Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs, accused of over 120 sexual assault charges, rose to fame in the late 1990s for his influence in music and his star-studded parties.
unbranded – Entertainment
Sean “Diddy” Combs’ lawyers are laying stunning groundwork for his legal defense, arguing that he’s not guilty of federal sex crimes because, in his mind, he was just engaging in sexual “swinging.”
The embattled music mogul’s legal team offered that window into his possible defense during a court hearing April 25, less than two weeks before his May 5 trial begins.
“Swinging,” a consensual but non-monogamous sexual behavior takes place when singles or partners in committed relationships engage in intimate acts.
The discussion arose when the prosecution argued Combs’ lawyers shouldn’t be able to tell jurors that he is being targeted in a vindictive or novel way.
Diddy sex-crimes trial: Prosecutors can show Cassie video in high-profile case
Combs’ attorney Marc Agnifilo said his legal team agrees they shouldn’t be able to argue Combs is being selectively targeted for prosecution, but they need to be able to say that there is “a lifestyle” that Combs had. “Call it swingers,” Agnifilo said.
He suggested that portraying Combs’ activities as part of that lifestyle will be relevant to demonstrating to jurors that Combs didn’t have the criminal intent that’s required to be guilty.
Diddy on Trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom with USA TODAY as Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs faces sex crimes and trafficking charges. Subscribe to the newsletter.
But federal prosecutors allege the music mogul engaged in behavior that was far more sinister in nature. Combs, 55, was arrested in September at a Manhattan hotel. He has been charged with two counts each of sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution and one count of racketeering.
Combs has pleaded not guilty to all five counts.
Diddy trial set to begin May 5
The criminal trial emerges as a series of civil lawsuits from dozens of accusers aimed at Combs have been filed, accusing one of the music industry’s most recognizable figures of a pervasive pattern of sexually and physically abusive behavior. The allegations span decades and include accusations of rape, sexual assault and physical violence.
Through his legal team, Combs has continued to maintain his innocence. At the April 25 hearing, a federal prosecutor said Combs had rejected a plea deal.
The same attorney did not share terms of the plea offer, but indicated she wants Subramanian to confirm with Combs directly that his lawyers told him about the offer and that he made the decision to turn it down.
Subramanian indicated he will question Combs at a May 1 hearing, just days before one of the most talked-about celebrity trials in recent history is underway.
Season 4 of ‘The Righteous Gemstones’ began airing on March 9.
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The end is near for the fourth and final season of HBO’s “The Righteous Gemstones” as the Gemstone saga is entering its final two episodes.
The show starring Danny McBride (Jesse Gemstone), Walton Goggins (Baby Billy Freeman) and John Goodman (Eli Gemstone) “tells the story of a world-famous televangelist family with a long tradition of deviance, greed, and charitable work,” according to Warner Bros. “Despite constant bickering, Gemstone family ties run deep, and this season, the family’s codependence is tested as they attempt to move forward without letting go of their storied past.”
Last week’s episode saw a lot of developments, with Eli facing a dangerous enemy, Judy Gemstone (played by Edi Patterson) dealing with monkey troubles and much more.
Here’s what you need to know about Season 4 of “The Righteous Gemstones.”
How to watch ‘The Righteous Gemstones’ Season 4
New episodes of “The Righteous Gemstones” will premiere on HBO at 10 p.m. ET / PT on Sundays, and be available for streaming on Max at the same time they air on the premium TV service.
Season 4 of “The Righteous Gemstones” began airing on March 9, with new episodes dropping weekly on Sundays.
How can I subscribe to Max?
Max subscription plans begin at $9.99 a month with ads, while ad-free subscriptions cost $16.99 a month.
The highest tier, which is $20.99 a month, includes the ability to stream on four devices and offers 4K Ultra HD video quality and 100 downloads. HBO also offers bundles with Hulu and Disney+.
