (he thought Sigourney Weaver's Tempest was actually, in some way, good). I have just endured three hours plus of The Brutalist , to which he gave a rave review in TNE #422. Never mind the pretentious (invoking Naipaul's great novel!) illogicality of the plot, but where, oh where, was the 'often apparent' 'spirit of Saul Bellow' which he detected? I am very familiar with, and greatly admire, nearly all of Bellow's novels, but could not, and in retrospect cannot, detect any such thing. Leo Pilkington By landing and sea I've seen a different view to James Brown of the relationship between the stadium and the floatplanes at Lake Como ('The beautiful game', TNE #422). Many, perhaps most, of the floatplanes don't have any tourists or film stars as passengers – they don't actually have any passengers at all. They have an instructor and a student pilot on board, as Lake Como is one of very few places in Europe where you can be trained for a seaplane rating. Where does the stadium come in? It's forbidden to overfly it (whether or not it's occupied, so this local rule is more severe than the usual low-flying rules). When I did my flight test, the last thing to be tested was the forced landing, where the examiner closes the throttle and says 'your engine has just failed' and you have to land safely. There's a runway on the lake marked out by buoys which is used for take-offs and landings, and which boats know to steer clear of. But… from where I was, and how high I was, and how fast I was, and with no engine, I reckoned that I couldn't both avoid overflying the stadium and land on the runway. Not without doing a steep turn once past the stadium, which would be a fairly insane manoeuvre to attempt while low and slow and without an engine. Priority number one was, of course, as always when in control of an aircraft, staying alive, but priority number two on this occasion was passing the test and I was pretty sure I'd be failed if I overflew the stadium. So I told the examiner 'I'm not going to make it to the runway; what I'm going to do is avoid the stadium and then land outside the runway'. And that's what I did (without hitting any boats). And the examiner said I'd passed the test, so it appears to have been the correct decision. Tim Ward Are people born evil? In TNE #422, Paul Mason makes a strong argument for changing the Contempt of Court Act, which prevented publication of Axel Rudakubana's name and history before completion of his trial. Paul describes Rudakubana as evil. He stabbed three children to death and tried to kill many more, in addition to making lethal chemicals. I would like to argue that, while Rudakubana's behaviour would rightly be described as evil, depraved and inhuman, using the word to label the man is wrong. No baby, at birth, has any innate desire to kill or cause damage to others. Every child is born with an urge to survive and all their behaviour is geared towards survival. Rudakubana's attitude of not caring if he is alive or dead implies that he learned early on to be like that. We are told that he became obsessed with genocide and violence while still of school age. I suggest that these behaviours are learned and fuelled by the environment in which he existed. Maybe we should be looking at changing the environment in which our young people are raised – possibly beginning with online messages and the use of mind-altering substances. Pat Brandwood Not very Christian I'm afraid that Nigel Warburton's Everyday Philosophy on Don Cupitt ( TNE #422) merely showed a very basic understanding of Christianity. Completely orthodox modern theologians such as Rowan Williams could give tutorials on Darwin, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud etc. Moreover, medieval theologians such as Aquinas themselves viewed God not as a 'being' within what exists, but as the basis for existence. And the view that humans can only speak of 'God' by means of imperfect analogies is traditional Christian orthodoxy. Given that so many now give credence to conspiracy theories, it is lazy to assume that Christianity's decline in Europe has intellectual causes. Deep-seated cultural and sociological trends are probably more responsible. Meanwhile, the practical challenge each of us faces, today as always, is to retain hope and commitment to what is good, however tough things get. In my 66 years I have not found that Christians are handicapped in meeting that test: we could do without patronising and ill-informed condescension. Hugh Brodie Cardiff, Wales Getting the right drug One correction to Alastair Campbell's Diary ( TNE #422): Wegovy and Ozempic are trade names for the same drug (semaglutide). The former is the name given to that drug as a weight-loss treatment, the latter for the treatment of diabetes. Otherwise, excellent article as usual. Mark Curtis Take your Leave In her interview in TNE #419, Stella Creasy claims of the referendum that 'the public are never wrong'. Yet polls have shown that many of the public chose Leave for reasons that had nothing to do with the EU. Many did so as they wanted more money for the NHS. Many more did so as a protest against David Cameron and Tory austerity and the damage this had done to 'left behind' towns. Others chose Leave to stop immigration even though it was clear that leaving the EU would at the very least increase net migration. With Leave implying that we would stay in the single market and not much mention at all of the customs union, the only real mandate to leave the EU in the way we did was Boris Johnson's win in the 2019 general election. But there is no reason at all for this Tory mandate to apply to a Labour government. Sally Churchill Pontypridd, Wales BELOW THE LINE Comments, conversation and correspondence from our online subscribers Re: Kemi Badenoch's favourite Beatles song (Rats in a Sack, TNE #422). Yellow Submarine is an ode to mixed races living harmoniously together. The irony. Steve Buch Re: Isabel Oakeshott in Rats in a Sack ( TNE #422). It is irony writ large that Reform want immigration to the UK stopped, yet it is OK for its deputy leader's partner to be an 'economic' migrant to Dubai. Surely her school fees rising to £150,000 is chicken feed when her partner is worth tens of millions? William David Taylor No doubt Isabel Oakeshott will integrate fully in Dubai and learn Arabic, send her kids to a mixed school with local children, perhaps even dress accordingly and join the local community mosque. Practise what you preach, eh? Richard Riddle Re: 'Conclave and a real-life Vatican thriller' ( TNE #422). What a fascinating article. We were already looking forward to the film, but even more so now!Norma Spark Re: '50,000 football fans in one bar' ( TNE #422). La Sagrada Familia is not a cathedral because it does not have a bishop's throne ( cathedra in Latin). Barcelona cathedral is a late medieval Gothic building in the Barri Gotic , the old quarter. Rosemary Morlin In 'We need to talk about immigration' ( TNE #421), Matthew d'Ancona writes 'the core problem was that a fear of giving offence too often eclipsed a commitment to get things done'. This is a real problem for progressives. And it actually exacerbated the problem as it fails to discuss or deal with the issues head on. I was shocked last year to learn that a friend was voting for Reform in the general election. The reason? 'Farage is the only one talking about what we are thinking about.' This is exactly what we have just witnessed in the USA. The majority of the population simply felt that the Democrats weren't even talking about the issues that mattered to them. Trump was –so was forgiven any other perceived flaws. Progressives here mustn't make the same mistake. Peter Holpin JOIN THE CONVERSATION Subscribe and download our free new app to comment and chat with our writers

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store