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Jessica Alba's new romance with Top Gun's Danny Ramirez 'takes a surprising turn' as they enjoy date night

Jessica Alba's new romance with Top Gun's Danny Ramirez 'takes a surprising turn' as they enjoy date night

Daily Mail​4 days ago
She may have been embracing life as a single woman following the end of her marriage earlier this year, but Jessica Alba's love life has recently taken a shocking twist.
In new photos obtained exclusively by DailyMail.com, the actress was spotted enjoying dinner with new boyfriend Danny Ramirez at the Italian restaurant Alba in Los Angeles on Wednesday evening.
Jessica sat in the passenger's seat as her boyfriend maneuvered the car out of the area, his eyes focused on the road.
And neither could keep themselves from smiling as they made their exit.
While the relationship reportedly began as a casual one for the actress, these new photos indicate the romance may be on the way to becoming something significant.
And an insider told DailyMail.com that the relationship does appear to be headed in that direction - however the star isn't keen to rush things.
The source said: 'Jessica's romance with Danny has taken a surprising turn. What started out as a summer fling feels like it's getting more serious, although she still wants to take things slow. But at the end of the day Jessica has never been one to play the field. She's excited to see where this romance is headed.'
Jessica Alba was spotted enjoying dinner with new boyfriend Danny Ramirez in Los Angeles
The smile showed just how much fun she's having with Danny
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Country star causes outrage after singing for women to 'give up rights' and 'tale a slap' in controversial talk show appearance
Country star causes outrage after singing for women to 'give up rights' and 'tale a slap' in controversial talk show appearance

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Country star causes outrage after singing for women to 'give up rights' and 'tale a slap' in controversial talk show appearance

An American musician sparked outrage after singing she would 'give up a few rights' and 'take a slap' if it meant she'd be treated more respectfully by men - in some divisive lyrics. Country star Jessie Murph, 20, performed the controversial tune on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, with the lines yearning for her beau to 'love her like it's 1965'. Her ballad was also nostalgic for a time period where courting gentlemen were 'handwriting letters' and 'showing up at the door with flowers' instead of 'hit[ting] [women] up on Snapchat ' at 2am. The star donned a Priscilla Presley beehive and a baby pink mini dress with patterned tights as she danced on a stage with a retro sofa in what appears to be a recreation of the 'tradwife' lifestyle, charming husband on hand. The term refers to women who perform 'traditional' gendered roles, often likened to the archetypal 1950s 'housewife'. Recent interest in the aesthetic has seen millions on social media calling for girls to ditch corporate life and instead, dedicate their days to cooking, cleaning, wearing modest and feminine dress, and practicing traditional etiquette - as well as being submissive to their husbands. Jessie's tune attracted fury online, with many branding the remark 'tasteless' for making light of a time in which women endured horrific misogyny. In both England and the US, marital rape was still legal during the era, and women could not open their own bank account, among other restrictions. 'In 1965, it was legal for men to rape their wives. I don't care if this is meant to be ironic or satirical or whatever, I absolutely hate it,' one commenter on social media penned. Another added: 'Like what does loving like it's 1965 even mean? Getting your a** beat? having no rights is romantic? I hate the white woman 50s-60s "aesthetic".' A third simply exclaimed: '"I think id give up a few rights if you would just love me like it's 1965" SORRY?????' 'Call me too woke but "I would give up rights if you love me like it's 1965" at a time where women are actually losing rights is so insane???' another offered. Others similarly agreed, writing: 'Has anyone else heard the song 1965 by Jessie Murph? 'Read the lyrics, it's literally far right propaganda that is encouraging women to give up their rights. People are saying it's satire but given everything going on, why say this while we are literally at risk of losing our rights ??'. She's not the only performer to have attracted backlash for similar aesthetics in recent months. In June, Sabrina Carpenter announced her new album Man's Best Friend - but the cover art for the upcoming release sparked fierce criticism from fans. During an Instagram Live, the 26-year-old pop singer shared a video of herself flipping through a stack of records by Donna Summer, ABBA, and Dolly Parton, before stopping on her own, revealing Man's Best Friend. Jessie's lyrics attracted fury online, with many believing the remark was tasteless and made light of a period of horrific misogyny for women Earlier this year, Jessie turned up at the ACM Awards 2025 in Texas with a baby piglet in her arms The teaser gave a peek at the album cover, showing Carpenter on all fours while a person dressed in black slacks — whose face is not visible — pulls her blonde hair. She also posted a close-up image of a heart-shaped dog collar engraved with Man's Best Friend. The highly sexualized and provocative album art quickly drew backlash, and she later released a more conservative alternative. After her performance, Jessie thanked the Tonight show for a 'dazzling' and 'grand time'. The Alabama-born singer first rose to fame from uploading vlogs and song covers to TikTok and YouTube - which led her on to releasing her two albums: That Ain't No Man That's the Devil in 2024 and Sex Hysteria in 2025. She also received backlash when the music video for her song, 1965, was released - with some accusing the footage of being pornography, Taste of Country reported. In the retro-inspired clips that shows a family around a table - and Jessie forlornly singing to a child - as there is also a brief shot of a couple having sex. The clip - which has to have age verification to be watched - drew comments like 'the fact that YouTube removes videos for way less and this is still up is insane' and having a child in this video, especially just before a sexual scene, is wild'. The track also includes risque lines like 'I might get a little slap-slap, but you wouldn't hit me on Snapchat' and 'I would be twenty, and it'd be acceptable for you to be forty'. Jessie resorted to taking to TikTok to insist that 'the entire song is satire', quipping: 'Are y'all stupid?'. It's not the first time Jessie sparked attention in the media. In May, the singer turned heads at the ACM awards 2025 after she bizarrely rocked up on the red carpet with a baby pig. Talking to Entertainment Tonight before the show, she introduced the 'little guy' as Wilbur. 'I just decided that I wanted a pig, and I've always wanted one my whole life,' she explained. 'I've always wanted a mini pig, and then I find out that miniature pigs don't exist.'

