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  • What time does Travis Scott perform at Coachella 2025? How to watch

    What time does Travis Scott perform at Coachella 2025? How to watch


    Travis Scott is back at Coachella, performing at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, on Saturday night and again on April 19

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    Travis Scott is finally returning to Coachella, coming back to the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, on Saturday night.

    Travis Scott will make his first appearance at the famous music festival for the first time since 2017, when he played the Outdoor Theatre. He also made a guest appearance during Kendrick Lamar’s headlining performance that year.

    Coachella’s first weekend events runs from April 11 to 13, while the second weekend is April 18-20.

    Here is what you need to know about Travis Scott’s performance at Coachella 2025, including his set time, how to watch from home and more.

    When is Travis Scott performing at Coachella?

    Travis Scott is set to make two performances at Coachella 2025. The first will be on Saturday, April 12, and the second one scheduled for Saturday, April 19. 

    He is scheduled to kick off his performance on the main Coachella stage at 11:40 p.m. local time for both this Saturday and next Saturday’s performance.

    How to watch Travis Scott’s Coachella performance live

    Coachella performances are available on YouTube, according to the company, and streams started on Friday, April 11. People will be able to watch multiple stages from their couch simultaneously, while a vertical livestream option featuring DJ sets will also be available.

    YouTube is also allowing viewers to watch the show with content creators on their respective channels.

    “New to the desert this year, Watch With allows creators to react to live events with commentary and real-time reactions, giving you the experience of watching Coachella alongside your favorite creator,” the video platform shared.

    Coachella 2025 set times

    A complete list of day-by-day set times can be found on Coachella’s website or in an Instagram post below:

    Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.

  • JK Rowling never misses a chance to be transphobic

    JK Rowling never misses a chance to be transphobic


    I grew up on ‘Harry Potter’ and the world J.K. Rowling built. It’s sad to see her transphobia in action.

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    It’s no secret that “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling has spent the past few years spewing transphobic hate any chance she gets. Now, her hatred of other members of the LGBTQ+ community is making headlines. She just can’t stop.

    April 6 was International Asexuality Day, celebrating members of the LGBTQ+ community who do not experience sexual attraction. Rowling had a problem with that, taking to X (formerly Twitter) to go on a bigoted rant about people whose lives she refuses to understand: “Happy International Fake Oppression Day to everyone who wants complete strangers to know they don’t fancy a shag.”

    She continued her barrage of hate in the replies, adding: “Sure, people are still killed for being gay in a lot of countries, but straight people who don’t fancy a quickie are being literally ignored to death.” She was also confused about how people can identify as gay and be asexual.

    Sure, she could do a little research and quickly discover that sexual attraction is different than romantic attraction, but why would she do that when it’s even easier to continue dunking on vulnerable groups? Why learn anything when you can just punch down for social media clout?

    J.K. Rowling is transphobic every chance she gets

    Lest we forget that she also hates transgender people, Rowling also got into it with “Last Week Tonight” host John Oliver when the comedian aired an episode about the panic over trans women competing in sports.

    The author claimed Oliver was a sellout, alleged that standing up for transgender people “was the cost of doing business” and told him to “read the f—— room.”

    If we’re reading the room, surely Rowling knows that her views alienate people and add to the intense hate trans people face daily. Instead of trying to understand trans people, she’d rather hide behind her hateful comments.

    Surely, she could be doing something better with her time: writing, volunteering or getting a hobby. Instead, she has decided that she’s willing to die on her hill of transphobia, tarnishing her reputation and hurting her fans in the process.

    ‘Harry Potter’ was part of my childhood. Rowling’s politics ruined it.

    Like millions of people around the world, I grew up reading the Potter series. My mother took my younger sister and me to the midnight release of the “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” book in 2005. I held on to my ticket stub from the 2011 midnight premiere of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2” for years.

    Like many of the people who read those books, I was heartbroken when Rowling began using her platform to disparage the transgender community.

    It’s ironic that a woman who created a series about witchcraft and fantastical things is unable to comprehend things as simple as people not experiencing sexual attraction or identifying with genders that don’t match the sex they were assigned at birth.

    Opinion alerts: Get columns from your favorite columnists + expert analysis on top issues, delivered straight to your device through the USA TODAY app. Don’t have the app? Download it for free from your app store.

    According to The Sunday Times Rich List 2024, Rowling is worth £945 million – the equivalent of more than $1.23 billion. She has so much money that she could live a life of seclusion for the rest of her days, or at least enough money that she doesn’t need to be bothered by what is happening politically.

