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Gwyneth Paltrow branded as 'cringe' after gushing over 'scripted' praise from husband Brad Falchuk
Gwyneth Paltrow branded as 'cringe' after gushing over 'scripted' praise from husband Brad Falchuk

Daily Mail​

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Gwyneth Paltrow branded as 'cringe' after gushing over 'scripted' praise from husband Brad Falchuk

After sharing various videos of herself making 'boyfriend breakfasts' on Instagram, Gwyneth Paltrow 's husband has responded with his own act of love - a heartfelt text message. The Goop founder, 52, recently shared a text from Brad Falchuk, her husband of almost seven years, on her podcast. While the actress admitted text message - in which described all the things he likes about her - made her cry a 'little,' many fans declared the effusive love note 'cringe' - some even accusing Paltrow of writing it herself. The Academy Award-winning actress read the gushing message from her television writer, director, and producer husband on Tuesday's episode. Falchuk, 54, started by telling his wife he 'honestly doesn't know' if he has a favorite thing about her. 'I truly love every aspect of you, your physical beauty, the way your body moves through space, the way you disappear a little when you're working, the way your hands add something to a pan, your love of dirty jokes and well plastered walls,' Paltrow read on behalf of a gushing Falchuk. She continued with the long list, which included 'how much you know about art, that you feel comfortable naked and hate fake people, when you're needy, when you're angry on the road.' Falchuk's flowery message continued with: 'I love it when you chug water by the bedside at night, I like the things you choose to worry about and how you handle problems. 'I love your morning routine, and when you act like I've been demanding you to get out of the bath, but I haven't said a word about it,' a smiling Paltrow read. 'I love the skin on the back of your knees and the arch in your feet and when you smile at me in bed after you've put in your retainers, I love how hard you try and how often you succeed,' he wrapped up the enthusiastic message, adding: 'I can keep going if you'd like.' Paltrow looked every bit the loved-up spouse after reading the message, but some fans didn't think it was as sweet as it appeared. 'It looks like I'm in the minority but I find this cringe… not that he wrote it but that she read it out loud,' chimed in another. 'It is all bit too cheese,' agreed someone else. 'Who she ask? ChatGPT???' a cynical user responded. Someone else shared their theory, writing: 'Ok. I'm thoroughly convinced she wrote out that response prior to interviewing, knowing she'd share it. 'This 100% is not a real response from "Brad" lmfao but hey! She's confident!' Others loved the sugary-sweet endless message of affirmation. 'Before everyone freaks out on their spouse, please remember this man is a WRITER. Yes, this is all lovely. But if your partner does not have this eloquence, doesn't mean they don't love you,' one user assured others 'Well, that's ridiculous. Makes me a lot less icked out by men,' celerity pal Chelsea Handler wrote. The Goop founder has been married to Falchuk, a television writer known for co-creating massive hits like Glee and American Horror Story, since 2018. The couple do not share any children together but are stepparents to each other's kids. Falchuk is stepfather to two kids Paltrow shares with her ex-husband Chris Martin — daughter Apple and son Moses. The actress is also stepmother to Isabella and Brody, whom Falchuk shares with his ex-wife Suzanne Bukinik.

American Airlines makes U-turn after passenger sounds alarm over message on fellow traveler's phone
American Airlines makes U-turn after passenger sounds alarm over message on fellow traveler's phone

Yahoo

time06-07-2025

  • Yahoo

American Airlines makes U-turn after passenger sounds alarm over message on fellow traveler's phone

An American Airlines plane was forced to return to its origin airport after a snooping passenger spotted — and misinterpreted — a text message received by another traveler. According to a report in local news outlet Primera Hora, a passenger on a July 3 flight leaving San Juan, Puerto Rico, saw another traveler receive a test message that said "RIP." Rest in peace is an idiom frequently used in relation to the recently dead. The passenger who saw the text reportedly interpreted it as a threat to the flight, according to Puerto Rico's Office of Explosives and Public Safety. The flight, American Airlines 1847, was on schedule for its trip between San Juan and Dallas, but after the passenger flagged the message the plane returned to San Juan, just 32 minutes after takeoff. Once it landed, airport security and the Transportation Security Administration gave the plane a thorough inspection, and the passenger who raised the alarm about the text was questioned by law enforcement. The passenger who received the text message was also questioned by Puerto Rican law enforcement. They explained the message was sent in response to one of their relatives who had passed away the day before the flight. The passenger was trying to get to Dallas to assist their family following the death. Once the flight was cleared, it was scheduled to depart again around 9.40 a.m. The plane was delayed by around three-and-a-half hours. Passengers had to stay on board the plane during the investigation. No arrests were made. American Airlines confirmed the incident to USA TODAY, and said the plane was eventually cleared to carry passengers and fly once it was determined there was no threat. "It was a mix-up that was handled in accordance with safety protocols. There was no real threat to the flight or its passengers," Aerostar Airport Holdings' operations director, Nelman Nevarez, said in a statement. Aerostar Airport Holdings manages the airport in San Juan. "The flight landed safely at SJU, and law enforcement inspected and cleared the aircraft to re-depart," the airline said in a statement. "Safety and security are our top priorities and we apologize to our customers for the inconvenience."

