Author: business

  • Dylan Meyer confirms wedding, shares pics

    Dylan Meyer confirms wedding, shares pics

    play

    Kristen Stewart is married!

    The “Twilight” star, 35, and screenwriter Dylan Meyer have tied the knot. Meyer confirmed the news in an April 24 Instagram post, which showed her and the actress kissing at what appeared to be their wedding ceremony.

    “I do,” Meyer captioned the photos. “I really really really really really do.”

    Meyer’s post did not confirm where or when the wedding took place. USA TODAY has reached out to representatives for Stewart for additional information.

    Stewart and Meyer first confirmed their relationship on Instagram in October 2019. The following month, the Oscar nominee shared on “The Howard Stern Show” that she and Meyer met on a movie and didn’t see each other for six years before bumping into one another again at a friend’s birthday party. “I was like, ‘Where have you been, and how have I not known you?’” she said.

    Stewart also told Stern that she planned to propose to Meyer and couldn’t “wait” to do so. “I want to be somewhat reasonable about it, but I think good things happen fast,” she said. By November 2021, the pair confirmed their engagement.

    “I wanted to be proposed to, so I think I very distinctly carved out what I wanted, and she nailed it,” she told Stern. “It was really cute. She did very well, and we’re marrying. It’s happening.”

    At the time, Stewart said that she and Meyer were planning for a “chill” wedding, noting, “I don’t want anyone walking anyone down any aisles. We’re just gonna stand and do vows.” She also floated the idea of Guy Fieri officiating the wedding.

    Stewart later revealed on “Watch What Happens Live” that Fieri reached out and offered to do so, but she said it likely wouldn’t happen because she’s “bad at planning” things. “We’re probably just going to marry each other and then call Guy and say, ‘You were here in spirit, babe,’” she said.

    Speaking to Rolling Stone in 2024, the “Spencer” actress revealed that she and Meyer had discussed having children together. “Ideally at some point soon I go, ‘I want to have a kid,’” she said. “I really want that to happen.”

    Meyer has written films like “XOXO,” starring Sarah Hyland, and “Moxie,” which was directed by Amy Poehler. She also served as producer on Stewart’s upcoming directorial debut “The Chronology of Water,” which will premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

  • Bravo ‘Summer House’ star Amanda Batula on ‘The Pitt,’ mental health

    Bravo ‘Summer House’ star Amanda Batula on ‘The Pitt,’ mental health

    In USA TODAY’s The Essentials, celebrities share what fuels their lives, whether it’s at home, on set or on the road.

    NEW YORK – Summer should be fun, and “Summer House” star Amanda Batula is making sure of that.

    The Bravo reality TV star, along with husband Kyle Cooke, has spent the last nine seasons showcasing the life of a share house in the Hamptons, bonding and partying with friends and housemates. This year, Batula is stepping into her power more than ever.

    “I’m really becoming a new person now,” she says. Batula has entered entrepreneurship – launching a successful swimwear collaboration with South Moon Under and timing her sold-out drops to each Wednesday’s episode of Season 9 – and is putting her mental health and friendships first.

    “We live in a house together, you don’t want unnecessary tension – even though we’ve had it over the years, and there’s been our ups and downs,” she says. “You want to get along. We all have the most fun when we’re all getting along together, and that’s what the fans really like to watch, too.”

    Batula shares her morning routine must-haves, go-to TV shows and Hamptons necessities.

    play

    Amanda Batula reveals her top everyday essentials and favorites

    Amanda Batula of Bravo’s “Summer House” shares a look at her daily routine and product must-haves.

    Entertain This

    Maintaining mental health with sunshine, dog walks and meds

    Batula has opened up on the Bravo reality show about her depression and mental health, finding support from her castmates and viewers alike for her candor.

    Maintaining a solid foundation for her mental includes “my medication, I can’t speak more highly about it.”

    “I know that there’s a stigma around it, but when you have a headache, you take Advil. When you’re depressed, you take antidepressants. If they’re making it that easy, why not just do it?” She also urges people to “go see your doctor if you’re struggling with mental health.”

    “Getting outside is really big for me. Fortunately, I have my dogs,” she says as her adorable pup Reese watches her from the couch. “And then finding time to do things that I love: Cooking has been a big thing for me … (and) getting out and seeing friends.”

    She says she’s taking “small steps to just feel like normal and feel like I’m able to keep my sanity.”

    Electrolyte water is the new coffee

    Though Batula says “coffee and matcha lattes” are “probably my favorite,” she’s made a morning drink switch.

