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Kelly Clarkson paid tribute to Dolly Parton with a spine-tingling cover of ‘I Will Always Love You’

Kelly Clarkson tore the roof off Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Monday night at the 57th Academy of Country Music Awards with a powerful performance of Dolly Parton’s “I Will Always Love You.” The performance was a tribute to Parton, who was the ceremony’s host.

Clarkson’s performance was magnificent because she sang the song with the perfect balance of power and vulnerability, which is no easy feat. “I Will Always Love You” is commonly seen as one of the most difficult songs to sing and to do it in front of the woman who wrote it had to be nerve-wracking. It was a bold move considering the fact that Whitney Houston’s version of the song is one of the most impressive vocal performances ever committed to tape.

But Dolly loved Clarkson’s rendition.


“Oh my, God, that was so great!” Parton exclaimed after the performance. “That’s so great, Kelly. I know that Whitney is smiling down on us tonight. Thank you very much … I was backstage trying not to cry my false eyelashes off.

“That just topped it off for me,” Parton continued.

“I Will Always Love You” has had many lives. Dolly’s first version hit No.1 on the charts in 1974. In 1982 she rerecorded it for the film “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” and it hit No.1 again.

In 1992, the song was a monster smash for Whitney Houston, who performed the song on “The Bodyguard” soundtrack.

While most people assume that it’s a love song, it was written by Parton as a way to say goodbye to her duet partner and mentor Porter Wagoner.

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Taylor Tomlinson On Why She Keeps Telling Her Own Mental Health Story For Laughs

Taylor Tomlinson’s therapist probably shouldn’t watch her latest stand-up special on Netflix.

That’s because, in the hour-long set Look At You (available to stream on Netflix now), Tomlinson does exactly what her professional mental health advisor told her not to: she airs out her dark, dirty-minded laundry for laughs.

“Your therapist always says that. Like, ‘Hey, maybe keep some of this private, just for us,’” Tomlinson tells UPROXX, recalling the session she had before the special aired. “And you’re like, ‘Yeah, for sure.’ And then you process it for like a month or two and then you’re like, ‘I thought of something funny about it. I’ve got to try it.’”

Medical degrees aside, we’d argue hearing Tomlinson riff on everything from her mom’s untimely passing to being ghosted by a suicide hotline operator is, actually, therapeutic. It’s certainly funny – sometimes even painfully relatable, which is what’s always made Tomlinson’s comedy so compelling.

In 2020, the then-25-year-old was offering up sharp, insightful commentary on surviving a Quarter-Life Crisis in her first Netflix special. Now, two years later, her comedy’s grown. Her material is a bit more morbid, sure, but it’s also refined, armed with the kind of self-reflection and ability to package the pain and heartbreak of life into quippy punchlines and sarcastic one-liners that comedians twice her age are still struggling to perfect.

We chatted with Tomlinson about her new special, focusing her storytelling on her own mental health journey, and the science behind making six minutes’ worth of dead mom jokes work on-stage.

You got your start in the Christian comedy circuit. I feel like I should’ve known there was a Christina comedy circuit.

Oh, there’s no reason you should know that. I grew up really religious and I didn’t know. I only found out because I took a standup class in high school from a church comedian.

What was the turning point, then? The moment you realized you wanted to do a different kind of comedy?

[It was] very gradual. I was probably 22 when I started going, “I feel pretty confident that I don’t subscribe to this belief system anymore. And I don’t want to be dishonest about being a Christian or something.” Because I think if you do those shows, you’re telling those venues that’s what you are and what you believe. And I just wasn’t that person anymore. I wanted to talk about other things.

Right. Like d*cks. You can’t really joke about d*ck at the pew pit.

[laughs] No, they don’t like it. It’s so strange. You can’t even be like, ‘God made d*cks.’ He did, but we don’t mention that

You dive into the topic of mental health more than you’ve done before. Why did now feel like the right time for that?

It was just what was happening in my life. It wasn’t something I was holding onto necessarily. The jokes about losing a parent really young… that had been a subject that I had touched on before and didn’t feel I was mature enough as a performer to really get into it and sell it and make it funny. I hadn’t dealt with it enough. A lot of times you talk about something, and you haven’t dealt with it enough to make it funny and people can sense that. But as far as the mental health stuff, that was stuff I was experiencing in real-time and that’s just how I write — coming from a place of what’s actually happening to me. It was just like, “This is what I’ve got. This is who I am right now.’”

