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Watch: Sahith Theegala hurls a misbehaving club into a different time zone
Watch: Sahith Theegala hurls a misbehaving club into a different time zone

Yahoo

time21-03-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Watch: Sahith Theegala hurls a misbehaving club into a different time zone

What's going on at the Valspar Championship? One day after Patton Kizzire booted a putter halfway to the moon, Sahith Theegala has decided to take out his frustrations on the tee box. Behold what happens when you send Theegala's ball in the wrong direction: — Golf Clips (@clips_golf) March 21, 2025 Standing on the par-3 4th hole, Theegala flared a shot out to the right — not terribly so, but bad enough that he decided to give his club a sling. He tomahawked the offending stick off the tee box, and then proceeded to ... par the hole, holing a 13-foot putt. This was likely the buildup a long series of frustrations for Theegala, who had bogeyed three of the past six holes, including the third right before this tee shot. (He started play on the 10th hole on Friday.) Theegala had been two strokes off the lead after the first round, but will go into the weekend at least four strokes back after carding a 1-over round on the day. Theegala's form on the club throw was impeccable: strong pullback, effective first step, quick wrist snaps, smooth follow-through. You can see the club spiraling off into the distance there in the video above. Really, the only problem with his entire toss is that he violated one of golf's prime tenets. "If you are going to throw a club," the temperamental legend Tommy Bolt once said, "it is important to throw it ahead of you, down the fairway, so you don't have to waste energy going back to pick it up." Solid advice. Nothing worse than throwing a club and then having to go do the Walk of Shame — or, worse, send your innocent caddie to do it — in order to get the club back. Go for the fairway next time, Sahith. It's easier than putting your tee shot there.

Charlie Cox on Daredevil's Controversial ‘Walk of Shame' in She-Hulk
Charlie Cox on Daredevil's Controversial ‘Walk of Shame' in She-Hulk

Yahoo

time04-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Charlie Cox on Daredevil's Controversial ‘Walk of Shame' in She-Hulk

Actor recently shared his thoughts on Daredevil's 'Walk of Shame' from the 2022 series She-Hulk starring Tatiana Maslany. Cox will arrive on Disney+ as Matt Murdock in the new series Daredevil: Born Again. The superhero reboot series, which debuts on Tuesday, also stars Vincent D'Onofrio, Deborah Ann Wall, Wilson Bethel, and Elden Henson, among others. Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio recently sat down for a chat with IGN while promoting Daredevil: Born Again. In the interview, Cox shared his thoughts on the criticism surrounding Daredevil's 'Walk of Shame' on She-Hulk: Attorney at Law. He told the outlet, 'It's funny how many opinions I've heard about this little moment in She-Hulk. There's the Walk of Shame, which was a last-minute idea where they set up a big green screen and just had me walk across it carrying my shoes. And a lot of people don't like it, and a lot of people love it.' Cox's Matt Murdock appeared in She-Hulk with a new costume and a slightly different personality. While talking about that version of Daredevil Cox said, 'If you take the Matt Murdock from our show and you put him in She-Hulk as-is, he's probably overly serious and becomes the butt of all jokes.' He added that Murdock had to 'adapt to the tone' of the 2022 show. In October 2022, Cox revealed that wearing the new Daredevil suit was one of the most exciting aspects of his cameo in She-Hulk. The actor told in an interview that he was 'really excited about the new suit.' As soon as he saw the suit he was 'really excited to put that on and to give it its first outing.' Cox shared that he used 'to sit around wearing' the new red and yellow color suit. He also expressed that sharing scenes with Tatiana Maslany was also very 'fun.'

