Category: BUSINESS

  • Ben Affleck premieres ‘The Accountant 2’ at SXSW with Matt Damon

    Ben Affleck premieres ‘The Accountant 2’ at SXSW with Matt Damon

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    AUSTIN, Texas – The math is back to mathing with the return of sharpshooter Christian Wolff in “The Accountant 2.”

    Ben Affleck, who portrays the neurodivergent genius, premiered the action-packed sequel to the 2016 feature Saturday night at Austin’s SXSW festival running through March 15. Matt Damon, Affleck’s longtime friend and an executive producer on the movie, also attended and the two posed for photos on the carpet.

    “The Accountant 2” files into theaters April 25. When audiences are reunited with Christian, he’s getting suited up for a speed dating event. Themes of loneliness are explored in the follow-up film as they were in the original. The yearning for that connection is something that resonated “profoundly” with Affleck, he told USA TODAY on the red carpet.

    “I think that that’s what’s really moving and interesting about this guy; he’s a very vulnerable character,” said Affleck. “Yes, on the one hand, he’s got strengths, and skills and talents that are really interesting and exceptional. But at the end of the day, what allows people in to a story is he’s trying to find a connection. He wants to have love in his life. He wants to meet a woman that he can have a connection with. And he sees other people having this, and he knows it’s something that matters to him. He’s not quite sure how to do it.

    “I think a lot of us have felt that way at times,” Affleck, 52, continued. “It’s not an easy thing to be a person and build authentic connections, and he’s estranged from his brother (Braxton, played by Jon Bernthal), the guy he probably loves most in the world. But they’re just very different and sometimes it seems like they don’t speak the same language. The idea of, ‘How do we try to get along with our friends and family, people even closest to us?’ Sometimes you miss each other, or we hurt each other’s feelings.”

    The dating in the film is “not treated glibly,” Affleck added. “Relationships are complex and fraught and full of a kind of coded language that we use, and they’re hard for everyone to figure out, and that’s why I think this movie touches on some really universal, accessible things that I find really moving, funny, beautiful, and I hope audiences do too.”

    In the movie, Christian attempts to woo a girl at a bar by learning moves to “Copperhead Road” to impress her, an acting feat Affleck shared in a post-screening Q&A.

    “For me, the challenge of course was the months and months that I spent training to line dance, which really qualifies as a stunt for me,” he joked. “Tom Cruise has nothing on me, just in terms of line dancing.”

    While Christian and Braxton were separated for most of the first feature, the brothers partner with Marybeth (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) for a new mission.

    “This one, we’re sort of together for the whole ride,” Bernthal, 48, said on the carpet. “You never know how that chemistry is really going to work. For me, fortunately or unfortunately, making movies is usually an exercise in me banging my head up against a wall. I’m really hard on myself. I really want to get it right. I like it to be hard. I don’t want it to be easy. This one was just really easy, honestly.

    “Every day was a joy to go to work with him,” Bernthal applauded. “We just naturally could pick up cues with each other and just pick up where somebody else left off. It sounds cheesy, but I genuinely love him. I love him as a guy. I love him as an artist, and I’m super proud to call him a friend. I’d follow him anywhere.”

  • What happened to Gene Hackman and wife Betsy Arakawa: The final hours

    What happened to Gene Hackman and wife Betsy Arakawa: The final hours


    Arakawa, already dead, was splayed on a bathroom floor of the Santa Fe home she shared with Hackman, who didn’t make any calls or otherwise ask for help for the seven days he outlived his wife.

    SANTA FE, N.M. – One of the last times anyone saw Betsy Arakawa in public, she was strolling through the aisles of a CVS Pharmacy in Santa Fe, her face covered by a mask, likely because of the virus ravaging her lungs.

    Within hours, she was dead.

    Security cameras captured Arakawa’s image during her visit to the pharmacy on Feb. 11, the last day she is believed to have been alive. The longtime wife and main caregiver of actor Gene Hackman, Arakawa had busied herself with errands that day: sending an email, stopping at the pharmacy, doing some grocery shopping.

    Most notable was what she didn’t do. She failed to swing by Gruda Veterinary Hospital in southwest Santa Fe to pick up the prescription dog food and medication she had ordered for one of her three dogs, Zinna, Bear and Nikita.

