Kelly Ripa Makes 'Fascinating' Observation About Mark ConsuelosNew Foto - Kelly Ripa Makes 'Fascinating' Observation About Mark Consuelos

Kelly Ripais telling onMark Consuelosonce again. The longtime couple often shares embarrassing details about their personal life onLive! with Kelly and Mark,and on the newest episode that aired on Friday, May 16, they did it again. After chatting about the latest trends in healthy grains and a viral story about women taking a whole rotisserie chicken on a plane, Consuelos segued into a story about "caveman skin." Before he could finish, Ripa said, "I believe you have that." 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 "There's a new fad emerging —caveman," Consuelos explained before adding, "It is truly the antithesis of expensive facial care [where] absolutely nothing is involved in achieving caveman skin. Not even water... they don't even wash their face!" Consuelos then revealed that he washes his face after filming the show each day to remove the powder and any other stage makeup they put on him. You can watch the clip right here. Then he confessed, "But I don't really have a routine at night." Ripa cut in, "You have no routine, it's fascinating to me. The longer my routine gets, the shorter your routine gets." She then claimed Consuelos once tried her moisturizer on "for like 5 seconds" telling the audience that he simply put it on but didn't stick with it, noting, "and that was it. That was the extent of it." "I got bored," he cheekily admitted. Consuelos then claimed he does exfoliate when he shaves his face before adding, "You're taking off dead skin cells. I'm not shaving my forehead. That's bad. But I think a happy medium. I probably should put more sunblock on. I should do that." Not many people can just ignore their skincare the way Consuelos does and still have flawless skin. How lucky is he? Related: Ryan Seacrest Makes Bold Confession About Marriage Plans

Kelly Ripa Makes ‘Fascinating’ Observation About Mark Consuelos

Kelly Ripa Makes 'Fascinating' Observation About Mark Consuelos Kelly Ripais telling onMark Consuelosonce again. The longtime couple...
Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed?New Foto - Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed?

