Connect with us

Entertainment

Jen Affleck Announces She’s Pregnant with 4th Kid

Jen Affleck’s family’s getting a little bigger, and her belly is too … she’s pregnant with her fourth child!
The ‘Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ star announced the news in a series of photos she shared to social media Thursday … and the snaps have a vintage, classic look to them.
Waiting for your permission to load the Instagram Media.
Jen’s wearing a flowing white dress in the shots and holding her baby bump … absolutely glowing as she flashes a flawless grin to the camera.
She captioned her post, “Chapter Four. 🤍”
Jen and her husband Zac have been busy building their family over the last few years … they also share a daughter, Nora, who turns 5 in the fall and a son Lucas who will turn 3 next month. In July 2025, they announced the birth of their youngest, Penelope.
Waiting for your permission to load TikTok Post.
Fans have been speculating online in recent months that the two were going through marital issues … especially after Jen posted a tearful TikTok in which she talked about her “next chapter” and wasn’t wearing a wedding ring.

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Daughter Of Director William Wyler Found Dead With Husband In Running Car

Judith Sheldon, daughter of the legendary Hollywood director William Wyler, was found dead along with her husband Wylie Sheldon in a parked and still-running car on the side of Interstate 5, north of Redding, California, on Monday, June 15.
According to media reports, the couple, longtime patrons of San Francisco’s film and arts scenes, were driving to Ashland, Oregon, to attend the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. The 84-year-old Judith and 86-year-old Wylie, a prominent lawyer, had failed to meet up with friends at the festival, as planned. The friends, according to The New York Times, later learned that the California Highway Patrol had found the couple at 5:46 p.m. Monday inside the parked Jeep Compass, with Judith in the driver seat and Wylie on the passanger side. Both were deceased.
The Shasta County (California) Sheriff’s Office indicated to The New York Times that extreme heat conditions might have contributed to the couple’s deaths. A spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office tells Deadline that postmortem examinations are in the process of being scheduled.
News reports indicate that the Jeep’s fan was on high but the air conditioning was not working, indicating that the fan might have been blowing hot air. No water or other liquids were found in the vehicle.
Investigators do not suspect foul play, and the vehicle, which had plenty of gas, showed no signs of mechanical failure.
One of the friends who had been waiting for the couple in Oregon told The Times, “They didn’t crash. They stopped. They both just died there. The entire thing is so bizarre. We’re still in a state of shock.”
The couple, residents of San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood, were well known in the city’s arts communities: Judith was a chairman of the board of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, and were patrons of the San Francisco Opera and San Francisco Performances.
Born May 21, 1942, in Los Angeles, Judith, credited as Judy Wyler, appeared in at least two of her famous father’s most celebrated films: In 1946 she appeared in an uncredited role in a department store scene of The Best Years Of Our Lives, and in 1953 she appeared, again uncredited, in Roman Holiday. (In that film, she and her sister Catherine play schoolgirls at the Trevi Fountain, where the character played by star Gregory Peck steals their camera.)
Judith had other acting roles as a young adult, appearing in such TV shows as The Buccaneers and The Errol Flynn Theatre.
While her mother, actor Margaret Tallichet, starred in the 1940 noir film Stranger on the Third Floor and the 1941 comedy It Started With Eve, it was Judith’s father who secured the family’s place as Hollywood royalty. Universally considered one of Hollywood’s all-time great directors, the three-time Oscar winner William Wyler directed such classics Mrs. Miniver (1942), The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), Ben-Hur (1959), Dodsworth (1936), Wuthering Heights (1939), The Letter (1940), The Little Foxes (1941), The Heiress (1949), Roman Holiday (1953) Friendly Persuasion (1956) and Funny Girl (1968), among many others. He died in 1981.
The Sheldons had two sons, but complete information on survivors was not immediately available.

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Anne Hathaway pregnant with 3rd child, reveals news in Instagram video

Anne Hathaway is pregnant with her third child, a representative for the actress confirmed to ABC News on Friday.
“The Devil Wears Prada 2” star, 43, revealed the news Friday morning in a video posted on her Instagram.
In the video, Hathaway steps into frame wearing a long, flowy white skirt set with her arms folded across her midsection before dropping them to the side to reveal her pregnancy with a smile.
“Baby, I’m yours,” Hathaway wrote in the caption of the video, set to the 1965 song of the same name by Barbara Lewis.
Hathaway’s Instagram post amassed more than 800,000 likes in just over 30 minutes, and the comments section was immediately flooded with congratulatory messages and well-wishes from friends and fans alike.
Hathaway has two other children with husband Adam Shulman — sons Jonathan Shulman, 10, and Jack Shulman, 6.
Hathaway and Shulman have been married since 2012.

