Taylor Swift Puts 'Baby, That's Show Business' 'Showgirl' Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Swiftly Sell OutNew Foto - Taylor Swift Puts 'Baby, That's Show Business' 'Showgirl' Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Swiftly Sell Out

Anyone who feared they would never get another shot at purchasing vinyl variants of Taylor Swift's "The Life of a Showgirl" can put that dread aside. Although the two limited-edition LP editions that Swift put up for sale last week sold out on her webstore within an hour, she has returned with an on-sale of two different versions of the album with an entirely different third cover, dubbed the "Baby, That's Show Business Edition." The Vegas showgirl motif continues in this newly unveiled cover image, photographed, like all the other artwork, by Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott. This edition is available in two vinyl colors: "lovely bouquet golden vinyl" and "lakeside beach blue sparkle vinyl." More from Variety FTC Files Suit Against Reseller for Price-Gouging Concert Tickets, Including for Taylor Swift's Eras Tour Taylor Swift Puts Vinyl Variants of 'The Life of a Showgirl' Up for Sale, and They Sell Out in Less Than an Hour Taylor Swift's 'New Heights' Podcast Earns 13 Million YouTube Views in 24 Hours as She Unveils 'The Life of a Showgirl' (Update: the blue vinyl variant was marked as sold out about a half-hour after the items went on sale at 3 p.m. ET Thursday, and the golden vinyl sold out just past the one-hour point.) Her webstore shows that this edition will be available for 48 hours or "while supplies last," which, as noted, ended up being less than one hour for the previous release. These versions of the album can be foundhere. The previous variants, which went on sale and almost immediately sold out on Monday, were dubbed"The Shiny Bug Collection."The standard edition, an orange-sparkle disc that has the image of Swift in full costume in a bathtub, is not a limited edition and remains on sale. These alternate vinyl editions follow on the heels of three deluxe CD variants that went on sale last week in Swift's webstore, each of which did last longer than an hour on sale but still sold out well before the announced end time. Anyone who missed out on these LPs or CDs can surely count on more variants coming in the pipeline before the album's Oct. 3 release, and if these have set a pattern, it's to expect a three-hour countdown clock appearing on her webstore before fresh variations go on sale. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) All of the covers for the standard and deluxe editions of the album use the showgirl motif and point back toward Swift's stated theme for the album, which is that it reflects her experiences balancing show business and her personal life on the nearly two-year Eras Tour. In the recent past, Swift has augmented her variants with bonus tracks, including a deluxe edition of "The Tortured Poets Department" that was nearly twice as long as the standard edition, but she declared in a podcast appearance with Travis Kelce that she would not be doing that this time around. So fans can count on the differences in editions of "Showgirl" having to do with packaging and not content. "With 'Tortured Poets Department,' I was like here's a data dump of everything I thought, felt, experienced in two or three years. Here's 31 songs. This is 12," she said in the podcast. "There's not a thirteenth, there's not other ones coming. This is the record I've been wanting to make for a very long time. I also wanted it to be every single song is on this album for hundreds of reasons, and you couldn't take one out and it be the same album, you couldn't add one and be… It's just right." She continued, "That focus and that kind of discipline with creating an album and keeping the bar really high is something I've been wanting to do for a very long time," she continued. "I tend to write lots and lots of music, so it's a temptation to release lots of music. But oftentimes, I wanted to do an album that was so focused on quality and on the theme and everything fitting together like a perfect puzzle that these 12 songs for my 12th album, I feel like we achieved that and I'm really happy about that." Best of Variety Oscar Predictions 2026: Venice and Telluride Will Spark the Start of Awards Season New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Taylor Swift Puts ‘Baby, That’s Show Business’ ‘Showgirl’ Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Swiftly Sell Out

Taylor Swift Puts 'Baby, That's Show Business' 'Showgirl' Vinyl Variants Up for Sale, After Previous Limited Editions Sw...
Apollonia, Co-Star of 'Purple Rain,' Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage NameNew Foto - Apollonia, Co-Star of 'Purple Rain,' Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage Name

Apollonia, best known as a singer-actor-model and Prince protege who co-starred in the1984 film "Purple Rain,"has taken the late singer's estate to court over its attempts to cancel her trademarks and claim ownership over the stage name. Apollonia, whose real name is Patty Kotero, alleged in a suit filed Tuesday and reviewed byVarietythat Paisley Park Enterprises "embarked on an aggressive campaign" to take control of the Apollonia name by appealing to the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, allegedly claiming Kotero signed over rights to the name as part of her contracts for Purple Rain. More from Variety Prince Documentary Director Speaks Out About Canceled Netflix Project: 'It's a Joke' 'Purple Rain' Returns to Theaters for One-Night Dolby Cinema Presentation Controversial Prince Netflix Documentary Will Not Be Released, Estate Is Free to Create New Project "Now that Prince is deceased, [Paisley Park Enterprises] will not stop in its efforts to acquire all things related to Prince even though it has no legal right to do so," the suit reads. The estate of Prince, who died in April 2016, has been involved in a tangle of lawsuits over ownership of the Purple One's legacy. "The statute of limitations for breach of contract expired long ago," the complaint reads, referencing the Purple Rain contracts assertions, "and neither Prince nor anyone on his behalf ever requested Apollonia cease using her name or demanded she stop using her name on a personal or professional level. Contrary to defendants' claims before the [Trademark Trial and Appeal Board], Prince and Apollonia were friends, and he wanted her to be successful as Apollonia." Paisley Park and Prince "never enforced their alleged rights and the statute of limitations expired long ago," the complaint reasserts. In alengthy response, a rep for Prince's estate called the suit "frivilous" and added in part, "As is our duty, we will continue to protect and preserve Prince's assets and legacy." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Prince (@prince) "All of the goodwill associated with the name and trademark 'Apollonia' for the past four decades is attributable to plaintiff," her lawyer Daniel Cislo argues. "There is only one Apollonia, and Apollonia is the source of the goods and services provided under this name. Therefore, to protect her brand, Ms. Kotero owns several 'Apollonia' trademark applications and registrations." Trademark Trial and Appeal Board documents show that Paisley Park Enterprises filed two cancellation cases against Kotero, one in 2019 and the other in 2021. One has been suspended, the other is awaiting a motion of suspension. "Due to the fact that there are two parallel cancellation proceedings involving the same parties and almost identical marks it is also possible that two different decisions may be issued that cannot be reconciled," Kotero's lawyer wrote in a separate Aug. 19 filing. Best of Variety Oscar Predictions 2026: Venice and Telluride Will Spark the Start of Awards Season New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Apollonia, Co-Star of ‘Purple Rain,’ Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage Name

Apollonia, Co-Star of 'Purple Rain,' Sues Prince Estate Over Ownership of Stage Name Apollonia, best known as a singer-actor-model a...
Lil Nas X Arrested, Hospitalized for Reported Possible Overdose While Wandering L.A. Streets in UnderwearNew Foto - Lil Nas X Arrested, Hospitalized for Reported Possible Overdose While Wandering L.A. Streets in Underwear

Jon Kopaloff/Getty Lil Nas X was reportedly arrested for the alleged assault of a police officer in Los Angeles He was taken to the hospital for treatment, and will go through the booking process once he's released Police responded to reports of a man "nude in the street," and TMZ reported that man was the musician Lil Nas Xwas reportedly arrested for the alleged assault of a police officer after law enforcement responded to calls that the musician was naked in the streets of Los Angeles. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department tells PEOPLE that officers responded to reports of a man "nude in the street" in the 1100 block of Ventura Blvd. just before 6 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 21. The suspect allegedly went on to "batter an officer, so he was booked for battery on a [peace officer]," the spokesperson said. The suspect was taken to the hospital for treatment; once he is released, he will be charged and go through the booking process. While the spokesperson was unable to identify the man,TMZ reportedthat the suspect was Lil Nas X. The outlet published photos that showed the "Old Town Road" singer, 26, walking down the 1100 block of Ventura Blvd. around 4 a.m. wearing only underwear and boots. The outlet also reported that multiple calls were made to the LAPD to report a possible overdose, though the spokesperson was unable to confirm such calls. A rep for the star did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment. Lil Nas X (né Montero Hill) rose to fame in 2021 with the release of his debut albumMontero, which was nominated for Album of the Year at the 2022 Grammy Awards. He has released a number of singles since, including "Light Again!" and "Hotbox," which came out in March. Earlier this year, he released the EPDays Before Dreamboy. In April, Lil Nas X shared a video to Instagram taken from a hospital bed, and said he wassuffering from facial paralysis. He later told fans that he was doing alright, writing, "Guys I am OK!! Stop being sad for me! Shake Ur ass for me instead!" Read the original article onPeople

Lil Nas X Arrested, Hospitalized for Reported Possible Overdose While Wandering L.A. Streets in Underwear

Lil Nas X Arrested, Hospitalized for Reported Possible Overdose While Wandering L.A. Streets in Underwear Jon Kopaloff/Getty Lil Nas X was r...
Netanyahu says Israel to begin Gaza ceasefire negotiations to end war, release hostagesNew Foto - Netanyahu says Israel to begin Gaza ceasefire negotiations to end war, release hostages

(Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday that Israel will begin immediate negotiations for the release of all hostages held in Gaza and an end to the nearly two-year-old war on terms acceptable to Israel. Speaking to soldiers serving in Gaza, Netanyahu said he was meeting commanders to approve plans for capturing Gaza City and defeating Hamas. "At the same time I have issued instructions to begin immediate negotiations for the release of all our hostages and an end to the war on terms acceptable to Israel," he said, adding: "We are in the decision-making phase." The Israeli military maintained its pressure on Gaza City into Thursday. On Wednesday, the military called up 60,000 reservists in a sign that the government was pressing ahead with the plan, despite international condemnation. Calling up tens of thousands of reservists is likely to take weeks, giving time for mediators to attempt to bridge gaps over a new temporary ceasefire proposal that Hamas has accepted, but the Israeli government has yet to officially respond to. The proposal calls for a 60-day ceasefire and the release of 10 living hostages being held in Gaza by Hamas militants and of 18 bodies. In turn, Israel would release about 200 long-serving Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. The Israeli government has stated that all of the remaining 50 hostages held by militants in Gaza must be released at once. Israeli officials believe that around 20 of them are still alive. (Reporting by Mayaan Lubell and Howard Goller; Editing by Ros Russell)

