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Mahershala Ali dodges question about Marvel's troubled Blade reboot

Mahershala Ali dodges question about Marvel's troubled Blade reboot

Independent4 days ago
Mahershala Ali expressed reluctance to discuss Marvel 's troubled Blade reboot, in which he is cast as the lead.
The Blade reboot, announced in 2019 with Ali in the title role, has faced significant delays and production issues since its initial 2023 release target.
Problems include two directors departing the project and its second scheduled release date in November 2025 being removed from the calendar.
Marvel head Kevin Feige confirmed in November 2024 that the Blade character, and Mahershala Ali's version, will still be coming to the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Actor Delroy Lindo revealed he exited the reboot because the project "went off the rails", and costumes originally intended for the film were used in another production, ' Sinners '.
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Randy Moss opens up on 'emotional roller coaster' while battling cancer as he prepares for shock TV return
Randy Moss opens up on 'emotional roller coaster' while battling cancer as he prepares for shock TV return

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Randy Moss opens up on 'emotional roller coaster' while battling cancer as he prepares for shock TV return

One of the greatest wide receivers in the history of the NFL opened up about his return to his television gig after a battle against a very rare form of cancer. Randy Moss, the former Minnesota Vikings and New England Patriots star, is set to come back to ESPN after taking a leave of absence from the network as he dealt with cholangiocarcinoma - a form of bile duct cancer. After undergoing various surgeries and treatments, Moss is set to return to the network's show 'Sunday NFL Countdown' and is eagerly anticipating seeing his co-workers again. 'Man, I look forward to it. I missed my crew. Greenie [Mike Greenberg], Alex [Smith], Teddy [Bruschi],' Moss told Michael Babcock on the TMZ Sports TV show. But Moss kept things joking and playful when addressing his other desk-mate: 'I really didn't miss Rex Ryan much because he got on my nerves. 'So, Rex, if you're hearing this, I am coming back, so scoot over,' the Hall of Famer joked. Moss added, 'we have a great group of guys that I work with that I tremendously missed for two months and ESPN accepted me back with open arms.' 'Man, I just can't wait for week one to get back with the crew and talk football!' Moss' absence as he fought cancer was a trying experience for him - even as he received an outpouring support from his co-workers and the NFL community at large. 'It was an emotional roller coaster, but being able to see the support from the ESPN Sunday Countdown crew, the football fans, and just people in general, man, just showing their love and respect,' Moss told us. 'I thank everybody for their love and their prayers. I really felt everything. I felt all of it.' Moss added that he even hear from celebrities - like 90s music icon Montell Jordan. Reflecting on his ordeal as a whole, Moss said, 'Just being able to experience that was nothing I wish on any man or any human being, but for the fact that God took me through it and brought me out of it back healthy, being able to be back with my family, great support system and some great doctors around me, it was an emotional roller coaster, but the people I met along the way, I'm a blessed man, I'll leave it at that.' His forthcoming return to the airwaves will be the first time he's back full-time at the network since last fall, and the first time he'll be on-air since Super Bowl LIX. Back in November, a number of fans had grown concerned about Moss' health when his eyes appeared yellow on ESPN. That led to Moss making the shock announcement about his health a month ago, appearing on an Instagram Live video alongside his sons to tell fans he had undergone a six-hour surgery and could not walk without a cane. Speaking about his cancer battle in December, Moss said: 'I've told y'all over the last couple of weeks about me battling something internally, and ya boy is a cancer survivor.' He then revealed: 'I did have cancer, they found it in the bile duct, right between the pancreas and the liver, and the cancer was sitting right outside the bile duct.

