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  • Crumbl’s new cookies inspired by Kardashians, Jenners: See the flavors

    Crumbl’s new cookies inspired by Kardashians, Jenners: See the flavors

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    Reality television’s most iconic family is taking over the Crumbl cookie menu this week.

    On Monday, the bakery chain that offers specialty cookies launched its Kardashian Jenner Family Crumbl cookie menu. A part of Crumbl’s Kardashian Jenner Week − April 7-12 − the cookies range from Kris’ classic yellow layer cake with chocolate icing to Khloe’s cookies and cream brownie skillet.

    “We’ve never had an entire menu takeover before, and who better to do that than the legendary ladies of the Kardashian Jenner family? Iconic family meets iconic desserts − it just makes sense,” Crumbl Co-Founder Sawyer Hemsley said in a news release.

    Here’s what to know about the Kardashian Jenner Family Crumbl cookie menu.

    What flavors are the cookies?

    • Kris’ Classic Yellow Layer Cake: Two layers of yellow cake, swirled with fudge frosting, topped with a chocolate glaze and chocolate curls

    • Kourtney’s Flourless Chocolate Cake: Gluten-free chocolate cake made with zero refined sugar, drizzled with a dark chocolate glaze and topped with raspberries

    • Kim’s Snickerdoodle Crumb Cake Cookie: Snickerdoodle cookie smothered in white chocolate chips, topped with a cinnamon streusel crunch and drizzled with white chips

    • Khloe’s Cookies & Cream Skillet Cookie: Dark chocolate brownie with cookies and cream pieces and scoops of vanilla bean cookies and cream mouse, finished with a drizzle of chocolate ganache

    • Kendall’s Cookie Dough Cupcake Cookie: Brown sugar cookie with semi-sweet chocolate chips, cookie dough-inspired buttercream, crumbled cookie pieces and topped with Crumbl Cookie Dough Bit

    • Kylie’s Pink Confetti Sugar Cookie: Vanilla sugar cookie with rainbow sprinkles and pink cake batter buttercream

    The cookies can be ordered as a six-piece set, served in a limited-edition box ($22.99), or each is available individually ($4.49-$6.48).

    How long are the cookies available?

    The Kardashian Jenner Family menu is available Monday, April 7 through Saturday, April 12.

    Where is the nearest Crumbl to you?

    To find the nearest Crumbl store near you, visit crumblcookies.com/stores.

    Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her at [email protected].

  • Jenna Ortega breaks silence on ‘Scream 7’ exit, reveals reason

    Jenna Ortega breaks silence on ‘Scream 7’ exit, reveals reason

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    Jenna Ortega has finally revealed why she’s ghosting the “Scream” franchise.

    The “Wednesday” star, 22, spoke with The Cut in an interview published Monday about why she isn’t returning for the upcoming “Scream 7” after starring in the horror franchise’s most recent two entries.

    Some previous reports indicated Ortega exited the sequel due to scheduling conflicts with “Wednesday.” But in the interview, the actress clarified this was not the case.

    “It had nothing to do with pay or scheduling,” the actress told The Cut. “The Melissa (Barrera) stuff was happening, and it was all kind of falling apart. If ‘Scream VII’ wasn’t going to be with that team of directors and those people I fell in love with, then it didn’t seem like the right move for me in my career at the time.”

    Ortega’s co-star Melissa Barrera was fired from “Scream 7” due to her social media posts about the Israel-Hamas war. Prior to Barrera’s firing, Christopher Landon was tapped to replace Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, who directed both of Ortega’s “Scream” movies, as director.

    Ortega and Barrera played sisters Tara and Sam Carpenter, respectively, beginning in the 2022 reboot “Scream,” which established them as the franchise’s new main characters. They both returned in 2023 for the sequel “Scream VI,” which became the series’ highest-grossing entry at the domestic box office.

    In between the two films, Ortega achieved a new level of fame thanks to the release of “Wednesday.”

    Barrera was initially expected to once again lead “Scream 7” before being fired in November 2023 due to social media posts supportive of Palestine that production company Spyglass Media Group alleged constituted “hate speech.” In response, Barrera said at the time, “I condemn hate and prejudice of any kind against any group of people.”

    Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter in 2024, Barrera said that she and Ortega “chatted for a while” about the situation. “I love her so much,” she told the outlet. “She’s been very supportive of me, and we’re sisters for life.”

