Category: BUSINESS

  • Kate Middleton, Prince William celebrate Princess Charlotte’s birthday

    Kate Middleton, Prince William celebrate Princess Charlotte’s birthday

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    Prince William and Princess Kate’s only daughter just turned 10.

    Princess Charlotte celebrated her birthday May 2, with her parents giving her a shoutout on their Prince and Princess of Wales Instagram account.

    “Happy 10th Birthday Princess Charlotte!” the royals captioned an outdoorsy photo of Charlotte, the spitting image of her father, taken by Kate.

    Princess Charlotte is the second child of the Prince and Princess of Wales and third in line to the British throne, preceded by Prince George, 11, and, of course, her father, Prince William, 42. Prince Louis, 7, is fourth in line.

    Louis celebrated his 7th birthday last month, with the British royals sharing an adorable photo with his two front teeth missing. George will turn 12 this summer, on July 22.

    The family of five recently celebrated Easter together in Norfolk, skipping Easter service at St George’s Chapel in Windsor with King Charles III and Queen Camilla.

    It has been celebrations all around for the royals, as William and Kate just celebrated their 14th wedding anniversary. The couple visited a picturesque, rural Scottish island on April 29 for a two-day visit to the Isles of Mull and Iona, part of the Hebrides archipelago off the west coast. William and the former Kate Middleton were married in a high-profile ceremony at Westminster Abbey in 2011, after meeting a decade earlier as students at the University of St Andrews on Scotland’s east coast.

    They began the trip in the town of Tobermory, famed for its brightly coloured houses which overlook the harbour, looking relaxed as they beamed and waved to a crowd of well-wishers to the strains of a bagpiper in the background. They visited a community hub before strolling through an artisan market where they chatted to stallholders and posed for pictures with locals.

    British media reported that following their official duties, they would spend their anniversary at a small, isolated self-catered cottage on Mull, famed for its dramatic and beautiful scenery.

    Contributing: Michael Holden and Paul Sandle, Reuters

  • Beyoncé changes setlist for second show, adds throwback hits

    Beyoncé changes setlist for second show, adds throwback hits

    Beyoncé Knowles-Carter kept the heat coming during her second show in Los Angeles, switching up her set list and performing some of her most beloved throwback hits.

    The Grammy-winning singer took the stage at SoFi Stadium for a second night on May 1, and not only did she perform songs from her “Renaissance” album, as she did during her debut show, but she moved some songs around and added more tunes to her massive set list.

    Beyoncé performed “Irreplaceable” (2006), “If I were A Boy” (2008), “Single Ladies” (2008) and “Love on Top” (2011). And the crowd seemed pleasantly surprised as they belted the songs along with Beyoncé. The excitement was also prevalent online as fans watched from afar.

    One fan on X wrote, “I’m loving this new setlist Beyoncé!!” Another said, “Beyonce’s switch up of the Cowboy Carter Tour changes the game, it shows you how you can reorder your setlist, add and remove songs here and there by surprise, without compromising the vision and still sticking to a narrative…INSANITY IM GAGGED.”

    During Thursday’s show, Beyoncé also peformed songs in a different order than the first night. Most notably, she performed her hit songs, “Riiverdance,” “II Hands II Heaven” and “Tyrant” back to back. And of course, fans have already been theorizing on how the set list might change in different cities.

    Toward the end of her set, she thanked the crowd.

    “Thank you to my Beyhive for always loving me and always protecting me,” she said.

    Los Angeles is the first city on Beyoncé’s 32-stadium “Cowboy Carter”Tour, which kicked off April 28. Fans from all over the world traveled to witness Beyoncé’s first shows, which were filled with family, politics, soaring vocals, incredible costumes and masterful dancing.

    The nine-city tour will span the U.S. and Europe with the grand finale taking place in Las Vegas on July 26. She’s set to make history with her scheduled tour dates, including by playing the most dates at SoFi Stadium of any artist.

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

  • Is 'Thunderbolts*' suitable for little kids? A parent's guide.Movies

    Is 'Thunderbolts*' suitable for little kids? A parent's guide.Movies

    Is ‘Thunderbolts*’ suitable for little kids? A parent’s guide.Movies

  • Watch Beyoncé, Blue Ivy, Rumi congratulate Tina Knowles onstage for book

    Watch Beyoncé, Blue Ivy, Rumi congratulate Tina Knowles onstage for book

    Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” tour continues to be a family affair with the superstar honoring her mom, Tina Knowles, and sharing a special moment with her during her second show in Los Angeles.

