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Rihanna's Dad Ronald Fenty Dead at 70

Rihanna's Dad Ronald Fenty Dead at 70

Yahoo31-05-2025
Originally appeared on E! Online
Rihanna and her family are in mourning.
The pregnant "Diamonds" singer's dad Ronald Fenty has died, multiple outlets reported May 31. He was 70.
While the cause of his death was not made public, he had recently battled an illness, the reports said. Sources close to the Fentys told Starcom Network News, which is based in their home country of Barbados, that family members gathered in California before Ronald passed away in the early hours of the morning.
News of his death comes days after Rihanna's brother Rajad Fenty was photographed arriving at a Los Angeles hospital, reportedly with the Grammy winner in the car, TMZ reported.
In addition to the two, Ronald is also survived by the siblings' mom, his ex Monica Braithwaite, and the former couple's other son together, Rorrey Fenty, 35, as well as the patriarch's three kids Samantha Fenty, Kandy Fenty and Jamie Fenty from past relationships.
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Rihanna— who is expecting her third baby with A$AP Rocky—was born Robyn Rihanna Fenty to Ronald and mom Monica Braithwaite in 1988. The 37-year-old's parents had divorced in 2002 when she was 14—two years before she moved from their hometown of Bridgetown, Barbados to the United States.
The Fenty Beauty founder said her family "broke up" because of her dad's struggles with addiction, and it took a while for her and her father to move past that.
"I repaired my relationship with my dad," Rihanna tearfully told Oprah Winfrey in a 2012 interview, "I was so angry at him. I was just angry about a lot of things from my childhood and I couldn't separate him as a husband from him as a father."
Rihanna said she came to realize that he was "probably one of the best fathers in the world."
"He taught me everything," she said. "And as awful as he was to my mom at times, it didn't compare to how great he was as a father. And I had to come to terms with that. And I was able to close that gap with him."
Years later, the two became involved in a legal dispute. Rihanna sued her father in 2019 for false advertising, false designation of origin and invasion of privacy—false light publicity.
In the lawsuit, obtained by E! News, she alleged that Ronald and his business partner "egregiously and fraudulently misrepresented to third parties and the public" that their company, Fenty Entertainment, was affiliated with her and had the authority to act on her behalf. In 2021, Rihanna filed to dismiss the lawsuit, the BBC reported.
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App
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I Played Battlefield 6: Hands-On With the Return To Big Battle Warfare
I Played Battlefield 6: Hands-On With the Return To Big Battle Warfare

CNET

timean hour ago

  • CNET

I Played Battlefield 6: Hands-On With the Return To Big Battle Warfare

After a few hours playing the upcoming Battlefield 6, it's clear the game is designed to be a mea culpa to fans: Trust us, we're bringing back the Battlefield you remember. At a massive preview event in Los Angeles, I sat down to play a slice of the game's multiplayer mode -- and came off it suitably whelmed with a mix of raucous moments and tedious deaths. Ultimately, it feels like it will deliver the kind of big team battles players have been craving, with technical flourishes that amplify the gleeful chaos of a warzone. Developer DICE has a lot to prove with Battlefield 6. Its predecessors, 2018's World War II-themed Battlefield V and 2021's near-future Battlefield 2042, made unpopular changes to the game's formula, but subsequent updates salvaged some goodwill. So there's a reason the developers emphasized that DICE's newest game drew from the wells of Battlefield 3 and 4, returning to a successful era of big, destructive battles and retreating from some of the more drastic deviations. "We approached [this project] with this idea that not only do we want to draw inspiration from Battlefield 3 and 4, and sort of the best of the best in our series, we wanted to do it with our players," said Christian Grass, vice president and executive producer at DICE's Ripple Effect studios. "That was a big thing early on, get Battlefield Labs stood up, get [the game] out there, get players to play, and then start that conversation with them, listen to the feedback they're giving us and sort of build this game together." With the Battlefield Labs feedback program DICE set up, it's clear the studio wants to head off any potentially unpopular changes to the core gameplay people have come to expect from Battlefield. "With [Battlefield] Labs, everything that we're doing and communicating with our community early on, we want to make sure that we are landing it when [Battlefield 6] comes out," said Thomas "Tompen" Andersson, creative director at Ripple Effect. He noted that the team wants to "make sure that we don't have to counter some decisions that the community doesn't agree with." Labs has already provided Battlefield 6's developers with a wealth of data, from weapon pick rates to map movement patterns, that's led developers to tune the guns and different game modes. Their attention zooms down to the level of destructibility in objects, gathering feedback on whether walls are too sturdy or fragile and how that affects the player experience. "OK, maybe no one is using this lane, why aren't they using that? Oh, they feel like it's a kill zone, or there's not enough coverage," Andersson said. "We're taking that internally and testing and seeing if we can make that better." 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Manny Jacinto Is Not Your Handsome Dope: 'I Love Proving People Wrong'
Manny Jacinto Is Not Your Handsome Dope: 'I Love Proving People Wrong'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