Hollywood loves a good comeback story. But what about real-life rebounds? That, it turns out, is an iffier proposition and one that's about to be tested by three bold-faced names: Alec Baldwin, Johnny Depp and Will Smith. All three were at different points lead players in the cultural zeitgeist. And all three lost that role, admittedly for vastly different offenses that nonetheless had the same career-dinging effect. Baldwin afterHalyna Hutchins was fatally shotwith a gun he held on the set of "Rust" in 2021, Depp after a protracted and tawdry2022 lawsuit with his ex Amber Heardand Smith afterslapping Chris Rockat the 2022 Oscars. Can this trio win back the hearts and wallets of fans with their new projects? Will Hollywood's gatekeepers stand ready with open arms? Not surprisingly, the latter is highly dependent on the former, industry experts say. If you can still turn a buck with your talents, watch your Tinseltown dance card fill up. "If people have a loyal fan base, they'll always get a second and even third shot," says Stacy Jones, CEO of pop culture marketing firm Hollywood Branded. "Look at Robert Downey, Jr. His drug addiction crashed his career more than 20 years ago. And now..?" Well, now the "Ironman" star's movies havegrossed more than $14 billionand he has a best supporting actor Oscar for "Oppenheimer." Point taken. So is that sort of about-face a possibility for Baldwin, Depp and Smith? Experts say the calculus for rebounding from scandal involves factors such as what you did, who you did it to, and to what degree people still care. "If you think about MeToo and cancel culture and people being publicly shamed, while that was strong in recent years, for me the question is, is that sentiment as strong today?" says Todd Boyd, who holds the Katherine and Frank Price Endowed Chair for the Study of Race and Popular Culture at the University of Southern California. For Michael Schulman, author of "Oscar Wars: A History of Hollywood in Gold, Sweat and Tears," fans are the critical factor. "Stars come back to the extent that they're profitable," he says. He laughs, adding, "I hope you can hear the cynicism." One thing that could help a comeback is playing to your scandalous side, Schulman says. His examples include Rob Lowe, who, after an '80s sex tape scandal, won back fans by playing a sleazy villain in the comedy "Wayne's World." Even Baldwin himself, who was in the tabloids for his raucous 2002 divorce from Kim Basinger and then scored a hit by playing a hilariously morals-free executive in the NBC comedy, "30 Rock." Schulman, who keeps a keen eye on Hollywood for The New Yorker, did a2021 piece for the magazine called "Fatty Arbuckle and the Birth of the Celebrity Scandal,"about the silent movie star who was acquitted of rape and murder in the 1920s and never regained his popularity. Today, more than a century later, Schulman says social media connects fans more intensely to celebrities, creating a bond that can help launch a comeback. "Each of these three stars has a fan base on their side," he says. "Will's slap for many was just a man standing up for his wife. With Alec, there's a widespread sense he shouldn't even have been charged. And Johnny had wide online support during that trial. Studios will take the temperature, and when needed can reintroduce people with the help of marketing and publicity." Let's open our inquiry into these three comeback cases by looking at what each is working on and whether these roles could prove enough to reignite their personal spotlights. For Baldwin, whose Western "Rust" debuted in theaters and video on demand May 2 to poor sales, his new output consists of playing himself in theTLC reality series "The Baldwins." Although it's an attempt to showcase the actor as a loveable dad to his brood of seven, the series hasn't made a mark. In fact, unless Baldwin, whose standout movies include "Glengarry Glen Ross" and "The Hunt for Red October," returns with a dramatic flourish, his relaunch could be on permanent hold, experts say. "Ironically, if Alec is guilty of anything it's coming back as a cringeworthy dad," says Schulman. "It's a naked attempt at rebranding. Why not come back as