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Chris Brown pleads not guilty to two more charges in London nightclub assault case

Chris Brown pleads not guilty to two more charges in London nightclub assault case

New York Posta day ago
Grammy-winning singer Chris Brown on Friday pleaded not guilty to two further charges related to the serious beating of a music producer with a bottle in a London nightclub in 2023.
Brown, 36, denied the more serious charge of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm at a hearing last month.
The singer, wearing a light brown suit, pleaded not guilty to assault causing actual bodily harm to Abraham Diaw at the Tape nightclub in the swanky London neighborhood of Mayfair in February 2023.
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4 Chris Brown arrives at Southwark Crown Court in London on July 11.
ANDY RAIN/EPA/Shutterstock
4 Brown, 36, denied the more serious charge of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm at a hearing last month.
AP
He also denied having an offensive weapon — a bottle — in a public place during the short hearing at Southwark Crown Court.
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Around 20 fans sat in the public gallery behind the dock for Friday's hearing, with several gasping as the singer of 'Go Crazy,' 'Run It' and 'Kiss Kiss' walked into the courtroom.
Co-defendant — Brown's friend and fellow musician — Omololu Akinlolu, 39, also denied actual bodily harm on Friday.
The 2023 attack was caught on surveillance camera in front of a club full of people, prosecutors said.
4 Co-defendant Omololu Akinlolu, Brown's friend and fellow musician, also denied actual bodily harm on Friday.
ANDY RAIN/EPA/Shutterstock
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4 Brown leaves Southwark Crown Court on July 11.
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Brown was released in May on bail of 5 million pounds ($6.75 million), which allowed him to start his 'Breezy Bowl XX' tour. Following a series of dates in Europe, he's set to return to North America at the end of July to play in Miami, before moving across the U.S. with a two-night stop in Toronto along the way.
Brown, who rose to stardom as a teen in 2005, won his first Grammy for best R&B album in 2011 for 'F.A.M.E..' He earned his second in the same category for '11:11 (Deluxe)' earlier this year.
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Lena Dunham says Taylor Swift is responsible for one of her favorite 'Too Much' moments
Lena Dunham says Taylor Swift is responsible for one of her favorite 'Too Much' moments

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Lena Dunham says Taylor Swift is responsible for one of her favorite 'Too Much' moments