Comedians are natural storytellers, but I think we forget that the stories you guys are telling are from your own life and they can be really painful and you’re just really good at repackaging them for laughs. Is that process therapeutic for you, or is it draining?

It was pretty draining, to be honest. As soon as we filmed the special, I started switching in newer jokes and the first ones I dropped were the ones about my mom and the suicidal thoughts bit because I was like, “Okay, doing this every single night, it’s just a lot.” It’s a lot of yourself to put out there to strangers. Touring is also just exhausting on its own. So, I think emotionally and physically, I was a little drained and exhausted. I think this next one, this next hour of material will hopefully be a lot lighter. Hopefully relatable and whatnot, but not so heavy.

I used to think that if you were doing jokes on stage, it meant you were fine with whatever happened. But then you get back into actual therapy and you’re like, “Oh no, that’s not really true. It’s just you trying to make it seem better.”

Was there a joke you were surprised by the reaction to in this special?

I worked really hard to get that suicide hotline joke to work. I don’t remember how soon after I started doing that joke, but I did need some distance between it for sure. Because I think the first couple of times I tried it, it was like too fresh or something.

You hadn’t fully processed it yet?

That was my personal experience. I remember waiting for them to call me back. And they didn’t and that genuinely made me laugh. It did weirdly help. If I hadn’t had a super dark sense of humor, that would not have been helpful, but I do. So, I was like, this is objectively very, very funny

But I think I was surprised that I got it to work. Because for a while I was like, “I think it’s funny, but it’s not going to work.” And I felt that way about a lot of stuff. I felt that way about the mom stuff for a while where I was like, “This just might not work, but I think I can get it there.” That’s why you run stuff into the ground on tour in a bunch of different cities so that you can know for a fact that it’s going to work with most people.

Are you intentional about where you place jokes within the hour? Are you sandwiching the heavier stuff in between lighter jokes?

Yeah, I definitely did that with that six-minute chunk of dead mom jokes. It’s like, if you really look at it, it’s not six minutes about my dead mom. There are d*ck jokes in there and the Taylor Swift joke. There’s other stuff that was strategically placed in there to help it. There’s the whole sit-down thing I do where I’m like, “It’s not going to feel long because I’ve cushioned it.” I remember that took a while to get people to laugh at because it is so morbid. But the second half of that joke basically started out as save lines to make up for this heavy thing that I really wanted to say.

Some of your peers have talked about how you’re really good at living your life and narrating it almost simultaneously. Are you constantly measuring your experiences for potential material?

Yeah, I think your brain just works like that as a comedian. This is probably unhealthy, but when you’re doing things, there’s a little part of your brain going, “Is this something?” Which is probably not the best way to be present. So, whenever you are truly present, it’s beautiful and a miracle. But yeah, I think that I’m still working on that balance of trying to live my life and have things to say.

Are there other comedians whose work feels similar to yours that you admire?

Yeah, [Tig] Notaro doing that set about having cancer. That was when I was, I don’t know, 18? I thought that was so cool. And that’s such a raw set too. I don’t think it was planned. But mental health is much less taboo now to talk about. Everybody’s obsessed with Bo Burnham’s Inside. People who didn’t even think they had struggles with mental health, I think the pandemic… If it didn’t reveal to you that you had work to do on yourself or certain aspects of your mental health that could use some support, I think you at least became more empathetic towards people who do have mental health issues normally, because everybody was anxious and depressed. Some people for the first time in their life.

The goal of storytelling is to make someone feel something. Is that goal the same for comedy? Or is it more about making you confront the things you’re already feeling?

I guess you could say it’s to confront the things you’re already feeling because you’re trying to say things that are relatable to people. Even if it’s not confronting some difficult feeling they have, if it’s just like, “Oh my God, that’s how I feel too.” But then also, there are comedians who change the way people think about stuff. So, I think it just really depends on your material. Because sometimes you’ll do a set that skews one way thematically and then you’ll do one that’s completely different. My goal to have my next hour be a lot lighter is a good example of that. The next hour you’re like, “Okay, this is what I want to talk about and this is who I want it to resonate with. And this is what I want to spend my time going on about it and finding out what’s already funny to people and all that.”

