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Robert Downey Jr.'s Avengers: Doomsday Pay Revealed

Robert Downey Jr.'s Avengers: Doomsday Pay Revealed

Yahooa day ago
Robert Downey Jr. is set to star in Avengers: Doomsday, and according to a new report, his pay for the film won't be coming at any sort of discount.
What is Robert Downey Jr.'s Avengers: Doomsday pay?
According to a new report from Variety on the upcoming slate of movies for Marvel Studios, Downey — who has already earned between $500 and $600 million from his time in the Marvel Cinematic Universe — won't be 'working at a discount' for Doomsday.
In a since-edited report, Variety originally reported that Downey would be making 'significantly more' than $80 millon for his roles in both Doomsday and Secret Wars. This suggests that Downey is likely set to earn over $100 million for his roles, pushing his total MCU earnings into some very wild numbers.
Past reports from Variety also note that Downey has gotten a ton of perks for his upcoming turn as Doctor Doom. These include things like private jet travel, dedicated security, a 'trailer encampment,' and more.
Although Downey headlines it, the remaining cast for the upcoming Avengers: Doomsday will be massive. So far, several major stars from the MCU have been confirmed to be in the movie, including Chris Hemsworth's Thor, Pedro Pascal's Reed Richards, Vanessa Kirby's Invisible Woman/Sue Storm, Anthony Mackie's Captain America, Sebastian Stan's Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier, Letitia Wright's Shuri/Black Panther, and Paul Rudd's Ant-Man.
More names for the upcoming movie include Wyatt Russell's U.S. Agent/John Walker, Tenoch Huerta's Namor, Ebon Moss-Bachrach's The Thing/Ben Grimm, Simu Liu's Shang-Chi, Florence Pugh's Yelena Belova, Kelsey Grammer's Dr. Hank McCoy/Beast, Lewis Pullman's Bob/Sentry, Danny Ramirez's Joaquin Torres/Falcon, Joseph Quinn's Johnny Storm/Human Torch, David Harbour's Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian, Winston Duke's M'Baku, Hannah John-Kamen's Ava Starr/Ghost, and Tom Hiddleston's Loki.
Several X-Men characters are also coming back for the upcoming movie, including Patrick Stewart's Charles Xavier, Ian McKellen's Magneto, Alan Cumming's Nightcrawler, Rebecca Romijn's Mystique, James Marsden's Cyclops, and Channing Tatum's Gambit.
Avengers: Doomsday is slated to release in theaters on December 18, 2026.
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Commentary: Scottie Scheffler's role in 'Happy Gilmore 2' is an unexpected gift for golf fans
Commentary: Scottie Scheffler's role in 'Happy Gilmore 2' is an unexpected gift for golf fans

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Commentary: Scottie Scheffler's role in 'Happy Gilmore 2' is an unexpected gift for golf fans