Spoiler alert! The following story contains major details about the ending of "The Idea of Glue," the 10th episode of Netflix series "Too Much" (now streaming). There are few things more heart-wrenching than a well-placed Taylor Swift needle drop. In the season finale of Netflix's "Too Much" (now streaming), creator Lena Dunham masterfully deploys "Bigger Than the Whole Sky," a bonus track off Swift's Grammy-winning best album "Midnights." The elegiac ballad, released in 2022, comes at a moment of release for Jessica (Megan Stalter), who had just broken up with her boyfriend, Felix (Will Sharpe), when her dog unexpectedly died. While crying on the couch, she receives a text asking to meet up with Wendy (Emily Ratajkowski), who started dating her ex-boyfriend Zev (Michael Zegen) before Jessica moved to London. After despising and envying his seemingly perfect new partner from afar, their coffee date is a chance for Jessica to reconcile with the fact that Wendy was never the bad guy after all. And in a tear-jerking sequence set to Swift's song, Jessica walks backward into her old New York apartment – saying goodbye to Zev, before she leaves him behind and strolls forward onto the sidewalk. 'Too Much': How Lena Dunham made the year's most devastating episode of TV "Bigger Than the Whole Sky" is achingly apropos for Jessica as she closes that chapter of her life, with its bittersweet lyrics about grief and the pain of moving on. ("I've got a lot to live without / I'm never gonna meet / What could've been, would've been / What should've been you.") Swift is a longtime friend of Dunham, although it's the first time that the "Girls" writer has included her music in one of her projects. "I'm always listening to her when I write – I mean, like 99.9% of America, I'm just always listening to her," Dunham says. "Originally, that was actually a different song and it was something that had been used in another film fairly recently. She watched the sequence and so did her brother, Austin, who is amazing and does all of her music placement. So she said, 'Actually, I think I know what should be here.'" Dunham thought she'd have to re-edit the sequence to fit Swift's song, but to her surprise, "we did not have to move a frame," Dunham continues. "That song just said everything that had to be said about their relationship, about her relationship to her dog – I mean, it's one of my absolute favorite moments in the show, and one of my absolute favorite moments I've ever had the chance to film. It's my first time actually getting to use a T.S. song in my work, and besides the amazing music that my husband put together for the show, it's everything I could've dreamed of. I couldn't feel luckier that she let us use it." In classic rom-com fashion, Jessica and Felix eventually make up and get married at episode's end. For viewers who have had longterm relationships, Dunham hopes they appreciate the complexities of both characters, who wrestle with personal demons but still find their ways back to each other. "I've had a couple of twentysomethings watch (the show) and they're really sweet about it, like, 'It's funny!'" Dunham says. "But there's something when I talk to people who are in their 30s; they just get it in a different way. It's about that moment where you go from living your life for the crazy story to being like, 'I don't want to be a person who moves through the world alone. How can I find that connection?' So it's interesting to see how my friends who have gotten to that point are able to understand the love story in a different way." Review: Lena Dunham's 'Too Much' is actually just enough The series is loosely inspired by the real-life love story between Dunham, 39, and Luis Felber, 39, a British musician whom she married in 2021. (Somewhat notably, "Bigger Than the Whole Sky" was co-produced by Jack Antonoff, whom Dunham dated for five years.) Felber co-created "Too Much" with his wife and was instrumental in helping bring Felix to life on screen. "I love writing men, but at the end of the day, I haven't had a chance to be one in this lifetime," Dunham says. "Patriarchy hurts everyone; men, too. So what does it look like for a guy who is tender and complicated and has made mistakes to try and put some of that behind him? Between my husband and Will, who himself is such an amazing writer and director, I felt like Felix was the most fully embodied man I've ever gotten the chance to create." Additionally, "Lu is a native Londoner, so he was also there to make sure we were showing a version of London that was different than the kinds we've seen in other romantic comedies," Dunham says. "We were seeing some spaces that weren't just Notting Hill; whether it's about Jessica living in East London, or Felix making music in Camberwell, or going to the outskirts of the M25 to see his parents. There was a truth and authenticity, and I hope Londoners will recognize there was a lot of love put into it."

