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  • Duke says ‘White Lotus’ use of merch has gone ‘too far’

    Duke says ‘White Lotus’ use of merch has gone ‘too far’

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    The newest season of “White Lotus” has fans obsessed.

    Parker Posey’s over-the-top accent, a skin-crawling incest scene and a perfectly choreographed political conversation for the Trump era have enraptured viewers. But one subset has a bone to pick: Duke University administrators.

    Frank Tramble, the university’s vice president for communications, said the sixth episode of the show had gone “too far” in it’s use of the college’s merch.

    “Duke appreciates artistic expression and creative storytelling, but characters prominently wearing apparel bearing Duke’s federally registered trademarks creates confusion and mistakenly suggests an endorsement or affiliation where none exists,” Tramble said in a statement to USA TODAY Thursday.

    HBO, which produces “White Lotus,” declined to comment.

    During the latest episode of “White Lotus,” Tim Ratliff (Jason Isaacs), one of Season 3’s central characters and a fictional alum of the university, dons a Duke T-shirt as he considers a murder-suicide while on vacation with his family at the White Lotus hotel in Thailand. Duke, one of the major universities in North Carolina, where the drama series’ Ratliff family hails from, was less than pleased by the homage − especially given the context.

    “‘The White Lotus’ not only uses our brand without permission, but in our view uses it on imagery that is troubling, does not reflect our values or who we are, and simply goes too far,” Tramble wrote in his statement, adding that suicide is the second-leading cause of death on college campuses.

    “As imagery from the show is being shared widely across social media, we are using our brand to promote mental health awareness and remind people that help is available,” he continued.

    Duke plays a prominent role in the season as a subplot sees the younger Ratliff son, Lochlan (Sam Nivola), struggling to decide between Duke and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    Tim, the family patriarch, went to Duke as did Saxon, the older Ratliff brother played by Patrick Schwarzenegger. Mother Victoria, the breakout star of the season portrayed by Posey, went to Chapel Hill. The family’s only daughter Piper (of “Piper, no!”), played by Sarah Catherine Hook, is currently enrolled at Chapel Hill.

  • Selena Quintanilla’s killer Yolanda Saldivar up for parole

    Selena Quintanilla’s killer Yolanda Saldivar up for parole

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    Thirty years after pop singer and Tejano legend Selena Quintanilla-Pérez was murdered, her killer is under review for parole.

    Yolanda Saldívar, 64, is currently serving a life sentence for her murder. The crossover star died nearly 30 years ago to the day, March 31, 1995, at 23 years old in Corpus Christi, Texas.

    According to Texas Department of Criminal Justice records, Saldívar will be eligible for parole on March 30, and she is currently in the parole review process.

    Here’s what to know about Selena’s death and Saldívar’s parole bid.

    Who was Selena Quintanilla-Pérez?

    Known by fans simply as Selena, Quintanilla-Pérez was a beloved Tejano musician turned crossover superstar. In 1986, she was named female vocalist of the year at the Tejano Music Awards − a title she’d go on to earn 10 more times. She won the Grammy for the best Mexican American album in 1994. Selena’s tracks like “Como La Flor” (1992) and “I Could Fall In Love,” released posthumously in 1995, endeared her music to Spanish and English-speaking audiences alike.

    Who killed Selena? What happened between Selena and Yolanda Saldívar?

    Saldívar was the former president of the Selena fan club and a manager of Selena’s clothing boutiques.

    On March 31, 1995, Saldívar, then 34, fatally shot Selena at a Days Inn Hotel in Corpus Christi, Texas, after the singer learned that Saldívar had been embezzling money. The singer was pronounced dead just two weeks before she would have turned 24.

    Selena movie with Jennifer Lopez released 2 years after death

    In 1997, Warner Bros. released the film “Selena” on the life, career and death of the pop star, starring Jennifer Lopez in what would be her breakout performance. The film helped launch Lopez into stardom, after her TV debut as a Fly Girl dancer in the Wayans family sketch comedy “In Living Color” and going on to star in a handful of smaller films, including “My Family” and “Money Train.”