This is a story about a movie that saved a sport. OK, that's a stretch, but only a little one. Scottie Scheffler is the No. 1 golfer in the world. Has been for a couple of years. He has won two Masters titles, one PGA Championship and the recent British Open, as well as an Olympic gold medal. He is so good that somebody ought to check his golf balls for tiny magnets that hook up to the cups on the greens. So far this year, by slapping a little white dimpled ball around in the grass, he has won $19.2 million. He has yet to turn 30, but his overall income, just from golf tournaments, is around $90 million. This guy is so good that his caddie, Ted Scott, is estimated, at the normal 10% of winnings, to have pocketed about $5 million. For carrying a bag. So, what's the problem? Scheffler is so good that he might also be sparking a trend called remote remorse. You really want to watch, but once he gets ahead by a couple of shots, there is nothing left. No drama, no possible twist and turn, no chance of any excitement. Other players in those tense, title-on-the-line final holes, dunk a shot into the water or bury one so deep in the sand that their only choice of club is a shovel. Not Scheffler. He is a 6-foot-3 human robot whose veins circulate ice water. When the going gets tough, Scheffler yawns. So, you see this and you know what is coming next — final putt, arms raised in satisfaction, a hug for his multi-millionaire caddie, the mandatory TV interview with the apparently mandatory British-accent female sportscaster, who will always start with, 'How does this feel?' You, and millions more, click the button on your remote for something more interesting, like HGTV or the Gardening Channel. When Scheffler gets ahead in the final round like that — which is almost always — it is game over. He can squeeze the drama out of a golf tournament like Bill Belichick could out of an NFL postgame interview. Certainly, you say, Tiger Woods used to win lots of tournaments by lots of big margins and that never seemed boring. That's because it wasn't. Tiger was animated, angry, annoyed, analytical, fed up with some part of his game, charged up over another part, mad at a reporter, upset with his agent. Tiger could win by eight, occasionally did, and it was still must-see TV. When Tiger was at his best, nobody could beat him and the public loved him and just wanted more. Scheffler is currently at his best and the public certainly is terribly impressed and, sadly, kind of meh. Tiger was a pound-on-the-table-and-shout-at-the-TV kind of player. Scheffler is a nod and a shrug. But there is hope. Hollywood has intervened, as only Hollywood can. Twenty-nine years ago, an up-and-coming comic named Adam Sandler made a movie inspired by one of his New England friends, who was a great hockey player and could also hit a golf ball a long distance with a hockey stick. Sandler called the movie "Happy Gilmore" and found a wide audience that loved it for its irreverence about a game that flaunts hushed reverence. Among the highlights was an on-course fistfight between Happy Gilmore (Sandler) and aging TV game show host Bob Barker. Barker won by KO. The movie was hilariously overdone slapstick. It was a gut-laugh-a-minute. It was so stupid and wacky that it was wonderful. Now, Sandler has made "Happy Gilmore 2," and it is again a must-see for all the reasons that the original was. Plus the cameo appearances. Especially one by Scheffler. Read more: 'Happy Gilmore 2' brings back Adam Sandler and his longtime collaborator for another round In the movie, Scheffler is good, funny, fun. He doesn't have a lot of lines, but he has perfect timing. He punches a guy out on the green and the cops come and haul him away. 'Oh, no. Not again,' he says. Remember, earlier this year, when Louisville cops hauled him away and put him in an orange jail suit, when he was accused of making a wrong turn while driving into the golf course at the PGA Championship, a tournament that he would eventually win? Well, Sandler and his writers made hay out of that, but more significantly, Scheffler played to it perfectly. After the movie punch-out, Scheffler is pictured in a jail cell, in an orange jail suit, as a guard asks, since he has been in that cell for three days, if he wants to get out. Scheffler replies, 'Ah, what's for dinner?' When he is told chicken fingers, he says, 'I think I'll stay another night.' Now, of course, none of that is knee-slapping stuff, but it is Scheffler, and the self-effacing comedy is a perfect image-enhancer, even if it is only in a stupid movie. It is so much better for golf fans to see Scheffler as a roll-with-the-punches fun guy, than an emotionless, ball-striking robot. Neither is totally accurate, but in this media world of image-is-everything, "Happy Gilmore 2" has done wonderful things for this wonderful golfer. Even moreso, for his sport He will be all over your TV screens for the three-week FedEx playoffs. It starts Aug. 7 with a tournament in Memphis, followed by the next week in Baltimore and the grand finale Aug. 21 in East Lake, Ga., near Atlanta. For the playoffs, the PGA will distribute $100 million in prize money and the winner will receive $10 million. Scheffler, a likely winner, would then certainly be invited to appear on TV, especially the late-night shows such as Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon. This would present another great image-building opportunity. He could show up in an orange jump suit. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Parents In Other Countries Do This 1 Thing — And American Kids Might Be Missing Out.
Parents In Other Countries Do This 1 Thing — And American Kids Might Be Missing Out.

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Parents In Other Countries Do This 1 Thing — And American Kids Might Be Missing Out.

