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Patton Oswalt On His New Comedy Special ‘We All Scream’ And His Issues With ‘Top Gun: Maverick’

It’s hard to limit yourself to just one topic when talking with stand-up comic, actor, and pop culture oracle Patton Oswalt, and so a conversation initially focused on his fantastically smart and silly new Netflix special, We All Scream (which you can stream now), veers a little. Make no mistake, there’s a lot here for fans of Oswalt’s comedy as we discuss the special (which is his directorial debut) and why he never blames an audience for a missed joke. But we also discuss the rah-rah patriotism of Top Gun: Maverick, the positives of nostalgia overload, and the dangers of over-enthusiastically trying to shepherd a new generation to the “good” art.

All of this is to say that what we have here for you is further evidence of Oswalt’s fertile mind and a nice appetizer for a special that is as comfortable talking about our tenuous grip on what is cool and what is inoffensive as it is joking with doctors and grocery store managers in the audience after spinning a tale about a barn full of pubic hair.

We spoke in May 2020 (right in the middle of lockdown) and I just remember asking (in a tearful frightened voice) “what… what movies are you watching? I don’t know what to ask?” It was a great conversation on my part.

I’m sure that interview was a portrait of psychosis.

[Laughs] And it was still early. So, I love the special. But are you really that hard on yourself for what you did or didn’t get done during the pandemic?

It wasn’t that I was so hard on myself for what I didn’t get done. What I’m really hard on myself for was the self-delusional, aspirational nature of what I mapped out that I was going to do. And you realize, “Oh, all of the hubris that I make fun of in other people, I own in spades.” And so it can be a little sobering when you see that aspect of yourself and know that exists.

I remember years ago, I got laid off from a job, and in the first week I reorganized my house, I converted all my CDs to digital files. I really thought the pandemic was going to be the same thing. And I signed up for Duolingo and stuff, and I did not learn Italian. Patton, I did not learn Italian.

I’m still trying to learn Italian. Oh, my God, there were going to be so many things I was going to do and I just absolutely did not do them. Friends of mine learned to cook, they wrote screenplays and stuff, and I just couldn’t do anything because it was weird. It felt like, “Why am I trying to create something for a world that might not exist when I’m done with it?” You do need the world pushing back or waiting, even if they’re waiting to tear it apart. For me, at least, you feel like you want to feel like, “Is there someone waiting for this? Or else, why am I doing this?”

You talk a little bit about being open-minded and the passage of time, and you are someone who’s very notably into comic books, geek culture, things of that nature, Star Wars — the things everybody’s into now, basically. But there’s a gatekeeping aspect to that in a lot of people. How do you steer clear of that? Has being a father helped you get to a place where you’re able to accept, “Okay. Everything’s not about me?”

Yeah. It’s actually two things. The first thing that’s very important; everything is not about me. And a lot of people have trouble, I think, embracing that, but what’s even more important is you have to step the fuck out of the way. I’m still very in touch with remembering what it was like when I was a kid, what it was like to be in elementary school and then middle school and then high school, and trying to form yourself and nothing, nothing made you recoil quicker than an adult that wanted to have a guiding hand in the kind of media that I consumed or the music that I liked. Everything good that happened from our generation and from any other generation before that, or any other generation that is going to follow us, is from kids being left alone to figure stuff out for themselves.

My parents were not into science fiction, they were not into comic books. I found what I needed to find by myself. And so I don’t want to be the jock version of a nerd dad saying, “You’re going to sit down and watch these Marvel films,” I want her [Alice, Oswalt’s 13-year-old daughter] to figure out [what she likes]. She likes some Marvel stuff, but there are other things she likes that I don’t understand, but that’s her thing and I’m letting her go do it. I’m not going to try to cram my ’80s childhood into my daughter’s 2020s childhood, that doesn’t make any sense.

Sometimes it just freaks me out a little, how there’s still this continuing push (in Hollywood) to make things feel relevant that happened 30, 40 years ago.

Except, here’s what’s kind of cool about that, there is always going to be the force of nostalgia on culture. People look back at, “Oh, but the ’70s had Star Wars,” but they also had a lot of crappy reboots and redos of TV shows and movies, just like any other decade because everyone wants safety and it’s the people that reject the nostalgia and plow forward with the new thing that creates the new nostalgia.

