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  • Ed Sheeran performs ‘Galway Girl’ at Irish pub for St. Patrick’s Day

    Ed Sheeran performs ‘Galway Girl’ at Irish pub for St. Patrick’s Day

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    Ed Sheeran surprised fans at an Irish pub in Boston with a special performance on St. Patrick’s Day.

    Sheeran shared a video Monday on Instagram performing “Galway Girl” at The Dubliner, a popular Irish pub in the city alongside Irish folk band Beoga.

    Earlier on St. Patrick’s Day, the Grammy winner teased the pit stop on his Instagram story with a picture of Sheeran wearing a Boston Celtics basketball jersey that said, “Meet me in the pub tonight.” The post was set to “Galway Girl,” the Irish-themed love song from his 2017 album “Divide,” stylized as “÷”

    Sheeran appears to be on a bar tour in anticipation for the release of his upcoming single, “Azizam.” He released a preview snippet of the forthcoming song on his YouTube channel Wednesday.

    On Saturday evening, Sheeran was on Nashville’s Lower Broadway at Music City’s Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge.

    If you were in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, on the corner of Broadway and John Lewis Way, you too could have witnessed the “Shape Of You” and “Thinking Out Loud” vocalist, clad in a bachelorette’s pink cowboy hat, performing impromptu on top of the first level’s bar.

    Tootsie’s posted via social media, “If you’re not at Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge right now… you should be! Ed Sheeran casually singing on the bar.”

    Ed Sheeran cut off by police in India for busking

    Last month, while performing to a small crowd in India, Sheeran was cut off by police who said he didn’t have permission to be out playing on the street.

    Wearing a T-shirt and shorts, strapped with an acoustic guitar, Sheeran was seen in videos circulating on social media playing to a crowd along Church Street in Bengaluru, India’s tech capital. While in the middle of his hit song “Shape of You,” a police officer unplugs Sheeran’s microphone, resulting in shocked reactions from those nearby and a shrug from Sheeran.

    Sheeran reportedly shared to his Instagram story that he did have permission to perform along Church Street, according to Reuters. Sheeran’s team did not immediately respond when contacted by USA TODAY.

    Contributing: Greta Cross, USA TODAY; Marcus K. Dowling, The Tennessean

  • Netflix boss Ted Sarandos talks Karla Sofía Gascón, Meghan Markle

    Netflix boss Ted Sarandos talks Karla Sofía Gascón, Meghan Markle

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    Karla Sofía Gascón still has a home at Netflix.

    In an interview with Variety published Wednesday, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said he would work with the “Emilia Pérez” star again despite the controversy over her offensive social media posts.

    “You have to have some grace when people make mistakes, and we have grace,” he said.

    When asked if Netflix will vet its talent’s social media differently in the wake of the scandal, Sarandos said the company is mainly concerned with whether a person’s controversial posts received significant news coverage in the past. This was not the case with Gascón’s posts, which only resurfaced after the Oscar nominations had already been announced.

    “What we’re typically vetting for is mostly headlines,” Sarandos told Variety. “Did someone’s social media stuff create headlines before? Then again, I’m not on Twitter, so I’m not going to come in and look at someone else’s Twitter.”

    In January, Gascón apologized over old X posts expressing controversial and racist views on Muslims, George Floyd and diversity at the Academy Awards, among other topics.

    “I want to acknowledge the conversation around my past social media posts that have caused hurt,” she said in a January statement obtained by USA TODAY. “As someone in a marginalized community, I know this suffering all too well and I am deeply sorry to those I have caused pain.”

    Gascón played the title role in the Netflix musical “Emilia Pérez,” and days before her posts resurfaced, the film led the Oscar nominations with an impressive 13 nods. She became the first openly transgender actress to be nominated for an Oscar.

    Though some pundits initially considered “Emilia Pérez” a best picture frontrunner, the movie went on to lose the top Oscar to “Anora.” But the film still walked away with two Academy Awards: best supporting actress for Zoe Saldaña and best original song for “El Mal.”