Watch The Righteous Gemstones Season 4 with Sling + Max
‘The Righteous Gemstones’ Season 4 episode schedule
Here’s the full list of release dates for Season 4 episodes of “The Righteous Gemstones”:
Episode 1, “Prelude”: March 9
Episode 2, “You Hurled Me Into the Very Heart of the Seas”: March 16
Episode 3, “To Grieve Like the Rest of Men Who Have No Hope”: March 23
Episode 4, “He Goeth Before You Into Galilee”: March 30
Episode 5, “You Shall Remember”: April 6
Episode 6, “Interlude IV”: April 13
Episode 7, “For Jealousy Is the Rage of a Man”: April 20
Episode 8, “On Your Belly You Shall Go”: April 27
Episode 9, episode title not yet released: May 4
Watch the ‘The Righteous Gemstones’ Season 4 trailer
‘The Righteous Gemstones’ cast
John Goodman as Dr. Eli Gemstone
Danny McBride as Jesse Gemstone
Adam Devine as Kelvin Gemstone
Edi Patterson as Judy Gemstone
Cassidy Freeman as Amber Gemstone
Tim Baltz as BJ
Tony Cavalero as Keefe Chambers
Gregory Alan Williams as Martin Imari
Skyler Gisondo as Gideon Gemstone
Walton Goggins as Baby Billy Freeman/Baby Billy
Kelton DuMont as Pontius Gemstone
Gavin Munn as Abraham Gemstone
Jennifer Nettles as Aimee-Leigh Gemstone
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Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.
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‘He’s been like my little convict brother, who I’ve had to counsel through our 30s together,’ Penn Badgley told USA TODAY about his ‘You’ character, Joe Goldberg.
Penn Badgley is ready to say goodbye to ‘You’ character, Joe Goldberg
After playing Joe Goldberg on “You” for the past 10 years, Penn Badgley reflects on the show’s impact.
Editor’s note: This story contains spoilers from the “You” Netflix series.
For Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley), life has come full circle, as one would imagine after killing almost two dozen people and locking up a dozen more in his infamous glass cage.
In the “epic fifth and final season” of Netflix’s thriller drama, “You,” Joe is back in New York to enjoy his happily ever after as society’s “Prince Charming,” until his “perfect life is threatened by the ghosts of his past and his own dark desires,” according to the streaming service.
The final chapter of Joe’s life picks up three years after he and Kate (Charlotte Ritchie) left London for New York City. Kate is now CEO of the Lockwood Corporation, while Joe is her loyal husband, “dubbed Prince Charming by the adoring public.”
While the two are “following through on their pact to help each other do good,” it is not long before Joe’s misadventures catch up with him.
As the curtain drops on “You,” here’s why the series won’t be returning for another season.
How ‘You’ ends in series finale: Does Joe survive? Is justice served?
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Will ‘You’ be returning for another season?
No. After a successful five-season run, Joe Goldberg’s journey on “You,” which premiered in September 2018 (on Lifetime before it moved to Netflix), has come to an end.
Co-showrunner and executive producer Michael Foley told Netflix’s Tudum the producers knew Joe’s journey would end after five seasons and loved the “idea of things coming full circle” for him.
“We always said that we would stop after five and [that], in a perfect world, we would bring Joe back home to New York,” Foley told Tudum. “We loved the idea of things coming full circle for him. We’re excited by the fact that Joe came home as such a different person than we saw in Season 1. At the core of our final story for Joe is this dichotomy of the old and the new.”
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Penn Badgley says he’s done with Joe
Badgley, meanwhile, in an exclusive interview with USA TODAY’s Anika Reed, said he is done with Joe.
“I’m glad we’re putting him to bed,” the actor said. “I’ve been with (Joe) my entire 30s, actually, I was 30 years old when I signed on to do this. I’m going to be 39 later this year.”
“He’s been like my little convict brother, who I’ve had to counsel through our 30s together,” Badgley added. “And in that way, he’s kind of taught me to be a better man. He’s failing miserably, but I’ve had to reflect on all the things I share with him, even if they’re not that escalated or that magnified.”
Badgley said he’s glad the series is coming to an end at this point.
“The world is a different place now than it was when (‘You’) started,” Badgley said. “I said, I think in the first season, ‘How far are we willing to go to forgive an evil man?’ … It feels like the stakes in the world are a little bit different. I’m glad that this show is closing rather than starting.”
In the backseat with Penn Badgley: With ‘You,’ ‘Gossip Girl’ in the rearview, what’s next
In a separate interview with the Los Angeles Times, Badgley said he’s happy with the way things end for his character.
“The last 20 minutes (of the season) feel good to me,” Badgley told the LA Times. “Here’s the main reason: because, by the end, we’ve deconstructed him and made him less interesting. It’s like, do you want more of this man? Do you really want more? I’m sure there’s a way we can cook something up, but do you really?”
“In those last moments, he’s uninteresting,” the actor added. “He’s like a lizard. He has nothing to offer. At that point, I was just like, ‘I can’t do this man anymore.’”