    Will Selena’s killer Yolanda Saldívar get parole?

    Saldívar is now eligible for parole for the first time. If granted, she would be released to serve the remainder of her sentence in the community under supervision.

    If she is denied parole, her next review date will be set for one to five years from the decision date, a spokesperson for the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles told the Times-Caller, part of the USA TODAY Network, earlier this year in an unsigned email. The parole panel would determine the specific number of years.

    During the parole decision process, a Texas Department of Criminal Justice parole officer interviews the offender to prepare a case summary for the board. A panel of three members, who also have the discretion to interview the offender and individuals who support or protest their release, is then responsible for the final vote. Victims’ family members are notified in advance of an offender’s parole eligibility.

    The parole panel considers the seriousness of the offense, letters of support or protest, the length of the sentence and the amount of time served, as well as criminal history, institutional adjustment and the offender’s age.

    Parole can be denied for several reasons, including if past behavior indicates a predisposition to commit criminal acts, if the offender poses a continuing threat to public safety or indicates a conscious disregard for the lives and safety of others, or if they’ve refused to participate in or failed to complete programs in prison.

    The board traditionally votes on a case just before the parole eligibility date – in this case, March 30.

    In 2019, Saldívar filed an appeal challenging her conviction and sentence, according to federal court records. According to documents from the denied appeal, a pair of tennis shoes worn by the victim at the time of the murder were not admitted into evidence during Saldívar’s trial. Saldívar asserted that if the prosecution had admitted these shoes as evidence, the defense could have potentially discredited the argument that Saldívar shot Quintanilla-Pérez intentionally.

    Saldívar’s appeals have not been successful.

    Selena Quintanilla songs

    Some of Selena’s biggest records include “Como La Flor,” “I Could Fall In Love” and “Dreaming of You.” Selena and her family, who performed as Selena y Los Dinos before she went solo, released a dozen albums, 24 singles and seven promotional singles.

    “Dreaming of You,” her fifth and final solo album released four months after her death, peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart and became the first predominately Spanish album to top the Billboard 200 chart.

    Contributing: Taijuan Moorman, USA TODAY; John Oliva, Corpus Christi Caller Times

  • Ye sued for copyright infringement by singer angry over antisemitism

    Ye sued for copyright infringement by singer angry over antisemitism

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    Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West, is being sued for copyright infringement.

    In a complaint filed Tuesday in California, German singer-songwriter Alice Merton accused Ye of “massive and continuing unauthorized commercial exploitation” of her song “Blindside.”

    In the filing, lawyers for Merton, her record label and her publishing company allege that Ye’s 2023 song “Gun to My Head,” illegally sampled her track without proper permission or compensation.

    USA TODAY has reached out to Ye’s lawyers for comment.

    Merton, who rose to fame after the release of her popular song “No Roots” in 2016, is principally known in Europe but has achieved some American crossover appeal, performing on several late-night programs in the U.S.

    In the filing, she alleges that Ye, along with Kid Cudi, who is featured on “Gun to My Head,” released the track to widespread attention, as it marked the first music drop for both rappers in a while.

    When the public began to notice that it sampled “Blindside,” Ye and his record label requested approval to use the track, which Merton denied, the complaint claims. While she did not originally share her reasoning with Ye, after a follow-up email requesting an explanation, Merton informed the rapper’s team that “the artist’s values are contrary to our values.”

    Merton, who is a direct descendant of holocaust survivors, cited Ye’s “antisemitic, racist remarks” as the underlying reason she “was unwilling to compromise her personal beliefs and wanted not to be associated with Ye in any manner,” according to the complaint.

    In recent years Ye has taken to sharing controversial political and social beliefs online, often spouting antisemitic screeds on X that valorize the swastika symbol and accusing Jews of being untrustworthy, among other things.

    When Ye released his album “Vultures” in 2024, which “Gun to My Head” was slated to be a part of, fans were disappointed that the song was missing and blamed Merton, the complaint claims.