    Arakawa had been taking her dogs to that vet for years and never once missed a food or meds pickup. The following week, sometime after Feb. 17, Gruda’s staff tried calling Arakawa on her cellphone to remind her the food was ready. No one picked up.

    “She was devoted to those dogs,” Robert Gruda, the hospital’s owner, told USA TODAY in an interview. “She was consistent, predictable. We knew something was wrong when she didn’t pick up the food on time.”

    Unbeknownst to Gruda and his staff, Arakawa, 65, was already dead, splayed on a bathroom floor of the Santa Fe home she shared with Hackman, seized by a rare but potentially lethal disease spread by rodents.

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    Death timeline of Gene Hackman, wife

    Gene Hackman and his wife died a week apart and from entirely different causes. No foul play is suspected in the deaths.

    Hackman, 95, racked by advanced Alzheimer’s disease, lived another week after his wife died, then died in a mudroom on the other side of the house, a cane and sunglasses nearby. What exactly did Hackman do during that time? Did he even know his wife was dead? Was he aware that one of the couple’s dogs, Zinna, a 12-year-old Australian Kelpie mix, had also died while locked in a crate in the home?

    News of the couple’s twin deaths has rattled and baffled the Santa Fe community, where they were at once pillars and reclusive. On Friday, Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza and other officials held a news conference to reveal details on the causes and dates of their deaths.

    Yet, more questions remain. How and why, for example, did Arakawa, by all accounts a youthful, energetic woman, contract the hantavirus and die so suddenly?

    “I’m more confused and really devastated even more,” Santa Fe restaurateur Doug Lanham, a close friend of the couple and Hackman’s former business partner, said after the news conference. “How do you connect all these dots?”

    ‘An excellent dog owner, excellent caretaker’

    Arakawa began bringing her dogs to the Gruda Veterinary Hospital several years ago and quickly became a favorite at the animal hospital. She reliably brought the dogs to appointments and chatted with staff and Gruda. She regularly called Zinna by her full name, Zinfandel, and confided to Gruda that she was named after Hackman’s favorite wine varietal. 

    “She was an excellent dog owner, excellent caretaker to those dogs,” he said. “She really doted on them.”

    One of the last times the hospital staff saw Arakawa was in late January, when she came in to pick up Zinna, who had had “major surgery,” Gruda said. She was her typical, alert self, he said. 

    The staff instructed her to confine Zinna to a crate, to keep her from running around and undoing the effects of the surgery, Gruda said. 

    “She was friendly, dutiful,” he said of Arakawa. “That’s how we make a living, with owners that care for their animals and see us consistently.”

    By this time, even the couple’s closest friends were seeing them less and less around town. Lanham, who used to golf regularly with Hackman and dine with the couple, hadn’t seen them in more than five years. 

    A few weeks after picking up Zinna from the hospital, on Feb. 11, Arakawa began her day by exchanging emails with a massage therapist around 11:21 a.m., according to Mendoza, the sheriff. She later shopped at a Sprouts Farmer Market grocery store between 3:30 and 4:15 p.m., then visited a CVS Pharmacy. Surveillance footage showed her wearing a mask, he said. 

    Arakawa returned home around 5:15 p.m. and used a remote to open the gate at Santa Fe Summit, the gated community in the foothills just outside of Santa Fe where the couple had lived for decades. 

    She made it inside the sprawling, 9,000-square-foot home. But by now, the hantavirus was clawing its way into her lungs. Her hours were numbered. 

    A rare but deadly rodent disease

    First discovered in 1993, the hantavirus began spreading from the Southwest to across the U.S. Humans contract it by breathing in aerosolized urine, feces or saliva from a rodent – in New Mexico, the tiny deer mouse is usually the culprit.

    Cases are rare. As of 2024, New Mexico had seen only 136 infections over the past 50 years, with just five of those in Santa Fe County, according to Erin Phipps, the state public health veterinarian. Dogs don’t get the disease, and the strain found in the U.S. can’t spread from human to human, she said. 

    Symptoms are akin to getting the flu: body aches, fever, abdominal pain. But the disease could quickly turn deadly. After incubation the virus for anywhere from three to four weeks and up to eight weeks, an infected person’s lungs will begin to fill with fluids that escape through capillaries, triggering coughing and shortness of breath, said Greg Mertz, professor emeritus of internal medicine and former chief of the division of infectious diseases at the University of New Mexico. 

