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  • The Yale Center for British Art remains as fiercely contemporary as ever

    The Yale Center for British Art remains as fiercely contemporary as ever

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    Louis Kahn died in a lavatory at New York’s Penn Station in 1974. He was returning from India but the address in his passport had been mysteriously scratched out and his body remained unidentified for three days. It was an ignominious end for the man the New York Times called “America’s foremost living architect”.

    At the time he was working on designs for the Yale Center for British Art, which opened to the public three years after he died and became his final museum building. His first museum stands just over the road in New Haven, the 1953 Yale University Art Gallery. When that opened it caused a scandal; its fiercely reductive brick wall was seen as an insult to the rich decoration of the elaborate building that it extended (surprisingly dating from only 25 years earlier yet full-on historical).

    By the time the Yale Center opened to the public in 1977, Kahn had gone a little out of fashion, his monumental work looking ponderous and solemn compared to, say, the flamboyant glass and steel Centre Pompidou, which had opened a couple of months earlier in Paris. But now, almost half a century later, the Pompidou is having to undergo a huge refurbishment at the cost of hundreds of millions of euros. The YCBA meanwhile has just had its lamps and skylights updated for $16.5mn.

    The YCBA is clad in stainless steel panels © Richard Caspole

    I’m underplaying, of course. As always with the conservation of modernist structures there is much complexity and unseen labour as well as an earlier restoration in 2016 that did a good deal of heavy lifting, but nevertheless Kahn’s museum building looks, I would argue, as contemporary as anything you might be able to build today. Walking around it and taking notes feels like reviewing a brand-new building, albeit an oddly familiar one.

    One of its most striking facets is the contrast between the white oak-encased richness of its interior and the grey, steely coldness of its outside face. Clad in stainless steel panels and almost entirely flush with the glass and the shopfronts, it is a cool piece of contemporary urbanism that disguises the preciousness of the works inside, the finest collection of British art outside the UK, accumulated by American philanthropist Paul Mellon. It is also an extremely unusual exterior. Most museums revel in their own status in the street, jostling to be the main attraction. But here Yale was doing something new; with this building they crossed over Chapel Street, the historic border between the university and the town. As a result Kahn attempted to integrate this new building into the cityscape, not only as monument but as a functioning part of the commercial street.

    The storefront and fascias, like the interiors, have been beautifully restored by architect George Knight, with no fuss and almost complete invisibility. All the building’s 224 acrylic skylights have been replaced with more robust polycarbonate domes and the light appears to have changed; cleaner, cooler. That’s accentuated by the updating of the museum’s lighting fixtures, the shapes and containers of which have been mostly retained, with the old halogen lights replaced by LEDs, creating a more neutral, albeit colder light (and a 60 per cent increase in energy efficiency).

    Three paintings on a wall with people standing in front of them
    The museum is a cool piece of contemporary urbanism . . . 
    Walls full of hanging paintings from the ceiling to the floor
     . . .  that disguises the preciousness of the works inside © Richard Caspole

    The top floor is, as it always was, luminous. Huge concrete coffers funnel toplight in but every level is permeated by natural light thanks to Kahn’s unusual decision to design the galleries around a pair of atria. This means light trickles rather than floods in but it also creates a spatial awareness rare in museums, with the visitor always aware of their position in relation to those spaces. It is extremely easy to navigate and made even more so by the looming presence of the charismatic concrete stair core, a castle tower of a cylinder that stands as a sculptural presence in one of the atria. 

    If the building appears to have changed barely at all, the art has subtly shifted. The museum is opening with a pair of shows that oddly collide in Margate: Tracey Emin (who grew up in the coastal town) and JMW Turner (who spent much of his childhood there). For Emin this is, rather remarkably, her first museum show in the US and it is exactly what you might expect: profoundly personal, revealing, freighted with sex, sickness and emotion, striking graphic works displayed to their full effect. For Turner there must always be a problem of selecting from the nearly 3,000 works in the collection but the curators do well, embracing everything from early seascapes and epic roiling oceans to the fine inscribed lines of the engravings and prints that made his work so popular. A small sketchbook on display provides an astonishing burst of light and colour. Like Kahn, Turner was an artist preoccupied by light and the two square up in perfect balance. 

