Entertainment
Lilo Voice Actor, The Ring Villain Was 35

Daveigh Chase, who voiced Lilo in Disney’s original animated movie “Lilo & Stitch” and terrified audiences as Samara Morgan in “The Ring,” died Tuesday, according to TMZ. She was 35.
Chase’s boyfriend told TMZ, which broke the news of her death, that she died from meningitis and an infection in her blood after being hospitalized in Los Angeles for malnutrition earlier this month.
Chase got her big break by voicing Lilo Pelekai, the young Hawaiian protagonist in Disney’s “Lilo & Stitch,” in 2002. For her role, she won an Annie Award for outstanding voice acting in an animated feature production and went on to lend her voice to in several spinoffs, like “Stitch! The Movie” (2003), “Leroy & Stitch” (2006) and Disney Channel’s “Lilo & Stitch: The Series.”
She also voiced the lead character Chihiro Ogino in the English-dubbed version of Hayao Miyazaki’s hit Japanese animated movie “Spirited Away.”
In live-action, Chase had a terrifying turn as Samara Morgan, the creepy little girl who created the cursed video tape in the 2002 horror movie “The Ring.” Samara was also played by Kelly Stables and contortionist Bonnie Morgan, who famously climbed out of a TV in one of the most iconic scenes of the horror genre. Chase’s performance was also used as archival footage in the 2005 sequel “The Ring Two” and 2017’s “Rings.”
Chase also played Samantha Darko, the younger sister of Jake Gyllenhaal’s lead character in “Donnie Dark,” and she starred in the direct-to-video sequel, “S. Darko,” in 2009. In TV, she starred in HBO’s “Big Love” and voiced the lead character in PBS Kids’ “Betsy’s Kindergarten Adventures.” Her last acting roles came in 2016.
Entertainment
Daveigh Chase, who starred in ‘Lilo & Stitch’ and ‘The Ring,’ dies at 35
Daveigh Chase, a former child actor known for voicing Lilo in Disney’s animated Lilo & Stitch and playing Samara in The Ring, has died. She was 35.
“Daveigh was the sweetest woman on the planet and this is a huge loss to all of us,” John Ryan Jr., a representative for Chase, told Yahoo. “Daveigh was one of my best friends for the last 17 years and we’ve managed her for over a decade. We were in the middle of a documentary about her during this tragic passing.”
TMZ was first to report Chase’s death. Her boyfriend, Roy Hernandez, told TMZ that she died on Tuesday after battling both meningitis and an infection in her blood. He said it had led to septic shock. Hernandez told the outlet that she was hospitalized for malnutrition earlier in June.
“She was the greatest. She loved cats. She worked with cat rescues with us. She was very to herself, ” Ryan told the BBC. “She was not very Hollywood,” he said. “She’d rather eat at Bob’s Big Boy and go home with the cats. She loved acting but wasn’t into the fame scene.
Chase began her Hollywood career in a 1998 episode of Sabrina the Teenage Witch. Over the years, she’s had guest appearances on numerous TV shows, including CSI, Cold Case and Without a Trace. In 2008, she voiced the main character of Betsy on Betsy’s Kindergarten Adventures, a preschool series. Her longest-running role was that of Rhonda, a child bride, in the TV series Big Love, which ran from 2006 to 2011.
But it was perhaps her film roles that she’s most known for. Chase played the younger sister Samantha, opposite Jake Gyllenhaal’s character, in the 2001 cult film Donnie Darko. She later reprised the role in 2009’s S. Darko, a direct-to-video sequel.
In 2002, Chase appeared as the ghostly Samara Morgan in The Ring. That same year, she voiced Chihiro Ogino in the English dub of Spirited Away, from acclaimed Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki. She lent her voice again to Lilo in Disney’s animated Hawaiian adventure Lilo & Stitch, which earned her an Annie Award the following year for Best Voice Acting in an Animated Feature Production.
“I just want to make something that I love and people will respect,” Chase told Interview magazine in 2009. “I want to do things that will change someone’s life, not something they’ll forget about tomorrow.”