How many people did Joe kill in ‘You’?
Joe killed a total of 23 people over five seasons of “You,” according to Netflix, including:
His mom’s boyfriend
Benji
Elijah
Peach
Ron
Beck
Jasper
Henderson
Ryan
Love
Malcolm
Simon
Vic
Gemma
Rhys
Tom Lockwood
Tom’s bodyguard
Eddie
Uncle Bob
Reagan
Dane
Clayton
A police officer
The killer, meanwhile, imprisoned 14 people in his cubic cage, of which only 9 survived it.
‘You’ Season 5 cast
While “You” is not returning for another season, here’s who was a part of Season 5’s cast:
Penn Badgley as Joe Goldberg
Charlotte Ritchie as Kate Lockwood
Madeline Brewer as Bronte
Griffin Matthews as Teddy Lockwood
Anna Camp as Raegan and Maddie Lockwood
Natasha Behnam as Dominique
b as Phoenix
Pete Ploszek as Harrison
Tom Francis as Clayton
Nava Mau as Detective Marquez
How to watch ‘You’ Season 5
All five seasons of “You” are available to stream on Netflix.
Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs, accused of over 120 sexual assault charges, rose to fame in the late 1990s for his influence in music and his star-studded parties.
unbranded – Entertainment
A key witness at the heart of the Sean “Diddy” Combs trial will be allowed to testify in court about why victims stay in relationships amid domestic violence, a judge determined Friday, April 25. But their testimony must be limited in scope.
The ruling is significant in this case as prosecutors will bring alleged victims of Diddy to testify about abuse, and defense attorneys will try to dispute their statements. In many abuse cases, if victims don’t immediately report abuse or sever ties with abuser, they are often discredited.
Relationships between victims and alleged abusers are complicated, and experts say trauma bonding may result. It’s common for someone to not even consider their abuser as a predator until much later.
Combs’ attorneys met with Judge Arun Subramanian on April 25 at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in Manhattan to hash out trial preparations with prosecutors. The trial is set to begin with jury selection on May 5. Federal prosecutors and Combs’ legal team have sparred in recent weeks about expert witness testimony that will be shown before the jury during the Diddy trial.
Subramanian determined that psychologist Dawn Hughes, a much-contested witness, is not allowed to discuss coercive control – a form of domestic abuse – but is allowed to discuss coping strategies for victims and why victims stay in relationships with patterns of domestic violence.
Diddy on Trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom with USA TODAY as Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs faces sex crimes and trafficking charges. Subscribe to the newsletter.
‘They will act like a stellar human being’
Combs was arrested in September 2024 at a Manhattan hotel and was subsequently charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all five counts.
The criminal trial emerges as a series of civil lawsuits from dozens of accusers have been aimed at Combs, accusing one of the music industry’s most recognizable figures of a pervasive pattern of sexually and physically abusive behavior. The allegations span decades and include claims of rape, sexual assault and physical violence.
Beth Tyson, a psychotherapist and childhood trauma consultant, previously told USA TODAY that predators often treat some people in their lives well in order to preserve their credibility. Predators do this, she says, so they can have supporters, should they ever get accused of wrongdoing by someone else.
“They will act like a stellar human being in front of the people they are not abusing in order to have people in their corner who will unknowingly discredit their victims,” she said.
What is a trauma bond?
Federal prosecutors wanted to call Hughes so she could testify about how victims of sexual abuse may sometimes remain loyal and committed to their perpetrator and stay in relationships with them due to emotional manipulation or a fear of violence.
Hughes has testified in other high profile sex trafficking cases, including R&B singer R. Kelly’s trial in 2021.
Prosecutors say Hughes’ expertise is necessary to contextualize Combs’ argument that victims willingly participated in “Freak Offs” given that they at times expressed affection for him and chose to stay with him.
Combs’ lawyer Alexandra Shapiro said at an April 18 court hearing that the government was improperly seeking to use Hughes’ testimony to bolster the credibility of the alleged victims who are expected to testify against him.
Traumatic or abusive situations often distance or isolate people. But sometimes, it can also bring them closer in what is called a “trauma bond,” an unhealthy relationship between an abuser and their victim.
Contrary to popular belief, it does not describe a shared connection between two victims of trauma.
