Billie Eilish and Nat Wolff Look All Loved Up While on a Boat in Venice
Billie Eilish has a new romance in her life.
The 'Lunch' singer's relationship history includes everyone from 2 Little Monsters actor Matthew Tyler Vorce, to The Neighbourhood singer Jesse Rutherford, to internet star Quenlin Blackwell, and now, she seems to be dating actor and musician Nat Wolff.
Wolff, like Eilish, grew up in the entertainment industry. His mother is actress, writer, director, and producer Polly Draper, and his father is the jazz pianist Michael Wolff. Inspired by their parents, Wolff and his brother, Alex, began acting and singing when they were just kids. They starred in Nickelodeon's The Naked Brothers Band (produced by his mom and with music supervised by his dad) and even went on tour to promote it.
Wolff's other acting credits include The Fault in Our Stars (2014), Paper Towns (2015), Stella's Last Weekend (2018), and Mainstream (2020). Now, he and his brother are focused on their music. As pop-rock duo Nat & Alex Wolff, they have released two studio albums and even joined Eilish on her Hit Me Hard and Soft Tour last year.
Ahead, everything we know Wolff and Eilish's relationship.
Despite sources previously denying rumors that Eilish and Wolff are dating, the musicians are seen kissing on a balcony in Venice, Italy, and enjoying some champagne.
The pair enjoys a boat ride in Venice, Italy, while in casual outfits. The two are seen cuddling and laughing, and at one point, Wolff leans over to give Eilish a kiss on the cheek.
The pair seem to have a date night in Manhattan—first going to see a play at Lucille Lortel Theater, and then going bar-hopping in the East Village. See the photos here.
Wolff and brother Alex join Eilish's Hit Me Hard and Soft tour as the opening act, and soon, rumors that Wolff is involved with Eilish emerge.
In an interview published on October 2024, Wolff says of Eilish: 'She's one of those people where almost everything she does, she does better than everyone else. She's like, 'Come see me ride my horse,' and the teacher says, 'You know, if she put all her energy into it, she could go to the Olympics.' You just have to kind of submit to the fact that she's going to be better than everyone else at everything.'
Wolff makes an appearance in Eilish's 'CHIHIRO' music video—and they look great running together in coordinating baggy fits.
Wolff and Eilish meet at the 2023 Academy Museum Gala in Los Angeles. Wolff reveals this fact in an interview months later, when he says that they bonded over the fact that they both have Tourette's syndrome.
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Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
She voiced M3gan. Now her breakup anthem is blowing up TikTok.
'In Texas, we have this saying called 'Go big or go home,'' says Jenna Davis. She's going big. Let's take a look at a day in her life — June 27, 2025 — for proof: she returned as the voice of the AI robot killer M3gan in M3GAN 2.0, which opened in theaters nationwide, and debuted her debut country album, Where Did That Girl Go? Phew! If Davis' big day hasn't landed on your radar yet, there's still a chance you've heard the 21-year-old's voice before, in the horror-comedy franchise or on the radio. But content creation is where she's found the most success so far. With a combined 10.4 million followers across YouTube, Instagram or TikTok, she's been growing and tending to her social media following, all the while pursuing the creative projects that she's most passionate about. Davis's first brush with social media stardom came in her childhood, when her voice teacher mom recorded videos of her singing covers in her apartment's parking garage, then uploaded them to Instagram. In one viral video from 2018, the then 14-year-old, wearing a denim jacket and rocking a severe side part, makes intense eye contact with the camera as she soulfully sings 'Jealous' by Labrinth. Davis says she learned her lesson about the eye contact — commenters used to say she was 'staring into their souls' — but is well aware that her adolescent awkwardness added to her charm back in the day. 'People just started to catch on and watch my content because I was a dorky little girl who didn't care what I looked like — rocking pigtails or weird miscolored outfits and just being me,' she tells Yahoo. 'I would look right into the camera and sing my little heart out.' Davis booked a few gigs over the years as an actress in shows like Raven's Home and Treehouse Detectives. As her follower count grew, she wanted to share more than just singing videos online. That's when she started acting more like a traditional influencer, attempting viral challenges and uploading prank videos. Some of her most popular videos include 'I SPENT THE NIGHT IN MY FRIENDS HOUSE & THEY HAD NO IDEA…' and 'EATING ONLY ONE COLORED FOOD FOR 24 HOURS!' The videos are high energy, colorful and frantically edited, appealing to youngsters with short attention spans. That makes her posts feel strangely authentic, like a teenager really could have produced them. 