    When Variety asked Sarandos if he believes “Emilia Pérez” could have won best picture if not for the Gascón controversy, the executive pushed back.

    “I hate that question, because it creates all of these what-if’s,” he said. “It was the frontrunner, but it was never a slam dunk that ‘Emilia Pérez’ — with all its innovation and thrills — would win best picture. It was a great movie, a great campaign, and I’m bummed we had all that what-if’s thrown at us.”

    Prior to the Oscars, Netflix chief content officer Bela Bajaria said on “The Town” podcast in February that it was “such a bummer” that the Gascón controversy distracted from the rest of “Emilia Pérez.” She also said that it’s “not really common practice for people (or companies) to vet social tweets” in the entertainment industry, although “a lot of people are reevaluating that” now.

    “If you ask me today, everything I know, we would still buy the movie today,” Bajaria added.

    After stepping back from the Oscar campaign trail amid the controversy over her posts, Gascón still attended the Academy Awards on March 2, where host Conan O’Brien made light of the situation.

    “‘Anora’ uses the F-word 479 times. That’s three more than the record set by Karla Sofía Gascón’s publicist,” the comedian joked, drawing groans.

    Netflix boss defends ‘underestimated’ Duchess Meghan

    Elsewhere in the interview, Sarandos defended Duchess Meghan when asked why she was the “right person to bet on.” Her lifestyle show “With Love, Meghan” debuted on the streamer earlier this month to mostly negative reviews.

    The Duchess of Sussex and her husband Prince Harry signed a multiyear deal with Netflix in 2020, which also led to the 2022 documentary series “Harry & Meghan.”

    “I think Meghan is underestimated in terms of her influence on culture,” Sarandos said. “When we dropped the trailer for the ‘Harry & Meghan’ doc series (in 2022), everything on-screen was dissected in the press for days. The shoes she was wearing sold out all over the world. The Hermès blanket that was on the chair behind her sold out everywhere in the world. People are fascinated with Meghan Markle. She and Harry are overly dismissed.”

    “With Love, Meghan” is set to return for a second season, which has already wrapped filming.

    During an event in January unveiling Netflix’s 2025 slate, comedian John Mulaney mocked the streamer for its deal with Harry and Meghan while detailing his talk show “Everybody’s Live with John Mulaney.” The comic joked, “This is a really fun experiment. Not since Harry and Meghan has Netflix given more money to someone without a specific plan.”

    Contributing: Pamela Avila, Jay Stahl

  • Heather Thomas faced stalkers, shot one of them at peak of fame

    Heather Thomas faced stalkers, shot one of them at peak of fame

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    Actress Heather Thomas has been out of the spotlight for a scary reason.

    The “Fall Guy” actress and 1980s TV star revealed in a new interview that the reason she left Hollywood in the 1990s due to harassment. Thomas, 67, starred in the 1981-86 series as Jody Banks, a stunt performer.

    “I did a lot of work after ‘The Fall Guy,’” Thomas said on a Monday episode of the “Still Here Hollywood” podcast. “I did a lot of movies. And then I was just getting so many stalkers.”

    The actress, who also starred in the 1980s films “Zapped” and “Cyclone,” said she would get two stalkers a week and filed “tons of restraining orders.”

    She said one stalker jumped her gate carrying a “giant buck knife,” while another stalker cut open a window screen to get in her bedroom. “I shot him” with birdshot, she said, or small lead shotgun pellets used for bird hunting.

    “I don’t know if this is true now … You could be in a soap commercial, and they would fixate on you,” she said. “And there weren’t a lot of stalker laws.”

    She recalled getting a box of bullets or stolen funeral wreaths from graveyards sent to her home. Thomas, who has three daughters, said she wouldn’t leave the house for months at a time because of the harassment, though her children were largely unaware. “I always had a bodyguard in the house. Because that’s where I didn’t want to come home to a dark house.”