    “Ye’s fans were relentless, making threats to Merton should she not clear the sample,” the filing reads. “Following these threats, Merton feared returning to America for further tour dates. She also stopped performing (‘Blindside’) at concerts for fear of confrontation or potential violence against her.”

    Amid the harassment, Ye did nothing to call off the witch hunt headed by his fans, the complaint alleges.

    “Ms. Merton continuously rejected attempts by Ye and his team to use a sample of her song ‘Blindside,’” lawyers for Merton wrote in a statement to USA TODAY Thursday. “However the Ye song using Merton’s sample, ‘Gun to the Head’ was released and is still available in multiple spots on the internet …The unauthorized use was particularly problematic for Ms. Merton given she is the descendant of holocaust survivors and does not want her image or likeness associated with Ye and his antisemitic diatribes.”

    Merton is requesting damages along with a jury trial.

  • Ed Sheeran has a surprise for subway ridersCelebrities

    Ed Sheeran has a surprise for subway ridersCelebrities

    Ed Sheeran has a surprise for subway ridersCelebrities

  • Sarah Hyland talks ‘Great Gatsby’ musical, ‘Modern Family’ anxiety

    Sarah Hyland talks ‘Great Gatsby’ musical, ‘Modern Family’ anxiety

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    NEW YORK – At 15, Sarah Hyland made her Broadway debut in the Tony-winning “Grey Gardens,” a musical adaptation of the cult classic documentary.

    For the “Modern Family” star, the show brings back memories of SAT prep and bad ex-boyfriends.

    “I got dumped right before my 16th birthday, but he was there at the opening-night party,” Hyland recalls with a self-deprecating smirk. “My life as a teenager!”

    Hyland, 34, is back on the boards for the first time in nearly 20 years in “The Great Gatsby,” stepping into the iconic role of Daisy Buchanan at the Broadway Theatre. The Jazz Age musical feels like a homecoming for the Manhattan native, after more than a decade of living in Los Angeles while she played eldest daughter Haley Dunphy on TV. 

    Being back on stage as an adult is “so nice because I’m not having to go to school every day,” Hyland quips. “I have the luxury of being like, ‘You know what? I can sleep in until noon.’” Even more so, “it’s just a really beautiful, full-circle moment. I’m tap-dancing again! I haven’t tapped in decades. So it’s bringing me a lot of childlike joy.”

    Sarah Hyland talks ‘weighty’ connection to Broadway’s ‘Great Gatsby’

    Like F. Scott Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel, the stage adaptation tells the doomed love story between the ravishing caged bird Daisy and mysterious millionaire Jay Gatsby (Ryan McCartan). Daisy has long frustrated and fascinated readers, as she chooses money and status over genuine connection. But rather than dismiss her as shallow, Hyland sees the wife and mother as a survivor.

    “I read the book so many times as a young person, and I never thought Daisy was flaky or flippant,” Hyland says. “When you think of ‘Gatsby,’ you think of parties and prohibition and romance. But being a woman in the 1920s, there’s a lot of layers to that. She will do whatever it takes to be with her daughter and make sure her child has the best life.”

    Her sacrifice and desperation come full bore in “Beautiful Little Fool,” Daisy’s crushing ballad about navigating a patriarchal society. For Hyland, it’s a way to honor the resilience of women and the LGBTQ+ community in today’s climate: “As the words are coming out of my mouth, it’s so heavy. This book came out 100 years ago, but it’s still so relevant.”

    Marc Bruni, who directed “Gatsby,” praises the “intelligence and intention” that Hyland imbues Daisy with.

    “Sarah has a deep sense of craft and processes everything through her own barometer for truth,” Bruni says. “Her exquisite rendition of ‘Beautiful Little Fool,’ in particular, revels in the delicious complexity of Daisy, and elicits a hugely emotional response from the audience every night.”