'I started just basically posting content that I felt reflected me, because I wanted my audience to know Jenna for Jenna,' she says. 'There's always an actor side that feels untouchable, or like you can't know that person, and I wanted to make sure that people could watch me and feel like they know me.' It could be why her single 'Miss Wannabe,' which she calls her 'most savage song yet,' has drawn comparisons to 'Before He Cheats' by Carrie Underwood, the quintessential female rage country song. It has blown up on TikTok, where authenticity is a social currency that can't be bought, as other creators shared the song with their own breakup stories. 'Well, she's a bottle of beer and I'm a glass of champagne / She's a fake veneer and I'm the real dang thing,' she sings cheekily, dismissing her ex's new partner as a cheap imitation. Later, she continues: 'He's kissing her, but he's missing me / I pity pretty little miss wannabe.' It is pretty savage. It's no coincidence that Davis is experiencing concurrent career highs. But, she insists, she's not capitalizing on recent viral success to propel her musical success; she's always been a singer (look no further than the awkward pre-teen videos that live on the internet forever). 'I don't know if I would go as far as to say it's insulting, but I think it's just not true,' she says of the implication. '[Having] a social media presence, everyone's going to have opinions, and that's OK.' She clearly has her own opinions too, and as she matures, her lyrics have as well. 'When I was younger… well, I was a child, so I didn't really have much to say,' Davis says. 'I don't think that as a little homeschooled girl, I had a lot of life experience … Now, I've gotten older and lived a bit longer and know what I want to say as an artist.' Her mom got her obsessed with country legends at a young age. Even after they moved from Texas to Los Angeles, Dolly Parton, Shania Twain and Patsy Cline were on repeat. She's also related to Gene Autry, a country music icon known for 'Home on the Range' and 'Back in the Saddle Again,' whose career began in the 1930s. 'I love the storytelling of country music, and I think a lot of people have a phase when they're growing up and around country music so much that they turn from it,' she says. 'I was always just like, 'Give me more!'' Her upbringing may have helped mold her voice as a country singer, but the voice of a homicidal android that gave her her breakout acting role in M3GAN came to her while she was on the floor of her bedroom closet. That's where she auditioned for the gig, and given the odd circumstances, she was shocked to book the role — and thrilled when the movie became a surprise box office hit in 2023. Davis voices a doll powered by AI that goes on a murderous rampage. (Amie Donald plays the other half of the role, portraying her physically onscreen.) In the sequel, she's back with a different mission: Stopping another doll like her who has gone rogue and become a military-grade weapon. She's still pretty evil, but she's hellbent on protecting her young owner, Cady, at all costs. Davis has a lot of love for M3gan. As she told the news outlet PRIDE, she hopes that the character might become a horror legend like Chucky. 'I think it was the most unexpected surprise, but also a thrill, but also nerve-racking at the same time, introducing a new villain into such an empire,' Davis says of initially booking the role, gushing about the impact that production company Blumhouse has had on horror. It had a hand in bringing iconic films like Paranormal Activity, The Purge, Get Out and now M3GAN to life. As the heroine of so much of her songwriting, playing a villain was new for Davis. She says it's 'challenging and uncanny, but at the same time, M3gan is a lot more than a villain.' 'She is very sassy and witty and fun, and just has so much spunk and spite and sass. It's very fun to play her because she has so many levels,' Davis tells Yahoo. As someone with a lot of levels herself — after all, she's a singer, an actress and a social media savant — Davis gets it. She doesn't have M3gan's penchant for violence, of course, but she's known to be lyrically savage.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
11 new movies to watch this week: See 'Jurassic World Rebirth' in theaters, rent 'Thunderbolts*,' stream 'Sinners' on HBO Max and more
