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  • Reggae singer, Jamaican artist was 65

    Reggae singer, Jamaican artist was 65

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    Cocoa Tea, a celebrated reggae singer and songwriter, has died. He was 65.

    “I extend condolences to the family, friends, and supporters of Calvin George Scott, affectionately known as Cocoa Tea,” Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness wrote in a post on Instagram Tuesday.

    “His smooth vocals and compelling lyrics gave us timeless classics like ‘Rocking Dolly’ and ‘I Lost My Sonia,’ songs that have become anthems in our cultural landscape,” Holness wrote.

    His wife, Malvia Scott, confirmed to the Jamaica Gleaner, the country’s paper of record, that the singer had died following a cardiac arrest early Tuesday morning in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

    Born in the Rocky Point neighborhood of Clarendon, Jamaica, Scott rose to popularity on the island first before his fame began growing internationally in the ’90s. Known for songs like “Lost My Sonia” and “Rocking Dolly,” his signature sounds blended breezy slow-grooving vocals with socially conscious lyricism.

    He was first diagnosed with lymphoma in 2019, which worsened when he began battling pneumonia six months ago, his wife told the Gleaner.

    “He was definitely very brave,” Malvia Scott told the outlet. “He was positive throughout it all. About three weeks ago when he was admitted in the hospital he asked if I was worried and I said ‘I am always worried.’ He told me not to worry because everything was going to be all right. He was always very hopeful.”

    That positive outlook could be seen throughout his discography as he leaned heavily on themes of love and peace − both also important tenets to Rastafarianism, a religion he joined in 1985.

    “Beyond his musical genius, Cocoa Tea was a beacon of kindness and generosity, consistently uplifting the less fortunate and embodying the warmth of our nation,” Holness said in his statement.

    “Cocoa Tea’s influence extended beyond our shores, touching hearts worldwide and solidifying Jamaica’s place on the global musical stage.”

  • Billy Joel postpones 8 concerts due to medical condition

    Billy Joel postpones 8 concerts due to medical condition

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    The Piano Man has to push off several of his 2025 tour dates.

    Billy Joel announced on his Facebook page Tuesday that he had to reschedule eight concerts due to a medical condition, with Joel needing time to “recover from recent surgery and to undergo physical therapy under the supervision of his doctors.”

    Joel, 75, is expected to make a full recovery, according to the statement, and dates that had been scheduled this year from July 5 on will proceed as planned.

    “While I regret postponing any shows, my health must come first,” Joel said in a statement. “I look forward to getting back on stage and sharing the joy of live music with our amazing fans. Thank you for your understanding.”

    More details on Joel’s health weren’t provided, but he had a scare last month after falling on stage during a concert in Connecticut. At the time, he was able to recover and continue performing.

    New dates have been announced for seven of Joel’s rescheduled concerts, which will first pick up in November in Detroit and span through at least early July 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. But the April 26 concert that had been scheduled for American Family Field in Milwaukee has yet to be rescheduled.

    Previously purchased tickets will be honored for the new dates, and refunds for first-hand tickets will be available.

    Joel previously postponed a show at Florida’s Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood in January “because of a medical procedure.” The concert was rescheduled for November.

    “I’m disappointed to share that I must postpone my concert at Hard Rock Live,” he said at the time. “I appreciate your understanding and look forward to seeing everyone in November.”

    The “Uptown Girl” singer wrapped his residency at Madison Square Garden in July after 10 years.

    “I’m going to miss doing it a lot,” Joel told USA TODAY last year. “I love it. The band loves it. The crowd is a New York-crazy crowd. The minute you walk onstage you’re aware they’re rooting for you. The only way you could mess up that gig is to try to screw it up.”