Netanyahu says Israel to begin Gaza ceasefire negotiations to end war, release hostages

Netanyahu says Israel to begin Gaza ceasefire negotiations to end war, release hostages (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said o...
Pulse Memorial's rainbow crosswalk removed overnight in OrlandoNew Foto - Pulse Memorial's rainbow crosswalk removed overnight in Orlando

A rainbow crosswalk in Orlando, Florida, that was part of the city's Pulse Memorial was painted over by the state late Wednesday night. The memorial honored the 49 people fatally shot by a gunman at the Pulse LGBTQ nightclub in 2016, in what was the largest mass shooting in the country at the time. Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer criticized the removal of the crosswalk on social media, calling it a "cruel political act." "We are devastated to learn that overnight the state painted over the Pulse Memorial crosswalk on Orange Avenue," he wrote. "This crosswalk not only enhanced safety and visibility for the large number of pedestrians visiting the memorial, it also served as a visual reminder of Orlando's commitment to honor the 49 lives taken." Dyer added that the crosswalk adheres to safety standards and was actually installed by the state. It was created in 2017. Brandon Wolf, one of the Pulse shooting's surviving victims, said the removal was a desecration of the deceased victims' memories. "In the dark of night, they came to erase our show of solidarity, our declaration that we will never forget,"Wolf wrote on X. "The cowards who feel threatened by our lives should feel lucky they didn't have to bury the ones they love — then watch the state come & desecrate their memory." Gov. Ron DeSantiscommented Thursday afternoon on X. In response to a video of Democratic state Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith criticizing the rainbow crosswalk's removal, DeSantis wrote: "We will not allow our state roads to be commandeered for political purposes." The state Transportation Department and DeSantis' office did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The crosswalk's removal follows a directive last month from President Donald Trump's transportation secretary, Sean Duffy. On July 1, Duffy sent a letter to all 50 states, along with Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico, about roadway safety that stressed "consistent" roadway markings that are "free from distractions." In asocial media postthat same day, Duffy shared the letter along with a message taking direct aim at rainbow crosswalks, which are typically intended to symbolize LGBTQ Pride. "Taxpayers expect their dollars to fund safe streets, not rainbow crosswalks," he wrote. "Political banners have no place on public roads. I'm reminding recipients of@USDOTroadway funding that it's limited to features advancing safety, and nothing else. It's that simple."

Pulse Memorial's rainbow crosswalk removed overnight in Orlando

Pulse Memorial's rainbow crosswalk removed overnight in Orlando A rainbow crosswalk in Orlando, Florida, that was part of the city's...
Part of Delta plane wing breaks off mid-flight: See videoNew Foto - Part of Delta plane wing breaks off mid-flight: See video

ADelta Air Linesflight heading from Orlando to Austin experienced amalfunctionthat caused a part of one of its wings to detach. Delta flight 1893 flew from Florida to Texas on Aug. 19 with "a portion of the left wing's flap … not in place," the airline said in a statement. The aircraft, a Boeing 737-800, safely landed at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport around 2:30 p.m. local time after departing Orlando International Airport around 12:55 p.m., according toFlightAware data. There were six crew members and 62 passengers on board, the airline said, noting the aircraft has been taken out of operation for maintenance. Two flights scheduled on Aug. 20 were cancelled due to the matter. 83028115007 "We apologize to our customers for their experience as nothing is more important than the safety of our people and customers," the airline's statement continued. Shanila Arif, one of the passengers on board, toldKXAN, an NBC affiliate, she noticed an issue shortly after takeoff. "While the plane was at an altitude of approximately 12,000 feet, we noticed that a part of the wing had broken and was visibly detached," she said, calling the ordeal a "serious safety event." Arif separately told CNN she felt bad turbulence during the flight. "The plane was shaking," shesaid. "The lady in front of us opened the window and told us it is broken. I opened the window and got scared." She recorded footage showing the piece of the flap coming off of the wing. She said she was worried that it would detach, hit the tail and cause an accident. There were no reported injuries. The Federal Aviation Administration says it is investigating the incident. More travel news:Spirit flight sparks storm fears after flying near Hurricane Erin It's not the only issue involving a Delta plane this month. On Aug. 10, a Delta plane was pushing back from the gate at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport when its right wingtip struck the left winglet of a parked Airbus A350. The incident occurred in a part of the airport where air traffic controllers do not communicate with flight crews, the FAA said. Following the strike, the aircraft returned to the gate, and passengers deplaned and boarded another aircraft,FlightAware data shows. No one was hurt. Michelle Del Rey is a trending news reporter at USA TODAY. Reach her at mdelrey@usatoday.com This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Part of Delta Air Lines plane wing breaks off during flight: Watch

Part of Delta plane wing breaks off mid-flight: See video

Part of Delta plane wing breaks off mid-flight: See video ADelta Air Linesflight heading from Orlando to Austin experienced amalfunctionthat...
Mila Kunis Reveals What She's 'Not Supposed To Say' About Training For 'Black Swan'New Foto - Mila Kunis Reveals What She's 'Not Supposed To Say' About Training For 'Black Swan'

Mila Kunisknows what you're not supposed to say about preparing for a movie, but she's going to say it anyway. The actoropened up to Vogue magazineabout the intense time she spent training for the Darren Aronofsky film, "Black Swan," for a retrospective piece in honor of the 15th anniversary of the movie. "My prep was a lot of dancing and very little eating — which I know you're not supposed to say, but it's the truth. I drank a lot of broth and danced for 12 hours a day," Kunis told Vogue. "We were only supposed to have three months of prep before filming started, but we lost some financing, so that got extended to six months while Darren tried to find money," she added. "It sucked for Darren, but Nat and I were so happy because we had three extra months to dance." Related:Joe Jonas Reveals Mortifying Move He Made Immediately After Joining The Mile High Club Natalie Portman, who played the lead in "Black Swan," previously opened up about her rigorous preparationin an interview with Vogue back in 2010, the same year the film was released. "The dance training for 'Black Swan' started a year before the film, with two hours a day," she said at the time. "Six months later we ramped it up to five hours a day, and the last two months it was eight hours a day, because we added choreography and cross training, so I was also swimming a mile a day." "The discipline was good for the part — it hurt a lot; your body is in constant pain," Portman said, as the magazine added that the actor, "like most dancers, she survived on coffee and ibuprofen, and slept five hours a night." While both Portman and Kunis were exerting themselves physically to the extreme, Aronofsky was also trying ― unsuccessfully ― to play mind games with the two. "My take is that I was trying to be a sneaky director and make them argue," the director shared with Vogue. "Mila and Natalie both realized very quickly what I was doing and made fun of me, so it quickly became a joke that we all understood," he added. "They're both very clever and were instantly privy to whatever trick I was playing." Mila Kunis Says She 'Fell In Love' With Being Jewish After Meeting Ashton Kutcher Ashton Kutcher And Mila Kunis' Kids Make Rare Appearance With Their Parents Shannen Doherty Explains How Her Beef With 'Charmed' Co-Star Alyssa Milano Began Read the original on HuffPost

Mila Kunis Reveals What She's 'Not Supposed To Say' About Training For 'Black Swan'

Mila Kunis Reveals What She's 'Not Supposed To Say' About Training For 'Black Swan' Mila Kunisknows what you're not ...
The Beatles to release new outtakes collection and restored documentary seriesNew Foto - The Beatles to release new outtakes collection and restored documentary series

LONDON — Fifty-five years after rock 'n' roll's most important and influential band split up, The Beatles are to release a new collection of unheard outtakes, as well as a remastered and expanded classic documentary series as part of a reboot of a 1990s "Anthology" project. Paul McCartney, 83, one of the two surviving members of the band alongside Ringo Starr, 85, teased the announcement in an Instagram post on Tuesday, and the band's official websiteconfirmed on Thursday. The "Anthology" series was a mid-'90s multimedia project that reunited McCartney, Starr and George Harrison and included three double CD albums, a TV documentary and two new songs, "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love." The TV series chronicled the band's meteoric rise from the clubs of Liverpool, England, and Hamburg, Germany, to global fame — and the acrimonious split in 1970. It has been restored by teams led by "Lord of the Rings" director Peter Jackson and will stream on Disney+ from Nov. 21. There will be a new episode, titled "Episode Nine," that shows behind-the-scenes footage from the "Anthology" reunion in 1994-95. The three "Anthology" albums are also to be remastered and re-released alongside a new fourth volume featuring unheard tracks from the '94-95 sessions. Beatles aficionados eagerly consumed the three "Anthology" albums' studio outtakes and alternate versions in the 1990s, which captured the exuberant humor of the band in its early days and the creative mastery they showed later on. The band's music inspired countless younger acts who were making their strides to stardom at the time, including Oasis. "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love" were the first new songs from the band in more than 30 years, and both were made possible thanks to a shaky, low-quality demo tape recorded by John Lennon in his New York apartment in 1977. After Lennon died in 1980, the tape was eventually passed to McCartney by Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, and some creative studio trickery from co-producer Jeff Lynne allowed the other Beatles to play along with the faint, ghostly vocals and piano, recorded on a simple four-track tape recorder. The same tape formed the basis of the Grammy-winning "Now and Then," the final track to feature all the Fab Four, released in 2023. The 2020s have been a rich time for celebration of The Beatles' legacy. Peter Jackson's "Get Back" documentary showed the making of their final album; the "Beatles '64" documentary, produced by Martin Scorsese, chronicled the effects of Beatlemania after their whirlwind first visit to the U.S., and McCartney continues to tour and play Beatles classics across the world. His U.S. tour kicks off in Palm Springs, California, on Sept. 27. However, one question still unanswered for Beatles obsessives is whether the elusive "Carnival of Light" will ever be released. Made at the start of the "Sgt. Pepper" sessions in 1967, the 14-minute avant-garde oddity was made for an event in London. It was driven principally by McCartney but featured all the Beatles, who later reportedly vetoed its inclusion on "Anthology 2" in 1996.