My son, age 14, loves watching the Japanese show 'Old Enough' on Netflix. The premise is that young children — ages 4, 3 and even 2 — are sent to run errands by themselves. Cleverly disguised camera crews trail them on their journeys while their parents wait for them at home or some other predetermined meeting point. The kids walk though neighborhoods, cross the street, navigate public transit and manage interactions with shopkeepers. One little girl carries her mother's work pants to be mended. Another child purchases dumplings from a vendor. The children's focus and determination is captivating, and it's impossible not to become invested in their success at the task. The kids are also adorable. Their reactions and facial expressions regularly crack my son up. But that isn't the show's only allure. The sheer implausibility of the whole endeavor draws him in. 'You would've never let me do something like this,' he observed. 'You would've been freaking out.' He's not wrong. When he was 3, I likely would've sent him hang gliding before allowing him to cross the street alone. But my parenting instincts aren't just a product of my own neuroses. They're part of a culture, and here in the U.S. we've developed a culture of overprotectiveness and fear when it comes to kids acting independently. By keeping them safely within arms' reach, what are our kids missing out on? And what are some ways we could give them the opportunity to practice these vital life skills? What kids' independence looks like in other countries. Japan isn't the only nation where you can find kids navigating a town's streets and public transportation without adult supervision. Mei-Ling Hopgood lived in Argentina as a new mother, writing about the experience in her book 'How Eskimos Keep Their Babies Warm,' in which she explores parenting practices around the globe. She noted that it was common in Argentina and in other countries to see children commuting to and from school without adults. In some places, the reasons behind this particular independence are structural. Not all families have cars, so the only options may be walking, biking or taking public transit. Another factor is parents' level of trust in their community. When they send their kids out of the house, do they assume they will be safe and that the adults they interact with will be helpful and trustworthy? In Argentina, Hopgood saw signs of trust in the community of surrounding adults. 'If a child is crossing the street, not with a parent, or if an older person is crossing the street and needs help, they will take your hands. For example, when I would take the girls back to Argentina when they were little, the drivers that would pick us up, a man they did not know, would take their hands and walk them to the car,' she said, much to the surprise of her daughters, who by then were living in the U.S. 'The thinking [is] that adults are there to help you,' Hopgood told HuffPost. This includes men and even men you don't know, and was a real shift from the 'stranger danger' panic that permeated her American childhood. It was 'notable to me because of the bias against men being nurturing people, or they are the strangers you should be afraid of.' Journalist Michaeleen Doucleff observed a similar kind of autonomy among the Maya, Inuit and Hadzabe children that she observed when researching her book 'Hunt, Gather, Parent.' Children in these cultures, she told HuffPost, 'have enormous freedom to decide where they go, what they do and who they're with. Parents and older kids are around them, observing and ensuring they are safe. But generally their movements and actions are their own.' Again, there is a shared assumption that children are safe moving throughout the community. This autonomy extends to kids setting their own schedules — deciding when do go to bed, for example (an often fraught topic for American parents that has generated the profession of sleep consultant). In general, kids were entrusted with a multitude of what an American would likely consider 'adult' responsibilities: 'They use knives and the stove. They help take care of younger siblings (playing with them, changing diapers, feeding them). They take care of animals or a family garden. They learn to hunt, slaughter/butcher animals, make clothes. They work at local stores. They climb trees, gather firewood or forage for food,' Doucleff said. This trust in children's ability to handle things includes managing their emotions and speaking for themselves. 'They are allowed to get upset, have tantrums, without being scolded or forced to control their emotions very early,' Doucleff said. In addition, she said, 'parents allow children to talk for themselves' rather than answering questions directed at them on their behalf or prompting them with what to say. Other cultures also have a higher tolerance for risk when it comes to kids' behavior. Helen Russell, author of the forthcoming 'The Danish Secret to Happy Kids' (released already in Britain as 'How to Raise a Viking'), observed in Denmark that children often take risks in their extensive outdoor play and are expected to resolve conflicts among themselves when they arise. Likewise, children speak for themselves and are expected to dress themselves (including the all-important snowsuit!) and feed themselves, rather than being told by adults what to say, what to wear and when and what to eat. Danish children, Russell told HuffPost, are allowed to pretty much 'roam free,' and the same is true in other Nordic countries. 