
EXCLUSIVE Has the curse of Meghan struck again? The smart set's latest whispers about her once closest confidante, revealed by RICHARD EDEN
But has Misha, 39, been jinxed by the association – at least where her fashion business is concerned?
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Daily Mail
44 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Brock Lesnar makes stunning return to WWE after two years in exile to confront John Cena at SummerSlam
After two years in exile due to his alleged involvement in the Vince McMahon lawsuit, Brock Lesnar returned to WWE programming at SummerSlam to confront John Cena on Sunday night. Lesnar last appeared for the company at SummerSlam in 2023 and was written off television despite being one of the company's biggest stars at the time allegedly due to his ties to the McMahon litigation. Lesnar has not commented on the incident publicly since being named in the suit in February.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The simple eye trick to fall asleep in seconds if you keep waking up at 3am: 'You've saved my life'
Millions have been left stunned over a bizarre-but-brilliant sleep hack that promises to knock you out in seconds. And all it involves is moving your eyes around. Jenna Coak, an American content creator known for testing wellness tips, has gone viral after posting a clip now viewed 2.6 million times. In the video, she explained how a trick she saw on Instagram helped her fall back asleep in the middle of the night, something she says she normally struggles with every single night. 'I saw this trick on Instagram for falling back asleep after you wake up in the middle of the night,' she told her followers. 'I was like no way does this actually work. But I've tried it a couple of nights in a row and it literally works.' In the clip, Jenna, who wears an Aura ring to track her sleep, revealed her shocking data showing how often she normally wakes during the night. 'I usually wake up this much. It's insane I know,' she said, flashing a screenshot of her restless stats. Jenna Coak, an American content creator said the trick is: 'You look to the left, you look to the right, you look up, you look down, then they go round in a circle one way, and then you go the other way. And that's it. You just repeat it until you fall back asleep.' 'This was the first night I tried it. So much more restful. Second night it also worked!' Her fail-safe hack couldn't be more low-effort. 'This is what you do. I'm going to demonstrate it,' she said, eyes closed. 'You look to the left, you look to the right, you look up, you look down, then they go round in a circle one way, and then you go the other way. 'And that's it. You just repeat it until you fall back asleep.' To prove her theory, Jenna said she tested the technique multiple nights in a row. 'One night I swear I did it twice and I remember thinking 'no way is this going to work',' Jenna said. 'And the next thing I knew it was 7.30am and my alarm was going off.' To prove her theory, Jenna said she tested the technique multiple nights in a row and recorded it on her Aura ring (pictured) Jenna claims there's a science-based reason behind the success of the technique. 'I obviously looked at the science behind it, and it sounds like it activates our parasympathetic nervous system because it tricks your brain into thinking it's in the REM cycle,' she explained. 'It feels like some type of voodoo magic.' Her followers were blown away by the trick, flooding the comments with praise, personal hacks and pleas for it to work on small children. 'Yes! We do this in therapy and it regulates your nervous system,' one viewer confirmed. 'Can someone tell my baby this hack?' another joked. 'You've saved my life,' a third wrote. And others who tried it were instantly convinced. 'I am chronically up every night, and I tried this last night,' wrote one fan. 'I am sold! It was the weirdest thing. I was very aware of how I was moving my eyes around, and then that would be the last thing I remembered. Thanks for sharing!' Another user added: 'I close my eyes, and say 'nothing, nothing, nothing,' over and over again in my mind. 'It keeps all the intrusive thoughts away. Works every time.'
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The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
Stephen A Smith reveals he took ‘major offense' to Michelle Obama's criticism of Trump voters
Stephen A Smith says he took 'major offense' over remarks made by Michelle Obama during the 2024 presidential election, when the former First Lady seemingly scolded young Black men for considering to vote for Donald Trump. The ESPN host said that while he thought of Obama as 'the greatest first lady in American history,' her rhetoric while campaigning for former Vice President Kamala Harris had left him feeling 'pretty salty.' Smith made the comments on Saturday's episode of The Stephen A Smith show, in response to being name-checked by Obama in an episode of her own podcast, IMO, in which she compared ESPN to reality television. 'If I listen to ESPN for an hour, it's like watching the Real Housewives of Atlanta,' Obama said. 'I mean, you know, it's the same drama, and they're yelling at each other and they don't get along, you know? I mean, Stephen A Smith, he's just like every other talk show host.' Smith made it clear that, while he disagreed with the parallel drawn, other remarks by the first lady had irritated him more. 'You said a vote for Trump was a vote against you and a vote against y'all as women,' Smith said. 'I want to stay for the record, I took major offense to that. Black men don't just love our black women, we revere y'all. 'It's who we are. And to say what you said back then, I think to this day, is the only thing that I didn't like that you said, I didn't appreciate it.' At a rally in Michigan in October, Obama told rally-goers that she was 'a little frustrated' by things she had heard about why people were not fully getting behind Harris' shot at the presidency. Speaking directly to men, she emphasized how further restrictions on abortion and other aspects of women's health care, proposed by the Trump campaign, would impact them and their sons, too. 'I am asking y'all from the core of my being to take our lives seriously — please,' Obama said. 'Do not put our lives in the hands of politicians — mostly men — who have no clue or do not care about what we, as women, are going through.' This struck a chord with Smith, who pointed out in his podcast episode that there were many other reasons that such men may have chosen not to vote for Harris, including the economy, national security and even immigration. 'You will never hear me utter a negative word about you, but I respectfully disagreed and still remain pretty salty about what you said about us.' He added that he was 'even more adamant about what your husband, Barack Obama said,' referring to the former president's berating of young Black male voters, who he subtly accused of being misogynistic with their voting habits. He pundit, who himself has been linked with a presidential run, added that he though Michelle Obama would have beaten Trump in 2024, and any other GOP candidate if she chooses to run for office.