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Shane Gillis reveals the celeb who couldn't stop laughing at his ESPYs jokes

Shane Gillis reveals the celeb who couldn't stop laughing at his ESPYs jokes

New York Post17 hours ago
Shane Gillis had at least one celebrity in stitches last week during his ESPYs monologue, which was delivered to a mixed reception from audience members.
Addressing his experience as host of the ESPYs, Gillis revealed that Busta Rhymes laughed during the nearly 10-minute opening monologue that included jokes touching on everything from Caitlin Clark to Aaron Rodgers to President Donald Trump.
'The one person laughing my entire monologue was Busta Rhymes,' Gillis said on his 'Matt and Shane's Secret Podcast,' which released on Monday. 'And while I was up there, I kept, like, looking over to be like, 'Yes. Yes. Yes.' I don't care how badly this is going, just seeing Busta Rhymes like…Yes. Yes. Yes.'
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Host Shane Gillis speaks at the ESPY Awards at the Dolby Theatre.
AP
The comedian had also addressed the joke in which he duped the audience into clapping for 'four-time WNBA All-Star Brittany Hicks,' who was really just his friend Matt McCusker's wife when the camera panned to her.
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The joke was among several of the more controversial bits during Gillis' act.
Gillis had said during the podcast that there were several other sports that a joke like that would have worked with as well.
'You could've been like, '10-time All-Star, NHL legend Matt McCusker,' and they would've been like, 'For sure,'' Gillis said.
Busta Rhymes performs onstage during the 2025 ESPY Awards at Dolby Theatre.
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He later added, 'I knew they would clap. I would have clapped. Anybody on earth would clap.'
Gillis' monologue drew plenty of reaction with several ex-ESPNers hitting out at the comic's jokes, including Sarah Spain and Dan Le Batard.
However, ESPN appeared to stand behind Gillis following the show, knowing that his comedic stylings weren't going to be for everyone.
While ESPN was likely hoping that Gillis' presence would draw a new audience, the ESPYs saw a dip in viewership from the previous year by 22 percent, according to Sports Media Watch.
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Renée Fleming makes directing debut with wrestling-themed ‘Così fan tutte' at Aspen Music Festival
Renée Fleming makes directing debut with wrestling-themed ‘Così fan tutte' at Aspen Music Festival

Hamilton Spectator

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Renée Fleming makes directing debut with wrestling-themed ‘Così fan tutte' at Aspen Music Festival

ASPEN, Colo. (AP) — Renée Fleming's 'Così fan tutte' was ready to rumble. Long a star soprano, Fleming made her directing debut Monday night at the Aspen Music Festival and School by transporting Mozart's masterpiece from 18th century Naples, Italy, to a gym in Yarmouth, Massachusetts, amid professional wrestling's rise in 1980. Posters on stage display Sylvester Stallone as Rocky, wrestler Randy Savage and Jane Fonda hawking her workout video. In Fleming's concept, Fiordiligi and Dorabella are workout-obsessed high school sisters. 'It's a coming of age for the protagonists and a loss of innocence,' Fleming said. An outstanding student cast ages 25-32 mostly making role debuts, was accompanied by conductor Patrick Summers leading a 45-piece orchestra at the 375-capacity Wheeler Opera House, opened in 1889 during the Colorado Silver Boom. There are two additional performances through Saturday at a festival that includes about 200 public events from July 2 to Aug. 24. Lauren Carroll, the 26-year-old soprano who sings Fiordiligi, did a split. Dorabella, 27-year-old mezzo-soprano Ashlyn Brown, struggled to lift a heavy barbell. Michelle Harvey's scenic design in the tight space of a 25-foot-wide proscenium included punching bags, bo staffs and ThighMasters. Fleming sang her first Countess in Mozart's 'Le Nozze di Figaro' as an Aspen student in 1984. Now 66, she has, since 2017 , limited her singing to concerts, a few contemporary operas and Broadway. Staging spark was at a hockey game Fleming had a circuitous route to her concept. 'I can't do the opera relating to hockey, but I did think of another sport that reminds me so much of opera and that's professional wrestling. There's a suspension of disbelief that is huge,' she said. 'Fans believe these characters are real and that the moves are real, and of course it's all completely choreographed.' Fleming at first spoke with Francesca Zambello, the Washington National Opera's artistic director. 'I said, `Convince me, sell me, tell me,'' Zambello related, '`you really have to work it through from the overture to the final curtain.' WNO's 'Così' in 2021 was canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic. In 2020, Fleming and Summers launched Aspen Opera Theater and VocalARTS, with 15 singers annually attending an eight-week program that covers their $12,325 tuition, room and board plus pays a $1,500 stipend. Wrestling family history Ashlyn Brown, the 27-year-old mezzo-soprano who performs Dorabella, is a granddaughter of Don Stansauk, the wrestler known as Hard Boiled Haggerty. 'I grew up with wrestling culture,' she said. 'I used to go to the Cauliflower Alley Club meetings when I was a kid. He brought all of his buddies, like Andre the Giant.' Carroll was a cheerleader and her mother is an aerobics instructor. 'She really invests in young artists and it's authentic,' she said of Fleming. 'She really means it and backs it up with action.' In creating the look, Fleming thought back to her time at Churchville-Chili Senior High School in New York. 'I have photographs of me with a really bad mullet and overalls,' she said. Just before intermission ended, a Fonda dress-alike led the audience in calisthenics. Despina (soprano Laura Miah), a gym manager here instead of a maid, uses a blender to make protein shakes and heads stretching exercises. 'Renée of course demanded a lot of herself as a singer in that way and that's extended itself to her demands on them in this,' Summers said. Mozart's opera has the two boyfriends adopt hidden identities and romance each other's girlfriend to test their virtue. Both women fall for the other's boyfriend, and while the two couples get back together in the original, Fleming has both relationships come apart. Fiordiligi ends up wearing an 'ERA YES' shirt. Don Alfonso is a gym owner. 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At WNO, Fleming had envisioned a set with a stadium-sized video screen. She hopes the staging has an extended life. 'If anybody wanted to do it, it would be really fun in a bigger theater with a budget,' she said. 'Especially the time we're in, it's not a bad time to bring pro wrestling into opera because of the similarities, for the sheer novelty of it.'