But I think all anybody really wants is for people to think it’s funny and laugh.

Taylor Tomlinson’s ‘Look At You’ comedy special is available to stream now on Netflix.

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Carson Wentz Will Return To The NFC East After The Colts Traded Him To Washington

The NFL’s quarterback carousel continues to turn. One day after Aaron Rodgers announced his intention to return to the Green Bay Packers and the Denver Broncos pulled off a trade with the Seattle Seahawks to bring Russell Wilson to Colorado, a new report by Adam Schefter of ESPN indicates that the Washington Commanders have found their quarterback for the 2022 NFL season.

According to Schefter, the Commanders and the Indianapolis Colts worked out a deal to send Carson Wentz to the nation’s capital after only one year in the AFC. While the exact parameters of the trade have not yet been announced, Schefter reports that Indianapolis will receive a package of picks, including a pair of third-round selections.

Schefter also added that the Commanders will take on the entirety of Wentz’s contract.

Ian Rapoport of NFL Network reported that the Colts will begin looking for a quarterback, with one eye on San Francisco’s Jimmy Garoppolo.

Wentz began his NFL career in the NFC East, as he was a Philadelphia Eagle for several years before getting traded to the Colts last year. His future in Indianapolis came into doubt after the team lost to the Jacksonville Jaguars in the final game of the season, knocking them to 9-8 on the year and preventing them from making the playoffs. He completed 62.4 percent of his passes for 3,563 yards with 27 touchdowns and seven interceptions.

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Trump’s Ex-Press Secretary Essentially Called Him A Coward Who ‘Would Be 57 Feet Below Ground Hiding’ If America Were Invaded

Donald Trump may be loudly proclaiming that had he still been president , there would be no Russia Ukraine War. Because he is big, strong Trump Man and no one would dare mess with him. But Stephanie Grisham, Trump’s former press secretary, has a very different view of her old boss—and it’s a characterization that’s not nearly as flattering, as Vanity Fair reports.

While appearing on The View on Tuesday, Grisham was asked about the former president’s relationship with Vladimir Putin, given that Trump has spent years slobbering all over the Russian tyrant, including in the wake of his recent invasion of Ukraine. But the way Grisham sees it is that Trump’s respect from Putin stems more from the fact that he scares the sh*t out of him.

“I think [Trump] feared [Putin]. I think he was afraid of him. I think that the man intimidated him. Because Putin is a scary man, just frankly, I think he was afraid of him. I also think he admired him, greatly, I think he wanted to be able to kill whoever spoke out against him. So I think it was a lot of that. In my experience with him, he loved the dictators, he loved the people who could kill anyone, including the press.”

What a comforting thought!

As if that weren’t enough, she also spoke about how, as she’s watching what’s happening in Ukraine right now, she has imagined how Trump would’ve reacted had America been invaded while he was in office. “Just in watching all of this with [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy,” Grisham said, “Donald Trump would be 57 feet below ground hiding. And Zelenskyy has been out there fighting for his country.”

Make America Gutless Again!

(Via Vanity Fair)

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George R.R. Martin Is ‘Deeply, Heavily’ Involved With The ‘Game Of Thrones’ Spinoffs (But Don’t Worry, He’s Working On The Next Book, Too)

Now that Elden Ring is out, surely George R.R. Martin can focus on finishing The Winds of Winter, and finishing The Winds of Winter only. Right…?

In a blog post, the author updated his fans on the sixth book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series. “Yes, of course I am still working on THE WINDS OF WINTER,” he wrote. “I have stated that a hundred times in a hundred venues, having to restate it endlessly is just wearisome. I made a lot of progress on WINDS in 2020, and less in 2021… but ‘less’ is not ‘none.’ The world of Westeros, the world of A SONG OF ICE & FIRE, is my number one priority, and will remain so until the story is told. But Westeros has become bigger than THE WINDS OF WINTER, or even A SONG OF ICE & FIRE.”

Martin proceeded to list the other projects he’s working on, including the Dunk & Egg novellas, a coffee table book, and various Game of Thrones spin-offs for HBO / HBO Max, like the House Targaryen-focused House of the Dragon.