    “Recently, I’ve been feeling (caffeine is) giving me anxiety, so I’ve been drinking a big thing of electrolyte water” as her “new go to thing to energize me and fuel me throughout the day. Caffeine is only when absolutely necessary.” She cites Kroma Wellness’ cranberry hydration elixir jar as a go-to.

    ‘Summer House’ star’s mornings start slowly with couch cuddles

    Mornings are “pretty slow over here,” she says. “We walk the dogs. I feed them, and their food is frozen, so we call it couch cuddles after breakfast cuddles. We get on the couch and we cuddle for a couple of minutes, and I’m able to scroll my phone and sort of wake up while the dogs digest.”

    Batula works alongside her husband leading creative and branding for Cooke’s beverage brand, Loverboy, which allows her flexibility during her work day.

    “Kyle goes over to the office side” of their shared space while Batula stays “on the apartment side, and I’m just able to do my content, take meetings, take calls.”

    “Because I have the flexibility to work from home, and I’m not working for someone specifically, I’m able to do things that a lot of people do in the morning anytime throughout my day. If I want to squeeze in a quick workout or run some errands, I could anytime in between meetings. But I like a nice, calm, slow, quiet morning. Kyle’s up at the gym, (but) I’m still in bed by the time he gets back.”

    Amanda Batula’s nonnegotiable in her night routine

    Batula says she’s “more regimented” at night: “Doing my full skincare routine, making sure the kitchen is cleaned up before bed, taking the dogs out, unwinding with the dogs and watching some of our favorite shows or a movie.”

    Her dogs have Wellness Whimzees dental bones “so that they’re brushing their teeth while I’m also brushing mine and getting ready for bed, because they’re small and dental health is such an important factor.”

    Amanda Batula, Kyle Cooke are watching this medical show

    Though she’s not a “repeat watcher” of the same comfort TV shows, Batula is a repeat viewer of the medical drama genre.

    “I’ve been into doctor shows,” she says, noting Fox’s “Doc” and Max breakout series “The Pitt” as recent watches. “Those are two that I keep going back and forth between. I’m obsessed with them because they release weekly, (but) I’m like, can you just give them all to me at once?”

    But, Batula jokes, if Cooke “ever watched anything without me, I would murder him.”

    “He travels a bunch, so I’ll be home over the weekend (and) I’ll binge watch a whole season of something. If I think it’s really good, when he comes back I’ll say, ‘Let’s watch this together,’ and I’ll watch it a second time.”

    Amanda Batula’s Hamptons essentials

    As a Hamptons aficionado, Batula knows what to pack for the long haul from New York City to Long Island each weekend of the summer.

    “You will never see me out in the Hamptons without denim,” she says, pairing jeans and denim shorts with a T-shirt or “a nice going-out top,” with Zara as a recent go-to for her clothing basics.

    “Linen sets are a must again. They’re a really easy thing for me to pair. I’ll always have a pair of chunky sandals and a pair of very slim, sleek sandals and then sunglasses. … I love to put them up as an accessory, not even to wear on my face, almost more of as a headband. I’ll always be out there with sunglasses.”

    This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

  • JoJo Siwa: Photos of the 'Dance Moms' alum, singer through the yearsCelebrities

    JoJo Siwa: Photos of the 'Dance Moms' alum, singer through the yearsCelebrities

    JoJo Siwa: Photos of the ‘Dance Moms’ alum, singer through the yearsCelebrities

  • Kehlani’s Cornell performance canceled over previous Gaza comments

    Kehlani’s Cornell performance canceled over previous Gaza comments

    play

    Cornell University is speaking out after canceling a scheduled performance from Kehlani.

    In a letter posted to the school’s website, university President Michael Kotlikoff shed some light on the decision to axe the R&B star from the school’s “Slope Day” year-end celebration over comments she made regarding the state of Israel.

    “Unfortunately, although it was not the intention, the selection of Kehlani as this year’s headliner has injected division and discord into Slope Day,” Kotlikoff wrote.

    “For that reason, I am rescinding Kehlani’s invitation,” he continued, adding that a new headliner would be announced in the coming days.

    USA TODAY has reached out to reps for Kehlani for comment.

    “Since Kehlani was announced, I have heard grave concerns from our community that many are angry, hurt, and confused that Slope Day would feature a performer who has espoused antisemitic, anti-Israel sentiments in performances, videos, and on social media,” Kotlikoff wrote.

