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Michael Madsen dead at 67 after Reservoir Dogs & Kill Bill star ‘found unresponsive at home'

Michael Madsen dead at 67 after Reservoir Dogs & Kill Bill star ‘found unresponsive at home'

The Irish Sun03-07-2025
ACTOR Michael Madsen has died aged 67.
The Reservoir Dogs star was found dead in his home in Malibu on Thursday morning.
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Michael Madsen at the 8th Filming Italy Festival on March 1, 2023 in Los Angeles
Credit: Getty
Madsen was best known for his roles in Quentin Tarantino movies like Kill Bill: Vol. 1, Reservoir Dogs, and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos
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People say I'm setting women back, but they're mums relying on boyfriends or benefits says Bonnie Blue in shocking chat
People say I'm setting women back, but they're mums relying on boyfriends or benefits says Bonnie Blue in shocking chat

The Irish Sun

time14 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

People say I'm setting women back, but they're mums relying on boyfriends or benefits says Bonnie Blue in shocking chat

'DON'T stand too close to me, you might catch something,' quips Bonnie Blue as we pose for pics. As The Sun's Sexpert, there's not much that shocks me. I've been to swinging parties, witnessed 50-strong orgies and even taken part in an orgasm contest in New York. 5 Bonnie Blue is the disturbing reality of what happens when pornography and the world of 'influencers' collide Credit: Olivia West 5 Bonnie's controversial bonkfest during Nottingham Freshers' Week made headlines Credit: Tim Stewart 5 Bonnie has been branded as dangerous for women as toxic masculinity influencer Andrew Tate Credit: Instagram You could say I'm unshockable, and I'd have agreed with you — until Bonnie burst on to the scene. I've covered the industry long enough to know what's what, and I count porn stars, escorts and OnlyFans models as friends. But such is Bonnie's determination to perform the most degrading stunts imaginable, she's a tough one to defend. Her shock claim to fame — She has even been branded as dangerous for women as toxic masculinity influencer 'I love sex with public' So today, I'm sitting down with the 26-year-old to find out what really drives her — and maybe even get under her skin. Readers will know that The Sun does not make a habit of interviewing porn stars. But Bonnie is more than that. She is the disturbing reality of what happens when pornography and the world of 'influencers' collide, just as much a staple on the unregulated social media pages your kids scroll through as she is on adult sites. Bonnie is riding a new wave of anything-goes promiscuity that's genuinely worrying — and that's coming from someone who has built a career on being 'sex positive'. Real name Tia Billinger, she grew up in Draycott, a village between Derby and Nottingham, and was virtually unknown until she catapulted to fame in October last year. Bonnie Blue CANCELS disgusting 'petting zoo' event after extreme backlash, but reveals 10 THOUSAND men applied Her extraordinary story is laid bare in new fly-on-the-wall Channel 4 documentary, 1,000 Men And Me: The With immaculately blow-dried blonde hair and a preppy style, she's far from the stereotypical porn star. There's an old-money vibe about her — part of her appeal no doubt, and the shock factor. I ask her about being Claiming to be inspired by David Blaine, she wanted to tie herself up inside a glass box in the centre of London, which would be 'open for the public' to 'It's frustrating, I've never broken a single f * g rule,' she fumes. 