an actor?" Baldwin is starring in "Hollywood Heist" with Nick Cannon, with Deadline reporting the film is being introduced to buyers in Cannes. But USC's Boyd argues that Baldwin's name was never as lofty in the culture as Depp or Smith, and that could hurt his chances of a comeback. "He's just not as relevant anymore," he says. The public seems to agree, says Jones. "Even if 'The Baldwins' is atrocious, you should have had a lot of haters tuning in," she says. "But the public response was indifferent." Depp's offense was not an on-set tragedy but rather an incendiary 2022 court battle with his actress ex wife, who had accused him of being abusive during their relationship. He sued her for damaging his reputation, and won. Depp iscurrently filming "Day Drinker,"a thriller with Penelope Cruz. It's his first movie since appearing in the little seen 2023 French-language film "Jeanne du Barry," in which he played King Louis XV. Recently released photos from the new production show a gray-haired and bearded Depp who appears to be acting his age, 61. That pivot could be a smart way to reinvent himself. "Depp won the court of public opinion (in his case against Heard), but the bigger issue is simply whether he is still the big star he once was," Boyd says of "Pirates of the Caribbean" icon. "Does he mean the same to audiences now that he did in the past?" Depp has said before he wasn't interested indoing a sixth installment in Disney's lucrative "Pirates" franchise, but "he's still the face of that ride at Disney, and I bet he would totally do another if offered," says Jones. The response to "Day Drinker" could sink or revive those piratical conversations. And then there's Smith. The talented rapper-turned-TV-star-turned-Oscar-winner (a title he earned on the very nighthe struck Chris Rock for making a jokeabout his wife's shaved head, a result of her alopecia) is planning to bombard his fans with fare soon. Upcoming Smith filmsin various phases of development are a remake of the 1987 John Candy and Steve Martin comedy "Planes, Trains, and Automobiles," co-starring Kevin Hart; a post-apocalyptic action thriller sequel "I Am Legend 2" with Michael B. Jordan; and a super hero redemption sequel "Hancock 2." With these movies, Smith has a chance to recement his bond with audiences, which didn't happen with two post-Slap movies, "Emancipation," about a runaway slave, and the popular but critically panned "Bad Boys 4," as well as a new album, "Based on a True Story." But for those reading Hollywood tea leaves, Smith has the greatest chance of mounting a strong industry comeback. "He was a gigantic star and people really aren't that angry about that slap and some saw it as noble even," says Schulman. "Plus, we all saw it happen, it was no secret. There was no mystery." For Boyd, "it comes down to who he slapped, which was Chris Rock, a comedian, and comedians often say things that people don't like." Jones agrees on Smith's good odds, adding what was most shocking about the slap was that it was done "by someone who comes across to us as such a nice guy" through roles such as TV's "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air." For her, what Smith did was more a direct result of the pressure-cooker spotlight and "all-out mania" of Hollywood's awards season. Smith is "fundamentally a kingmaker who can likely still make billions in profits for someone," she says. "Plus, let's remember, he slapped someone across the face, he didn't kill someone." We'll give Boyd the final word here. And the final word is: cash. "In any performance based industry, and this comes up in sports a lot, if someone is very good at what they do and they have a strong following and someone can profit off those talents, those things will be factored into consideration when it comes to giving people another chance," he says. "Anyone looking at talent that is trying to come back from something is thinking: 'Is the risk of taking on this person bigger than the profit we stand to make?' You figure that out, and go from there." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Can Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin get a Hollywood comeback?

Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed?

Will Smith, Johnny Depp and Alec Baldwin hope for comebacks. Can they succeed? Hollywood loves a good comeback story. But what about real-li...
14 Legendary Musicians Who Died Mysteriously, From Biggie Smalls to Jim MorrisonNew Foto - 14 Legendary Musicians Who Died Mysteriously, From Biggie Smalls to Jim Morrison

Clarence Davis/NY Daily News Archive via Getty; CBS via Getty While musicians may die, their art lives on, and so do the tales of their sudden deaths, as is the case for several notable names in Hollywood who have passed under mysterious circumstances. From rock 'n roll legends like The Doors frontman Jim Morrison and The Rolling Stones founder Brian Jones to rap legends includingTupac ShakurandNotorious B.I.G., there have been deaths that have affected fans years later. Although official autopsies try to dispel rumors surrounding an artist's departures, sometimes they prompt more questions than provide answers. Here are 14 musicians who changed the course of the industry and the details behind their mysterious deaths. Jess Rand/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Possibly the greatest "pure" soul singer in American history, Sam Cooke's career was on the rise after a string of hits when he wasshot to deathon Dec. 11, 1964, at age 33 in a seedy L.A. motel, allegedly by the hotel's manager in self-defense. Various alternate theories have surfaced; however, most of which circle around the idea that Cooke may have been murdered:Etta James, for instance, saw Cooke's body before he was buried and maintained his injuries were more consistent with those of a beating than a shooting,perThe Guardian. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images The "I Fought the Law" singer was found dead at 23 in his car on July 18, 1966 — just a few months after the song became a hit. His body had apparently been doused in gasoline, and several people indicated the presence of bruises on his body. Initially considered a suicide, Fuller's death was eventually ruled accidental. However,according to NPR, rumors circulated that he'd been killed by the Mafia or, in one more outlandish theory,the Manson Family. Mark and Colleeen Hayward/Redferns Brian was the eccentric genius behind some of the most daring sounds on the earlyRolling Stones' records, including the marimba on "Under My Thumb." The English musician died at the age of 27 on July 3, 1969. His death was ruled as an accidental drowning in his pool (and labeled "Death by Misadventure" by the coroner as a nod to his alcohol and drug abuse). However, U.K. investigative journalist Scott Jones pinned Brian's death on a builder named Frank Thorogood, the last person to see the musician alive. Sussex police reviewed the case in 2009 based on Scott's evidence but decided none of the new information was enough to overrule their initial decision (viaThe Guardian). Related:The Rolling Stones: All About the Members of the Iconic Rock Band Then and Now CBS Photo Archive/Getty Given Jim Morrison's legendary hedonism, considering his death "mysterious" might seem odd. After he was found dead in the bathtub in a Paris apartment on July 3, 1971, his official cause of death was listed as a heart attack — though no autopsy was ever performed on the Doors frontman, as it wasn't required by French law. In 2014,perThe Telegraph, singer-songwriter Marianne Faithfull accused late drug dealer and ex-boyfriend Jean de Breiteuil as the manbehind Morrison's death, alleging he administered a too-strong dose of heroin to Morrison. On Aug. 17, 1973, Paul Williams (top left) was found dead inside a car parked in an alleyway with a gun nearby shortly after an argument with his girlfriend. He had reportedly spoken of suicide to friends in recent months. That said, the coroner's report stated that Williams used his right hand to shoot himself in the left side of his head — think about the logistics of that — and the gun used in the shooting had fired two shots that night, only one of which killed Williams. Gilles Petard/Redferns Donny Hathaway lived with paranoid schizophrenia and was known to be not particularly attentive about adhering to his medication routine. Though his career was rebounding from a low point in 1979, he started behaving erratically during a recording session on Jan. 13. Hathaway then went back to his 15th-floor room at the Essex House Hotel in New York City and jumped to his death at the age of 33 (viaThe New York Times). Rumors have persisted that Hathaway owed money to the mob around this time, though it would have been hard to separate his ravings about "white men being after him" from the symptoms of his mental illness. Fin Costello/Redferns/Getty Images Gary Driscoll of the British rock group Rainbow was found murdered in his Ithaca, N.Y., home on June 8, 1987, with no apparent motive. Separating fact from invention is difficult, but there have been rumors that there was more than one murderer, the killing was drug-related and — perhaps most disturbingly — that Driscoll was either dismembered or flayed alive. It remains an unsolved case to this day. Archivio Cameraphoto Epoche/Getty Images Chet Baker fell to his death from the balcony of a hotel in Amsterdam on May 13, 1988; he was 58 years old. Battling addiction and financial woes, it would be easy to assume Baker's death had some malicious aspect to it. (After all, he was beaten over drugs so badly in the late 1960s that most of his teeth were knocked out.) Drugs were found in his system, and it is widely assumed that his death was accidental. However, given Baker's enduring legacy, it's likely to remain a point of rumor circulation. ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images Cornelius "Cornell" Gunter — R&B singer and member of The Coasters —was shot and killed in his car in Las Vegas on Feb. 26, 1990. He was shot through the windshield at an intersection, and witnesses reported Gunter arguing with a man from his car shortly before the shooting,according to theLos Angeles Times. No arrests were made, and the murder of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee remains unsolved. Like Morrison, Johnny Thunders' death on April 23, 1991, was hardly a surprise. Though it was ruled officially drug-related, toxicology reports later determined the drugs in the guitarist and singer's system were not at a fatal level. (Thunders had also been suffering from advanced leukemia at the time.) His New Orleans hotel room, however, had been ransacked. Dee Dee Ramone wrote in his 2000 autobiography,Lobotomy: Surviving the Ramones, that "Johnny had gotten mixed up with some bastards … who ripped him off for his methadone supply. They had given him LSD and then murdered him." David Tonge/Getty Images Richey Edwards had a long history of mental health issues by the time he went missing on Feb. 1, 1995, just before his band, Manic Street Preachers, was supposed to fly to the U.S. for a promotional tour. Though his car was found abandoned near Severn Bridge — a common suicide spot in the U.K. (viaThe Independent) — Edwards became one of rock's most famous missing persons for a time, with sightings in tropical islands and India. His sister criticized the police's handling of the case, with the family not declaring Edwards legally dead until Nov. 23, 2008, upon which his status changed to "missing, presumed dead." Ron Galella Collection via Getty Shakur's 1996 murder hassparked countless conspiracy theories. Often rumored as the victim of an inter-gang dispute, some have even pointed the finger at hip-hop mogulsSean "Diddy" Combs— who was reportedlyjealous of Shakur's friendshipwith late Bad Boy artist Biggie Smalls (né Christopher Wallace) — andSuge Knightfor ordering the deed. In his 2011 self-published book,Murder Rap,former LAPD detective Greg Kading claimed to have proof that Combs and Knight were responsible for Shakur's death, and the Los Angeles authorities suppressed the evidence (viaRolling Stone). Combs, however, denied the allegations in an email toL.A. Weeklyin 2011, writing, "This story is pure fiction and completely ridiculous." Though supposedly one of Shakur's songs contains the hidden message "Suge shot me," there has never been any conclusive evidence linking the former Death Row CEO and co-founder to Shakur's death. Knight himself has denied killing Shakur and eventold TMZ(presumably jokingly) in 2014 that the rapper is, in fact, still alive. Even more strange,Haaretzreportedthat the FBI files released in 2011 revealed Shakur had received death threats from the Jewish Defense League, an organization characterized as a terrorist cell. After Shakur's murder, Duane "Keefe D" Davis (or "Keffe D" as prosecutors have noted) — the uncle of deceased Crips gang member Orlando Anderson, the suspected shooter who later died in a separate gang-related incident in 1998 — wasarrested and charged in connectionwith the crime. While Davis has maintained his innocence, authorities believe heorchestrated the killing as retaliationin the middle of a growing gang feud involving his nephew. Davis' trial was scheduled for March 2025 but at the last minute was pushed to February 2026, perABC News. Related:Sean 'Diddy' Combs Was 'Jealous' of The Notorious B.I.G.'s Friendship with Tupac Shakur, Who Had No 'Respect' for Mogul Al Pereira/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images A similar group of rumors has surrounded Smalls' (a.k.a. Notorious B.I.G.) unsolved murder,according toNew York Daily News. While some have posited the unfounded theory that government agents killed both Smalls and Shakur to end the perceived "East Coast/West Coast" rap battle of the '90s, theFBI's fileson the "Juicy" rapper's death on March 9, 1997, include a reference to rare ammo used in the shooting that was also found in the home of LAPD cop David Mack. At the time of the murder, Mack was moonlighting as a bodyguard for Knight and was arrested for bank robbery that same year. The FBI also found a black Chevy Impala SS in Mack's possession — the same vehicle the agency claims was driven by the killer. Smalls' family named Mack in a 2005 wrongful death lawsuit, but the case was dismissed from court,reportedRolling Stone. The late LAPD Detective Russell Poole, who died in 2015, was a vocal proponent of the theory that Knight ordered unknown assassins — possibly Mack — to commit the crime. To this day, Mack has not been prosecuted for any crime related to Smalls' murder, and he has continued to maintain his innocence. Knight has also denied ordering anyone to kill Smalls. Related:The Notorious B.I.G.'s Son C.J. Wallace Talks His 'Global Legacy' on the 25th Anniversary of Rapper's Death Andy Willsher/Redferns/Getty Images Musician Elliott Smith (né Steven Paul Smith) died at age 34 on Oct. 21, 2003, of what were two seemingly self-inflicted stabs to the heart. However, there were wounds on his hands consistent with defensive marks, and the coroner's report made no mention of typical "hesitation wounds" seen in suicides by stabbing. The Guardianreportedthat detectives concluded his death was "possibly suspicious" at the time, though nothing ever came of a further investigation. Read the original article onPeople