The Beatles to release new outtakes collection and restored documentary series

The Beatles to release new outtakes collection and restored documentary series LONDON — Fifty-five years after rock 'n' roll's m...
'The Pitt' Season 2 teaser promises more emergencies in new heart-pumping shiftNew Foto - 'The Pitt' Season 2 teaser promises more emergencies in new heart-pumping shift

Feel that pit in your stomach? It may be the stress of"The Pitt" Season 2's impending return. Theadrenaline-pumping medical show, which charmed fans with its"ER" reminiscent style, is back for more after its inaugural season. A new teaser, out Aug. 21, shows lead doctorMichael "Robby" Robinavitch (Noah Wyle)clocking in for a new shift at the fictional Pittsburgh hospital that serves as backdrop for "The Pitt." Without giving away much plot, the trailer offers a series of quickly strung together scenes, showing the staff dealing with various medical emergencies as pressure mounts. Noah Wyle: I play a doctor on'The Pitt.' Real health care workers need our help. Season 2 ofthe series,which streams on HBO Max, will drop in January. Lauded as a realistic portrait of the challenging circumstances American medical workers face post-pandemic,"The Pitt"is a strong Emmy contender this year. Rather than chronicle months in its characters' lives, the show's entire first season took place over the course of one day. 84074317007 Our obsession with 'The Pitt'and other medical shows, explained Wyle, who also starred in "ER,"previously told USA TODAYthat putting the stethoscope back around his neck for "The Pitt" felt nostalgic. "I didn't know that a prop could ever be endowed with as much muscle memory and history as a stethoscope for me," he said. "But it's true. It's just weird." Contributing: Bryan Alexander This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'The Pitt' Season 2 teaser brings adrenaline and heartache

'The Pitt' Season 2 teaser promises more emergencies in new heart-pumping shift

'The Pitt' Season 2 teaser promises more emergencies in new heart-pumping shift Feel that pit in your stomach? It may be the stress ...
New York court throws out $527 million penalty in Trump civil fraud caseNew Foto - New York court throws out $527 million penalty in Trump civil fraud case

A panel of justices on a New York appellate court threw out the half-billion-dollar penalty in the civil fraud case against President Trump and others on Thursday, ruling that the fine was "excessive" while saying they were divided on the merits of the case. One of the justices on the Appellate Division, First Judicial Departmentwrotethat the penalty, known as a disgorgement, against Mr. Trump, two of his sons and other executives and their company was "an excessive fine barred by the Eighth Amendment." In February 2024, a New York judgeorderedMr. Trump and his codefendants to pay the state nearly $364 million in "ill-gotten gains" and millions more in interest dating back years, a total that has since ballooned to about $527 million. Judge Arthur Engoron's judgment left Mr. Trump on the hook for nearly 98% of the total. New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement Thursday that her office will appeal the decision to the Court of Appeals, the state's highest court. Her statement lauded one aspect of the ruling, which left in place sanctions barring Mr. Trump from serving as an officer or director of any corporation or other legal entity in the state for three years. His sons, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., were banned for two years. "The court upheld the injunctive relief we won, limiting Donald Trump and the Trump Organization officers' ability to do business in New York. It should not be lost to history: yet another court has ruled that the president violated the law, and that our case has merit," James said. Mr. Trump hailed the decision in apost on Truth Social, claiming "TOTAL VICTORY," despite the limited nature of the ruling. "I greatly respect the fact that the Court had the Courage to throw out this unlawful and disgraceful Decision that was hurting Business all throughout New York State," Mr. Trump wrote. James first brought the case in 2022, alleging Mr. Trump oversaw a scheme to deliberately mislead companies he was in business with about the values of properties and Mr. Trump's overall net worth. Mr. Trump's lawyers have long argued that the civil case was driven by politics. But Engoron disagreed, ruling in February 2024 that Trump and his codefendants had misrepresented his wealth and inflated the valuations of his properties by hundreds of millions of dollars over the course of a decade. The state said the scheme was intended to trick banks and insurers into offering more favorable deal terms. The president appealed the judgment, and the five-justice appellate panel heard arguments in September 2024. At least two of the justicesseemed skepticalof the size of the judgment. One called it "immense" and "troubling." Mr. Trump was represented during the September proceeding by D. John Sauer, who is now the solicitor general. The court's ruling In a complex323-pageseries of opinions on Thursday, the justices wrote that they were deeply divided, with two saying a new trial should be ordered and one writing that the case should be tossed altogether. A majority of four justices settled on an alternate path: vacating the massive financial penalty without resolving the merits of the case. The penalty, as one wrote, "was far from a reasonable approximation" of the amount that was warranted. Justice David Friedman, who dissented from the majority, noted that two of the four justices who voted to vacate the penalty "do not actually agree with the resolution of the appeal for which they are voting." "I find it remarkable that, although a three-justice majority of this five-justice panel believe that the judgment in favor of the Attorney General should not stand … the result of the appeal is the affirmance of the judgment, albeit as modified to eliminate the disgorgement award," Friedman wrote. "To draw a sports analogy, it is as if a team is awarded a touchdown without crossing the goal line," he continued. Justices John Higgitt and Llinét Rosado said they would have preferred to order a new trial, but would join the majority "with great reluctance." "Under the truly extraordinary circumstances here, where none of the writings enjoys the support of a majority, we are moved to take this action to permit this panel to arrive at a decision and to permit the parties and the Court to avoid the necessity of reargument," they wrote. "We must therefore agree with Justice Friedman in his observation that a remarkable situation has necessitated a remarkable solution." The appellate court typically issues decisions within a few months of arguments, but the intricacy of the legal issues at hand seems to have delayed a final ruling. Sources on both sides of the dispute expressed surprise to CBS News about the length of the wait for a resolution, as the seasons changed and the court drew closer to a year without word from the court. James' office has defended the punishment, saying it accurately reflected the size of Mr. Trump's profits from fraud. Engoron wrote in his ruling that documents in evidence prove "over and over again" that the defendants falsely inflated Mr. Trump's wealth and reported those fraudulent numbers to business partners. He said Mr. Trump's "complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological," and said his company gave their accountants "blatantly false financial data." Despite overturning the judgment, the appellate panel concluded that Engoron "was even-handed at trial, and allowed both sides to 'make their case.'" Mr. Trump testified during a bench trial in the case,in November 2023, blaming his employees and others while also insisting his books were kept appropriately. Accused of falsely inflating his wealth, Mr. Trump claimed the opposite was true, saying his company "underestimated" the value of his properties. "The numbers you are talking about here is, you know, they are very big numbers, very, very big. Far bigger — the values are far bigger than what is on the financial statement," Mr. Trump said, later adding, "billions of dollars more." Engoron concluded that testimony by Mr. Trump, his sons and other Trump Organization executives was not credible. A majority of the appellate panel agreed with that determination, as well as another related to Mr. Trump's former lawyer and "fixer" Michael Cohen, who testified against Mr. Trump. "We defer to the court's findings that the testimony of President Trump, Donald Trump, Jr., Eric Trump, Jeffrey McConney and Allen Weisselberg were not credible, and that the testimony of Michael Cohen was credible," the court said. Unsealed video shows TikTok employees' concerns about its impact on teens Hurricane Erin bringing coastal flooding to New York as it churns off East Coast Energy prices climbing twice as fast as inflation in U.S.

New York court throws out $527 million penalty in Trump civil fraud case

New York court throws out $527 million penalty in Trump civil fraud case A panel of justices on a New York appellate court threw out the hal...
Charbroiled steak, anyone? Tractor trailer fire grills 20 tons of ribeye on highwayNew Foto - Charbroiled steak, anyone? Tractor trailer fire grills 20 tons of ribeye on highway

If you enjoy aribeye steakcooked well done, an incident that occurred earlier this week may leave your mouth watering. Atractor trailercarrying 20 tons of ribeye caught fire on the side of a highway inMissourion Aug. 18, officials said. The Doolittle Rural Fire Protection District said in a statement on social media that it responded to reports of a tractor trailer fire on Route 174 eastbound. Officials said the trailer was packed with 40,000 pounds of ribeye steaks, which were a total loss. Officials did not specify what caused the tractor trailer to catch fire; however, they said it is their eighth vehicle in the last three weeks. Both eastbound lanes were temporarily shut down while crews put out the blaze, and no injuries were reported.

Charbroiled steak, anyone? Tractor trailer fire grills 20 tons of ribeye on highway

Charbroiled steak, anyone? Tractor trailer fire grills 20 tons of ribeye on highway If you enjoy aribeye steakcooked well done, an incident ...
Privacy and civil rights groups urge US colleges to end campus surveillance to protect protestersNew Foto - Privacy and civil rights groups urge US colleges to end campus surveillance to protect protesters

NEW YORK (AP) — A coalition of more than 30 privacy and civil rights groups called on U.S. universities Thursday to dismantle campus surveillance and data collection, to protectstudent protestersand others from government retaliation. The demands, issued in a letter sent to leaders of 60 major universities and colleges, come as PresidentDonald Trumphaspressed schoolsto crack down on alleged antisemitism and take a harder line on demonstrations. But the groups said it is essential that universities resist that pressure, including threats to millions of dollars infederal research grants, to preserve the academic freedom and rights to expression of their students, faculty and others. "We are open-eyed to the financial pressure that all campuses are under," said Golnaz Fakhimi, legal director for Muslim Advocates, a civil rights group that has counseled students who participated in pro-Palestinian protests and which joined in signing the letter. "But we think this is the moment for all campuses to hunker down" and hold the line against government interference. In their letter, the groups called on university leaders to refuse to cooperate with law enforcement agencies seeking to surveil, detain or deport students, and demanded they do more to secure and delete sensitive data. The letter also asked that schools reject restrictions on masks worn by some student protesters to conceal their identities, work to prevent doxxing and dismantle campus surveillance systems. "Without immediate action, surveillance tools and the data they amass will be used to supercharge the virulent attacks on campus communities," says the letter, coordinated by the group Fight for the Future. It was signed by 32 groups, including Amnesty International USA, the Electronic Privacy Information Center and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. Several colleges introduced newsecurity measuresand protest guidelines following a wave of pro-Palestinian campus protests in spring 2024. The letter was sent to leaders of 60 schools, including Yale, the University of Michigan and Columbia, which last month agreed in a deal with the Trump administration to pay more than $220 million to restorefederal research moneythat was canceled in the name of combating antisemitism on campus. "Surveillance does not make a university safer," said Will Owen of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, which also signed the letter. "It chills free speech, endangers students who speak out against injustice and it's really essential for campuses to protect their communities from the threat." ___

