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  • Is the Diddy trial televised? Livestreamed? Live updates on jury pool

    Is the Diddy trial televised? Livestreamed? Live updates on jury pool

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    Jury selection in Sean “Diddy” Combs’ ongoing sex-crimes trial enters a homestretch after nearly 40 potential jurors were selected.

    Prosecutors and attorneys for the embattled hip-hop mogul, 55, reconvened in Manhattan court on May 7 to continue their interviews of prospective jurors in the high-profile legal proceeding. Jurors have been questioned one by one by Judge Arun Subramanian, the prosecution and the defense to determine their qualifications to serve.

    Lawyers previously said they planned to question as many as 150 potential jurors, with each questionnaire lasting 20-30 minutes. On May 5, Subramanian deemed 19 qualified to serve, while 16 jurors were selected on May 6. Federal prosecutors need to identify 45 qualified jurors to continue with opening statements.

    Jurors on May 6 were repeatedly asked if they, a family member, or a friend had been a victim of sexual assault, sexual harassment, or domestic violence, and whether they or a loved one had been charged or accused of such crimes.

    During his final pretrial hearing on May 2, Combs confirmed he turned down a potential plea deal in the case.

    A judge previously rejected a request from the rapper’s legal team to delay the start of the trial. Combs could spend the rest of his life in prison if convicted.

    How does jury selection work in a case like this? Attorneys on both sides need to approve a group of 45 prospective jurors to ultimately select the 12 final jurors who will sit for the case alongside six alternates.

    While it looks like they could clear that 45-juror bar on April 7, prosecutors signaled the jury many be selected on April 9. They asked to perform peremptory strikes then – using a tool later in the week that allows lawyers to remove a potential juror without any cause, according to multiple reports. Lawyers don’t get unlimited strikes, and they’re not allowed in all courts.

    One person who won’t be selected for the jury: A woman who works at HBO who had moved forward in the jury selection process. Combs’ lawyers previously objected to her being included because the media company recently released a documentary titled “The Fall of Diddy.” 

    The judge had denied the request because the potential juror didn’t work on the film. But when Combs’ lawyers raised the request again, the judge agreed after prosecutors consented.

    The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings.

    USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom.

    By the end of court proceedings on May 6, 39 prospective jurors had faced questions, with 16 moving forward in the process, including 10 men and six women.

    Their ages ranged from 38 to 87, and their occupations included an American Airlines pilot, social worker, kitchen designer, physician assistant and more. Three mentioned liking hip-hop music. Some in the group said they get news from The New York Times and NBC, while others cited YouTube and other social media platforms.

    One of the jurors who faced the longest questioning on May 6 was a man who told the court he had multiple run-ins with police in his early teens and twenties, including what he described as stop-and-frisk incidents and one instance of assaulting a police officer.

    Although prosecutors said the man could struggle to be unbiased after negative experiences with police, Combs’ defense argued he has grown and changed, including the man’s current employment at New York’s transit department. The judge ruled that he could move forward.

    Another man, a pilot for American Airlines, said he was worried about being biased against Combs due to details he had previously heard about allegations against the rapper.

    Combs’ team took issue with the comment, but the judge hit back that jurors knowing about Combs’ celebrity and seeing previous media coverage of his charges is simply part of a case this prominent.

    One potential juror was dismissed on May 6 after sharing that he was arrested seven years ago for possession of marijuana. “If I asked you not to use marijuana during the trial, would that be hard for you?” Subramanian asked.

    The man responded that it would be a difficult request for the case, and the last time he used marijuana was the previous night. After the man was dismissed and left the proceedings, Combs’ defense joked in the courtroom that jurors shouldn’t use marijuana during the trial.

    Another potential juror was dismissed after revealing he had read a USA TODAY article about the selection process on May 5. Saying he knew he shouldn’t have clicked the link, he admitted he did anyway and spent a few minutes reading. Prosecutors argued the decision showed an inability to follow instructions.

    Nicole Westmoreland of Westmoreland Law LLC is the latest lawyer to join Combs’ legal team after filing a notice of attorney appearance with the court on May 6. 

    Combs’ defense team was already led by attorneys Marc Agnifilo and Teny Geragos. Both are founding partners at Agnifilo Intrater. Geragos is “particularly experienced in defending and investigating allegations of sexual misconduct,” according to the firm’s website.

