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Rachel Zegler refuses to subscribe to ‘victim mindset' over online backlash

Rachel Zegler refuses to subscribe to ‘victim mindset' over online backlash

News.com.au24-06-2025
The actress-singer, who has Colombian and Polish heritage, faced backlash from social media trolls after she was cast in the titular role in Disney's recent reimagining of Snow White. Rachel courted further controversy by seemingly criticising the animated original and voicing her support for Palestine while promoting the live-action remake on social media, with Jonah Platt, the son of the film's producer Marc Platt, later blaming her for its poor box office performance. During an interview for i-D magazine published on Monday, the 24-year-old insisted she always opts for a positive outlook amid difficult times.
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‘I f***ing hate him': NBA legend takes fiery feud to new heights
‘I f***ing hate him': NBA legend takes fiery feud to new heights

News.com.au

time33 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘I f***ing hate him': NBA legend takes fiery feud to new heights

Shaquille O'Neal's longstanding feud with Timberwolves centre Rudy Gobert took an even more drastic twist Thursday. The NBA Hall of Famer has traded barbs with Gobert for years, but this time it got personal, the NY Post reports. 'I f***ing hate Rudy Gobert,' said O'Neal on his podcast The Big Podcast with Shaq. 'Because that motherf***er making $250 million, (and) he don't deserve it, dawg. F*** that. 'As the president of The Big Man Alliance, you making big money, play like a f***ing big man. That's it. 'Throw some (elbows), knock some people out, don't be letting little white dudes from Denver dunk on you and talk sh*t to you.' Gobert, a four-time defensive player of the year, has averaged 11.7 rebounds, 12.6 points, 2.1 blocks and 0.7 steals per game in his 12-year career. O'Neal is hoping those accomplishments aren't enough to make the two Hall of Fame counterparts. 'If Rudy Gobert gets into the Hall of Fame, I'll wear this dress to the motherf***ing ceremony,' said O'Neal while holding up a picture of Charles Barkley wearing a dress in a WeightWatchers commercial. O'Neal has targeted Gobert since at least 2021, when he made fun of his lack of offensive ability. 'I'm not gonna hate, but this should be an inspiration to all the little kids out there,' O'Neal said. 'You average 11 points in the NBA, you can get $200 million.' His opinion of Gobert is so low that he even had rival Draymond Green's back when Green was suspended for putting Gobert in a headlock in 2023. Last season, O'Neal told Complex that Gobert was the worst NBA player of all time, along with Ben Simmons, whom he called 'another bum.' Gobert responded to that diss on social media. 'It is sad to see someone that has accomplished as much as you did @SHAQ both in sport and business still be triggered by another man's finances and accomplishments,' Gobert said. 'I get the entertainment part but unlike other folks, you don't need that stuff to stay relevant.'

‘In pieces': Hulk Hogan's wife shares heartbreaking post after wrestling legend's death
‘In pieces': Hulk Hogan's wife shares heartbreaking post after wrestling legend's death

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

‘In pieces': Hulk Hogan's wife shares heartbreaking post after wrestling legend's death

The heartbroken wife of the late Hulk Hogan has spoken out following the wrestling legend's shocking death at the age of 71. Sky Daily, who married Hogan in 2023, said her 'heart is in pieces' in a gut-wrenching Instagram post. 'I wasn't ready for this … and my heart is in pieces,' she began. 'He had been dealing with some health issues, but I truly believed we would overcome them. I had so much faith in his strength. I thought we still had more time.' Hogan was pronounced dead shortly after 11am Thursday morning (US time). Medics were dispatched to the WWE Hall of Famer's Clearwater, Florida home before 10am following a 'cardiac arrest' call. Speculation about Hogan's health had percolated in the weeks leading up to his passing. In June, Bubba the Love Sponge, the host of a titular Tampa-based radio program, reported Hogan wasn't doing well. 'Allegedly Hogan is in the hospital and I've heard people say that he might not make it,' he claimed. A rep for Hogan addressed the allegations, telling TMZ in June that 'he's just dealing with more of the same ailments he's had for years.' Daily, who married Hogan in 2023, also hit back at rumours her husband was in poor health. 'No, he's definitely not in a coma! His heart is strong, and there was never any lack of oxygen or brain damage … none of those rumours are true,' Sky wrote,' she wrote in an Instagram Story earlier this month. ' … We've been in and out of the hospital to support that recovery. So truly, there's no need for the drama or panic some people try to stir up. He's healing, and we're taking it one day at a time with love, strength, and patience.' Daily added Friday that Hogan, 'despite growing physical discomfort,' wanted to always 'show up' for his loyal supporters. 'Hulk loved his fans so much and despite his growing physical discomfort, he did everything he could to show up, sign autographs, take photos, and connect with the people who supported him through it all. You meant everything to him,' she wrote on Instagram. 'He was a believer in Christ, and I take comfort knowing his soul is at peace and he's been welcomed home. 'Please keep his family and all of us who loved him in your prayers as we try to navigate this new reality.' Hogan, whose real name was Terry Bollea, married three times. Prior to his union with Daily, Hogan wed his first wife, Linda, in 1983. The couple, who shared daughter Brooke, 37, and son Nick, 34, finalised their divorce in 2009. Hogan later moved on with Jennifer McDaniel in 2010. They divorced in 2022. He and Daily were baptised together 18 months before Hogan's death.