    She said leaving the limelight didn’t immediately solve the issue, “not for a couple of years.”

    In 2024, Thomas, with co-star Lee Majors, starred in an after-credits cameo for “The Fall Guy” movie remake starring Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt. That year she also starred in the drama “The Ghost Trap.” She’s only credited in one other film since 1998, for the musical comedy “Girltrash.”

    In 2008, Thomas published her first novel, “Trophies.”

  • Lollapalooza lineup 2025: See the performers onstage before ChicagoMusic

    Lollapalooza lineup 2025: See the performers onstage before ChicagoMusic

    Lollapalooza lineup 2025: See the performers onstage before ChicagoMusic

  • Diddy’s ‘right hand’ Kristina ‘KK’ Khorram speaks out

    Diddy’s ‘right hand’ Kristina ‘KK’ Khorram speaks out

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    The “right hand” to Sean “Diddy” Combs and a defendant in lawsuits against the scandalized rap mogul is speaking out.

    Kristina “KK” Khorram, who has been described as the producer’s chief of staff, has been accused of witnessing and assisting the Bad Boy Records founder in his alleged sexual trafficking “venture.” But on Wednesday, Khorram addressed the allegations for the first time, telling USA TODAY in a statement: “For months, horrific accusations have been made about me in various lawsuits regarding my former boss.

    “These false allegations of my involvement are causing irreparable and incalculable damage to my reputation and the emotional well-being of myself and my family,” she continued. “I have never condoned or aided and abetted the sexual assault of anyone. Nor have I ever drugged anyone.

    “The idea that I could be accused of playing a role in – or even being a bystander to – the rape of anyone is beyond upsetting, disturbing, and unthinkable. That is not who I am and my heart goes out to all victims of sexual assault,” Khorram added. “I am confident that the allegations against me will be proven to be untrue.”

    Rolling Stone was first to report the statement. Khorram previously worked at Combs Enterprises as far back as 2013, according to the outlet.

    USA TODAY has reached out to Combs’ reps for more information.

    She is named in a sexual battery, assault and racketeering lawsuit filed by Ashley Parham, who claimed Combs and associates, including Druski and Odell Beckham Jr. “violently gang raped” her in an October 2024 lawsuit. All three have denied the claims, and police have called Parham’s claims “unfounded.”

    Parham also claimed Khorram threatened her safety before the assault.

    In Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones Jr.’s February 2024 sexual assault, liability and racketeering lawsuit, the music producer said Khorram had Combs Enterprises employees carry out duties ranging from drug trafficking to acquiring sex workers for Combs. In response to Jones’ complaints that Combs had made advances toward him, he claims Khorram responded: “You know, Sean will be Sean,” and downplayed his groping of Jones as “horseplay,” according to the lawsuit.

    In a statement shared with USA TODAY at the time, Combs’ attorney said, “Lil Rod is nothing more than a liar … shamelessly looking for an undeserved payday.”

    And Diddy’s former assistant Phil Pines, who filed a December lawsuit against the Revolt TV founder, has said he worked under Khorram, who he alleges would often direct him to clean up hotel rooms in the aftermath of Combs’ sex parties, he said in Investigation Discovery’s “The Fall of Diddy” docuseries.

    In response, Combs’ representatives said: “Mr. Combs has full confidence in the facts and the integrity of the judicial process. In court the truth will prevail: that the accusations against Mr. Combs are pure fiction.”

    This story was updated to include new information.

    If you or someone you know has experienced sexual violence, RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Hotline offers free, confidential, 24/7 support to survivors and their loved ones in English and Spanish at: 800.656.HOPE (4673) and Hotline.RAINN.org and en Español RAINN.org/es.

    Contributing: KiMi Robinson, Edward Segarra

  • ’47 Ronin’ director Carl Rinsch charged with defrauding Netflix

    ’47 Ronin’ director Carl Rinsch charged with defrauding Netflix

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    A Hollywood director has been arrested and charged with defrauding Netflix out of millions of dollars in connection with a streaming show that was never completed.