So yes, for as many reboots that are happening right now and as many revisitations, there are also people that we don’t even know about yet, that are kicking against that and aren’t liking that. And, I feel like we have a better quality of reboots, something like Cobra Kai is a reboot about the dangers of nostalgia and rebooting things, about how that just creates more problems. The Falcon And The Winter Soldier, which is “all the Marvel Avenger stuff that you were rah-rahing for was actually kind of evil in a way, wasn’t exactly all good.” And that needs to be examined. So maybe the smarter reboot, the smarter nostalgia, will make people more leery of it when it’s done badly or when it’s done for propagandistic purposes.

It’s so hard to figure out if there’s a path that people can actually identify that will tell them what is going to succeed. Like Paper Girls just got canceled, but that was a great comic.

Right. Not only did they not give it a chance, I didn’t know that it was on until after it had been on. There was no build-up to it. I don’t remember seeing a trailer and that’s one of my favorite graphic novels of all time.

Netflix Oswalt
Netflix

You just launched a comic with Dark Horse, Minor Threats [issue 2 comes out October 5]. As someone who is putting stuff out there in this world, do you try to figure out what the dynamic is to try and find success?

The only thing that will ever find success is when someone is making something that really is passionate for them, that they are excited to do. And if you feel that excitement, that’s what makes the thing push through. It’s why Squid Game was such a sensation. That was something that obsessed that guy for, I think 15 years he worked on that thing. It was just this thing that he could not get out of his head. So looking at whatever the trends are now or trying to predict an algorithm will always lead you to disaster.

As I think a lot of these paint by numbers, blockbusters, have been showing us, there’s been a lot of stagnation. Whereas something like Top Gun: Maverick, which I had my problems with, but that thing, whether you like it or not, is a crazy piece of filmmaking because that was a crazy obsessive vision from crazy obsessive Tom Cruise, who is basically betting on himself. And there is an actual visceral thrill to that, to seeing that level of commitment and kind of near insanity. There’s something thrilling about that, that a lot of other movies don’t have.

What are some of your issues with Top Gun: Maverick? I’m curious because I have some myself.

There’s a spooky, unspoken throwback to America: right or wrong, if anyone looks at us sideways, we go after them, even if that enemy might not be there. There’s no tangible, physical enemy there, in a weird way, the enemy is the unspoken idea that, “Hey, maybe America isn’t so awesome anymore. Well then let’s blow up the fucking world!” Now, however, they do make it look spectacular.

They do.

But the enemy in that movie is not the Russians, it’s not terrorists, it’s doubt in America. It is an esoteric idea that needs to be bombed off the face of the earth. And there’s something really weird about that. By the way, and I’m not going to lie and go, “And I sat there with my arms crossed and I was disgusted,” I was thrilled out of my fucking mind watching that thing. It was incredible.

I loved it, too. I just was hoping he (Maverick) would die. He saved him (Rooster) and it was nice, but I like fucked up endings, which is helpful for life. That’ll eventually pay off for me, but everything else, apparently gets a happy ending.

But he can’t die because at this point it’s like, this is all about franchise bucks down the line.

So you directed this special, tell me a little about just the decision to do that. Was this a precursor to something down the road, or is it just you really wanted to just take control here?

Both. I wanted to take control and have an idea that there are visual things that I want to see in specials. There are visual things I want to avoid in specials. I see a lot of crazy camera work and a lot of spectacle in the place of substance, and I really wanted to just bet on the substance of the material over any kind of crazy camera moves. And I had those ideas in my head. So to get to be there during the filming and during the cutting really made a big difference to me. And then it also showed me that, “Yeah, you can direct a movie.” It’s about gathering people and being open enough to other people’s suggestions and ideas to all create something together. And that’s how you get past the fear.

When you’re starting out as a comic and you’re experimenting, how do you avoid being angry at the audience when they don’t get something? How do you stay humble in that moment and not just be like, “Well they’re stupid, they don’t get me.”