    Lights hanging from a skylight
    The museum’s skylights and lighting fixtures have been updated . . .  © Richard Caspole/YCBA
    The inside of a building with skylights in the ceiling and art on the walls
    . . . creating a more neutral light © Office of Public Affairs & Communications

    An effort to counterbalance a picture of imperial power and elite portraiture arrives in the form of works by Cecily Brown and Yinka Shonibare, along with existing and restored works from the collection that throw new light on women artists (notably Mary Beale, 1633-99) and paintings illuminating aspects of British colonialism from tea to sugar plantations, from the Himalayas to the Caribbean; landscapes as maps of conquest and presence.

    Kahn’s building is so good that it has become a little fetishised. You sense that the curators are almost frustrated at the art being overlooked by those who revere the setting. But it is a curious situation where the architecture is so successful precisely because it allows you to admire the art, as well as to see it in a wider context. Kahn was arguably the first major US architect to reject the modernism’s objectivity and modular rigidity in favour of something more archetypal and monumental, an architecture that was fiercely contemporary and yet which created spaces that were humane and often even familiar.

    A room with a yellow neon sign on a mirror
    Tracey Emin’s canary-yellow neon work ‘I loved you until the morning’ was commissioned for the museum’s entrance

    Here he used a Renaissance palazzo as a model, referring to the entrance atrium as a “cortile”. Now cleaned up and freer of stuff, those ideas become clearer. Much like in an Italian palace, this is a building at street level, with none of the steps of the traditional art museum but instead contiguous with the pavement. Free to enter and open to all, this is truly a public palace. And if there were ever any doubt about the nature of a building that appears to melt into the street with its storefronts and its unassuming cutaway entrance, that has now been addressed through the commission of a canary-yellow neon work by Tracey Emin: “I loved you until the morning”, scrawled in familiar angsty script transmuted into light. It shimmers through to Chapel Street, intriguing and inviting. Love become light seems a pretty gorgeous metaphor for one of the modern era’s most seductive museums.

    britishart.yale.edu

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  • Maria Shriver on her liberating new book, Patrick’s ‘White Lotus’ fame

    Maria Shriver on her liberating new book, Patrick’s ‘White Lotus’ fame

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    The end of Maria Shriver’s 25-year marriage knocked her to the floor, the way gut-wrenching heartbreak does. How can you stand when your very foundation has been washed away? Shriver, now 69, sobbed in a hotel room while grappling with Arnold Schwarzenegger’s infidelity and revelation he fathered a son during an affair that spurred prolific headlines in 2011.

    Shriver fell for the Austrian body-builder-turned actor (who’d later turn Governator) at the Robert F. Kennedy Tennis Tournament in 1977. Mr. Universe became her world when they exchanged vows in 1986 at a Catholic church in Hyannis, Massachusetts, just a couple of miles from the Kennedy compound. The bride’s cousin, Caroline Kennedy, served as maid of honor.

    Schwarzenegger and the daughter of Special Olympics founder Eunice Kennedy Shriver welcomed four children during their marriage: Katherine, now 35; Christina, now 33; Patrick, now 31 and Christopher, now 27. They spilt in 2011 after Shriver learned of her husband’s affair with their housekeeper which resulted in the birth of Joseph Baena, now 27.

    Shriver remembers the collapse of her marriage in her latest book, “I Am Maria: My Reflections and Poems on Heartbreak, Healing, and Finding Your Way Home” (available now).

    “Through my poetry,” she writes, “I’ve found, and am still finding, a woman who was terrified of not being able to live up to her family’s legacy — scared of not being big enough, scared of not being good enough, a good-enough daughter, a good-enough sister, a good-enough wife, a good-enough mother, a good-enough journalist. A good-enough human being.”