    Brian Steel, who represented Young Thug in the rapper’s RICO trial, is also working with Combs, as are attorneys Alexandra Shapiro, Xavier R. Donaldson, Anna Maria Estevao and Jason Driscoll.

    Combs will argue at his sex trafficking trial that women who took part in his elaborate sex parties did so willingly, but his lawyers will face an uphill battle trying to undermine the credibility of accusers who say the hip-hop mogul forced them to participate.

    Prosecutors with the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s office say that for two decades, he used his business empire to lure women into his orbit with promises of romantic relationships or financial support and then used violence and threats to obligate them to take part in days-long, drug-fueled sexual performances known as “Freak Offs” with male sex workers.

    “The defense has quite the uphill battle ahead,” said Heather Cucolo, a New York Law School professor. “There was a clear power dynamic, and that power dynamic is going to be a main focus and a main issue here.”

    Lawyers for Combs have said prosecutors are improperly trying to criminalize a consensual “swingers” lifestyle in which he and his longtime girlfriends sometimes brought a third person into their relationships.

    Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling suit that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry.

    He was arrested in September and has been charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all five counts.

    His indictment emerged alongside dozens of separate civil suits suggesting a pattern of abusive behavior and exploitation spanning decades, including accusations of rape, sexual assault and physical violence.

    How long will Diddy’s trial be?

    Assuming all parties can agree on 45 jurors by the end of the May 7 session, the prosecution and defense will spend May 8-9 preparing for opening statements, which begin May 12.

    Is Diddy in jail?

    Despite repeated attempts at bail, Combs was ordered to remain in custody at the Special Housing Unit in Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center ahead of trial — a ruling his legal team has challenged in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. He’s been jailed since his arrest on Sept. 16, 2024. 

    Contributing: Patrick Ryan and Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY

  • Angourie Rice and mom pen debut romance novel ‘Stuck Up & Stupid’

    Angourie Rice and mom pen debut romance novel ‘Stuck Up & Stupid’

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    NEW YORK – Angourie Rice is in the business of breathing new life into classics. 

    You’ve seen the actor as Betty Brant in the latest Tom Holland “Spider-Man” movies and as Cady Heron in 2024’s musical remake of “Mean Girls.” Now, she’s adding author to her repertoire with “Stuck Up & Stupid” (out now from Candlewick Press), a YA retelling of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” she wrote with her mother, the playwright Kate Rice. 

    In a sit-down interview just ahead of Mother’s Day, Angourie and Kate tell USA TODAY what it was like to “meet each other as artists” after a lifetime of being mother and daughter. Angourie says she’s excited for fans to see a more personal side, especially because the book is set in two places close to her heart –  her native Australia and adopted Los Angeles. 

    “This is sort of a piece of my home that we’ve put in the book and that we’re sharing with people,” Angourie says. “That’s scary and vulnerable, but it’s also exciting because it’s something that has really defined who I am and the place that we describe in the book is so special and unique, but also I think universal.”

    The ultimate mother-daughter project: How Kate and Angourie Rice wrote a novel together

    “Pride and Prejudice” is well embedded in the fabric of the Rice family – Angourie recalled fond memories of Kate reading it aloud to her as a kid. Kate herself had always considered writing about the next generation of Bennet family members. Then, when Angourie asked Kate if she’d write her a modern-day retelling (perks of having a writer mom), Kate suggested they do it together. 

    After outlining the novel alongside Austen’s original, they wrote the first few chapters by hand while on vacation on the beach. They took turns writing and reading what the other had written. They kept a strict rule with editing in those early drafts – only add, don’t remove. 

    “As a writer, you get very critical of yourself and I didn’t want us to bring that criticism to each other’s work,” Kate says. “I wanted just to make sure that it was a very supportive way of writing together because it’s bad enough when you’re writing and you have your own voice in your head going, that’s terrible.”

    “It’s also very improv,” Angourie adds. “Like ‘yes and.’”

    Some find sharing their writing to be a vulnerable experience at first, but Angourie says that wasn’t the case with “Stuck Up & Stupid.” Kate has already seen her through “the most embarrassing moments” of her life, she says.

    “When I think about working together, I think about how great it is to have something beyond our relationship as mother and daughter,” Angourie says. “It’s coming together to create this thing as two creative people who are being creative and who tell stories. And that’s really cool to sort of, I guess, meet each other as artists.” 

