Nicola Peltz Says She's 'Thankful for the Angels in My Life' As She Shares Image of Brooklyn Beckham amid Rumored Family 'Tension'New Foto - Nicola Peltz Says She's 'Thankful for the Angels in My Life' As She Shares Image of Brooklyn Beckham amid Rumored Family 'Tension'

Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty; Nicola Peltz/Instagram Nicola Peltz shared a series of Instagram Stories on Wednesday, May 21 which showed her low-key picnic date with her husband, Brooklyn Beckham The actress shared "I love you so much baby," across the snap of Brooklyn and also added "thankful for the angels in my life," alongside a figure of an angel Nicola's posts come amid the ongoing rumors of tension between herself and Brooklyn and his parents, David and Victoria Beckham Nicola PeltzandBrooklyn Beckhamare enjoying a low-key picnic date amid ongoing rumors offamily tensionsbetween them and the wider Beckham family. Nicola, 30, shared a series of Instagram Stories on Wednesday, May 21, which showed her and her husband of three years' takeout, picnic date night. The pair enjoyed what appeared to be curry and rice dishes eaten from their plastic containers on the grass in their backyard. The actress tagged interior designerMichelle Finkelsteinin the pictures, so it appears she joined them too. "Best kind of night," Nicola wrote across one of the images while she added, "I love you so much, baby," across the image of Brooklyn lying on the grass wearing a baseball cap and a T-Shirt bearing the logo of hishot sauce brand, Cloud 23. Nicola Peltz/Instagram 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. An earlier Instagram Story post from her showed an angel figure alongside which the star had written, "Thankful for the angels in my life." The statement seems particularly relevant given the ongoing rumored tensions between Nicola and Brooklyn and his parents,DavidandVictoria Beckham. A source told PEOPLE earlier in May that there are"tensions between Brooklyn and Nicola and the family." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! And rumors of the family feud picked up steam after Brooklyn and Nicola, who live in Los Angeles, did not attendDavid's 50th birthday celebrationsin March. A source told PEOPLE that the couple was invited to the event, and it is not clear why they weren't present. Allen Berezovsky/Getty But, the first source added, "The relationship is definitely not beyond repair. They love and are always there for him. They're just hurt and disappointed that he's now playing no part in family life." Appearing to extend an olive branch, formerSpice GirlVictoria, 51,shared a photo on May 19 featuring all four of her children: sons Brooklyn, 26,Romeo, 22, andCruz, 20, plus daughterHarper, 13. In the snap, Brooklyn stood next to his sister with his arm around her shoulder. "We both love you all so much," Victoria wrote on top of herInstagram Storiesphoto, seemingly speaking for herself and husbandDavid Beckham, 50. Brooklyn and Nicolaexchanged vowsin 2022 and recently marked theirthird wedding anniversary. Karwai Tang/WireImage 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! There have been whispers of bad blood between the formerBates Motelactress and fashion designer for many years, but Nicola denied there was any "feud" during a March 2023 interview withCosmopolitan. "I've said this so many times:There's no feud," she said. "It's really weird, actually, whether it's my life or someone else's life or whatever, when you know the truth and then you read something totally wrong," she added. Read the original article onPeople

Nicola Peltz Says She’s ‘Thankful for the Angels in My Life’ As She Shares Image of Brooklyn Beckham amid Rumored Family ‘Tension’

Nicola Peltz Says She's 'Thankful for the Angels in My Life' As She Shares Image of Brooklyn Beckham amid Rumored Family 'Te...
Tom Cruise Reacts to Going Viral for the Way He Eats Popcorn at the MoviesNew Foto - Tom Cruise Reacts to Going Viral for the Way He Eats Popcorn at the Movies