    Instead, she is using her massive platform and hordes of wealth to put down vulnerable communities. In the process, she has soiled her reputation and harmed people who were once fans of hers.

    Imagine being so hateful that you relish in it.

    I wish Rowling and other billionaires would use their money and time to advocate for the betterment of society instead of villainizing people who have done nothing wrong. But maybe I’m more imaginative than she is.

    Follow USA TODAY columnist Sara Pequeño on X, formerly Twitter: @sara__pequeno

  • Host, time, how to watch Jon Hamm

    Host, time, how to watch Jon Hamm

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    “Saturday Night Live” is set to air the 18th episode of Season 50 this weekend, with its host making his fourth appearance on the iconic late-night show.

    This Saturday’s episode will be hosted by Jon Hamm, according to NBC. The actor will return to the late-night comedy show for the fourth time.

    Hamm will be joined by Lizzo as the night’s musical guest. Hamm made his debut on SNL in 2008. This is also Lizzo’s fourth appearance on the show, with the singer making her debut in late 2019.

    Here’s what to know about the Saturday, April 12 show, including what time it airs and where to watch.

    How to watch ‘SNL’ on April 12

    The April 12 “SNL” episode will be available to watch live on NBC at 11:30 p.m. ET/8:30 p.m. PT.

    Viewers can also stream it the next day on Peacock.

    Who is the ‘SNL’ musical guest on April 12?

    Lizzo is the April 12 musical guest.

    Her performance comes at the heels of the release of “Still Bad,” the newest single from her upcoming album, “Love in Real Life.”

    Who’s in the Season 50 ‘SNL’ cast?

    James Austin Johnson reprised his role as President Donald Trump. Bowen Yang has played the role of Vice President JD Vance.

    Former cast member Maya Rudolph played the role of Vice President Kamala Harris in the lead-up to the November presidential election.

    Season 50 returning cast members include:

    • Michael Che
    • Mikey Day
    • Andrew Dismukes
    • Chloe Fineman
    • Heidi Gardner
    • Marcello Hernández
    • James Austin Johnson
    • Colin Jost
    • Michael Longfellow
    • Ego Nwodim
    • Ashley Padilla
    • Sarah Sherman
    • Kenan Thompson
    • Devon Walker
    • Emil Wakim
    • Jane Wickline
    • Bowen Yang

    New cast members this season are:

    • Ashley Padilla
    • Emil Wakim
    • Jane Wickline

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

    Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.

  • Bill Maher’s monologue on Donald Trump meeting: Full transcript

    Bill Maher’s monologue on Donald Trump meeting: Full transcript

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    In the opening monologue for the April 11 episode of “Real Time with Bill Maher,” Maher gave a highly anticipated report on how his dinner with Pres. Donald Trump at the White House went.

    “What I’m gonna do is report exactly what happened. You decide what you think about it,” the longtime host told his audience.

    Maher conceded the Trump he met on March 31 was different from the persona he sees on TV. But he also acknowledged, “It doesn’t matter who he is at a private dinner with a comedian; it matters who he is on the world stage.”

    He later added, “Why can’t we get the guy I met to be the public guy?”

    Though the meeting, which was also attended by Kid Rock and UFC CEO Dana White, went well, Maher maintained he will continue to hold the Trump administration to account in his political commentary.

    Read on for a transcript of Maher’s monologue.

    Watch Bill Maher’s full monologue about his Trump meeting

    Bill Maher discusses dinner with Donald Trump: full transcript

    For what I know you’ve all been waiting for, I’d like to give you my book report on my visit to the White House. As you know, 12 days ago, I had dinner with President Trump —  a dinner that was set up by my friend Kid Rock, because we share a belief that there’s got to be something better than hurling insults from 3,000 miles away.

    And let me first say that to all the people who treated this like it was some kind of summit meeting, you are ridiculous. Like I was going to sign a treaty or something. I have no power. I’m a … comedian and he’s the most powerful leader in the world. I’m not the leader of anything, except maybe a contingent of centrist-minded people who think there’s got to be a better way of running this country than hating each other every minute.

    OK, so meet up in person, maybe it’ll be different. Spoiler alert, it was. First good sign, before I left for the capital, I had my staff collect and print out this list of almost 60 different insulting epithets that the president said about me. Things like: stupid, dummy, low-life dummy, sleazebag, sick, sad, stone-cold crazy. Really a dumb guy, fired like a dog, his show is dead.