Hello, Yahoo readers! Film critic Brett Arnold here, and I'm back with another edition of Trust Me, I Watch Everything. With the holiday weekend approaching, it's a big week for movies, and I watched them all so you can plan your screen time wisely because the sun is calling! If you're looking to escape the summer heat by heading to the local cineplex where the air-conditioning is always on blast, consider catching Jurassic World Rebirth (F1, which I previously recommended and is dominating the global box office, is a great option too). For the homebodies, or those needing a flick to help drown out the sound of fireworks, there's plenty to choose from, including streaming debuts like Heads of State with John Cena and Idris Elba on Prime Video and The Old Guard 2 with Charlize Theron and Uma Thurman. Exciting recent releases like Marvel's Thunderbolts* and From the World of John Wick: Ballerina become available to rent or buy and vampire drama Sinners premieres on HBO Max. Phew, that's a lot — and I'm just getting started. Read on because there's something here for everyone. What to watch in theaters Movies newly available to rent or buy Movies newly available on streaming services you may already have My recommendation: Why you should watch it: Jurassic World Rebirth is a fresh start for the franchise, ditching the Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard characters and swapping in Scarlett Johansson and a slew of other fresh faces, including Wicked's Jonathan Bailey, Oscar-winner Mahershala Ali and Rupert Friend. Johansson plays a mercenary hired by a pharmaceutical company to infiltrate an island full of prehistoric creatures and obtain DNA that could lead to medical breakthroughs. Sound familiar? David Koepp, the screenwriter of the original Jurassic Park film and its best and first sequel, The Lost World, returns to scripting duties here, and the movie harkens back to the adventure movie energy of the original trilogy. It also sneaks in some meta-commentary about how audiences may be tiring of these movies: there's a whole thread here about society moving on from dinosaurs, once a special thing that became less and less exciting the more prevalent they became in the world. As the characters traverse the island, the movie cycles through set pieces as fast as it does its obvious influences: a little Jaws here, some King Kong Skull Island antics there, sprinkle in some Temple of Doom for good measure. Director Gareth Edwards (2014's Godzilla, Rogue One) is known for his visual effects, and they look great here, even if you do ultimately feel the lack of the practical element that even the lame last movie, Jurassic World: Dominion, made sure to include. It's good fun, though, even if it never really makes a case for returning to this world other than "these movies all make a billion dollars each, easy." There's something nice about the fact that it has no grander ambitions than delivering a summer blockbuster that features exciting and tense sequences where humans must outrun and outsmart huge, monstrous dinosaurs, some of which are genetically modified to be even scarier! In short, Jurassic World Rebirth provides what you came for. 🍿 What critics are saying: It's an even split! Mark Kennedy from the Associated Press praises it as "superb," writing that the filmmakers, like the film's mercenaries, have the same mission: "Going back to the source code to recapture the magic of Steven Spielberg's 1993 blockbuster original. They've thrillingly succeeded." Amy Nicholson at the Los Angeles Times, however, was not a fan, writing "the series itself has gotten so bored with the beasties that it continues to invent new ugly mutants." 👀 How to watch: Jurassic World Rebirth is now in theaters nationwide. Get tickets Why you should watch it: If you've managed to avoid the meaning of the asterisk until now, congratulations, I won't ruin it for you here. I previously recommended Thunderbolts* when it hit theaters, writing at the time that "I couldn't believe the level of ambition I was seeing in a Marvel movie in 2025." 🍿 What critics are saying: With a 93% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, audiences love it, calling it a return to form for Marvel and the best film from the studio in a while. 