    ‘Stuck Up & Stupid’ brings ‘Pride and Prejudice’ to the 21st century

    “Stuck Up & Stupid” keeps the essential elements of “Pride & Prejudice” with some key modern-day upgrades – no daughters shipped off into marriage here. Mr. Collins isn’t trying to wed his cousin to keep the family fortune close. The Mr. Darcy and Bingley characters are celebrities rather than wealthy Englishmen. 

    “Why retell this?” was the question in both Kate and Angourie’s minds as they wrote. Ultimately, it was a task of examining what universal themes survive and which deserve a fresh spin. 

    “There are some scenes in there that just could have happened yesterday, could have happened today,” Kate says.

    “I remember feeling so intensely the anxiety and hurt of the characters,” Angourie adds. “It didn’t at all feel far away to me. It didn’t feel like these characters were created 200 years ago.”

    The original “Pride and Prejudice” has a lot to say about women’s inferior standing in 19th-century society. From Charlotte’s spinster monologue to Lydia’s scandalized elopement and the general pressure of Elizabeth and her sisters to marry off hastily, there’s a lot that needed a facelift. “Stuck Up & Stupid” is instead billed as a novel for “a generation of teens who are definitely NOT looking for love.” It also gives more color to the mother character, as Mrs. Bennett is traditionally depicted as a derisive woman whose only goal is to get her daughters married. 

    “For us, it was also about exploring the mother and daughter relationship a bit more and really trying to give that character a chance to grow,” Angourie says. 

    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]

  • Smokey Robinson accused by former housekeepers of sexual assaultEntertainment

    Smokey Robinson accused by former housekeepers of sexual assaultEntertainment

  • Angourie Rice, playwright mom reflect on writing process, inspirationBooks

    Angourie Rice, playwright mom reflect on writing process, inspirationBooks

    Angourie Rice, playwright mom reflect on writing process, inspirationBooks

  • Misty Copeland shares secret to confidence, self-care essentials

    Misty Copeland shares secret to confidence, self-care essentials

    In USA TODAY’s The Essentials, celebrities share what fuels their lives, whether it’s at home, on set, or on the road.

    Misty Copeland is paying it forward – both on and off the dance floor. 

    The American Ballet Theatre principal dancer, still dancing but now at a new stage of her career as a mom, foundation owner and mentor, is sharing her advice for teens in a new book.

    “Letters to Misty” (out now from Simon & Schuster) compiles fan notes the ballerina has received over her decades-long career. As the first Black woman to become a principal dancer at the ABT, Copeland has long inspired young performers, especially dancers of color. She shares with USA TODAY the best tips she’s learned for self-care and confidence. 

    Prince gave Misty Copeland key advice for confidence

    In “Letters to Misty,” Copeland, 42, teaches teens that confidence is something you have to practice.  

    “It’s working a muscle, it’s putting in the reps and having a support system around you,” Copeland says. “The ballet mistresses or the coaches or the teachers around you are there to help and guide you, but it’s up to you to be consistent.”

    As a young dancer, she was often the only Black girl in the room. Throughout her several collaborations with Prince, she said the “Purple Rain” singer gave her advice she’ll never forget: Uniqueness and individuality are strengths. 

    “I was coming from this place of fear and wanting to shrink myself in order to fit in and he was like ‘What are you talking about? There’s so much power in being the only one out there,’” she says. “‘You’re holding your attention – now what are you going to do with the opportunity?’”

    Mentors are an essential part of Misty Copeland’s journey

    A support squad is also crucial to building confidence, Copeland says. Her local childhood Boys and Girls Club (where she took her first ballet class) helped her establish healthy mentor figures from a young age. Her first ballet teacher was a key role model. 

    She also looks up to fellow dancers Alicia Graf Mack, Raven Wilkinson (who Copeland’s 2022 book “The Wind at My Back” is about), Lauren Anderson, actress Victoria Rowell and producer Susan Fales-Hill. 

    “Throughout my career, so many incredible women, and specifically Black women, have really been like the backbone of my success,” Copeland says. “That, naturally and organically, taught me the importance of being a mentor.”

    Misty Copeland’s favorite social media accounts help her stay ‘zen’

    In “Letters to Misty,” young readers ask Copeland about staying true to themselves in the digital age and how to navigate an often toxic social media landscape.

