logo
White Lotus star Walton Goggins reveals eye-catching bulge in skintight yellow speedo for Cultured photoshoot

White Lotus star Walton Goggins reveals eye-catching bulge in skintight yellow speedo for Cultured photoshoot

The Sun22-04-2025
WHITE Lotus star Walton Goggins revealed an eye-catching bulge while sporting a skintight speedo for a photoshoot.
Walton, 53, played vengeful Rick Hatchett in the HBO anthology's third outing.
4
4
4
The star sporting a skintight yellow speedo will surely catch fans' attention.
Viewers watched Rick and Aimee Lou Wood's character Chelsea's dynamic unfold across the season.
Following the dramatic finale, Walton sat down with Cultured for a photoshoot and interview.
He addressed having been asked what the "secret" to his enduring success is.
Walton shared: "It was interesting to sit with that and try to answer honestly—I said, 'If I'm being real, it's fear.' Truly. A heavy dose of anxiety."
The star added: "Of letting people down, being unprepared, dishonoring the people who made it possible for me to play pretend in front of a camera.
"So, I try to work harder than anyone in the room."
Continuing, Walton also opened up about how his process differed from colleagues on The White Lotus.
He revealed: "I'll say this. Someone I worked with on The White Lotus didn't fully understand my process.
"My character—Rick Hatchett—he's isolated. So during filming, I was isolated.
White Lotus star Aimee Lou Woods SLAMS 'mean' Saturday Night Live sketch that mocked her teeth
"I liked mirroring that, but it was emotionally difficult."
It comes as fans recently speculated Walton and co-star Aimee, 31, are feuding.
The actors had spoken of their extremely close bond while filming White Lotus in Thailand.
SPOILERS for White Lotus Season 3 finale below
Rick and Chelsea's storyline ending saw them both killed in a Greek tragedy-style shoot-out at the luxury resort.
Taking to Instagram, Walton posted a gushing, romantic tribute to the ill-fated pair - which was not liked by Aimee.
Reddit, TikTok, and X were flooded with speculation over why the pair are not following each other on the social media site.
One fan posted online: "They used to idolize each other and talk about each other in such positive light in interviews and such, it's so weird that all of a sudden there's this switch up?"
Another shared: "They unfollowed each other on insta a couple weeks ago, walton posts white lotus stuff and tags everyone in the photos except aimee lou wood, posts a whole tribute to white lotus and still doesn't tag her, posts tons of pictures of her on his story in a commemorative tribute to the show. what happened?"
4
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hulk Hogan's death marks the end of an era that defined larger-than-life personalities of the 1980s
Hulk Hogan's death marks the end of an era that defined larger-than-life personalities of the 1980s

The Independent

time23 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Hulk Hogan's death marks the end of an era that defined larger-than-life personalities of the 1980s