    Contributing: Brendan Morrow, Melissa Ruggieri

  • Hulu’s ‘Rust’ documentary examines Halyna Hutchins’ tragic death

    Hulu’s ‘Rust’ documentary examines Halyna Hutchins’ tragic death

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    For the public, the tragic debacle of “Rust” − the Western movie set where a prop gun held by Alec Baldwin discharged during rehearsal in 2021 and killed promising cinematographer Halyna Hutchins − is over.

    Baldwin, the film’s star and producer, was acquitted of criminal charges on legal technicalities last summer. The movie’s young armorer, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, is serving 18 months in prison for involuntary manslaughter. And “Rust” was finished and had a quiet debut at a Polish film festival last fall. As yet, there are no U.S. distribution rights.

    But for many, “Rust” never sleeps. It haunts Hutchins’ widower, Matt, and their son, Andros, who was 9 when his mother died, as well as Hutchins’ family in Ukraine and her many friends in Hollywood. Which is why filmmaker Rachel Mason, who bonded with Hutchins when the two dropped off their then-3-year-olds at day care, has directed a documentary about her pal, “Last Take: Rust and the Story of Halyna” (streaming now on Hulu).

    “I was here to bear witness as her friend, sent by Matt, who wanted this done,” says Mason, whose goal with “Last Take” wasn’t to reinvestigate the case, but rather to “show the overall human toll, from the crew to the people in the courtroom, everyone had their own unique angle on that pain.”

    Several questions addressed by Mason’s documentary:

    Why did ‘Rust’ resume filming two years after Halyna Hutchins died?

    On Oct. 21, 2021, filming halted immediately on the New Mexico set of “Rust” after Baldwin’s gun went off. With the criminal and civil lawsuits that followed, it seemed unlikely “Rust” would ever be completed. And yet that’s what happened in 2023, as Baldwin, his production team and a new cinematographer, Bianca Cline, went to Montana to finish the Western.

    But accusations of this decision being callous don’t resonate with Mason. Hutchins, 42, would have wanted as much. “If Halyna chose a film to work on, it’s because she was committed to it,” Mason says. “Looking at it from the victim’s perspective, she wanted to make it, and she died making it. If you knew Halyna, it’s impossible not to think she would want it completed.”

    Mason’s documentary shows Cline avidly studying the voluminous notes Hutchins kept while working on “Rust,” details covering everything from lighting ideas to lens possibilities. “When you see her images from ‘Rust’ coupled with what people say about her vision for this movie, it hits home why it had to be made,” Mason says.

    Is Alec Baldwin in ‘Last Take,’ the new documentary about Halyna Hutchins?

    Mason felt comfortable approaching Baldwin for an interview because she knew him from a prior encounter.

    “I’d met Alec years before at a film festival and he was a big champion of my 2019 film ‘Circus of Books’ (about a gay bookshop in Los Angeles),” says Mason. When she spoke to him after the shooting, “he was in a state of utter trauma. It was a sad and horrible thing. I did ask him later to be in (‘Last Take’), but he was working on other projects at the time.” The star is currently seen in his family’s TLC reality show “The Baldwins.”

    One of the most striking moments in Mason’s film involves Baldwin. Footage shows the actor being interviewed by two Santa Fe law enforcement officials after the shooting. One tells Baldwin that Hutchins has died. He sits frozen for a long time, almost giving the impression that the video has glitched. “You see his total shock in that footage,” Mason says.

    Who else from ‘Rust’ is seen in the ‘Last Take’ documentary?

    The “Rust” shoot was conducted on a budget and perhaps in a bit of a rush, as evidenced by some crew members quitting just before Hutchins’ accidental shooting to protest working conditions. “Last Take” spotlights camera assistant Lane Luper, who explains the concerns he had about a few accidental firearm discharges, which he shared with producers at the time.

    It might be easy to blame negligent producers who didn’t heed such warnings, but Mason she wanted to show that the reality of a movie set is more complex. “Yes, there was a lot of tension on this set and people weren’t listening to each other well, but I don’t think that’s unique to ‘Rust,’” says Mason, adding that complaints about “Rust” set safety often were part of very lengthy emails that included issues related to COVID policies.