    In an indictment unsealed Tuesday, prosecutors alleged “47 Ronin” director Carl Rinsch engaged in a scheme to defraud Netflix after securing $11 million from the company but not using the money for its intended purpose of completing an unfinished science-fiction series.

    USA TODAY has reached out to Netflix and a representative for Rinsch for comment.

    The indictment did not name the streaming company involved in the case, but a 2023 New York Times investigation confirmed it was Netflix.

    According to the indictment, between 2018 and 2019, Netflix paid $44 million for “White Horse,” a sci-fi show from Rinsch that was to follow the creation of superintelligent clones. By 2020, the streamer paid an additional $11 million after Rinsch requested more funds and falsely claimed that this money would be used to complete production, prosecutors said.

    But Rinsch allegedly transferred nearly all of this additional money into personal accounts and lost more than half of it after making a “number of extremely risky purchases of securities.” He allegedly failed to inform Netflix he lost the money, instead telling the streamer the show was “moving forward really well.”

    The director allegedly then used the remaining money to speculate on cryptocurrency and on personal expenses, including five Rolls-Royces and a Ferrari.

    Rinsch never delivered a completed show, nor did he return the money to Netflix, prosecutors said.

    The filmmaker was charged with wire fraud, money laundering and engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity. Police arrested him Tuesday in West Hollywood.

    “Rinsch’s arrest is a reminder that this office and our partners at the FBI remain vigilant in the fight against fraud and will bring those who cheat and steal to justice,” acting U.S. Attorney Matthew Podolsky said in a statement.

    Rinsch is best known for directing the 2013 action fantasy film “47 Ronin,” which starred Keanu Reeves. The movie bombed at the box office, grossing less than $40 million domestically. According to Variety, the production budget was $175 million. Rinsch has also made short films and music videos but has never directed another movie or TV series.

  • Ryan Reynolds says Justin Baldoni lawsuit centers on ‘hurt feelings’

    Ryan Reynolds says Justin Baldoni lawsuit centers on ‘hurt feelings’

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    Ryan Reynolds is attempting to extract himself from the web of lawsuits ensnaring his wife Blake Lively and her former co-star Justin Baldoni.

    In a motion filed Tuesday, Reynolds moved to dismiss the legal claims brought against him by Baldoni and his production company Wayfarer Studios.

    Baldoni, who starred in and directed the ill-fated adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s best-selling novel “It Ends with Us” alongside Lively, has sued both the actress and her husband, claiming the pair used their fame and influence to defame and extort him.

    His suit represents a counter-action to filings from Lively, which allege Baldoni harassed her and other female cast members on-set then carried out a highly coordinated online smear campaign to delegitimize her character in case she attempted to speak out against him.

    Reynolds’ lawyers now say his involvement in the scandal was merely peripheral.

    “What does Ryan Reynolds have to do with that (Lively and Baldoni’s dispute), legally speaking, other than being a supportive spouse who has witnessed firsthand the emotional, reputational, and financial devastation Ms. Lively has suffered?” his lawyers wrote in a memorandum supporting Tuesday’s motion.

    “The claims filed against Mr. Reynolds are simply a list of grievances attempting to shame Mr. Reynolds for being the man Mr. Baldoni has built his brand pretending to be,” a rep for Reynolds wrote in a statement sent to USA TODAY Wednesday. “A man who is ‘confident enough to listen’ to the woman in his life.”

    Baldoni’s lawyers, in their own statement Wednesday, told USA TODAY: “Mr. Reynolds’ exploitation of his enormous power in Hollywood continues, this time arrogantly asking to be dismissed from the case despite his publicly documented involvement extending far beyond just being a ‘supportive spouse.’”