14 Legendary Musicians Who Died Mysteriously, From Biggie Smalls to Jim Morrison

14 Legendary Musicians Who Died Mysteriously, From Biggie Smalls to Jim Morrison Clarence Davis/NY Daily News Archive via Getty; CBS via Get...
Deported mom says toddler's return to Venezuela after separation by US authorities was a 'miracle'New Foto - Deported mom says toddler's return to Venezuela after separation by US authorities was a 'miracle'

A Venezuelan mother who was initiallydeportedfrom the US without her 2-year-old daughter says beingreunited with her childthis week felt like a "miracle." "Many times, I doubted that my daughter was going to come," said a tearful Yorely Bernal in an interview with Venezuelan news outlet La Iguana TV on Thursday. "But that miracle they gave me yesterday was something that there are no words to explain." Bernal was deported from the United States in March without her daughter Maikelys, who remained in foster care in the US. When Venezuelan First Lady Cilia Flores personally handed Maikelys Espinoza to Bernal at the presidential palace in Caracas on Wednesday, it put an end to nearly a year of separation between the two. According to the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Maikelys spent most of her time in the US in foster care under the custody of the US Office of Refugee Resettlement before being returned to her mother under court order. DHS claims that the separation was for the child's safety, alleging that Bernal and her partner, whom the US deported to the high-security CECOT prison in El Salvador earlier this year, are members of the Venezuelan criminal gang Tren de Aragua – something both parents deny. "The child's mother, Yorely Escarleth Bernal Inciarte, oversees recruitment of young women for drug smuggling and prostitution for Tren de Aragua," DHS alleged in a statement on May 14. The US government has not provided specific evidence for this allegation, and both Bernal and Espinoza say they have no affiliation with Tren de Aragua. Bernal told La Iguana that US authorities cited Bernal's upcoming immigration hearings at the time when they took first her daughter into custody last year. Bernal entered the United States with Maikelys and her partner Maiker Espinoza on May 14, 2024. All three were swiftly detained by US immigration authorities, Bernal told La Iguana, and Maikelys was removed from their care five days later. Months would pass before Mikaelys – who was just over a year old when they crossed the border – was able to see her mother again through a video calling app under immigration authorities' supervision, according to Bernal. At that point, the toddler no longer recognized her, she says. "They allowed me a video call once a week for thirty minutes," Bernal told La Iguana. "That's when I was able to see her. I knew it was her. But she didn't recognize me anymore. It had been about five months until I was able to see her again." Eventually, Bernal and Espinoza were able to see their daughter in 30-minute in-person visits, she says. In a Februaryaffidavitfiled in federal court, Espinoza said that this was around October 2024. Now reunited with her child in Venezuela, Bernal told Venezuelan media that she's still hopeful that her partner would eventually be set free from CECOT and join his family in Venezuela. "I know that he is going to be here, because he promised me," she said. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Deported mom says toddler’s return to Venezuela after separation by US authorities was a ‘miracle’

Deported mom says toddler's return to Venezuela after separation by US authorities was a 'miracle' A Venezuelan mother who was i...
Caught between the U.S. and China, young people in Taiwan just want things to stay the sameNew Foto - Caught between the U.S. and China, young people in Taiwan just want things to stay the same

