
Diddy's hotel alias revealed as assistant is heckled and accused of 'MeToo' money grab
Mia said on the resume that she had previously 'handled all unique requests' for Mike Myers. She said she once set up 'a private and confidential tour of the CIA by corresponding with Secret Service agents and government officials.'
Mia told the court last week that she worked for Myers - as well as Harvey Weinstein's ex-wife Georgina Chapman - before she was employed by Diddy.
Myers famously visited the CIA headquarters in 2009, as reported by Entertainment Weekly.
The Canadian comedian toured the CIA's museum and had lunch with some agents, telling them he was grateful for their service.
Myers also paid tribute to his mother during his visit; she was in the British Royal Air Force during World War II and held a security clearance.
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Sky News
15 minutes ago
- Sky News
Trump warns Hamas - and claims Israel has agreed to 60-day ceasefire in Gaza
Donald Trump has said Israel has agreed on terms for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza, and is urging Hamas to accept the deal before conditions worsen. The US president announced the development ahead of hosting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for talks at the White House next week. He has been increasing pressure on the Israeli government and Hamas to work out a ceasefire and hostage agreement to end the war. "My Representatives had a long and productive meeting with the Israelis today on Gaza. Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions to finalise the 60 Day CEASEFIRE, during which time we will work with all parties to end the War," Mr Trump wrote on social media - adding that Qatari and Egyptian officials would deliver the final proposal. "I hope, for the good of the Middle East, that Hamas takes this Deal, because it will not get better - IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE." Analysis: Many unanswered questions remain In the long Gaza war, this is a significant moment. For the people of Gaza, for the hostages and their families - this could be the moment it ends. But we have been here before, so many times. The key question - will Hamas accept what Israel has agreed to: a 60-day ceasefire? At the weekend, a source at the heart of the negotiations told me: "Both Hamas and Israel are refusing to budge from their position - Hamas wants the ceasefire to last until a permanent agreement is reached. Israel is opposed to this. At this point only President Trump can break this deadlock." The source added: "Unless Trump pushes, we are in a stalemate." The problem is that the announcement made now by Donald Trump - which is his social-media-summarised version of whatever Israel has actually agreed to - may just amount to Israel's already-established position. We don't know the details and conditions attached to Israel's proposals. Would Israeli troops withdraw from Gaza? Totally? Or partially? How many Palestinian prisoners would they agree to release from Israel's jails? And why only 60 days? Why not a total ceasefire? What are they asking of Hamas in return? We just don't know the answers to any of these questions, except one. We do know why Israel wants a 60-day ceasefire, not a permanent one. It's all about domestic politics. If Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was to agree now to a permanent ceasefire, the extreme right-wingers in his coalition would collapse his government. Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich have both been clear about their desire for the war to continue. They hold the balance of power in Mr Netanyahu's coalition. If Mr Netanyahu instead agrees to just 60 days - which domestically he can sell as just a pause - then that may placate the extreme right-wingers for a few weeks until the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, is adjourned for the summer. It is also no coincidence that the US president has called for Mr Netanyahu's corruption trial to be scrapped. Without the prospect of jail, Mr Netanyahu might be more willing to quit the war safe in the knowledge that focus will not shift immediately to his own political and legal vulnerability.


Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Read the horrific texts I discovered on my husband's phone when I got back from my work trip
A woman has revealed the moment she opened her husband's phone after returning from a work trip - and uncovered a string of text messages detailing a casual, unapologetic affair with another woman. The wife, who shared her story anonymously on Reddit, said she had a 'gut feeling' something was wrong while she was away for work. When she returned home, her husband was 'aloof and distant'. The next morning, she picked up his phone - and what she found left her 'shaking and crying'. Among the messages was a conversation between her husband and a friend, where he bragged about his night out. '311 concert. Box seats for free,' he texted. 'With a buddy and a friend's ex who he left at the altar.' The following day, the tone turned even more shocking. 'Aaaaand I slept with her,' he wrote, before laughing it off with: '[It was] fantastic lol. Did not expect the night to go that way. Woke up fifteen minutes ago and was like 'who are you?' before I remembered.' The friend responded with enthusiasm - 'Omg. Lol. How was it?' - but there was no pause for guilt or regret. He confirmed the hookup happened at a mutual friend's house, and admitted he'd 'been crushing on' the woman since he was 14-years-old. The conversation ended with a final jab: 'Good warm up for next weekend,' the friend wrote. The husband agreed, adding, 'Haha yeah sort of. Experiencing a level of hangover I don't think they've discovered yet.' The betrayal didn't end with the infidelity. The woman revealed that she knows the other woman involved - and is even friends with her. Despite the devastation, she hasn't confronted her husband. To make matters worse, the 'warm up' refers to the holiday her husband and his mates are preparing for - a trip the wife described as 'a week of debauchery' 'There's no point. He will scream and yell and blame me,' she explained. To make matters worse, the 'warm up' refers to the holiday her husband and his mates are preparing for - a trip the wife described as 'a week of debauchery'. Reddit users were horrified by the exchange. 'He has absolutely no sense of remorse. This wasn't a mistake - this is who he is: an unfaithful and unremorseful,' one person wrote. Another commenter pointed out the lack of surprise from the friend: 'He has the casualness of a repeat offender. His friend wasn't even shocked. He's been cheating, and seems to be planning to cheat again soon.' Many readers urged the woman to get her affairs in order quietly: 'Get your ducks in a row. Speak to multiple lawyers for a consult and collect evidence.' One summed it up simply: 'This makes me sick to my stomach just reading it.' Though the woman hasn't decided what to do next, her heartbreaking discovery has already shattered her trust - and confirmed what her instincts had suspected all along.