The Zach Bryan effect: Why country music fans are flocking to Nashville
The Zach Bryan effect: Why country music fans are flocking to Nashville

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

The Zach Bryan effect: Why country music fans are flocking to Nashville

It's 1am on Lower Broadway, Nashville. In a neon-lit, honky-tonk twangy country music fills the room and a cowboy hat tips in my direction. Fried bologna sandwiches sizzle on the grill and pints of Pabst Blue Ribbon line the bar of Robert's Western World, and I am, without a hint of irony, having the time of my life. It's an iconic bar that boasts a sturdy rotation of world-class musicians — Lana Del Rey performed here in 2023 — where you can slow-dance with a wild-haired stranger and maybe fall in love for a song or two. I've crossed over 6,000km and one ocean to be here, but it feels oddly familiar. Last April Aer Lingus launched a direct flight from Dublin to Nashville, a new bridge between Ireland's musical roots and this southern American city that beats with a surprising kind of kinship. It's easy to overlook just how deeply country music resonates in Ireland. Carried across the Atlantic by 18th-century settlers, Irish fiddle tunes, melancholic ballads and raucous jigs found new life in the Appalachian mountains. The storytelling tradition — tales of lost love, exile and hard luck — flourished in isolated communities, blending with African-American blues and frontier gospel. The lilting strains of the Irish reel became the backbone of the American fiddle tune, while barn dances echoed ceili nights. Back home, the Country and Irish music scene emerged from the showband era, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s where we were two-stepping to Big Tom and Philomena Begley at packed dance halls and GAA club fundraisers from Dingle to Dungloe. Then there was Garth Brooks. Blame it all on his (Irish) roots, the Oklahoma showman, with his ten-gallon hat and heart-on-sleeve ballads, struck a chord with Irish audiences in the 1990s. Brooks became a phenomenon and when his planned Croke Park gigs were cancelled in 2014 there was national uproar. Today Ireland's affection for polished country music has swelled even more and just last month Zach Bryan, a 29-year-old also from Oklahoma, performed three sold-out shows at Phoenix Park, with a total attendance of more than 180,000 people. To get underneath the skin of country on home soil, you can leave Dublin mid-afternoon, clear US immigration before you board, and be sipping whiskey by nightfall at the pulsing, sweating, guitar-strumming belly of Tennessee. Dubbed 'Music City' Nashville's identity is steeped in a legacy that sings from every street corner and backroom bar. The moniker's origins trace from 1873, when Queen Victoria allegedly dubbed the Fisk Jubilee Singers' voices as angelic, saying they must be from a 'music city'. The name stuck — and Nashville has made good on the promise. The city's soundtrack hums with a musical heartbeat unlike anywhere else. It's a creative crucible where genres collide — country, bluegrass, gospel, rock, indie and Americana converge in writers' rooms and studios. Everyone, it seems, is a musician or knows one. The result is a city that doesn't just play music; it lives it, breathes it, and, most importantly, writes it. Beyoncé recorded bits of Cowboy Carter here, while Del Rey, who played a sold-out show at Dublin's Aviva stadium last month, has recorded some of her forthcoming country-tinged album in studios in the city. Elvis Presley recorded more than 200 tracks in RCA Studio B, a shadowy temple where legends were made and souls bartered in sweat and song. 'It was late, everyone was getting tired but Elvis wanted to do one more song,' the guide reveals. 'He got the lights turned right down low, went up to the mike, closed his eyes and started singing.' She then turns down those same lights, presses a button and Elvis sounds like he's in the room singing Are You Lonesome Tonight? It's both chilling and exhilarating at the same time. Around the corner is an apartment where, legend has it, Roy Orbison wrote Oh, Pretty Woman when he looked out the window and saw a girl walking past. Your visit to RCA Studio B is included in the same ticket price for the guided tour at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum ( €45.30), which is a must-visit — it is part museum, part shrine. Its sleek, modernist façade belies the raw, storied soul housed within. Hank Williams's handwritten lyrics sit alongside Elvis Presley's flamboyant Cadillac. There's a display featuring key pieces from Taylor Swift's Eras tour. The exhibit includes a sparkly purple ballgown, known as the 'cupcake dress', and a one-of-a-kind koi fish guitar. Among the other gems is Johnny Cash's first black stage suit and Patsy Cline's cowgirl costume, battered acoustic guitars and gilded Grammy awards, each artefact telling a fragment of the larger country music narrative. Just down the road is the Ryman Auditorium — the so-called Mother Church of Country Music. It's hallowed ground. The acoustics are so good you could whisper a Liam Clancy ballad on stage and still make a grown man weep in Row Z. The world-renowned Irish tenor John McCormack performed there in 1916 — cut to 2025 and Dermot Kennedy is performing in October ( €30.65 for a self-guided tour). You can't visit Nashville without a night on Broadway, where the city's image explodes into technicolour spectacle — think Temple Bar crossed with Las Vegas. A strip baptised in bourbon, honky-tonk, rhinestone jumpsuits and more cowboy