    I brought this to the White House because I wanted him to sign it, which he did. Which he did, with good humor, and I know as I say that, millions of liberal sphincters just tightened. Oh my god, Bill, are you gonna say something nice about him? What I’m gonna do is report exactly what happened. You decide what you think about it. And if that’s not enough pure Trump hate for you, I don’t give a (expletive).

    So no, I didn’t go MAGA. And to the president’s credit, there was no pressure to. After we left the Oval Office, he showed me the little room off the office, you know, the one where Clinton used to … the (expletive) room, OK? Well, not anymore. That’s where they keep the merch now.

    And he gave me a bunch of hats, but he didn’t ask me to take a picture in one, which I appreciated. The guy I met is not the person who the night before the dinner … tweeted a bunch of nasty crap about how he thought this dinner was a bad idea and what a deranged (expletive) I was. I read it and thought, oh, what a lovely way to welcome someone to your house.

    But when I got there, that guy wasn’t living there. Now, does Trump want respect? Of course, who doesn’t? My friend said to me, what are you going to wear to the White House? I said, I don’t know, but I’m not going to dress like Zelenskyy, I’ll tell you that. Just for starters, he laughs! I’ve never seen him laugh in public. But he does, including at himself. And it’s not fake. Believe me, as a comedian of 40 years, I know a fake laugh when I hear it. And I thank you for them.

    Example: In the Oval Office he was showing me the portraits of presidents and he pointed to Reagan and said in all seriousness, ‘You know the best thing about him? His hair.’ I said, ‘Well, there was also that whole bringing down Communism thing.’ (I was) waiting for the button next to the Diet Coke button to get pushed and I go through the trap door. But no, he laughed; he got it.

    I said to him at one point, ‘Mr. President, you know, the dog. That’s unusual in the White House.’ He said, ‘Well, a lot of the presidents, they had a dog for political reasons.’ I said, ‘No, people love dogs! That’s what that is.’ (Trump said)  ‘Oh yeah, OK, that true.’ I’m telling you, it happened!

    At one point we were walking through his amazing —  it is an amazing tour of the whole house. And I don’t remember exactly what we were talking about but it must have been something with the 2020 election because I know he used the word ‘lost’, and I distinctly remember saying, ‘Wow, I never thought I’d hear you say that.’ He didn’t get mad. He’s much more self-aware than he lets on in public.

    Look, I get it. It doesn’t matter who he is at a private dinner with a comedian; it matters who he is on the world stage. I’m just taking it as a positive that this person exists, because everything I’ve ever not liked about him was, I swear to God, absent, at least on this night with this guy. Bob — Kid Rock —told me the night before, he said, ‘If you want to get a word in edgewise, you’re going to have to cut him off, (or) he’ll just go on.’ Not at all.

    I’ve had so many conversations with prominent people who are much less connected, people who don’t look you in the eye, people who really don’t listen because they just want to get to their next thing, people whose response to things you say just doesn’t track. Like, what? None of that with him. And he mostly steered the conversations: ‘So what do you think about this?’ I know. Your mind is blown. So is mine.

    There were so many moments when I hit him with a joke or contradicted something and no problem. At dinner, he was asking me about the nuclear situation in Iran in a very genuine, ‘Hey, I think you’re a smart guy. I want your opinion’ sort of way. And I said, ‘Well, obviously you’re privy to things about it (that) I’m not, but for what it’s worth, I thought the Obama deal was worth letting play out because we made Iran destroy 98% of the uranium, and they were 15 years away from a bomb.’

    And then I said to him, ‘Well, we got rid of that. You got rid of that.’ He didn’t get mad or call me a left-wing lunatic. He took it in. I told him I thought parts of his plan for Gaza were wacky but that I had supported him in the idea that Gaza could be Dubai instead of hell. I told him he was wrong when he tweeted the night before that I was critical of all things Trump. Not true —  check the tapes.

    Moving Israel’s embassy to Jerusalem? Loved it. The border did need to be controlled. I’m glad the cops are getting their morale back. DEI had gone too far. Biological men shouldn’t be playing women’s sports. Europe should pay for their defense. And of course, it makes sense that Arab countries should take in Arab refugees, like the million Syrians who wound up in Germany when Saudi Arabia took none. He said to me, ‘You’re right, they took none.’ I said, ‘Well you should remind your boyfriend in Saudi Arabia that the next time you see him.’ He laughed.