Cindy Ord/Getty Tom Cruise has reacted to a viral video of himself eating popcorn The clip of the actor had the Internet talking, with fans commenting on the way Cruise eats the snack "They know when I'm going to these movies that I'm watching, I'm eating popcorn," Cruise said of the viral moment Tom Cruise's snacking habits are setting the Internet ablaze! The actor, 62, has gone viral for the way he eats popcorn, thanks to avideoposted by user @seifwtf on X. In the clip, Cruise could be seen frantically throwing popcorn into his mouth while at a screening ofMission: Impossible - Falloutat the BFI IMAX in London on May 11. Towards the end of the video, Cruise smiled as a voice in the background could be heard saying that he was being awarded theBFI Fellowship, before continuing to shovel the popcorn into his mouth. "This is how my dad eats popcorn," commented one, while another added, "Tom Cruise eating popcorn like he an uncle with a handful of peanuts." Disclaimer: There is a profanity used in the below video. "I'm eating that popcorn@DariusJButler" 😂😂@TomCruise#PMSLivehttps://t.co/hjKVYTz2lopic.twitter.com/EhJXqjWg2G — Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow)May 21, 2025 Cruise later addressed the viral video while appearing onThe Pat McAfee Showwith Darius Butler on Wednesday, May 21. "I've never seen anyone eat popcorn this like," Butler, 39, told theMission: Impossiblestar. "Are you actually eating popcorn or are you full of s--- right here, TC? I've got to know." "Man, I'm eating popcorn," Cruise said while laughing. "They know when I'm going to these movies that I'm watching, I'm eating popcorn." According toRolling Stone, at a screening of Cruise's latest movie —Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning— he asked the audience if they had popcorn and admitted, "I normally eat two big buckets myself during a movie." Meanwhile, anotherinteractionshared on X showed Cruise urging a fan to "go get some more" popcorn after noticing their bucket was empty. 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. Daniel Cardenas/Anadolu via Getty It's not the first time Cruise's love of popcorn has circulated. In a 2023promotional videoduring the press run for the seventhMission: Impossiblefilm,Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part 1, Cruise declared, "I love my popcorn. Movies. Popcorn," while eating from a large bucket of the snack on a leather sofa. "Four cities. Four screenings. We had so much fun at the first fan screenings for Mission: Impossible! Thank you to everyone who came out," Cruise captioned the video on X. Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoningis in theaters May 23. Read the original article onPeople

Tom Cruise Reacts to Going Viral for the Way He Eats Popcorn at the Movies

Tom Cruise Reacts to Going Viral for the Way He Eats Popcorn at the Movies Cindy Ord/Getty Tom Cruise has reacted to a viral video of himsel...
Lisa Rinna's "Melrose Place "costars stunned she had to pay for parties, clothes, hair, and makeup on "Real Housewives"

Tommy Garcia/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty; Courtesy Everett Collection Producing theReal Housewivesmay actually involve a lot of artifice, but there's one thing that can't be faked: the staggering amount of money spent on parties and glam. Real Housewives of Beverly HillsstarLisa Rinnashocked her fellowMelrose PlacealumsDaphne Zuniga,Laura Leighton, andCourtney Thorne-Smithon a recent episode of theirStill the Placepodcast when she revealed that it's the cast who foots the bill for those expenses, not production. "You said that each cast member has to pay for her own parties?" Thorne-Smith asked incredulously. Rinna confirmed: "And your own hair and makeup and wardrobe! Imagine that. That's the part that's the hardest, because we're used to being dressed," she said, gesturing to the prolific TV credentials of the assembled actresses. "They want your real life," Rinna said, repeating the explanation she said she was given during her nine-season stint onRHOBH. "Their take on it is: You should look how you look, because this is your life. So they want that. But I didn't love that part of it, because I spent all my money on hair and makeup and wardrobe. You know what I mean? You just spend it all." Leighton shared in Thorne-Smith's shock, reasoning thatBravo, the network behind the sprawlingHousewivesfranchise, must not want true pictures of their stars' lives, because "at home, you don't do your hair and makeup every single day, so you're in their world. So they should pay for how they want you to look in their world." Rinna agreed, saying of the explanation she was given, "I still don't buy it. I think that wardrobe — they're just cheap, and hair and makeup should be covered. I really do. That was the hardest thing for me." Courtesy Everett Collection Rinna joinedThe Real Housewives of Beverly Hillsin a guest role in season 4, and was promoted to main cast the following year, where she remained until sheresignedafter season 12. During that time, she threw and attended countless parties, had to pack numerous costume changes for international trips in far-flung locales like Dubai, China, and Italy, and cycled through a number of hair and makeup transformations — all on her own dime. Bravo exec andHousewiveswranglerAndy Cohenhas detailed thebudgetary breakdownin the past, explaining that while it's the network that pays for most vacations and group dinners, he did admit, "The women take the planning of the vacation really seriously, and so it's case by case, but we have paid for them." Leighton, Thorne-Smith, and Zuniga may have been surprised, but it's well known amongHousewivesfans that cast are expected to pick up the tab on their parties and glam — because many of those cast members have been open about that expectation. Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. "People always ask about the planes and the parties and stuff, and they do think everything is paid by production — even other cast members from other shows ask about that,"RHOBHO.G.Kyle Richardssaid at BravoConin 2022. "We are actually paying for those things ourselves." Real Housewives of Dallasstar Stephanie Hollmanconcurredin a 2024 TikTok, explaining, "Whenever you throw events — so usually you have to throw one big thing a year — you pay for that and those events can be very, very pricey because they're expected to be nice and look good on film and that will cost you." You can listen to Rinna's full conversation with Leighton, Thorne-Smith, and Zuniga onStill the Placeabove. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Lisa Rinna's “Melrose Place ”costars stunned she had to pay for parties, clothes, hair, and makeup on “Real Housewives”