‘Building the Band' has Liam Payne's last major appearance before his death
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‘Building the Band' has Liam Payne's last major appearance before his death

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'We were amazing dancers, obviously, in One Direction,' Payne joked in the episode while offering critiques to boy band Midnight 'til Morning, whose members expressed hesitations with dancing onstage. Band member Mason Watts then revealed his family had won tickets to sit front row at a One Direction concert when he was 11, stoking applause from the crowd and a heartfelt response from Payne. 'Ever since that moment, I wanted to be in a group,' Watts, originally from Australia, said in the episode. 'It's kind of a full-circle moment to be here with a group and performing in front of you. So, thank you, man.' Landon Boyce, a member of the show's other boy band, Soulidified, told The Associated Press that Payne left a lasting impact and was a leading example of how he hopes to carry himself as a performer. 'I remember Liam just said, 'Have fun,'' Boyce says. 'He just told us, 'I wish One Direction kind of, like, did what you guys were doing.' And I kind of just took that as like, let's just have fun and dance.' Payne is seen nodding along with excitement during the band's showcase performance, when they sang 'Sure Thing' by Miguel. Bradley Rittmann, another Soulidified member, told the AP they were 'on Cloud 9' after Payne said he would join their band. Payne applauded their ability to own the stage and acknowledged the unconventionality of their band due to the members' varying musical and fashion styles, saying he 'wouldn't put you guys together, but the result was amazing.' How it works: 'Love is Blind' meets 'The Voice' This show mashes together the likes of 'Love is Blind' with music competition shows like 'The Voice,' secluding contestants in pods, where they can only hear each other. Contestants can express interest by hitting a button during the performance, and then speak through voice chats to test their chemistry. 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Nori Moore, a member of 3Quency, 'had a lot of firsts' in the show as a young performer and says Payne's advice to contestants that they claim the moment every time they walk onstage was pivotal to her development as an artist. Larsen says viewers can watch the show and 'see his heart.' 'We know how much he loves the show,' says Katie Roeder, another SZN4 member. 'I know he's very proud of us and looking down on us.'

Caitlin Clark shares details of Taylor Swift conversation at Chiefs' playoff game: ‘That was really fun'
Caitlin Clark shares details of Taylor Swift conversation at Chiefs' playoff game: ‘That was really fun'

Fox News

time2 hours ago

  • Fox News

Caitlin Clark shares details of Taylor Swift conversation at Chiefs' playoff game: ‘That was really fun'

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