    Hantavirus has a staggering mortality rate of between 35% and 50%, according to health officials. 

    “Unfortunately, it could progress to cardiogenic shock over a period of a few hours,” he said. “Even in a hospital, most deaths occur within the first day.”

    During cardiogenic shock, the heart stops pumping adequate blood supply to the organs. Blood pressure plummets and the patient lapses into cardiac arrhythmia, or an irregular heartbeat. From there, it’s very difficult to save an infected person, Mertz said. 

    The virus is difficult to detect, as many of the symptoms are akin to the flu, he said. There is no medicine to combat it and, once it spreads, it’s hard to stop it from overwhelming the body. 

    Mertz said he was treating a patient once with hantavirus at University of New Mexico Hospital. The patient was sitting on a hospital bed and began complaining about feeling ill. Their blood pressure dropped and they went into shock, he said. Within 20 minutes, the patient was dead. 

    “It’s a pretty horrific progression,” Mertz said. “There aren’t a lot of diseases with higher mortality rates.”

    ‘Come over here! Come over here!’

    Around 1:43 p.m. on Feb. 26, a maintenance man who had done work on the Hackman home for years visited the property and found the front door ajar. He peeked through a window and saw Arakawa lying on the floor. He then notified another maintenance man who works for the subdivision, who called 9-1-1. 

    Paramedics with the Santa Fe Fire Department arrived at the scene, pushed open the front door and saw Arakawa lying on the nearby bathroom floor, Chief Brian Moya said. She looked deceased, so they retreated back outside and radioed the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office for backup, as per protocol. 

    Backed by several sheriff’s deputies, the two paramedics and three other Santa Fe firefighters inspected Arakawa’s body, which had noticeable signs of decomposition. A bottle of prescription thyroid medication was on the bathroom counter, loose pills spread across the countertop. 

    The first responders then fanned out through the sprawling four-bedroom home, meticulously checking bedrooms, hallways, bathrooms and closets for other people or signs of foul play, Moya said. Thirty minutes passed without a sign of anyone else. 

    As they searched, one of the couple’s dogs kept running up to them, barking and running off in a different direction, he said. At first, paramedics thought the dog wanted to play. Then, they realized it wanted them to follow. 

    “They realized (the dog) was trying to say, ‘Hey, come over here! Come over here!’” Moya said.  

    The dog led them to a mudroom in the far end of the home, next to the kitchen. It then sat next to the body of Hackman, who was crumpled on the floor. Sunglasses and a cane laid nearby. His hands were blackened and showed signs of decomposition, Moya said. A back door was propped open, allowing the dogs to go in and out of the home. 

    Firefighters went through the home and two detached structures on the property with handheld six-gas monitors, measuring oxygen levels and looking for signs of harmful gases, such as carbon monoxide. The readings were nothing out of the norm, Moya said. The gas company later did its own inspection and also found no harmful levels of gases. 

    The two workers who first alerted police to the home told investigators they rarely saw the owners while conducting maintenance around the house, according to a search warrant affidavit. They said they mostly communicated via phone calls or text and primarily with Arakawa. 

    First responders noted how clean and organized the home appeared, Moya said. “It was very neat, organized with no clutter,” he said.  

    The two surviving dogs, Bear and Nikita, were rounded up and transported to a local pet day-care facility. Hackman’s and Arakawa’s bodies were taken to the state Office of the Medical Investigator at the University of New Mexico for autopsies. 

    Finally, some answers

    At 2 p.m. Friday, outside the sheriff’s office in Santa Fe, Heather Jarrell stepped before the cameras. For over a week, media from all over the world had descended upon the New Mexico capital, all looking for answers to the same question: How did Hackman and Arakawa die?

    Jarrell, New Mexico’s chief medical examiner, had led the queries into the couple’s deaths from her lab in Albuquerque. Finally, she had some answers.

    Hackman’s heart showed signs of previous heart attacks, a pacemaker and multiple heart surgeries, as well as a scarred kidney due to chronic high blood pressure. Hackman’s cause of death was cardiovascular disease. He also had advanced Alzheimer’s disease, she said, which contributed to his death.

    In other, less-experienced medical examiners’ offices, Arakawa’s cause of death may have gone undetected. But Jarrell and her staff knew enough to recognize the microscopic evidence revealed in the patient’s lungs. Arakawa tested negative for COVID-19 and influenza but positive for the hantavirus, Jarrell said. Cause of death: hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. 