    I never felt I had to walk on eggshells around him, and honestly? I voted for Clinton and Obama but I would never feel comfortable talking to them the way I was able to talk with Donald Trump. That’s just how it went down. Make of it what you will. Me? I feel it’s emblematic of why the Democrats are so unpopular these days. He was even OK when I checked him on the orangutan lawsuit. He was. I know.

    He said to Dana White, you know, ‘Bill said my father was an orangutan, and I said, I really love my father.’ And I said, ‘Well, Mr. President, I did that because I didn’t like what you were doing regarding Obama’s birth origins. I thought that was low.’ Again, no anger, just a little smile, as if to say, yeah, I get it.

    The most surreal part of the whole night was when I got home. I flew back right after the dinner, and I’m in bed watching ’60 Minutes’ from the night before. And there’s Trump in one of their stories, standing at a podium in a room that looked to me like one of the rooms and places we’d just been in. And he’s ranting, ‘Disgusting, you’re a terrible person.’ And I’m like, who’s that guy? What happened to Glinda the Good Witch? And why can’t we get the guy I met to be the public guy?

    And I’m not saying it’s our responsibility to do that. It’s not. I’m just reporting exactly what I saw over two and a half hours. I went into the mine, and that’s what’s down there. A crazy person doesn’t live in the White House. A person who plays a crazy person on TV a lot lives there, which I know is (expletive) up. It’s just not as (expletive) up as I thought it was. And I have no illusions now that I’m back to work at my job that he might start a new list.

    Because I don’t have a good feeling and will be critical about a lot of what he’s doing: the trade war and disappearing people, ruling by decree, threatening judges, gutting the government with glee. But I also think he now understands I have a job to do, or at least he did on this night because he said to me early on that he’d seen our last episode, which was the Friday before this dinner And he said, ‘I thought maybe you’d be nice, but you’d hit me really hard.’ I did, because I’m not going to pull my punches that presidents get to propose a third term for themselves. He understood that, and without animus. That doesn’t mean he’s not going try to do it.

    At one point I said to him, ‘You’re scaring people. Do you really want to be scaring your own citizens so much?’ And I know now you’re all saying, and what did he say to that? Honestly, I don’t remember. But it wasn’t ‘OK, I’ll stop.’

    So MAGA fans, don’t worry, your boy gave me nothing. Just hats. Hats and a very generous amount of time and a willingness to listen and accept me as a possible friend, even though I’m not MAGA, which was the point of the dinner. My favorite part of the whole night was we were standing in the (room off the Oval Office) and he said, ‘You know I’ve heard from a lot of people who really like that we’re having this dinner. Not all, but a lot.’ And I said, ‘Same, a lot of people told me they loved it, but not all.’

    And we agreed the people who don’t even want us to talk? We don’t like you. Don’t talk as opposed to what? Writing the same editorial for the millionth time and making 25-hour speeches into the wind. Really, that’s what liberals have? He takes the piss out of everybody else, and we can hold ours?

    OK, that’s my report. You can hate me for it, but I’m not a liar. Trump was gracious and measured, and why he isn’t that in other settings, I don’t know. And I can’t answer, and it’s not my place to answer. I’m just telling you what I saw, and I wasn’t high.

    Damn, missed opportunity.

  • Bella Thorne claims Mickey Rourke bruised her while filming

    Bella Thorne claims Mickey Rourke bruised her while filming

    Former child actor Bella Thorne is calling out Hollywood veteran Mickey Rourke for alleged on-set misconduct in the wake of backlash over comments the 72-year-old actor made that some are calling homophobic.

    In X posts the 27-year-old Thorne shared on Friday, she claimed that “working with Mickey was one of the all-time worst experiences of my life working as an actress.”

    “I had to work with this man – in a scene where I’m on my knees with my hands zip-tied around my back. He’s supposed to take a metal grinder to my knee cap and instead he used it on my genitals thru my jeans. Hitting them over and over again,” Thorne wrote. “I had bruises on my pelvic bone.”

    The message was written over a screenshot of an article about former child actor-turned musician JoJo Siwa calling out Rourke’s comments, which she and producers called homophobic, toward Siwa on “Celebrity Big Brother.”

    Thorne went on to allege that she suffered from “so many gross stories of things (Rourke) made me go thru” while filming an unnamed movie. The two co-starred in the Chad Faust-directed 2020 thriller, “Girl.”

    She claimed the “Sin City” star covered her “completely in dirt” by revving a car engine “to humiliate me in front of the entire crew” and added that she allegedly went into his trailer to “convince him to show up and complete his job, as he shouted crazy demands that he wanted from the producers.”