    Hyland says the overwhelming success of ‘Modern Family’ still ‘hasn’t hit me yet’

    Hyland first fell in love with acting as a little girl watching Shirley Temple movies. Her parents, Melissa Canaday and Edward Hyland, are both actors. In fact, while Hyland was playing Audrey in “Little Shop of Horrors” Off-Broadway last summer, her dad was on the exact same street performing in “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.”

    “It was so nice to have him up the block,” Hyland says with a grin. “Honestly, the person who loved it the most was my mom, so she didn’t have to take too many trips back and forth!”  

    The actress made her film debut at age 5, playing Howard Stern’s daughter in the 1997 comedy “Private Parts.” Some of her earliest memories are on movie sets: doing homework in Jennifer Aniston’s trailer during “The Object of My Affection,” and learning to cry on cue while shooting “Annie” with Kathy Bates.

    “I’m really fortunate to have always been surrounded not only by the cream-of-the-crop, talented actors, but also just delightful human beings,” Hyland says.

    By the time ABC sitcom “Modern Family” came around, Hyland jokes she was a “jaded” industry veteran with “zero expectations. I was like, who knows if this is even going to get picked up? At least I booked something.”

    The comedy became a cultural phenomenon, airing for 11 seasons and scooping up 22 Emmys, along with four Screen Actors Guild Awards for best ensemble. Memes and clips from the series frequently make the rounds on social media: “The impact it’s had on people is still mind-boggling to me,” Hyland says. “And I’m such an awkward person that I never know how to react to that!”

    “Modern Family” wrapped filming in February 2020, weeks before the U.S. went into COVID-19 lockdown. The cast has remained close: Jesse Tyler Ferguson came to see Hyland in “Gatsby” last month, while many others were on hand at her 2022 wedding, when she tied the knot with “Bachelor in Paradise” alum Wells Adams. That’s partly why she never panicked about the show ending.

    “If I had any anxiety at all, it was just what’s going to be my next job?” Hyland says. “I feel like I never got to the point of actually grieving ‘Modern Family’ because we were just thrown into this worldwide pandemic and hoping that people lived. The stakes became so much higher elsewhere.”

    Hyland is ready for ‘where the wind takes me’ next

    Hyland has worked steadily these last few years, hosting “Love Island” for two seasons on Peacock, and starring in the streaming comedy “Pitch Perfect: Bumper in Berlin.” And in 2021, Hyland joined chocolate supplement brand Sourse as a co-founder, spurred by her experience being “in and out of hospitals my entire life.” The actress was diagnosed with kidney dysplasia as a child and has undergone two kidney transplants. She’s also had surgeries for both endometriosis and an abdominal hernia.

    Working in the wellness space and getting to meet others with similar experiences has been “really fulfilling,” Hyland says. “Invisible illness and chronic illness warriors – the majority of people don’t understand what one day is like for us. It could be a good day or a really bad day, and you still have to go to work and live your life. I love that the door has been opened, so now we can have actual conversations about it. If you never do, it feels so isolating.”

    Hyland relies on the basics ‒ water and sleep ‒ to power through her grueling eight-show weeks (“Recovery time is so, so important for my body”). On her rare off nights from “Gatsby,” she and Adams have been trying to catch as many musicals as possible (“He loves the big, glitzy Broadway shows”). Recently, she’s been excited to support her pals Nicole Scherzinger (“Sunset Boulevard”) and Jordan Fisher (“Hadestown”) in their respective productions.

    “My friends and I don’t go out to clubs: We just sit in the living room, drink wine and sing show tunes,” Hyland says. “I just love the theater community so much ‒ it’s part of my DNA.”

  • Sarah Hyland talks 'Great Gatsby'Entertain This!

    Sarah Hyland talks 'Great Gatsby'Entertain This!

    Sarah Hyland talks ‘Great Gatsby’Entertain This!

  • Johnny Mathis announces retirement from performingEntertainment

    Johnny Mathis announces retirement from performingEntertainment

  • Laurie Metcalf says ‘The Conners’ is not the ending you might expect

    Laurie Metcalf says ‘The Conners’ is not the ending you might expect

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    After seven seasons, “The Conners” is getting ready to leave the air.