    The Grammy-winning singer brought Knowles onstage at SoFi Stadium to congratulate her on her new memoir becoming a New York Times bestseller, a day after Knowles kicked off her “Matriarch” book tour in Washington, D.C.

    During the May 1 show, Mama Tina joined Beyoncé and her daughters Blue Ivy Carter and Rumi Carter as Bey sang “Protector.” Toward the end of the song, Beyoncé took a moment to applaud her mom on the success of her book and thousands of fans joined in for the moment.

    “She has the No. 1 book — the New York Times bestseller,” Beyoncé told the crowd. “Everybody please say congratulations Mama T.” And thousands of fans did so in unison.

    Of course, Knowles released her book April 22. In it, she shares intimate details about her life, including private and public battles. Oprah Winfrey announced the book is the latest selection for her famous Oprah’s Book Club.  

    As fans know, Beyoncé launched her Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit Tour on April 28 in Los Angeles, and the first show kicked off a total of 32 stadium shows. Fans from all over the world traveled to witness Beyoncé’s debut show, which was filled with family, politics, soaring vocals, incredible costumes and masterful dancing.

    The nine-city tour will span the U.S. and Europe with the grand finale taking place in Las Vegas on July 26. She’s set to make history with her scheduled tour dates, including by playing the most dates at SoFi Stadium of any artist.

    Meanwhile, Knowles is in the middle of her own her nine-city tour for her “Matriarch” memoir with the next stop taking place in the same city — Los Angeles — on May 2.

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

  • Princess Charlotte turns 10Entertainment

    Princess Charlotte turns 10Entertainment

  • Selena Gomez on Justin Bieber split, Benny Blanco first kiss

    Selena Gomez on Justin Bieber split, Benny Blanco first kiss

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    Selena Gomez is offering insight into her breakup with Justin Bieber and finding love again with fiancé Benny Blanco.

    Gomez got candid about feeling lonely in the time between ending her relationship with Bieber and sparking a new connection with Blanco on the “Table Manners” podcast on April 29.

    “I hadn’t liked anyone in a very long time,” the “Lose You to Love Me” singer said.

    Gomez said that when she and Blanco shared their first kiss, the moment felt refreshing after a few years of dating misfires.

    “Some kisses are for fun, and then when you feel something behind a kiss, it’s completely different,” she said. “And I’d been alone for about five years, with the exception of a few (bad) dates here and there, but never felt that way. And I was a little embarrassed.”

    Gomez reportedly dated DJ Zedd in 2015 and singer The Weeknd in 2017. Gomez’s on-again, off-again relationship with Bieber lasted over seven years, from 2010 to 2018.

    In a Time interview published in May, Gomez opened up about how her romance with Blanco started, saying that though she’d only considered the “Diamonds” producer a friend at first, she’d discovered her feelings were romantic after attending a birthday party to meet his friend. “It just happens when you least expect it,” Gomez said.

    The couple went public with their relationship in December 2023. In a since-deleted comment at the time, the Rare Beauty founder appeared to reveal the two had already been dating for six months. They shared their engagement a year later.

    Bieber has also moved on with model Hailey Bieber. The couple’s own on-again-off-again relationship began in 2015 and culminated in their marriage in 2018. The Biebers welcomed their first child together, a baby boy named Jack Blues Bieber, in August.

  • 'I Kissed a Girl' musician Jill Sobule dies in fireEntertainment

    ‘I Kissed a Girl’ musician Jill Sobule dies in fireEntertainment

  • See if your favorite prevailed in 28th annual TV poll

    See if your favorite prevailed in 28th annual TV poll

    CBS’ “The Equalizer,” a fifth-season revival of a 1980s drama starring Queen Latifah as a mysterious guardian angel, is the big winner in USA TODAY’s exclusive Save Our Shows poll.

    You’ve made your voice heard: “Equalizer” dominated the 28th annual poll, which asked readers which of 17 endangered broadcast-network comedies and dramas deserved another season, and which should face the chopping block. About 47% of voters want the show to return for a sixth season, the highest percentage of any show, followed by NBC’s “The Irrational,” starring Jesse L. Martin as a case-solving behavioral-science professor, which 44% want to keep.

    At the other extreme, Fox’s animated comedy “The Great North,” the same network’s new Denis Leary military sitcom “Going Dutch” and NBC’s “Lopez vs. Lopez” earned the lowest support among the 17 series, with 60% of voters – the most of any series – wanting to drop “Lopez,” which stars comedian George Lopez and his daughter, Mayan.