    Some of Barrera’s other “Scream” co-stars are returning for “Scream 7,” though: Jasmin Savoy Brown and Mason Gooding are coming back to play twins Mindy and Chad. Chad, Mindy, Tara and Sam were described as the “core four” in “Scream VI,” which implied these four characters would all continue to star in future installments.

    Instead, “Scream 7” is now set to focus on the series’ original star Neve Campbell, returning as Sidney Prescott after exiting “Scream VI” due to a salary dispute. Several actors whose characters died in past “Scream” films, including Scott Foley and Matthew Lillard, are also returning by means that are not yet clear.

    “Scream 7,” set for release in 2026, also got a new director in the wake of Barrera’s firing. Kevin Williamson is now helming the sequel after Landon stepped away from the gig, which he described as a “dream job that turned into a nightmare.”

  • Jack Schlossberg internet antics continue with cryptic Usha Vance post

    Jack Schlossberg internet antics continue with cryptic Usha Vance post

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    If self-generated scandal is the internet’s most valuable currency, Jack Schlossberg is continuing to grow his wealth.

    Schlossberg, the grandson of former President John F. Kennedy, has become a buzzy, if not enigmatic mouthpiece for a younger generation of Democrats in recent years. On Sunday, he only added to that lore by posting on X that he was having a baby with Vice President JD Vance’s wife Usha Vance.

    “I’m having a son !! So excited about this,” Schlossberg, 32, wrote in a post on Sunday. “Cannot wait for the birth of my next child because today was the best day of my life. Out of wedlock, yes. But we might get married.”

    The cryptic pronouncement was followed up with a post to his Instagram showing his face photoshopped over a child being held by Usha Vance.

    “Little Jason and his mom,” Schlossberg wrote. “You never feel like you’re ready to be a parent. Until one day, you become one.”

    USA TODAY has reached out to both Schlossberg and Vance’s reps for comment.

    Among the youngest branches in the storied Kennedy family tree, Schlossberg represents just one part of the political dynasty’s return to public life. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the son of former Attorney General Robert “Bobby” Kennedy, is currently serving as secretary of Health and Human Services in the second Trump administration. His position on the other side of the aisle has surprised some for whom the Kennedy name has become synonymous with the Democratic establishment.

    Schlossberg, the son of JFK’s daughter Caroline Kennedy and designer Edwin Schlossberg, is keeping that tradition alive on the other hand.

    An up-and-coming journalist, his work has appeared in New York Magazine and the Washington Post, and in 2024 he was hired as a political correspondent for Vogue.

    His head-cocking approach to social media is intentional, he previously told MSNBC’s Jen Psaki, who asked him about a social media post in which he once again referenced Vance, asking followers if she was hotter than his grandmother Jackie Kennedy.

    “The internet is a place where it’s difficult to break through,” he told Psaki. “Especially if you’re not saying something that’s controversial or at least somehow unexpected.

    “Democrats play that game not as well as we could,” he continued, “I use my judgment to make posts that I think are funny or silly but have a purpose … flipping people out and getting a reaction is almost half the battle.”

    “It’s very important to switch it up and to take risks because I think that’s not only entertaining for me myself as I laugh and post it on my phone but also a good way to signal to people that you’re willing to either fight for them or speak your own mind − if you’re willing to say something that other people might not get or you know might engender a reaction that some people don’t like,” he said.

    Asked if he cared that many of the posts, like one in which he claimed to be actor Justin Baldoni’s lawyer, involve lying, Schlossberg said he didn’t care. Referencing the fast pace of the news cycle and what he perceives as the gullibility of news consumers, he explained that the “game” he’s playing is about pointing out the flaws in the information ecosystem.

    “I can’t help but laugh that people believe something so stupid,” he said.

  • Hugh Grant speaks out about ‘creepy’ experience at airport with kids

    Hugh Grant speaks out about ‘creepy’ experience at airport with kids

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    Hugh Grant is speaking out about a “creepy” travel experience.

    The “Notting Hill” star, 64, took to X to criticize an immigration officer at Heathrow Airport in London, whom he said asked his children to confirm whether he and his wife were their parents.