    As fans anxiously await the last few episodes of the series, Laurie Metcalf, who plays Jackie Harris on the popular “Roseanne” spinoff, is urging viewers not to expect a storybook ending.

    In an interview with People published Wednesday, Metcalf revealed the final season is “not going to have a big bow tied up.”

    “There’s a lot to wrap up and I think the writers are really working hard to get everybody’s storylines sort of … not completed,” Metcalf told People.

    “It will remain true to their storyline, what happens to them in the final episode,” she told the outlet. “But, it’s a very short amount of time to wrap up this many seasons of a family that’s covered decades.”

    “The Conners,” which also stars John Goodman and Sara Gilbert, follows an eponymous fictional working-class family as they navigate the struggles of daily life and an ever-tightening budget.

    A second act for “Roseanne,” the series imagines the family at the heart of the original show but without the matriarch, who was played by Roseanne Barr. Barr’s controversial comments on Twitter, now X, led to the original reboot of the show being canceled in 2018 and later reimagined as “The Conners.”

    The spin-off has enjoyed widespread success, but as it winds down don’t expect “something wacky or kind of culminating” to happen during the finale, Metcalf’s co-star Lecy Goranson warns.

    “It’s just not really our style. Our show is about real people and real-life situations, so I feel like we don’t need to do that,” she told People.

    Goranson, who plays Becky Conner, says she’s not really ready to say goodbye.

    “I’m already thinking of the next thing for all of us, including the crew,” she told the outlet. “I’m an optimist and I’m thinking, ‘How do I keep us all together?’ I just refuse to believe that it’s done.”

    When is ‘The Conners’ finale?

    The final six episodes of the show began premiering on ABC on March 26 and will air Wednesdays at 8 p.m. ET.

  • Nicole Kidman is tulip crazy in dull thriller

    Nicole Kidman is tulip crazy in dull thriller

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    The biggest mystery in the Nicole Kidman thriller “Holland” is how to keep from falling asleep. Since it’s streaming on Prime Video, Amazon really should throw in a coffee maker so you can make it to the film’s lackluster denouement.

    “Holland” (★½ out of four; rated R; streaming now) immerses Kidman in Midwestern malaise, taking the A-lister to a Michigan town known for its tulips, ginormous windmill and Dutch festival fare. Her Lifetime-esque potboiler centers on a bored working mom who discovers her husband might not be on the level, but while the locale is postcard idyllic, the narrative is a never-ending slog, only getting halfway interesting with a silly third-act twist and a suddenly bloody finale.

    “Every day I get to wake up in the best place on Earth,” says Nancy Vandergroot (Kidman), almost trying to convince herself that her perfect life isn’t perfectly boring.

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    ‘Holland’: Nicole Kidman is embroiled in a Midwestern mystery

    A bored Michigan woman (Nicole Kidman) begins to think her optometrist hubby (Matthew Macfadyen) might be living a double life in “Holland.”

    Nancy’s biggest issues seem to be her 13-year-old son Harry (Jude Hill) being “cheesed off” at her and wondering if disinterested babysitter Candy (Rachel Sennott) stole one of her pearl earrings. She teaches life skills at the high school, where she sips on a Hi-C juice box during chats with shop teacher pal Dave (Gael García Bernal), and comes home to strait-laced optometrist husband Fred (Matthew Macfadyen) when he’s not traveling for work. Which is often.

    But drawing ketchup hearts on meatloaf isn’t doing it for Nancy anymore. She’s haunted by weird nightmares and increasingly restless when she discovers small clues that make her believe Fred isn’t being entirely truthful about where he’s been going.

    When she worries about him cheating, Dave tries to have her keep things in perspective – he even wonders aloud to her what we’re all thinking, like who’s going to hook up with this dull eye doctor? However, Dave also fosters strong feelings for Nancy, so he becomes a willing participant in her sneaky missions to seek out evidence. Along the way, Nancy and Dave dig up something wholly unexpected that puts a damper on their enjoying Holland’s Tulip Time parade.