Continue Reading

Entertainment

The Real Reason Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce Allegedly Canceled Wedding Plans After Report She Cut Out a Guest Who ‘Can’t Be Trusted’

After months of speculation about Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding, reports suggest that their plans have been canceled.
According to a June 18 report from TMZ, the power couple originally planned to exchange vows in Rhode Island on Saturday, June 13. However, they reportedly switched gears after news of the venue leaked: “We’re told the couple bailed after word got out about the venue.”
More from StyleCaster
Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce’s Baby Plans Revealed Less Than a Month Before Wedding-‘Family Life in Mind’
Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce’s Wedding Plans Reportedly Include 1 Big Surprise-‘Once-in-a-Lifetime Experience’
Early reports indicated that Swift and Kelce were set to tie the knot at the Ocean House resort, a five-star hotel near Taylor’s Rhode Island home, known as “High Watch.” But due to the leaks, the singer and Kansas City Chiefs player are now reportedly planning to host their wedding at New York City’s iconic Madison Square Garden on Friday, July 3.
But what about the actual ceremony? “It’s looking increasingly likely the nuptials will not take place at the Garden, but somewhere more intimate,” TMZ claimed.
Related: Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce Reportedly Facing ‘Major Drama’ After She Snubbed 3 A-List Friends From Wedding—’It’s Been a Monstrous Headache’
This follows a report from Star, which claimed the ongoing changes in “venues and dates” have proven to be a “monstrous headache” for Swift and Kelce. The couple is even now requiring all guests—including close family and friends—to sign strict, iron-clad NDAs.
It’s understandable that this condition extends to relatives, seeing as insiders previously told the Daily Mail that Swift has kept details about the “really, really, big” wedding from her future father-in-law, Ed Kelce, because he “can’t be trusted” to keep a secret.
“He’s sort of like a loose cannon,” one source explained. “Nobody knows what he’s going to say, so it’s kind of a controversial situation.”
The insider then pointed out that Ed “already gave out a lot of information about the engagement,” including when, where, and how his famous athlete son proposed to Swift.
Best of StyleCaster
The 26 Best Romantic Comedies to Watch if You Want to Know What Love Feels Like
These ‘Bachelor’ Secrets & Rules Prove What Happens Behind the Scenes Is So Much Juicier
BTS’s 7 Members Were Discovered in the Most Unconventional Ways

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Benson Boone and Alix Earle Seen Leaving Cozy Dinner Together

Benson Boone and Alix Earle are sparking romance rumors after the two were spotted leaving an apparent dinner date.
The pair appeared comfortable in each other’s company as they left Craig’s in West Hollywood Thursday night and headed to Benson’s car. Benson even opened the passenger-side door for Alix before the two drove off together.
Our photog caught up with them outside and asked Benson point-blank if he and Alix are dating … and we’ll let you interpret his response.
Alix stayed mum when asked whether she would be Benson’s plus one to Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding celebration at Madison Square Garden on July 3 in New York City. As we first reported … Benson is expected to attend.
We broke the story … Benson personally tapped Alix to appear in his latest music video for his new song, “The Time of My Life,” where we’re told she’ll play a significant role.
Waiting for your permission to load TikTok Post.
Folks who were dining at Craig’s tell TMZ … the two sat close together in a booth in the main dining room. We’re told they were overheard discussing how difficult dating can be these days.
Benson and Alix have been friendly since meeting at last year’s American Music Awards, and fans recently noticed Benson featuring a Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue starring Alix in one of his TikToks.

Continue Reading

Entertainment

New movies to watch this weekend: See ‘Toy Story 5’ in theaters, rent ‘Pressure,’ stream ‘Project Hail Mary’ on MGM+