    She also revisits the need to construct a new identity following her separation. In that hotel room, she encouraged herself, “Maria, this doesn’t have to be the end of you. It can’t be the end of you,” she writes. “Make it a new beginning of you.”

    Naturally, the Peabody award-winning journalist began with questions.

    “I started asking, ‘When did this start? When did you first feel heartbreak? When did you first feel lost? When did you first acknowledge that love was tied to accomplishment?’ And I just went back so that I could go forward. I tried to peel apart every single thing and make peace for it, try to understand it and let it go,” she tells USA TODAY.

    She enlisted the help of therapists, shamans, mediums, psychics, candles, crystals, plant medicine and self-improvement books. She practiced meditation, Pilates and yoga.

    “I was hard-working, diligent and determined to remake myself into a more tender-hearted, vulnerable, stronger version of myself,” she says. “I wanted to have a specific kind of relationship with Arnold. I wanted my children to have the relationship they wanted to have with him, separate from anything, my voice in their head. I had a specific idea of the kind of person I wanted to be, and I just worked towards that.”

    Shriver’s poetry allowed her to trace the effects of her upbringing in a family in which, as she writes, “you didn’t sit around and talk about your feelings. You went out into the world and had an impact.”

    “I certainly was raised with, ‘You have to go out and do something big and you better do it quick,’” Shriver says. She thought her broadcast journalism career would be the ticket. “But of course it’s not,” she says. Then she thought, “‘Oh, I’ll do the First Lady (of California) thing. That’ll be big, that’ll be powerful. Everybody will say that was the best first lady ever!’” But that wasn’t the answer, either. “What I’ve come to learn (is despite) whatever anybody else says it’s what you feel on the inside, do you feel seen? Do you feel connected? Do you feel good in your own life, in your own skin? Do you feel loved? These are the things that actually make you feel big, right?”

    Today Shriver knows herself to be “kind-hearted, loving, fun, funny, strong, fierce, loved woman,” she says, “someone who wants to make our world better, to see others, understand others, have compassion for others, and have the same for myself. I feel my feet are on the ground. I feel grounded in the love of my children, my friends, my family, and I feel deeply, deeply grateful,”

    That sense of self derived internally, Shriver says, is something she talks “non-stop” to her four children about, including Patrick, who’s gained fame as protein shake-pounding finance bro Saxon Ratliff on the current season of “The White Lotus.”

    Because “even though he may be having a moment, everybody else at the table is, in their own ways, also having a moment,” Shriver says. “They are loved unconditionally, regardless of what they do in life, (it) has nothing to do with the love that is there for them. They are a priority. They are seen. They are distinct from one another but grounded in their loyalty to one another. Moments come and moments go. But what doesn’t is the love that is there for them. The joy that’s there for them. The friendship, the family, the certainty that they can come home at any time and sit on the couch and be enough.”

  • Deborah Norville from 'Inside Edition': See the anchor through the yearsCelebrities

    Deborah Norville from 'Inside Edition': See the anchor through the yearsCelebrities

    Deborah Norville from ‘Inside Edition’: See the anchor through the yearsCelebrities

  • ‘Inside Edition’ anchor Deborah Norville leaving after 30 years

    ‘Inside Edition’ anchor Deborah Norville leaving after 30 years

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    Deborah Norville is leaving “Inside Edition” after 30 years of inside scoops.

    The former “Today” show co-anchor announced she is leaving the show at the end of its season during Wednesday’s episode, according to a clip released on the show’s social media pages.

    “It has been such an honor and privilege to be here at ‘Inside’ (Edition) for all these years,” she said on the telecast. “A milestone like this is a time for reflection, and on reflection, I have decided that now is the time to move on from ‘Inside Edition.”

    She also revealed that “Inside Edition” producers wanted her to stay on the program.