👀 How to watch: Thunderbolts* is now available to rent or buy and will likely hit Disney+ in late August or early September. Rent or buy 🤔 But that's not all! I previously wrote of Ballerina, "whenever the movie is in hyper-violent action mode, it's a lot of fun. The problem is, that awesome action is almost entirely relegated to the final 45 minutes, which leaves about an hour and 15 minutes of laborious setup." It's still worth a watch for fans of John Wick, and the man himself does appear in the film, courtesy of pretty obvious reshoots. Rent or buy. This sequel to a straight-to-Netflix Liam Neeson vehicle from 2021 is not on Netflix but is available to rent or buy at home after a brief theatrical run. It's better than the average late-period Liam Neeson action flick yet very strange as a sequel to The Ice Road; it may as well be any old Neeson flick, the connection is so tenuous. Rent or buy. The filmmakers behind A24's hit horror film Talk to Me are back with another unsettling genre flick about a foster mother with a terrifying secret. The Philippou brothers again prove their ability to craft genuinely shocking moments, but this is pretty familiar or buy. This Scottish samurai-western, which I recommended when it was in theaters, is riveting and efficient. Actress Kōki stars as Tornado, a Japanese puppeteer's daughter who gets caught up with criminals when their traveling circus show crosses paths with an infamous gang of criminals. Rent or buy. Why you should watch it: With Sinners, Ryan Coogler took a huge swing — and knocked it out of the park, with a $364.5 million worldwide box office haul so far, making it one of the top-performing films of the year. Based on an original idea and starring Michael B. Jordan as twins, which he believably portrays as two distinct people, the movie is a period-piece gangster movie that patiently sets up the stakes of its story. The stakes, as I previously pointed out, just so happen to be that this is really a vampire movie, but disguised as a metaphor about the director's feelings on making art as a Black man in an industry that's eager to exploit his perspective. 🍿 What critics are saying: Sinners is one of the most popular films of the year, according to Rotten Tomatoes, scoring high with critics and audiences alike. As Michael Phillips at the Chicago Tribune said, this isn't your average vampire movie. 👀 How to watch: Sinners starts streaming on HBO Max on July 4th. Stream 'Sinners' Why you should watch it: Thank you, Amazon Prime, for keeping the big-budget comedy alive. Last month we had Deep Cover, which was unexpectedly funny and entertaining, and now we have Heads of State, another action-comedy with a super fun premise and A-list talent attached. Idris Elba plays the U.K. prime minister and John Cena plays the action-star-turned-U.S.-president, and the two men have a public rivalry that jeopardizes their countries' "special relationship." But when they become targets of a ruthless foreign adversary, they must set aside their differences and begrudgingly rely on each other. It's typical mismatched buddy action-comedy fare elevated by the high-concept nature of its premise and the commitment to the bit by its leads, as well as co-star Priyanka Chopra Jonas, and a cavalcade of others including Paddy Considine, Jack Quaid and Carla Gugino. Director Ilya Naishuller (Nobody) does a great job with the action, usually a low point of movies like this, and the set-pieces are all exciting and inventive and laced with comedy in that Jackie Chan-esque way we all love, for lack of a better term. It's a shame we have to settle for watching this at home, as it would surely be a riot in a theater with a packed house, but it'll have to do! 🍿 What critics are saying: Critics are more split than I am. Deadline's Pete Hammond laments that the movie lets "the explosions and gunplay take center stage in a movie where action-to-the-max is our filmmaker's mantra." The Hollywood Reporter's Caryn James calls it "sporadically diverting." 👀 How to watch: Heads of State starts streaming on Amazon Prime Video on July 4th. Stream 'Heads of State' 🤔 But that's not all! Charlize Theron returns in this sequel to Netflix's 2020 movie The Old Guard, and Uma Thurman joins the fun this time, though you may be surprised by how little she's actually in the movie despite being the main villain. Now streaming on Netflix. "Wannabe Coen Brothers" is its own thriving subgenre, and this is a perfectly OK one! A retired hitman's life is turned upside down when his ex-wife and son arrive unannounced during the holidays because they are on the run from his former mob associates. It's impressive that newcomer Miles J. Harvey stands out most among the A-list cast, which is absolutely stacked: Bill Murray, Pete Davidson, Jennifer Coolidge, Ed Harris, Gabrielle Union and Lewis Pullman. Starts streaming on Hulu on July 4th. A dramatization of the real-life 1984 Press Your Luck game show scandal, in which a man went on a hot streak on the show but may not have been playing fairly. The movie is at its best before it reveals how he did it, frankly, and it runs out of steam from there. Paul Walter Hauser is great in the streaming on AMC+ on July 4th. That's all for now — we'll see you next week at the movies.