    “Just came through Heathrow with wife and children,” Grant wrote. “We all have the same last name (Grant) on our passports. Immigration officer engages my children in chit chat then whispers to them ‘Are these your Mum and Dad?’”

    The actor described this encounter as “intrusive, insulting and creepy.”

    In response to an inquiry from USA TODAY, a representative for Heathrow Airport noted that immigration matters are handled by Border Force officers, who are employed by the U.K.’s Home Office and are not Heathrow staff.

    According to a British government website, officers with the Border Force agency “will seek to establish the relationship between children and the adults who are accompanying them or who are meeting them on arrival” in the U.K.

    “If you are travelling with a child (under 18) and are not the child’s parent, or may appear not to be the parent (for example, if you have a different family name), we may ask you a few questions to establish your relationship with the child,” the page notes. “We will always do this as quickly as possible and in a way which is sensitive to the interests of the child and the adult involved.”

    Grant has been married to Anna Eberstein since 2018, and they have three children together: John, 12; Lulu, 9; and Blue, 7. Grant also shares two kids with Tinglan Hong: Tabitha and Felix.

    Speaking to Radio Times in 2020, Grant described fatherhood as “damned nice.”

    “Anyone with young children would probably agree that it’s simultaneously the worst time in your life and the best,” he said. “On a day-to-day basis, as you tread on another broken toy with a hangover, it’s just awful. But when you look back at the photographs on your iPhone, you realise, ‘Oh, I have been extremely happy. This is very nice.’”

  • Zombie show loses the plot

    Zombie show loses the plot

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    The beauty and the horror hasn’t worn off yet in HBO’s “The Last of Us” as it returns for a long-awaited second season. It’s gory and gorgeous, viciously violent and vividly brought to life. It is the prestigious, mature series fans loved in Season 1. But it also feels like there’s something missing this time around.

    The critically acclaimed and Emmy-nominated series starring Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey has a lot to live up to in its sophomore year. “Last of Us” is credited with reviving the zombie genre, has become the definitive example of a successful video-game-to-Hollywood adaptation (it’s based on the popular 2013 game) and helped make Pascal a household name and universally beloved father figure to a generation of fans.

    Producers Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann deliver a laudable and epic Season 2 of “Us” (Sundays, 9 ET/PT, on HBO and Max, ★★½ out of four). The acting is still impeccable, particularly from leads Pascal and Ramsey, the world is yet again meticulously rendered and the pacing and excitement is unparalleled.

    But it’s hard not to finish the seven-episode season without feeling somewhat dissatisfied, an itching in the back of your mind that there is something missing. The new season saves big reveals and explanations for potential future installments at the expense of what fans are watching now. By the finale, which ends with a major cliffhanger, you’re left wanting more, but not necessarily more new episodes; you’ll wish the episodes you just watched had more meat on their bones.

    Season 2’s premiere picks up right after the final moments of Season 1, when weary smuggler Joel (Pascal) has “rescued” his surrogate daughter Ellie (Ramsey) from a group that wanted to kill and dissect her to manufacture a cure to the fungal-based zombie virus that ended the world. (Ellie is uniquely immune to the infection). Joel killed everyone in his path to save Ellie, a grisly fact that he hides from her. But his rampage has immediate consequences as we see the poor kids who remain from the organization bury their comrades and vow revenge on Joel, hilariously described as “in his 50s and handsome.”

    The series then jumps five years into the future, when the pair have made a home in the relative safety of a Wyoming walled community. Though their relationship is tense and fraught, Ellie has best friend/crush Dina (Isabel Merced) to keep her company, and Joel is in therapy with the only shrink left, played with drunk wit by the ever-wonderful Catherine O’Hara.

    After a series of events and catastrophes I won’t spoil, their safe world is turned upside down, and our heroes are drawn to the ruins of Seattle, where a militia and a cult are in the midst of a bloody war.

    That is a frustratingly vague description, but the best moments of the season rely on shock and awe, and it would be criminal to rob viewers the chance to experience that. The first three episodes are propulsive and arresting, full of the lightning and spark that was apparent throughout Season 1.

    But then “Us” begins to lose its way. The season introduces big stars in new roles, including Kaitlyn Dever as vengeful antagonist Abby and Jeffrey Wright as Isaac, the militia general, but fails to develop them over the episodes beyond a few cursory scenes. It feels like a huge waste of major talent.