    “They made me a lovely offer to stay, but there are things I’d like to do and places I want to do them that continuing here doesn’t permit,” Norville said. In December, Variety reported that Norville would host the game show “The Perfect Line,” which is set to premiere in the fall.

    Norville added: “So, at the end of the season, I’ll be moving on. I’ve got some exciting things in the works, which I’ll talk about later, but what I want to say now is what a privilege it’s been to lead ‘Inside Edition’ for all these years. To work with the incredibly talented team here, and to be invited into your homes every day, it’s an honor I don’t take lightly.”

    Deborah Norville joined ‘Inside Edition’ in 1995, resulting in 30-year run

    On Wednesday, Norville also took to her personal social media pages to pay tribute to her time on “Inside” with a personal video.

    “It’s been an amazing ride and I will leave with gratitude for the people I have worked with and for — and the viewers who have watched,” she captioned the post.

    “Twice before, I made career moves for personal reasons (Chicago to NBC News in NY, CBS News to Inside Edition) and they were the right decisions. This decision is also motivated by family … and I know it’s a good one. There’s lots more to come from me … just from a new place,” she concluded the caption.

    The longtime TV journalist first joined “Inside Edition” in 1995 after leaving CBS News, where she served as both anchor and correspondent. Before that, she was a co-anchor of NBC’s “Today.” The Georgia-born on-air personality first started her career at FOX 5 Atlanta after graduating from the University of Georgia in Athens.

    Deborah Norville publicly battled cancer on TV after help from viewer

    Norville’s time on the program has been full of ups and downs, including her public cancer journey in 2019.

    In a video announcement in April 2019, Norville said she would undergo surgery to remove a cancerous thyroid nodule first pointed out by a viewer. 

    “We live in a world of see something, say something, and I’m really glad we do,” she said in a video announcement posted on the show’s official YouTube account. 

    Contributing: Cydney Henderson, USA TODAY

  • Premiere date, cast, trailer, how to watch

    Premiere date, cast, trailer, how to watch

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    “Pulse,” Netflix’s answer to Max’s ultra-popular medical drama “The Pitt,” is set to premiere tomorrow.

    Following in the style of medical-procedurals-turned-romantic-dramas like “Grey’s Anatomy,” Netflix’s news site Tudum says the messy relationship between protagonist and third-year medical student Danny (Willa Fitzgerald) and chief resident Dr. Xander Phillips (Colin Woodell) will serve as the “nucleus” of the show.

    Set in a Miami emergency room and following a tight-knit cast of characters, “Pulse” will “spike your heart rate” as its doctors contend with intense medical situations and interpersonal ones alike, according to writer Zoe Robyn and co-showrunner Carlton Cuse.

    While Robyn is a newcomer, Cuse is known for his work on shows like “Lost,” “Bates Motel,” and “Locke and Key,” among others.

    Here’s what to know about catching Netflix’s first English-language medical drama.

    When does ‘Pulse’ Season 1 premiere?

    “Pulse” Season 1 premieres on April 3 on Netflix. All 10 episodes will drop on the streaming service the same day.

    We’ve got room on the couch: Sign up for USA TODAY’s Watch Party newsletter for all TV and film news.

    How to watch ‘Pulse’ Season 1

    “Pulse” is a Netflix original series that can only be watched on the streaming platform.

    Netflix subscriptions come in three tiers: a “Standard with ads” plan for $7.99 a month, a “Standard” plan for $17.99 and a “Premium” plan for $24.99 a month.

    Besides differences in ads and access to certain content, the plans also vary in how many devices you are allowed to use with your account and how many people are allowed to share the account with you, stipulations that have proven controversial for the streaming giant.