    “OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) would argue there should always be a ‘stop work order’ option, where any person has the authority to say stop work now, but on a film set, the hierarchy is baked in,” Mason says. “So you have Hannah who is feeling low on the totem pole, while Alec is on the high end, and in between people are saying this and that. Communication (on a set) sadly is not as simple as stop and let’s all halt.”

    Who is to blame for the death of Halyna Hutchins, according to the ‘Last Take’ documentary?

    Of all the players in the “Rust” tragedy, only Gutierrez-Reed is serving jail time. In “Last Take,” she seems baffled when Santa Fe authorities tell her that multiple live rounds were found floating around the set.

    And yet “Last Take” also features a telling text exchange in which Gutierrez-Reed asks for more time to secure the weapons and is told she needs to tackle her various chores with the time she has. “Where this all lands for me and for the film is where it lands for most people: We don’t have more answers to truly how that gun came to be loaded with that live bullet,” Mason says. “I really wish we did.”

    Regret seems to be the most common sentiment in “First Take.” Veteran actress and “Rust” cast member Frances Fisher recounts how disorganized Guitierrez-Reed was upon their first meeting. It was an omen she ignored.

    “I wish I had said something to her, and I wish I had said something to Alec,” she says. “And would my alerting somebody, would that have changed anything? That’s what gnaws at me.”

  • From radio to TV icon

    From radio to TV icon

  • Gigi Hadid confirms Bradley Cooper romance: ‘Really lucky’

    Gigi Hadid confirms Bradley Cooper romance: ‘Really lucky’

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    Gigi Hadid is opening up about her relationship with actor Bradley Cooper for the first time.

    In a Vogue magazine profile published Tuesday, the supermodel, 29, described her relationship with Cooper, 50, as “very romantic and happy,” but divulged that she keeps certain details private because “it’s just not part of our relationship to share for whatever reason.”

    Hadid also opened up about the pitfalls of dating in the public eye: “You want to give yourself a normal experience of dating and even for my friends who aren’t public figures, that’s hard. Where do you go? And, what? You just start talking to people? And then there’s another added layer of privacy and security.”

    Before dating Cooper, Hadid was linked to former One Direction singer Zayn Malik and the pair share 4-year-old daughter Khai. Cooper previously dated model Irina Shayk, who is now linked to legendary former NFL quarterback Tom Brady. They share a 7-year-old daughter, Lea De Seine.

    “You want to believe that people are going to have your back and not call TMZ or go on (gossip Instagram account) Deuxmoi or whatever, but you just don’t know,” she continued, adding that unnamed “sources” share information “that’s kind of right and kind of wrong,” but “you just have to let it go; you can’t always correct everything.”

    The pair made a buzzy appearance together with Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce at Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour concert in Paris last May.

    Gigi Hadid: ‘I just feel really lucky’ to be with Bradley Cooper

    In the Vogue story, she praised the 12-time Oscar nominee for his creative instincts.

    “I respect him so much as a creative and I feel that he gives so much to me: encouragement and, just, belief. For those people you admire to encourage you, it can create so much belief in yourself,” Hadid told Vogue about Cooper. “Like, what’s the worst thing if I auditioned for this? You jump and take the leap,” adding that the relationship “has opened me up to going to the theater more, and that’s something that’s so nice to bring back into my life.”

    “I think just getting to the point where knowing what you want and deserve in a relationship is essential and then to find someone that is in a place in their life where they know what they want and deserve … and you both do work separately to come together and be the best partner that you can be,” she continued. “I just feel really lucky. Yeah, lucky’s the word.”

    Gigi Hadid, One Direction singer Zayn Malik are focused on ‘raising our daughter’

    Despite their shared rocky past, Hadid and Malik are in a better place as co-parents.