“It describes a bond or connection with the perpetrator of abuse in our life,” Cecile Tucker, a registered clinical counselor specializing in trauma, previously told USA TODAY. “For example in an abusive relationship, one might start to connect with, understand or even become defensive of the person who is abusing them.”
In a trauma bonded relationship, moments of distress and devaluation are often juxtaposed with intermittent positivity or intimacy, making it difficult to leave these toxic situations. The victim will often try to rationalize or justify the abuse they’re experiencing and consequently form an emotional attachment to their abuser.
Not everyone who experiences abuse will develop a trauma bond. But Tucker says it can be a maladaptive way for our brains to handle or survive trauma.
Some victims of abuse may think, “If they understand this person at a deeply intimate level, it makes it a lot easier to predict how (the abuser) might harm you in the future. So really, it’s a safety strategy that we are unconsciously doing in order to protect ourselves,” Tucker says.
However, she warns that staying in abusive and traumatic situations for too long can have mental health consequences in the long-run, including an increased risk for PTSD, anxiety, substance use and depression.
How to break a trauma bond
Breaking free from a trauma bond can be a difficult, decades long process. But The National Domestic Violence Hotline offers some suggestions to those struggling:
Don’t compromise the truth for empty promises. “It means being honest with ourselves about how our partner’s choice to behave violently towards us in any way has impacted us in the past, is currently impacting us, and may impact us down the road, without dismissing this reality.”
Be vigilant and acknowledge what you’re going through. This can mean writing it down to remind yourself later and reflecting on its impact.
Avoid negative self-talk. Instead, embrace “positive self-truths” by surrounding yourself with a strong support system. “Try something like, ‘I’m smart, because I’m taking steps to empower my future at this very moment,’” the NDVH recommends.
Contributing: Charles Trepany, Jenna Ryu, Jay Stahl, Anna Kaufman, Edward Segarra and Patrick Ryan, USA TODAY;Luc Cohen, Reuters
A porch is an in-between place — partly indoors, partly out, perched between private and public. The word comes from ancient Latin (it’s related to the term “portico”, a formal entrance with columns) yet there’s nothing more traditionally American. In the south, especially, it’s where folks watch the world go by, and sometimes welcome it in.
It is also the theme for the US Pavilion at this year’s Venice Architecture Biennale: Porch: An Architecture of Generosity. Somewhat unusually for an exhibition on the international biennial circuit, the project was organised in the American heartland — specifically in northwest Arkansas, a place that coastal types may regard as itself being neither here nor there. Pavilion co-commissioner Peter MacKeith, however, argues that Arkansas is an ideal vantage point, centrally located in the country and rich in vernacular buildings. Arguably, these structures tell us what people actually want and need, as opposed to what architects think they should have.
To come out on the porch was to see and be seen, to have nothing to hide. It signalled a willingness to be known
Frank Lloyd Wright, for one, dismissed the porch as a conservative cliché, “that curse of the American home”. But it is commonplace for good reason. Practically, it gives access to shade and fresh air; socially, it is where barriers break down. “Verandas and porches were made for females to have outdoor space to occupy,” the Kentucky-born author bell hooks wrote in her 2009 book Belonging. “To come out on the porch was to see and be seen, to have nothing to hide. It signalled a willingness to be known.”
MacKeith is now Dean of the Fay Jones School of Architecture + Design at the University of Arkansas, but he spent much of his career in Scandinavia; he also curated the Nordic Pavilion for the Biennale in 2012. His two co-commissioners are Susan Chin, a highly regarded urbanist and principal of the consultancy firm Design Connects, and Rod Bigelow, executive director of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, an institution dedicated to making art accessible to the widest possible public. “We are a community-centred organisation,” Bigelow says of the museum in Bentonville, Arkansas, “with multiple entryways. We think of ourselves as one big porch.”
The pavilion itself has been utterly transformed, as it also was, to spectacular effect, by artists Simone Leigh and Jeffrey Gibson in the 2022 and 2024 Art Biennales. (The consensus seems to be that the existing pavilion, an essay in textbook Palladianism from 1930, is better treated as armature than architecture.) For this year, the three co-commissioners interpreted the theme partly by inviting many others to join the effort. They asked the prominent architect Marlon Blackwell, who also teaches at the University of Arkansas, to create a dramatic temporary projection out front. Though grandly proportioned, it is indeed porch-like, with a vocabulary of wooden slats. The addition creates a capacious gathering space which will be programmed throughout the summer with talks, music, group meals and other events.