Hulk Hogan was billed as 'The Immortal One' and the former WWE champion seemed to believe it as he bellowed in his red-and-yellow attire throughout sold-out arenas around the world in the 1980s and into this century that Hulkamania would live forever. Hogan was the first wrestler to host 'Saturday Night Live,' the only wrestler to flex his 24-inch pythons on the cover of Sports Illustrated and stood tall as the hated Thunderlips against Sylvester Stallone's Rocky Balboa on the big screen. One by one, Hogan took on the biggest, baddest and all the larger-than-life cartoon characters who helped skyrocket the WWE into a mainstream phenomenon in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Hogan's death Thursday at the age of 71 made him just the latest superstar in what some fans and historians would call wrestling's greatest era – in a time where staid Saturday morning television exploded into late-night must-see sports entertainment – to face the final 10-bell salute. Hogan wrestled in a tag-team match at the first WrestleMania in 1985. Mr. T is the lone surviving actor from the rest of the participants that included 'Mr. Wonderful' Paul Orndorff and 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper. The wrestler Hogan defeated to win his first WWE championship, the hated Iron Sheik, has also died Andre the Giant, Randy Savage, Dusty Rhodes, the Ultimate Warrior and so many headline stars that also include 'Mr. Perfect' and 'Ravishing' Rick Rude from an era in which personality — and yes, performance-enhancing drugs that led to a spike in super-sized bodies — reigned more than in-ring ability that dominates today's wrestling landscape. Here's a look at some of professional wrestling's greatest performers from Hogan's era who have died. The Ultimate Warrior Wearing face paint and dressed in tassels dangling from his biceps, the Ultimate Warrior sprinted to the ring when his theme music hit. He'd shake the ropes, grunt and howl, and thump his chest while the crowd went wild for the popular good guy. In an era when the WWE targeted kids as its primary audience, Warrior was a perfect fit with a spastic entrance, blood-pumping music, flowing locks and always dressed in electric colors from head to boots. His rambling, incoherent promos both energized and confused fans, and Warrior would often stare down at his hands as he spoke, as if he was summoning magical powers out of his fingertips. The Ultimate Warrior became the first wrestler to defeat Hogan in a WrestleMania match in 1990 when he used his finishing running splash for the pin. He won the championship in front of 67,678 fans at Toronto's SkyDome in a match billed as 'The Ultimate Challenge.' Warrior died in 2014 at 54. 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper Piper trash talked his way to the main event of the first WrestleMania and later found movie stardom. Piper and Hogan battled for years and headlined some of the biggest matches during the 1980s. Hogan and Mr. T defeated Piper and Orndorff on March 31, 1985, at the first WrestleMania at Madison Square Garden. Piper was a villain for the early portion of his career, once cracking a coconut over the skull of Jimmy 'Superfly' Snuka. He later starred in the movie 'They Live.' Piper died in 2105 at 61. 'Macho Man' Randy Savage Snap into it! Savage, a former minor league baseball catcher, was known for his raspy voice, the sunglasses and bandanas he wore in the ring and the young woman named Miss Elizabeth who often accompanied him. Savage defined the larger-than-life personalities of the 1980s World Wrestling Federation. He wore sequined robes bejeweled with 'Macho Man' on the back, rainbow-colored cowboy hats and oversized sunglasses, part of a unique look that helped build the WWF into a mainstream phenomenon. He spent years as a pitchman for Slim Jim and barked 'snap into it!' on commercials that air to this day. The WWF made Savage their champion after a win over Ted DiBiase in the main event at WrestleMania in 1988. He lost the championship at the next year's WrestleMania to Hogan. Savage died in 2011 at 58. 'The American Dream' Dusty Rhodes Dusty Rhodes, known better as the 'The American Dream,' was a member of the WWE Hall of Fame, and held the NWA championship three times. He became famous during the height of wrestling's popularity in the 1970s and 1980 with his long-running feud with Ric Flair, now wrestling's greatest living legend. Throughout his several decades in the ring, the Austin, Texas, native endeared himself to fans as an everyman with a less than stellar physique, but a gregarious gift of gab behind a microphone. Rhodes was also the father of two other famous professional wrestlers: one son known as Goldust, still a champion in the rival All Elite Wrestling, and one of WWE's biggest stars, 'The American Nightmare' Cody Rhodes, who will face John Cena next month in the main event of SummerSlam. Rhodes died in 2015 at 69.

Fortnite streamer forced to BAN 15-year-old fan from his Twitch chat over shock behavior
Fortnite streamer forced to BAN 15-year-old fan from his Twitch chat over shock behavior

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Fortnite streamer forced to BAN 15-year-old fan from his Twitch chat over shock behavior