'I went from "They [OnlyFans] would prefer me to do a cooking show or a dog's yoga retreat, but it's a sex site. People say I'm setting women back, but when I check their profiles, they're often stay-at-home mums relying on a boyfriend or benefits. Bonnie Blue 'I love having sex with the public and that is not going to stop. OnlyFans has tried to cancel me, but it's done the opposite.' So does Bonnie think she's setting women back with such degrading behaviour, teaching young men that it's OK to treat them as objects? 'I say I'm not a feminist, but a lot of my views are,' she says. 'I believe in equality, women being in control and not feeling intimidated by men. I do what I want, when I want, and I feel safe doing it. 'People say I'm setting women back, but when I check their profiles, they're often stay-at-home mums relying on a boyfriend or benefits — and I think, hang on a second.' Bonnie's controversial bonkfest during Nottingham Uni Freshers' Week, which saw her have sex with 150 18-year-olds — many of whom she claimed were virgins — made news. But it was her stunt in January that really caused outcry, as she claimed to have slept with over 1,000 men in 12 hours, working out at less than 45 seconds per fella. 5 Bonnie's shocking claim to fame was bedding 1,000 men in 12 hours Credit: bonnie_blue_xox/Instagram 5 A young Bonnie with with her ex Ollie Credit: Facebook She later revealed she was left covered in bruises and bite marks from the sex marathon and issued a thank-you to 'all the barely legal, barely breathing and the husbands'. One of the first things that strikes me about Bonnie is how tiny she is. When I go to give her a hug, she's so delicate and pint-sized I worry I might crush her. I can't help but think about her being thrown around in her infamous gang bangs and wonder how she wasn't seriously damaged. I imagine my young kids — already exposed to social media — stumbling across her content and shudder. I'd be heartbroken if my three-year-old daughter ever thought this was inspirational, and asked Bonnie what led her down this path. 'Everyone wants me to say I've been through something traumatic in my past,' she says. 'But it's not true. They just can't accept that I want to do this because I enjoy sex.' I enjoy sex, too, but I find it hard to believe anyone could genuinely enjoy a 1,000-strong orgy. I ask her if she actually orgasms during these stunts and how her body felt the next day. 'Oh it's completely hit and miss,' she explains. 'Even in my personal sex life, I have to remind them how I like it. "Most of these men are inexperienced, so I don't, but I enjoy giving them a good experience. My jaw hurt more than I did down there after the 1,000 challenge,' she adds nonchalantly. 'My legs were burning, too.' Some guys were just lonely and wanted a conversation, other guys wanted me to strip down within 60 seconds with a sex toy inside of me. Bonnie Blue Bonnie says she ordered a burger and watched Dexter on Netflix that evening as she was 'too excited to sleep', then treated herself to a massage and facial at a spa the next day. Another Brit OnlyFans content created, Unlike Bonnie, Lily, from Derbyshire, claims the experience left her in tears — yet she still pledged to go a step further and sleep with 1,000 men in 24 hours. But Bonnie nailed the challenge first — and in half the time. The pair previously made joint content, but Lily has since claimed their views 'don't quite align'. Last month, 'His opinion is that women have fought for years to be in control and have their say and do what they want with their bodies. I do exactly that. So if that's the outcome, so be it.' Like Andrew, she's a Marmite figure — loved by some, loathed by others — and receives hundreds of death threats a day online. 'Last time I went out by myself was six months ago,' she explains. 'It's not safe.' It's hard not to find this incredibly sad. What's the point of making big money if you can't actually enjoy it? 