Privacy and civil rights groups urge US colleges to end campus surveillance to protect protesters

Privacy and civil rights groups urge US colleges to end campus surveillance to protect protesters NEW YORK (AP) — A coalition of more than 3...
Millie Bobby Brown and Husband Jake Bongiovi Welcome First Baby TogetherNew Foto - Millie Bobby Brown and Husband Jake Bongiovi Welcome First Baby Together

Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi are now parents The couple announced that they welcomed their first baby via adoption "We are beyond excited to embark on this beautiful next chapter of parenthood," they wrote on Instagram Millie Bobby Brownis a mom! TheStranger Thingsstar, 21, and her husbandJake Bongiovi, 23, have welcomed their first baby together via adoption, announcing the news onInstagramon Thursday, Aug. 21. "This summer we welcomed our sweet baby girl through adoption. We are beyond excited to embark on this beautiful next chapter of parenthood in both peace and privacy," she wrote in the post. "And then there were 3." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The pair — who sparked romance rumors in June 2021 when Bongiovi shared a selfie with the actress — first connected through Instagram. They "were friends for a bit" before they started dating, the actress toldWiredin 2022. The couple then secretly married in May 2024. In October, the couple posted photos on Instagram from their celebration at Villa Cetinale in Italy with family and friends. "Forever and always, your wife," the actress captionedthe carousel, which featured photos from their nuptials and Brown's two stunning bridal gowns. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Bongiovi also shared his ownset of imageson Instagram from the couple's special day. "Forever and always, your husband," he captioned photos of the newlyweds. In his carousel, the couple can be seen exchanging vows under white floral arch. In other photos, the pair smiles in front of rows of tall trees. Bongiovi also shared a shot with his dad Jon Bon Jovi. This past March, the actress opened up about growing her family with Bongiovi while appearing on an episode of theSmartlesspodcast. At the time, the actress said she'sreally looking forwardto becoming a mom. "My mom actually had her first child at 21, and my dad was 19. And you know, it's been my thing since before I met Jake," Brown said. "Since I was a baby, I told my mom, like, baby dolls. I wanted to be a mom just like the way my mom was to me." "And my nan, my grandmother is, she was a huge part of my life. And so, yeah, I mean, Jake knows how important it is to me and, of course, I want to focus on really establishing myself as an actor and as a producer, but I also find it's so important to start a family for me personally," she went on. "It's a huge thing. Jake was like, we cannot do that until we get married. So that was his thing." TheElectric Statestar went on to say that she and her husband are planning on having a big family since they both come from families with four kids. "And my thing was, I really want a family. I really want a big family," Brown shared. "I'm one of four. He's one of four. So, it is definitely in our future, but, for me, I don't see having your own child, you know, as really any different as in adopting." Later that month, Brown said "loved" the experience of shaving her head so much, she wants to do it again — specifically whenshe becomes a new mom. "I always tell Jake for my first baby, I wanna shave my hair off," Brown said on an appearance on the theCall Her Daddypodcast. "I don't know. I just feel like it was really liberating. Would suggest it for anyone, any girl." When Cooper pushed to confirm that Brown would actually shave her head for her first baby, the actress explained why she wants to — and when she'd do it. "Maybe like right before I'm about to give birth. Because I just think hair is such an ordeal anyway to deal with," Brown noted, saying she just wants to "nurture" her baby. Brown added, "Why deal with my hair? I think it's such a liberating experience, like to be a woman is, and I felt like I had that experience as a girl, but I'd like to have that experience as a woman." Read the original article onPeople

Millie Bobby Brown and Husband Jake Bongiovi Welcome First Baby Together

Millie Bobby Brown and Husband Jake Bongiovi Welcome First Baby Together Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi are now parents The couple ann...
"A Man on the Inside" season 2 first look shows Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen adorably playing love interests

Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Ted Dansonis on the case again inA Man on the Insideseason 2 — and he's not alone. In March, it was revealed that Danson would be joined by his wife, Academy Award and Golden Globe winnerMary Steenburgen, in the second season of the acclaimed Netflix comedy, but her role was kept largely under wraps at the time. Now, in the first sneak peek at the new season, above and below, the curtain is being peeled back. From the looks of it, the real-life couple — who celebrate their 30th anniversary in October — will be playing an adorable onscreen one. Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix To recap, season 1 followed Charles (Danson), a retired man who gets a new lease on life when he answers an ad from a private investigator and becomes a mole in a secret investigation in a nursing home. In season 2, he gets his next case, when a mysterious blackmailer targets the president of Wheeler College, Jack Berenger (Max Greenfield), who enlists Charles to go undercover this time around as a professor. Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Per the official synopsis: "Who's making these threats? Does it have something to do with the iconoclastic billionaire Brad Vinick (Gary Cole), a Wheeler graduate, and his proposed donation to the school? Charles finds no shortage of possible suspects, but his attention gets diverted by free-spirited music teacher Mona (Steenburgen), whose zest for life awakens feelings he thought he'd buried after the passing of his wife. Is he ready to open his heart again at this stage in his life? And more importantly, has he fallen for the very criminal he's been sent to unmask?" Oh là là! Also in season 2, Netflix teases that Charles' daughter Emily (Mary Elizabeth Ellis) is inspired by the changes she's seen in her dad, and uncovers a long-ignored passion of her own, while PI Julie (Lilah Richcreek Estrada) is also back, and embarks on her own journey of growth as she reconnects with an important figure from her past. Courtesy of Netflix The first look photos also confirm that Charles hasn't completely left the nursing home and the friends he made there in season 1 behind.Stephanie Beatriz's Didi, the managing director of Pacific View Retirement Community, is shown, as is Stephen McKinley Henderson, who plays Charles' bestie, Calbert. Courtesy of Netflix Michaela Conlin, Lisa Gilroy, Madison Hu, Sam Huntington, Jason Mantzoukas, Constance Marie, Linda Park, David Strathairn, and Jill Talley also star in season 2. From creatorMichael Schur,A Man on the Insideis based on the documentaryThe Mole Agent, a 2021 Oscar nominee for Best Documentary feature. In addition toA Man on the Inside, Steenburgen and Danson have previously starred together on several other occasions, including inMr. Mayor,The Good Place,Pontiac Moon,Gulliver's Travels,andCurb Your Enthusiasm. Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Schur (Fremulon), Morgan Sackett, David Miner (3 Arts Entertainment), Maite Alberdi and Marcela Santibañez (Micromundo Producciones), and Julie Goldman and Christopher Clements (Motto Pictures) executive produce the series. Universal Television, a division of Universal Studio Group, is the studio. All eight episodes of the new season ofA Man on the Insidehit Netflix Nov. 20. See more first look images below. Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“A Man on the Inside” season 2 first look shows Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen adorably playing love interests

"A Man on the Inside" season 2 first look shows Ted Danson and Mary Steenburgen adorably playing love interests Colleen E. Hayes/N...
Brent Hinds, former singer-guitarist for the Grammy-winning metal band Mastodon, dies at 51New Foto - Brent Hinds, former singer-guitarist for the Grammy-winning metal band Mastodon, dies at 51

Brent Hinds, the former singer-guitarist for the Grammy-winning heavy metal band Mastodon, has died in a motorcycle accident in Atlanta, the band and authorities said. He was 51. Hinds was killed while riding a Harley-Davidson motorcycle late Wednesday night when the driver of a BMW SUV failed to yield while making a turn, according to Atlanta police. Hinds was described as "unresponsive" at the scene. "We are heartbroken, shocked and still trying to process the loss of this creative force with whom we've shared so many triumphs, milestones, and the creation of music that has touched the hearts of so many,"the band said on social media. Mastodon had three albums rise into the Top 10 of the Billboard 200 chart and two that topped the Rock Album chart — "Emperor of Sand" in 2017 and "Once More 'round the Sun" in 2014. Hinds co-founded Mastodon in 2000 with bassist Troy Sanders, guitarist Bill Kelliher and drummer Brann Dailor. Mastodon's third studio album, 2006's "Blood Mountain," was their first to reach the Top 40, peaking at No. 32 on the Billboard 200. Hinds left the band in March 2025. No reason for the departure was given. The band said they had "mutually decided to part ways," but comments made by Hinds on Instagram indicated a rocky relationship with the members of his former band. "We're deeply proud of and beyond grateful for the music and history we've shared and we wish him nothing but success and happiness in his future endeavors," the band said at the time. Mastodon — which forged ferocious metal, progressive wizardry and sludge rock tendencies — earned six Grammy Award nominations, winning one in 2017 for best metal performance for "Sultan's Curse" from the album "Emperor of Sand." Rolling Stone magazinelisted Mastodon's 2011 album"The Hunter" among its best off the year, saying the band had "streamlined their molten thrash into a taut thwump that doesn't pull back one bit on their natural complexity of innate weirdness." Hinds was due to tour Europe later this year with Fiend Without a Face, a band that was once a side project during his years with Mastodon.