    “I really suggest surrounding yourself, following people that are more aligned with your own values and being able to shut it off and say ‘What’s important are the people who are actually in my life that are there for me,’” she says. 

    Her favorites include culinary icon Ina Garten, photographer Mark Seliger, art curator Thelma Golden and any of the Aman hotel properties, which make her feel “so zen just looking at them.”

    How Misty Copeland recharges: ‘A necessity and not a luxury’

    Rest is a self-care priority to Copeland, telling teens in “Letters to Misty” it’s “a necessity, not a luxury.”

    When she’s in the dance studio for eight hours a day, a day off has a leisurely start, sleeping in late and stretching. On the second day of her weekend, she’ll take a Pilates class, nap more, drink lots of fluids and eat nutritious meals. She also ices her body with her Game Ready ice machine, which keeps her blood circulating and reduces inflammation.

    You’ll also find her dabbling in some “terrible TV” and listening to Kendrick Lamar, Mariah Carey, Anita Baker or Sade.

    One of her favorite ways to unwind is to cook, especially her signature citrus salmon dish that she once made for Garten herself. Copeland broils her fish in a homemade marinade of brown sugar, orange juice, soy sauce and white wine vinegar, pairing it with sweet potato mash on the side.

    “One of my favorite things is opening the refrigerator and there’s nothing in there and you’re like, ‘How can I make something work?’ It’s this creative challenge,” Copeland says.

    Journaling is also a key part of her routine and has been since she was young. She often journals when she’s on the road or in hotel rooms and saves every finished notebook to look back on later.

    “It’s such a healthy way to process things and also to document,” she says.

    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].

  • Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ tour causes surge in hotel prices

    Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ tour causes surge in hotel prices

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    • Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” tour is causing hotel prices to surge in tour cities.
    • A study found hotel prices increasing by up to 178% in cities like Chicago.
    • The tour has sparked increased interest in accommodations, with over 82,000 Google searches in the last month.
    • The album’s country music influence and Beyoncé’s past experiences with the genre have contributed to the tour’s impact.

    Beyoncé Knowles-Carter has launched her “Cowboy Carter” tour, and each city along the way is seeing the Beyoncé effect with the singer causing hotel prices to skyrocket.

    A new study conducted by Casino Reviews found that in the last month alone, there have been 82,590 Google searches for “Beyoncé tour accommodation.” And this interest is having an impact, causing hotel prices to skyrocket by up to 178% for cities along Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter and Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit Tour.

    According to researchers who looked at accommodations on booking.com, fans can expect to pay up to $221 more for every mile closer a hotel is to the respective tour venues.

    The study found that hotel prices have surged the most (178%) around Chicago’s Soldier Field stadium — Beyoncé’s next stop. This equates to fans paying an additional $523.89 compared to a typical one-night stay.

    Other cities like Beyoncé’s hometown of Houston and Las Vegas — the last stop — saw around 37.5% and 32.9% surges, respectively.

    As fans know, Beyoncé first debuted her tour at SoFi Stadium in Los Angles on April 28 with 39 songs on the set list. Her second show took place May 1 on the same stage. The groundbreaking concert proved to be spectacle of many things including fashion, different music genres and most notably country music and political commentary.

    Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., are among the U.S. cities on the nine-city tour. It will also visit two cities in Europe — London and Paris. The grand finale will take place in Las Vegas on July 26. Beyoncé is set to make history again with her scheduled tour dates, including by playing the most dates at SoFi Stadium of any artist.

    “Cowboy Carter” has been a huge catalyst for the recent spotlight on Black country artists and the genre’s roots. Prior to releasing the album, Beyoncé got candid about creating the five-year project and alluded to her 2016 performance at the CMA Awards. It was met with an icy reception.

    “This album has been over five years in the making. It was born out of an experience that I had years ago where I did not feel welcomed…and it was very clear that I wasn’t,” she wrote on Instagram. “The criticisms I faced when I first entered this genre forced me to propel past the limitations that were put on me. Act ii is a result of challenging myself and taking my time to bend and blend genres together to create this body of work.”