Lisa Rinna's "Melrose Place "costars stunned she had to pay for parties, clothes, hair, and makeup on "Real Housewives...
Critics deride DOJ plans to drop police reform efforts as harmful political theaterNew Foto - Critics deride DOJ plans to drop police reform efforts as harmful political theater

Officials and experts blastedJustice Department plansto abandon police reform settlements as political theater that will undermine public safety and social justice efforts on America's streets while possibly setting the stage for future lawsuits against police departments nationwide. On Wednesday, the DOJ announced it would initiate dismissal of lawsuits against and consent-decree negotiations with police departmentsin MinneapolisandLouisvillein a move decried by community activists and cheered by some policing officials. However, consent decrees applied to law enforcement have largely helped communities in which they've been implemented, said Michael Lawlor, an associate professor of criminal justice at the University of New Haven in Connecticut. "Where these have been imposed, in almost every case the end result was better policing, less crime and fewer lawsuits against cities and towns," said Lawlor, a former Connecticut state representative. "The bottom line is these actually help, and not hurt, police departments." In law enforcement, the legally binding agreements, approved by all parties, typically stem from Justice Department investigations into widespread patterns of misconduct. The signed agreements must be approved by a federal judge to take effect. The DOJ on Wednesday said it would halt lawsuits and police reform settlement negotiations initiated during President Joe Biden's administration after two incidents in 2020 that drew worldwide attention and outrage, including themurder of George Floydby Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin and thekilling of Breonna Taylorby police executing a no-knock warrant in Louisville. In a May 21press release, the department said those efforts were based on what it described as erroneous associations of statistical disparities with intentional discrimination. "These sweeping consent decrees would have imposed years of micromanagement of local police departments by federal courts and expensive independent monitors, and potentially hundreds of millions of dollars of compliance costs, without a legally or factually adequate basis for doing so," the DOJ release said. The Justice Department also said it wouldclose investigations and retract findings of wrongdoingagainst police departments in Phoenix; Memphis, Tennessee; Trenton, New Jersey; Mount Vernon, New York; Oklahoma City; and the Louisiana State Police. Lawlor said the city of New Haven was subject to a consent decree when he served as a state representative after a federal investigation found the city's police department had a pattern of racially profiling Latinos. "The end result was a rebooted police department, more professionalized and with higher morale," Lawlor said. "Everybody's a winner — but it took a tragedy to force the issue." He called the announcement unfortunate but not surprising given the Trump administration's record on criminal justice thus far, even down to the timing of the announcement just days before the five-year anniversary of Floyd's murder. "I'm sure that's not a coincidence," Lawlor said. "As with a lot of things they're doing, it's performance art. But at the end of the day, everybody loses." Community leaders and activists reacted to the DOJ's plans with a mix of devastation and determination to carry on. In Memphis,it remained unclearwhether the Justice Department's moves might affect a $550 millioncivil lawsuitfiled against the city by the family of Tyre Nichols, a 29-year-old FedEx employee who died after being pepper-sprayed, punched and kicked by five Memphis police officers during a traffic stop. Three of those former officerswere acquittedearlier this month. "This decision is a slap in the face to the families of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Tyre Nichols, and to every community that has endured the trauma of police violence and the false promises of accountability," said Ben Crump, the noted civil rights attorney representing Nichols' family, in a press release. "These consent decrees and investigations were not symbolic gestures. They were lifelines for communities crying out for change, rooted in years of organizing, suffering and advocacy." Louisville Metro Councilwoman Shameka Parrish-Wright, a leader in the 2020 protests over Taylor's killing who unsuccessfully challenged Greenberg for the mayor's seat in 2022, expressed disappointment. "For me, everyone's fears just came true," shetold The Courier Journalin Louisville. "… The work will continue in other forms. The people of Louisville deserve accountability and transparency on every level." In a