    Kehlani, who has enjoyed chart-topping success for nearly a decade, has for years been a vocal supporter of the Palestinian people. In a video for their song “Next 2 U” released in 2024, the singer appeared before a Palestinian flag and incorporated the words “long live the intifada,” a popular refrain at protests over the Israel-Hamas war.

    The singer is also seen in the video wearing a shirt featuring pieces of a keffiyeh, a traditional headdress worn in some parts of the Middle East and viewed largely as a symbol of Palestinian resistance to Israeli military occupation.

    Kehlani has also used their social media to indicate opposition to Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip and ongoing military campaign there, as well as to call out other musicians for being silent on the issue. The artist also once described Zionists, a term which can take on different meanings but which many view as supporters of a Jewish state, as “scum.”

    The initial announcement of Kehlani’s slated performance drew quick backlash from some on Cornell’s campus, with several of the university’s Jewish student organizations calling them an “antisemite” and demanding a change in the lineup. Jewish students make up about 16% of the student body, according to Cornell Hillel.

    “While any artist has the right in our country to express hateful views, Slope Day is about uniting our community, not dividing it,” Kotlikoff wrote in his letter. “I understand that my decision will be celebrated by some and criticized by others. I believe it is the right thing to do and the decision I must make to ensure community and safety at this high-profile event that reaches the entire campus.”

    His decision arrives in the shadow of widespread protests across American universities last year over the war in Gaza and the ongoing support of Israel from the U.S. government.

  • ‘Andor’ explores unlikely ‘Star Wars’ romance in the Empire

    ‘Andor’ explores unlikely ‘Star Wars’ romance in the Empire

    play

    Spoiler alert! The following story includes light spoilers from the first three episodes of “Andor” Season 2.

    If you thought Darth Vader choking out an underling or throwing his boss down an elevator shaft was incredibly tense, wait till you see an Imperial officer meet her boyfriend’s mom.

    There have been far more Jedi battles and starship dogfights than actual romances in “Star Wars” movies and TV shows, outside of Han and Leia’s bickering flirtation and Anakin and Padme’s doomed love affair. Yet the new season of “Andor” (first three episodes now streaming; three more each Tuesday) for the first time shows members of the evil Empire in a domestic relationship, even though neither of them are exactly good at it.

    Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY’s movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox.

    Dedra Meero (Denise Gough), a steely go-getter in the Imperial Security Bureau, and Syril Karn (Kyle Soller), a repressed and meek civil servant, met in the first season, released in 2022. She’s hot to stop pockets of rebellion bubbling up against the Empire, and he wants revenge on Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) for getting away with murder. Syril saves Dedra’s life during the riots on Ferrix in the Season 1 finale.

    Gough says she was worried about the aftermath: “I was like, ‘Oh no, I do all this work to make her this kind of odd, really specific type of character. And now she’s gonna get rescued by a boy? And then what, she’s going to fall in love?!’ ”

    But the actress has been happy about how things are working now for the fan-favorite antagonistic power couple. Syril’s moving up in the Imperial Bureau of Standards and living in a swank apartment on Coruscant with Dedra, though she’s been traveling a lot for work. She’s part of a brain trust put in place by Director Orson Krennic (Ben Mendelsohn) to plan for potential resistance against an Imperial operation to mine a precious mineral needed for the construction of the Death Star.

    “The great thing about putting them in this arrangement with each other is they retain all their Dedra- and Syril-ness,” Gough adds. “It’s a very awkward, strange interaction at all times.”

    The most intriguing peek into their domesticity comes in the third episode, in which they’ve scheduled a get-together with Syril’s passive-aggressive, domineering mother Eedy (Kathryn Hunter). Syril makes dinner in their apartment, the stern Dedra tries on outfits and smiles, and both are nervous when Eedy shows up.

    “You look nothing like what I expected,” she tells Dedra, who gives Syril an “Are you kidding me?” look. Over intergalactic fondue, they converse. Eedy, who’s always giving her son a hard time for not visiting, calls him “delicate.” And Dedra gives Eedy (and the audience) her entire backstory in a few sentences: her parents were arrested when she was 3 and she was raised in an Imperial kinder-block.

    “You’ll toughen him up,” Eedy cracks, leading Syril to leave the room, but then Dedra icily lays into her. “This game ends now,” she says. “You want Syril in your life, you will think before you speak. I’ll make sure he visits twice a month, I’ll make sure that he calls you. I will guarantee a level of engagement, but it will be inversely proportional to the volume of anxiety you generate in our lives.”