In 2016, she appeared opposite Rory Culkin and Nikki Reed in the independent horror movie Jack Goes Home. Her final acting role was in the thriller American Romance that same year.
Chase was arrested on a misdemeanor drug possession charge in Los Angeles in 2018. The year prior, she was arrested as a passenger in a stolen BMW during a traffic stop, resulting in a felony booking for riding in a vehicle without the owner’s consent.
Entertainment
Ms. Juicy Gets Emotional With Cops, Shouts ‘I’m Going to Jail?’ Before Arrest
Ms. Juicy was frightened after police told her she was going to be arrested and taken to jail … and her emotional reaction is all on video.
In the police bodycam footage from the “Little Woman: Atlanta” star’s April 18 arrest in Winder, Georgia, she chats with the cops who pulled her over … and when they tell her she’s being placed under arrest, she replies … “I’m going to jail? Woo.”
Ms. Juicy — whose real name is Shirlene King-Pearson — was booked on charges of driving on a suspended license and no proof of insurance.
During her chat with cops, Ms. Juicy told officers she was upset because she believed the issues with her license had been previously resolved in court.
She said she was warned about a warrant via a letter in the mail and wondered aloud … “How the hell did I have a warrant?” Ms. Juicy also said she truly believed her license was valid.
During her interaction with cops, Ms. Juicy talked to a friend on the phone … who was going to pick up her car from where she was arrested.
She told the friend … “I don’t want nobody to see me. If they see me, they gonna take photos.”
The reality star began tearing up on the call … and that’s when cops told her she was being arrested.
Entertainment
Netflix’s new Harlan Coben show is ludicrous
Last year, there was plenty of chatter about Netflix’s alleged directive for writers and showrunners to dumb down stories, lest anything too complex or thought-provoking distract viewers from spending time on their phone while the show plays, or worse, make them stop binge-watching altogether. In other words, not all (of course) but enough of the streamer’s originals seem curated for background viewing—surface-level thrillers (The Waterfront, Untamed, His & Hers) with plot points frequently repeated so you don’t miss anything, shockingly silly twists, and subpar work from talented actors who help maintain a facade of prestige. The latest to join this slate is I Will Find You, which, based on the title alone, indicates how plainly it wants to spell everything out for viewers.
The eight-episode series is Netflix’s 13th (!) adaptation of a Harlan Coben novel; evidently, there’s an appetite to see Coben’s engaging airport reads translated to the screen, even if it comes at the risk of dull storytelling. At least I Will Find You‘s creator, Robert Hull (Quantum Leap), brings a slew of cool stars aboard this mostly sinking ship: The ensemble features Sam Worthington, Britt Lower, Milo Ventimiglia, Madeleine Stowe, Chi McBride, and Logan Browning. It’s just too bad that each of them is saddled with a one-dimensional character who speaks in dialogue that mostly doubles as exposition dumps.
Everything about I Will Find You comes across as doing the bare minimum, including the acting, direction, and focus on any interpersonal relationships between characters, including the ones who are meant to be the show’s driving force. None more so than protagonist David Burroughs (Worthington) and his former sister-in-law, Rachel Mills (Lower), who team up to hunt for David’s presumed-dead son and evade the feds on their tail, all while David’s ex-wife/Rachel’s sister, Cheryl (Erin Richards), is mostly kept in the dark. Unfortunately, everyone’s phoning it in here, and the leads’ stiff performances just detract further from the plot’s urgency.
I Will Find You opens with David pointedly narrating that for the past five years, he’s been wrongfully incarcerated in a Maine prison for the murder of his three-year-old son, Matthew. When Rachel drops in one day with proof that his kid is actually alive and out there somewhere, they make it their mission to find both the truth and Matthew. David’s able to break out and head home to Boston because the prison’s warden (Peter Outerbridge) is a former cop who once worked closely with David’s dad (Hugh Thompson). David’s best friend, Adam (Jonathan Tucker), is also a police officer who helps him, in case you were wondering if the circumstances of the protagonist’s escape were getting a little too convenient.