    “Lopez” is unlikely to continue, while the fates of two other series on the poll was decided after it was published on April 2: ABC’s latest Tim Allen comedy, “Shifting Gears,” which debuted in January, has been renewed for a second season. It placed third in the poll, as 34% of voters wanted it back. And CBS’ “Poppa House,” another multigenerational family sitcom starring Damon Wayans and Damon Wayans Jr., was canceled after one season (just 23% of poll respondents wanted it back, while 53% hoped to bury it).

    Networks will make their final choices between May 7 and June 30, as they announce schedules for the TV 2025-26 season and decide which shows to cancel.

    More than 36,000 readers participated in this year’s poll. Save Our Shows has been credited by NBC with “saving” sci-fi drama “Timeless,” first for a second season and the next year, for a finale moive, after it led two consecutive polls. Another top vote-getter, “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist,” was renewed for a second season on NBC despite low ratings and then for a Christmas movie to wrap up the series on the Roku Channel.

    The poll returned from a hiatus in 2024, when monthslong actors and writers’ strikes in Hollywood disrupted the rollout of new and returning shows and delayed renewal decisions.

    In 2023, rescue drama “9-1-1,” then on Fox, led the poll, but was canceled due to cost concerns; ABC, owned by Disney, which produces the series, snapped it up, and this fall is planning a new spinoff set in Nashville. Other top winners were ABC’s “The Good Doctor” (renewed for one more season) and “Alaska Daily” (canceled), and CBS’ “S.W.A.T.,” which was renewed but canceled this year.

  • Halyna Hutchins died filming ‘Rust.’ Is it OK to watch the movie?

    Halyna Hutchins died filming ‘Rust.’ Is it OK to watch the movie?

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    Alec Baldwin’s beleaguered Western movie “Rust” hits theaters and video on demand May 2. Its release raises a thorny question: Is it OK to see this film?

    As most people know, during a rehearsal in New Mexico on Oct. 21, 2021, Baldwin’s gun discharged a live bullet, killing 42-year-old cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injuring director Joel Souza.

    For some, watching the film might seem like a gruesome voyeuristic act, even if the scene in question is not a part of the final cut.

    For others, including Hutchins’ colleagues and family, supporting the film pays tribute to the final artistic pursuit of a departed wife, daughter and pal.

    “Halyna’s family knew just how important her art was to her, how much she lived and breathed it, and they did not want it to simply vanish,” Souza said via email to USA TODAY.

    “Rust” represents the apex of Hutchins’ cinematic work, and all efforts were made to convey that sentiment to those who worked on the movie after the fatal incident, Souza added.

    “Halyna’s mother spoke of how much she wanted her daughter’s film to be completed and to be seen,” he said, adding that her husband, Matthew, “made himself available to talk with people (in the production) who wanted to hear his thoughts on all of this.”

    Seeing ‘Rust’ is a way of helping the family of Halyna Hutchins, a friend insists

    In 2023, Matthew Hutchins said in a statement he was “grateful that the producers and the entertainment community have come together to pay tribute to Halyna’s final work.”

    USA TODAY reached out to his lawyers for comment, but did not hear back before publication. Hutchins was made an executive producer on “Rust” when filming resumed in Montana in 2023 amid myriad civil and criminal lawsuits sparked by the shooting.

    A source close to the film told NPR last fall that none of the original producers will share in profits as part of a wrongful-death settlement reached between Hutchins and Baldwin, whose criminal charges were dismissed last year on a legal technicality.

    Rachel Mason, Hutchins’ longtime friend and the director of the Hulu documentary “Last Take: Rust and the Story of Halyna,” echoes that those who screen “Rust” will be helping her friend.

    “By watching the film, you are supporting the family,” she tells USA TODAY. “The money from the film goes to them.”

    For those who returned to finish “Rust” when filming resumed, “so many suffered from PTSD, but they learned by being there they could do something for her,” Mason says.

    The documentarian watched a lot of Hutchins’ Western footage in compiling her film. She describes the scenes as breathtaking. “Halyna was picky, she shot very few movies, and here on ‘Rust,’ she was operating at her pinnacle level,” she says. “I don’t like Westerns at all, but this film is exceptional in many ways.”