American Airlines makes U-turn after passenger sounds alarm over message on fellow traveler's phone
American Airlines makes U-turn after passenger sounds alarm over message on fellow traveler's phone

The Independent

time04-07-2025

  • The Independent

American Airlines makes U-turn after passenger sounds alarm over message on fellow traveler's phone

An American Airlines plane was forced to return to its origin airport after a snooping passenger spotted — and misinterpreted — a text message received by another traveler. According to a report in local news outlet Primera Hora, a passenger on a July 3 flight leaving San Juan, Puerto Rico, saw another traveler receive a test message that said "RIP." Rest in peace is an idiom frequently used in relation to the recently dead. The passenger who saw the text reportedly interpreted it as a threat to the flight, according to Puerto Rico's Office of Explosives and Public Safety. The flight, American Airlines 1847, was on schedule for its trip between San Juan and Dallas, but after the passenger flagged the message the plane returned to San Juan, just 32 minutes after takeoff. Once it landed, airport security and the Transportation Security Administration gave the plane a thorough inspection, and the passenger who raised the alarm about the text was questioned by law enforcement. The passenger who received the text message was also questioned by Puerto Rican law enforcement. They explained the message was sent in response to one of their relatives who had passed away the day before the flight. The passenger was trying to get to Dallas to assist their family following the death. Once the flight was cleared, it was scheduled to depart again around 9.40 a.m. The plane was delayed by around three-and-a-half hours. Passengers had to stay on board the plane during the investigation. No arrests were made. American Airlines confirmed the incident to USA TODAY, and said the plane was eventually cleared to carry passengers and fly once it was determined there was no threat. "It was a mix-up that was handled in accordance with safety protocols. There was no real threat to the flight or its passengers," Aerostar Airport Holdings' operations director, Nelman Nevarez, said in a statement. Aerostar Airport Holdings manages the airport in San Juan. "The flight landed safely at SJU, and law enforcement inspected and cleared the aircraft to re-depart," the airline said in a statement. "Safety and security are our top priorities and we apologize to our customers for the inconvenience."

American Airlines flight diverted mid-air
American Airlines flight diverted mid-air

Daily Mail​

time04-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

American Airlines flight diverted mid-air

By A frightened passenger caused an entire American Airlines flight to divert back to the airport after they wrongly panicked over a seatmate's text messages. The AA Flight 1847 to Dallas, Texas, was forced to abort and return to Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Thursday due to concern the flight was in immediate danger. An unnamed female passenger became spooked when she oversaw her neighbor receive a text that said 'RIP [rest in peace]' 30 minutes into their journey. She interpreted the message as threatening, causing staff to declare an emergency and divert back to the island, according to local news site Primera Hora. Pilots told the tower they were treating the threat as a 'level three,' meaning it could be life-threatening to passengers. 'We have a threat onboard,' the pilot said in audio obtained by Daily Mail. 'With text messaging between passengers and flight members, so we're going to need authorities at the gate to meet us just to figure out what's going on here.' The tower asked if the cockpit was secure and the pilot confirmed, before reiterating: 'We just have a threat from out back, we're not even sure it's even credible at this point. 'But, you know, with the way things are this holiday weekend and everything else, we figured the best course is just to be safe as possible.' It was determined that the passenger had received the text about a relative who had died the day before. The passenger was traveling home from vacation early, Primera Hora said. TSA also inspected the aircraft and did not find a threat. Nelman Nevárez, Aerostar's director of operations, told the outlet: 'It was a mix-up that was handled in accordance with safety protocols. 'There was no real threat to the flight or its passengers.' The plane took off for Dallas shortly after the fiasco and landed in the States shortly before 2pm local time. 'Safety and security are our top priorities and we apologize to our customers for the inconvenience,' an American Airlines spokesperson told Daily Mail.

‘Ignore or delete': Traffic ticket text messages are a scam, Washington state drivers warned
‘Ignore or delete': Traffic ticket text messages are a scam, Washington state drivers warned

Geek Wire

time25-06-2025

  • Geek Wire

‘Ignore or delete': Traffic ticket text messages are a scam, Washington state drivers warned

A screenshot of a scam text message targeting drivers in Washington state. (@WA_DOL via X) Scam text messages from Washington state and Seattle agencies that don't exist are targeting drivers with warnings of outstanding traffic tickets that could result in suspension of driving privileges and prosecution. Messages received by GeekWire staffers have come from such fake agencies as the 'Seattle Vehicle Administration' and the 'Seattle WsDOT.' Others have received messages from the 'Washington Department of Motor Vehicles.' The messages cite city code 15C-16.003 and warn that records show an outstanding traffic ticket that must be dealt with in the coming days. For those who don't take action, the sender threatens a number of consequences including having the driver reported to a 'violation database.' People are urged to pay up before 'further legal trouble' and directed to open the message and click a link. The state's official — and very real — Department of Licensing posted about the messages on social media this week, call them 'obviously fake.' The international area code of the senders is one giveaway. The agency told people to 'ignore or delete messages you suspect are fraudulent' and 'never click on links in unsolicited emails and text messages.' A scam text received this week. (GeekWire Image) But the scam's ability to confuse and scare drivers was on display at a state Department of Licensing office in Shoreline, Wash., on Tuesday. While dozens of people waited more than an hour for normal business such as driver's license renewals or to get their Real ID, I witnessed several people who made the trip and waited in line just to ask about the text messages. Some held their phones up to the clerk's window asking, 'Is this real?' The agency rep reiterated in person what DOL is telling people online: ignore or delete. The Washington State Department of Transportation is still warning drivers about scam messages related to the Good To Go! toll paying program. Scammers have been pretending for more than a year to be from a collections agency working on behalf of Good To Go!, the program that allows drivers to automatically pay fees for toll roads in Washington, such as SR 520.

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