Brent Hinds, former singer-guitarist for the Grammy-winning metal band Mastodon, dies at 51

Brent Hinds, former singer-guitarist for the Grammy-winning metal band Mastodon, dies at 51 Brent Hinds, the former singer-guitarist for the...
Federal investigators demanded details on transgender patients from at least 1 hospitalNew Foto - Federal investigators demanded details on transgender patients from at least 1 hospital

When the U.S. Justice Department sought information from doctors and clinics that provide gender-affirming care for young transgender patients, officials weren't just asking for policies. They also demanded information about individual patients. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced in a statement July 9 that the department had sent more than 20 subpoenas to doctors and clinics that provide the care. The request represented an elevation in PresidentDonald Trump's administration's effort to halt the medical treatment for transgender youth, even in states where it's legal. Bondi said the requests were part of investigations into "healthcare fraud, false statements, and more." No charges have been announced so far, but the probes have had a chilling impact on the availability of care. Specifics of the requests were not made public until a court filing in a separate lawsuit this week. Advocates say the requests are invasive and unnecessary. "It turns doctor-patient confidentiality into government surveillance," said Jennifer Levi, GLAD Law's senior director of Transgender and Queer Rights. At least one of the requests seeks names and social security numbers of patients The subpoena sent to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia on June 11 was included in a legal filing Monday in challenges from the states of Minnesota, Oregon and Washington to the administration's attempts to bar the treatment for patients under age 19. The 18-page document demanded an expansive list of documents be provided. Among them: Documents to identify "by name, date of birth, social security number, address and parent/guardian information" patients who were prescribed puberty blockers or hormone therapy. The requests also covered personnel files for various categories of hospital employees, information about patient intake procedures and about which insurance billing codes the hospital used for gender-affirming care. The due date listed was July 9. It's not clear whether subpoenas sent to other providers were identical. The Department of Justice declined comment and the hospital did not respond to a request for comment. Gender-affirming care has emerged as part of a political and legal battle Gender-affirming careincludes a range of medical and mental health services to support a person's gender identity, including when it's different from the sex they were assigned at birth. It encompasses counseling, medications that block puberty and hormone therapy to produce physical changes as well as surgeries to transform chests and genitals, though those are rare for minors. Most major medical groups say access to the treatment is important for those with gender dysphoria and see gender as existing along a spectrum. While there's wide, if not universal, medical consensus, the political situation is contentious. Since 2021, at least 27 states have adopted laws restricting or banning the care for minors, and aU.S. Supreme Court rulingin June affirmed the states' right to have such policies, at least under certain conditions. The Alaska State Medical Board on Friday is set to consider a resolution that would deem doctors who perform gender-affirming care of minors "as constituting unprofessional conduct." The board directed one of its members, a podiatrist, to help draft the statement that could declare practitioners who perform the care "as being grossly negligent and therefore subject to disciplinary sanctions," according to the minutes of the board's June meeting. The resolution was proposed after it asked the Alaska Legislature to ban such treatments for minors, but lawmakers took no action. Trump has signed one executive orderdefining sex as only male or female— and as unchangeable — and another that seeks toend federal fundingof the care for patients under 19. He's also sought tobar transgender military service membersand keeptransgender athletesout of certain sports competitions. And the administration released a document thatquestions the standards of treatmentfor transgender youth and suggests relying solely on talk therapy rather than medical interventions. The investigation is one reason some clinics have halted the care At least eight major hospitals and hospital systems announced in July that they werestopping or restricting gender-affirming care, even though they're in states where it is not banned. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is not among those that have announced they're curtailing care, though a place it has referred patients for surgeries — Penn Medicine — said in May that it would no longer perform them on patients under 19. A group of Democratic state officials across the country are suing the Trump administration, claiming it is intimidating healthcare providers to stop the care. GLAD Law's Levi said the investigation is just one of many factors that have led providers to change their policies. "It's chilling," she said. ___ Associated Press reporter Mark Thiessen in Anchorage, Alaska, contributed to this article.

Federal investigators demanded details on transgender patients from at least 1 hospital

Federal investigators demanded details on transgender patients from at least 1 hospital When the U.S. Justice Department sought information ...
Exclusive-Putin's demand to Ukraine: give up Donbas, no NATO and no Western troops, sources sayNew Foto - Exclusive-Putin's demand to Ukraine: give up Donbas, no NATO and no Western troops, sources say

By Guy Faulconbridge MOSCOW (Reuters) -Vladimir Putin is demanding that Ukraine give up all of the eastern Donbas region, renounce ambitions to join NATO, remain neutral and keep Western troops out of the country, three sources familiar with top-level Kremlin thinking told Reuters. The Russian president met Donald Trump in Alaska on Friday for the first Russia-U.S. summit in more than four years and spent almost all of their three-hour closed meeting discussing what a compromise on Ukraine might look like, according to the sources who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. Speaking afterwards beside Trump, Putin said the meeting would hopefully open up the road to peace in Ukraine - but neither leader gave specifics about what they discussed. In the most detailed Russian-based reporting to date on Putin's offer at the summit, Reuters was able to outline the contours of what the Kremlin would like to see in a possible peace deal to end a war that has killed and injured hundreds of thousands of people. In essence, the Russian sources said, Putin has compromised on territorial demands he laid out in June 2024, which required Kyiv to cede the entirety of the four provinces Moscow claims as part of Russia: Dontesk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine - which make up the Donbas - plus Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the south. Kyiv rejected those terms as tantamount to surrender. In his new proposal, the Russian president has stuck to his demand that Ukraine completely withdraw from the parts of the Donbas it still controls, according to the three sources. In return, though, Moscow would halt the current front lines in Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, they added. Russia controls about 88% of the Donbas and 73% of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, according to U.S. estimates and open-source data. Moscow is also willing to hand over the small parts of the Kharkiv, Sumy, and Dnipropetrovsk regions of Ukraine it controls as part of a possible deal, the sources said. Putin is sticking, too, to his previous demands that Ukraine give up its NATO ambitions and for a legally binding pledge from the U.S.-led military alliance that it will not expand further eastwards, as well as for limits on the Ukrainian army and an agreement that no Western troops will be deployed on the ground in Ukraine as part of a peacekeeping force, the sources said. Yet the two sides remain far apart, more than three years after Putin ordered thousands of Russian troops into Ukraine in a full-scale invasion that followed the annexation of the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and prolonged fighting in the country's east between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian troops. Ukraine's foreign ministry had no immediate comment on the proposals. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has repeatedly dismissed the idea of withdrawing from internationally recognised Ukrainian land as part of a deal, and has said the industrial Donbas region serves as a fortress holding back Russian advances deeper into Ukraine. "If we're talking about simply withdrawing from the east, we cannot do that," he told reporters in comments released by Kyiv on Thursday. "It is a matter of our country's survival, involving the strongest defensive lines." Joining NATO, meanwhile, is a strategic objective enshrined in the country's constitution and one which Kyiv sees as its most reliable security guarantee. Zelenskiy said it was not up to Russia to decide on the alliance's membership. The White House and NATO didn't immediately respond to requests for comment on the Russian proposals. Political scientist Samuel Charap, chair in Russia and Eurasia Policy at RAND, a U.S.-based global policy think-tank, said any requirement for Ukraine to withdraw from the Donbas remained a non-starter for Kyiv, both politically and strategically. "Openness to 'peace' on terms categorically unacceptable to the other side could be more of a performance for Trump than a sign of a true willingness to compromise," he added. "The only way to test that proposition is to begin a serious process at the working level to hash out those details." TRUMP: PUTIN WANTS TO SEE IT ENDED Russian forces currently control a fifth of Ukraine, an area about the size of the American state of Ohio, according to U.S. estimates and open-source maps. The three sources close to the Kremlin said the summit in the Alaskan city of Anchorage had ushered in the best chance for peace since the war began because there had been specific discussions about Russia's terms and Putin had shown a willingness to give ground. "Putin is ready for peace - for compromise. That is the message that was conveyed to Trump," one of the people said. The sources cautioned that it was unclear to Moscow whether Ukraine would be prepared to cede the remains of the Donbas, and that if it did not then the war would continue. Also unclear was whether or not the United States would give any recognition to Russian-held Ukrainian territory, they added. A fourth source said that though economic issues were secondary for Putin, he understood the economic vulnerability of Russia and the scale of the effort needed to go far further into Ukraine. Trump has said he wants to end the "bloodbath" of the war and be remembered as a "peacemaker president". He said on Monday he had begun arranging a meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian leaders, to be followed by a trilateral summit with the U.S. president. "I believe Vladimir Putin wants to see it ended," Trump said beside Zelenskiy in the Oval office. "I feel confident we are going to get it solved." Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Thursday that Putin was prepared to meet Zelenskiy but that all issues had to be worked through first and there was a question about Zelenskiy's authority to sign a peace deal. Putin has repeatedly raised doubts about Zelenskiy's legitimacy as his term in office was due to expire in May 2024 but the war means no new presidential election has yet been held. Kyiv says Zelenskiy remains the legitimate president. The leaders of Britain, France and Germany have said they are sceptical that Putin wants to end the war. SECURITY GUARANTEES FOR UKRAINE Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff was instrumental in paving the way for the summit, and the latest drive for peace, according to two of the Russian sources. Witkoff met Putin in the Kremlin on August 6 with Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov. At the meeting, Putin conveyed clearly to Witkoff that he was ready to compromise and set out the contours of what he could accept for peace, according to two Russian sources. If Russia and Ukraine could reach an agreement, then there are various options for a formal deal - including a possible three-way Russia-Ukraine-U.S. deal that is recognised by the U.N. Security Council, one of the sources said. Another option is to go back to the failed 2022 Istanbul agreements, where Russia and Ukraine discussed Ukraine's permanent neutrality in return for security guarantees from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council: Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, the sources added. "There are two choices: war or peace, and if there is no peace, then there is more war," one of the people said. (Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Pravin Char)

Exclusive-Putin's demand to Ukraine: give up Donbas, no NATO and no Western troops, sources say

Exclusive-Putin's demand to Ukraine: give up Donbas, no NATO and no Western troops, sources say By Guy Faulconbridge MOSCOW (Reuters) -...
Pilot rescued after U.S. fighter jet crashes off coast of VirginiaNew Foto - Pilot rescued after U.S. fighter jet crashes off coast of Virginia