    “They say you marry one version of your parents,” Soller says of the scene. “In that moment, Eedy is seeing Deedra step up in a way that Eedy had to when Eedy’s husband left and (she) had to raise Cyril on her own. You’re seeing this very strong woman stand up and take the reins. (Eedy’s) going, ‘Oh, I’m seeing myself in you,’ which is quite narcissistic.”

    Gough believes that if these two were together in a room again, “it’d be quite pleasant, in a strange way. Nobody gets destroyed – except that cutaway to Syril lying on the bed, which is just one of the most genius things. He just is like, ‘I can’t do it anymore. I need to reboot.’ ”

    So do Dedra and Syril really care for each other? Even though each has their own agenda, “there is a deeper level of care and intimacy that they’re both exploring for the first time ever in their lives,” Soller says. “That intimacy is starting to break apart the foundations of the world that has been created for them and around them, and you see Dedra showing little cracks here and there throughout her journey, which is a direct result of their relationship.”

    Unfortunately, neither has any example of real love to look at in their lives, Gough says. “Everything has been about control. So how then do two people come together and express real intimacy if you don’t learn it from somewhere?”

  • Look back at ‘The Conners,’ from 1980s ‘Roseanne’ to 2025 finale

    Look back at ‘The Conners,’ from 1980s ‘Roseanne’ to 2025 finale

  • Beyoncé fans see seat changes to their ‘Cowboy Carter’ concert tickets

    Beyoncé fans see seat changes to their ‘Cowboy Carter’ concert tickets

    play

    • Some fans attending Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” tour opener are experiencing seat reassignments due to potential stage obstructions.
    • Ticketmaster notified affected fans, assuring them of comparable replacement seats.
    • The seat changes have fueled fan speculation about the stage production and set design for the tour.
    • The tour kicks off on April 28 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

    The countdown to Beyoncé’s opening show on her “Cowboy Carter” tour has begun, and fans should confirm their seat assignments ahead of time, as some are seeing changes before the show.

    Beyoncé is set to debut her highly anticipated Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit Tour on April 28 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. Days before the tour kicks off, some fans were notified that their seat assignments for Beyoncé’s concert had been changed.

    One fan wrote on X, “My floor ticket was moved to a different section and when I called Ticketmaster to ask why, they said that the production team moved my seat because of obstruction view of the stage and the team relocated me. Did this happen to anyone else? I was on the aisle seat of section A2.”

    Many other fans chimed in, noting that they received similar changes to their tickets. Another wrote, “This just happened to me. Also had an aisle seat in A2 and now I’m in D2.”

    According to the shared message, TicketMaster told fans “the event organizer has accommodated you with new seats in a comparable location on the floor.”

    The changes have been stirring up curiosity and excitement amongst fans. Many theories have been floating around about what may have caused the rearranging with some guessing another stage and others imagining an extraordinary set design. All will be clear in the coming days.

    As fans know, Beyoncé first announced her eighth studio album, “Cowboy Carter,” during a surprise Super Bowl commercial in 2024 when she released singles “16 Carriages” and “Texas Hold ‘Em.”

    Beyoncé’s Los Angeles concert will be the first of 32 stadium shows across the U.S. and Europe. Since the initial announcement, Beyoncé has added a handful of concerts including final shows in Las Vegas. She’s also set to make history with her scheduled tour dates. The nine-city tour will wrap on July 26.

    Follow Caché McClay, the USA TODAY Network’s Beyoncé Knowles-Carter reporter, on InstagramTikTok and X as @cachemcclay.

  • Jesse Palmer introduces the new 'Golden Bachelor'Entertain This!

    Jesse Palmer introduces the new 'Golden Bachelor'Entertain This!

    Jesse Palmer introduces the new ‘Golden Bachelor’Entertain This!

  • Jay Leno says caring for wife Mavis amid dementia is ‘what love is’

    Jay Leno says caring for wife Mavis amid dementia is ‘what love is’

    play

    Jay Leno is glad he stayed committed to wife Mavis.

    The former “Tonight Show” host discussed staying true to his vows and being a dedicated caretaker to Mavis Leno, 78, amid her “advanced” dementia diagnosis, in an April 23 appearance on “In Depth with Graham Bensinger.”

    “When you get married, you take a vow,” he said, noting that he asked himself, “Will I live up to this? Or will I be like a sleazy guy if something happens to my wife?”

    Leno, 74, said he still enjoys the time spent with his wife. “I go home, I cook dinner for her, watch TV. It’s basically what we did before, except now I have to feed her and do all those things, but I like it,” he continued. “I like taking care of her. She’s a very independent woman, so I like that I’m needed.”