“Those have taken a ton of my time and attention this year. I have seen some comments out there questioning how much I am involved in these new series. The answer is: a lot. Deeply, heavily involved in every one of the new shows,” Martin confirmed. “It’s my world, and while I have been working closely with some fantastic writers and showrunners, ultimately it is up to me to try to keep the canon… well, canonical… and to do all I can to help make the new shows great. (And I love these stories too).”

At the end of every post on his blog, Martin includes a “Current Mood.” This blog’s Current Mood: tired. The second he faxes the drafts to The Winds of Winter and A Dream of Spring to his publisher, which I assume is how it works, Martin better take a vacation to whichever tropical island has the most frozen margarita machines. He’s earned it.

(Via Not a Blog)

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Director Shawn Levy On ‘The Adam Project’ And What He Wants To Avoid In ‘Free Guy 2’

There’s a recent seven-year gap in Shawn Levy’s film directing career. Now, it’s easy to just assume, well, with his involvement in Stranger Things, maybe he was just busy with that. In fact, that is pretty much what I assumed. But, as we kind of got into when we spoke to Levy last year for Free Guy, Shawn Levy movies make a lot of money. And guess what happened with Free Guy? A movie that was not existing IP and came out during the pandemic? It made a lot of money. So I did wonder if maybe there was another reason for the gap. And, as Levy explains, the gap had quite a bit to do with, after the third Night at the Museum film, losing his friend Robin Williams and needing a break.

Now, after that break, The Adam Project (on Netflix this week) is Levy’s second film in the last seven months. It stars, again, Ryan Reynolds as a crack pilot from the future named Adam Reed who travels back to our present to find his dorky younger self (Walker Scobell). Now, finding his younger self isn’t the main mission, it’s more of a side mission that needs to be completed in order to fulfill the main mission. (Adam is injured and his future aircraft won’t start when it senses a pilot is injured so he needs his younger self’s uninjured DNA to start his plane.) It’s a clever time travel movie that kind of turns the trope of not running into your younger self, or family members, on its head. After the two get the aircraft started, they decide to team up to complete the greater mission of stopping a future conglomerate of controlling everything. (Or as older Adam says, something way worse than the Biff timeline in Back to the Future Part II.)

Ahead, Levy explains why he’s drawn to projects that aren’t existing IP. Though he does realize, now, Free Guy has now become existing IP and people want a sequel. But he will only do one if the script is right and he tells us what he doesn’t want a second Free Guy to be. But, first, as we jumped on Zoom, the host of the meeting gave Levy quite a complimentary introduction that involved many, many accolades…

Shawn Levy: You just get sweeter and sweeter as the day goes on. The introduction is embarrassing.

I wish I had someone to introduce me like that.

I literally need Bea from the Virtual Junket Production Company to follow me around the world.

I would pay money for this service. I guess it does cost money. I guess someone is paying for this service.

Somebody’s paying something, Mike.

Yeah, this isn’t on the house…

I am happy that we’re going to use only audio of this conversation. I got to change to a more comfortable chair and I’m lounging.

By the way, in case this happens, my super is supposed to come today to fix a hole in the wall, and I said the only time I wasn’t available was right now. So I know within the next 10 minutes there’s going to be a knock on the door…

I mean, where are your priorities Mike? Talking to a Hollywood director or fixing shit in your home?

Well, I just want to warn you this could happen.

I love it. Love it.

So I’m watching this movie and I’m picturing you and maybe Ryan having to map out the rules of time travel for this world. And that sounds like a lot of fun.

Well, I’m going to surprise you. To me, that sounds like the opposite of fun.

Wait, really?

Because even though I am now the director of a time travel, sci-fi adventure, my interest in time travel mythology and science rules is minimal. I am an emotional filmmaker. I want my movies to connect emotionally. So literally my whole goal with The Adam Project was the simplest, most concise declaration of rules possible.

Okay, but that’s still rules.

It’s still rules. And you know what? Here’s why I’m lucky. Jonathan Tropper and Don Granger at Skydance spent eight years developing the script. I understood about 78 percent of it. To quote Taika Waititi in my movie Free Guy, “Pretend I’m dumb.” I said, “Tropper, pretend I’m dumb. Tell me the rules.” He explained it to me in layman’s terms. And I said, “Okay, use those words in the screenplay,” because I don’t want the movie to feel like homework. I want it to feel soundly constructed but digestible so that the audience could just connect with the characters.