Welcome to Trust Me, I Watch Everything, a weekly guide to all the new movies out each Friday and where to find them. This week’s buzziest release is Toy Story 5, the latest entry in the iconic 31-year-old Disney-Pixar franchise.
If you’d rather have a movie night at home, you can rent or buy Pressure, the star-studded WWII D-Day movie that elicits tension about a weather forecast.
And on streaming services you’re likely already paying for, the Ryan Gosling sci-fi vehicle Project Hail Mary, one of the year’s biggest box-office hits, is coming to MGM+.
Intrigued? Let’s get into it!
What to watch in theaters
Movies newly available to rent or buy
Movies newly available on streaming services you may already have
🎥 What to watch in theaters
The biggest release: Toy Story 5
Why you should see it: Toy Story 5 is here and set to become the biggest movie of the summer at the box office, 31 years after the original introduced the concept of a feature-length, entirely computer-animated movie to the big screen. It continues the storied franchise’s tradition of laughs, tears and, frankly, just being damn good movies that both kids and adults can enjoy.
When Bonnie receives a Lilypad tablet as a gift and becomes obsessed, Buzz, Woody, Jessie and the rest of the gang have to go head-to-head with the all-new threat to playtime.
What’s most impressive here is the way the movie understands the multi-pronged threat that technology poses to children: how it changes the very nature of “play” to the point where playing with toys is discouraged, and why using a tablet to communicate with your classmates as the only way to connect, especially for shy kids, can be a big disadvantage.
It took becoming a parent for me to realize that every single one of these movies is, quite obviously, about parenting. In case that wasn’t made clear enough, there’s a shot toward the end of the film that makes it fact, with Bonnie’s parents and Buzz and Woody positioned so we’re watching both sets of “parents” react.
It may not reach the highs of the original trilogy, but it has a renewed sense of purpose that wasn’t quite present in the fourth entry. By focusing on the very real threats children face from our societal push toward “smart” toys and the proliferation of iPads and tablets, Toy Story 5 more than justifies its existence, even if the messaging stops short of going full “analog is better, and tech is inherently bad for children’s development.” Reminding children that nothing can replace face-to-face contact, and that simply hanging out, playing, and using your imagination is the best way to form community, is an important lesson, particularly relevant today. But there is some cognitive dissonance required when the movie tries to have its cake and eat it too about tech’s invasion into our lives — they have to sell Lilypad, after all.
What other critics are saying: It’s getting mostly positive reviews! Nick Schager at the Daily Beast writes: “A cute and funny sequel that treads well-worn territory and yet manages to elicit its fair share of waterworks, it’s not the series’ best but, in most respects, is still better than the rest.” TheWrap’s William Bibbiani, meanwhile, calls it “enjoyable but repetitive.”
How to watch: Toy Story 5 is now playing in theaters nationwide.
Get tickets
The Death of Robin Hood: The latest film from Michael Sarnoski, the writer/director of the beloved Nicolas Cage film Pig, provides his own take on the iconic character. Grappling with his violent past, Robin Hood (Hugh Jackman) finds himself gravely injured after a battle that he thought would be his last. He soon gets a chance at salvation when he meets a mysterious woman and a young girl. I’m technically on vacation and missed this one, but it’s getting strong reviews, with critics calling it both gratuitously violent and thoughtful.
Get tickets
💸 Movies newly available to rent or buy
The biggest release: Pressure
Why you should consider it: Pressure will either sound fascinating to you, or incredibly boring, and however you feel about it going in will, in fact, determine what you think of it.
In the tense 72 hours before D-Day, and with the fate of the free world hanging in the balance, the film follows General Dwight D. Eisenhower (Brendan Fraser) and Captain James Stagg (Andrew Scott) as they face an impossible choice — launch the largest and most dangerous seaborne invasion in history or risk losing the war altogether.
Essentially, it’s an entire movie relying on the tension of a weather forecast. It’s a movie tailor-made for the stereotypical “dad” viewer, who stand a little too close to the TV and watch movies with their hands on their hips, rapt. It combines two undeniably “dad” interests — World War II and the weather — and attempts to deliver a rousing spectacle.
Despite a terrific lead performance from Scott — and a hammy big one from Brendan Fraser — the movie is simply boring. It’s a lot of people talking about how sure or unsure they are about the weather, and the tension isn’t quite there, given that we all know the actual day D-Day happened. It’s one of the most famous dates on the calendar!
Pressure may satisfy those who think a movie about a WWII-era weather forecast sounds like riveting entertainment, but the rest of us might find it more suitable for background fodder during a nap.
What other critics are saying: Reviews are more mixed. AP’s Jocelyn Noveck writes: “Fraser’s Eisenhower is physically imposing and stubborn too. … But he’s frankly less interesting than Scott’s multifaceted Stagg, a character and performance that elevates an otherwise efficient, well-made war movie into something more intriguing.” IndieWire’s Alison Foreman writes: “There are hints of a far better movie peeking out from [director Anthony] Maras’s dull weather drama, and the Australian director nearly finds it on numerous occasions.”
How to watch: Pressure is now available to rent or buy on Apple TV, Prime Video and other VOD platforms.
Rent or buy
But that’s not all…
Busboys: Extremely successful podcaster Theo Von joins up with comedian/actor David Spade in this independent film that is entirely written, produced and self-financed by its two stars, who put up $3 million of their own money. A pair of clueless friends see becoming waiters as the answer to all their problems, and hijinks ensue. It wasn’t screened for critics in advance, but I’ll be catching up with it soon! Rent or buy.
Deep Water: Renny Harlin bounces back from his awful trilogy of Strangers sequels with this shark attack/plane crash double disaster flick. A group of international passengers on a flight from Los Angeles to Shanghai is forced to make an emergency landing in shark-infested waters. The terrified group must work together and overcome their differences if they hope to escape their sinking plane and the frenzy of sharks drawn to the wreckage. The plane crash sequence itself is the highlight, arguably one of the most and most drawn-out crash sequences I’ve ever seen, but once they’re fending off sharks, the movie’s budgetary constraints start to show. Aaron Eckhart’s hammy performance will either work for you, or it won’t.Rent or buy.
📺 Movies newly available on streaming services you may already have
The biggest release: Project Hail Mary
Why you should consider it: Ryan Gosling and his ample reserve of charming movie-star energy help power the extremely familiar Project Hail Mary to recommendable status, despite some elements that occasionally get in the way.