    Her lungs had crashed as the virus branched through her body. 

    As Jarrell examined the patients, she received a phone call from one of Hackman’s doctors. 

    His pacemaker, the doctor said, had shown activity as recently as Feb. 17. 

    After further inspecting the device, Jarrell and investigators noticed Hackman’s heart also showed an atrial fibrillation, or irregular heartbeat, the following day, on Feb. 18. That’s likely when he died, Jarrell said. 

    Mendoza said authorities are still waiting on more data from two cellphones collected at the home, as well as results from a necropsy on Zinna. But the medical examiner’s information answered a lot of the questions they had, he said. 

    Hackman was in the house for seven days after Arakawa died. There were no cameras inside the house to record his movements.

    In that time, he didn’t make any phone calls or otherwise ask for help, authorities said. He hadn’t eaten but had somehow managed to stay hydrated. 

    Clouded by Alzheimer’s and struggling with a scarred heart, he was alone while his wife and main caregiver was dead on the bathroom floor near the front of the home.

    It’s likely, authorities said, Hackman never knew his wife was already gone.

    Contributing: Javier Zarracina, USA TODAY

    Follow Jervis on X: @MrRJervis.

  • Crossword Blog & Answers for March 9, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    Crossword Blog & Answers for March 9, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    There are spoilers ahead. You might want to solve today’s puzzle before reading further! Southern Discomfort

    Constructor: Nate Cardin

    Editor: Amanda Rafkin

    What I Learned from Today’s Puzzle

    • BIG ORANGE COUCH (14D: Iconic ’90s Nickelodeon sofa) Nickelodeon used the BIG ORANGE COUCH as a mascot for SNICK (Saturday Night Nickelodeon) in the 1990s. SNICK was a programming block geared toward preteens and teens. The BIG ORANGE COUCH was featured in promos, and was seen in a number of locations.
    • YONDR POUCH (26D: Magnetic bag used to store students’ cellphones) YONDR is a company founded in 2014 by Graham Dugoni. Their main product is the YONDR POUCH, a magnetic bag used by schools and other venues to create phone-free spaces. The YONDR POUCH allows each person to keep their cell phone with them, but makes it inaccessible until the pouch is unlocked.