    In October 2021, Malik pleaded no contest to charges that he harassed his then-girlfriend and her mother, Yolanda Hadid, during an allegedly violent argument at the family’s home in Pennsylvania, according to court documents.

    According to the Vogue cover story, with Hadid telling the fashion magazine the exes now share “love, and a feeling of camaraderie.”

    “Zayn and I do our custody schedules months in advance,” Hadid told Vogue. “That doesn’t mean that it doesn’t change here and there, but we help each other out and have each other’s backs.”

    She added: “There is the hard part of the world knowing this much, and thinking they know everything and at the end of the day, we’re not interested in giving everyone our whole story. What we are interested in is raising our daughter together, with so much respect for each other, and not just as co-­parents, but what we’ve been through together.”

  • ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8 prompts producer to push for ‘nice men’

    ‘Love is Blind’ Season 8 prompts producer to push for ‘nice men’

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    After the Season 8 reunion Sunday, backlash from viewers is rising about the quality of men on the show, which allows potential couples to date sight unseen before getting engaged and deciding whether love “is truly blind” enough for a marriage.

    Five years after the inaugural season of “Love is Blind,” Netflix’s hit reality-dating show continues to cause a stir.

    In response, Ally Simpson, the executive producer of the show, has a message for potential applicants she hopes will resonate: Nice guys finish first.

    “If you look at the husbands who come from the show, it’s the really nice guys who it works out for,” she said in an interview with Rolling Stone published Monday. “We just need nice men. Sometimes I feel like social media is scaring some nice guys off, so we’ve enlisted the help of some former participants who are big fans and they’ll sometimes get on (the phone) with people before they come (on the show) and answer questions about what’s it’s really like and they’ll put them at ease.”

    Only one couple out of the four followed on the show decided to tie the knot this season: Taylor Haag and Daniel Hastings.

    The remaining pairs duked it out during the tense reunion episode Sunday night.

    That the program moves from city to city and plucks “regular” folk out of their everyday lives to see who can find lasting love has helped to distinguish it among its peers as a bona fide microcosm of American dating life.

    Season 8, shot in Minnesota, played right into that narrative with several women saying no at the altar or being influenced in part by their partner’s political or social beliefs. Their decisions arrive amid a growing gender gap in American politics.

    “Those are the kinds of things that make or break relationships,” Simpson told Rolling Stone. “We take it very seriously that we are able to talk about these important topics in a way that most unscripted shows can’t, and we want to be a reflection of society at large.”

    The season also came under fire for a lack of diversity. While previous casts were about 50% non-white, Season 8 was only around 30% non-white, Entertainment Weekly reports.

    In response, creator Chris Coelen told EW that it wasn’t intentional but the show “casts itself.”

    “We put people in the pods, and you try to have a very diverse group of people in lots of different ways (at the start),” Coelen told EW. “If you’re sort of trying to tick a box, there were lots of people who were in the group coming into the pods who ultimately just didn’t find their person and who we didn’t choose to (follow).”

    ‘Love is Blind’ producer insists set is supportive place for contestants

    Simpson also leaned heavily throughout the interview on how supportive of an environment “Love is Blind” can be. Her emphasis stands in stark contrast to claims made by some former contestants, in a push to unionize the cast, who allege their contracts unlawfully prevented them from speaking out and trapped them in a production environment with unsafe working conditions.

    In December, the National Labor Relations Board sided with the contestants, issuing a complaint that accused Kinetic Content, the production company behind the show where Simpson is vice president of content programming, of labor violations.

    “There’s a lot of rumors out there about (behind the scenes of) the show, but it’s really a few of us who care so much about these people trying to provide the right support,” Simpson told Rolling Stone, in a seeming reference to the NLRB dispute.

    She cited a moment from Season 8, in which Haag suspected Hastings had followed her on Instagram prior to filming and the crew allowed her to have her phone back to check and for the two to have lunch away from the cameras.