Nicola Benedetti on marrying a man 25 years her senior
Nicola Benedetti on marrying a man 25 years her senior

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Nicola Benedetti on marrying a man 25 years her senior

As one of the best-known violinists in the world, Nicola Benedetti enjoys a stellar public profile. Yet she has maintained a strict secrecy around her private life, even though it has been long-rumoured in music circles. Now she has confirmed for the first time that she is married to Wynton Marsalis, the celebrated jazz musician who is 25 years her senior, and they have a baby daughter. They met professionally when she was 17 and he was 42, and much later began a romantic relationship. Benedetti has publicly shared the joys of motherhood but did not, until now, confirm the identity of the father. Speaking to the Telegraph, Benedetti, 38, said of her marriage to Marsalis, 63, who counts former US president Barack Obama among his admirers: 'I think it's pretty much out there now. I really don't care any more if people want to write about it or not.' Explaining why she has not talked about her relationship with Marsalis, with whom she has collaborated on musical projects for many years, Benedetti said: 'I don't tend to discuss my private life because people don't come to my concerts because of whom I'm in a relationship with. They come because I play the violin.' Benedetti was 17 when she travelled to New York to attend the American Academy of Achievement summit as a student-delegate. A year earlier, she had won the BBC Young Musician of the Year competition. She performed in the company of Marsalis, a trumpeter who was the first jazz musician to receive the Pulitzer Prize. 'When we met then, I was already a huge fan, and we just kept in touch as good friends,' Benedetti once explained. Marsalis has said they felt 'a certain type of kinship'. Many years later, Marsalis wrote a violin concerto for Benedetti, although in a joint interview they joked about not remembering who had proposed the idea. Marsalis said: 'It's like a scene from When Harry Met Sally. I don't know if I said it or she said it.' They have continued to collaborate and perform together. Benedetti, from Ayrshire in Scotland, is artistic director of the Edinburgh International Festival and had her daughter in May 2024. Marsalis also has a teenage daughter and two adult sons from previous relationships. The 'Pied Piper' of jazz Marsalis started playing the trumpet at the age of six and went on to become a key figure in the jazz renaissance of the 1980s. He has been credited with rekindling interest in the genre, has been referred to as the 'Pied Piper' of jazz and won nine Grammy awards during his career. He is currently the artistic director of Jazz at the Lincoln Center, in New York. Benedetti told the Telegraph that she has begun to question her upbringing, during which her mother made her and her older sister practise the violin for three hours every day during the school holidays. 'My daughter is only one, but my sister has two children, aged three and five, and seeing her experience has definitely made me consider my own childhood,' she said. 'But both of us have a realistic, even a positive view of our upbringing. It was very strict – we feared upsetting our parents, or doing the wrong thing – but we also knew we were loved to death by our mum and dad.' She believes that today's young people are less willing to make the sacrifices required to become a world-class musician, saying: 'I think young people have become used to a lack of basic discipline in their daily lives – and that really worries me.'