Such contrived developments—not coherent, compelling narratives—push the show’s momentum forward, including how freewheelingly Rachel, a former Boston Globe investigative journalist, uses her contacts or gets stories published. She reaches out to her extremely wealthy ex-boyfriend, Hayden Payne (Ventimiglia), whose involvement only amps up I Will Find You‘s total suspension of logic. Hayden is hardly a step above a plot device; someone who lets David and Rachel crash at his penthouse and whose wealth is like a literal get-out-of-jail-free card. Any build-up required to sell Hayden’s relationship with Rachel is nonexistent, and yet, the show relies heavily on their bond.
I Will Find You—in a wannabe Mare Of Easttown way—hints at an emotional throughline about the lengths parents go to and sacrifices they make for their children, but this thesis is inconsistent and explored only on a surface level. Some of that weight is well carried by—mild spoiler alert—the father-daughter FBI task force duo hunting for David and Rachel. While looking into them and the case, agents Sarah Greer (Browning) and Max Williams (McBride) look back on their own relationship over the years, which lends I Will Find You some heft.
But the show’s suspense gradually spins totally out of control. Shady figures like a vengeful, semi-retired mob boss (played by Clancy Brown) and a calculating heiress (Stowe) emerge as underdeveloped suspects for David and Rachel to chase across the Eastern Seaboard. And once Cheryl eventually becomes a part of the mission, the twists go from ridiculous to downright offensive, with hardly any commitment to unpacking the implications of why David and his family were targeted in the first place. Somehow, the show takes itself too seriously and not seriously enough, leaving it an inorganic mess that not even its cast can elevate. At least it won’t distract much from the doomscrolling you’re doing while the episodes play.
Saloni Gajjar is The A.V. Club‘s TV critic.
I Will Find You premieres June 18 on Netflix.
Entertainment
Harry and Meghan to visit UK with family for the first time in 4 years, British media reports
Britain’s Prince Harry and his family will return to the United Kingdom for a visit next month, British media reported Wednesday.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are expected to be accompanied by their two children, Archie, seven, and Lilibet, five, in what would be their first trip to the UK as a family in four years, according to the BBC, the Telegraph and ITV News.
Harry and his wife Meghan, who live in California, left the UK for North America in 2020 after stepping back from royal life, and have since been involved in a long-running, public falling out with his family.
The Sussexes cited a toxic cocktail of tabloid intrusion, entrenched racism in British institutions, online abuse and complex family dynamics, alongside a desire for financial independence as reasons for leaving the UK, in televised interviews and a memoir.
In the years since, Harry, 41, has made several short trips back to the UK, most notably attending the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022 and his father King Charles III’s coronation in 2023.
Harry returned to England in September last year when he reunited with his father –– their first face-to-face meeting in 19 months. His last visit to the country was January this year, when he attended court as part of a lawsuit he and others have brought against the publisher of the Daily Mail over allegations of unlawful information gathering.
Harry has previously shared his desire to reconcile with his family, and the meeting triggered speculation the royal family’s rift might be abating.
It is not yet known whether the King will meet with his grandchildren during the reported visit next month. They last saw each other in person in 2022, when the Sussex family returned to the UK for the late Queen’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations.
Their visit coincides with an event marking one year to the start of the Invictus Games, the biennial sporting competition Harry founded more than a decade ago.
Entertainment
‘Heated Rivalry’ Musical, Honorary Awards For Will Ferrell & Lisa Kudrow & All The Winners Of The Night
The 2026 Las Culturistas Culture Awards, hosted by Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers, celebrated the best in pop culture.
It was a jam-packed two-hour telecast of the award ceremony in its second year on Bravo.
Yang and Rogers started off the night with a nod to Heated Rivalry, breaking out into song in their hockey gear. Hunting Wives stars Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman also joined the duo to sing Tatu’s “All the Things She Said,” which was needle dropped in the Canadian series.
In their opening monologue, Yang and Rogers mentioned the Summer House scandal, which rocked the Bravoverse. Later that night, Ciara Miller won the Allison Williams Cool Girl Award and delivered a speech that resonated with fans.