Young people inTaiwanare used to living with uncertainty when it comes toChina— a situation they generally say is for the best for the time being, particularly when recent actions by the Trump administration have some of them asking a certain question. "Can Taiwan continue to view the U.S. as an ally?" said Chan Yu-hsiang, 25, a graduate student at National Taiwan University. Chan's question reflects growing concern in Taiwan over the reliability of the U.S. as a security partner under PresidentDonald Trump, who has expressed support for the Beijing-claimed island in the face of Chinese military threats but also made critical remarks and upended trade relations. In aTaiwan government pollreleased in March, the percentage of respondents who said the U.S. military would "definitely" intervene in the event of a Chinese invasion dropped to 14% from 19% a year earlier. Almost half of respondents said the U.S. military was unlikely to intervene, the same as apoll by the Brookings Institutionconducted the same month. According to the same Taiwan government poll, 36% of respondents said U.S.-Taiwan relations would get worse under Trump, a 12% increase since January. Taiwan's rising wariness toward the U.S. comes amid growing pressure from China, which claims the self-governing democracy as its own territory and has not ruled out the use of force in achieving its unification goal. Beijing sends warplanes and ships toward the island on near-daily sorties. Last month, the Chinese militaryconducted large-scale drillsaround Taiwan in what it said was a warning to "separatist" forces. The Taiwan government has warned that Beijing could hold more drills in the coming days as the island marks one year under PresidentLai Ching-te, whom China describes as a "separatist" and "troublemaker." China has rebuffed multiple offers of talks from Lai, who says only Taiwan's 23 million people can decide its future. Beijing insists the island's future is "by no means an 'internal affair of Taiwan,'" warning that Taiwanese authorities would "suffer an apocalypse" if they sought formal independence. The U.S. has no formal relations with Taiwan but is its most important international backer, bound by law to provide it with defensive weapons. On Monday, Taiwan test-fired for the first time a new rocket system provided by the U.S. thatUkrainehas also used against Russia. Washington has long maintained a policy of "strategic ambiguity" when it comes to whether the U.S. military would defend Taiwan against a Chinese attack, not giving a definitive answer either way. Trump has not given any indication of a change in that policy. But he has unnerved Taiwan with comments accusing it of stealing semiconductor business from the U.S. and calling for Taiwan to pay more for its own defense, which it has pledged to do. Last month, he also slapped Taiwan with a 32% tariff on its goods, with an exemption for the chip industry, which makes up a big part of the Taiwan economy and which the U.S. relies on heavily. Taiwan has said it will not retaliate against the U.S. and that it is ready for trade talks "at any time," offering a package of zero tariffs on American goods and increased U.S. investment. The duties came as a surprise to Taiwan after state-backed chipmaker TSMC announced a plan in March toinvest an additional $100 millionin the U.S., where it is already building multiple factories. For Chan, this suggested that even Taiwan's "silicon shield" — the semiconductor industry that makes the island so indispensable to the global economy — is not enough to guarantee U.S. support. "If you keep giving away Taiwan's last line of defense, the U.S. will take advantage of it, but they won't necessarily treat you well," he said. "Why would Taiwan still believe that Trump would definitely deploy troops if it was to fall?" Though some U.S. officials and Taiwan's military point to 2027 — the 100th anniversary of the founding of China's People's Liberation Army — as a possible timeline for China to attack, polls show that most Taiwanese believean invasion is unlikelyin the next five years. Asurvey last yearby National Chengchi University in Taipei showed that over 88% of people in Taiwan support maintaining the status quo, in which Taiwan operates as a de facto independent country without formally declaring independence, a move that would risk all-out war with China. That's especially true for Taiwan's youngest voters, said Lev Nachman, a political scientist and assistant professor at National Taiwan University who hasstudied their views. Taiwan's Gen Zers "are by no means pro-China relative to other generations, but they don't have the same attitude towards Taiwan independence" as millennials do, he said. "Instead, we see younger generations having a much more sort of pro-status-quo approach to politics," Nachman said. Young people in Taiwan were too young to be radicalized in political upheavals such as the island's Sunflower Movement in 2014 and the martial law era, he said. They don't want to "rock any major boat" with any "radical change" in the Taiwan Strait, Nachman added, though the desire for unification with mainland China is still "incredibly low." The Taiwan government poll foundthat over a third of respondents ages 18 to 29 viewed China as the island's "primary threat" despite efforts by Beijing to win them over with preferential policies for studying and working in the mainland, as well as various activities including sponsored trips, internships and cultural events. Last year, over 4 million people from Taiwan visited mainland China for tourism, study or work, a year-over-year increase of 54.3%, according toofficial datareleased by Chinese authorities. According to China's Taiwan Affairs Office, young people were the "most active" group. "You are also Chinese. You are our family," Chan said he and other students from Taiwan were told by a tour guide last year on a Beijing-sponsored trip to the Chinese province of Henan. While some accuse Beijing of using such efforts to strengthen its sovereignty claims, these measures are "quite good" and enable young people in Taiwan to visit and explore different places, said Chen Pin-yin, a student at the National Taiwan University of Arts. Chen, 21, who is also pro status quo, said not everything is about politics. Young people in Taiwan are mainly concerned about practical issues such as the cost of living and their job prospects, she said. Chen did a one-month internship last summer for a variety show in the southern Chinese province of Hunan that was partly funded by Chinese organizers. The experience was "a dream come true" for Chen, who said the Chinese TV industry is "highly developed." She said she plans to pursue a master's degree in mainland China next year and that she would also consider working there. The most important thing "is to avoid wars for now," Chen said. "I hope the U.S. can play the role of a mediator when tensions are high."

Caught between the U.S. and China, young people in Taiwan just want things to stay the same

Caught between the U.S. and China, young people in Taiwan just want things to stay the same Young people inTaiwanare used to living with unc...

 

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