'I want to be the best at what I do,' explains Bonnie. 'I'm not driven by material things and would rather be at home doing a puzzle than glammed up at a red carpet event.' 'Part-time nun' When she's not filming controversial content, she spends her time fishing, surfing and doing jigsaws. She says the only time she's been hurt was when someone uploaded a photo of her late grandad and falsely claimed he had sexually assaulted her. 'My family are getting double looks in the street,' she revealed. 'It made me realise the impact I was having on my family.' So how did someone like Bonnie, who seems to have it all, end up here? 'Growing up, I loved dancing,' she explains. 'But you've got to have money to make it. All the big dance schools are in London and I couldn't even afford a train ticket there.' Bonnie was studying midwifery before she dropped out of college and worked for the NHS doing recruitment finance. She later moved to 'The move really helped me become a sex worker,' she recalls. 'It got me out of that small-town mindset where you're constantly comparing yourself to others.' She was inspired by women on TikTok flaunting their sex work earnings and decided to give it a go. 'I wanted money, freedom and to feel in control,' she says. Bonnie was racked with nerves before starting, but her ex-husband was her rock. 'My palms were sweating. I had no idea what I was doing — I didn't even know all the sex terms,' she recalls. 'I had a separate laptop next to me and any time someone asked something I didn't understand, I'd quickly Google it because I was too embarrassed to admit it. They expect me to drop my pants because they're famous. Bonnie Blue 'Some guys were just lonely and wanted a conversation, other guys wanted me to strip down within 60 seconds with a sex toy inside of me.' 'We had sex three or four times a week after watching Netflix,' she recalls. 'My friends would say they had a threesome at the weekend and I'd say, 'Oh my God that's crazy. I'd never even had a one night stand.' Bonnie separated from Ollie last year and their divorce will be finalised next month. 'I'll always love and care for my ex dearly,' she explains. 'But I didn't look at him in the end and think, 'Oh I want to have sex with you'. We became brother and sister in the end.' Bonnie tells how big celebs slide into her DMs, but she's not interested. 'They expect me to drop my pants because they're famous' she laughs. 'But unless they'll film content and be identified, I'm not going to sleep with them. I'm like a part-time nun. I'm one extreme to the next.' She would like to start dating, but it's not a priority. 'I've done what people think is happiness,' she says. 'Marriage, buying a house, a nice car, having money — and they didn't make me happy.' I like Bonnie — she's witty and self-deprecating, cracking jokes at her own expense and clearly enjoys shocking people. But I can't help wondering if it's her armour against the world. As we talk, I wonder what her life will be like five years from now. When her looks fade, will she have to go to even greater extremes for attention? 'If it doesn't make me happy, then I'll be the first to stop,' she explains. 'I'm in control.' Bonnie tells me she hopes the documentary will shift public perception — not just of her, but of the men who sleep with her. 'I want people to know these men aren't disgusting,' she says. 'They're nice people. 'I'm also happy because everyone assumes that behind the cameras, I must be crying, upset or broken — but that's not the case. 'People think I must be sick in the head to enjoy this. But I'm living a life I'm incredibly grateful for. I feel very, very lucky.' But at what cost? 1,000 Men And Me: The Bonnie Blue Story is on Channel 4 tomorrow at 10pm.