    Random Thoughts & Interesting Things

    • ANGRY BIRDS (16A: Video game with feathered protagonists vs. enemy pigs) The video game ANGRY BIRDS was first released in 2009. Since then, a number of variations of the game have been released. The basic premise of the game is to use a slingshot to launch BIRDS at pigs, with the goal being to destroy all of the pigs on the playing field. It’s been quite a few years since I’ve played ANGRY BIRDS, but the clue describes it perfectly, and I was able to fill in the answer without any crossings.
    • YEAR (26A: ___ of the Snake) (2025 in the Chinese zodiac)) The YEAR of the Snake began on January 29, 2025. This clue reminded me of the crossword on that day.
    • OTOE (28A: Great Plains tribe) The OTOE were historically a semi-nomadic people that lived along the Missouri River in the Great Plains. Today the OTOE people are part of the OTOE-Missouria Tribe, which has its headquarters in Red Rock, Oklahoma.
    • ERIE (34A: People with a namesake Great Lake) The ERIE people lived in what is now western New York, in the Great Lakes region along the southern shore of Lake ERIE. In the mid-17th century, warfare forced most of the tribe to leave the area. Lake ERIE and ERIE, Pennsylvania are named for the ERIE people. Our crossword friend ERIE is making its first appearance of the month today, and its third appearance of the year. Surprisingly, we didn’t see ERIE at all in February.
    • WING (37A: Artificial limb for Icarus) In Greek mythology, Icarus was the son of Daedalus. During an attempt to escape from Crete, Icarus and Daedalus used WINGs that the latter constructed of feathers and wax. Although Daedalus warned him not to fly too close to the sun, ICARUS ignored his father’s warning. The sun melted his WINGs and he fell into the sea and drowned. 
    • SEOUL (47A: Capital of South Korea) SEOUL is the capital and largest city of South Korea.
    • WISH (56A: Disney film in which Asha meets a magic fallen star) WISH is a 2023 animated Disney movie about Asha, a 17-year-old girl who makes a WISH on a star, and then meets a living, magic fallen star. Ariana DeBose voices the role of Asha.
    • OSCAR THE GROUCH (4D: Furry green Muppet in a trash can) I’ve always had a soft spot for OSCAR THE GROUCH, the curmudgeonly Muppet who lives in a trash can. Here’s a fun fact: OSCAR THE GROUCH was originally orange, and did not become his characteristic green until the second season of Sesame Street. On the show this color change was explained as being a result of a visit to Swamp Mushy Muddy.
    • BETA (17D: Letter after alpha) Looks like it’s time to review the beginning of the Greek alphabet: alpha, BETA, gamma, delta, epsilon, zeta, eta, theta, iota…
    • AFT (22D: Second-largest U.S. teachers union) AFT here stands for the American Federation of Teachers, which was founded in Chicago in 1916. The largest U.S. teachers union is the National Education Association (NEA).
    • RIRI (25D: “Umbrella” singer’s nickname) “Umbrella” is a 2007 song by Rihanna. To fans, Rihanna is known as RIRI, Rih, or Rih-Rih. This clue reminds me of the January 21, 2025 puzzle, “Singin’ in the Rain.”
    • APA (39D: “Riverdale” actor KJ) Riverdale (2017-2023) is a TV series based on the characters of the Archie comic books. KJ APA plays the role of Archie Andrews.
    • ACLU (41D: Bill of Rights defense org.) In the U.S., the Bill of Rights refers to the first ten amendments of the U.S. Constitution. These amendments guarantee specific personal freedoms and rights. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is a nonprofit organization that works – through litigation and lobbying – to protect the individual rights of all people in the United States. I’m always happy for an opportunity to shout-out the ACLU and the amazing work they do.
    • SEWS (47D: Stitches like Betsy Ross) Betsy Ross (1752-1836) was an upholsterer and seamstress. Betsy Ross is known for making a number of U.S. flags during her lifetime, although the story about her making the first U.S. flag is unsubstantiated.
    • RPG (54D: World of Warcraft, for one (Abbr.)) RPG here stands for role-playing game and refers to a game in which players assume the roles of characters in a fantasy world. World of Warcraft is an online RPG. Although I’m not a gamer, I know of World of Warcraft from my son, and I’m always grateful to him for that knowledge when the game appears in the puzzle.
    • A few other clues I especially enjoyed:
      • ZEN (9A: ___ garden (meditation spot with raked gravel))
      • HARM (1D: “First, do no ___”)
      • SEES (23D: Spies with their little eyes)

    Crossword Puzzle Theme Synopsis

    • OSCAR THE GROUCH (4D: Furry green Muppet in a trash can)
    • I’M NO SLOUCH (5D: “My work ethic is solid”)
    • BIG ORANGE COUCH (14D: Iconic ’90s Nickelodeon sofa)
    • YONDR POUCH (26D: Magnetic bag used to store students’ cellphones)

    SOUTHERN DISCOMFORT: At the SOUTHERN end (that is, the bottom) of each vertical theme answer, the word OUCH is found: OSCAR THE GROUCH, I’M NO SLOUCH, BIG ORANGE COUCH, and YONDR POUCH.

    The phrase SOUTHERN DISCOMFORT is a play on Southern Comfort, which is a brand of whiskey. It makes for a fun theme today. Figuring out the theme helped me complete the puzzle, as I knew the theme answers needed to end in -OUCH. This was particularly helpful for YONDR POUCH, which is new to me. Thank you, Nate, for this enjoyable puzzle, which did not cause me any DISCOMFORT, SOUTHERN or otherwise.

    For more on USA TODAY’s Crossword Puzzles

  • Date, time, how to watch

    Date, time, how to watch

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    Editor’s note: Season 8 spoilers ahead!

    The curtain falls on yet another season of Netflix’s “Love is Blind” and of the five couples who got engaged in Season 8’s pods sight unseen, only one made it to the altar and exchanged their vows. The others, meanwhile, went their separate ways, or so we think.

    As with every “Love is Blind” season finale, Season 8’s finale was no different, taking viewers on an emotional rollercoaster of love, heartbreak and tears and leaving them with a bunch of questions.

    In the upcoming reunion episode of “Love is Blind” Season 8 on Sunday, things are expected to come to a head and give participants and viewers the closure they deserve and will give an insight into what went down behind the scenes, and since filming wrapped.