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Manny Jacinto Is Not Your Handsome Dope: 'I Love Proving People Wrong'

'Freakier Friday' co-star Manny Jacinto is the love interest Millennial moms need this summer. But his chiseled jawline is just one reason why. The shirt was a poly-blend boa constrictor—jet-black with tourniquets for sleeves. It was giving Danny Zuko from Grease! or Johnny Castle from Dirty Dancing … if either of those guys shopped in the children's section of Target. Manny Jacinto was worried it would send the wrong message. Sure, he was playing the DILF in a hotly-anticipated summer rom-com opposite Lindsay Lohan. But this was a family-friendly movie produced by Walt Disney Pictures. Surely, that company has some standards to uphold, no? So Jacinto asked Nisha Ganatra, the director of said film, Freakier Friday, if his costume for a scene in which his and Lohan's characters are taking a dancing lesson was inappropriate. She told him it was perfect. Jacinto may have questioned it, but that shirt could be a metaphor for his career: Hook the audience with cheekbones and chest muscles, then keep them there with charisma. Despite his bachelor's degree in civil engineering and his work as a competitive hip hop dancer (cards on the table: The Freakier Friday dance scene was Jacinto's brain child), the actor's breakout role was playing the ultimate Florida Man, Jason Mendoza, on the Kristen Bell-fronted NBC comedy The Good Place. This led to parts like the maybe-too-zen-to-be-believed Yao in Nine Perfect Strangers, Hulu's dismantling of the wellness industrial complex starring Nicole Kidman, and the mysterious Qimir in The Acolyte, the first female-centric Star Wars series for Disney+. Although he does do more macho work—all of his lines were famously cut from Top Gun: Maverick and he just wrapped the Old West comedy The Stalemate—Jacinto will happily concede that he owes his career to women-led stories. 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Anna has her own teenager, and—the stakes needing to be ever higher in a sequel—the two girls along with Anna and Tess undergo a bizarre quadruple body swap right under Eric's nose. Jacinto is not British; the fake accent is part of his charm offensive. ('I apologize to all of the U.K. readers,' he quips.) And Jacinto admits that it was a bit of a gut punch that, at 37, he's hit the age at which he can believably be cast as the father of someone old enough to apply for a learner's permit. But he sells us on the idea that Eric is a guy for whom Anna would uproot her life and move herself and her child to another country. After years of playing the comic relief or interesting side character, Jacinto has convinced audiences (and casting directors) that he can be not just a leading man, but one who is confident enough in his own abilities to step aside and let the women get the laughs. 'I'm not gonna lie; I love dunking the ball,' Jacinto says. 'Getting the ball and getting to shoot and make people laugh … but another reason why this character appealed to me was just [to show that] I can be the heart of this story. I can be the straight man.' Sipping on an Arnold Palmer while reclining in an untucked blue button-down and baggy jeans, Jacinto seems relaxed but not aloof. He's attentive to my needs, insisting on buying my Topo Chico and moving my recorder closer to him when decibels rise in the bustling north Los Angeles coffee shop where we're meeting. But his cadence remains even; his voice staying below any octave that would draw attention to himself. 'It's wild that I get to do this. I never would have thought I'd play the love interest to Lindsay Lohan; I watched Lindsay Lohan as a kid,' he says with genuine awe. 'It's wild what you can do if you put your mind to it.' After The Good Place, Jacinto says he was offered roles similar to the adorable meathead he played in that comedy, but that the 'good looking dope thing—it's never comfortable for me.' He loves that Freakier Friday, which he describes as a celebration of Lohan's work in its predecessor as well as The Parent Trap (1998), lets him plumb other ranges of comedy. (Judging by the end-of-film outtakes, a lot of improv was involved.) Initially, Jacinto's role wasn't as central to the story, but it grew as the creatives realized what a gold mine they had in the actor. 'He is just one of those rare artists that can do this earnestness that you believe,' Ganatra, the director, tells me. 'He can do comedy and he can do drama and when I realized the breadth of his talent, we just kept asking him to do more and more and more.' Just as the first film kept Anna's incoming step-dad (Mark Harmon) in the dark, Jacinto's character is never made aware that his fiancée has swapped places with her daughter, though he does sense that there's something amiss. Even more complicated than Harmon's tight-rope walk is that Jacinto also had to play that he doesn't know his own daughter and his future mother-in-law have switched bodies, too. 'He does the perfect look away at the right moment, or look into their eyes in the right moment, where you see that he kind of knows something's wrong, but he's just trying to keep everyone happy,' Ganatra says. 'And I think he ends up stealing your heart at the end of the movie, because he is just trying so hard to buoy everybody up. Manny has a lot of that in him; he has a big, huge heart.' Now, if we're being fair, Jacinto isn't the only eye candy that Freakier Friday serves up to the Millennials in the audience. Chad Michael Murray, who played Anna's boyfriend Jake in the first film, is back for the sequel, too. And Ganatra also makes the most of his scenes, such as a slow-mo exit from a motorcycle that includes a helmet removal and casual hair toss. 'I think I even had a crush on Chad Michael Murray when I was younger,' Jacinto says, laughing off any potential #TeamJake versus #TeamEric wars brewing within the fandom. Off-screen, the two bonded over their shared love of fitness. 'He had some amino acid protein powder,' Jacinto says. 'I was like, This is my guy…We're gonna be best friends.' Of his own looks, Jacinto seems both nonchalant and ambivalent. Ganatra tells me that she had to sequester her actor to his own tent between takes of a beach scene because the crew couldn't stop staring. But Jacinto says he pitched the Freakier Friday dance scene not so much to show off as because he felt he might as well get it on camera now 'while my lower back is still functioning.' 'There's nothing like knowing that you might be shirtless on-screen to motivate you to hit the gym,' he jokes. Jacinto still takes dance classes on his off time; just that morning ​​he tried to con his wife, Grey's Anatomy and The Descendants actress Dianne Doan, into joining him at one. But even when he's mastering a skill, he questions if he could be learning something more. 'I had a conversation with a few friends the other night about how I can't read fiction because in the back of my head I'm like, I could be learning something, I could be doing something more productive,' he admits. 'But the point of reading fiction, or watching TV, or watching movies, is to just be in the moment and to enjoy the art.' So his immediate goals are along those lines. He and Doan are planning to travel to Japan. He's in the process of producing a Filipino story that he's passionate about. Although The Acolyte only lasted a season, Jacinto says he's keen to do more franchise work. He likes a challenge, so he's up for acting in a different language ('I speak French and a little Tagalog'). Perhaps try to do a musical? 'Dirty Dancing 2,' he jokes, 'that's the long game.' In earnestness, though, Jacinto feels he's just getting started. And whatever route he takes next, he's certain, like any good Disney Prince, to enchant audiences all along the Photographer Ryan Pfluger Stylist Ilaria Urbinati Grooming Kim Bragalone using Kypris Beauty and Bumble and Bumble at Redefine Representation Set Stylist Amy Jo Diaz Styling Assistants Rajina Dusara & Rum Brady Location 1 Hotel West HollywoodRead the original article on InStyle Solve the daily Crossword