What’s actually an example of that? Where you thought it was too confusing.

There’s a scene outside the cabin where Zoe Saldaña is talking about how there was a time jet that came back from a certain time stream, but there was no record of it having left. And literally I said to Tropper, “Wait, how was there a record of it if it never left?” And Tropper said because the time stream from which it left had already been changed. And I literally said, “Wait a second. This is convenient. I have one character who’s not so bright, and I’ve got the little, 12-year-old kid who’s like a brainiac. So why don’t you write the dialogue that you and I, director and screenwriter, just had and put it in the mouths of the characters?” So I always find that’s a useful trick, to literally name the explanation by using it as dialogue.

Like Doc Brown explaining something to Marty McFly.

It is very helpful when you have a character in the narrative who can be the mouthpiece of explanation. It also helps when you have a young Ryan Reynolds character who can give shit to Ryan Reynolds. So in that same scene, I wrote a line where Walker looks at Ryan and says, “It’s like I traded in my brains for those muscles.” And then Ryan improvised the line for Walker on the shooting day where he adds, “That’s a shit deal.” That’s very much how we work. We work on the script, and then we add, and then we add, and then we add, and then we add while we’re making the thing.

I assume now that you’ve done two movies in a row you and Ryan are on a wavelength?

Well, we are on a crazy wavelength. And we’re old enough and experienced enough to know that we should grab onto it with both arms and savor it, which we do. But I’ve been lucky in my career because early on I made two movies with Steve Martin, and then I made three Night at the Museum movies. So I have always worked with writer-actors: Steve Martin, Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Ricky Gervais, Robin Williams. And then Date Night with Steve Carell and Tina Fey. I want my actors to be voices who contribute. I don’t look at them as just the performers who say the script. I want additive contributions every day. So I came to Ryan after a career of empowering my cast as collaborators, and Ryan slots in brilliantly as that.

All things considered, are you still a little surprised Free Guy took off the way it did?

I guess I am. I knew the movie would be satisfying, but so much in this world gives us pessimism about the viability of original movies at the theatrical marketplace. They just don’t make those movies anymore, and no one has released one that became a bonafide hit in a long, long time. Even pre-pandemic, a new movie that went on to be a global hit…

Well, Channing Tatum, who was obviously in Free Guy, had a decent hit with Dog and everyone seems surprised.

And look, it is a positive sign. But the fact that Free Guy went on to make like $330 million. And I like the fact – and Night at the Museum was a bit like this too – it didn’t open with record-shattering numbers, but it just stuck around. And I remember Sam Raimi said to me when I was in film school – I was at some birthday party with our kids – and I congratulated him on Spider-Man, which had done really well. He goes, “No, don’t congratulate me. Opening weekend is the marketing department’s victory. Second weekend? That’s the director’s victory.”

That’s interesting.

That means the movie’s doing its work for you. The movie is satisfying people. So they’re coming back, and they’re telling their friends. So the way Free Guy hung around, that was the most gratifying part.

You mentioned Night at the Museum. I haven’t thought about this in years, but you almost picked my friend Kirk’s apartment for Ben Stiller’s apartment. He was in the final three.

To think how Kirk’s fate would have been altered.

It’s true.

It’s like a whole other time stream. See, I’m bringing it back to time streams.

You are.

Because I’m smart like that now.

He said he would have gotten a free hotel for a month.

I need you to tell Kirk that giving up your home to a movie production, though the money’s tempting, it’s never quite worth it.

Okay, I will pass that along.

I’ve just given location departments a bad name. They are cursing me around the world.

During The Adam Project, I kept thinking what it would be like to meet myself at that age, and I don’t think I’d like it.

Well, but the whole point is – and Ryan and I talked a lot about this when we were polishing the script – you think that a movie like this is going to be about telling your younger self, “Hey buddy, I got you. It’s going to be okay.” The subversive idea in The Adam Project is this is a deeply self-loathing character, so he does not like that kid. He is mortified of that nerd loser who gets bullied and is a flesh-covered antenna of hypersensitivity, and that’s what makes their dynamic interesting.