All Together Now festival in Waterford – your complete guide to routes, safety and top tips
All Together Now festival in Waterford – your complete guide to routes, safety and top tips

Irish Independent

time2 days ago

  • Irish Independent

All Together Now festival in Waterford – your complete guide to routes, safety and top tips

'We're excited to welcome 30,000 festival-goers to for the sold out sixth chapter of All Together Now (ATN), taking place across the bank holiday weekend from Thursday, July 31 to Monday, August 4,' said a spokesperson. 'We can't wait to throw open the gates and get the party started once again for another incredible weekend of music, art, conversation, and connection. Here are some tips and hints, and everything you need to know to have the best experience at ATN25 - we can't wait for you to join us.' Whether you're going for just one day, or for the whole weekend, here is everything you need to know about safely getting there and back. Stage times and site map - get the ATN App The ATN App, powered by Bank of Ireland, keeps festival-goers in the loop across 21 stages. The app is available at the App Store, Google Play or via This gives you all live stage times and set changes, special guest alerts, and interactive site map, and live traffic and travel updates. Sold out – warning There will be no day tickets for All Together Now 2025. Once again, organisers strongly urge all festival-goers to be cautious and avoid scams of counterfeit or unofficial tickets being sold online. Festival goers are strongly advised to avoid purchasing tickets or campervan passes from unauthorised sellers. Organisers have received a significant number of messages from people who have been scammed when trying to buy tickets through unofficial channels, particularly through a Facebook group claiming to resell tickets for our events. All tickets and campervan passes are completely sold out. Ticket info Mobile tickets are downloaded directly to your phone. No need to print or search through your emails - find them in your Ticketmaster account and on the app, or save them to your mobile wallet. What to pack Photo ID and tickets. Reusable water bottle. Tent, sleeping bag, toiletries, loo roll. Card for cashless payments as the festival does not accept cash as payment for anything. Layers, rain gear, sun cream and wellies – prepare for all weather. ADVERTISEMENT Learn more Organisers would suggest that if you don't need an item, don't bring it, especially any valuables. Professional photographic equipment is not permitted at the festival. Early entry – Thursday, July 31 Early entry is open to all ticket holders - no separate early access ticket required. Organisers encourage as many as possible to beat the rush by arriving on Thursday evening. Campervan, boutique and pre-pitched camping will all be ready and waiting for early arrivals. There will be live entertainment to get the celebrations started, with music on the bandstand and other surprises around the site. Festival opening times Thursday, July 31 - Car park opens at 2pm. Campsites open at 4pm. Last entry at 10pm Friday, 1 August – Sunday, 3 August. Car park and campsites: open from 9am daily. Last entry: 10pm Monday, 4 August. Site closes: 12pm noon. Please take everything with you. Leave not trace. Age policy All Together Now is strictly over 21s, except for children aged 12 and under, who may attend free with a family weekend camping ticket and a parent-guardian. Download your ticket to your phone before leaving the house - on-site signal may be limited. Alcohol policy – BYOB Each person with a general weekend camping ticket is permitted to bring one of the following: 24 cans or one litre of spirits or 1.5 litres of wine. These are allowed only on your initial entry. Alcohol may be brought into both the campsite and the main arena. No re-entry with alcohol once wrist-banded. No single-use plastic bottles. Please decant and use reusables. No glass: glass bottles are strictly prohibited. We suggest you decant to reusable plastic or stainless steel containers. Campervans and caravans Campervan - caravan field opens at 4pm on Thursday, July 31. Camping in tents is not permitted in this field. No gazebos allowed – to ensure everyone has adequate space. No generators, and no electrical hook-ups allowed. Awnings must be built-in, not free-standing. Sleeping in cars in the car park is strictly prohibited. Getting to the festival The car park will open at 2pm on Thursday, July 31 and the campsite will open at 4pm on Thursday, July 31, for all ticket holders. Travelling by road between 9am - 1pm is one of the quietest times to travel to the festival. For the latest traffic news, check: local radio (WLR 