    “The story doesn’t end at ‘I do’ or ‘I don’t,’ Netflix said about the upcoming episode. “On Sunday, March 9, the pod squad comes together for the first time since the finale to discuss everything that went down. With surprise guests, jaw-dropping confrontations and all the answers you’ve been waiting for, you won’t want to miss Love is Blind: The Reunion.”

    “There’s nothing quite like the ‘a-ha’ moments a ‘Love Is Blind’ reunion provides,” the streamer added.

    Here’s what to know about the reunion episode of “Love Is Blind” Season 8, including how to watch.

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

    When is ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8 reunion episode?

    The “pod squad” will get back together on camera for the first time since the season stopped filming for the reunion episode on Sunday, March 9 at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT on Netflix.

    The reunion episode runs just two days after the finale episode of Season 8 airs.

    What time is ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8 reunion episode?

    The reunion episode will stream on Netflix at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT on Sunday.

    How to watch ‘Love Is Blind’ Season 8 reunion

    The reunion episode of “Love is Blind” Season 8 will stream on Netflix. All 13 episodes of Season 8 are also available on the streamer, along with previous season of the Emmy-nominated series.

    Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

    ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8 reunion episode trailer

    Which couples got married ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8?

    Of the five couples who got engaged in the pods, only one couple actually said, “I do,” as per Netflix. They are:

    • Daniel Hastings and Taylor Haag

    Which couples broke up in ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8?

    For the others, meanwhile, reality set in, “in the form of future in-laws (specifically, an abundance of sisters), different approaches to money, religion, and intimacy, and long conversations about dating history,” Netflix said.

    The couples who are no longer together, as per Netflix, include:

    • Monica and Joey
    • Devin and Virginia
    • Ben and Sara
    • David and Lauren
    • Madison and Alex

    Which couples are still together in ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8?

    Two cast members on the season, Kylie Schuelke and Brian Sumption, found love off-camera and got engaged after being dropped from the show. The couple told the streamer that though their on-camera romance ended early, the two have forged something far too special for TV.

    “Ultimately, we went on ‘Love Is Blind’ to find love — and we did just that,” Schuelke told Netflix. “The experiment worked for us, and now we get to write our own story.”

    ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8 location

    Season 8 of “Love is Blind” follows singles from Minneapolis, Minnesota as they “cut through the static of modern dating” and develop deep relationships without seeing each other.

    Previously, Season 7 of the show was set in Washington, D.C., while Season 6 was set in Charlotte, North Carolina. Season 5 of the show was set in Houston, Season 4 in Seattle and Season 3 in Dallas.

    ‘Love Is Blind’ hosts

    The show is hosted by real-life couple Vanessa and Nick Lachey.

    Five years of ‘Love is Blind’

    The reunion episode of “Love is Blind” will also celebrate five years of the show with co-hosts Nick and Vanessa “announcing the most memorable ‘Love Is Blind’ moments of all time, voted on by fans,” Netflix said.

    Netflix, at the start of Season 8, had invited fans to cast their vote for the “most iconic ‘Love Is Blind’ moments of all time” in categories such as “Into the Pods” and “Break Ups that Broke the Internet.”

    Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.

  • John Goodman injured on-set in UK, filming paused: Reports

    John Goodman injured on-set in UK, filming paused: Reports

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    John Goodman has suffered an on-set injury while filming in the U.K. and the movie is postponed until he recovers, according to reports.

    A Warner Bros. spokesperson addressed the injury in a statement Saturday, Deadline and People reported.

    “Actor John Goodman experienced a hip injury,” a Warner Bros. rep said in a statement, according the the outlets. “He received immediate medical attention that led to a brief delay in shooting to allow him time to recover. The production resumes shooting next week following John’s full recovery.”

    USA TODAY reached out to reps for Goodman and Warner Bros. for comment.

    Goodman, 72, was apparently injured while filming the latest movie from Oscar-winning director Alejandro González Iñárritu, whose last films were 2015’s “The Revenant” and “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” in 2022.

    The buzzy film’s IMDB synopsis says the “most powerful man in the world causes a disaster and embarks on a mission to prove that he is the savior of humanity” in the movie.

    Crew member previously died on ‘The Conners’ starring John Goodman

    The actor’s injury comes four years after a crew member working on “The Conners,” the “Roseanne” spinoff starring Goodman, died after a “fatal medical event.”