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

  • Photos of Karol G, boyfriend Feid making their red carpet debutCelebrities

    Photos of Karol G, boyfriend Feid making their red carpet debutCelebrities

    Photos of Karol G, boyfriend Feid making their red carpet debutCelebrities

  • Crossword Blog & Answers for May 7, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    Crossword Blog & Answers for May 7, 2025 by Sally Hoelscher

    There are spoilers ahead. You might want to solve today’s puzzle before reading further! 2BRs

    Constructor: Stella Zawistowski

    Editor: Amanda Rafkin

    What I Learned from Today’s Puzzle

    • SARI (33A: “A ___ for Ammi” (children’s book)) A SARI for Ammi is a children’s book by Mamta Nainy, illustrated by Sandhya Prabhat. This book tells of two young girls whose mother is a weaver. The girls notice that their mother is a talented SARI maker, but she never wears the SARIs she creates. The girls set out to buy a SARI for their mother, and learn about the process of creating SARIs along the way. I’m always happy to learn about a new children’s book.
    • LAMB (43A: Jalamah meat) Jalamah is a LAMB dish that originated in Asir, a province of Saudi Arabia. LAMB is cooked with fat, onions, and Arabic spices (cardamom, cinnamon, coriander, and black pepper).
    • LANA (68A: Drag queen ___ Ja’Rae) LANA Ja’Rae competed on the most recent season of RuPaul’s Drag Race, which aired from January 3 to April 18.

    Random Thoughts & Interesting Things

    • ALOO (16A: ___ paratha (potato-stuffed breakfast dish)) ALOO paratha, which is a flatbread with potato filling, is a dish in Indian, Pakistani, and Bangladeshi cuisine. This is my occasional reminder that ALOO is a South Asian term for potatoes, so when a dish in a crossword clue is described as containing potato, the answer may be ALOO.
    • BRENE BROWN (18A: Author of “Daring Greatly”) BRENÉ Brown is a research professor at the University of Houston, where she studies courage, vulnerability, shame, and empathy. She’s also an author, podcaster, and lecturer. Her 2012 book, Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead is one of six of her books that have been New York Times bestsellers. I am a fan of BRENÉ BROWN, and if you aren’t familiar with her work, I highly recommend checking it out. Daring Greatly is a good place to start, as is her Ted Talk (which I just recommended to you a few days ago).
    • EPA (22A: Org. with a Household Carbon Footprint Calculator) The Household Carbon Footprint Calculator is a tool provided by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The interactive tool allows you to estimate your carbon footprint in three areas: home energy, transportation, and waste. Tips are also provided to decrease your carbon footprint.
    • OTOE (24A: The ___ Missouria Tribe) The OTOE-Missouria Tribe has its headquarters in Red Rock, Oklahoma. The OTOE and Missouria tribes both originated in the Great Lakes region.
    • BROOKS BROTHERS (27A: Preppy clothing chain) Henry Sands BROOKS found a clothing store in Manhattan in 1818. His four sons – Elisha, Daniel, Edward, and John – eventually inherited the business, and in 1850 they changed the name from H. & D. H. BROOKS & Co. to BROOKS BROTHERS. The high-end clothing brand is especially known for its clothing for men, though it also makes clothing for women and children. Here’s a not-so-fun fact: Both President Abraham Lincoln and President John F. Kennedy were wearing BROOKS BROTHERS when they were assassinated. On a happier note, many U.S. presidents have worn BROOKS BROTHERS for their inaugurations.
    • NATO (34A: 32-country defense group, for short) The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is a military alliance established with the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty in 1949. There were 12 founding members, and there are currently 32 NATO members. The most recent country to join NATO was Sweden on March 7, 2024. Three additional countries (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, and Ukraine) have informed NATO of their desire to join the alliance.
    • WALL-E (38A: Pixar film about a trash-cleaning robot) WALL-E, the trash-collecting robot on an uninhabitable, deserted Earth in the year 2805, is the title character of Pixar’s 2008 animated movie. WALL-E stands for “Waste Allocation Load Lifter: Earth Class.” The character is voiced by Ben Burtt. It’s been a while since I’ve watched WALL-E (but I have seen it!); it might be time for a rewatch.
    • BROOKLYN BRIDGE (46A: Iconic structure across NYC’s East River) The BROOKLYN BRIDGE connects the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and BROOKLYN. When it opened in 1883, it was the longest suspension BRIDGE in the world, with a span of 1,594 feet. That record now belongs to Çanakkale 1915 Bridge in Turkey, which was a span of 6,637 feet.
    • NOAH (56A: Comedian Trevor) Trevor NOAH is a comedian, writer, and producer. From 2015-2022, he was the host of The Daily Show, a late-night talk show on Comedy Central. Trevor NOAH currently hosts a podcast called What Now? He has also hosted the Grammy Awards for the last five years.
    • IOWA (10D: State with January caucuses) Every four years, the Democrat and Republican parties hold caucuses in January (or sometimes early February). At the caucuses, voters discuss party business, and most notably, vote on their party’s candidate for president. For many years, the IOWA caucuses have been the first voting opportunity of the presidential primary season. (This was not true for the 2024 Democratic caucuses.) Living in IOWA as I do, I have participated in caucuses. I do so because I feel it’s my civic duty, but I have to admit that the process sometimes feels a bit chaotic.
    • HENS (26D: Egg-laying birds) HENS are having a crossword moment. We saw the singular word HEN in the puzzle the last two days.

