Latest news with #DenzelWashington
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
"We're talking about a name that my mother made up!" - Jalen Rose on people naming their kids after him
"We're talking about a name that my mother made up!" - Jalen Rose on people naming their kids after him originally appeared on Basketball Network. Jalen Rose may not be the most recognized name in the history of the sport, but he takes great pride in his name's legacy. In every endeavor he undertakes, Rose consistently strives for excellence and gives his best, something that has certainly not gone unnoticed. Many fans still remember Rose's name, and in fact, some of them have even gone so far as to name their children after him. For Rose, this unbelievable phenomenon speaks volumes about what kind of career he had and the admirable qualities he displayed as a player. Moreover, Jalen firmly believes that the overwhelming number of kids named after him is a perfect reflection of the lasting impression he has made on the game. "It means everything," Rose told HoopsHype of his name's unique legacy. "And when you talk about impact on the game and impact on today's players, I always think about how crazy it is that people have named their kids after me." "People like Denzel Washington and Shaquille O'Neal are two of the greatest at what they do, so people would obviously name their kids after them," he continued. "But people have named their kids after me? We're talking about a name that my mother made up! What? I'm sitting at the NBA Draft and hearing, 'With the No. 3 overall pick, the Boston Celtics select Jaylen Brown.' What? Or I hear about Jalen Ramsey on the Jacksonville Jaguars. It's a common name now!" Before being drafted by the Denver Nuggets in the 1994 NBA Draft, Rose was one of the most prominent college players in the country. In his junior year, he averaged an impressive tally of 19.9 points, 5.7 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game. During his three-year stint with the University of Michigan, Jalen was a two-time consensus All-American and a key member of the school's elite squad famously known as "The Fab Five." Rose looks back at his time with the group with deep gratitude. He truly believes that it was the Fab Five's success that made him a notable figure in the eyes of many hoops fans at the time. "If people hate you, they definitely aren't naming their kid after you," the 2000 NBA Most Improved Player pointed out."That right there, to me, was like my personal [achievement] that the Fab Five helped make happen. And that's special because that name is going to continue long after I'm gone." Prime Rose was indeed ahead of his time. His overall game was like what many consider in today's NBA as sexy. He had the ability to attack the basket and a sweet outside shooting. That being said, it's no surprise that many parents wanted their children to be the next Jalen. To gain a deeper insight into Rose's impact, the NBA conducted an extensive and comprehensive study examining professional athletes named Jalen or with similar sound but different spelling. The data were quite surprising as it revealed that "Jalen" has emerged as one of the most popular names in the realm of professional sports in recent years. The statistical trend suggested that the name Jalen has been appealing to younger generations and has become synonymous with talent and success. "For the 2024-25 season, there are 15 teams with a Jalen (or variation) on their roster – half the league. When you include all spellings, 3% of the NBA is named Jalen this season," the article read. "The NBA isn't the only league with an influx of Jalens. There have been three in the WNBA, 58 in the NFL, 322 in NCAA basketball and 496 in NCAA football." "To put the rise of the name Jalen into perspective, the other most popular names in the NBA since 2000 have been Chris, Jordan and Josh — all names with origins that date back over 1,000 years. The data makes it clear – Jalen Rose's game and his mother's innovation created the most popular name in the NBA and inspired the next generation of athletes," it his remarkable skills, Rose was never viewed as a superstar during his NBA career. In fact, he never even earned a single All-Star selection to his name. However, that didn't mean that the former Fab Five star didn't reach legendary status. Jalen had his breakout year in 2000, having averaged his first career-best 18.2 points per game. Along with Reggie Miller, he led the Indiana Pacers to an NBA Finals appearance. Since then, Rose has become one of the most prolific scorers in the league. However, the league was plagued with big-name superstars in his position at the time. Iconic figures such as Kobe Bryant, Tracy McGrady and Vince Carter understandably gained more popularity than Jalen. Nevertheless, the growing number of modern-day athletes who carry the same name is a testament to the legacy he has built as a player. Arguably, this makes Rose a legend in his own story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jun 27, 2025, where it first appeared.


