
All the celebrity rosé wines ranked: From Angelina Jolie to Cameron Diaz and Meghan Markle... one A-lister will be left VERY sour
Earlier this month, Meghan Markle finally released her anticipated As Ever rosé priced at a whopping $30 per bottle.
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Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Justin Bieber's son Jack Blues makes his music video debut for Yukon as he bonds with parents in sweet footage
Justin and Hailey Bieber's baby boy Jack Blues is officially a rising star. The child, who was born in August 2024, has made his music video debut in his father's new track, Yukon. The idyllic, black-and-white video sees the new parents dote on their bundle of joy as they enjoy a sun-soaked boat trip. While the parents have yet to reveal their child's face to the public - and continue to creatively maintain his privacy in the video - they do show off his adorable baby teeth. In the video, the Baby singer, 31, is shown bonding with his child during a blissful family getaway. He showers his son with kisses as they lounge on the luxurious boat together. Hailey, 28, nuzzles Justin's bare shoulder as their infant son waddles beside their father in another sweet moment. They stop at a secluded cove, where Hailey splashes in the water with Jack in her arms. Justin and Hailey announced the arrival of Jack Blues, their first child together, in August 2024. 'WELCOME HOME JACK BLUES BIEBER,' Justin captioned a post announcing his son's arrival. The new parents tied the knot in a New York City courthouse in 2018 followed by a more lavish ceremony the following year. But the couple have been plagued by rumours of marriage trouble in recent months, with the singer sparking concerns among fans with his behaviour. While Hailey had been seen in public without her wedding ring last month, the couple appeared to be on affectionate terms when they were seen earlier this month in Switzerland. In a move certainly intended to quiet the chatter, Hailey also shows off her massive diamond engagement ring in the sweet music video. And speaking to Vogue Italia as their August 2025 cover girl, Hailey appeared to quash the rumours of a rift as she gushed over Justin being an 'extraordinary' father, 'a natural', and 'seeing her as a goddess, a superhero'. Hailey also opened up about her pregnancy with Jack, revealing it was unexpected. 'The pregnancy was hard for me to accept, it was a surprise and you have to deal with so many emotions,' she told the outlet. 'You realise that your life will never be the same again, yes, it changes in a positive way, but it will never be the same again. It was a huge challenge for me, mentally,' she added. Despite this, Hailey said that everything ends up coming together eventually and it acted as a huge teaching lesson for her as a person - and her marriage. 'Suddenly, your partner sees you as a goddess, a superhero... Or at least, that's how it was for me,' she said. Justin's bad behaviour has manifested in recent months in the form of arguing with Hailey online, acting erratically and clashing with paparazzi, a source told Page Six. The material on the latest album, which Justin released July 11, included a trio of comedy skits with comic Druski. One of the bits dubbed 'Therapy session,' in which Druski portrays a counsellor, Justin touches on the complications of living life in the limelight. 'That's been a tough thing for me recently - feeling like I have had to go through a lot of my struggles as a human, as all of us do, really publicly. 'And so people are always asking if I'm OK - and that starts to really weigh on me.' Bieber busts a move on the vessel Justin said that the attention makes him feel like he's 'the one with the issues and everyone else is perfect.' The singer sold rights to his catalogue for $200million in 2023, the Los Angeles Times reported recently. His most recent studio album prior to Swag was Justice in 2021. The album garnered critical acclaim and spawned successful commercial tracks such as Peaches, a Billboard Hot 200 chart-topper; and the top 10 hits Holy, Anyone and Ghost. In February 2023, Justin officially cancelled the remainder of his Justice World Tour after the singer said he was diagnosed with the condition Ramsay Hunt syndrome, which can lead to facial paralysis.


Times
23 minutes ago
- Times
Feeling gloomy? Hollywood has a so bad-it's-good comedy for you!