    ‘Pulse’ Season 1 cast

    • Willa Fitzgerald as Danielle “Danny” Simms
    • Colin Woodell as Xander Phillips
    • Jack Bannon as Tom Cole
    • Jessie T. Usher as Sam Elijah
    • Chelsea Muirhead as Sophie Chan
    • Daniela Nieves as Camila Perez
    • Jessy Yates as Harper Simms
    • Justina Machado as Natalie Cruz
    • Santiago Segura as Gabriel Moreno
    • Jessica Rothe as Cass Himmelstein
    • Néstor Carbonell as Dr. Ruben Soriano
    • Arturo Del Puerto as Luis Dominguez
    • Ash Santos as Nia Washington

    Watch the ‘Pulse’ Season 1 trailer

  • What happened to Teddi Mellencamp? Cancer spreads, 4 new tumors form

    What happened to Teddi Mellencamp? Cancer spreads, 4 new tumors form

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    Teddi Mellencamp is sharing a significant health update, announcing her stage 4 cancer has metastasized, and doctors have found four new tumors.

    The “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” alum and daughter of rocker John Mellencamp revealed the news in an Us Weekly interview published Wednesday.

    “There are some days (where) I think you’re allowed to say, ‘I don’t feel confident right now, I feel very uncomfortable and I want to wear a wig.’ And there are some days that I’m like, ‘It is what it is.’ Some days, I’m really sad and really scared, and some days, I’m like, ‘I got this; I’m not worried,’” Mellencamp told the magazine.

    “I’m fighting for my life, but also for my family’s life and all the people I love,” Mellencamp added.

    Last month, Mellencamp revealed she underwent emergency surgery after several tumors were found on her brain. The podcaster, who co-hosts “Two Ts in a Pod” with fellow Real Housewife Tamra Judge, has long been open about her health on the pair’s hit iHeartMedia podcast.

    Teddi Mellencamp reveals stage 4 cancer diagnosis

    In a statement shared to Instagram on Feb. 12, the “RHOBH” alum said she received her diagnosis after being hospitalized for a series of “severe and debilitating headaches.”

    Mellencamp told the magazine that she has stage 4 melanoma, a type of skin cancer she has long struggled with, that has metastasized to her lungs and brain. The four additional tumors were discovered on her brain late last month on March 26, according to Us Weekly.

    “After a CT scan and MRI, doctors found multiple tumors on my brain, which they believe have been growing for at least 6 months,” the 43-year-old wrote.

    “I am blessed to be surrounded by my children, family, friends, doctors, nurses and surgeons who are doing everything possible to get me back into better health,” Mellencamp concluded. “Thank you to everybody who has reached out, and to everyone who has supported me along this journey,” she continued.

    Teddi Mellencamp divorce from Edwin Arroyave paused

    Mellencamp was in the midst of a tense divorce from home security entrepreneur Edwin Arroyave before being diagnosed, but she told Us Weekly that they’ve hit pause on their divorce amid her cancer battle.

    “It was so bad for a while,” Mellencamp said of the divorce. “I was like, ‘How did this happen to me and my best friend of 16 years?’ We’ve always made each other laugh. We always pushed each other’s buttons, and (that made) it fun.

    “And us not being able to have that for a long time was really sad and hard. If any part of this was for a reason, the second that I got sick, he completely changed. It’s a silver lining,” she said. “He’s been there for me a hundred percent, he’s been there for the kids, and we’re back to laughing. We call it the ‘Divorce Chronicles.’”

    Mellencamp, with her signature humor, told Us Weekly that she has a plan now that she is on good terms with Arroyave: “I want to talk (to her husband) about the kind of girls (he’s) going to marry… because if these people are going to take care of my kids, this is what I want, and this is the definition of what I don’t want.”

    Contributing: Edward Segarra

  • Morgan Wallen ‘SNL’ exit inspires ‘get me to God’s country’ merch

    Morgan Wallen ‘SNL’ exit inspires ‘get me to God’s country’ merch

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    That was fast: Morgan Wallen’s “SNL” exit saga already has its own merchandise.