The Guardian
a day ago
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Past Lives to The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes – the seven best films to watch on TV this week
With Celine Song's new film Materialists on the brink of release, now is the perfect time to revisit the film that put her on the map. Past Lives is an extraordinary piece of work about a woman forced to re-examine her entire sense of self when an old love reappears, long after she has moved on. It's a film that aches with longing. It's knotty with the mess of cultural identity. All three of its leads do tremendous, heartbreaking work, but Greta Lee deserved an Oscar for her outstanding central performance. That she didn't even receive a nomination is utterly baffling. Nevertheless, consider this an update to Brief Encounter, only with a less infuriatingly paternalistic ending. Sunday 29 June, 10pm, BBC Two Ed Zwick's recent memoir Hits, Flops, and Other Illusions has much to recommend it (not least the astonishing bridge-burning chapter about his involvement with Shakespeare in Love), but chief among its qualities is how much it will make you want to rewatch Glory. Zwick's film about an African American regiment in the civil war is a true epic. The script swings for the fences. Cinematically it spills from the screen. And, let's not forget, this is the movie that announced Denzel Washington as a major presence. He still may not have bettered this performance. Saturday 28 June, 12:30am, Channel 4 Starting life as a short John Cheever story in the New Yorker, The Swimmer does its best to defy as many conventions as it can. Burt Lancaster plays Ned Merrill, an ad executive who one day decides to 'swim home' by clambering in and out of every pool he passes. Along the way he attempts to seduce a string of women, refers to himself in ever more grandiose terms and begins to detach from the easy suburbia he finds himself in. Before long he has spiralled out of control. Dark and hallucinogenic, it's perhaps the best midlife crisis movie ever made. Monday 30 June, 4:55pm, Film4 This needs to be said upfront: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes is a musical. Even though the film's publicity really did not want you to know about it, this is a film where Rachel Zegler will not stop singing. But forewarned is forearmed, and once the shock of the genre has worn off, what's left might be the best Hunger Games movie yet. A prequel, this is an origin story for Coriolanus Snow (the authoritarian ruler played in previous movies by Donald Sutherland), so it gets to exist in the moral murk more happily than the rest of the series. Tuesday 1 July, Netflix Sign up to What's On Get the best TV reviews, news and features in your inbox every Monday after newsletter promotion Long before The King's Speech made him an A-lister (and even longer before Cats blew his career to smithereens), Tom Hooper made arguably his best film. A wilfully inaccurate biopic of Brian Clough's ill-fated stint as manager of Leeds United in 1974, the film is like a tug of war between a headstrong individual and an immovable corporation. It is truly fantastic, with Michael Sheen operating at the highest possible level as the cocky, obstinate Clough. A wonderful celebration of a complex man. Tuesday 1 July, 12am, BBC Two Strongly in the running for the most gleefully preposterous film of the decade, Heads of State is a movie about the American president and the British prime minister. What's preposterous is that they are respectively played by John Cena and Idris Elba. Even more preposterously, it's an action buddy comedy by Ilya Naishuller, the director of Nobody. Did the world need a film where the leaders of the western world are stranded in the middle of nowhere and have to machine-gun their way out in a whirlwind of quips? Absolutely not. But the most preposterous thing of all is that it somehow works. Wednesday 2 July, Prime Video If you couldn't get enough of Heads of State, here's a film that must have at least partially inspired it. Although it suffered at the time from comparisons to Olympus Has Fallen – Gerard Butler's dour action film about a terrorist attack on the presidential residence – White House Down is a far lighter affair. Sure, the same things happen, but this has Channing Tatum instead of Butler, and he's intent on delivering all his lines with the biggest wink imaginable. This is an impossibly silly film and, if you're drunk enough, it forms a perfect double bill with Heads of State. Friday 4 July, 9pm, E4
Yahoo
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Zohran Mamdani's mom, Mira Nair, has storied career in Hollywood
