Latest news with #Custody


Time of India
27-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Justin Bieber changes Instagram username to 'lilbieber' amid divorce rumours with Hailey, fans call it cry for help
Justin Bieber has officially gone from Biebs to LilBieber on Instagram, and fans are losing it. As of Thursday, June 26, 2025, the singer's IG handle now reads @lilbieber, and no, this is not a drill. No press release, no announcement, just a stealth name change and a whole load of speculation. Because when Justin does something subtle, the drama is anything but. Justin Bieber changes Instagram username to 'lilbieber' | Credit: Instagram A fan account, @offmybieber, posted a screenshot of the change, and shortly after, Bieber, now rocking his new IG moniker, dropped a cryptic comment under the headline. No explanation. No denial. Just chaos. Obviously. Justin Bieber has changed his Instagram username to 'lilbieber.' — FearBuck (@FearedBuck) June 26, 2025 Justin and Hailey Bieber | Credit: Instagram/haileybieber Twitter thinks he is dropping bars... and maybe Hailey Netizens immediately grabbed their tinfoil hats and fired up the theories. One corner of the internet is convinced that LilBieber signals a long-awaited rap era. "Is he going full SoundCloud mode?" asked one user. Others are speculating this could be a soft launch for a solo reinvention, maybe post-Hailey? justin's reply about changing his new instagram @ to lilbieber — bay ꨄ︎ (@offmybieber) June 26, 2025 Why? Because the Hailey x Justin divorce rumours are hotter than ever. The Rhode mogul has been spotted multiple times without her wedding ring, and fans cannot help but link the username shift to a possible identity pivot during their rumoured split. justin bieber changed his ig user to lilbieber…. — monie (@monieflics) June 26, 2025 Baby Jack enters the chat While the username change screamed Gen Z chaos, Bieber's recent posts featuring his son Jack Blues added layers of mystery and sentiment. First came a blurry Father's Day pic of Jack's tiny hand clutching Justin's face. Then a carousel of black-and-white moments, baby on his back, snuggles on the sofa, all sans face reveal. The sentimental drip-feed feels like a direct message to the public: 'Yes, I am going through it, but look, here is my legacy.' View this post on Instagram Jack Blues, born in 2024 and named after Justin's dad Jeremy Jack Bieber, has become the singer's quiet anchor amid the storm. While Hailey remains silent, Justin is leaning into dad mode with a vengeance. Justin Bieber cuts off unnamed friend in angry text exchange | Credit: X | @bestoffbieber What is next, divorce track or diss track? At this point, anything is possible. A rap mixtape? A heartbreak ballad? A surprise collab with Drake called 'Custody'? Bieber is clearly in a transitional era, professionally and personally. Whether LilBieber marks the start of his Yeezus phase or just a chaotic username change during a tough year, fans are strapped in. Justin and Hailey Bieber | Credit: X The question remains: Is LilBieber the new chapter or the final straw?


New York Times
20-03-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
‘Shared Custody' Is a Prickly Spanish Divorce Drama
'Shared Custody' is a light divorce drama, though it is perhaps better seen as a cellphone drama: the buzzing, the ringing, the texting, the 'just one second,' the deleted messages, the accidental photo uploads, the app notifications. Is everyone disconnected, or is everyone too connected? The show, on Hulu (in Spanish, with subtitles, or dubbed), follows Cris (Lorena López) and Diego (Ricard Farré) through the early stages of their divorce. They each tell their parents that they're going to do things amicably, without lawyers, and that figuring out custody of their little girl won't be that big of a headache. 'You can't do that,' Diego's father grumbles. 'And if you had gone to law school, you'd know that.' Episodes themselves have a sort of split custody. We see Cris at work, where she is told to keep her child and her separation a secret, lest she be pushed aside. Diego's client, on the other hand, declares that fathers are inherently trustworthy and that she is impressed by his family life. We see each parent on a too-boozy night with friends and how each set of abuelos is both the cause of and solution to some of the issues at hand. Cris is too rigid and selfish — or wait, Diego is too lazy and has mooched off his family and wife forever. ('I've taken two degrees worth of digital marketing courses!' he brags to a friend.) As with many shows that cattily dissect the bougie, 'Custody' includes a party held at the richest friend's ostentatiously artsy house, where all the kids are screaming and running around, and all the grow-ups are forming hostile cliques. Things boil over! As with many European shows, this one features interesting sweaters and fabulous bathroom tiles. And as with many contemporary domestic dramas, it captures the misery of being around other people's poorly behaved children. 'Custody' is not dark or brutalizing, but neither does it shy away from how quickly Cris and Diego can take a whisper of disagreement and turn it into an opera of 'you are in fact just like your parents, specifically in the ways you most fear and resent.' You know what, maybe we should get lawyers after all.