    The country singer’s online store has launched hats and a T-shirt that say “get me to God’s country,” the phrase Wallen posted on Instagram after abruptly walking off stage at “Saturday Night Live” over the weekend before the credits had finished rolling.

    The shirt and the hats retail for $45 and will ship by June 13, according to the site. Wallen posted a link to the merchandise on his Instagram story without further comment.

    The “I’m the Problem” singer served as musical guest on the March 29 episode of “SNL,” hosted by “Anora” star Mikey Madison. When it came time for the signoff at the end of the show, the singer walked off the stage immediately after Madison said goodnight. Wallen briefly hugged the actress but seemed to ignore the rest of the cast and quickly walked past view of the camera.

    “SNL” episodes typically end with the host, musical guest and cast remaining on stage for the entire credits to hug each other and chat. After the show, Wallen posted a photo of a plane on his Instagram story and wrote, “Get me to God’s country.”

    Wallen has yet to publicly comment on why he left the stage early. But “SNL” cast member Kenan Thompson told Entertainment Weekly that the singer’s move was “definitely a spike in the norm.”

    “We’re so used to everybody just turning around and high-fiving us, everybody’s saying, ‘Good job, good job, good job,’” the comedian said. “So when there’s a departure from that, it’s like, hmm, I wonder what that’s about?”

    Thompson also addressed Wallen’s “get me to God’s country” post, telling Entertainment Weekly, “The ‘God’s country’ of it all is strange because it’s like, what are you trying to say? You trying to say that we are not in God’s country? We’re not all in God’s country? We’re not all under God’s umbrella? That’s not necessarily my favorite.”

    Wallen was previously a musical guest on “SNL” in 2020. Unlike during his most recent appearance, that time, the singer stuck around on stage for the duration of the credits along with the cast and host Jason Bateman.

    It didn’t take long after Wallen posted “get me to God’s country” for the phrase to spark a wave of memes, and even “SNL” writer Josh Patten got in on the fun. In an Instagram story, Patten posted a photo of a Krispy Kreme truck along with the text, “Get me to God’s country.”

  • Ali Hazelwood cancels all UK tour stops, citing border concerns

    Ali Hazelwood cancels all UK tour stops, citing border concerns

    An internationally bestselling author is canceling and refunding all her U.K. tour events, citing border concerns with leaving and reentering the U.S., where she lives.

    Ali Hazelwood, known for BookTok sensations like “The Love Hypothesis” and “Bride,” posted on Instagram Wednesday about the “disappointing” decision to cancel because “it’s not possible for me to safely travel outside and then back inside the US,” she wrote. 

    Hazelwood, originally from Italy, now resides in the U.S. She was originally booked for several U.K. appearances, including one with “Summer in the City” author Alex Aster. It’s unclear whether Hazelwood is a naturalized U.S. citizen, visa or green card holder. Hazelwood’s reps at Penguin Random House told USA TODAY they couldn’t comment on the situation.

    “Believe me, this is not a decision I made lightly. I know a lot of you have already made traveling plans, and I know how inconveniencing it is to cancel so close to the tour,” Hazelwood wrote. “All I can say is: I hope things change quickly, I hope to be able to travel abroad soon, and I am deeply thankful for your support and your understanding.”

    Hazelwood’s decision comes amid concerns from tourists, noncitizens and visa and green card holders about the Trump administration’s recent travel bans and border actions.

    A flurry of legal U.S. residents were detained or deported following cellphone searches at airports. In one recent instance, a British tourist was allegedly detained for nearly two weeks after attempting to travel from the U.S. to Canada. In another, “an administrative error” led to the deportation of an El Salvador native who had won a court order from an immigration judge to prevent his removal. A Venezuelan soccer player who was awaiting a ruling on his asylum claim was recently deported on suspicion of being a gang member in what his attorney said was a misinterpretation of his soccer-related tattoo.