I think in a situation like in this movie, I think I could convince my younger self that I am the older version. I don’t think he would listen to me. Because I thought I had it all figured out then, and I know now I didn’t.

Young you was defiant, rebellious, didn’t respect authority?

No, I think I was just stupid.

We all were. I think most of us, especially males, aren’t really thinking until about 22.

You’ve mentioned you don’t want to do a second Free Guy until the script is right. You mentioned past sequels you’ve done and you know what you want to avoid. Is there something specific?

Well, it’s not like Night at the Museum 2 or 3 and I wouldn’t even loop in my Pink Panther sequel or my Cheaper By the Dozen sequel because I didn’t direct those. I didn’t direct those because I felt I had done what I wanted to do with the first movies. I just know that with Free Guy especially, if all it is is more video game hijinks, that’s not a reason to make it. It needs that similar alchemy of gamer fluency and coolness with humanism because I think it was the combination of those traits that made Free Guy succeed the way it did and the way I believe it now is, based on social media and volume alone currently on Disney+ and HBO Max.

It’s weird because you were just talking about existing IP, and you’ve made two movies that aren’t existing IP back to back, but now Free Guy feels like it’s becoming exactly what it wasn’t before.

I know. Well, and that’s the other inconvenient thing. If we make Free Guy 2, we will call it Albuquerque Boiled Turkey if only to mock ourselves. But we will literally become the thing we stand against, and then I’m sure we’re going to backpedal.

Once you’re up to Free Guy 6, you’ll be like, “Look…” And you can pay Kirk for almost using his apartment.

I know. Kirk, I’m sorry you were robbed.

I know you had Stranger Things when you had a directing gap, but I’m glad you’re making movies and at a pretty fast pace again…

You know what? I do feel you’re not wrong. There was a long breather there after the last Night at the Museum after Robin Williams’s death where I was knocked back. And I regrouped. And life intervened and brought Arrival into that moment and Stranger Things into that moment. And then to come back to the directing chair with Free Guy and The Adam Project back to back all in an 18-month period, their releases, it’s very gratifying, and I don’t take any of it for granted.

And I’m so happy my super did not interrupt us.

Go deal with the hole in your wall.

‘The Adam Project’ streams via Netflix this weekend. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Rex Orange County Reunites With Tyler The Creator On The Smooth New Single ‘Open A Window’

Rex Orange County has a new album quickly on the way, as Who Cares? is set to drop this week, on March 11. He shared “Keep It Up” to announce the album, and now he has dropped what will presumably be his final pre-album single, reuniting with Tyler The Creator on “Open A Window.” Rex and Tyler have famously collaborated before, most recently on Tyler’s 2017 album Flower Boy.

The new songs lives in the smoother side of Rex’s oeuvre, a soulful tune carried by a subtle but impactful groove. Tyler pops up during the song’s final third with a verse that accentuates the track’s rhythm.

Rex discussed his relationship with Tyler in a 2020 interview and gave an example of a time the rapper helped him out, saying:

“I was complaining and worrying about putting out that album, Pony, and feeling like… I was like, I don’t know if I’m wasting my time when there’s so much music coming out. I’m hearing albums come out every week and I’m even going, ‘Alright, cool, next,’ skimming things. It felt like just a landfill of music. I actually just called him up and he was like, ‘The thing is, first of all, everyone has their place. You can’t change anything. Complaining or hating on anything is a waste of your time, because whilst you’re spending 20 minutes hating on that person, that person’s going to spend 20 minutes doing their thing and living their life that they have. You’re going to be on this planet once and you’re just wasting your life. And there’s going to be someone in the world who thinks their album is what you felt when you first heard, like, Channel Orange or Stevie Wonder or whatever. You can’t take that away from anyone, whether you like it or not.’ […] It helped me so much not to be concerned so much about what people would think. He just broke it down in a way that helped me a lot.”

Listen to “Open A Window” above.

Who Cares? is out 3/11 via Sony Music. Pre-order it here.

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Devin Booker Will Return On Wednesday From COVID Protocols Against The Miami Heat

Phoenix Suns star guard Devin Booker has missed the team’s past four games after entering COVID-19 protocols. According to a report from Shams Charania of The Athletic, Booker will return to the floor Wednesday against the Miami Heat when the top seeds in each conference clash.