    Mason describes a range of “striking wide shots, with dust creeping up across the landscape, shots of horses lingering just so,” she says. “Joel (Souza) made room for Halyna’s art.”

    Hollywood has dealt with tragedy on film sets before, and the show often goes on

    Despite stringent safety requirements, Hollywood sets have seen accidents and deaths among cast and crew alike. And often in those cases, the final project does eventually get released.

    In 1982, actor Vic Morrow and two child actors were killed on the set of “The Twilight Zone” movie when a helicopter crashed during filming. The production continued despite a barrage of lawsuits.

    In 1993, actor Brandon Lee, son of legendary martial artist Bruce Lee, died on the set of “The Crow” when a prop gun loaded with dummy bullets struck Lee with enough force to cause fatal internal injuries. The movie was completed using special effects and a stunt double, and remains Lee’s crowning achievement.

    In the case of many big-budget productions, financial concerns might drive the decision to carry on. But “Rust” was a relatively low-budget affair, which critics argue led to lax safety on the set that contributed to the tragedy. While Baldwin has settled civil suits, “Rust” armorer Hannah Guitierrez-Reed is serving 18 months in jail for involuntary manslaughter as she was deemed responsible for the appearance of live rounds on the set.

    While Baldwin could likely have shelved the film after Hutchins’ death, it does appear the decision to resume was driven largely by her family’s desire to see the project completed for both emotional and financial reasons.

    Baldwin has not himself commented on why he, as star and producer of “Rust,” opted to resume production after the shooting. Matt DelPiano, the actor’s representative, said in an email to USA TODAY that Baldwin, currently starring in the TLC reality series “The Baldwins,” would not be commenting about the release of “Rust.”

    The decision to return to the directorial helm of “Rust” was difficult for Souza, who is reminded daily of the tragedy. He sustained shoulder injuries when the bullet that killed Hutchins also struck him. “It ruined me,” he said in a Vanity Fair interview last summer.

    But in returning to “Rust,” he found some peace and a lot of purpose.

    “Halyna was on my mind every single day,” Souza wrote to USA TODAY. “You could feel that with everyone there. Just how seriously they took this and what it meant for them to be there. As for me, I always thought it was important to make clear to people why I decided to come back, which was to honor my friend and finish what we started together.”

  • Eric Church talks new album, 2025 tour, politics and state of music

    Eric Church talks new album, 2025 tour, politics and state of music

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    If you’re talking to Eric Church, you’ve found a steadfast spirit devoted to the resonance of music.

    He isn’t interested in churning out quick hits or viral bait for social media. He wants to make music that matters.

    His just-released album, “Evangeline vs. the Machine,” his first since 2021, is flooded with meaning despite only being 36 minutes across eight songs

    In the opening “Hands of Time,” Church, who turns 48 on May 3, acknowledges the realities of aging with a wink by namechecking songs from AC/DC, Bob Marley, Meat Loaf and other artists who spoke to him in his youth.

    The album’s title spotlights the battle between technology’s soullessness and a creative muse, which he explains in the song “Evangeline” (“Take me down to the water/dunk my head into the river/raise your hands, all hail rock ‘n’ roll”).

    “The way people consume music, it puts chains on creativity,” Church says from his home in Nashville. “The more machines involved in our lives, whether tech or phones or AI, the less life we’re able to experience.”

    Church will bring his omnipresent dark glasses and his new round of rock-rooted country songs along with favorites such as “Smoke a Little Smoke,” “Springsteen,” and “Drink in My Hand” to arenas around the country starting Sept. 12 in Pittsburgh. Tickets for the Free the Machine tour, with guests Elle King, Marcus King Band and Wesley Godwin, are on sale at 10 a.m. local time on May 9 via ericchurch.com.

    The concerts, Church says, will “start out in a big way and move to me and a guitar … go from big to small.”

    In a thoughtful conversation, Church elaborated why he writes albums for his “10-year-old self,” is “bored” by the chaos of politics and why he has no regrets after last year’s polarizing Stagecoach performance.

    Question: Both “Evangeline” and “Hands of Time” have some great classic song references. Are those songs also about the importance of music in your life?

    Answer: One thousand percent. Music is the way I’ve dealt with anything good or bad in my life. I’m a fan first. Music was this siren for me at an early age and has always been the thing I’ve leaned on when I’ve had struggles, devastation, triumphs. A lot of those inspirational artists show up on this album. You think about the way they committed themselves to their art and I see that lacking today, that care and thoughtfulness.