As technology and social media become increasingly embedded in our lives, people become more fearful as to how it may affect people - specifically younger generations. And as a popular Twitch streamer learned, children who are given unlimited access online tend to make some questionable decisions. Cody Conrod, or 'Clix,' is a popular pro Fortnite streamer with more than eight million followers. This means that he plays the online game on a live stream, all while interacting with subscribers and fans. These fans have the ability to donate real money to streamers, usually as an indication that they enjoy their content. While this is typically something a streamer would be happy about, Clix found himself in a situation where he was contemplating sending the money back to a viewer. Reddit users reposted a clip from Clix's stream, along with the title 'Fortnite Streamer Clix bans a 14-year-old in his Twitch chat for donating over $36,000 to him in a month.' After listening to the clip, it's revealed that the fan, Lucas, is 15 years old and donated $35,000 to streamers. Clix tries to make sense of the situation. 'You [made] $18K profit this year, you spent $35K on streamers, and now you want to quit the one thing that's making you revenue after you just spent all your money?' Clix asked the boy, incredulous. From the conversation, one can surmise that this 15-year-old boy is also a streamer who makes a good amount of profit - but also uses double that on other streamers. The boy confirms this information and says, 'Yeah, 'cause I don't enjoy it.' 'Dude, I don't want to promote refunds... but like, bro. Why the f**k did you spend $35,000?' Clix continued. Clix then tells Lucas that he makes 'millions and millions' of dollars but still wouldn't donate 'more than $2,000' to streamers a month. Lucas goes on to explain that he gets a 'dopamine rush' anytime a streamer says his name - 'it's addicting,' he said. In response, Clix first asks Lucas if his parents are 'financially stable' and then 'financially well,' and Lucas responds 'Yeah' to both.' When asked why he finally stopped, Lucas admits that his father found out and was 'annoyed.' From the clip, it's hard to tell what Clix ended up doing in the situation since he said goodbye to Lucas and the young fan said he was going to bed, but based on the title of the Reddit thread, it's assumed that he eventually banned the streamer for the irresponsible behavior. And Reddit users agreed with action while in disbelief that a teenager would have access to that much money - and then spend it so frivolously. 'This is my question. Where's this money coming from? Because if it's his parents' money, how have they not noticed?!' one Reddit user said. 'Kid donated my yearly salary to a streamer over the course of a month... Jesus Christ,' another added. 'Kids are f**king stupid and have access to mom and dads credit card. What do you expect?' one user said, summarizing the situation. 'Plus, this type of media glorifies it because you can be seen in front of thousands of others, generating a false sense of popularity.'

Chloe's It Girl Bag Is Back Again
Chloe's It Girl Bag Is Back Again

Graziadaily

time5 hours ago

  • Graziadaily

Chloe's It Girl Bag Is Back Again

It was a fashion girl's fever dream. Picture 2005: skinny jeans are clinging on for dear life, the Alexander McQueen skull scarf is already two years deep into iconic status, and the Chloé Paddington bag? It's everywhere. Tucked into the crooks of arms belonging to Hollywood It girls - Hilary Duff, Halle Berry, Kate Moss, Katy Perry. Age four, I had no idea what that clunky, padlocked bag meant, but I was about to find out. Designed by Phoebe Philo in 2004, the boho Paddington didn't need to beg for attention. Unlike the Balenciaga City bag, which took a minute to catch fire, this one exploded instantly. The first 8,000 units sold out before they even hit the shelves. It was peak 'if you know, you know', before that was even a thing. But like most era-defining accessories, the Paddington faded into fashion's archive. Until now. In March 2025, during Paris Fashion Week, Chloé's new creative director Chemena Kamali resurrected the Paddington for her Fall/Winter '25 runway. It's back in four updated colourways with a modernised silhouette and a new price point of €2,300 (£1,950) in Europe and \$2,750 (£2,130) in the US. For comparison? The original retailed for around \$1,400 (£1,085) in 2005. So yes, it's doubled in price but should that stop you? Not likely. The hype is real. According to Reddit, the new version is less heavy (a major complaint with the OG), and Depop has reported a 1,137% spike in searches for vintage Paddingtons since June. Because if there's one thing this generation loves, it's bringing something back-from low-rise jeans to point-and-shoot cameras, and of course, It-bags. Chloe Womenswear Fall/Winter 2025-2026 ©getty images The reissued Chloé Paddington will be available from September, but until then, you can join the waitlist or hit the secondhand market. You can find one on Depop, eBay, or Vestiaire - just be prepared to fight for it. 1. Chloé Paddington Bag Renee Washington , Grazia's digital fashion and beauty writer, lives online. With a penchant for wispy lashes and streetwear, she writes about the worlds of fashion and beauty from the viewpoint of the modern fashion girlie.. Main image credit: @chloé

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store