    In their filing, Reynold’s team accused Wayfarer, in particular co-founder Steve Sarowitz, of “polluting” the court docket with “hundreds of paragraphs of clickbait,” aimed at continuing to capture outside audiences but devoid of legitimate legal standing.

    In Baldoni’s original suit, the actor and director alleged that Reynolds based his character Nicepool in “Deadpool & Wolverine” around Baldoni’s “woke feminist” brand and used the role to satirize and bully him.

    Baldoni, who got his first break playing Rafael Solano on “Jane the Virgin,” has since made a name for himself as an author and outspoken critic of toxic masculinity.

    Tuesday’s motion called Baloni’s claim “thin-skinned outrage over a movie character,” and argued it “does not even pretend to be tied to any actual legal claims.”

    Reynolds’ lawyers said Baldoni’s claim falls into his suit’s “general allegation of ‘hurt feelings’ which in reality is nothing more than a desperate effort to advance the same curated ‘bully’ image that the Wayfarer Parties created and disseminated in the retaliation campaign they launched against Ms. Lively in August of 2024.”

    The filing also touches on claims by Baldoni that Reynolds called him a “predator,” which amounted to defamation. Lawyers for Reynolds opted not to walk back that statement but instead argued that defamation would imply Reynolds did not truly believe Baldoni was a predator.

    Arguing that Baldoni didn’t offer sufficient evidence of the specific instances in which Reynolds called him a “predator,” the actor’s lawyers said either way that it would be protected free speech if he believes it to be true − and he does.

    “These first amendment principles ought to be obvious to — and even celebrated by — a group of litigants (Baldoni and Wayfarer) who have spent most of the past few months calling Mr. Reynolds and his wife ‘bullies’ and ‘liars,’” the filing said.

    The filing then goes on to reference excerpts from Baldoni’s own books and podcasts to paint a picture of a man who allegedly, by his own admission, has engaged in predatory behavior.

    “It would be perverse to permit Mr. Baldoni to build an entire brand — complete with a podcast, Ted Talk, and books — off of his confessions of repeatedly mistreating women, only to turn around and sue Mr. Reynolds for $400 million for simply pointing out in private what Mr. Baldoni has bragged about in public,” Reynolds’ legal team argued.

    The motion to dismiss is just the latest in an ongoing game of legal chess between the Lively-Reynolds camp and Baldoni.

    Since Lively’s claims of harassment burst into the fore following a tense promotion cycle for the film, the ex-co-stars have swapped increasingly hostile and salacious claims, with each side alleging the other made making the movie a nightmarish process.

    The pair are headed to trial in March 2026.

  • Courtney Love criticizes Trump, applies for UK citizenship

    Courtney Love criticizes Trump, applies for UK citizenship

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    Courtney Love is making her British residency official.

    The American singer, a longtime United Kingdom resident, announced she was getting her British citizenship, a representative confirmed to USA TODAY Wednesday.

    Love, speaking at a Royal Geographical Society in London event, said it is “so great to live here” and that she is getting her U.K. citizenship in “six months,” according to The Daily Mail.

    The widow of the late Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain said it’s “frightening now” in the United States and related the decision to President Donald Trump.

    “In terms of Trump, and particularly this group (in power) … it’s like emperor-core – wearing million-dollar watches,” she said, according to the British tabloid. “Emperor-core is going on at Mar-a-Lago. It’s frightening now. It’s like cyanide now.”

    Love recently became a grandparent when her and Cobain’s daughter, Frances Bean Cobain, and Tony Hawk’s son, Riley Hawk, had their first child together, a baby boy named Ronin Walker Cobain Hawk, in September.

    The grunge star is one of a select group of celebrities that have announced their moves, or intentions to leave, the U.S.

    Earlier this month, Rosie O’Donnell announced she had moved to Ireland amid Trump’s presidency. “It’s been heartbreaking to see what’s happening politically and hard for me personally as well,” O’Donnell said in a lengthy video posted to TikTok. “I just felt like we needed to take care of ourselves and make some hard decisions and follow through.”