“Thank you so much. If by ‘cool’ you mean, ‘Utterly disappointed by everybody around me,’ yes, I am so f**king cool,” she said. “Obviously, this year has been a little rough, but you know what they say – the best revenge is winning the Allison Williams Cool Girl Award.”
She added, “And booking Love Island USA. And being in Shaboozey’s music video. And also being a registered nurse. And a model. So I’m going to put this in the bathroom of my new house.”
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Will Ferrell was honored with the Titan of Culture award and gave audiences advice to “be proud of yourself,” adding, “I think we should all celebrate our pride.”
“I have pride about being an actor and a filmmaker, but I also have pride about being a husband to a wife,” the SNL alum said. “I guess what I’m saying is, I’m proud to be straight. God, it feels good to finally say that.”
Ferrell continued his funny bit, saying, “The second, more important thing after pride is to be happy, be joyful, be gay. Have gay pride! Starting this month, I hereby declare June — Pride Month!”
RELATED: Jackie Tohn & Timothy Simons On ‘Nobody Wants This’ Filming In LA & Why It’s So Important: “The Infrastructure Already Exists”
Lisa Kudrow received the Lifetime of Culture honor, with Ben Platt taking the stage for a rendition of “Smelly Cat,” the song Kudrow’s Phoebe Buffay sang on Friends.
“Thank you so much. Winning this Lifetime Culture award is everything to me,” Kudrow said after receiving her trophy from her The Comeback co-star Malin Akerman. “I know what got me here tonight, it’s a career of meticulous planning to impress Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang.”
Kudrow joked that it was Romy & Michele that “was going to be enough” to impress Rogers and Yang “when they were in grade school.”
“When I auditioned for Friends in 1994, I thought, ‘This is the show I should do cause you know who’s going to love it? Four-year-old Matt and not-yet-born Bown!’ Kudrow said, eliciting laughs from the audience. “All culminating in, not a coincidence, the third season of The Comeback. I knew Matt and Bowen would have to give me this award this year. So, thank you, gentleman, for playing right into my hands. And a bigger thanks to me, Lisa, for having my priorities straight.”
RELATED: Bravo Teases ‘The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Roaring 20th’ With First Look Video
Performances of the night included Megan Stalter performing “Prettiest Girl in America,” Rachel Zegler, Pikachu, and Mandy Moore.
List of All the Winners Televised At the 2026 Las Culturistas Culture Awards
Artist of the Millennium: RuPaul
Allison Williams Cool Girl Award: Ciara Miller of Summer House
The All Good Either Way Award for Bisexuality In Media: Hannah Einbinder of Hacks
Titan of Culture: Will Ferrell
Best Vibe, Hands Down: Mia Calabrese of Summer House
Best Part of “Where Is My Husband!” Song: Sarah Sherman and Aidy Bryant
Eva Longoria Award for Tiny Woman, Huge Impact: That Girl From Duolingo (The Owl)
Shhh Don’t Repeat This Award For Rumor We Are Making Up: Kamala Oh, Mary!
Most Beautiful Name for a Daughter You Haven’t Even Thought of Yet: Ricochet
Jaws Award for Water Diva: Me, When I Was Young, They Used To Call Me a Fish At the Beach!
Hilary Duff Award for Millennial Excellence: Indoor Fern
Best New Artist: Stacey Rusch of The Real Housewives of Potomac
Lifetime of Culture: Lisa Kudrow
Most Surprising Snack: Eric Nam
30 under 30: Pikachu
Most Iconic Building or Structure: The Barclays Center, AKA Ellie the Elephant’s House
Tokyo Disneysea Land of Great Beauty Award: Roku City
Yess!!! Award for Girl We Learned About This Year (And Loved): Olandria of Love Island USA
Scariest Moment in History: Hereditary Lil’ Diva Head Come Off
Eternal Lesbian of the Pop Culture Mind: Wanda Sykes
The Shrek Award for Top Thing We Want to Do to That Green Guy: Double-Sided Dildo
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