    USA TODAY has reached out to Rourke’s representative for comment.

    Thorne had her breakout role on the Disney Channel show “Shake It Up,” in which she starred opposite Zendaya, and went on to act in 2015’s “The DUFF” and “The Babysitter” movies. She also had a successful stint on the adult platform OnlyFans.

    Thorne has been outspoken about difficulties she encountered from a young age in Hollywood. In a 2022 podcast appearance, she claimed a director declined to advance her in a casting process when she was 10 years old because he felt she was “flirting with him,” which made him “uncomfortable.”

    Also in 2022, Rourke − who earned Golden Globe and BAFTA recognition, as well as an Oscar nomination for 2008’s “The Wrestler” − revealed that his upbringing was “violent” as he experienced abuse as a teenager.

    A therapist told Rourke this made him “a scary person to deal with” in adulthood, he added. Rourke also mentioned being in therapy for more than two decades.

    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.

  • ‘No, I didn’t go MAGA’

    ‘No, I didn’t go MAGA’

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    Longtime Donald Trump critic Bill Maher is finally ready to dish on his White House dinner with the president.

    “No, I didn’t go MAGA, and to the president’s credit, there was no pressure to,” Maher said during his opening monologue on the April 11 episode of his Max late-night talk show, “Real Time with Bill Maher.”

    Maher conceded Trump is “much more self-aware than he lets on in public” but acknowledged, “It doesn’t matter who he is at a private dinner with a comedian; it matters who he is on the world stage.” He later added, “Why can’t we get the guy I met to be the public guy?”

    Though the March 31 meeting went well, Maher — who had derided the president’s tariff flip-flopping earlier in the monologue — maintained he will continue to hold the Trump administration to account.

    “I don’t have a good feeling and will be critical about a lot of what he’s doing: the trade war and disappearing people, ruling by decree, threatening judges, gutting the government with glee,” Maher said.

    He ended his report by saying, “Trump was gracious and measured, and why he isn’t that in other settings, I don’t know. And I can’t answer, and it’s not my place to answer. I’m just telling you what I saw, and I wasn’t high.”

    He quipped, “Damn, missed opportunity.”

    Viewers had been anticipating Maher’s take on the meeting since he posted on April 1 confirming it happened but “as it’s April 1 today, no one would believe what I said today anyway!”

    Everything Bill Maher said about his Trump dinenr

    Head here for the full transcript of Maher’s 13-minute monologue.

    Trump signed Bill Maher’s list of insulting epithets

    Maher also confronted the president with at least 60 “insulting epithets” that Trump has called him over the years. These were printed on a piece of paper, which Trump signed “with good humor,” Maher revealed.

    Words Trump had used to describe Maher included “stupid, dummy, low-life dummy, sleazebag, sick, sad, stone-cold crazy, really a dumb guy, fired like a dog, his show is dead,” Maher listed off the legal-sized paper.

    Trump has gone after Maher multiple times over the years, frequently targeting him in social media posts that claimed the ratings for “Real Time with Bill Maher,” now in its 23rd season, were suffering. Trump also filed a lawsuit against Maher in 2013 — then later dropped the case — after the TV host joked that Trump was “the spawn of his mother having sex with an orangutan.”

    Maher’s so-called “book report” from the White House come days after he released a Club Random podcast episode in which he stood by his past criticisms of Trump while admitting has has some admiration for the president.

    Maher said that though he has not been a fan of some of Trump’s comments and actions, he believes “Trump is one of the most effective politicians.”

    Maher admitted Trump has “political instincts” and a “connection with young people,” which he believes the Democratic party lacks.

    Kid Rock: Maher and Trump’s meeting ‘blew my mind’

    Prior to the meeting, Trump expressed doubts about how the encounter would go in a Truth Social post, saying Kid Rock suggested they confer, and “I really didn’t like the idea much, and don’t like it much now, but thought it would be interesting.”

    Country rock singer Kid Rock confirmed he was responsible for setting up the dinner, which he and UFC CEO Dana White also attended. For his part, Rock said on “Fox & Friends” that it “could not have been better. Everyone was so surprised.”

    Rock added, “It blew my mind. I was very proud.”

    “Real Time” guests on April 11 were Trump’s former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who was released from prison in October after his conviction for contempt of Congress, and controversial British media personality Piers Morgan, as well as author Josh Rogin, who is the lead global security analyst for Washington Post Intelligence.