    In November, Eva Longoria revealed she no longer lives in America full-time, telling Marie Claire in an interview: “I’m privileged. I get to escape and go somewhere. Most Americans aren’t so lucky. They’re going to be stuck in this dystopian country, and my anxiety and sadness is for them.”

    That same month, People magazine reported that Ellen DeGeneres and wife Portia de Rossi had relocated to the English countryside.

    Other stars such as Sharon Stone, Christina Applegate, Stephen King, Billie Eilish, Bette Midler and Sophia Bush have previously shared their grievances on social media following Trump’s win.

    Contributing: Edward Segarra, Anna Kaufman

  • Protesters crash Gal Gadot ceremonyEntertainment

    Protesters crash Gal Gadot ceremonyEntertainment

    Protesters crash Gal Gadot ceremonyEntertainment

  • ‘Hunger Games’ continues to raise generations of critical thinkers

    ‘Hunger Games’ continues to raise generations of critical thinkers

    NEW YORK – It’s a Monday night in New York City and young adults are lining up by district to await their fate onstage. 

    No, this isn’t “The Hunger Games,” but the fans at Barnes & Noble Union Square probably would have volunteered as tribute regardless. Dressed in cosplay and hair braided down the side like it’s 2008, they answered jeopardy questions so niche it had Scholastic editor and publisher David Levithan consulting his notes.

    In other words, it’s the midnight release party of “Sunrise on the Reaping.” 

    “The Hunger Games” raised an entire generation of readers, many of whom will revisit Panem with “Sunrise” now as adults. It’s been five years since Suzanne Collins released prequel “The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes” after a 10-year hiatus from the series. Perhaps every generation has its version of “Hunger Games,” but because social media was in its infancy when Collins’ 2008 series debuted, it became much more than a popular book – it was early fandom culture, fodder for cosplay, the games middle schoolers played in the woods and a gateway into dystopian literature. 

    “The dream in children’s and teen literature is to have those books that people come up to you 15 to 20 years later and say ‘I read this book when I was 15 and I’m still reading your books,’” Levithan says. “I think we permeated the culture because it means something, not just because it’s mere entertainment.”

    Christina Agosta, 30, and Aliza Kessler, 29, met through a mutual love of the series a decade ago. Now at the “Sunrise” release party, they remember going to the midnight releases of the movies – Kessler even went when she was studying abroad, even though she didn’t understand the language and no one else dressed up.

    “This is my thing,” Kessler says. “It doesn’t matter where in the world I am – this is home.”

    Raising generations of critical thinkers and dystopian readers

    When Levithan first read Collins’ manuscript of “The Hunger Games,” he was left with only two words – “Holy sh–.” 

    Months before the first book came out, a Publishers Weekly article called “The Hunger Games” a “dark horse” breakout. Another Newsweek article in the same month remarked on the new trend of “Apocalypse Lit for Kids.” The series’ astronomical success ushered in an era of teen dystopian literature followed by similar bestsellers like “Divergent” and “The Maze Runner.” It only helped that online fandom culture was on the rise across Tumblr, Facebook and the newly minted Instagram. 

    What was striking to Levithan, working in publishing, was the rise of plots and characters that interrogated structures of power. Riley Vaske, 28, tells USA TODAY “The Hunger Games” was the first book series that trusted her to understand such big concepts. 

    “When you’re a young person, I feel like it really bolsters your confidence a little bit when someone is writing something that they’re like ‘You can handle this,’” Vaske says. “It just laid the foundation for me understanding how to critique these wider social structures.” 

    That lens for critical thinking is precisely why Tom Paradis teaches a course on “The Hunger Games” to freshman students at Butler University in Indianapolis. Paradis has written two books on Collins’ worldbuilding, one about Appalachian geography in the books and the other about ballads and tribute music. His “Unpacking the Hunger Games” course uses the series as a “life-long learning” tool to teach students how to research and critique text. They get to choose their area of focus – communication students often examine the Games as reality TV, political science students look at the Capitol, pharmaceutical students study Mrs. Everdeen’s apothecary and psychology students examine symptoms of PTSD in Katniss, Peeta and Haymitch. 