'Icelandic children are all allowed to roam free until a state-sanctioned 'curfew' in the summer holidays, when Iceland enjoys 24-hour sun. So, come July, 13- to 16-year-olds are allowed to run wild until midnight, while children up to the age of 12 get to hang out until 10 p.m.,' she said. Why it's important to foster kids' independence. Letting children travel about, do chores and play without interference from adults can allow the adults more time to get their own work done and might seem to require less effort. Doucleff, however, noted that it's not that parents are letting their children go unattended. 'Adults keep a close eye to ensure kids are safe. So it's not about simply doing less.' The key difference, she explained, is that 'parents don't interfere with children's actions and movements, especially during play.' Kids, not adults, are the ones who truly reap the rewards of this dynamic. 'Lack of autonomy is strongly associated with anxiety and depression,' Doucleff said, while 'high levels of autonomy are linked to confidence, drive and all-around better mental health. In the communities I visited in 'Hunt, Gather, Parent,' children had these in spades.' Autonomy, she explained, 'enables children to learn adult skills ... . So they can be active contributors to their families and not simply attended to by their parents.' We know that being able to contribute meaningfully can help kids feel a sense of mattering, which is protective of their mental health. Knowing that adults trust them to get from one place to another or use the kitchen knives helps them believe in their own abilities and gives them opportunities to 'learn on their own, make mistakes on their own,' Hopgood said. Experience teaches them that they can figure things out for themselves and overcome challenges. Russell explained that all the outdoor play kids engage in in Denmark, in spite of frigid weather, also has a positive effect on their well-being. 'Studies show that spending time outdoors improves well-being and cooperation, reduces stress, helps with concentration and evens out differences between low-achieving and high-achieving children,' she said. Hopgood, a journalism professor at Northwestern University, noted that here in the U.S. we are beginning to see the effect of a lack of independence once these children head off to college. 'Students coming to university, [their] maturity and responsibility level is years below what they were some years ago. Because of many reasons, but parents have done so much for them.' Without practice, kids lack problem-solving skills and confidence in their ability to tackle challenges without their parents' help. Ways parents can help kids gain independence. There's no need to move all the way to Latin America or Scandinavia to help your kids learn independence. Some communities, by their design, are more conducive to kids' autonomy than others, and some places are also simply safer. But even within the confines of your own home, there are steps you can take to encourage this growth. 'It's about having confidence in children's ability to learn and grow at a young age without the need for constant interference from adults,' Doucleff said. Doucleff measured her own interference in her children's lives by counting how many times per hour she gave them commands. ('Eat two more bites, please.' 'Give me the ball.') She initially found that this number was 120 — which is in line with what most kids experience in Western cultures. 'In cultures with autonomous children, parents give only two to three commands per hour. So a hundred times fewer! It's radically different than the approach that's common in the U.S.,' she said. She encourages parents to use their cellphones to record their own interactions with their children and count the number of commands they are giving now and make a goal of getting that number down to three per hour. You can start slow, by having a low-command hour just once a day, perhaps at the playground. She also recommends that parents take some time to observe their children. 'See what their interests are but also their skill level. Then you know when to back off and be confident that they've got the situation handled or when to jump in to help if they need it.' Focus on building up their independence in a specific domain by 'teaching them skills they need to handle any dangers or problems that may arise in these environments,' such as using knives and electrical plugs, crossing streets or watching for cars. 'Then schedule time in their week to simply be autonomous in these environments (without devices),' she said. You don't have to start by letting them roam free all afternoon. Instead, you might begin by letting them walk home from school with a sibling or group of friends. If they're interested in cooking, you could plan to let them make breakfast for themselves on Saturday mornings. 'A little goes a long way,' Doucleff said. 'Just adding a few hours of autonomy each week will help your child immensely. You'll see a huge difference in their anxiety, behavior and overall confidence and self-sufficiency.' Related... What Is Child Endangerment? When Leaving Your Child Alone Becomes A Crime. 9 Parenting Practices From Around The World That May Totally Surprise You 11 Seemingly Innocent Phrases You Shouldn't Say To Kids