S omething strange is happening in cinema. Have you noticed? It's Liam Neeson delivering one-liners, sight gags and a very effective diarrhoea routine in The Naked Gun. Or it's Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis camping it up together as hipster teenagers in Freakier Friday (released this week). Or it's Christopher Guest as the ageing rocker Nigel Tufnel, awkwardly shredding a guitar solo in a tiny English pub in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, out in September. Or it's Ariana Grande joining Robert De Niro for another Meet the Parents instalment, Focker In-Law. Or it's Bill Pullman in the Star Wars spoof Spaceballs 2, or Eddie Murphy in the new Pink Panther, or … OK, we get it. Comedies are back. And it's been a while. 'I'm Liam Neeson, and every passing year more and more comedies go unseen, unmade and unquoted.' That's how the 73-year-old Taken star began a recent faux public service announcement that begged potential audiences to buy a cinema ticket for The Naked Gun, 'so our children and hopefully their children too can one day enjoy watching a comedy in the theatre'. The clip was just part of the film's zany promotional machine but it addressed a glaring absence of comedies in the multiplex ecosystem. Box office analysts and culture watchers alike suggest that it's been more than a decade since comedies effectively disappeared from cinema screens, or at least since comedy impresarios such as Judd Apatow could turn everything from The 40-Year-Old Virgin to Knocked Up to Bridesmaids into box office gold. 'What we witnessed is a migration of audiences to the small screen to get their comedy,' says Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for the data firm Comscore. 'In order to spend their money, and take the time and effort to go out to the theatre, audiences wanted the larger-than-life experience of superhero movies, action movies and sci-fi movies.' • Read our film reviews, guides about what to watch and interviews In short, thanks to Iron Man and the rise of the streamers, a grand cinematic tradition that included the Marx Brothers, Woody Allen, Barbra Streisand, Monty Python, Airplane!, Austin Powers and Wedding Crashers had effectively been replaced by a faceless Netflix algorithm that was regularly pumping out joyless 'laugh fests' such as Mother of the Bride and Love & Gelato. The few comedies that did remain in cinemas, according to the Naked Gun producer (and Family Guy creator) Seth MacFarlane, weren't always recognisable as such. 'We've been giving people broccoli and telling them it's a candy bar for the last ten years, as a lot of things called comedies now are most definitely not comedies,' he said recently. 'We've been offered comedies that are a little up their own asses, maybe a little inflated with a sense of their own importance.' MacFarlane, at the time, declined to name the 'offenders' in question, but any search for key movie comedies of the past decade will throw up titles such as the social satire Triangle of Sadness, the love letter to creativity The Banshees of Inisherin and the environmental sermon Don't Look Up. All great movies, yes, but not exactly Neeson doing a diarrhoea gag. Christopher Guest, Harry Shearer, and Michael McKean in the upcoming Spinal Tap 2 SONY PICTURES And that's another thing. This new wave of comedies is being described as 'pure comedy', the films focused only on giggles and laughter, and notable for their delicate dance through the culture wars. There is not a single scene in either The Naked Gun or Freakier Friday that could aggravate either side of the foam-flecked clickerati. This is something that could not be said of the previous comedy wave: plenty of Apatow movies, even the best ones, involved whiny guys sitting around telling sexist jokes. 'Without getting into politics and stuff, we're all living in a culture, a society, where we're scared to speak and scared if we don't,' Neeson said recently, noting that movies such as The Naked Gun, like 'gargoyles in cathedrals', are here to remind us, 'Come on, don't take yourself too seriously. The film is a giggle and we need that.' • How Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson became the new late-life love story Neeson's point is underscored by the Freakier Friday director Nisha Ganatra, who sees this big-screen comedy resurgence as a reflection of wider collective yearnings. 'It's my hope that people are craving a communal experience again and that laughing together with a group of people at a theatre is what makes people feel good,' she tells me. 'Especially in this time of uncertainty, comedies can provide relief. Laughing out loud is an energising experience with your friends or with total strangers. Everyone ends up feeling better.' The crucial question, however, is whether enough cinemagoing audiences will turn up for comedy in a time of uncertainty. The box office figures are in and The Naked Gun made $28.3 million on its opening weekend. It has not, according to Dergarabedian, 'blown the doors off', but it is a solid beginning that, combined with positive scores and exit polls, suggests word-of-mouth may sustain a healthy commercial run. What it really means, Dergarabedian says, is that all attention now falls on Freakier Friday, which opens this weekend. If that's a hit, then the new multiplex comedy wave continues apace. If not, expect to be watching Murphy's Pink Panther on Netflix next year. 'If there's a crisis of confidence that's happening with movie comedy it's simply because putting a comedy into a movie theatre is more expensive than going to streaming,' Dergarabedian says. 