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'Our King & Queen': Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfeld's wedding pics leave fans obsessed crown them ‘couple of the year'

'Our King & Queen': Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfeld's wedding pics leave fans obsessed crown them ‘couple of the year'

Time of India2 days ago
Fans are calling Josh Allen & Hailee Steinfeld the couple of the year (Image via Beau Society)
Hailee Steinfeld and Josh Allen have sparked widespread delight among their admirers through their recent nuptials. The couple's intimate ceremony showcased their deep connection, with heartwarming photos highlighting Steinfeld's bridal elegance and Allen's affectionate gestures.
The joy exuded by the newlyweds resonated widely, with many online observers celebrating their union.
Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfeld break the internet with fairytale
wedding photos
The enchanting wedding of Hailee Steinfeld and Josh Allen recently unfolded, creating a stir of excitement and warm sentiments among their admirers. The "Sinners" star and the Buffalo Bills quarterback celebrated their union in a scenic California setting on May 31st. The published photographs from their heartfelt celebration have truly reverberated, highlighting their undeniable bond and Hailee's fascinating bridal presence.
Captured by the lens of Jose Villa, the wedding photographer, the visual narrative of their big day is filled with adorable moments. Hailee was dazzling in her pristine white wedding gown, while Josh's affectionate gaze rarely left his bride.
One frame beautifully portrays the couple raising a toast with champagne, indicating their shared future, and another captures them elegantly strolling down the aisle, hand-in-hand, amid the merry applause of their guests.
A particularly delicate shot portraits Hailee gently kissing Josh's cheek, adding a touch of fairytale magic to the occasion.
Social media platforms quickly filled with praise for these touching wedding pictures. Comments poured in, with a fan @theperfectenster wrote, "So increably photographed!! Gorgeous!!!" Another devoted fan @edceventplanning from Buffalo shared their local pride: "Our King & Queen. Such a beautiful day for these two! We have all been anxious to see these pictures back here in Buffalo!" Another user @littlefinchparty wrote, 'Timeless elegance!! Congratulations to all those who made this event exquisite.
' Another @mrs.rheamae wrote, 'Such a GORGEOUS Wedding and Couple.'
Fans praise Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfeld (SS via IG)
The romance between Hailee and Josh first drew public attention, when they were spotted together multiple times in New York City, in May 2023. By June, reports demonstrated Hailee was genuinely infatuated with the football sensation. Josh playfully appreciated the rising interest in their relationship on the "Pardon My Take" podcast in August 2023, jesting, 'It still surprises me that people care so much,' regarding their publicly affectionate holiday snapshots.
Their relationship became Instagram official in July 2024 when Josh shared a series of charming photos with Hailee, including moments from a trip to Paris and a family gathering. The peak of their romance arrived in November 2024, when Josh proposed in an astonishing waterfront location. They declared their engagement through a joint Instagram post, captioned '11•22•24,' exhibiting Allen on one knee beneath a romantic arch of flowers and candlelight.
Also Read:
Josh Allen ditches Hailee Steinfeld right after wedding to chase Super Bowl glory with Buffalo Bills
Prior to their relationship, Hailee was connected to singer Niall Horan in 2018, while Josh had been in a long-term partnership with Brittany Williams from 2015 to 2023.
For real-time updates, scores, and highlights, follow our live coverage of the
India vs England Test match here
.
Game On Season 1 continues with Mirabai Chanu's inspiring story. Watch Episode 2 here.
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The result was a cuisine that tasted like home but spoke with a Caribbean accent – Trinidadian pelau, for example, is biryani reborn with caramelised sugar and coconut milk. Food historian Ramin Ganeshram calls pelau 'a Trinidadian favourite that plays off Indian biryani but browned in syrup in an African style. ' It is chutney made edible – ingredients ground, pounded, mixed, fermented, and loved into something entirely new. They built temples from bamboo poles and tin roofs, placing stone murtis brought from India or moulded from clay. They recited the Ramcharitmanas under hurricane lamps, their voices rising in Chautal and Chowtal – antiphonal Bhojpuri songs sung during Holi, weddings, and harvests. Ramleela became an annual spectacle: local boys playing Rama and Hanuman with sackcloth costumes and cardboard crowns, watched by grandmothers who still remembered the ghats of Patna. Their language evolved too. Caribbean Hindustani – a creole Bhojpuri – fused with English and Creole vocabulary. In Suriname, it survives as Sarnami Hindustani; in Trinidad and Guyana, it lives mainly in chutney lyrics and temple chants. Yet words like nana, dhal, basmati, and jahaji remain everyday currency, testament to a stubborn ancestral tongue. Chutney: When Bhojpuri Met Soca I am a hunter and she want to see my gun - Vedesh Sookoo If blues was the magic carried by African slaves, chutney music was the sorcery of Indo-Caribbeans. It is Bhojpuri folk electrified with Caribbean swagger – dholak beats fused with soca basslines and steelpan melodies. Lyrics toggle between Hindi, English, and Creole, telling stories of Krishna's rasleela, rum-shop heartbreak, and gossip at weddings. Sundar Popo, the godfather of chutney, captured this hybridity in 'Kaise Bani.' His songs declared: we are neither only Indian nor just Caribbean – we are chutney, a third, ferociously hybrid possibility. 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His early novels, like A House for Mr Biswas, captured the small humiliations and fierce dignities of Indo-Trinidadian life – from temple politics and chutney singers to rum shops and Ramleela dramas. Naipaul was the inheritor of both traditions: the Indian memory of epics and rituals, and the Caribbean's relentless demand for reinvention. His critics called him rootless; his admirers called him a prophet of cultural truth. But whether in London or Port of Spain, Naipaul carried the same knowledge that Delta Jim carries in Sinners: what his people brought wasn't forced upon them. It was their own music, their own magic. PM Modi's Reunion with Chautal In this image released by PMO on July 4, 2025, Prime Minister Narendra Modi being greeted by people upon his arrival at Piarco International Airport, in Port of Spain. (PMO via PTI Photo) (PTI07_04_2025_RPT019A) When PM Modi stood in Port of Spain last week, welcomed by ministers in Indian attire and greeted by Bhojpuri Chautal, it was beyond diplomatic protocol. It was a civilisational reunion. The Ram Mandir replica he gifted, the Sarayu water he poured – these were gestures. But the real bridge was in the Chautal beats, in the Bhojpuri words still sung after 200 years, proof that India had never left, a cultural version of what Einstein called 'spooky entanglement at a distance'. Columbus came looking for India and found the Caribbean. Indians came to the Caribbean and created their own India there – an India of dhalpuri roti and pelau, of tassa drums and chutney soca competitions, of Kamla Persad-Bissessar, the 'Bihar ki Beti' who leads with Caribbean pride and Indian memory. An India that survived not by remaining unchanged but by transforming itself into chutney: a culture ground, pounded, fermented, and loved into something entirely new. 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