A pilot was rescued after a U.S. Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet crashed into ocean waters off the coast of Virginia on Wednesday morning, officials said. A little before 10 a.m. ET, a pilot assigned to Strike Fighter Squadron 83 ejected from a Super Hornet during a routine training flight, according to a statement from Navy spokesperson Lt. Jackie Parashar. Search teams were deployed and the pilot was rescued at about 11:21 a.m., Parashar said. The pilot, whose condition was not confirmed, was taken to a hospital for a medical evaluation. The crashed jet has not yet been recovered from the water, Parashar said. The cause of the crash is under investigation. Strike Fighter Squadron 83 is based out of Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia Beach. This marks the sixth F-18 that the Navy has lost in the last ten months. In October 2024,two pilots were killedwhen an EA-18G Growler, a variant of the F/A-18E Super Hornet,crashed nearWashington state's Mount Rainier, also during a routine training flight. Then in December, U.S. Central Command reported that a Super Hornet assigned to the USS Harry S. Truman in the Red Seawas accidentally shot downby friendly fire from the guided missile cruiser USS Gettysburg. The two pilots aboard ejected safely. In February, a Growlercrashed in the San Diego Bayin Southern California, near Naval Base Coronado. Both pilots ejected and were rescued by a charter fishing boat. In April,a Super Hornet fell overboardoff the USS Harry S. Truman and into the Red Sea while it was being towed into a hangar bay, the Navy said. There were no serious injuries. About one week later, in early May, a Super Hornet fighter jetwent overboard as wellwhile attempting to land on the flight deck of the USS Harry S. Truman. At the time, a Defense Department official told CBS News that an arrestment — a mechanism used to catch a fighter jet and safely slow it down — had failed. Both pilots were able to safely eject. The Super Hornethas a production costof about $67 million, according to the Navy. Trump says he's going on patrol with police and National Guard in Washington, D.C. Hurricane Erin sparking storm surge warnings as it starts to move away from North Carolina Trump responds after New York court tosses $527 million civil fraud penalty

Pilot rescued after U.S. fighter jet crashes off coast of Virginia

Pilot rescued after U.S. fighter jet crashes off coast of Virginia A pilot was rescued after a U.S. Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet crashed into o...
How KPop Demon Hunters Conquered the WorldNew Foto - How KPop Demon Hunters Conquered the World

Like the best idol groups,KPop Demon Huntersisn't good at just one thing. In K-pop, songs can and do exist on their own, but they are meant to be part of a bigger performance that incorporates visuals, dance, fashion, personality, and an aesthetic concept into one story spectacle. In many ways, it's a lot like filmmaking. "As people who work in animation and storytelling, we're trained to layer things on and and create something as entertaining as possible," co-director Maggie Kang tells TIME of howKPop Demon Hunterscame to be the summer's biggest hit. The animated children's film about a K-pop girl group that moonlights as a team of demon hunters blends comedy, action, music, and a dash of supernatural horror for a film that is as emotionally rewarding as it is rewatchable. It's been more than two months sinceKPop Demon Hunters' unassuming debut on Netflix, and the movie's success is showing no signs of slowing. At the time of this writing, it is one track to be the streamer's most-watched filmever(Tudum reports 210 million views), and two of the soundtrack's original songs arein the Billboard Hot 100's Top Ten. "Golden," the movie's most popular track, is currentlythe most streamed songin the United States. Three of the movie's songs havemade it into the Billboard Hot 100's Top Ten, marking the first time since 1995'sWaiting to Exhalethat a film soundtrack has done this. For Kang, the pop culture phenomenon started with a simple yet deep desire to "see something culturally set in Korea and to really embrace that," something the Korean Canadian filmmaker hadn't seen in Western animation. InKPop Demon Hunters, cultural detail is infused into every scene's setting—from the ignored "parking prohibited" markings on the Seoul streets to the way main characters Rumi, Mira, and Zoey place napkins under their chopsticks while eating out. "Everything was seen through this Korean lens: The characters are going to eat at a restaurant, it's just a conversation around food at the dinner table, but what is the food that's on the table? What does the background look like? Does it feel like Korea? Everything was designed to honor authenticity of the Korean culture." Also, demons—more specifically, thegat-wearing,hanbok-donningjeoseung saja, a kind of grim reaper tasked with guiding the dead to the afterlife in Korean mythology. In the world ofKPop Demon Hunters, thejeoseung sajaare the demons that K-pop girl groups, andfemale shamans before them, have worked to keep at bay for generations. Rumi, Zoey, and Mira use song, dance, and weapons to slay the demons and reinforce thehonmoon, a magical barrier between the world of demons and the world of humans. "They terrorized me as a kid," Kang says of thejeoseung saja. The figures didn't necessarily seem like the best element for a children's film. Then, her future niece—four years old at the time—sawMaleficentin theaters. "She told me how scary it was to her, and I was like, 'Oh, I'm sorry you were scared.' And she said, 'No, no, I really liked it.' So I realized, 'Oh, there is this entertainment value to children being scared.'" K-pop came later, as Kang continued to search for ways to infuse the concept with more aspects of Korean culture. "K-pop brought spectacle and scale, all the pizzazz that is kind of needed to sell it. It all came together." Like most animated features (and, sometimes, K-pop),KPop Demon Huntersis the result of hundreds of people working together to create one story. Kang had previously worked on major animated films likeThe LEGO Ninjango Movie,Rise of the Guardians, andPuss in Boots,butKPop Demon Hunterswas to be her first feature film. Sony Animation President Kristine Belson suggested she find a co-director to help shoulder the immense workload. (KPop Demon Hunterswas produced at Sony Pictures Animation, butgreenlit by and distributed by Netflix.) Kang wanted to work with another Asian woman, but when the search didn't work out, turned to Belson for suggestions. "Kristine was basically like, 'Look, I'm sorry, but I think it's gonna be a white man.'" That turned out to be Appelhans, who previously made his directorial debut with 2021'sWish Dragon, a Chinese-set animated fantasy comedy about a college student who meets a wish-granting dragon. "When [Chris] madeWish Dragon, he traveled to and lived in China to make it with a Chinese crew," says Kang. "I think that really shows how dedicated he is about respecting a culture and knowing the importance of embracing the talent that brings you that authenticity." Appelhans, who was coming off ofWish Dragon's long production, wasn't looking to take on another multi-year-long project. "I met with Maggie, and I was really tired, and I was like, 'I'm gonna take a long break,'" he says. "And then she was about 10 minutes into explaining this concept, and I was playing it cool on the surface, but inside, I'm like, 'Oh no, you can't take a break. You have to keep going now. This is one of those things that is worth four years of your life.'" For Appelhans, who grew up as a musician,KPop Demon Huntersrepresented a chance to bring two of his great loves together. "I always wanted to make an animated film that was very music-centered, but not in a conventional sort of Disney, sing-your-feelings way," he says. The two collaborators set about figuring out what demon-hunting and K-pop have in common. "In trying to answer that question, we were taking inspiration from BTS during the pandemic, who were literally a light in a dark time," Appelhans says. "And it just started to build momentum." InKPop Demon Hunters, music isn't just a fun soundtrack for fights or dance sequences; it is integral to the story. Most of the songs are singles released within the world by HUNTR/X and Saja Boys, though some songs, such as "Free," exist solely to reveal character emotions and connection, and not as part of an in-universe idol discography. In a supernaturally heightened version of the way music can impact listeners in the real world, all of the film's music holds the power to influence its in-world listeners. The Saja Boys use their musical power to steal souls, while HUNTR/X uses their songs to seal the honmoon. "The story invited music to be a part of it in such a unique way," says Appelhans. "It was genuine pop music, rather than musical theater and putting some pop sounds on top of it. It demanded all of these ways in which the music needed to reveal character and reveal plot." Ian Eisendrath, the executive music producer onKPop Demon Hunters, was in charge of coordinating all things music. While he had never worked on an animated film previously, his background includes Olivier-winning and Grammy-nominated work as diverse as Broadway musicalCome From Away, Disney's live-actionSnow White, and Hulu'sOnly Murders in the Building. OnKPop Demon Hunters, he did everything from conducting and arranging to music and vocal producing. "I think of my job as the integrity of the music from the second the film starts to the second the film is over," he says. He brought on some of the K-pop industry's biggest hitmakers, including producers at The Black Label and the writers behind BTS songs like "Boy with Luv" and "Butter," to help craft an authentic K-pop sound. Other chief collaborators included EJAE, the Korean-American songwriter behind girl group tracks like aespa's "Drama" and Red Velvet's "Psycho." As one of the main songwriters, she was paired with Mark Sonnenblick, an Emmy-nominated writer more familiar with writing for TV and film. "[EJAE] was a North Star for us throughout the process," says Eisendrath of EJAE's role in the film, calling her his "closest collaborator" on the music side of things and adding that she wrote the vocal melody and co-wrote the lyrics and arrangements for four of the songs. Though EJAE was coming from a songwriting background within the K-pop industry, she quickly got on board with the narrative-forward needs of the project. "When writing songs forKPop Demon Hunters, the storyline was everything," explains EJAE. "Every sonic and lyrical choice had to align with the scene's emotions and what the characters were experiencing. Our job was to move the narrative forward while still delivering a track that structurally and sonically hit like a true K-pop banger." EJAE contrasts it with the work of writing a song for a K-pop group: "The focus shifts to matching the group's persona, crafting a catchy hook, and building a concept that resonates with a wide audience," she tells TIME via email. "The key similarity between the two was the maximalist approach—whether for the film or for a real group, both worlds rely heavily on intricate layering in the vocal production to create that rich, dynamic K-pop sound." Eisendrath breaks down just how much each song had to do within the story, all while also working as a banger of a pop song: "'How It's Done'starts as more of a story song in the plane, but then we just have to full-on deliver concert. But it wasn't enough to just deliver 'concert.' We needed to establish our three