The 6 Rudest Things You Can Say And Do To A Restaurant Host
The 6 Rudest Things You Can Say And Do To A Restaurant Host

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The 6 Rudest Things You Can Say And Do To A Restaurant Host

When it comes to restaurant staff, your first thoughts are probably of chefs, servers and bartenders. But there's one major player that you're probably forgetting about — the restaurant host. The host is the person you first see when you walk into an eatery, the one who answers your calls and works to solve any last-minute reservation changes. 'I don't expect people to have an in-depth knowledge of how a restaurant operates — and the host, the maître d', is kind of like the conductor of a big symphony, and people aren't privy to that,' said Patrick Murphy, the director of hospitality and partner at Rootstalk and Radicato in Breckenridge, Colorado. The role of the host is demanding yet oft-overlooked, Murphy added. 'There's a lot of vectors of information coming your way ... there's a good amount of pressure to make sure that people are getting their tables,' said Murphy. 'And, oftentimes, people think that person at the front door is sort of the low man on the totem pole, or someone that can kind of be pushed around ... people think that they can kind of bully those people to get their way, and I think that that can be really challenging.' When it comes to challenging, difficult and downright rude interactions, there are certain situations and phrases that really irk hosts. Below, restaurant hosts and front-of-house staff share the rudest things people do and say to them at a restaurant: 1. Not greeting the host when you walk in. If you've ever skipped over the greeting pleasantries when walking into a restaurant, you're being pretty rude. 'When someone walks in ... [the host says], 'Hi, good evening, how are you tonight?' and there's no reciprocation or response, it's just, 'We have a reservation,'' Murphy said. It's a simple thing to reply with a greeting like, 'Hi, I'm doing well' or 'Hi, how are you?' and when you don't do that, it can be off-putting for the host, said Murphy. 'They just kind of breezed by the most basic human interaction, which is a simple hello, a smile, a greeting, an acknowledgement that you are a person and you're doing a job and that you value that first interaction at a restaurant,' he said. 'I think that one is probably the one that is most persistent,' Murphy stated. 2. Not replying to a notification that your table is ready. If you're on the waitlist for a walk-in table but not paying attention to incoming calls or texts from the restaurant, you're adding stress to the host's day. Hannah Brown, a host in New Jersey, said that sometimes people won't reply to a waitlist notification at all, or will take too much time to reply — resulting in the restaurant giving up their table. This leaves the restaurant in a tough spot if the person does decide to show up since there are likely other people on that waitlist, too. 'So, just not having any urgency to respond when we're trying to communicate with them,' Brown stated. 3. Bringing more people than you booked your table for. 'One of the things is showing up with more people in your party than you've reserved for,' said Brown, 'that happens pretty often.' 'And then we kind of have to scramble to accommodate,' she added. If you do need to bring an extra person, let the restaurant know ahead of time, Murphy said. 'Because walking into the front door and being like, 'Oh, we're five instead of four' changes the entire landscape of what kind of table we can offer you,' Murphy noted. The same goes for requesting a specific table, Murphy said. If you're a party of two, you can't just request a table for four when you get to the restaurant. If you want a certain spot, this should also be communicated ahead of time, too. 4. Having people join your table halfway through a meal — and not letting your host and server know. Similar to showing up with more people than you reserved for, having extra people join your table during your meal is bothersome, too. 'When people have other friends or family join them halfway through the meal and add to a table that doesn't accommodate that many people ... it affects diners around them,' Brown said. Think about it: You're trying to enjoy a night out as the table next to you adds chairs to their table, making your corner of the restaurant inappropriately packed. If you are having more folks meet you during your meal, let the host know. This way, if they can accommodate the extra guests, they can seat you somewhere with the extra folks in mind. Otherwise it causes 'unnecessary stress for everybody,' Brown said. This goes for bringing a newborn or infant, too, Murphy said. Just because your baby isn't eating a meal doesn't mean the restaurant doesn't want to know they're coming — they may set you up with a little more space for their carrier or set up an area with a high chair. 'For me, it's just, kind of a safety thing for the kiddo, I don't want to put a 10-week-old baby in one of the main walkways of the dining room,' Murphy said, adding that there's lots of foot traffic, hot food and trays of drinks in certain areas, too. 5. Asking, 'Why can't I sit at that empty table?' Restaurants take walk-ins when they can, but, oftentimes tables may be fully booked (even when they're empty), said Murphy. And, in that case, there is one thing you shouldn't do. 'You come in and it's a fairly empty restaurant — it's early in the night, let's say, and I have to tell you, 'Oh, no, we don't we don't have a lot of space right now,' and someone's looking around the room and like, 'Well, what about this table?'' Murphy said. In other words, just because it's 5 p.m. and there are empty tables doesn't mean there are no reservations for those seats — 'there's other people who have reservations,' he said. 'That is a little rude and kind of lacks some understanding that while the restaurant may appear empty at the moment, in a half an hour or an hour, it will be full,' Murphy stated, 'And we have to save those tables for people who have reservations with us.' 6. Or saying, 'I don't need that much time to eat.' According to Brown, when folks are unhappy with the wait time for a table, they'll sometimes insist that they can quickly eat and don't need much time at a table, in hopes of getting squeezed in faster. They try to 'convince you insistently' that you should give them a table sooner because they can quickly eat, Brown said. When interacting with restaurant hosts, remember that they're human, too. The good news is people aren't very rude too often, Brown noted, but it's important to know that even a one-off decision to bring an extra person or neglect to reply to a waitlist text can be stressful for hosts. 'Just understanding that we're people at work ... hospitality is something that we love and take a lot of pride in, and just understanding that we are people, too,' Murphy said. 'When someone is genuinely interested, or kind or understanding ... it opens up that realm and allows us to connect with you on a level,' Murphy added. When dealing with rude guests, Murphy said he always reminds himself that he doesn't know what is going on in that person's life or if they traveled far to get to their dinner reservation. 'And that's why they come off as terse or rude, and so that's how we handle those situations,' he said, 'there's just empathy and grace and understanding that people have lives and we don't really know what's going on with people.' So, as restaurant staff do their best to see the humanity in people, diners should do the same by respecting rules, being polite, communicating any changes and remembering that hosts are people at a job, just like you and me. Related... The Rudest Things You Can Do In Someone Else's House 10 Of The Rudest Things You Can Do At The Grocery Store The Rudest Things You Can Do At The Airport Solve the daily Crossword

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