hats than a John Wayne fever dream. Pedal taverns full of whooping bridesmaids from Indiana, LED signs flashing 'Cold Beer & Country Music', endless variations of the same bar: boots on the wall, fiddle on the stage, deep-fried everything, €12 margarita in a plastic cup and bands belting out tunes from Johnny Cash to Randy Travis. I spotted more than one inflatable horse. It's a glorious riot of fun. Everyone's drinking hard seltzer; Wagon Wheel gets a few airings by girls who queue to take selfies under a neon boot. Pop in for the sheer Americana of it all. In a peculiarly Nashville quirk, many of these bars are owned by country stars. Blake Shelton's Ole Red, Miranda Lambert's Casa Rosa, Luke Bryan's rooftop joint, Jason Aldean's bar and grill, Dierks Bentley's Whiskey Row and Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville all line the strip. Even Garth Brooks, Ireland's adopted son, opened his Friends in Low Places honky-tonk last year. 'The walls here have seen more tears and drunken confessions than a thousand confessional booths combined,' a wannabe cowboy, who is on a stag from New York, shouts in my ear. There are also gems such as Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, where you'll hear musicians so good you'll wonder why they're not headlining festivals. Spend any time with locals and you realise that the country clichés are mostly for visitors. Nashville's working musicians aren't all strumming banjos in cowboy hats. They live in neighbourhoods like East Nashville or 12 South, drink craft beers in converted garages, and their wardrobes owe more to vintage denim than western wear. It's Jack White's adopted city. Sheryl Crow, Kacey Musgraves, Keith Urban and his wife, Nicole Kidman, Kings of Leon, and the Black Keys all live here too. Taylor Swift owns an apartment and a mansion in Nashville. Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel also join Oprah Winfrey and the like who have planted roots here. Reese Witherspoon owns the popular Draper James boutique in the 12 South area. Think beards and tattoos, bespoke denims from Imogene + Willie, leather jackets and vinyl records spinning classic outlaw country alongside blistering indie rock. Nobody struts. • 15 of the best things to do in Nashville And, if you still think Nashville's culinary reputation begins and ends with fried chicken and barbecue, you're missing the best part. While hot chicken is indeed a rite of passage — Prince's ( if you want the real deal, Hattie B's ( for a friendlier queue — the city's restaurants are world-class. Locust, run by the Dublin chef Trevor Moran, formerly of Noma, is one of the most exciting places I've eaten. It has received accolades such as Food & Wine magazine's 2022 Restaurant of the Year and was featured on The New York Times' 2022 Restaurant List. Moran's hands have been blessed by the gods of fermentation and fire. Every plate is a manifesto against mediocrity. Feast on exquisite dumplings, beef tartare and delicate kakigori, a Japanese-style shaved ice ( Over in Germantown, Rolf and Daughters does knockout small plates and pasta — scallop crudo, sourdough bread, tomato tart, cecamariti and linguine with mussels have garnered much praise. The cooking is boundary-pushing without being smug and the cocktails are top-notch too ( For all Nashville's modern buzz and indie dive bars, it's worth anchoring yourself in a slice of old-school Southern elegance — and they don't come with more stories than the Hermitage Hotel. Opened in 1910, it's a grand, beaux-arts pile with sweeping staircases, soaring ceilings and a lobby that feels like it belongs in a F Scott Fitzgerald novel. Its history is rich with Tennessee lore: politicians plotted Prohibition here, country stars drank in the Oak Bar, and in recent years it's become a discreet bolt hole for visiting A-listers dodging Broadway's chaos. The rooms are enormous, the bathrooms marble-clad, and the famous art deco men's restroom in the lobby (complete with lime-green glass tiles and original 1930s fixtures) is a listed attraction in itself. Even if you're not staying, pop in for a cocktail at the bar or afternoon tea in the Veranda, beneath glittering chandeliers. It's a serene, old-world contrast to Nashville's grit and neon — and proof that the city knows how to do glamour as well as grit ( Away from the music, Nashville offers more surprises. Centennial Park is home to a full-scale replica of the Parthenon, complete with a towering statue of Athena, and is as bonkers as it sounds. • Nashville grows up but retains its twinkle For the art lovers, check out the Frist Art Museum in a stunning art deco building that used to be the city's main post office (€17; Fancy some whiskey tasting? Located in Marathon Village, the Distillery Tour of Nelson's Green Brier Distillery takes you through the past, present and future of this storied distillery, (€21.40; Nashville is more than its stereotypes. It's cooler, scruffier, grander, funnier and it might just be the best American city you've never really considered. And crucially — unlike over-touristy US cities like New York or Boston — Nashville still feels like it's yours to discover. Yes, there are tourist traps and you might overpay for a pint somewhere. But you could also have a night that ends with a woman named Peggy teaching you how to line dance, and I promise you'll be talking about it for years. Aer Lingus flies direct from Dublin airport to Nashville, with fares starting from €499 return.. The airport can also be used for connecting flights within the US, Demelza de Burca was a guest of