Zohran Mamdani, who could become the first Muslim mayor of New York City, has esteemed Hollywood pedigree; his mother is an Oscar-nominated filmmaker who worked with a string of A-listers, including Academy Award winners Denzel Washington, Reese Witherspoon and Lupita Nyong'o. Mira Nair made history of her own when she won the prestigious Camera d'Or at Cannes in 1988 for 'Salaam Bombay!' With the debut feature, she became the first Indian filmmaker to achieve such status. The acclaimed work, about the lives of children living in slums in the city now known as Mumbai, also garnered an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Language Film in 1989. Her 1991 American breakthrough, 'Mississippi Masala,' was a cross-cultural romance movie that starred Denzel Washington in his first romantic role. The burgeoning heartthrob starred opposite Sarita Choudhury — currently in the 'Sex and the City' spinoff 'And Just Like That…' in the interracial romance set in Uganda during the reign of controversial dictator Idi Amin. Nair also directed Witherspoon in the 2004 Victorian-era England historical drama 'Vanity Fair' based on William Makepeace Thackeray's 1849 novel. Her credits include 2006's 'The Namesake' based on Jhumpa Lahiri, Disney's 'Queen of Katwe' starring Oscar winner N'yongo and the BAFTA-winning comedy 'Monsoon Wedding,' which also won the coveted Golden Lion at the Venice International Film Festival. Mamdani is Nair's only child with husband, writer and political scientist Mahmood Mamdani. The two met when she was in Uganda doing research for 'Mississippi Masala.' The Bowdoin College-educated, New York State assemblymember has had an influence in his mother's work — he is credited with convincing her to pass on the opportunity to direct 'Harry Potter and the Order of Phoenix,' which came out in 2007. 'He said to me, 'Mamma, many good directors can make Harry Potter, but only you can make 'The Namesake,'' she recalled about the 14-year-old in a 2018 interview. 'And it was such a liberating and clarifying statement, and it kind of is about how I lived my life. Like, what can I do that is so specific that you cannot do? How to make my distinctiveness my calling card.' As far as his career, the proud mother has been just as supportive. 'Eid Mubarak to all who love humanity. All New York wallahs, listen to this mama: If you want a progressive mayor, remember to vote for our son @zohrankmamdani!,' Nair, 67, wrote in a post on her social media ahead of the mayoral primary. The 33-year-old media savvy socialist stunned the political world with his win over former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic mayoral primary Tuesday.


Vogue
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Vogue
82 Thoughts I Had While Rewatching Mississippi Masala
In the wake of Zohran Mamdani's handy victory over Andrew Cuomo in New York City's mayoral primary on Tuesday, this seemed as good a week as any to rewatch the 1991 cult classic Mississippi Masala, directed by Mamdani's mother, filmmaker Mira Nair. But then again, does one really need a specific or timely reason to watch And Just Like That…'s Sarita Choudhury engage in one of the hottest sex scenes of all time with none other than Denzel Washington? Below, find every literally thought I had while watching Mississippi Masala:
Yahoo
21-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Danny Boyle admits he couldn't make 'Slumdog Millionaire' today because of cultural appropriation concerns
English director Danny Boyle said that he would not direct "Slumdog Millionaire" if it was made today due to "cultural appropriation" and would rather have a "young Indian filmmaker" make it instead. "We wouldn't be able to make that now. And that's how it should be. It's time to reflect on all that. We have to look at the cultural baggage we carry and the mark that we've left on the world... At the time it felt radical," Boyle told The Guardian. 'Snow White' Becomes Disney's Worst-performing Live-action Remake In Nearly 10 Years Set in India, the movie tells the story of Jamal, a young "slumdog" who's been selected to appear on the country's version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?", and hopes to also find his childhood lost love, Latika. Throughout his appearance, events from his tumultuous life are shown in flashback and help him answer the questions. Released in 2008, "Slumdog Millionaire" was a hit with audiences and critics, grossing nearly $380 million on a $15 million budget and winning eight Oscars, including Best Picture and Director for Boyle. Denzel Washington Shuts Down Reports He Bailed On Cannes Film Festival After Red Carpet Incident Read On The Fox News App However, despite its success, the movie was controversial for appearing to exploit Indian culture and portray stereotypes of India from a western perspective. Some Indian critics enjoyed the movie, but some Indian artists were underwhelmed, claiming it was "saturated with stereotyped images of India," TIME magazine reported. Boyle added that while the film was in production over 15 years ago, he was sensitive to the exploitative implications of making the movie as a foreigner then. "We made the decision that only a handful of us would go to Mumbai. We'd work with a big Indian crew and try to make a film within the culture. But you're still an outsider. It's still a flawed method. That kind of cultural appropriation might be sanctioned at certain times," Boyle told The Guardian. He went on to say, "But at other times it cannot be. I mean, I'm proud of the film, but you wouldn't even contemplate doing something like that today. It wouldn't even get financed. Even if I was involved, I'd be looking for a young Indian filmmaker to shoot it." Boyle's other notable movies include "Trainspotting," "Steve Jobs," "127 Hours" and the "28 Days Later" horror series. The latest, "28 Years Later", was released on Friday. Boyle nor his representatives immediately responded to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Click Here To Read More On Fox NewsOriginal article source: Danny Boyle admits he couldn't make 'Slumdog Millionaire' today because of cultural appropriation concerns