Cigarettes and KFC on the catwalk: How London Fashion Week is cashing in on hangover chic
Cigarettes and KFC on the catwalk: How London Fashion Week is cashing in on hangover chic

The Independent

time24-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Cigarettes and KFC on the catwalk: How London Fashion Week is cashing in on hangover chic

Nothing is less fashionable than a walk of shame. Chances are, your hair is in disarray and smells like an ashtray. On top of that, you've not slept a wink. Think hooded, tired eyes with an overall visage that's at best pallid and at worst severely sunken. Then there's your outfit: laddered tights, someone else's jacket, and a slinky top that's completely at odds with 7am commuter attire. Suffice to say, it's not the most obvious aesthetic to serve as inspiration for designers at London Fashion Week. And yet, it was exactly that for Sinead Gorey, whose A/W2025 collection was an homage to the morning after the night before; it was literally titled: 'Walk of Shame'. According to the show notes, it proposed 'a way of dressing that only surfaces during the wee hours' defined by 'accidental elegance' and looks that are more thrown together than carefully assembled. This was clear from the offset, as guests sat down to find bespoke KFC bags on their seats, each filled with a £10 'chicken cheque'. Taking place in the depths of a car park beneath Oxford Circus with a thrumming soundtrack spearheaded by electronic duo, Bicep, the mood was instantly one of underground – and after-hours – subversion. Models didn't so much as walk down the runway as they did swagger, stopping at various points to make eyes with those on the front row and wearing an array of what Gorey calls 'siren staples' like studded leather one-pieces, tartan co-ords, and scarlet chainmail gowns. Tights were worn over knickers and while knee-high stockings were paired with retro Converse stilettos and bug-eyed sunglasses hid hungover eyes. Playfulness was amplified by way of the red lipstick kiss marks several models had dotted across their chests. As for hemlines, well, they were ludicrously high, sometimes wedged halfway up bottoms, meaning skin was very much on show. At one point, the chaos was such that a model took a tumble and it was unclear whether or not this was intentional. The morning-after mood felt most potent, though, when some models strutted down the runway while puffing on what smelled like real cigarettes; others did so while taking bites out of KFC burgers. 'The decision to work with KFC came from the idea of the journey home from a night out, KFC cup in hand just having finished a burger,' Gorey tells The Independent. 'I think it's something everyone can relate to in one way or another, and I just wanted to have fun with it.' As for the smoking, the southeast Londoner says it was less of a statement than it was a character portrayal. 'I think things are taken too seriously in this industry,' she adds. 'I wanted to add some drama to the runway.' It was a joyful paean to teenage hedonism, evoking a reckless spirit that served as a refreshing antidote to some of the other more quotidian runways elsewhere in the capital. That said, Gorey's themes percolated elsewhere. The faux fur coats that models wore slung down their arms made appearances the following morning at Toga; some were belted while others came with matching hats. Meanwhile, a chaotic mood was conveyed through back-to-front jackets, which were worn by several of the models. Rather than seeming stuffy and prim, as faux fur coats and tailoring sometimes can, here these pieces were worn more subversively: think less Jackie Kennedy and more Carrie Bradshaw. 'I wanted to express provocation,' explained Toga's designer, Yasuko Furuta, in the show notes, which went on to explain that this collection 'takes formalwear and represents it as informal. As anti-form.' Overall, it offered a unique twist on sophisticated style. Speaking of classic elegance, this too was turned on its head at Emilia Wickstead, whose usual tone of demurity was traded for a twitchier, more haunting collection inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 classic, The Birds, with character-driven design led by the film's costume designer, Edith Head. Models walked the runway in an array of tailored pistachio two-pieces with lingerie-inspired necklines providing a more feminine edge. But with arms crossed, jumpers slung over their shoulders, and black leather gloves held tightly in their hands, the models' demeanours lent themselves to the same teenage angst we saw at Gorey's show. The mood was fraught and deliciously deviant. Simone Rocha also served up a nostalgic collection inspired by her school days complete with chunky knitted cardigans, duffle coats fitted with fur linings and striped rugby shirts. Faux fur found its way onto glamorous floor-length jackets but also onto hot pants as well as belts and bralettes. Then there were the teddy bear-shaped handbags and scarves, as well as tiny pearl tortoises. The show notes, which referred to The Tortoise and the Hare fable, stated simply: 'School days haze. Twisted twin sets. Behind the bike shed.' It's that last line that seems to capture the overall mood from the aforementioned shows, one that is fundamentally about a youthful spirit defined by debauchery, escapism, and the pursuit of hidden pleasures. Bring it on.

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