    The genius of Collins is how many subtle themes she packs into the series, says Paradis. Many of his students have only watched the movies. After they read the books in class, they walk away with a new appreciation.

    “With today’s students you’ve really got to connect their own lives, their own society, with what they’re learning in their classes,” Paradis says. “Otherwise, they’re not going to be very engaged with your material.”

    Collins’ writing is “so much fun to try to decode and interpret,” he says. 

    Young readers continue to look up to Katniss Everdeen

    Katniss herself is a large draw for many readers (not to mention the Halloween costumes). In a sea of young male hero protagonists, “The Hunger Games” offered a wholly complex female main character. For some readers, it was the first time they’d encountered that. 

    And everyone was reading it. For Kitty Shortt, 24, who read “Harry Potter” at a time when her classmates considered it “nerdy,” the mainstream support for a dystopian novel with a female protagonist was formative. 

    “Adults in our life were saying that it was a good book … boys in our class would also read it and think that it was a good book,” says Shortt. “The most powerful fandom is a fandom of young girls, and I stand by that.”

    Damia McKeithan, 21, says she appreciated the way Collins showcased a “different type of strength and femininity” as readers grew up alongside Katniss.

    “These women are often against all odds and they’re faced with all these setbacks and they literally never let it stop them. They keep going. They do whatever the hell they want. They’re not swayed by anybody – that, I love,” McKeithan tells USA TODAY at the midnight release party in New York. 

    I got radicalized at ‘The Hunger Games’

    Few modern books enter the mainstream vernacular – and stay there – the way “The Hunger Games” has. “The Capitol” has become social shorthand for out-of-touch billionaires. Last year, the Met Gala drew comparisons from social media users as celebrities strutted in fantastical fashions while wars raged in Gaza and Ukraine. Hold up three fingers in the series’ famous salute and it’s understood as a sign of solidarity in the face of adversity.

    From the beginning, Levithan was pleasantly surprised with how young people engaged with the story.

    “They love the characters, the love triangle, all of that was there, but they really wanted to talk about ‘What does this say about authority? What does this say about war? What does this say about how society treats people on the margins?’” Levithan says. “People often condescend to young adult literature and think that it’s beginner’s literature but it’s not – it grapples with serious, great themes. And that’s exactly what Suzanne did and readers replied with the same maturity.”

    Many readers told USA TODAY they’ve seen the series’ themes bleed into Gen Z activism.

    “Suzanne Collins writes about politics in a way that I feel is accessible to children, at least to a degree. The way it teaches you to question authority and wonder how you can improve the systems around you,” says Kellie Veltri, a cohost of the “Rereading the Revolution” podcast. “She does change lives.” 

    ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ is an excuse to revisit the revolution

    Former coworkers Veltri and Daphne LaPlante started “Rereading the Revolution” a year ago as they revisited teen dystopian favorites like “The Hunger Games.” As a teen, LaPlante found a refuge online connecting with other readers who loved the series after her family moved across the country. Veltri was part of a “Battle of the Books” club in middle school, where she was the team’s resident “Hunger Games” expert. 

    “I’ve read these books so many times for the past 15 years and every time I read them, I get something new from them,” LaPlante says. “Especially being at a different place in my life and being more aware of the political climate and what Suzanne Collins is saying.”

    “When I first read this, I was 11 years old – I was not old enough to be reaped in The Hunger Games. And now I’m 10 years older than Katniss,” says Veltri. “It is so much more salient reading it as an adult … I think that emphasizes the political themes even harder, the things that you wouldn’t have necessarily picked up – the fascism allegories, the allegories about real-life government.” 

    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]