Justin and Hailey Bieber Snuggle Up at Toronto Maple Leafs Game in First Public Outing Since He Addressed Diddy's Alleged CrimesNew Foto - Justin and Hailey Bieber Snuggle Up at Toronto Maple Leafs Game in First Public Outing Since He Addressed Diddy's Alleged Crimes

Michael Chisholm/NHLI via Getty Justin and Hailey Bieber watched an NHL ice hockey game at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto on Sunday, May 18 In photos, the "Sorry" singer, 31, and the Rhode founder, 28, appeared smitten as they snuggled up in the stands while supporting the Toronto Maple Leafs Justin shared several snaps from the date night on his Instagram following the matchup JustinandHailey Bieber's date night is as cool as ice! On Sunday, May 18, the "Sorry" singer, 31, and the Rhode founder, 28, visited the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto to watch the Toronto Maple Leafs go up against the Florida Panthers in game 7 of the NHL Eastern Conference semifinals. The couple appeared smitten as they snuggled up in the stands while taking in the action on the rink. In a photo shared by the NHL onX, Hailey could be seen wearing a blue Toronto Maple Leafs jacket in support of Justin's favorite team, while he opted for a bright orange jacket, sunglasses and a fluffy cream bucket hat while sitting with his arm around her. Michael Chisholm/NHLI via Getty The pair were all smiles for the photo — yet their beloved blue and white team lost 1-6 in the match. Following the ice hockey game, Justin shared several photos on his Instagram Stories and grid to document the date night. "@haileybieber Made it into the building; Game 7," he captioned asnap of Haileywalking in front of him backstage at the arena. "Let's go, baby," the "Peaches" singer could be heard yelling in aclipof his wife continuing to make her way to their seats. The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! View this post on Instagram A post shared by Justin Bieber (@justinbieber) Justin then shared a series ofselfieswith the players in the background from their rinkside seats, captioned, "I'm a slut for these boys." In aclipshared by the NHL on X, Justin could be seen bobbing his head in the stands and flashing a thumbs up. "Hailey and Justin are feelin' it tonight#Game7#StanleyCup," the clip was captioned. Justin also went on to share a more intimate glimpse into their outing, sharing a series ofphotos of himself and Hailey kissingand appearing in good spirits as they left through a backstage exit. "I don't remember a time in my life when I haven't been obsessed with the leafsssss," he wrote in the caption of the post. "This year we made it farther than we have in so long and I'm happy about that. I can be patient cuz I know this is the team to do it. 🫶🏼🫶🏼🫶🏼🫶🏼🫶🏼🫶🏼." Justin Bieber/Instagram The sporty date night came after Justin shared a photo with his dad on his Instagram Stories earlier that day from a game of golf. Jeremy Bieber shared the samesnap on his Instagram, showing the "Baby" singer with his tongue out after winning. "Right when I get better so does he.#darnit🤪⛳️gg🤦🏻‍♂️" Jeremy wrote. 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. It's been a busy few weeks for Justin and Hailey — whomarried in 2018and share sonJack Blues, 7 months — with a joint appearance atCoachellaand theMet Galafor Hailey. A source close to the couple told PEOPLE that the pair remains united despite rumors about the state of their marriage and Justin's recent social media posts sparking concern. "Justin is having fun, vibing out and yes, he smokes weed like everyone else," the source toldPEOPLE. "But everything he does is being weaponized against him." They added, "Hailey is not on the verge of wanting a divorce or leaving him. It's just completely untrue. If anything she's sad about how hard everyone is being on him now that he finally is coming back out of his shell." Justin Bieber/Instagram The couple's outing on Sunday comes after Justin broke his silence amidSean "Diddy" Combs' ongoingsex trafficking trialin New York City. The Canadian musician had largely remained quiet regarding theSeptember arrestof his former friend and longtime collaborator, 55, followingmultiple sexual assault and sex trafficking accusationsagainst him. In a statement on May 16, Justin's representative confirm that he was not one of the Bad Boy Records founder's victims. "Although Justin is not among Sean Combs' victims, there are individuals who were genuinely harmed by him," the spokesperson said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE. "Shifting focus away from this reality detracts from the justice these victims rightfully deserve." Read the original article onPeople

Justin and Hailey Bieber Snuggle Up at Toronto Maple Leafs Game in First Public Outing Since He Addressed Diddy's Alleged Crimes