Divided by Russia's invasion, a Mariupol family's future remains unclear

time3 hours ago

Divided by Russia's invasion, a Mariupol family's future remains unclear

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Iryna, an elderly Ukrainian woman, along with her husband, Oleg, told ABC News that they spent around three weeks in Mariupol at the very beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion, when the Kremlin's army was storming the city, surrounding Ukrainian troops and civilians in it. The couple, along with others ABC News spoke with, have had their families split apart in the years since the full-scale Russian invasion began. In conversations with those who've visited Mariupol after the Russian occupation or plan to return there no matter what, and those who are living abroad, many expressed grief for the city as it once was. Others also looked to the future, wondering how the city and its leadership may change in the years to come. "Remember the Oscars-winning documentary '20 Days in Mariupol?' It was about us and our survival during these days," said Iryna, who along with her husband asked to use just first names for safety reasons. According to her, she was confident that the Ukrainian military was covertly staying in the city, using some abandoned residential buildings to trace the Russian army maneuvers. "We were asking them to stay away from the area where civilians were hiding in the basements, but they were saying that they are just following the orders," said Iryna, complaining that some of the Ukrainian soldiers were very rude with people. But when Russians came, the situation even got worse. According to her, they were doing so-called cleaning of all the residential buildings in the area and people were supposed to leave their doors open. "It was Russian soldiers, possibly, even Kadyrov troops members, who broke the doors to our apartment," she said, referring to National Guard of Russia troops based in Chechnya. At that time Iryna and Oleg were already outside Mariupol -- the family managed to cross the checkpoints, heading to their relatives in Russia. "Our doors were closed, so they just smashed the lock and entered the apartment," said Iryna. Later, she received the video from the apartment made by her neighbors: everything was out of the closets and drawers. "It looked as if they were searching for some money or jewelry," Iryna said. Later, since the apartment remained unlocked, probably some marauders apparently stole all their kitchen appliances, electronics and other valuable family belongings. The couple did not stay long in Russia -- one of their children helped Iryna and Oleg obtain Canadian visas and welcomed them in a newly rented townhouse in Vancouver, British Columbia, in the late spring of 2022. But in less than two years the couple returned to Mariupol -- Oleg insisted that they should live in their own apartment, surrounded by familiar people, who speak their native language. At the same time, Russia did not appear ready to easily embrace the returning refugees: "The border guard in Moscow airport was not even willing to let us into the country -- the officer said to me that if I had moved to Canada I should have stayed in Canada and never come back," recalled Iryna. Despite this hostile attitude, after several hours of arguing, the family was granted the permission to continue their way home, and in a couple of days they reached Mariupol. "It was hard to recognize our city," said Oleg. According to him, the Russians were restoring the residential buildings in Mariupol. Although, some were demolished to the ground, but new ones were built as well. The family's multistory building managed to survive the hostilities, and local inhabitants who had stayed appeared to them to be living in it as if nothing had happened. "For people in Mariupol it is very important to have their own roof over their heads," explained Oleg said, confirming that it is a common thing when people tend to value their own home above safety and some missing conveniences of civilization -- running elevator, water or natural gas. According to him, the city inhabitants were feeling betrayed when it became known that Mariupol's mayor and his administration had left the city in the first days of the full-scale Russian aggression. "Now, these people have no right to criticize the new, appointed by Moscow authorities, who are running the city," he said. Oleg said he now tends to see positive changes in the city: "Mariupol is resurrecting now from the ruins as the Russians are rebuilding it under the supervision of Moscow and, especially, St. Petersburg authorities, since [that] former capital of the Russian empire is Mariupol's sister city," he said. Much of Mariupol was destroyed during the Russian army's two-month assault in the spring of 2022. At least 8,000 residents of the city died amid the siege, according to Human Rights Watch. Many others fled. The couple said they were especially satisfied with the new Russian pensions they received after returning to Mariupol and obtaining Russian passports. The amount of money was incomparably higher than their previous Ukrainian pensions, they said, because the occupiers' administration tends to give more money to former Ukrainian citizens than to the originally retired Russians. "As if they want to persuade the people that there is no other choice than to accept the new, more attractive reality," Oleg said. But the Ukrainian administration of the city was doing pretty much the same in 2014 to 2022, recalled Olga, the couple's daughter, who also asked to use a pseudonym and who moved from Mariupol at first to the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, and then to Canada. "The city was getting better and visibly nicer every year -- a lot of funds were obviously invested into social infrastructure, cultural events and it was the Russian invasion that destroyed everything," said Olga. Nevertheless, after just one summer spent in occupied Mariupol, Oleg and Iryna left the city once again and, using both Russian and Ukrainian passports, went back to Canada. According to Iryna, they came up with that decision as it was safer to survive winter far from the frontlines, in a peaceful city