Science teacher Ryland Grace (Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light-years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: to solve the riddle of the mysterious substance that is causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox ideas to save everything on Earth from extinction. But an unexpected friendship may mean he doesn’t have to do it alone.
If it sounds like you’ve seen this all before, that’s because Project Hail Mary is essentially a mash-up of several popular works of science fiction, including the decade-old Matt Damon flick The Martian, which was based on a book written by Andy Weir, the same guy who wrote the bestseller on which Project Hail Mary is based.
Gosling does commendable work throughout, carrying the movie on his back so thoroughly that I hope he checked in with a chiropractor after filming. It’s essentially a one-man show, and he does an excellent job of guiding the audience through it all. By the time a spider-like rock creature is introduced, he plays off his scene-partner puppet with gusto. Sandra Hüller of Anatomy of a Fall fame is also great in her scenes on Earth as the no-nonsense head of the expedition.
The movie pays lip service to classic sci-fi films like Close Encounters of the Third Kind while simultaneously stealing the plot of Christopher Nolan’s masterpiece Interstellar. It ultimately morphs into an E.T.-style story about a human befriending an alien creature and discovering we’re not all that different. There’s also a spacewalk scene that reminded me of Gravity. No, you’re not crazy to reference Armageddon or even Cast Away.
In addition to its plot similarities to The Martian, Project Hail Mary also emulates that film’s Obama-era hopecore ideal that if all the smartest people in the world put aside their differences and work together, nothing is impossible. Come to think of it, that sounds a lot like Arrival too. Also, am I the only person who remembers that bad Netflix movie Spaceman, starring Adam Sandler, from a few years ago? How did we end up with two movies about a guy talking to a spider-like creature in outer space?! That movie must’ve ripped off this book!
Anyway, as the movie goes on and on (and on and on, it ends about 15 times), it’s as if you’re watching the filmmakers attempt to convince themselves as well as the audience that the movie is an important work of sci-fi grandeur on the level of classics like 2001: A Space Odyssey, which it’s somehow longer than.
Filmmakers Phil Lord and Chris Miller have good reason to want to prove themselves — they became in-demand after the popularity of their 21 Jump Street reboot and The Lego Movie, but were famously fired mid-movie while making Disney’s Han Solo Star Wars spinoff before beloved director Ron Howard took over.
On a technical level, the movie looks great; I was especially taken with the alien creature’s ship. It’s the storytelling that falters. The movie aims to please so much that it undercuts any potential drama; it’s preordained that everything will work out fine. It’s so desperate to entertain that it constantly breaks the tension with jokes, which gets irritating, even if Gosling is good at selling it.
Part of the problem here is the flashback structure, which kills momentum by doubling back to fill us in on the story, which isn’t all that compelling because we’ve all seen the movies it’s ripping off. It is also a reminder of the incongruity between Gosling’s character as presented in space and as portrayed on Earth, where he’s a meek science teacher.
Despite the movie constantly joking about his lack of space captain abilities, he’s able to fly the ship when the movie needs him to, and there’s little point in spending so much time with his character refusing the mission. I’ve seen the future — he’s already there!
In short, Project Hail Mary mostly delivers as an IMAX-sized spectacle, anchored by Gosling’s terrific work, despite the movie’s increasingly derivative nature and protracted finale. And now you can find out how it plays at home on your television.
What other critics are saying: It’s well-reviewed, which is part of why I felt I had to level-set expectations. There’s something so try-hard about it to me! David Fear at Rolling Stone writes: “Gosling can actually sell us on an everyman thrust into extraordinary circumstances while still beguiling us with old-school snap, crackle, and pop.” Mashable’s Kristy Puchko writes: “Imagine The Martian meets Half Nelson meets E.T., and you’ll get some idea of the mirthful mash-up that is Project Hail Mary.”
How to watch: Project Hail Mary is now streaming on MGM+.
Watch on MGM+
Another great option: Voicemails for Isabelle
Why you should watch it: A romantic-comedy tearjerker that revolves around a character’s recently deceased sister shouldn’t work, but Voicemails for Isabelle absolutely does, thanks to strong performances and smart, clever utilization of rom-com tropes.
A young woman’s hilariously confessional voicemails to her late sister are unknowingly redirected to a stranger, who begins to fall in love from afar. It plays like a modern update of You’ve Got Mail with a tragic twist, yet it remains charming and funny despite the heaviness.
Zoey Deutch is wonderful, as always, in the lead role, and Nick Robinson does a great job navigating the complexities of the situation his character finds himself in. It’s one of those movies that reminds you that formulaic material can be a comfort, if executed properly.
Voicemails for Isabelle will make you laugh, cry and swoon over a romance that, in lesser hands, could’ve come off incredibly cheesy. Writer/director Leah McKendrick, whose previous feature, Scrambled, is also worth a look, proves herself an exciting new voice to keep an eye on.
What other critics are saying: It’s getting solid reviews. AV Club’s Caroline Siede calls it “the best Netflix dramedy in years.” William Bibbiani at TheWrap was a bit more restrained: “The enthusiasm comes across, and it’s infectious even when the movie doesn’t quite work. Which is most of the time.”
How to watch: Voicemails for Isabelle is now streaming on Netflix.
Watch on Netflix
But that’s not all…
How to Make a Killing: This remake of the 1949 black comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets stars Glen Powell as a blue-collar man disowned at birth by his obscenely wealthy family who will stop at nothing to reclaim his inheritance, no matter how many relatives stand in his way. Margaret Qualley steals the show as the sexy, menacing femme fatale; anytime she’s onscreen, the movie is electric. When she’s not, it’s fairly limp, and the energy shift to lame broad-caricature comedy about rich failsons that Powell ends up taking out one by one is always disappointing. In this case, you’re better off watching the original, in which Alec Guinness portrays all the victims, a far more clever take on the aristocracy’s borderline inbred nature. Now streaming on HBO Max.
Never Change: If you enjoy comedy with several jokes a minute and a lot of very funny people, this very silly movie might be for you. In 2008, the graduating class of North Meadows High School had their senior year cut short by a devastating tornado. Now in their mid-30s, they’re being forced to return home and finish high school once and for all. It’s got a Wet Hot American Summer-style penchant for silliness and a premise ripe for taking advantage of that. It won’t be for everyone, but those who find it funny will find it very, very funny. Now streaming on Hulu.
That’s all for this week! We’ll see you next Friday, just in time for Supergirl.