Shortly after the report, the team confirmed that Booker is back.

Amid Booker’s absence, the Suns went 3-1, with their only loss coming Sunday on the road against the Milwaukee Bucks, 132-122.

Wednesday’s battle should be enticing, despite Chris Paul remaining out of the lineup. Both of these teams look primed to contend for a title this season and Booker’s re-emergence really solidifies the intrigue around this matchup.

Back on Jan. 8, Miami routed the Suns in Phoenix, 123-100, even without Jimmy Butler and Bam Adebayo. This time, the Suns will be missing one of their stars, but have received a key reinforcement in the form of their three-time All-Star.

In 54 games this year, Booker is averaging 25.6 points, 5.2 rebounds, 4.6 assists, and 1.1 steals. The 52-13 Suns will face the 44-22 Heat at 7:30 p.m. EST tonight on ESPN.

While both squads tout enjoyable players regardless of Booker’s status, it’s nice to see him available, both for his own sake (mostly this, of course) and the quality of the game. We should be in for a treat this evening.

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You’ve *Never* Seen Emmy Rossum Like She Appears In Peacock’s ‘Angelyne’ Teaser

Shameless fans hoped (along side Showtime’s Shameless cast) that Emmy Rossum would somehow return as Fiona Gallagher for the series finale. That didn’t happen, because (as articulated by showrunner John Wells) pandemic-related logistics crushed that dream. Another reason: Emmy’s been hard at work for four years (extended also because of you-know-what) on Peacock’s Angelyne, a limited series that she executive produced. And yep, Emmy also stars as the iconic, buxom-blonde beauty that graced 1980s LA billboards a plenty and lived the pink lifestyle.

One can imagine there was a lot of time spent in hair and makeup (and yup, there are some obvious prosthetics involved here, too, as the below images will show). Via Peacock, Showrunner Angela Miller forewarns people not to expect “a straight forward biopic” (whew) but rather “an homage to the Real Angelyne who became a cultural icon in Los Angeles.” And Rossum said of Angelyne, “She’s as if Marilyn Monroe got into an easy bake oven with a ’80s punk Barbie Doll, and a dose of new age spirituality.” That oughta interest Rossum fans, as will the abundance of intriguing co-stars, including Hamish Linklater, Lukas Gage, Martin Freeman, and David Krumholtz.

From the series’ candy-filled synopsis:

ANGELYNE, Peacock’s limited series about fame, identity, survival, billboards, Corvettes, lingerie, men, women, women teasing men, men obsessed with women, West Hollywood, crystals, UFOs, and most importantly of all, the self-proclaimed Rorschach test in pink, glow-in-the-dark queen of the universe, Angelyne.

No one had better troll Emmy for the skimpy outfits here, because she’ll have a ready response for them, as she does. Here’s those aforementioned images.

Angelyne Emmy Rossum
Peacock
Angelyne Emmy Rossum
Peacock

Angelyne premieres (with the full, four-part shot) on May 19.

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Domantas Sabonis Received A One-Game Suspension For ‘Aggressively Confronting And Making Contact’ With A Referee

The Sacramento Kings couldn’t defend their home court on Monday against the New York Knicks, as Julius Randle went for 46 points and 10 rebounds en route to a 131-115 Knicks win. Late in the game, Kings big man Domantas Sabonis got called for a foul on Immanuel Quickley that he did not appreciate, and he voiced his frustrations to referee Josh Tiven.

Sabonis got a little too heated, which led to him picking up a technical foul. While protesting that, he accosted and made contact with Tiven, which led to his night ending a little early.

As a result, the league announced on Wednesday afternoon that Sabonis got handed a one-game suspension “for aggressively confronting and making contact with a game official.”

According to the release, Sabonis will serve his one-game suspension during Sacramento’s home game on Wednesday night against the Denver Nuggets.

Sabonis was acquired by the Kings at the trade deadline along with Jeremy Lamb and Justin Holiday. In exchange, Sacramento sent standout young guard Tyrese Haliburton, Buddy Hield, and Tristan Thompson to the Indiana Pacers. On the year, the Kings sit 24-43, which puts them in 13th place in the Western Conference and four games behind the New Orleans Pelicans for the final play-in spot.