Ioan Gruffudd's Still Fond of His ‘Fantastic Four' Tenure
Ioan Gruffudd's Still Fond of His ‘Fantastic Four' Tenure

Gizmodo

time2 hours ago

  • Gizmodo

Ioan Gruffudd's Still Fond of His ‘Fantastic Four' Tenure

Even before Marvel Studios retook ownership of the Fantastic Four and got a new movie into production, there was always a bit of fondness for the old Fox movies. Not so much the 2015 one, but the mid-2000s pair directed by Tim Story and starring Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, and Michael Chiklis still have their fans. Those films were general audiences' first introduction to the characters, and there remains a bit of attachment to those versions, particularly after Evans came back for brief, fiery thirds in Deadpool & Wolverine. In a recent Vulture interview, Gruffudd talked about still having 'pure excitement' over booking the role of Reed Richards. He didn't grow up reading the comics, but he felt a duty to portray Reed as 'naïve' about his powers at first, but still 'honorable and noble, and clearly a bookish character who was passionate about science and wanted to do good for the world.' 'There was a great belief that we needed to represent that friendship, camaraderie, bickering,' Gruffudd added about the dynamic with his costars. And we had that innately as actors when we got together. We all had our own responsibility, but then an understanding that this was a team, this was the Fantastic Four — we are one.' Speaking to the late Julian McMahon playing his rival Doctor Doom, he remembered his former costar as 'such a big part of this franchise and the success of the movies. You saw the envy and jealousy that Reed had towards Victor, and that there had been a friendship, so that sense of betrayal and devastation was an interesting aspect to play. […] You remember great performances from movies of this nature, like Gene Hackman in the original Superman, and that's the kind of flair and panache that Julian brought to this.' In Gruffudd's recollection, Story and everyone else were staying true to the 'lighter, family feel' of the Fantastic Four comics at the time, and he figured Fox's previous track record with the X-Men inherently meant the this would blossom into a franchise. The series ended with 2007's Rise of the Silver Surfer, though there were plans for a third movie that were later scrapped despite 'some sort of momentum.' These days, it wouldn't be out of the question for him to come back, but he says he's not been asked about it stretching one more time for Avengers: Doomsday or Secret Wars. But even if that never happens, he remains 'incredibly proud' of playing the character and getting to be 'part of something really beautiful and much bigger than you. And I'm excited that the comic and franchise lives on.' Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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