Continue Reading

Latest News

Video37 minutes ago

Walking through the ruins of a southern Lebanese city after Israeli strikes. #BBCNews

Video51 minutes ago

How to stop Iran from building a nuclear weapon | The Global Story

On Wednesday, President Trump met with Iranian leaders to sign an initial memorandum of understanding towards ending the …

Video1 hour ago

What could Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire mean to US-Iran peace talks?

Israel and Hezbollah have agreed to a renewed ceasefire, according to multiple sources familiar with the situation. CNN's Nic …

Video2 hours ago

Thousands of baby seals are dying on these remote islands. But why?

A deadly strain of bird flu is sweeping through remote islands between Australia and Antarctica, killing thousands of seal pups...

Video2 hours ago

Dave Chappelle: Obama center event felt 'like medicine'

Comedian Dave Chappelle said the opening of the Obama Presidential Center felt “like medicine,” describing the event as a …

Video2 hours ago

Interior dept says Reflecting Pool is 'crystal clear'

Some blue material at the bottom of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool is peeling off, days after the pool was...

Video2 hours ago

Massachusetts ‘legalises’ haggis amid Tartan Army takeover. #BBCNews

Video2 hours ago

Burnham wins Makerfield: Is the UK about to get another new prime minister? | BBC News

Andy Burnham has won the Makerfield by-election, securing nearly 55% of the vote. The victory has paved the way for...

Sports2 hours ago

USA vs Australia World Cup prediction favors lower-scoring American win

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Happy Juneteenth to everyone out there. I’m sure those words will irk...

Video2 hours ago

Push to ban NYC horse-drawn carriages after teen’s death

New York officials are renewing efforts to ban horse-drawn carriages after an 18-year-old tourist died in a runaway carriage …

Trending News

Join Our Newsletter

Stay updated with breaking news and exclusive content.