with warm buildings and running elevators. At the same time, she denies any opportunistic motives: "We are not waiting here for some permanent residency or other legal status in Canada, we are still planning to return home one day," said Iryna. On the one hand, she would like to stay with her granddaughter, but she described Oleg as being very stubborn, saying he is insistent on returning to Mariupol. Others who fled Mariupol are dealing with similar feelings -- feeling the pull of their hometown, but knowing that the city will never be the same while under Russian control. Maria, whose name was also changed at her request for security reasons, a young student of the one of the universities in Vancouver, said she has no plans to return to Mariupol under the Russian occupation. Her big family also managed to get out from the besieged city through Russia, and most of its members live now in Germany. But her grandmother returned to Mariupol after she learnt that her husband had survived the Russian invasion. "When she was going with us to Germany, she was sure that he was killed, as the area he lived in was under heavy Russian shelling," said Maria: "Grandma was hoping to get him out of Mariupol as well, but when he refused, and she stayed with him." Due to her academic contacts and willingness to continue her education in social studies, she went to Sweden for one year and then moved to Canada, although Vancouver itself was some kind of terra incognita for her. Maria has been living in Vancouver since late 2023. "The main difference between Mariupol and Vancouver, as I see it, is the way the everyday life is unfolding there and here. Despite the hard work in Mariupol, I had much more connections with the city, more touching points with it and the people around. Mariupol, as she remembered it, is a city of contradictions in its everyday life: "On the one hand, you have the sea and the beach that symbolize freedom for me in some way, but on the other hand, this freedom was limited to the role of a big industrial center when your whole life was organized around work on these huge factories," explained Maria. For Maria, the whole eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas, which is now mostly occupied by Russia, used to be a place for everyone, where anybody could melt into the crowd. "One might feel freedom there in some sense that is hard to feel for me in here, in Vancouver -- it was a feeling, that in order to keep living and stay in touch with the rest of the world you do not have to put in a lot of efforts," said Maria. One of her most beautiful memories of Mariupol, as she described it, was when she was walking along near the drama theater during the last days before the war broke out in February 2022: "That day, there city was covered with a magnificent fog and that picture still stands in front of my eyes." In several days that theater would be destroyed -- possibly by the Russian bomb, despite the hundreds of civilians were hiding in its basement and word "children" displayed in huge letters on the ground in its front. Now, the Russians are trying to restore the theater -- probably, to make it one of many new signs to demonstrate the qualitative transformations in the war-torn city, according to local reports that cite former Ukrainian city officials. But Maria said she is more concerned with the fate of people, not buildings. She tries to spend as much time as possible with her mother, brother and other family members, using every opportunity to fly to Germany. "Maybe, it is because I value our survival in Mariupol so much -- at some point, I was so afraid that my family is going to die there, and I will be the only survivor," she said. The girl is also staying in touch with her grandmother and step-grandfather. Although she communicates with them over the social media almost every day, it is hard for her to understand how it feels to be in Mariupol right now. According to Maria, she often feels the that her grandmother is under pressure to censor herself. "She used to be totally different person -- very vocal about politics, always having her opinion on everything, willing to share her thoughts, arguments, and concerns with others, and now I am witnessing some changes in her," Maria said. For example, her grandmother is justifying a need to obtain a Russian passport to gain access to the health care and social services, said Maria. And when Maria was asking her about the procedures she had undergone, Maria said, her grandmother started answering the question but, at some point, stopped, saying that it might be dangerous for her to talk about it, and she was afraid to reveal some sensitive information. "That is such a contrast to hear almost nothing from a person who used to comment on every political issue," said Maria. But she is not judging her relatives under the Russian occupation as she completely understands the origins of this self-censorship. "In my opinion, it is some kind of individual way to accepting this new reality," said Maria. According to her, people just do not fully understand the risk of living in the city if it stays under occupation. "My grandmother and her husband are considering the possibility of our family reunion and my return to Mariupol someday, but that is only their perspective, their anticipation," she said. Maria insists, that the only chance for them to meet now is somewhere in a different country, where they can go without a Ukrainian passport. "It is hard for them to understand why it is impossible for me to visit them in Mariupol, why I cannot simply return to my native city while it is occupied by the Russians," she said. In her dreams Maria sometimes is back to Mariupol but not to the times of peace before the war: "There are only Russian border guards in my obsessive dreams or my city already under the Russian occupation. It is very difficult to explain why, but I see them quite often as I sleep. For instance, in my dream I am on the train heading to Finland from Germany, but, at some point, the passengers are being told that from now on the train will be going through the Russian territory and that is how I meet Russian border guards once again."

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