Also on the pavilion design team are two landscape architects, Julie Bargmann of D.I.R.T. studio, in Virginia, and Maura Rockcastle, of the Minneapolis practice Ten x Ten; and one industrial designer, Stephen Burks, whose furniture and sculptural objects will populate both the exterior and interior spaces. In a project they call Objects of Belonging — the nod to bell hooks is intentional — Burks and his partner Malika Leiper orchestrated a partnership between the Milanese textile firm Dedar and Sew Gee’s Bend Heritage Builders, based in the Alabama town renowned for its community of quiltmakers. Dedar donated luxurious velvets and other Italian luxury fabrics — materials completely new to the Gee’s Bend quilters, which they duly cut up and collaged into brilliantly improvised compositions.
The many other exhibitors at the Pavilion, 54 in total, were identified by an open call. All exemplify some aspect of “porchness”, and they come from across the whole country; only built projects completed since 2000 were accepted. As is usually the case with such inclusive exercises, the parameters were often tested. Do the “streeteries” that popped up during the pandemic, transforming urban streets into outdoor dining venues, count as porches? Chin thought they should, and invited the City of New York Department of Transportation to submit a presentation on the topic.
At the other end of the spectrum are transformative urban development projects, in which the porch is interpreted at grand scale. Tom Lee Park in Memphis, completed in 2023 — a collaboration between Jeanne Gang’s studio and the landscape architects SCAPE — features a “Sunset Canopy” that provides public gathering space right next to the bank of the Mississippi. In St Louis, Studio James Carpenter and Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates created a new entrance to Eero Saarinen’s Gateway Arch, reorienting the iconic monument towards the city via a circular pocket park.
A porch’s elevation from the ground also has advantages in areas threatened by flooding and subsidence — a not unfamiliar topic in Venice
True to the porch’s in-between nature, it is perhaps the pavilion’s midsized projects that most fully embody the typology’s potential. The Bennie G Thompson Academic and Civil Rights Research Center at Tougaloo, a historically Black college in Mississippi, has a complex programme including a lecture hall, museum space, archive and classrooms. It was designed by the Jackson-based architectural office Duvall Decker to be primarily a gathering space, with a handsome covered walkway extending the full length of its brick façade, opening the building out to the campus. The Seattle-based firm atelierjones was selected for its Sierra Houses, replacing hundreds of homes lost to wildfire in Greenville, California. Essentially emergency housing, the mass timber buildings are nonetheless beautiful, not least because their asymmetrically roofed porches conjure an instant sense of community.
The Sierra Houses project is one of many featured in the pavilion that address the reality of climate change, an ever-present consideration for contemporary architecture. The writer Charlie Hailey, in his 2021 essay “A Case for the Porch”, reflects that “sitting on a porch calms me down but it also makes me anxious, because here, on the house’s edge, nature tells how everything is changing”. Global warming may soon result in a northward migration of porches, as well as people; we’re all going to be needing more shade. A porch’s elevation from the ground, which establishes a raised level for a building’s entire ground floor, also has advantages in areas threatened by flooding and subsidence — a not unfamiliar topic in Venice.
The pavilion has been in the planning for years, and it arrives at a strange moment. The principle of generosity sits uneasily alongside the doctrine of America First, and current US policies on immigration, tariffs and funding for the arts. (For what it’s worth, the co-commissioners have nothing but good things to say about the State Department, which helps to administer the pavilion; they affirm that there have been no efforts to censor the content, or otherwise interfere.) Arguably, these political circumstances make the project all the more timely. It’s good to be reminded that Americans do have a long history of offering one another welcome, and that this instinct is inscribed deeply into its built environment, from coast to coast, and everywhere in between.
porchusavenice2025.org
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What we know now about Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ pre-trial court appearance
Sean “Diddy” Combs was in court for a pre-trial hearing in his federal sex crimes case. What was decided in today’s hearing? Here is what we know now.
The much talked about video that allegedly shows Sean “Diddy” Combs beating, kicking and dragging his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura will be allowed to be included in his upcoming trial, a judge ruled today.
In a pre-trial hearing on April 25, lawyers for Combs, who is facing federal sex crimes charges, put in a motion to exclude a 2016 surveillance video obtained by CNN from evidence.
The video, which the “Bad Boy Records” founder has since apologized for, shows him clad in a bath towel and running down a hotel hallway toward Ventura before he strikes her, throws her to the ground and kicks her twice at a now-closed luxury hotel in Los Angeles. He then grabs her to drag her down the hallway. The video also shows Diddy throwing what appears to be a vase.