    Season 1 was a collection of linked but self-contained episodes, but Season 2 has one major story thread stretched over the seven installments. That’s not inherently a bad choice, but in this instance the overarching story feels both overlong and underwhelming as tiny pieces of the narrative are introduced without being fully explained. The militia/cult war is utterly devoid of emotion or stakes, but the fight dominates much of the season’s second half.

    If you have played the games, the structure makes a bit more sense, based on what my friends with better hand-eye coordination have told me. It seems as though all might be explained in future seasons, particularly the fleshing out of Abby and Isaac’s characters and backstories. But just as HBO’s “Game of Thrones” did not require summer reading to understand it, “Us” has to stand on its own as a TV show without requiring viewers to buy a PlayStation. The intentionally half-baked approach to Season 2 foreshadows an overstuffed and potentially controversial third season, the emotional effect of which will be dulled by the likely long hiatus (Season 1 premiered in January 2023).

    I may have judged a lesser show more kindly for pitfalls like this. And indeed, there are few of its peers with the ambition to create art on this scale. But “Us” doesn’t just deserve an A for effort, and because it’s got the biggest budget and handsomest stars around. We should demand more from the art we consume, challenge back as much as we are challenged as viewers.

    I want big scary zombies, bloody good violence, well-drawn characters and thoughtful plotting, all at the same time. So I’ll wait for a potential (inevitable?) third “Us” season, and hope I get that again.

  • 'White Lotus': See Season 3 finale in photosTV

    'White Lotus': See Season 3 finale in photosTV

    ‘White Lotus’: See Season 3 finale in photosTV

  • Clem Burke dead: Blondie drummer was 70

    Clem Burke dead: Blondie drummer was 70

    Clem Burke, a renowned percussionist best known for his role as the drummer for New Wave sensation Blondie, has died, a rep for the band confirmed. He was 70.

    “It is with profound sadness that we relay news of the passing of our beloved friend and bandmate Clem Burke following a private battle with cancer,” the group wrote in a statement posted to their Instagram Monday. The type of cancer was not specified.

    “Clem was not just a drummer; he was the heartbeat of Blondie,” the statement continued. “His talent, energy, and passion for music were unmatched, and his contributions to our sound and success are immeasurable.

    “Beyond his musicianship, Clem was a source of inspiration both on and off the stage,” the band wrote. “His vibrant spirit, infectious enthusiasm and rock solid work ethic touched everyone who had the privilege of knowing him.”

    Recruited by lead vocalist Debbie Harry and songwriter Chris Stein, Burke joined Blondie in the mid-1970s, helping to pave their path to success and banging out drums on some of the biggest punk and New Wave hits of the late-’70s and early ’80s, including “One Way or Another,” “Heart of Glass” and the band’s smash from the “American Gigolo” soundtrack, “Call Me.”

    When the group disbanded less than a decade later, Burke’s drumming prowess landed him a healthy career band-hopping as a guest percussionist with groups like the Romantics and the Ramones. Calling himself a “Rock & Roll survivalist,” according to the band’s Instagram statement, Burke took his talent from one high-profile collaboration to the next, teaming up with everyone from the Eurythmics to Bob Dylan to Iggy Pop.

    “His influence and contributions have spanned decades and genres, leaving an indelible mark on every project he was a part of,” Blondie’s statement reads.

    Burke also worked with Bob Geldof, Joan Jett, Chequered Past, The Fleshtones, Dramarama, The Adult Net, The Split Squad, The International Swingers, L.A.M.F., Empty Hearts, Slinky Vagabond and the Go-Go’s.

    His most famed work remained with Blondie, however, and he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame alongside other members of the group in 2006 alongside other original members of the band.

    “We extend our deepest condolences to Clem’s family, friends, and fans around the world,” the group finished their statement, “His legacy will live on through the tremendous amount of music he created and the countless lives he touched. As we navigate this profound loss, we ask for privacy during this difficult time. Godspeed, Dr. Burke.”

  • ‘The White Lotus’ finale: Cast reacts

    ‘The White Lotus’ finale: Cast reacts

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    Spoiler alert: This story includes details of “The White Lotus” season finale.

    WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif. − If the third-season finale of HBO’s “The White Lotus” seemed sad, the actors who spent seven months playing them in Thailand would likely agree.