Daily Mail
37 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Clint Eastwood compared quitting 'addictive' affairs to giving up smoking after years of serial cheating ... according to new memoir
Clint Eastwood has never been shy about admitting his penchant for adultery, a book released today claims. The 95-year-old movie actor/director's extramarital trysts were reexamined in Clint: The Man and The Movies from author Shawn Levy, 63 (not to be confused with the 56-year-old Deadpool & Wolverine director/Ryan Reynolds pal). Eastwood spoke with Levy for the book about his romantic relationships throughout the years, and how he assumed his partners understood that affairs came with the territory of being in a romance with a perennial Hollywood A-lister. Among his most prominent romances Eastwood was involved in, include his respective marriages to Maggie Johnson, 93, from 1973-1979; and Dina Ruiz, 59, from 1996-2013. The filmmaker of classics such as Million Dollar Baby, Mystic River and Unforgiven was also in extended relationships with actresses including the late Sondra Locke; and Titanic star Frances Fisher, who he's still on good terms with. has reached out to Eastwood's lawyers for further comment on the story. Levy said of Eastwood in the book: 'By many accounts, including his own, he more or less comported himself as if he were a bachelor.' Johnson was in the know about Eastwood's serial cheating., the book stated. Eastwood chat with the publication Photoplay about the dynamics of his marriage to Photoplay. Eastwood explained: 'One thing Mag had to learn about me was that I was going to do as I pleased. She had to accept that, because if she didn't, we wouldn't be married. 'I'm independent, a vagabond, and [Johnson] accepts me as I am and doesn't strangle me with female possessiveness.' The actor compared quitting cheating to quitting smoking in Clint Eastwood: A Biography, a 1997 book from biographer Richard Schickel It 'just became… I don't know… addictive… like you have to have another cigarette,' he said. Eastwood had been in a romance with Christina Sandera from 2014 until her tragic passing at 61 last July. A logline from publisher Mariner Books calls the book 'a revelatory portrait' of Eastwood, who is described as 'the most prolific and versatile actor-director in movie history and an imposing icon of American culture for six decades.' The synopsis continued: 'Whether he's facing down bad guys on a Western street (Old West or new, no matter), staring through the lens of a camera, or accepting one of his movies' thirteen Oscars (including two for Best Picture), he is as blunt, curt, and solid as his name, a star of the old-school stripe and one of the most accomplished directors of his time, a man of rock and iron and brute force: Clint.' The logline noted that Eastwood's long life has directly correlated to 'American culture,' as 'no Hollywood figure has so completely and complexly stood inside the changing climates of post–World War II America. 'At age ninety-five, he has lived a tumultuous century and embodied much of his time and many of its contradictions.' The synopsis concluded: 'Clint: The Man and the Movies is a saga of cunning, determination, and conquest, a story about a man ascending to the Hollywood pantheon while keeping one foot firmly planted outside its door.' In June, the publisher posted a sneak peek at the book cover while commemorating the actor's latest birthday celebration. 'Wishing Clint Eastwood's a happy 95th birthday this week!' the publisher said. 'We are so thrilled to be bringing the definitive biography of this legendary actor and director to stores everywhere on July 1.' Eastwood's most recent film, the legal thriller Juror #2, arrived in theaters last November and made $24 million in global revenues, according to Box Office Mojo . A logline for the film read, 'While serving as a juror in a high-profile murder trial, a family man finds himself struggling with a serious moral dilemma, one he could use to sway the jury verdict and potentially convict or free the wrong killer.' The cast of the motion picture included Nicholas Hoult, Toni Collette and J.K. Simmons.