Yahoo
7 days ago
- Yahoo
Jonathan Anderson's Dior Man Is a Delight
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." There's a new (new, new) look at Dior. After weeks of teasing glimpses, Jonathan Anderson has finally started to unveil his vision for the nearly 80-year-old fashion house. At Les Invalides in Paris, Anderson showed his debut collection for Dior men's and presented an entirely fresh vernacular for the global brand—one that delicately balanced the historical with the present while presenting lots of propositions for the future. The livestream began with videos of brand ambassadors traveling to the show. Lakeith Stanfield and Josh O'Connor chitchatted in the back of the cab, while Robert Pattinson leisurely strolled into an elevator. All of these guys were decked out in Anderson's new Dior, or perhaps it was less decked out and more dressed. Impossibly stylish, the clothes bend the arch between a dapper man and someone who's a bit of a scoundrel. Outside, Anderson collaborator and friend the director Luca Guadagnino was filming some of the recognizable guests who began to arrive, like Sam Nivola and Donatella Versace. Rihanna and A$AP Rocky were there. Sabrina Carpenter pulled up wearing an Anderson-ized version of Dior's New Look. Inside the venue, a nearly-empty gallery space had been built, punctuated only by light parquet floors and wooden blocks for seats. The walls were sparsely hung with still life paintings by Old Masters like Jean Siméon Chardin, whose work Monsieur Dior was fond of. Other than Versace, several more designers came out to support Anderson, including Pierpaolo Piccioli and Matthieu Blazy, both set to make their own debuts, at Balenciaga and Chanel respectively, this fall. The anticipation for this collection was high, to say the least. Once the first look hit the runway, it was clear just how much the hype had been warranted. Bang out of the gate, a hit: Anderson paired a Donegal tweed bar jacket with ballooning cargo shorts fastened with a pleated, cascading bustle at the back, a design loosely inspired by the mille-feuille dress silhouettes Monsieur Dior showed at the beginning of his career. Everything that followed painted a delightful, whip-smart portrait of the past infused with the present. Riffing off of ideas from his final womenswear collection for Loewe last year, Anderson wrote in the show notes that these pieces were meant to signify 'a reconstruction of formality' and celebrate the 'joy in the art of dressing: a spontaneous, empathetic collusion of then and now, of relics of the past things rediscovered in the archives, classic tropes of class, and pieces that have endured the test of time.' For any other designer, finding resonance with 'then and now' at a storied house might manifest itself as a re-issue. Anderson is one of the most important designers of his generation because he understands how not to do that. He makes things that are recognizable and ripped from history books and turns them into something we've never seen before. For Spring 2026, Anderson did this by crafting precise replicas of embroidered waistcoats and pairing them with white jeans and sneakers. Basic neckties were loose and worn flipped over to reveal Anderson's revamp of the Dior logo—a journey back to its roots when M. Dior, in his exacting way, would only settle for a French-style font. There were classic cravats and rococo-style micro-florals set against athletic socks and fisherman sandals. Anderson's new book totes were carried throughout the show, touting titles like Bonjour Tristesse and In Cold Blood—accessories for a hot dude who reads. The capes and maxi shirt-dresses added touches of Anderson's signature kookiness, abstracting and bending the idea of time even further. These men were dandy and regal, but also a little rough around the edges, the kind that Anderson has made into a bona fide style archetype over the last decade. No one else could, at least in this moment, make eighteenth-century wardrobe staples feel like they belonged with a pair of barrel leg jeans. Anderson imagines completely unimaginable wardrobes for those outside of the fashion sphere, for those who never thought a tie could be worn backwards or a pair of cargos could sashay. The biggest challenge of these gargantuan creative director jobs at luxury houses is being everything to everyone—being a creative director whose clothes, marketing, ambassadors, and accessories appeal to the classic brand loyalists, the high-net worth clients who want a logo splattered all over their bodies, and the kids who are looking for someone to tell them what's coming next. Anderson can imagine something for every luxury customer, and he has the vision to build new sartorial archetypes through instinctive design. He got a standing ovation of course, walking out with a shy swagger, the kind we'd just witnessed reverberate through the clothes he showed on the runway. This is the delight and the dream of Anderson. It was then, it is now, and it will be as he keeps moving ahead at Dior. You Might Also Like 4 Investment-Worthy Skincare Finds From Sephora The 17 Best Retinol Creams Worth Adding to Your Skin Care Routine