Sex and the City reboot turns interesting women into bumbling fools
Sex and the City reboot turns interesting women into bumbling fools

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Sex and the City reboot turns interesting women into bumbling fools

When Howard Hawkes's now-classic comedy, His Girl Friday, was released in 1940 starring Rosalind Russell and Cary Grant, the film critic of The New York Times, Frank Nugent, savaged lead character Hildy Johnson — a divorcee newshound chasing one last scoop before she heads off to re-marry — as "a wild caricature which should not be taken seriously". He was wrong, of course. Two years earlier, Katherine Hepburn had gone up against Grant at warp speed in the immortal Bringing Up Baby, and the idea of the fast-talking, ambitious, well-dressed, somewhat madcap woman had been a commercial success ever since Claudette Colbert hitched her skirt to hitch a ride with Clark Gable in It Happened One Night. These movies created a female character lead who became an American cultural classic. Every film and TV show that came afterwards featuring a headstrong, smart-mouthed woman owed a debt to what became known as the "screwball comedies" of the 30s and 40s. Their lineage is undeniable. You wouldn't have The Mary Tyler Moore Show, or Golden Girls, or 30 Rock, or Parks and Recreation without these films and this type of female character. Lena Dunham's Girls is the genre's granddaughter, but the HBO smash Sex and the City was the golden child of the "screwball comedy": it took all those romantic misunderstandings, outlandish scenarios, and the traditional "battle of the sexes" and wrapped them in enviable designer clothes and unapologetic sexual appetite. Like the classic films that defined the genre, SATC delivered strongly written female characters, handed them sharp dialogue and clever repartee and dropped them in situations just a few degrees south of what any romantically exhausted bachelorette might encounter in 1998: weird men with oral sex fetishes; married men who were compulsive liars and a dating roster of the odd, angry and addicted. Just another Friday night in Manhattan. This is a long run-up to where I know you suspect I'm going with all this but bear with me, because the horror of the present really only makes the most sense when you place it in its correct historical context. SATC was a success because the madcap was served with a withering millennial scepticism about love and sex, and the show made one key change from the screwball original: it switched out the male romantic lead for several female ones. The four women of SATC were each other's "love of their lives" as the toxic Mr Big finally figured out. And it made the romantic follies of single NY women bearable that, in the end, they always had each other. OK — we can't avoid it anymore: here we are, in 2025, and deep into the mystery confounding viewers worldwide: what the hell happened to these women? What the hell happened to the TV show that millions loved? We are now in series three of And Just Like That, the reboot of SATC, and this strange show has become without question the most awful, cringeful, embarrassing television most of us have probably ever persisted with. Don't take my word for it. And yet, we can't stop watching it. This bunch of smart, successful young women apparently grew up and lost everything — their sense, intelligence, social radars, insight, ability to read a room, their furniture and — in one case — apparently all their money. I must admit, I probably always hate-watched SATC — Carrie really was the most awful person — but my dread-watch of its bizarre reboot, And Just Like That, sits now at abysmal levels. Most of the great screwball comedies were, unsurprisingly, written by straight, white men (notably, except for Bringing Up Baby) and yet those blokes seem to have had a truer grasp of what drives a woman in love, or drives her mad, than do the ultra-hip writers' room of this show. This quintet of hand-waving hysterics seem to have forgotten how to negotiate an introduction, deal with an attractive co-worker or manage a pernickety neighbour, and have even forgotten their own personal histories. Why is Miranda, a woman who was for years a senior partner in a New York law firm, homeless and living in Airbnbs? Why does Seema, another former partner but of a real estate firm, have no savings at all? Why did Lisa apparently forget that her father was already dead in season one? These previously gimlet-eyed women are presented as stammering, stuttering idiots, fumbling basic social cues, agreeing to a five-year hiatus in their relationship and contradicting their own character arcs. In one episode, Carrie is bewildered and unable to ask her boyfriend even the basic meaning of his text messages; in another, she becomes a stone-cold bitch to her closest friend, Miranda, when she bells the obvious cat of Carrie's flirtation with her neighbour. I'm sorry for the repetition, but: who are these women? In this strange show, in which nothing ever happens (Seinfeld should sue for IP infringement), the women of SATC have devolved into the kind of unflattering caricatures of befuddled older women that would never have flown in the Golden Girls days. Everyone is asking but no one seems to know why. And Just Like That features several writers who also worked on the original Sex and the City, including Julie Rottenberg and Elisa Zuritsky, and showrunner Michael Patrick King continues to play a significant role in the writing and creative direction of And Just Like That, and of course, Sex-meister Darren Star, the original showrunner, is at the helm. You have to assume that the original writers and the newbies cherish these characters as much as their legions of fans do — and yet they twist them into strange and ludicrous shapes that are at the least insulting and, for me, verge on the misogynistic. I can't name a single female character from all my decades of consuming film and television as absurd as these women. My discomfort grows as I watch erstwhile capable women presented as bumbling fools, without the reassurance of well-written comedy or clever satire. Instead, the writing is woefully banal and the women are simply presented as unexplained absurdities. It feels as if it's all a bit of a send-up, as if depicting women in their 50s navigating their version of love, dating, marriage and romantic failure and success simply isn't worthwhile unless you turn them into idiots. Even the (male) titans of Hollywood's so-called "Women's Pictures" knew that'd be a folly: their audiences were smart; their female characters had to be smarter. Instead, in keeping with the general devolution of civilisation, in one of the most popular television shows in the world right now, the depiction of women has gone backwards. Kate Hepburn would smack them all over the back of the head. This weekend, the life of a working woman from a very different perspective: why is it so hard to get a job that provides enough to just live a life and enjoy it? Have a safe and happy weekend and don't forget to listen to the Hottest 100 of Australian music this weekend from 10am on Triple J It's going to be the biggest party in town. Consider this a frantic, last-minute vote: go well. Virginia Trioli is presenter of Creative Types and a former co-host of ABC News Breakfast and Mornings on ABC Radio Melbourne.

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