'There's a worldwide marketing push involved with a theatrical release that's a whole different animal to just going into streaming.' Latest figures suggest that marketing a Hollywood film globally costs as 'little' as $35 million and as much as $200 million. • Ten of the silliest comedies to watch now It explains why Adam Sandler famously signed his first four-movie Netflix deal in 2014 and why his new film, Happy Gilmore 2, a sequel to the big-screen golf comedy from 1996, has been released on Netflix only. It also explains why Sandler's most recent four-movie deal with the streamer, signed last year, is alleged to have earned him $275 million — it's clearly cheaper than pushing his films into the multiplex. Adam Sandler and Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio in Happy Gilmore 2 NETFLIX 'And so, yes, it's a fragile market place but, thankfully, The Naked Gun did not bomb,' Dergarabedian continues. 'And if Freakier Friday makes $40 million-plus domestically [in the US], that could be one that emboldens studios to get on board and hopefully open the door to more comedies.' In the meantime, if you fancy some quality toilet humour or a sweetly moving film with Lohan and Curtis playing teenagers, you should rush out and buy a ticket to your local multiplex. Because, as the great Liam Neeson says, it means that your children and their children will one day get to watch a comedy movie too, where it was meant to be seen: at the cinema. The Naked Gun is in cinemas; Freakier Friday is in cinemas from Aug 8; Happy Gilmore 2 is on Netflix Times+ members can enjoy two-for-one cinema tickets at Everyman each Wednesday. Visit to find out more. Which films have you enjoyed at the cinema recently? Let us know in the comments and follow @timesculture to read the latest reviews


Daily Mail
23 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Rihanna trolled over bizarre maternity outfit and sneakers which carry an eye-watering price
Fans poked fun at Rihanna 's latest wild maternity look but the price tag was certainly no laughing matter. The 37-year-old hitmaker - who is rumored to be touring again - donned a head-turning outfit while out and about in Los Angeles on Monday. The Fenty mogul donned quite the pricey ensemble for the errand trip as she sported a $2,845 Spring/Summer 2001 Vintage Issey Miyake pink and orange 3D high neckline pleated dress. That wasn't the only couture she proudly displayed as she strutted her stuff in a pair of silver and lime green Puma x Ottolinger Mostro sneakers which retail for $275. Rihanna also donned plenty of gold jewelry and massive white earrings as her hair was worn down and she showcased her natural looks with complementary make-up. Some fans poked fun at her look as a Rihanna fan account @gabgonebad on X (formally Twitter) posted snaps of her to varying degrees of approval. 'What is my mom wearing.....,' one user wrote while another said: 'Not my favorite one but she's still rockin it.' One user even blasted Jahleel Weaver who is Rihanna's stylist and was creative director of her fashion house Fenty from 2019 to 2021. They wrote: 'Fire Jahleel immediately.' There were other Rihanna fans who loved the look. 'She's always on point [fire emoji],' one said while another commented: 'Ugh fluffy fashion I love it.' She is currently expecting her third child with her boyfriend, rapper ASAP Rocky, with whom she already shares sons RZA, three, and Riot, nearly two. The nine-time Grammy winner revealed her pregnancy news when she showed off her baby bump at the Met Gala back in May. Last month, she dished on motherhood as she is expecting her third baby. She told Access Hollywood that her 'two princes' RZA and Riot have a ton of energy that wear her out when she attended the Smurfs premiere in Los Angeles. She is the voice actor for Smurfette in the new animated musical-comedy film and brought along her kids for the red carpet event ahead of the movie's release. It comes just days after the singer attended her father's funeral in her native country of Barbados - after he passed away at the age of 70 on May 30 following a battle with pancreatic cancer and accompanying complications. During an interview with Extra at the Smurfs premiere, she opened up about her little ones joining her at the screening. 'I'm excited for tonight. Tonight is going to be fun. We get to watch the movie together for the first time. I get to watch it in its full completion. So, that should be interesting,' she expressed. When questioned how RZA and Riot feel about another addition to their growing family, Rihanna said they were 'delighted' followed by laughter. However, she remained coy when asked if she was possibly going to welcome a baby girl. 'You'll have to wait and see,' the Love On The Brain hitmaker said, but later said that she has 'always wanted a girl.' And then when asked if the name of her third child could also start with the letter 'R,' Rihanna replied, 'I mean, of course. It's tradition at this point.' Meanwhile, Rocky appeared to accidentally reveal the gender of their third child while attending the world premiere of her film Smurfs held at Mont des Arts in Brussels, Belgium. When ET 's Kevin Frazier asked the 36-year-old rapper 'Is that the girl you've been waiting for' he immediately replied: 'It is, man, it is.' Feeling cornered, A$AP (born Rakim Athelaston Mayers) then held up a plush Smurfette doll and redirected: 'Right here, you know what I'm saying? Right here.' The star's appearance at the screening this weekend comes after she flew to Barbados to attend her father Ronald Fenty's funeral which was held in Barbados. A source