statement, U.S. Rep. Morgan McGarvey said he was "appalled and deeply disappointed by the Trump administration's decision to abandon Louisville's consent decree and undermine years of hard work by our community, law enforcement, and city officials." Chanelle Helm, an organizer for Black Lives Matter Louisville, said instituting systemic change is never easy. "Most of us never had faith that law enforcement at any level in Louisville, in Kentucky, in the U.S. was going to see justice and do right by Black folks," Helm said. "Largely, we always know that civil rights were never applied to us, and we would always have to fight for them. In this moment, we're just hoping people who have been terrorized by LMPD know that we got each other and that we're building spaces for each other to take time for ourselves. This is not the end." Lawlor, of the University of New Haven, said whether with or without federal participation, local communities can still move forward on their own and adopt whatever policies they want. "The problems have been identified," he said. "Communities can deal with them or not." Both Minneapolis and Louisville have indicated they intend to do so. In Minneapolis, Mayor Jacob Frey said the city will stand by the court-ordered reforms. Crime is down, he said, and police are already rolling out new use-of-force measures, improving community engagement and ensuring their work is transparent and accountable. Frey called the timing of the announcement "entirely predictable," charging the Trump administration of playing politics with the issue. Minneapolis, he said, is "serious about reform when the White House is not." "What this shows is that all Donald Trump really cares about is political theater," Frey said. Whether the federal judge decides to dismiss the case or not, he said, "I can speak to what we are doing. Here is the bottom line: We're doing it anyway." Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara echoed Frey's sentiments, saying the department has been through "an unbelievable amount of change and trauma" in the five years since Floyd's death, as have the city's residents. "I think they know things needed to change here," O'Hara said. "The men and women who remain here are deeply committed to getting this right. They are not about to turn their backs on their fellow officers or the residents of this community." "Consent decrees improve relations between police departments and communities and build necessary trust," said Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison. "Dismissing them does the opposite, and doing so comes as no surprise from a president who has torn up other federal consent decrees and has encouraged police to mistreat people they are sworn to protect. This dismissal, as predictable and shameful as it is, does not erase DOJ's historic finding that Minneapolis engaged in a pattern of racially discriminatory, unlawful, and unconstitutional policing." Ellison said the DOJ's move doesn't negate the progress made thus far, including an agreement between the city and the state's department of human rights, "which aligns closely with the DOJ's consent decree." "We will continue to improve policing and community relations in Minnesota without the federal government's help," he said. Likewise, in Louisville, Mayor Craig Greenberg said the city would continue reform efforts with or without a consent decree, including hiring an independent monitor to provide oversight. While the Justice Department's action was not the outcome the city had hoped for, he said, it was nonetheless the one it had planned for. "We as a city are committed to reform," Greenberg said. Ed Harness, the city's inspector general, said his office was preparing to probe several "misconduct areas" cited in the DOJ's 2023 investigation. Meanwhile, the ACLU of Kentucky said its efforts to bring about reform would continue, given what legal director Corey Shapiro called the Louisville police department's "systemic, long-term, and ongoing problem of unconstitutional policing and lack of transparency." "The consent decree was an opportunity to repair some of the broken trust between LMPD and the community,"Shapiro said. While city and police officials have indicated a commitment to following through on the terms of the agreement, he called on them to "begin the hard work of demonstrating, through transparency and accountability, that they will do what is right, even without the federal government's involvement." Despite the Justice Department's current direction, Lawlor said, the pendulum is bound to swing back the other way. "Whatever happens in the next few years will be paid for four or five years from now when there's a different perspective at DOJ," he said. Contributing: Lucas Finton, USA TODAY Network This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Critics say DOJ plans to drop police reform will harm cities