    And several college activists and academics are taking legal action against the Trump administration after they were detained and told their lawful permanent resident status was being revoked. The Trump administration has moved to revoke visas for hundreds of noncitizen students across the U.S. 

    Hazelwood has a background in academia, having moved to the U.S. to pursue a Ph.D. in neuroscience. Before becoming a full-time author of “STEMinist” romance novels, she taught as a professor.

    Fans rushed to the comments to offer support for Hazelwood’s decision. 

    “Do what you need to to keep yourself safe and comfortable!❤️ Maybe this will show readers whose votes lead to decisions like this being made will see the impact of their actions,” one wrote. 

    “I hope everyone who voted republican doesn’t pick up an Ali Hazelwood book again. The fact that one of the most prolific contemporary romance writers at the moment is scared to leave the United States because she won’t be let back in is extremely valid, but sickening nonetheless,” one user posted to Threads.

    “You come first!!! Love you❤️❤️❤️” fellow author Aster commented.

    A virtual event for U.K. readers is in the works, Hazelwood wrote.

    Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY’s Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you’re reading at [email protected]

  • ‘Get me to God’s country:’ Morgan Wallen’s ‘SNL’ exit becomes meme

    ‘Get me to God’s country:’ Morgan Wallen’s ‘SNL’ exit becomes meme

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    Country music star Morgan Wallen’s Instagram post after his abrupt departure from the “Saturday Night Live” stage has become a social media punchline.

    As the credits rolled Saturday, Wallen hugged host Mikey Madison briefly before leaving the stage. As the musical guest, he was expected to stay on stage with the rest of the crew, waving to the audience and saying goodbye to the cast.

    While Wallen hasn’t explained his Irish exit publicly, some have speculated it was due to his already-fraught relationship with the show.

    But it was his Instagram post showing his private plane shortly after he left the show that the internet latched onto.

    “Get me to God’s Country,” the viral post read.

    ‘Get me to God’s Country’ becomes internet trend

    People on social media took to making a joke out of his words, sharing their own pictures with the caption.

    Blockbuster, Chili’s, the Roku screen saver, Costco, and the Rainforest Cafe are all considered “God’s country” according to pictures on X as users take part in the trend.

    The Empire State Building’s X account shot back at the insinuation New York is not “God’s country” with its own post of the view from the historic skyscraper, with, you guessed it, “Get me to God’s country” as the caption.

    TikTok users also posted the caption over videos of The Eras Tour, Buc-ees and Barnes & Noble, to name a few.

    Morgan Wallen jumps on trend with merch

    Wallen may be quiet as to why he left the show early, but he is hopping on the trend in his own way.

    He is selling hats in two colors and a tee-shirt that reads “Get me to God’s country” for $45 each. He shared the merch on a Tuesday night Instagram story.

    Wallen is one of the most popular country music singers today. In 2020, his scheduled appearance on “SNL” was canceled after Wallen was photographed partying maskless during the pandemic. He made it back to the show by the end of the year and starred in a sketch making fun of the incident.

    But he has also been in hot water since then. In 2021, Big Loud Records said it suspended Wallen’s contract over a video of him drunkenly shouting a racial slur, an incident for which he has since apologized. In 2024, Wallen also pleaded guilty to reckless endangerment for throwing a chair off the roof of a bar.

    Contributing: Natalie Neysa Alund, Haadiza Ogwude, Brendan Morrow, Anna Kaufman

    Kinsey Crowley is a trending news reporter at USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected]. Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @kinseycrowley.bsky.social.

  • Drama, island getaways and murder

    Drama, island getaways and murder

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    Like all the best mysteries, it starts with murder.

    In its three seasons, juicy HBO series “The White Lotus” has captivated audiences from fictional, murder-prone resorts in Hawaii, Italy and, now, Thailand. This season has been filled with all sorts of unsavory drama, including a party turned incestuous, a surprise cameo (and unsettling monologue) from Sam Rockwell and an Inigo-Montoya-esque confrontation with a shadowy landowner. 