Diddy arrives in court as attorneys hash out details of his federal sex crimes trial: Live
In court documents filed earlier this month, lawyers for Combs argued that, per a forensic specialist they hired, the video was condensed and not able to “create an accurate version,” of events, therefore distorting the incident.
Diddy on Trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom with USA TODAY as Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs faces sex crimes and trafficking charges. Subscribe to the newsletter.
The judge in the case denied their request, saying the video was a “fair and accurate” depiction, and that there are two witnesses who authenticated video. Lawyers for the government were able to have video slowed down so it’s clearer and will be able to show it to jurors during the trial set to kick off May 5.
The April 25 pre-conference sets the stage for the much-anticipated trial as Diddy stares down life in prison.
Combs now faces two counts of sex trafficking, two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and one count of racketeering ahead of his trial. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and maintained his innocence in response to dozens of sexual assault lawsuits, which detail alleged events dating back to the 1990s, that have been filed over the past 1½ years.
Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations contributing to criminal activity.
Using RICO law, which is typically aimed at targeting multi-person criminal organizations, prosecutors allege that Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in “freak offs” — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors claim they have video of.
Emmy Award-winning actor Donald Sutherland has died. He starred in more than 200 movies and TV shows.
“Hunger Games” superfans already have another midnight premiere to look forward to.
Soon after author Suzanne Collins released a new installment of her much-beloved dystopian series, readers learned they would be treated to a film adaptation.
“Sunrise on the Reaping,” one of two prequels Collins has released in the aftermath of the original books, is set 24 years before the events of the series’ first novel. Chronicling the 50th Hunger Games, the tale is told from the perspective of Haymitch Abernathy, Katniss’ hardened but lovable mentor, who ultimately wins the games.
Released to high acclaim in March, “Sunrise on the Reaping” is set to become a film. Here’s everything we know.
After 17 years and five books, ‘The Hunger Games’ feel as urgent as ever
Who is in the ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ cast?
The cast of “Sunrise on the Reaping” (so far), according to the official “Hunger Games” Instagram account, includes:
Joseph Zada as Haymitch Abernathy
Whitney Peak as Lenore Dove Baird
Mckenna Grace as Maysilee Donner
Joseph Zada has been cast as Haymitch Abernathy, who, at 16 years old in the prequel, is more like the angry and protective Katniss at the center of the original series than the begrudging mentor he ultimately becomes.
Woody Harrelson played Abernathy in the original films.
An Australian actor, Zada is a relatively fresh face in the industry, his previous projects including the TV series “Invisible Boys” and the film “The Speedway Murders.”
Lenore Dove Baird, Abernathy’s love interest and a relative of Lucy Gray, a central character in Collins’ other prequel, “The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes,” will be played by Whitney Peak.
Peak, another new-ish name to Hollywood, has acted in the “Gossip Girl” reboot, “Hocus Pocus 2” and “Molly’s Game.”
While much of the cast remains a mystery, one final name has been announced: Mckenna Grace.
The 18-year-old actress will play Maysilee Donner, an enemy turned ally for Abernathy, who forms a bond with her as they compete in the Hunger Games. Grace has a slew of acting credits under her belt, including the 2017 Chris Evans film “Gifted” and a guest spot on “The Handmaid’s Tale.”
When will ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ movie come out?
Just hours after the book was announced, Lionsgate confirmed it’s adapting “Sunrise on the Reaping” into a feature film, which will hit theaters on Nov. 20, 2026.
Francis Lawrence is in talks to direct after helming every movie in the series except the 2012 original.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, renames lifestyle brand to ‘As Ever’
As she began promoting her new Netflix show titled “With Love, Meghan,” the Duchess of Sussex took to Instagram on Tuesday to share a video filmed by her husband, Prince Harry.
Cover Media
The queen of the kitchen is adding a dash of spice to the narrative surrounding Duchess Meghan’s Netflix show.
In a new Access Hollywood interview, Martha Stewart was asked about Meghan’s new lifestyle program, “With Love,” and admitted that she has “not seen the show yet,” which has drawn comparisons to Stewart’s media empire.
“Has it started?” Stewart then asked, even though “With Love” made headlines when it debuted in March. “I’ll watch an episode and see how she does.”
The Martha Stewart Omnimedia founder said she was “curious” about the show.