    Crossword Puzzle Theme Synopsis

    • BRENE BROWN (18A: Author of “Daring Greatly”)
    • BROOKS BROTHERS (27A: Preppy clothing chain)
    • BROOKLYN BRIDGE (46A: Iconic structure across NYC’s East River)
    • BREAK BREAD (62A: Share a meal)

    2BRs: Each theme answer consists of two words that begin with the letters BR: BRENE BROWN, BROOKS BROTHERS, BROOKLYN BRIDGE, and BREAK BREAD.

    In real estate listings, 2BR is shorthand for two bedroom. Today, 2BR is reinterpreted in a fun way, and I enjoyed these 2BR phrases. I also appreciate that the 2BRs span a variety of categories: a person, a brand, a structure, and a saying. Thank you, Stella, for this bright, brilliant puzzle.

    For more on USA TODAY’s Crossword Puzzles

  • Kelly Clarkson joins star-studded audiobook cast for thriller novel

    Kelly Clarkson joins star-studded audiobook cast for thriller novel

    Kelly Clarkson and Amy Grant are partnering on a new project – but don’t get your hopes up for a duet. 

    The “Since U Been Gone” singer announced on “The Kelly Clarkson Show” May 7 that she and Grant are lending their voices to narrate the audiobook of “Caretaker,” a thriller novel written by her longtime music director Jason Halbert and his wife, Rhonda. Grant was a guest on the episode, singing “Home (Lyana’s Song),” written specially for “Caretaker.”

    The audiobook is an immersive experience, featuring a cast of actors and a score by composer Joe Trapanese, promising to add to the “eerie atmosphere.” The star-studded ensemble includes Henry Ian Cusick, Erick Avari, Brandon Engman, Charles Esten, Hayley Orrantia, Michael Shanks and Josh Robert Thompson. The audiobook is now available on R.J. Halbert’s website and will be added to major audiobook platforms this summer. 

    Kelly Clarkson to narrate ‘eerie’ thriller written by her producer

    “Caretaker” by R.J. Halbert, follows the Keane family, who move to a small town in New Hampshire seeking a fresh start. The old house they move into has a rich history, but after a series of strange coincidences and hallucinations, it’s clear there’s something lurks beneath the surface. The Keanes are left to wonder whether the house will save or destroy them. “Caretaker” is the first book in a trilogy.

    “The transformation of ‘Caretaker’ into an audiobook with such a talented and diverse cast is a dream come true,” the writing duo said in a press release. “We are eager for both new and existing fans to experience the story in this dynamic format.”

    R.J. Halbert is the pseudonym of husband and wife Rhonda and Jason Halbert. Jason has collaborated with Clarkson for more than two decades as her music director and won a Grammy for his contributions to her album “Stronger.” 

    “We’ve worked on hundreds of songs together. Doing a 3.5-minute single for you versus 5.5 hours of audio, I had no idea how much work it was going to be, but it has been a labor of passion,” Halbert told Clarkson on the show. “We have had so much fun doing it, but it’s completely different.”

    “The most nervous he has probably ever seen me in the studio is when I did my part,” Clarkson said.

    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]

  • Photos of Smokey Robinson amid sexual assault lawsuitMusic

    Photos of Smokey Robinson amid sexual assault lawsuitMusic

    Photos of Smokey Robinson amid sexual assault lawsuitMusic