heroes. And so if you really listen closely, when they each have their own solo moments on stage, they're absolutely singing about who they are and establishing their individual vibe and role within [HUNTR/X]." "Soda Pop,"the fizzy track that introduces demon boy band Saja Boys to the public, has a similar story weight. For it, the music team had to produce a song that was catchy enough to lure fans in, introduced the various members, and hinted at their darker motivations—all at the same time. "At first glance, it just seems like, 'Oh, this is fun, innocent: You're my soda pop,'" explains Eisendrath. "But then it starts talking about how much I need you and I need to drink you up, and it becomes parasitical." From the beginning, Eisendrath dreamed of using the animation space to push the limits on the established theatricality of K-pop. "We went big," he says. "Not only did we do everything that one would do on a K-pop album, we also had a giant group of singers that sang all the backgrounds. We had a string section record on top of all the K-pop tracks, and we were able to really design the sound of the theatrical mix, which not many people experience. It really feels like this deep, fully immersive experience." (Fans will be able to experience the theatrical mix inKPop Demon Hunterssing-along screeningsscheduled for August 23 and 24.) KPop Demon Huntershas an impressive cast across speaking and singing roles, but protagonist Rumi's voice is the heart of the film. Her story as a demon-hunter who is hiding her half-demon side grounds the thematic strength of the narrative. "We knew we wanted to tell a story about shame, and we felt like the themes of shame were not really tackled in animation," says Kang. "It does feel like kind of an older-skewing theme, and it's dark. It's not a happy theme." Korean American actress Arden Cho imbues Rumi with heart, humor, and complexity in the character's speaking moments, but it is EJAE who took on the technically and emotionally demanding role of providing the idol's singing voice. As Rumi reveals her truth through music, it is arguably the most important performance in the entire project. "Rumi is incredibly complex," says EJAE. "She has strong leadership skills and works tirelessly. The great thing about that is she gets things done and does them successfully, but the downside is she puts a lot of pressure on herself and is a perfectionist. She tries to solve everything on her own and rarely reveals her flaws or weaknesses." Like many of the creators who crafted the world ofKPop Demon Hunters, EJAE brought her personal experience and unique perspective to the production. "I can relate to that because I was a K-pop trainee from the age of 11 for over a decade before eventually being dropped," she tells TIME. "During that time, I had to put my best foot forward constantly and felt the pressure to always be perfect. I understood that overwhelming urge to hide your flaws and the things you feel ashamed of, and how exhausting it is to maintain a façade of being okay instead of asking for help." EJAE drew on those experiences to bring out the emotions in Rumi's vocals. EJAE came onto the project solely as a songwriter, providing the demo vocals for all of the songs since day one. It was only later in the production process that she was officially asked to be the singing voice of Rumi. "In the past, she has not self-identified as a singer," says Eisendrath. "And I just kept saying, 'EJAE, your voice is unlike anything I've ever heard before. You might not want to do this, but get ready to see what's gonna happen." Eisendrath calls EJAE's register "bonkers," noting that she is able to hit "some of the lowest notes available to the female vocalist" while also hitting "notes higher than I would say are probably in any [other] film.' He adds: "What she does in 'Golden' is insane … I said to Spring [Aspers], who is president of music at Sony, 'Get ready for everyone to try to sing these songs and not be able to. They were tailored for EJAE's freakish vocal abilities.'" When asked about what she is most proud of inKPop Demon Hunters, EJAE points to the songs "Golden" and "Hunter's Mantra." "The melody forGoldencame to me incredibly quickly, and through writing it, I actually discovered my vocal range. I'm both terrified and proud of the A5 I hit in that song, it was a self-discovering moment for me," says EJAE. As for "Hunter's Mantra," the song that opens the film, EJAE leaned intopansori, a traditional Korean singing style and genre. "I studied its melodies and vocal techniques, but added my own unique twist when writing and performing it." Eisendrath logged over 50 hours with EJAE in the recording booth during the production process, recording Rumi's songs. "There's a darkness [to EJAE's voice]," he says. "There is a weight to it and a depth to it that is so emotional and appealing." Though the success ofKPop Demon Huntershas been led by children, the animated film stands out as a rare cross-demographic hit in a streaming era when audiences have become increasingly fractured across devices. The success transcends cultures, with the movie currently in the Netflix Top Ten inover 90 countriesaround the world. "Regardless of the Korean setting, the message of the movie and many of the songs is universal and something everyone can relate to," says EJAE. "'K-pop' was simply the vessel to convey a deeper truth: the importance of loving every part of yourself, both the good and the bad, and finding beauty in your flaws and mistakes. It's also about reminding people that they're not alone, and that it's okay to lean on loved ones for support instead of trying to fix everything on your own." While the theme is universal, the details are incredibly culturally specific.KPop Demon Huntersis an American production, but it has beenaccepted by Korean audiences(andreal-life K-pop idols), who appreciate the cultural authenticity in the film. "There are small details that I think were remarkable," says Hyun-woo Sun, the co-founder of popular Korean language learning platformTalk to Me in Korean. His video,"K-pop Demon Hunters explained by as Korean teacher,"breaks down the linguistic and cultural details in the film—from real-life locations like N Seoul Tower to the multiple meanings of "saja" to the tiger and magpie's roots in Joseon-era folk painting. "There are smaller elements that made a lot of Korean people go, 'Oh, they actually let the voice actors use Korean.' Or, like the doctor specifically calling Rumi by saying 'Rumi-nim.' They didn't need that, but then they included it." When speaking to TIME, he uses the production choice of using the light green dishes common in Korea for the private jet scene as another example. "Growing up, everybody in Korea has seen these light green dishes," he explains. "Even if they didn't use that design for the dishes where the kimbap is placed, it would have been fine … But just seeing that, [you think], 'You put in extra hours of work to design those dishes. The directors and producers must have had some fond memories. They must have poured a lot of their personal experiences into the story.'" KPop Demon Huntersnotably doesn't go out of its way to explain the Korean cultural details that provide the film with such depth and texture. "When you travel, you go to places and you think, like, 'Oh, this is what a mailbox looks like here. You just kind of accept it,'" says Kang. "And I think that should be how all movies are treated." Appelhans says he didn't worry because he had already been through similar, unwarranted concerns withWish Dragon. "Everybody was like, 'I don't think these people in Tempe, Arizona are going to have an interest in this very, very Chinese film,'" recalling screening the animated movie outside of a major metropolitan area. "And then it did great, and everyone seemed surprised. Audiences are smart, and they are looking for—on top of maybe elemental story ideas—they're looking for specifics. They're looking for new flavors. And so it's a treat to figure something out, and not just have every movie set in suburban America." The cultural specificity of the film extends to the world of K-pop, which is rooted in Kang's own decades-long history as a fan. "She has lived the experience of what music can mean to you, what the relationship is," says Appelhans. "There's a specificity to moments with the fans that came from her experience." KPop Demon Hunterstakes on many elements in its 95-minute runtime, but its depiction of fandom as a powerful force—for good and evil, depending on how it is wielded—is one of its best. "We knew the movie needed to highlight the importance of the fan and idol relationship because that relationship is unlike anything else in entertainment," says Kang. "There's this true give-and-take between the performer and the audience. When it's great, there's a lot of respect in that relationship. For us, having the crowd be part of the solution at the climax of the movie, and contribute to the music and to be this power source for the girls was always there." Many viewers, of all ages, have responded to the hope in that moment. From EJAE's perspective, it's another one of the elements that has been integral toKPop Demon Hunters' enduring success as a film and soundtrack. "Lately, in both pop and K-pop I haven't seen many songs at the top of the charts that center around hope," she says. "Yet I feel like we're living in a time where the world is collectively longing for it." The song "Golden," she says, carries that sentiment both lyrically and sonically, offering the listeners a moment to breathe, to believe in yourself, and to dream again." Many of the best movies have a theme that is seeped into the finished text because it was part of the creation process.KPop Demon Hunters' success seems rooted in just how much Kang, Appelhans, and their team bet on themselves and one another. This is perhaps best illustrated through the comedy woven throughout the film's supernatural narrative. "Now everybody knows how weird I am," Kang says. As someone who came up through mainstream animation, she says comedy has always been a priority. "I'm always, in every moment, trying to be funny. Meaning even now. And [animators] always joke, 'I wish the movies that we made are as funny as our conversations at the table.' That was always a bar, and that was always hard to hit. And I think with this movie, I didn't want to shy away from any of that, and I wanted to kind of be weird." In one of the best comedic gags in the film, HUNTR/XmaknaeZoey sees Abby, the fittest of the Saja Boys, for the first time. As he stretches, his stomach muscles reveal themselves and Zoey literally has abs in her Chibi-fied eyes. The abs shift to corns-on-the-cob, and then to popping popcorn when (in anot unprecedented K-pop scenario) a button flies off of Abby's shirt, revealing more skin. It works because it is weird and silly, but it also works because it is clever, specific, and well-executed. Though it draws from an existing animated language—and from real-life feelings that viewers may be familiar with, the moment feels novel. "That was one of the earliest jokes we had come up with in the movie, and it set the tone for how stupid we could go with it," says Kang, recounting how the sequence came to be. Initially, Zoey simply had abs in her eyes. Then, one of the character designers noted they looked like corn, and the team was off to the races. "It just kind of snowballed in the room," says Kang. "And then I even pushed it to my husband, who is also a director and creator, and he was like, 'That's not gonna work.' And I was like, 'Yes, it is.'" Contact usatletters@time.com.