    The April 6 finale (streaming now on Max) featured five deaths, four more than in each of the past two seasons. One of them was Chelsea (Aimee Lou Wood), the toothy girlfriend of Rick (Walton Goggins), who perished from a gunshot fired by a newly emboldened Gaitok (Tayme Thapthimthong), the Thailand resort’s security guard.At a panel following a finale watch party here, Wood was teary, taking sips of water. “It looked exactly how it felt,” she said of filming the finale. “There’s a lot in that episode that makes me … sob.”

    As Thapthimthong spoke about Gaitok’s decision to shoot (urged by Sritala, the resort owner), Wood interjected: “He’s a lover, not a fighter!” to cheers from the assembled crowd at the Four Seasons Hotel, the swanky chain whose properties hosted all three seasons of the hit HBO comedy murder mystery. Wood, 31, called the finale “very, very moving,” and despite the tragedy, “there was a lot of hope in it, and there was a lot of softness,” she said. “I found it incredibly uncynical, but especially for ‘The White Lotus.’

    “Obviously, being the one that dies, this whole time, I’ve been like, so sad,” she said, adding that initially she was upset that creator/writer/director Mike White offed Chelsea, the season’s beacon of positivity.

    “Mike kills hope! Because Chelsea is hope, and he kills her,” she thought. But after watching the entire 90-minute finale Sunday, she changed her mind: “What I saw just then was like, there was so much love in it!”

    How might Chelsea’s vacation pal Chloe (Charlotte Le Bon), the partner of sketchy Greg/Gary (Jon Gries), have reacted to the death? Though we never saw it, Le Bon theorized “she cried really, really hard for maybe five minutes. And then she decided to numb herself” with alcohol and sex, “because that’s what she does.””That’s my girl!,” Gries responded, which sparked laughter in the roomAnd what about Piper Ratliff (Sarah Catherine Hook), whose troubled family trekked from North Carolina to indulge her secret wish to join a Buddhist monastery, only to change her mind as her mom Victoria (Parker Posey) predicted? “I guess she is her mother’s daughter,” Hook said. “I guess she also needs a lorazepam right now. … I couldn’t be happier for her.”

  • 'A Minecraft Movie' has biggest opening ever for video game filmMovies

    ‘A Minecraft Movie’ has biggest opening ever for video game filmMovies

  • Beyoncé hair products now at Ulta, ‘Cécred Sundays’ coming soon

    Beyoncé hair products now at Ulta, ‘Cécred Sundays’ coming soon

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    • Beyoncé’s Cécred hair care line is now available at Ulta Beauty stores nationwide.
    • Seven thousand stylists at Ulta Beauty salons will be trained to offer Cécred hair services.
    • A “Cécred Sunday” event will be held weekly at select Ulta Beauty salons starting May 18.

    Beyoncé’s Cécred hair care products are now available at Ulta Beauty stores nationwide, and fans can also look forward to a new, weekly salon experience in-store.

    Fans can now shop Beyoncé’s entire Cécred collection at Ulta Beauty retail stores and online. Some of the products include Cécred’s hydrating shampoo and conditioner, its fermented rice and rose protein ritual, and restoring hair and edge drops, which fans have been raving about online.

    Additionally, 7,000 stylists across all 1,400+ locations will be trained on all things Cécred and will begin to offer hair services, including a scalp revival, protein treatment and hydration treatment at The Salon located inside the Ulta Beauty stores.

    Beginning May 18, fans will also have the opportunity to experience a true “Cécred Sunday” during a weekly salon event that will take place at 200 Ulta Beauty locations and feature exclusive services. Of course, Beyoncé has showed off her own wash day routine, and it seems the brand is bringing the same energy to Cécred Sunday. Each customer will also receive a mini Temple Oud candle with the hair services.

    The beauty brand announced it would be expanding into retail stores as it celebrated its first year in business in February. Beyoncé first released her Cécred hair care line Feb. 20, 2024, and it has become a celebration of all hair types and textures.

    She first teased the new business venture in May 2023 on Instagram while opening up about the impact of growing up in her mom’s hair salon.

    “I saw firsthand how the ways we nurture and celebrate hair can directly impact our souls,” Beyoncé wrote. “I watched her heal and be of service to so many women. Having learned so much on my hair journey, I’ve always dreamed of carrying on her legacy.”

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