    Werner Entertainment, the production company behind the ABC sitcom, confirmed the news to USA TODAY in a statement at the time.

    “With heavy hearts we regret to confirm that a member of our technical crew suffered a fatal medical event today. He was a much loved member of ‘The Conners’ and ‘Roseanne’ families for over 25 years,” the statement read. “As we remember our beloved colleague, we ask that you respect the privacy of his family and loved ones as they begin their grieving process.”

    “The Conners” embarks on its seventh and final season later this month on March 26.

    Contributing: Rasha Ali

  • Blake Lively at SXSW for 'Another Simple Favor'Entertainment

    Blake Lively at SXSW for 'Another Simple Favor'Entertainment

    Blake Lively at SXSW for ‘Another Simple Favor’Entertainment

  • Emily Osment engagedEntertainment

    Emily Osment engagedEntertainment

  • Anna Kendrick avoids awkward questions amid Blake Lively legal battle

    Anna Kendrick avoids awkward questions amid Blake Lively legal battle

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    Anna Kendrick is doing herself a simple favor and avoiding those questions about co-star Blake Lively.

    The “Pitch Perfect” franchise alum appeared at the “Another Simple Favor” premiere at South by Southwest Conference and Festival and brought her signature humor to the controversy surrounding her co-star’s legal drama with Justin Baldoni.

    During a red carpet interview, a Variety reporter asked Kendrick if she felt the movie was impacted by “everything going around in the world,” seemingly referencing Lively’s legal battle with her ex-co-star and director.

    “Why, what happened? I did ayahuasca and the last year of my life is just gone, but I heard the movie is amazing,” Kendrick said before blowing a kiss and walking away.

    While stopping to interact with SXSW fans, Kendrick was asked what it means to her to be working with Lively once again to which she responded, “oh you know,” before moving down the line to take a photo with a fan.

    “Another Simple Favor” follows Stephanie (Kendrick) on her way to the wedding of Emily (Lively) − years after a joint murder-suicide mission landed one in jail and one with a publishing contract.

    Now, Emily is out of prison and set to wed a wealthy Italian businessman, played by Michele Morrone, and she wants Stephanie as her maid of honor.

    Anna Kendrick, Blake Lively faced own feud rumors

    Kendrick and Lively have long been the subject of feud rumors of their own. On a July 2021 episode of “Watch What Happens Live,” a fan asked guest Henry Golding about a potential feud between his “A Simple Favor” co-stars.

    “No, definitely not. I think they got on pretty reasonably well … I think,” Golding replied. “Uhm, definitely no friction that I noticed.” Host Andy Cohen jokingly responded that the “key words are ‘reasonably’ and ‘that I noticed.’”

    Lively’s appearance at Friday night’s SXSW premiere was one of her few public outings since her relationship with Baldoni, her director and co-star on “It Ends with Us,” soured and turned into multiple competing court battles.

    Though “It Ends with Us” premiered in August, that was only the beginning for all the headlines that emerged about a reported rift among the cast. As 2024 came to a close, Lively sued Baldoni, his production company Wayfarer Studios and some of the public relations strategists they worked with, alleging sexual harassment in a workplace setting, retaliation, breach of contract and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

    Contributing: Erin Jensen, KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY; Robbie Farias, Alexis Simmerman, Austin American-Statesman

  • Emily Osment files for divorce after about 5 months of marriage

    Emily Osment files for divorce after about 5 months of marriage

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    “Hannah Montana” alum Emily Osment is splitting from her husband Jack Anthony after five months of marriage.

    Through a statement provided by her reps to USA TODAY on Friday, Osment addressed the split with Anthony, whose legal name is Jack Farina.

    “I think with any big decision in your life, whether it’s relationships or work or whatever it may be, you have to firmly plant both feet in that decision. Ultimately, it didn’t work out,” Osment said. Osment filed for divorce on Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court nearly five months after they tied the knot on Oct. 12. The filing states the pair separated on Dec. 7.

    According to People and E!, Osment shared a heartfelt, now-deleted Instagram post in June 2023, calling herself “deliriously happy” and flaunting a diamond engagement ring.

    “I did not know life could be this sweet,” the actress captioned the post. “I am so proud of the life we have built together and the people we have become over the last few years.”