How KPop Demon Hunters Conquered the World

How KPop Demon Hunters Conquered the World Like the best idol groups,KPop Demon Huntersisn't good at just one thing. In K-pop, songs can...
16 Little-Known Facts About "Dirty Dancing" (Like Why Patrick Swayze 'Hated' His Iconic Baby Line!)

Dirty Dancingshimmied onto the silver screen on Aug. 21, 1987, and summers haven't been the same since. StarringJennifer Greyas teenage resort guest Frances "Baby" Houseman and the latePatrick Swayzeas enigmatic dance instructor Johnny Castle,Dirty Dancinghas become a pop culture mainstay —referenced on sitcomssuch asModern Family, scenesreenacted in movieslike 2011'sCrazy, Stupid, Loveand signature choreographyrecreated at couples' weddings. Songs like theAcademy Award-winning "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" are not only synonymous with the 1987 classic but have become music staples in their own right. Not every iconic moment from the romance drama is loved by all, however. The one line nearly everyone knows, even if they haven't seen the film — "Nobody puts Baby in a corner!" — was the least favorite for one of the lead actors. Despite varying opinions on that now-famous line, it's impossible to ignore the enduring popularity ofDirty Dancing, which Grey has attributed to the movie being "very genuine and simple." "It was about innocenceand the way that innocence is lost and how people explode into a different iteration of themselves," theFerris Bueller's Day Offstar told PEOPLE in 2020. Keep reading to find out which cast member despised that renowned catchphrase and even more fun facts aboutDirty Dancing. David Cooper/Toronto Star via Getty WhileDirty Dancingis not autobiographical, the film was inspired by many elements from screenwriter Eleanor Bergstein's real life. Bergstein spent summers in the Catskills with her parents (though she wasn't there in 1963, the year the film was set). Not only was her father a doctor, but she also went by the nickname "Baby" until she was in her early 20s. Of course, she loved to dirty dance. "There are many, many, many things about my life that are in it — my family, my sense of this resort that I saw as a 12-year-old with my nose pressed to the dance studio, and I imagined the rest — but this is not the story of my 17th summer," BergsteintoldWoman's Worldin 2024. "It's not an accurate story of my life, it just uses lots of elements of my life." Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Among the film's original songs, three became pop classics. Swayze co-wrote and performed "She's Like the Wind," which he originally intended for his 1984 film,Grandview, U.S.A.He later brought it to the film's producer, Linda Gottlieb, who loved it. "Hungry Eyes" byEric Carmenand "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" by Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes were also huge hits. The latter won multiple awards, including an Oscar, aGolden Globeand aGrammy. As for the rest of the mega soundtrack, the crew had to scramble to afford the music that Bergstein insisted on including. Eventually, all the songs she requested made it into the movie, thanks in large part to music producer Jimmy Ienner. Since its release, theDirty Dancingsoundtrack has sold over 30 million copies worldwide and has become one of the best-selling albums of all time,per Legacy Recordings. Vestron/Kobal/Shutterstock It was down to the wire when the filmmakers picked "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" for the final scene. The night before shooting the finale, they went through a bag of cassette tapes that had been sent over to them, all of which contained original songs submitted for the movie. "The last cassette ... Well, that was it," choreographerKenny Ortegasaid in 2019 on season 1 of the Netflix docuseriesThe Movies That Made Us. Singer-songwriter Frank Previte, who also wrote "Hungry Eyes," served as co-writer of the legendary track. The filmmakers went through many photos of actors' eyes to find their perfect Johnny. "I wanted hooded eyes," Bergsteinsaid on the "Dirty Dancing" episodeofThe Movies That Made Us. "So, we went through picture after picture, and I said, 'Ah! Those are the eyes I want.' " However, they auditioned other actors because Swayze's resume stated "no dancing" — even though his mom was a well-known Texas dance teacher, and he was a professionally trained ballet dancer. The note was there because Swayze had suffered a knee injury playing high school football and didn't want to audition for projects as a dancer. Ron Galella/getty Dirty Dancingis a coming-of-age story about 17-year-old Baby, but Grey was 26 when she nabbed the leading role, while her co-star Swayze was 34. "Jennifer Grey was pushed into the audition room by her father, and we were in love," Gottlieb said onThe Movies That Made Us. Bergstein added, "As she [Grey] walked in, she said, 'Wish me luck, Daddy,' and she just closed the Baby's face in my mind, and from that moment on, she was the only person I wanted." Before Grey became Baby, casting director Bonnie Timmermann looked at 127 other stars for the role. Timmermann consideredWinona RyderandSharon Stonefor the part, andKyra Sedgwickwas among the screen-testers. However, it came down to two final actresses:Sarah Jessica Parkerand Grey. Ultimately, Grey and Swayze's chemistry during their screen test sealed the deal. "Our being forced to be togethercreated a kind of a synergyor like a friction," Grey later told PEOPLE in 2022 ahead of the release of her memoir,Out of the Corner. ActorsBenicio Del Toro, the lateVal Kilmer,Adrian ZmedandBilly Zaneeach auditioned for the role of Johnny.Titanicstar Zane got to the final screen-test stages, but Bergstein said onThe Movies That Made Usthat he "danced like someone who looked like he had learned to dance wonderfully for his bar mitzvah." Plus, Bergstein always wanted Swayze for the role,tellingCosmopolitanin 2017 that "it was always him and only him." "We went after him, and when I met him, I said, 'Now that I know you, if you decide not to do this, it's hard for me to think that I'll make the film.' I really felt that way, and I still do," Bergstein said. "So it was always Patrick, only Patrick, the only one we offered it to, and a wonderful, brilliant, good man." Vestron Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection ​​Grey and Swayze had previously worked together on the 1984 filmRed Dawnand did not get along. "She begged us to have anyone but Patrick," Bergstein said onThe Movies That Made Us. During an appearance onThe Viewin 2022, Grey revealed Swayze had played pranks on her and others on set. "It was just, like, macho, and I just couldn't take it. I was just like, 'Please, this guy, that's enough with him,' " she said. Grey was opposed to having Swayze sign on opposite her inDirty Dancinguntil he took her aside for a heart-to-heart during their screen test. "He pulled me down the hall and said to me, 'I love you, I love you, and I'm so sorry. And I know you don't want me to do the movie,' " Grey added. "And he got the tears in his eyes. And I got the tears in my eyes — not for the same reason. I was like, 'Oh, this guy's working me.' And he goes, 'We could kill it — we could kill it if we did this.' " With that, Grey as Baby and Swayze as Johnny were cemented in cinema history. Although they managed to work things out enough to film, the pair still clashed on set. Swayze had been a dancer for his entire life, much like his on-screen character, while Grey didn't have much experience. The pair channeled their pent-up frustrations into their performance. "The same way Baby and Johnny were not supposed to be together,we weren't a natural match," Grey told PEOPLE in 2022. "And that created a tension which made the movie work." Some of their more lighthearted moments were caught on film, such as the famous "Love Is Strange" scene. After seeing the pair fool around on the floor during a warm-up, director Emile Ardolino instructed them to improvise. When it comes to the scene where Baby laughs as Johnny glides his fingers down her arm, Grey was ticklish, and those giggles were real — and so was Swayze's frustration. "Both of them brought so much every day," Ortega told PEOPLE in 2017. "Sometimes, it was conflict; sometimes it was love. There was something there between the two of them that was unexplainable. They were human fireworks." Snap/Shutterstock The film was set at Kellerman's Resort, based on the real-life popular vacation spotGrossinger's Catskill Resort Hotelin Liberty, N.Y., that closed in 1986. However,Dirty Dancingwas produced on a tight budget of $4.5 million and couldn't afford to work in the Catskills, so they filmed in Virginia and North Carolina instead. Fans can still visitMountain Lake Lodgein Pembroke, Va., where much of the filming took place. The lodge hosts self-guidedDirty Dancingtours and an annualDirty Dancing Dayssummer festival.Visit North Carolinaalso provides information on how to visit filming locations around Lake Lure. Dia Dipasupil/Getty Actress Lynne Lipton was originally cast as Baby and Lisa Houseman's (Jane Brucker) mother, Marjorie Houseman, andKelly Bishopwas set to portray Vivian Pressman, an older, married resort guest with a crush on Johnny. Lipton got sick right before filming, so theGilmore Girlsstar took on the role of Mrs. Houseman — oppositeJerry Orbachas Baby and Lisa's father, Jake Houseman — at the last minute. Assistant choreographer Miranda Garrison would later pull double duty as Vivian. "That switcheroo was so bizarre that I thought I really must do this," BishoptoldThe Guardianin 2024. getty ThoughDirty Dancingtook place in the summer, the movie was filmed in autumn. Leaves were changing colors and had to be spray-painted green, and the lake water was so frigid that the actors' mouths turned blue. Between takes, they tried to keep warm by staying wrapped in blankets. "It was fall in North Carolina, and that water was really cold," Ortega told PEOPLE. "Jennifer actually got hypothermia." vestron "Nobody puts Baby in a corner" has become such a classic line that it's nearly as famous as the film itself. However, not everyone is attached to those six words — including the screenwriter. "I think it's really something that I was not deeply committed to. I don't think it's a great phrase," Bergstein said onThe Movies That Made Us, adding that Swayze "thought it was the stupidest line in the world, and I think he was right." Bergstein's fellow crew weren't sold on the one-liner either, citing everything from it being "ridiculous" to the fact that there wasn't a corner but a pillar behind Baby. As for Swayze, hetold the American Film Institutethat he "hated that line," revealing that he "didn't understand what was behind it." "When I went up and said that to her, I truly believed it," he said. "But up until that point, and up until I found that background and that passion as an actor, I hated that line and I was going to do anything in my power to get it cut." Vestron/Kobal/Shutterstock When a national sponsor was set to come on board, Bergstein was asked to cut the subplot of Johnny's first dance partner, Penny Johnson (Cynthia Rhodes), getting an illegal abortion. The screenwriter refused, telling the producers that "everything will fall apart" if she did so, as the storyline was integral to Baby meeting Johnny and all the dominoes that fell from there. The sponsorship fell through, and Bergstein didn't compromise on getting political and social issues embedded into her film. "My sense is if you're going to put something like this in, you better rhythm it so precisely into the plot that when the day comes — I sound likeThe Godfather, the day will come — when they ask you to take it out, you can't without the movie falling apart. Because if it can be taken out, it will be," Bergstein toldCosmopolitan. Alamy Swayze refused to use a body double while filming, including during the scene when Johnny and Baby dance on a log. Filmmakers acknowledged that it was dangerous, as a ravine was underneath it. "He fell, he hurt himself, we lost time on production, and everybody suffered in the end," Gottlieb said onThe Movies That Made Us. According toTIME, Swayze had to have fluid drained from his knee. The fall ended up not only aggravating Swayze's chronic knee pain and delaying filming, but it also made the final dance all the more difficult for him, as he had to jump off a stage multiple times to get the final take. Vestron/Kobal/Shutterstock Grey was "too scared" of the finale's big lift and opted out of practicing it. "I only did it on the day I shot it," GreytoldThe Guardianin 2015. "Never rehearsed it, never done it since." Shetold E! Newsin 2024 that she gave a "hard no" to running through the move because back then, she was "really scared and protective" of her body. Yet when it came down to it, Grey had no choice but to, well, film. "If you've ever tried it, you'd understand what it means to do it," she told the outlet. "It was one of those game-day things." In 2017, Ortega told PEOPLE, "Because she was an untrained dancer, the lifts were actually big moments for her personally. She was aspiring to do them as an individual, not just as a character.She brought that to the role, and her reactions were so genuine and honest." Grey later incorporated elements of the climactic end lift and other choreography whilecompeting alongside dance propartnerDerek Houghduring a freestyle number on season 11 ofDancing with the Starsin 2010. Read the original article onPeople

16 Little-Known Facts About “Dirty Dancing” (Like Why Patrick Swayze 'Hated' His Iconic Baby Line!)

16 Little-Known Facts About "Dirty Dancing" (Like Why Patrick Swayze 'Hated' His Iconic Baby Line!) Dirty Dancingshimmied ...

 

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