Justin and Hailey Bieber Snuggle Up at Toronto Maple Leafs Game in First Public Outing Since He Addressed Diddy's Alleged Crimes Michael...
DWTS Fans Are Crying Over Derek Hough's Birthday Gift From Wife Hayley ErbertNew Foto - DWTS Fans Are Crying Over Derek Hough's Birthday Gift From Wife Hayley Erbert

Dancing With the Starspro-turned-judgeDerek Houghturned 40 on May 17. He spent his actual birthdayhosting a charity event to raise money for families battling pediatric cancer— because of course he did, he's Derek Hough. But when he got back from Florida, where the event took place, his wifeHayley Eberthad set up a wonderful birthday surprise for Hough in their home. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Derek Hough (@derekhough) Houghexplains in the video, "After a week away, I walked into our home and saw the most amazing thing — balloons hanging from the ceiling and each with a picture and a personalized note from a friend or family member. The amount of love and sincerity in each note completely just overwhelmed me; they had personalized stories, just funny moments, made me laugh, and of course, made me cry. "I'm so thankful for my beautiful, creative wife Hayley, for just bringing everyone together to create such a special and incredible moment. This is a gift I'll cherish forever. It might sound a little corny, but it's a good reminder that the most precious gift is love." In the Instagram caption, Hough wrote, "The greatest gift I've ever received are these personalized messages, so thoughtful and heartfelt. I'm so thankful to my beautiful wife, @hayley.erbert, for always being incredibly creative and thoughtful. She always goes above and beyond to celebrate me. My love language is words of affirmation, and she jokes there's no better way to celebrate than with beautiful words from those who matter most. She's absolutely right. I'll cherish this forever. I love you so much, Hayley, and to all my friends and family, this means the world. Thank you 🙏🏼." In the comments, his famous friends and fans alike are so touched by the gesture. "This is so beautiful," writes fellow DWTS proKym Johnson-Herjavec. Jennifer Lopezwrote, "Happy birthday, baby!" "Wow. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️," wroteRicki Lake, Hough's partner from season 13. A fan wrote, "This is the sweetest thing I've ever seen🥹 absolutely adore you two." And another added that they will be stealing this idea for her husband's birthday, writing, "Thank you @hayley.erbert for a great idea for my hubs of 25 yrs who is so hard to shop for! @derekhough may your year be filled with more love to push through, joy to see the world brighter & hope that you keep making people see the world more beautiful through what you post on social & how you share that dance is for everyone, even if we can't dance! Happy 40th Birthday, Derek! 🧡🌺🕊️🙏🏼😇🎉🎂🎉🦋🧡."

DWTS Fans Are Crying Over Derek Hough's Birthday Gift From Wife Hayley Erbert

DWTS Fans Are Crying Over Derek Hough's Birthday Gift From Wife Hayley Erbert Dancing With the Starspro-turned-judgeDerek Houghturned 40...
It's the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fineNew Foto - It's the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fine