Critics deride DOJ plans to drop police reform efforts as harmful political theater

Critics deride DOJ plans to drop police reform efforts as harmful political theater Officials and experts blastedJustice Department plansto ...
Stain of martial law bid deters use of South Korea Yoon's officeNew Foto - Stain of martial law bid deters use of South Korea Yoon's office

By Jack Kim SEOUL (Reuters) -Just three years after South Korea's former President Yoon Suk Yeol moved the presidential office from the historic Blue House, his potential successors are vowing to move again, as they seek to escape the taint of his martial law attempt. Yoon, stripped of office on April 4 over the bid that triggered a snap election on June 3, never set foot in the Blue House, having promised to abolish the "imperial presidency" that he said the old executive compound had come to embody. His move to the defence ministry headquarters was estimated to have cost at least $40 million, with renovations still in progress when he was removed. Critics of the move have said the total cost could reach 1 trillion won ($721 million). Yoon's office denied that claim while saying indirect costs could take the total to 80 billion won. It has never released an official accounting. "It is where a military coup was plotted," Kim Min-seok, a Democratic Party lawmaker and a key ally of the presidential frontrunner Lee Jae-myung, said of Yoon's new office. Besides, it made little sense for the president to be in the same place as the military, he added. Both Lee and Kim Moon-soo, the candidate of the conservative People Power Party, say they would need to initially move into the office after the June 4 inauguration for lack of a secure alternative, but plan to move as soon as possible afterwards. Lee said his time spent there would be short, until the Blue House is ready for him to move back, before eventually taking the office permanently to Sejong, an administrative city hours away in the central region. Kim has also said he would set up an office in Sejong "soon". Yoon could not immediately be reached for comment. The proposal to move the seat of government and parliament to Sejong, 113 km (70 miles) from Seoul, is not new, and it is unclear if the latest plans will go further than previous attempts. In 2003, then-President Roh Moo-hyun pushed ahead with his campaign pledge to move the capital in a plan to ensure regional balance by reversing the concentration of political and economic activity in Seoul. But he was forced to scale back the plan a year later, when the Constitutional Court ruled the capital relocation plan unconstitutional. Government workers also proved reluctant to uproot their families from bustling Seoul. Moving to Sejong would require passing a special law, which may need further review by the Constitutional Court, a process that would take a "tremendous amount of time", said political commentator Kim Sang-jin. "It is a long-term project at best for the new government," said Kim, a former Blue House official. 'NATIONAL CHARACTER' After Yoon's fall, his Yongsan office has become a place to avoid for presidential hopefuls, as an emblem both of his abuse of power and the affinity for shamans many suspect the former first couple to have. Taking its name from a central crossroads at Yongsan in the capital, the office has become a symbol of a closed and domineering presidency that critics said deepened an already bitter social divide in an otherwise vibrant democracy. For nearly two months from May 2022, Yoon worked from a temporary space in the defence ministry headquarters until his new office there was ready, at times receiving intelligence briefings in a secure basement bunker. Some attributed the often haphazard decisions made there to advice from shamans the first couple was suspected to received, including even the office move to Yongsan. Yoon consistently denied that the couple had any involvement with a shaman. "Yongsan has become a symbol of bullheadedness and witchcraft," Hong Joon-pyo, who was a presidential candidate for Yoon's People Power Party, has said. "It is a question of national character." ($1=1,386.7500 won) (Reporting by Jack Kim; Editing by Josh Smith and Clarence Fernandez)

Stain of martial law bid deters use of South Korea Yoon's office

Stain of martial law bid deters use of South Korea Yoon's office By Jack Kim SEOUL (Reuters) -Just three years after South Korea's ...

 

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