    Do you think it’s because the process of putting out music has changed?

    I do. A lot of artists nowadays, you write a song on Tuesday and put it out Friday. There’s this flooding the zone. I’m an album kid and I still know it’s the right way. We’re going through a period that a lot of people aren’t listening to an album front to back. I see this with my kids that music becomes something happening in the background versus something that really affects them emotionally and artistically.

    And it definitely wasn’t just a background for you growing up.

    For me, it was something you committed yourself to and spent 45 minutes listening to that artist. You didn’t have the TV on or weren’t sitting there on your phone. When I make an album, I do it for my 10-year-old self who would have listened front to back. I don’t have a desire to make a song or two, here or there. I have to have something to say. That’s what inspires me. That’s what gives me my why. Even if I’m the guy yelling at clouds, I don’t care. I still believe if you’re going to be a longtime artist in the business and have a loyal fan base who you can play to in your 20s and your 50s, you have to build your career around albums.

    The French horn that segues into “Evangeline” sounds like an homage to the Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” Is it?

    (Laughs) Two things I didn’t see coming on this album were the French horn and the flute! Yeah, there’s a lot of Stones and a lot of The Band, who I also love.

    A lot of the music on this record comes from the Stagecoach show last year, when instead of a regular show, it was just me and a choir. It might not have been the exact spot for it, but also the perfect spot because it got the biggest megaphone and was a one-of-a-kind show. At a festival where a lot was about 30,000 TikTokers and the whole “look at me” stuff, we wanted to do something that would last for fans, and that’s when I started thinking about the orchestral parts for the album. The enjoyment I got from that show was really doubling down on creativity. The more success you have, the more rope you have and I believe in using every strand of that rope.

    You wrote “Johnny” after the Covenant School shooting in Nashville in 2023. Do you ever worry what some in your fan base will think about songs that take a stand against anything to do with guns?

    No. I’ve been very upfront about this. I’m an artist who played the deadliest mass shooting in history in Vegas (2017’s Route 91 Harvest Festival, where 60 people were killed and more than 400 injured), and we lost a lot of fans at that. I own guns and am a Second Amendment guy, but I never really had a viewpoint one way or another until Vegas. When you leave something like that, it changes your viewpoints. I’m still a Second Amendment guy, but when it came to “Johnny” and school shootings, I’ve always said about the Vegas shootings, those wounds don’t heal, they scab over. When something else happens – and it is inevitable ‒ it rips the scabs off and they bleed again.

    And “Johnny” came to you after dropping your sons (Boone, now 13, and Tennessee “Hawk”, now 10) off at school?

    The school they go to is a mile from Covenant and the hardest thing I’ve ever done is drop them off the day after the shooting. I remember pulling off in the parking lot after they got out and I sat there and didn’t want to leave. I looked to my left and to my right and there were four or five other parents doing the same thing. There was a helplessness and fear to that.

    As fate would have it, “The Devil Went Down to Georgia” was on the radio and the lyric that jumped out at me was, “Johnny rosin up your bow and play your fiddle hard because hell has broke loose in Georgia and the devil deals the cards. If you win, you get this shiny fiddle made of gold. If you lose, the devil gets your soul.” I remember thinking, if it were only true that the devil was just in Georgia, but he’s everywhere, wreaking havoc. Johnny kept rolling through my head, how we need that hero to fight the devil, and I went home and the song just fell out of me.

    I’m sure it will resonate with a lot of people.

    I think it’s my job. I’m not an overly political person. Politics, in general, bore me. It’s nonsense and chaos and makes my eyes and ears bleed, no matter what side you’re on. My viewpoints, a lot of times, are derived from things I’ve experienced and I did play Vegas and had fans killed and then played the Grand Ole Opry three days later and left seats open in memory of them. I’ve had those personal moments of loss and hurt, and when something else happens, like Covenant, the emotion was a little deeper and I was back in that same spot.

    You wrote “Darkest Hour” before Hurricane Helene devastated part of your home state of North Carolina last year, but immediately released it and directed all royalties from the song to those affected. What was it like for you to play the benefit Concert for Carolina in October?

    We still spend half our year in North Carolina and the community we were in was destroyed. We had just recorded the song and I felt that this needs to be out now. So we gave it to the people in perpetuity and that led to the concert, which is the most important musical thing I’ve done as far as concerts. The emotion of that night, the artists who came together, the quality of the music for 80,000 people … that’s when music is at its best, when it’s making a difference.