Marriage Diaries: My husband wants me to go topless on holiday
Marriage Diaries: My husband wants me to go topless on holiday

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Marriage Diaries: My husband wants me to go topless on holiday

Ever since our first holiday together as a couple, my now-husband has asked me to sunbathe topless. It started six months into our relationship, when we booked a fortnight on the French Riviera. Scrolling through my Instagram profile, he'd stop at past pictures of me on the beach, then point to my bikini top, declaring: 'You won't need that in Cap Ferrat!' As I got dressed in the morning, between putting on my knickers and putting on my bra, he'd gesture to my bust and say happily: 'You'll be able to walk around like that on the Riviera!' When it came to packing our cases, he held up the bikini tops I'd laid out with their bottoms, and told me: 'Oh, you won't need those!' I laughed it off – for what felt like the millionth time – and said: 'I'll sunbathe topless when we're married!' At this stage, we hadn't even discussed marriage, so it was just a light-hearted way of brushing off the idea. Then it ballooned, next time he raised the topic, as I told him that doing anything that racy had to be sanctioned by a wedding ring. This was on the first day of the holiday, when he'd tried to get me to take off my bikini top. I explained that I was wary of being perceived as a cheap tart, but being a wife would make it more respectable, and if we were both wearing wedding rings, no one would mistake me for a PA he'd taken away for a dirty weekend. If I'm really honest, it crossed my mind that it might spur him on to pop the question – and who knows, maybe it played a part, because four months later he did. Now we're married, and our first beach holiday as a married couple is approaching. My husband is so excited about me going topless for the first time, he might as well be rubbing his hands on his thighs in the deranged manner of Vic Reeves perving over female contestants on Shooting Stars. I, however, have freezing cold feet because I never wanted to sunbathe topless in the first place. It's not that I'm shy about my body. I have a great figure and I've always had fabulous breasts – even more so now, thanks to a boob job my husband paid for before the wedding. Now he can't wait to show me off, in the same way he hopes to impress people with his Porsche and our white stucco-fronted townhouse in a sought after street in SW1. For me though, the prospect of sunbathing topless is anxiety-inducing. Aside from a fear of burning my nipples, which have never seen the sun, I don't want other men looking at, and possibly leching over, my bare breasts! My husband waves away my concerns, reassuring me that we'll be on a private beach which is expensive enough to keep the riff-raff out. As he keeps reminding me, it works out at about £300 per person, per day – including lunch – so there's little chance of us encountering 'the great unwashed'. In his eyes, the exclusivity means it's perfectly acceptable for me to be semi-naked, because we'll be only around 'PLU' (aka 'people like us'). I don't see it this way at all, and actually I think it's degrading for men I'd never be intimate with to see such a private part of my body. In particular, I think it's inappropriate for the waiters at the beach to see my breasts, and worst of all I think it's awkward for our houseguests who'll be staying with us in the apartment we've rented.

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