    Season 3 may be almost over, but that doesn’t mean the drama has to stop. We’ve got book recommendations to keep you on the edge of your seat all year long.

    Books like ‘The White Lotus’

    These books – new and old – are filled with rich getaways, privileged vacationers and murder mysteries and are sure to scratch the same itch as Mike White’s intoxicating series. Here’s what we recommend. 

    ‘Saltwater’ by Katy Hays

    “Saltwater” starts as Sarah Lingate, a young mother and old-money heiress, is found dead in Capri. Though ruled an accident, the Lingate family is haunted by her death and returns every year on the anniversary. But on the 30th year, they come to Capri to find Sarah’s necklace at the villa waiting for them – the one she was wearing the day she died. Now, everyone is a suspect and hidden family secrets threaten to bubble to the surface. 

    ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ by Liane Moriarty

    Moriarty’s bestselling mystery finds nine people at a remote health resort seeking mindfulness, rejuvenation and reinvention. Over 10 days, formerly successful romance novelist Frances must cast aside her skepticism and immerse herself in the intriguing guests and hosts at Tranquillum House. Packed with wit, humor, tension and dizzying chaos, “Nine Perfect Strangers” is a must-read for fans of “The White Lotus.” 

    ‘Bad Summer People’ by Emma Rosenblum

    Infidelity, back-stabbing and murder ensue in an exclusive summer beach community on Fire Island in “Bad Summer People.” Jen and Lauren rule the town and tennis courts each summer alongside their husbands, who have summered on the island since childhood. Their friend Rachel joins them this year, eager to find a man. When a body is discovered off the side of the boardwalk, decades-old grudges and rumors ensnare the town. 

    ‘Malibu Rising’ by Taylor Jenkins Reid

    Like “The White Lotus,” when readers open this book, they already know the ending – a beachside Malibu mansion engulfed in flames. “Malibu Rising” follows four star-studded Riva siblings in the 24 hours leading up to the disaster at the party, as well as a look back at the secrets and betrayals that shaped their parents and their childhood. 

    ‘The Bandit Queens’ by Parini Shroff

    In “The Bandit Queens,” rumors fly after Geeta’s no-good husband up and leaves. The other women in the remote Indian village believe Geeta killed him, which she at first resents until she realizes people finally start to leave her alone because of it. It also makes for a good intimidation tactic for her jewelry business. But Geeta’s dangerous reputation comes to a head when other women start asking Geeta to help kill off their husbands too.

    ‘The Glow’ by Jessie Gaynor

    In “The Glow,” publicist Jane desperately tries to save her career by turning a charismatic cult-like retreat leader into an envy-inspiring, profit-driving self-care brand. One Goodreads review of this book describes Jane as “If Portia from The White Lotus — with all of her insecurities and self-absorption and general privilege — was a slightly older book character sans tacky Gen Z outfits.” 

    ‘Sex and Vanity’ by Kevin Kwan

    From the author of “Crazy Rich Asians” comes a vacationing romp that reimagines “A Room With a View.” In “Sex and Vanity,” Lucie finds herself trapped between two men. She first meets the intelligent, generous George Zao on an escapade to Capri. Years later, after the pair lose touch, she’s vacationing with her fiancé when she unexpectedly sees George again. Unsure of whether to listen to her heart or her head and caught between two cultures, Lucie spins a web of lies involving her family, fiancé and community.

    ‘Murder and Mamon’ by Mia P. Manansala

    If meddling gossipers and murder are your preferred plot devices, “Murder and Mamon” is for you. After much controversy and fanfare, Lila’s godmothers finally open their new laundromat in town. But as they celebrate, they find the laundromat vandalized and the body of one of their nieces next to a threatening message. Between the godmothers’ grief and a less-than-adequate police department, Lila will have to seek justice on her own terms and figure out which scheming godmother the vendetta was meant for. 

    Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY’s Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you’re reading at [email protected]