CANNES, France (AP) — "Is this what the end of the world feels like?" So asks a character in one of the most-talked about films of the78th Cannes Film Festival:Oliver Laxe's "Sirât," a Moroccan desert road trip through, we come to learn, a World War III purgatory. It's well into "Sirât," a kind of combination of "Mad Max" and "The Wages of Fear," that that reality begins to sink in. Our main characters — Luis (Sergi López) and his son Esteban (Brúno Nuñez) — have come to a desert rave in search of Luis' missing daughter. When the authorities break it up, they join up with a bohemian troupe of ravers who offroad toward a new, faraway destination. Thumping, propulsive beats abound in "Sirât," not unlike they do at Cannes' nightly parties. In this movie that jarringly confronts the notion of escape from harsh reality, there are wild tragedies and violent plot turns. Its characters steer into a nightmare that looks an awful lot like today's front pages. "We wanted to be deeply connected to this day and age," Laxe said in Cannes. As much as Cannes basks in the Côte d'Azur sunshine, storm clouds have been all over its movie screens at the festival, which on Monday passed the halfway point. Portents of geopolitical doom are everywhere in a lineup that's felt unusually in sync with the moment.Tom Cruise, in "Mission: Impossible – Final Awakening," has battled the AI apocalypse. Raoul Peck, in "Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5," has summoned the author's totalitarianism warnings for today. Eventhe new Wes Anderson("The Phoenician Scheme") is about an oligarch. If the French Riviera has often served as a spectacular retreat from the real world, this year's Cannes abounds with movies urgently reckoning with it. It's probably appropriate, then, that many of those films have been particularly divisive. "Sirât" is laudable for its it's-time-to-break-stuff attitude to its characters, even if that makes for a sometimes punishing experience for the audience. This is a love-or-hate-it movie, sometimes at the same time. Ari Aster's "Eddington,"perhaps the largest American production in recent years to sincerely grapple with contemporary American politics, was dismissed more than it was praised. But for a good while, "Eddington" is breathtakingly accurate in its depiction of the United States circa 2020. In "Eddington," the conservative, untidy sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) runs for mayor against the liberal incumbent, Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal), partly over disagreements on mask mandates. But in Aster's small-town satire, both left and right are mostly under the sway of a greater force: social media and a digital reality that can wreak havoc on daily lives. "I wrote this film in a state of fear and anxiety about the world," Aster said in Cannes. "I wanted to try and pull back and just describe and show what it feels like to live in a world where nobody can agree on what is real anymore." Reflecting a world running on a 'new logic' It's been striking how much this year's Cannes has been defined by anxious, if not downright bleak visions of the future. There have been exceptions — most notably Richard Linklater's charming ode to the French New Wave"Nouvelle Vague"and Anderson's delightful "The Phoenician Scheme." But seldom has this year's festival not felt like an ominous big-screen reflection of today. That's been true in the overall chatter around the festival, which got underway with the new threat of U.S. tariffs on foreign-produced films on the minds of many filmmakers and producers. Rising geopolitical frictions led even the typically very optimistic Bono, in Cannes topremiere his Apple TV+ documentary "Bono: Stories of Surrender,"to confess he had never lived at a time where World War III felt closer at hand. Other films in Cannes weren't as overtly about here and now as "Eddington," but many of them have been consumed with the recurring traumas of the past. Two of the most lauded films from the beginning of the festival — Mascha Schilinski's "Sound of Falling" and "Two Prosecutors," by the Ukrainian filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa — contemplated intimate cases of history repeating itself. "Two Prosecutors," set in Stalin's Russia, captures the slow-moving crawl of bureaucratic malevolence by adapting a story by the dissident author and physicist Georgy Demidov, who spent 14 years in the gulag. Loznitsa said his film is "not a reflection of the past. It's a reflection of the present." In the period political thriller "The Secret Agent," Brazilian filmmaker Kleber Mendonça Filho turns to not a real historical tale but a fictional one, set in 1977 during Brazil's military dictatorship. Wagner Moura brings a natural movie-star cool to the role of Marcelo, a technology expert returning to his hometown of Recife where government corruption is rife and hitmen are on his tail. Vividly textured, with absurdist touches (the hairy leg of a corpse plays as a colorful metaphor for the dictatorship), "The Secret Agent" seeks, and sometimes finds, its own logic of political resistance. "I really believe that some of the most heartfelt texts come not necessarily from fact but from the logic of what is happening," Filho said in an interview. "Right, now the world seems to be running on some kind of new logic. Ten or 15 years ago, some of these ideas would be completely dismissed, even by the most conservative politicians. I think 'The Secret Agent' is a film full of mystery and intrigue but it does seem to have a certain logic which I associate with my country, Brazil." Finding the rays of hope In nonfiction filmmaking, no one may be better today than Peck ("I Am Not Your Nego," last year's"Ernest Cole: Lost and Found") in connecting historical dots. "Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5" marries George Orwell's words (narrated by Damian Lewis) on totalitarian states that demand "the disbelief of objective truth" with the actions of contemporary governments around the world, including Russia, Myanmar and the United States. Images of abombed-out Mariupol in 2022runs with its official description: "Peacekeeping operations." It's not just geopolitical tremors quaking on movie screens in Cannes. Climate change and natural disasters are on the minds of filmmakers, too, sometimes in the most unlikely of movies. The French animated film "Arco," by illustrator Ugo Bienvenu, is about a boy from the distant future who lives on a "Jetsons"-like platform in the clouds. He travels back in time to another future-time, 2075, where homes are bubbled to protect them from fire and storm, and robots do all of the parenting for working parents who appear to their children only as digital projections. It's a grim future, particularly so because it feels quite plausible. But the strange charm of "Arco," a brightly colored movie with a whole lot of rainbows, is that is offers a younger generation a dream of a future they might make. A relationship between the boy from the future and a girl who finds him in 2075 sparks not just a friendship but a nourishing vision of what's possible. "Arco," in that way, is a reminder that the most moving movies about our current doom offer a ray of hope, too. "People are feeling disenchanted with the world, so we have to re-enchant them," said Laxe, the "Sirât" director. "Times are tough but they're very stimulating at the same time. We'll have to look deeply into ourselves. That's what we're forced to do because it's a tough world now." ___ Jake Coyle has covered the Cannes Film Festival since 2012. He's seeing approximately 40 films at this year's festival andreporting on what stands out. ___ For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visit:https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival

It’s the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fine

It's the end of the world and the Cannes Film Festival does not feel fine CANNES, France (AP) — "Is this what the end of the world ...
Influencer Emilie Kiser's 3-year-old son dies from injuries after drowningNew Foto - Influencer Emilie Kiser's 3-year-old son dies from injuries after drowning

The 3-year-old son of influencer Emilie Kiser died on Sunday in the hospital after a May 12 drowning incident in a backyard pool, the Chandler Police Department said. The Chandler Police Department said Trigg Kiser died after being hospitalized for several days. Authorities responded to a drowning call in Chandler, Arizona, around 20 miles southeast of Phoenix, where they found a 3-year-old unconscious and being pulled out of a pool,KPNX reported. The Chandler Fire Department told KPNX that police officers arrived at the home first and began CPR until firefighters arrived and took over. The child, now identified as Trigg, was taken to Chandler Regional Hospital, where he remained in critical condition for 6 days until he died, according to KPNX. "Our thoughts and deepest condolences are with the child's family and loved ones during this unimaginable time," Chandler Police Department spokesperson Sonu Wasu said in a Sunday statement. Emilie Kiser, a 26-year-old influencer with nearly 3.4 million TikTok followers, gained popularity for her mom-and-wife lifestyle content. She and her husband, Brady Kiser, recently welcomedtheir second child, Theodore, in March. Trigg would have celebrated his fourth birthday onJuly 14. Comments have poured in on Emilie Kiser's latest Instagram posts, as followers offer their condolences and support to the family. Kiser has not yet released a statement about her son's death. "The investigation into the circumstances surrounding this incident remain ongoing," Wasu added in the Sunday statement. "This is still an open investigation. Out of respect for the family's privacy, we will not be releasing additional details until the investigation is closed." Drowning is the leading cause of death among children ages 1 through 4,according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. May also marksNational Water Safety Month, which brings awareness for drowning prevention and safety resources.

Influencer Emilie Kiser's 3-year-old son dies from injuries after drowning

Influencer Emilie Kiser's 3-year-old son dies from injuries after drowning The 3-year-old son of influencer Emilie Kiser died on Sunday ...
Connecticut mom's remains found 2 years after she vanished in JapanNew Foto - Connecticut mom's remains found 2 years after she vanished in Japan

The remains of aConnecticutwoman who went missing on a hike in Japan two years ago have been recovered, herfamily announced. Pattie Wu-Murad disappeared in April 2023 during a solo hiking trip in central Japan. Despite an extensive search around the Kumano Kodo Trail, which included American and Japanese search and rescue teams, the U.S. Embassy and the FBI, no trace of her was found. In September 2024, more than a year and a half after her disappearance, a fisherman found Wu-Murad's backpack and one hiking shoe near a stream on a different trail from where her family originally believed she was hiking, the family said. Japanese officials launched another search in that area, but no further evidence was found. Earlier this year, a member of the original U.S. search team who was in Japan in April, retraced the area where Wu-Murad's backpack was found and discovered several other of her personal items and what appeared to be a femur, her family said in a post on social media. On May 9, the family was told that DNA testing using a sample from Wu-Murad's daughter confirmed the remains were a match. "Although we had tried to prepare ourselves for this outcome, the finality of this news is heartbreaking," her family said in a Facebook post. "It offers a measure of closure, but many questions remain unanswered, including the exact circumstances and cause of Pattie's death. We now begin the process of working through international protocols to bring her remains home." Wu-Murad's family said they hope more evidence will be found to shed light on what happened. "There'll be more people on that trail over the coming months and years, and maybe they'll come across more evidence," her husband, Kirk Murad,told NBC Connecticut. The family expressed their gratitude for the search teams, volunteers and outpouring of support they received over the past two years. "Pattie was an incredible woman whose love and friendship touched many lives," they said. "While we are devastated, we are also humbled by the global community that rallied to help find her. We will continue to honor her memory with love and gratitude in our hearts." Raw Video: Mexican navy training ship hits Brooklyn Bridge Italy's Trulli: From Past to Present Judge weighing throwing out Sean "Diddy" Combs trial testimony

Connecticut mom's remains found 2 years after she vanished in Japan

Connecticut mom's remains found 2 years after she vanished in Japan The remains of aConnecticutwoman who went missing on a hike in Japan...

 

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