Teen Mom star Jenelle Evans finalizes divorce from David Eason one year after separation
Teen Mom star Jenelle Evans finalizes divorce from David Eason one year after separation

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Teen Mom star Jenelle Evans finalizes divorce from David Eason one year after separation

Jenelle Evans is officially divorced from ex-husband David Eason. On Friday the 33-year-old Teen Mom star's attorney appeared in court on her behalf, with a judge granting the divorce despite the imminent signed order. The mom-of-three told TMZ about the milestone, 'After a really long and draining process, my divorce from David is official. 'This chapter has been heavy, but I'm walking away from it with clarity, strength and so much love for my kids. My focus is on them and our future and I'm just thankful to finally have peace and a fresh start.' Jenelle and David separated in March 2024, with the former citing her then-husband's wild behavior, drug use, and refusal to work as the reasons for the split. On Friday the 33-year-old Teen Mom star's attorney appeared in court on her behalf, with a judge granting the divorce despite the imminent signed order; pictured in 2019 Also on Friday, Jenelle was active on Instagram, answering questions from her 3.1 million followers. One person wrote, 'The Ashley is reporting you may get your divorce today... GOOD LUCK!' Evans replied, 'Finally! NC makes people suffer through a divorce,' referencing North Carolina, her home state. Someone else asked 'How are you?' and noted, 'You look happier without David. You deserve the best.' And the longtime MTV star answered, 'I'm thriving. I actually realized my worth, you guys,' with a crying laughing emoji. Earlier this week Evans posted a selfie on Instagram and wrote, 'You glow differently when you prioritize yourself.' Last month the reality television personality prematurely celebrated her breakup with a divorce party. The event was hosted at New York City's famous Spearmint Rhino strip club, where the divorcee was joined by a group of girlfriends. Also on Friday, Jenelle was active on Instagram, answering questions from her 3.1 million followers. Someone else asked 'How are you?' and noted, 'You look happier without David. You deserve the best,' to which Jenelle replied, 'I'm thriving' Prior to the celebration, Jenelle told TMZ that with David finally out of the picture, she was feeling great, less anxious and totally free. Jenelle and Eason share an eight-year-old daughter named Ensley Jolie Eason. The MTV alum also shares son Jace Vaughn, 15, with ex Andrew Lewis, and 10-year-old son Kaiser Orion with ex Nathan Griffin.

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