    Multiple polls published over the last week found that less than half of Americans approved of the president, with most pointing to Trump’s handling of the economy as the reason for their gripes. The Trump administration’s aggressive and sweeping tariffs have sparked a global trade war and sunk U.S. stocks.

    On Tuesday, the Pew Research Center also released a survey that showed Americans’ attitudes toward Trump’s U.S. foreign policy moves lean more negative or uncertain.

    Contributing: Savannah Kuchar, USA TODAY

  • Bill Maher through the years, from standup to 'Real Time': PhotosCelebrities

    Bill Maher through the years, from standup to 'Real Time': PhotosCelebrities

    Bill Maher through the years, from standup to ‘Real Time’: PhotosCelebrities

  • Date, time, episode count, cast, more

    Date, time, episode count, cast, more

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    Emotionally preparing for another season of “The Last of Us” may be as daunting as prepping for the apocalypse itself.

    The hit HBO zombie sci-fi drama returns for season 2 this weekend, kicking off a seven-episode journey that will surely be filled with petrifying and heartbreaking episodes.

    The first season, which debuted in early 2023, depicts a world where the mind-controlling parasitic fungi Cordyceps takes over the human race and reshapes society at large. The story followed smuggler Joel (Pedro Pascal) who safeguards Ellie (Bella Ramsey) across the country to a hospital as she is immune from becoming “infected.”

    The series is a live-action adaption of the 2014 video game franchise of the same name. Neil Druckmann and Craig Mazin co-created the series that went on to win eight Emmy awards last year and was nominated for outstanding drama series.

    Here’s what to know about season 2.

    When does ‘The Last of Us’ season 2 come out

    “The Last of Us” season 2 premiere drops at Sunday, April 13 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on HBO.

    New episodes will release every Sunday, with the season finale dropping on Sunday, May 25.

    How to watch ‘The Last of Us’

    New episodes of “The Last of Us,” as well as all of season 1, are available to stream on Max.

    How many episodes in ‘The Last of Us’ season 2

    There will be a total of seven episodes in “The Last of Us” season 2.

    What is ‘The Last of Us’ season 2 about

    According to HBO’s logline, Season 2 takes place five years later and shows Joel and Ellie “drawn into conflict with each other and a world even more dangerous and unpredictable than the one they left behind.”

    ‘The Last of Us’ season 2 cast

    Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey return to reprise their leading roles as Joel and Ellie in “The Last of Us” season 2.

    The remaining Season 2 cast includes the following:

    • Gabriel Luna
    • Rutina Wesley
    • Kaitlyn Dever
    • Isabela Merced
    • Young Mazino
    • Ariela Barer
    • Tati Gabrielle
    • Spencer Lord
    • Danny Ramirez
    • Jeffrey Wright

    Watch the ‘The Last of Us’ Season 2 trailer

    Will there be a ‘Last of Us’ season 3?

    HBO renewed “The Last of Us” for a third season ahead of the season 2 premiere.

    It’s unclear whether season 3 will be the show’s final season. Deadline reported that Druckmann and Mazin said they were previously contemplating making up to four.

  • Video shows bird landing on Fox News’ Peter Doocy live on air

    Video shows bird landing on Fox News’ Peter Doocy live on air


    ‘The hair on the back of your head is standing up,’ ‘Fox and Friends’ host Brian Kilmeade joked after the incident involving Doocy and the bird.

    A feathered protagonist is making the rounds on social media after the bird landed on Fox News reporter Peter Doocy while he was reporting from the White House on Friday morning.

    “A bird just landed on my head!” Doocy said as he tried to avoid the bird.

    The bird made its appearance while Doocy was wrapping up a live report from the White House for Fox’s morning show “Fox and Friends.” As Doocy tried to recompose himself following the bird’s visit, hosts Ainsley Earhardt, Lawrence B. Jones and Brian Kilmeade jokingly laughed at their flustered reporter.

    “I did not like that at all,” Doocy said. “That’s probably so … dirty.”

    Kilmeade did not miss the chance to joke with Doocy, pointing out that his hair had been made a mess by the bird.

    “The hair on the back of your head is standing up,” Kilmeade said. “What’s going on?”

    Watch the video here

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    Watch bird land on Peter Doocy during Fox & Friends

    Cameras caught the hilarious moment when a bird landed on top of Peter Doocy’s head while reporting on recent tariff wars on the White House lawn.

    Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.

  • Fox News correspondent ducks for birdTV

    Fox News correspondent ducks for birdTV

    Fox News correspondent ducks for birdTV