The comments came as Stewart promotes a new NBC cooking competition series, “Yes Chef!” with World Central Kitchen chef José Andrés, a friend of the former royal and her husband, Prince Harry, who followed his co-star’s comments by saying, “I love Meghan.”
See first look: Martha Stewart, José Andrés team up for ‘Yes, Chef!’
On April 23, Meghan revealed that she and Stewart’s mutual friend would be a special guest on the second season of “With Love” during the TIME100 summit in New York City.
“We haven’t revealed things about Season 2 and that’ll come through later. But I can apologize in advance for saying José Andrés is going to be on Season 2. We love José so much,” Meghan told TIME CEO Jessica Sibley.
The Duchess of Sussex also got candid about her newfound happiness while discussing her new business ventures, including podcast “Confessions of a Female Founder” and “With Love.”
“I think the confession for you today, that I could very comfortably say, is I’m the happiest I’ve ever been,” Meghan said. “Of all the things that have happened in my life, I never would have imagined that getting here, at this point, I feel just so happy and grateful. I really do.”
This year, Meghan reentered the public eye and reemerged with a pair of pre-Harry-inspired pursuits: a Netflix show, “With Love,” and a companion lifestyle brand, As Ever. Before meeting Harry, she was the curator of a successful lifestyle blog, The Tig.
Martha Stewart previously slammed former friend Ina Garten
The lifestyle maven is known to cook up beef with fellow lifestyle brand competitors, including taking aim at former friend Ina Garten in September.
Snoop Dogg’s BFF called out the Barefoot Contessa in a profile for The New Yorker about the latter’s life and career, telling the outlet that Garten stopped talking to her when she went to prison for insider trading in 2004.
Martha Stewart says ‘unfriendly’ Ina Garten stopped talking to her when she went to prison
“When I was sent off to Alderson Prison, she stopped talking to me,” Stewart told The New Yorker in an interview published on Sept. 9. “I found that extremely distressing and extremely unfriendly.” However, Garten told the outlet the former friends lost touch when Stewart spent more time at a new property in Bedford, New York.
The lifestyle guru served an infamous five-month sentence for lying to federal investigators about a stock sale. In March of 2005, she was released from Federal Prison Camp Alderson in West Virginia.
After Stewart’s comments to The New Yorker, her publicist and friend Susan Magrino tried to clarify to the outlet that the ex-Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover model was “not bitter at all and there’s no feud.”
Why everyone loved working with Melissa McCarthy on ‘Only Murders’
Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez sit down with USA TODAY to talk about the new season of “Only Murders in the Building” and working with Melissa McCarthy on the show.
Selena Gomez knows it’s not always easy to speak your mind on hot-button political issues − but she’s going to keep doing it anyway.
The pop star, who has been outspoken on an array of issues including mental health and immigration, said speaking your mind is “not for the faint of heart,” in an interview with Billboard published Thursday.
“At the end of the day, I believe it matters to be vocal about issues that matter to you, whether you are famous or not,” she said. “It’s not for the faint of heart, because you are putting yourself out there and trust me, there will be a lot of opinions that come at you for even having the nerve to say anything at all.”
Selena Gomez cries about immigration: See what she said about Trump’s orders
The actress and Rare Beauty founder drew sharp reactions in January when she posted a video to social media in which, between tears, she expressed sadness and concern over mass deportation efforts authorized by President Donald Trump.
“The children — I don’t understand,” Gomez said, per screen recordings shared on social media, including by @PopBase. “I’m so sorry, I wish I could do something for the kids. I don’t know what to do. I’ll try everything, I promise.” In text over the clip, she wrote “I’m sorry” and included the Mexican flag emoji. Gomez is third-generation Mexican American.
Selena Gomez reveals she can’t carry a baby. It’s a unique kind of grief.
Supporters of President Trump, including some in his administration, were quick to criticize Gomez, characterizing her emotional reaction as undue.
The “Only Murders in the Building” star has also been open about her struggles with mental health over the years and the importance of seeking help and spreading awareness.
“I remember when I decided to be open about my own personal mental health, it was scary to be that vulnerable, and I didn’t ever want anyone to think I am a victim,” she told Billboard. “I thought (that) by sharing my own story I could help others, and I will take any negative opinions that come with that because I see the bigger picture of how the conversations have changed around mental health.”
“The noise can be overwhelming, and I am not saying it’s easy,” she continued, “but by doing that and not compromising who you are, it goes a long way.”