    Leno said that despite people with dementia forgetting their loved ones, he tries to remind his wife of their memories together with pictures on flash cards.

    “It’s kind of fun,” he said. “(I’ll go), ‘Honey, that’s President Obama, remember we had dinner?’ (and she’ll say), ‘Oh no, not me.'”

    He replied, “Yeah, honey, it was you,” but she was adamant, “No, I don’t think so!”

    In January 2024, Leno filed to be appointed conservator of his wife’s estate amid her diagnosis. Mavis “suffers from dementia, major neurocognitive disorder,” her physician wrote in a doctor’s capacity declaration, which also outlined the decline of her cognitive function.

    Leno said “you have to find the humor” in caring for someone at her stage. He told a story about taking Mavis shoe shopping, and upon reaching the register, realizing his wife picked a $700 pair of shoes that looked remarkably similar to a $24 pair, but he bought them anyway.

    Though Leno is realistic about what being a caregiver to your spouse means.

    “When you have to feed someone and change them and carry them to the bathroom and do all that kind of stuff every day, it’s a challenge,” he said. “And it’s not that I enjoy doing it, but I guess I enjoy doing it.

    “It’s OK. Because I’m not just (thinking), ‘This person is attractive and sexy,’ and having sex with them and everything. At some point in my life, I’m going to be called upon to defend myself,” he said of the moral obligation. “I think that’s really what defines a marriage. I mean, that’s really what love is. That’s what you do.”

    The former late-night host said he’s proud he stayed the course.

    “I’m glad I didn’t cut and run. I’m glad I didn’t run off with some woman half my age or any of that silly nonsense. I would rather be with her than doing something else,” he said.

  • Meghan Markle, Prince Harry in New York for powerful memorial reveal

    Meghan Markle, Prince Harry in New York for powerful memorial reveal

    play

    Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan are criss-crossing the Big Apple this week.

    With a stop at the Time 100 Summit, Meghan spoke to a rapt audience in a breezy tan Ralph Lauren suit just in time for the city’s springtime thaw. Prince Harry watched on as his wife confessed she was the “happiest I’ve ever been,” according to People.

    Later in the week, the pair unveiled a touching new memorial.

    Through the Archewell Foundation, the royal couple’s philanthropic organization, the new installation will honor children whose lives were lost to “social media harms.”

    Entitled “The Lost Screen Memorial,” it features 50 large, illuminated smartphones with images of children who died due to harmful social media use. Their parents, all members of The Archewell Foundation Parents’ Network, have been invited to New York to lay flowers at the site.

    “These children were not sick. Their deaths were not inevitable — they were exposed to, and in many cases were pushed harmful content online, the kind any child could encounter,” Prince Harry said in a statement shared with USA TODAY April 24.

    “No child should be exploited, groomed, or preyed upon in digital spaces,” he continued. “To the platforms, they may be seen as statistics. To their families, they were cherished and irreplaceable.”

    Meghan also appeared at the memorial, taking in the exhibition and consoling the family members present at the unveiling.

    Open for just 24 hours, starting April 24, the project is meant to humanize the harms of social media use among young children and call for governments and private companies to act urgently to protect online spaces for young users. It is open to the public after a private memorial the evening of April 23.

    “While social media companies claim to be taking action, most still withhold critical data from grieving parents—data that could provide answers and accountability,” Prince Harry said. “This is a growing crisis. Social media is quietly taking our children, and those with the power to make change are failing to act.”

    Both Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan have been open about their own harmful experiences with social media, chronicling in their Netflix mini-series “Harry & Meghan” an online hate campaign that had the couple fearing for their safety.

    A rare bipartisan issue, politicians on both sides of the aisle have called for social media companies to bolster safeguards for young users.

    In 2023, the surgeon general issued a public health advisory noting social media use presents “a profound risk of harm” for kids’ and teens’ mental health and calling for “immediate action” from tech companies. 

    “This memorial is a collective act of remembrance, and a call to action. Each photo represents not just a child lost, but a family forever changed,” James Holt and Shauna Nep, Executive Directors of The Archewell Foundation, said in a statement shared with USA TODAY ahead of the memorial’s opening.

    “These parents are sharing the most painful parts of their lives so that no other family must experience the same heartbreak,” they said. “We hope this memorial inspires all of us—tech leaders, policymakers, and community members alike—to listen to their stories, to learn from them, and most importantly, to act. Online spaces should be safe by design, not an afterthought.”