    “I think a moment like that is real evidence of the show’s support for couples,” Simpson said.

    Don’t expect another live ‘Love Is Blind’ reunion

    Asked if they would attempt to do another live reunion, after a 2023 debacle in which the Netflix stream did not load, Simpson said she prefers the taped format.

    “In the future, it’s not something I would really push for,” she said. “I come from a place of wanting the participants to feel like they have the chance to say everything that they want to say and sometimes that means letting them breathe and take their time to think about what they want to say. There’s a pressure that comes with doing it live. These are normal, real people, and I think it’s an unfair pressure to put them under them.”

  • Meghan Markle kicks off 2025 with Instagram return and Netflix seriesEntertainment

    Meghan Markle kicks off 2025 with Instagram return and Netflix seriesEntertainment

  • You can stream the Robbie Williams biopic on Paramount+

    You can stream the Robbie Williams biopic on Paramount+


    “I’m just like a performing monkey,” Robbie Williams often told the movie’s director, Michael Gracey.

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    “Better Man” looks at British pop star Robbie Williams’ life, but he’s portrayed as a chimp. The biopic is available for streaming, and here’s how you can watch the unique take on the superstar’s life.

    The biopic is based on the true story of Williams’ life, and his rise, fall, and resurgence to fame.

    The movie, directed by Michael Gracey, who also directed “The Greatest Showman” starring Hugh Jackman, was released theatrically in December 2024 in Australia and released in the U.S. in January 2025, according to IMDB.

    Rotten Tomatoes gave the movie a “Certified Fresh” rating, and it was given a 90% on the website’s Popcornmeter.

    Where to stream ‘Better Man’

    The movie is available for streaming on Paramount+ now and was released on Tuesday, March 11, according to Rolling Stone, Forbes, and other outlets. It is also already available on a few other streaming platforms which include:

    • Apple TV
    • Prime Video
    • Fandango at Home
    • Google Play
    • Microsoft
    • ROW8

    What is the movie about?

    The movie is based on William’s rise to fame while he was a part of the popular boyband Take That, and then went solo in 1997.

    The movie contains plenty of music biopic tropes, but they happen to be true: A small-town kid is dabbed with fate’s wand, becomes immensely successful, can’t handle success, caves to addictions, goes solo, fills stadiums with hyperventilating fans enraptured with his sublime pop anthems, tries to earn the love of his cabaret-singing dad, and adores his primary supporter, his grandmother.

    Except, instead of watching a human go through the trials and tribulations that come with a life of fame, it’s a chimp, but the superstar thinks that portraying him as a chimp is “genius.”

    “I’m just like a performing monkey,” Williams often told Gracey.

    He’s “completely and utterly obsessed” with Gracey’s idea that his musical biography depicts him as a chimpanzee, Williams said.

    Julia is a trending reporter for USA TODAY. You can connect with her on LinkedIn, follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, Instagram and TikTok: @juliamariegz, or email her at [email protected]

  • Singer suffers from brain damage

    Singer suffers from brain damage

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    More than two decades later, Rick Springfield is discovering the true damage of an onstage fall.

    The ’80s rock legend revealed to People in an interview published Monday that a recent full body MRI scan had uncovered lingering brain damage from an accident at a Las Vegas concert in 2000.

    “I fell 25 feet, hit my head and then wood came down and hit my head, and then my head hit the stage again,” he told the outlet. “I thought I had just broken my wrist, but on the scan I found out I have some brain damage from the fall, so I’m working on trying to repair that.”

    A traumatic brain injury can vary in effects, the Cleveland Clinic reports, and can result from a hard bump or jolt to the skull, among other more serious scenarios.

    The results of the scan came as a surprise, but that’s precisely why the “Jessie’s Girl” singer wanted to do it. While some people don’t want to know what’s wrong with their bodies, he described himself to People as “the opposite.”