95.1FM and BEAT 102.0FM), the Festival App, or Twitter (X) @ATNFestival for the latest travel news as well as live updates. Driving Organisers have advised that festival goers should not follow Google Maps or Sat Nav, as it will not get you all the way to the festival site. Please use the directions at the bottom of this page, and follow the festival signage as soon as you see those. Do not travel to the festival via Carrick-on-Suir. Drop off - shuttle buses Friday drop off: designated drop off zone at Highfield Business Park, Portlaw, accessed from the N25 Kilmeaden Interchange. Free Shuttle Buses will bring ticket holders to the festival (operating Friday, 9am-9pm) and returning (Monday, 8am - 1pm only). Best option: use Waterford City Bus Terminus for Bus Éireann festival shuttle service, operating a regular service to the festival site. Taxis and drop offs The designated taxi pick-up and drop-off zone is located at the bus drop-off area right beside the main entrance to the festival. Ask your taxi driver to enter via Gate 4 for the smoothest access. Please do not arrange to be dropped off or picked up elsewhere near the estate as this can cause delays and disrupt traffic flow. Drop-off on the event site is prohibited on Friday and Monday. Ticketholders arriving to the festival on Friday by taxi or getting dropped off by private vehicles will be directed to the designated drop-off zone in Highfield Business Park, Portlaw - accessed from the N25 Kilmeaden Interchange. Ticketholders will then get the free shuttle bus to the festival (operating Friday 9am-9.30pm) and returning Monday (8am – 1pm only). To avoid festival traffic organisers advise the best drop off at the Waterford City bus Terminus where Bus Eireann festival shuttle will operate a regular service to the festival site. Bus and train Bus Éireann: Direct return services from Dublin, Cork and Waterford. Irish Rail: Routes from major cities to Waterford Plunkett Station, with onward travel options, see Cycling Bike racks are located next to Car Park 4 – follow staff directions once you enter the site. Driving by road From Dublin and north and east Drivers from Dublin and north and east via M9 and N25 west: travel the M9 to its end at Grannagh. Proceed towards the N25, west towards Cork, via the N25 Interchange. At the N25 Kilmeaden Interchange (Carrick Road Roundabout) motorists will be directed right at the roundabout towards the R680 through the town of Portlaw. In Portlaw, you will be directed out the Clonegam Road and enter via Gate 6 for access to the car park. From Waterford city Drivers from Waterford city via N25 west: travel the M9 to its end at Grannagh. Proceed towards the N25, west towards Cork, via the N25 Interchange. At the N25 Kilmeaden Interchange (Carrick Road Roundabout) motorists will be directed right at the roundabout towards the R680 through the town of Portlaw. In Portlaw, you will be directed out the Clonegam Road and enter via Gate 6 for access to the car park. From Cork and Southwest Drivers from Cork and Southwest via N25 east: motorists coming from the southwest will directed left off the N25 at Lemybrien. Motorists will use the R676 road, traveling north, then joining the event traffic at Crehana Junction of R676 - R677, then entering to event via Gate 5. From West and Midlands Drivers from the west and midlands via M7/M8/N24: Travel East along the N24. You will then turn Right at Kilsheelan to the R680. At the end of the R680, south of Carrick-on-Suir, turn Right at the T-Junction with the R676. You will then continue along this regional road and be directed left to the R677 towards Gate 5 (General). Campervans and caravans Please follow all 'event traffic' signs and VMS signage directing you to 'campervans buses.' Traffic coming from the southwest and east will travel north along the R677 to Gate 3. Traffic coming from the west will bypass Gate 5, for general campers, and travel south along the R677 to Gate 3. Once inside please follow the directions of staff who will direct you to your parking location. Private buses All private buses will be directed to Gate 4 regardless of their route origin. Buses will exit the same route as they entered the site. Note - no private hire coaches are permitted to stay on site. Disabled access parking and camping In order to avail of access camping, festival-goers must be in communication with access@ and receive confirmation from the access team. Patrons requiring accessible parking and camping will be directed to Gate 3 regardless of their route origin. Traffic coming from the southwest and east will travel north along the R677 to Gate 3. Traffic coming from the west will bypass Gate 5 and travel south along the R677 to Gate 3.