    Directed by Mimi Cave, who helmed the more confidently bonkers “Fresh,” “Holland” is a slice of underwhelming disturbia that wastes its actors and its premise. Holland, Michigan, is REALLY into tulips and offers a lot of potentially interesting visuals and plot points, yet much of the thriller could have been set anywhere. There is one creative use of a wooden clog that’s pretty inspired, and a couple of scenes with Kidman in Dutch wardrobe that are unsettling, purposefully or not.

    Kidman has done better nervy performances than this, but she also doesn’t have a ton to work with in Andrew Sodroski’s script: There are quite a few seeds planted that tease to Nancy’s mysterious backstory but frustratingly fail to bear fruit. Bernal is solid as a man who lets love get in the way of making smart decisions for his own well-being, while Macfadyen, one of the best things about “Succession,” gets the best role. Fred is as white bread as they come, happily sharing his massively detailed train set with his boy, yet the British actor does darkly smarmy better than most anyone.

    While “Holland” has decent star power, it whiffs on its comedic tones, sinister underpinnings and a mystery that doesn’t exactly satisfy. Instead of playing with your mind and a sense of reality, this forgettable flick will just make you snooze.

  • Remi Bader says she got weight loss surgery SADI-S

    Remi Bader says she got weight loss surgery SADI-S

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    Influencer Remi Bader is opening up about how her weight loss procedure led her into a “deep depression.”

    The TikTok star appeared on Khloé Kardashian’s podcast “Khloé in Wonder Land.” In an interview posted Wednesday on X, Bader, 30, opened up about undergoing a bariatric surgery called SADI-S over a year ago due to her health issues and her struggle with opening up about the surgery due to privacy concerns.

    Bader explained that she gained “80 to 100 pounds” in 2023, and suffered from knee pain. At one point, she was bedridden for a month due to back pain.

    Bader said other weight loss methods didn’t work for her, including trying Ozempic twice and Manjaro once.

    “I tried Ozempic before it was even a thing,” she said. “My doctor was just like, ‘Oh, you’re pre-diabetic, you should try this.’ I lost probably, like 10 pounds, but I was really sick and threw up a lot from it.”

    She then began considering other methods. Though she was concerned with public perception, a doctor referred to her convinced her to have a single anastomosis duodenal-ileal bypass with sleeve gastrectomy, a newer procedure recommended for her situation that is supposed to be simpler than other weight loss surgeries such as gastric bypass.

    Why Remi Bader calls weight loss surgery recovery ‘worst thing of my life’

    Normally, the surgery is a brief recovery process, her doctor told her, but for Bader, it was the “worst thing of my life.”

    “I couldn’t leave the hospital. I couldn’t swallow water. I was like, projectile vomiting,” she said. “But then that went on for six weeks.”

    Things got so bad that Bader went to stay with her parents, she said. She describes the recovery process as a dark time: “I got (in) a very scary, deep depression. I did not want to live anymore, I would literally just stare at the wall all day and be sick. It was just horrifying.”

    She also battled with feelings of guilt.

    “I think at that time, I had a lot of regret. I was like, ‘Oh my God, I’ve been this person that people looked up to online for this whole time,’” she added. “I was very open that I was struggling, but I was this person that was like, ‘But be confident in whatever you look like.’”

    Now, she said she’s in a much better mindset and is getting to a place where she loves herself internally and externally.

    The model emphasized that people with bigger body types could be healthy, and admitted that she was “so jealous” of her friends who were confident in their bodies. But, she said, “My journey was different.”

    “I was in pain. I was struggling with health, and this is what I felt I needed to do,” she said.

    What is SADI-S?

    SADI-S is a bariatric, or weight loss, surgery combining two weight loss procedures: a sleeve gastrectomy and a duodenal switch, according to the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. For the sleeve gastrectomy, a doctor removes nearly 80% of the stomach into a smaller, tube-shaped stomach. For the duodenal switch, the first part of the small intestine is divided just below the stomach, and a section of the intestine is rerouted and connected to the stomach.