    “My dad died from not wanting to know,” Springfield said. “He thought he had stomach cancer for years and never got it checked out. When he finally collapsed one day at home, they found out it was an ulcer that burst, and he died from the loss of blood. It could have been fixed if he had gotten it checked out.”

    A reliable ’80s hitmaker, Springfield moved from teenybopper stardom to rock success to a career in television before settling into a role as nostalgia ambassador for his most famous decade. Springfield will hit the road for an I Want My ’80s tour in May and hosted an ’80s themed show on SiriusXM in 2021.

    Volume 2 of his “Greatest Hits” album hit streamers Feb. 28.

    For now, the rocker told People, he is taking a more measured approach to some of the substances that dominated the industry at that time.

    “I was drinking quite a bit, and as you get older, it’s kind of a natural thing to drop,” he said. “I’m not (in) AA − I mean, I know a lot of people it’s worked for. I’ll have a couple of sips of vodka or something when I’m onstage, but I don’t drink any other time.”

    Tamping down alcohol consumption has aided with his depression, he told the outlet, and recent experiments with Ketamine and LSD have also opened his mind to alternative treatments.

    “I did acid, and that was actually a little better,” he told People. “I hadn’t done that since I was in my 20s, but it was a great high. I don’t mean to push drugs on anyone, but I’m not averse to anything that helps me be happier and a better person. I could use some help in that area. I’m always searching.”

  • Emily Osment, Jack Anthony reach divorce settlement

    Emily Osment, Jack Anthony reach divorce settlement

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    “Young Sheldon” and “Hannah Montana” star Emily Osment is officially ending her marriage after five months.

    According to court documents filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Monday and viewed by USA TODAY, Osment and Jack Anthony have reached a confidential divorce settlement agreement. Both parties agreed to waive their right to seek spousal support.

    The news came days after Osment, 33, on Friday filed for divorce from Anthony, whose legal name is Jack Farina. According to the filing, they separated on Dec. 7 after tying the knot on Oct. 12.

    USA TODAY has reached out to representatives for Osment and Farina for comment.

    In a previous statement provided to USA TODAY, the actress said, “I think with any big decision in your life, whether it’s relationships or work or whatever it may be, you have to firmly plant both feet in that decision. Ultimately, it didn’t work out.”

    Osment revealed her engagement in 2023 and said on Instagram that she “did not know life could be this sweet,” adding, “This love is so big and so uniquely ours and I know it can do anything,” according to People and E!. “I am so honored to stand next to you every day. I love you, Jack.”

    In an interview with People magazine in May, the “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage” star opened up about planning the wedding and said she could not “wait to be married.”

    “It’s so exciting, and we have to constantly remind ourselves, you’re only going to do this once,” she told the outlet. “So you might look at 1,000 pictures of what looks like the exact same chair, and your wedding planner will say, ‘What kind of chairs do you want?’ And I’ll say, ‘Yes, there should be chairs there.’ And she’ll say, ‘No, but what kind of chairs?’ And I’ll say, ‘I don’t care. There should just be chairs.’ It’s a little bit like that.

    “A lot of very small decisions that don’t seem to matter but on the day, you’re going to be so happy that you sat down and went through the tough decision making. Because at the end of the day, you get to be married, and that’s the greatest thing ever.”

    This was the first marriage for Osment, who played Mandy McAllister on the “Big Bang Theory” prequel “Young Sheldon” and is reprising the role on the spin-off “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage.” In an October interview with USA TODAY, Osment noted that her wedding would be taking place just days before the “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage” premiere.

    “I have to say, I had my wedding date first,” she said. “And when they said we’re starting the show on Oct. 17, I said, ‘Why does that date sound so familiar?”

    Osment, who is the sister of Haley Joel Osment, is also known for playing Lilly Truscott on the Disney Channel series “Hannah Montana,” and she has had additional roles on “The Kominsky Method” and “Almost Family.”

    Contributing: Jay Stahl, Bryan Alexander