Irish-produced drama Mix Tape and the musical love letter
Irish-produced drama Mix Tape and the musical love letter

RTÉ News​

time2 days ago

  • RTÉ News​

Irish-produced drama Mix Tape and the musical love letter

BBC drama Mix Tape, a tale of star-crossed lovers who bond over music, is coming to RTÉ soon but can it reinvigorate the lost art of the mix tape as musical love letter? It was a teenage rite of passage and also what the kids now call a major flex. Making a mixtape was a labour of love, a musical way into the heart of the one you fancied and also a proud artefact of just how very good your taste in music really was. Carefully pressing the right buttons on your twin tape deck, choosing the tracks of your hopes and dreams and lovingly inscribing the song titles and artists on the inlay card became something of a minor artform back in what some people probably correctly call simpler times. Van Morrison called it the inarticulate speech of the heart and for millions of seventies, eighties and nineties kids, the mixtape was the musical equivalent of the love letter - the spark for countless nervous conversations and maybe even debates. God knows, I still have a box of them in my spare room. And no, they weren't all retuned, un-played and unloved. These days, of course, you will see wizened old Boomers and Gen Xers posting tiresome memes on wizened old Facebook (it's where the adults hang out, OK?) of cassette tapes accompanied by a pencil. If you know, you know. This, apparently, is the modern age's equivalent of uncovering ancient runes and explaining arcane rituals to digital nativists. In our era of instant gratification, even the noughties phenomenon of the CD burn has given way to soulless Spotify playlists and causal YouTube shares on mobile phones. As ever, something has been lost but with a new generation turning to vinyl and even the cassette format making its own comeback, can the actual physical mixtape become a tribune of love once again? Perhaps recent BBC drama Mix Tape (ta-dah!), which is due to air on RTÉ soon, will inspire a fresh flood of spooling polyester plastic film coated with magnetic material as musical missives. Perhaps not. In any case, the fabled mixtape is the jumping off point for the four-part series. It is the overwrought story of two music mad Sheffield kids, with the very Irish names of Daniel O'Toole and Alison Connor, who meet as teens at a house party in 1989. The young Daniel (who looks like a cross between Grian Chatten of Fontaines D.C. and a young Neil Morrissey) is a music obsessive and he wins bookish Alison's heart with his impressive knowledge of Cabaret Voltaire. Then again, we later learn that his favourite Bowie song is Modern Love. Their first dance is to Joy Division's immortal Love Will Tear Us Apart, their first kiss is to The Jesus & Mary Chain, and when their bedroom fumbling goes much further, they DO IT to the strains of In-Between Days by The Cure. Oh, the drama! Oh, the great basslines! There isn't enough of The Fall featured in Mix Tape for my liking but music is the spine of young Dan and Ali's romance and it plays out the beats and missed heart beats of puppy love (thankfully, no songs by Donny Osmond were used in the making of this programme). Daniel slips his mixtapes into Alison's school bag and she hands him lovingly curated TDKs on the bus to school. We hear The Jesus & Mary Chain, The Velvet Underground and The Stone Roses. All very good, indeed. But just as their teen crush turns to full-blown romance, Alison vanishes from Sheffield, leaving Daniel feeling like a Morrissey song. It's an intriguing premise and the drama plays out in a dual timelines and dual time zones, making it a lot like Sliding Doors meets Sleepless in Seattle - a Proustian rush of 'what ifs' and 'if onlys' played out longingly in verboten mobile phone texts and mutual cyber stalking and the songs of their lost youth. Normal People it is not. However, it is fraught stuff. We follow Daniel and Alison, who is now a successful novelist living in Syndey and married to a total eejit, and move between their teenage romance in 1989 Sheffield and the modern-day reality of their adult relationships living on opposite sides of the world. Daniel and his wife aren't exactly singing from the same hymn sheet back in Sheffield. He now works as a music journalist but never seems to do any actual work (so, that makes sense) and he is toying with writing a book about some great lost music figurehead, like Daniel Johnson or Nick Drake. Mix Tape is a very Irish affair. The four-part drama was originated and developed by Dublin-based production company Subotica, who have previously produced North Sea Connection and The Boy That Never Was, with help from Ireland's generous Section 481 Film and Television tax incentive and the support of Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland and Screen Australia among others. It was also filmed entirely on location in Dublin and Sydney. And so, the former steel town of Sheffield is played by Dublin's Liberties (I was tickled to see that some of it was shot on the very street where I live), while location filming was also completed in Australia. However, things get seriously meta when the young Alison actually moves to actual Dublin and young Daniel nearly has a whitey on the actual Ha'penny Bridge when he sees her with another bloke. Strangely, no U2 was used in the making of this programme. Based on the novel by Jane Sanderson and adapted for television by Irish writer Jo Spain, the show stars Teresa Palmer as the adult Alison and Jim Sturgess as the adult Daniel and Rory Walton-Smith as young Daniel and Florence Hunt as young Alison. And here's the thing, the actors who play the younger versions of our protagonists are so much better than the anguished grown-up versions, who spend most of the time moping about like extras in a Cure video. Of course, the whole thing reminded me of that minor noughties indie hit about an estranged couple haggling over their shared record collection in the same way rich people haggle over their condo in Bel Air or their D4 pied-à-terre. If you're looking for a good music-based romance, Stephen Frears' film of Nick Hornby's High Fidelity is still your best. Mix Tape is a mite too tortured and joyless but it does have two major flexes - those Dublin locations and the actual music. It also asks an eternal question posed by music obsessives in every time line and time zone - can the songs that sound-tracked our young lives and loves ever really sound the same again?

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