    “This love is so big and so uniquely ours and I know it can do anything,” the “Young Sheldon” star added. “I am so honored to stand next to you every day. I love you, Jack.”

    Emily Osment couldn’t ‘wait to be married’

    At the time, Osment opened up to People magazine about her excitement ahead of tying the knot with Farina.

    “I cannot wait to be married,” the “Young & Hungry” star told People. “I wish we could just jump to that.”

    “It’s so exciting, and we have to constantly remind ourselves, you’re only going to do this once,” Osment said. “So you might look at 1000 pictures of what looks like the exact same chair, and your wedding planner will say, ‘What kind of chairs do you want?’ And I’ll say, ‘Yes, there should be chairs there.’ And she’ll say, ‘No, but what kind of chairs?’ And I’ll say, ‘I don’t care. There should just be chairs.’ It’s a little bit like that.”

    “A lot of very small decisions that don’t seem to matter, but on the day, you’re going to be so happy that you sat down and went through the tough decision making,” Osment added. “Because at the end of the day, you get to be married, and that’s the greatest thing ever.”

  • ‘Mickey 17’ ending explained: Robert Pattinson discusses spoilers

    ‘Mickey 17’ ending explained: Robert Pattinson discusses spoilers

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    Spoiler alert! We’re discussing important plot points and the ending of “Mickey 17” (in theaters now) so beware if you haven’t seen it yet.

    Robert Pattinson’s underdog title character in the sci-fi satire “Mickey 17” has all sorts of obstacles thrown at him – that’s the breaks when you’re considered “expendable.” In the end, though, he not only survives but thrives, even as a copy of himself meets a heroic fate.

    In Oscar-winning writer/director Bong Joon Ho’s new movie, Mickey Barnes (Pattinson) is an Earth man who signs up for a colonizing expedition to a distant icy planet and volunteers for a job that puts him in deadly situations constantly. Every time he dies, a new version with his memories is printed out. The 17th iteration is thought to have died, which leads to Mickey 18, but when the other didn’t perish, 17 and 18 have to figure out how to coexist.

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    They get a common enemy: Villainous politician Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo), the man leading the expedition, wants to kill the Mickeys. He also wants to wipe out the planet’s indigenous creatures, the Creepers, who had saved Mickey 17 earlier. After killing a baby Creeper, leading the mother Creeper to gather her fellow beasts and surround Marshall’s spaceship, Marshall sends 17 and 18 out to kill Creepers or else get blown up. But 17 warns the Creeper mom about Marshall’s plan to use nerve gas on them – and to keep them from wiping out humans in revenge – and 18 sacrifices himself to blow up Marshall.

    While he’s looked down on for most of the movie, Mickey 17 gains new respect among his human co-workers. And when his girlfriend Nasha (Naomi Ackie) is put in charge, she lets Mickey push the button that explodes the human printer.

    Does ‘Mickey 17’ have a post-credit scene?

    Nope, but before detonating the human printer, Bong includes an important dream sequence where Mickey confronts Marshall’s scheming wife Ylfa (Toni Collette) when she’s printing out a new version of her husband. “Isn’t this what everybody wants?” Mickey tells her off in four-letter fashion.

    “A lot of strange things have been happening” in Bong’s native South Korea and the world, the filmmaker says via a translator. “We’re going through climate disaster and fires and we all just feel a bit scared. We feel small and helpless. And what intensifies all that fear even more is hatred and disdain and contempt for one another.”

    But in the moment, Mickey rejects all that, Bong adds. “Even the most powerless underdog can overcome his fears and find hope and fight against the vitriol and the hatred of the world. Maybe that’s kind of all we can do and all we can hope for in this crazy world.”

    Pattinson sees the movie as “a very sort of extreme version of where your life could end up. I’m always a fan of saying people need to give themselves a break,” he says with a laugh. “It’s funny trying to put things in the context of the way the world is now – it shifts with such alarming pace that it’s almost impossible. Good advice today will be bad advice tomorrow.”

    While Mickey 17 is definitely an underdog, “at the same time, what’s interesting is it’s not like he wants to be leading the world afterward,” Pattinson figures. “He doesn’t even really get it. When everyone’s like, ‘You saved the world!” and he’s like, ‘I did? OK, cool.’ 

    “He just wants to have a nice life and be a regular dude. He doesn’t really have any higher aspirations particularly. He was fine with being tortured every day if he could just go home to Nasha.”