That was very much a feature of my youth. I’ve been doing it long enough now to know that. No matter how long you’ve been doing it, you’re going to have bad sets. I’ve seen people walk on stage where the crowd goes nuts. You’re seeing them feel like, “Well, there’s no way they can fail,” and then they try new stuff and it doesn’t work. Sometimes, something you think is funny, either you can’t sell it or you were wrong and it doesn’t work. And again, it’s never the end of the world when something doesn’t work. But it’s also never, “This audience is fucking stupid.” You either didn’t sell it or you didn’t a hundred percent believe in it like you should have. Blaming the audience is taking the responsibility off yourself. You’ve got to make every audience your audience, no audience is your audience until you start talking and then you convince them that what you’re doing is funny. So if they’re not laughing, you didn’t convince them.

Do you think that we put too much attention on comics at this point?

I think it’s actually a bigger problem, I think we put too much attention on us being entertained at all times. Some things in life, some important things, don’t necessarily need to be entertaining to you. You’re being entertained enough. There are people that I know that didn’t even agree with Trump, but still were like, “But he is really entertaining.” I’m like, “I’m sorry, you’re not being entertained enough?” We are nonstop entertained in this culture. So if, God forbid, ten minutes of politics is boring to you, but it’s making sure that the dams aren’t collapsing and the water is running, then let that be boring. And then go back to playing Candy Crush.

You’ll be fine. You don’t need to be entertained every millisecond of the day. So it’s not that they’re putting so much stress on me, it’s like people are acting as if it’s some kind of crime where a minute went by where I wasn’t entertained and that needs to be addressed. No, it doesn’t, a big part of life is having to deal with boredom. And if you learn to deal with boredom creatively, that’s where you can really create interesting stuff. But if you’re constantly looking to be overwhelmed and engulfed by a new realm or a new form of entertainment, then you’re never going to form anything of your own.

I think that’s accurate. For the record, I’m not entertained by the world at large right now.

Yeah. Me either.

Patton Oswalt’s ‘We All Scream’ is streaming on Netflix now.

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More Women Are Coming Forward To Share Screenshots Of ‘Flirty’ DMs Adam Levine Allegedly Sent To Them

Yesterday, Instagram model Sumner Stroh shared a video with screenshots of DMs sent to her by Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine that were fairly scandalous. You see, Stroh says she and Levine had an affair over the course of a year, and months after it ended, Levine messaged Stroh out of the blue to ask her if she was “ok” with him naming his third child with his wife — Victoria’s Secret model Behati Prinsloo — after Stroh. “I really wanna name it Sumner. You ok with that? DEAD serious,” he said. The circumstances are just as awkward as the infidelity and while Levine issued a statement denying said infidelity, more women have come forward sharing DMs by Levine in which he is being extremely flirtatious with them, especially for a married man.

TMZ has obtained multiple screenshots of messages from Levine to other women. In one, he tells a woman named Maryka to “Distract yourself by F*cking with me!” Another woman named Alyson Rosef shared a DM exchange with Levine where tells him she doesn’t like heavy metal music, to which he responds by saying, “Said no hot chicks ever other than you.” He also sends her a context-less two-second video afterward of himself looking at the camera and saying, “I’m stupid.”

In addressing the initial exchange with Sumner Stroh, Levine’s statement said, among other things, “I did not have an affair, nevertheless, I crossed the line during a regrettable period of my life.” As more screenshots of oddly flirtatious texts come out, Levine might have some more explaining to do beyond that.

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Megan Thee Stallion Will Pull Double Duty As Host/Musical Guest In The 48th Season Of ‘SNL,’ Which Will Kick Off With Miles Teller and Kendrick Lamar

The time has come for Saturday Night Live to return to our late-night screens with some occasionally funny jokes and Colin Jost’s squeaky-clean face. At the end of last season, fans said goodbye to long-time cast members Pete Davidson, Kate McKinnon, Aidy Bryant, and Kyle Mooney, meanwhile, a slew of new players entered the mix. Now, the long-running series has announced its first batch of hosts and musical guests for the 48th season.

The October 1st season premiere will be hosted by Top Gun Maverick’s Miles Teller with Kendrick Lamar making his third appearance as musical guest after releasing Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers earlier this year.

Episode two will air on October 8th with host Brendan Gleeson, who will star in The Banshee’s Of Inisherin this fall, though he might be more familiar to you as Mad-Eye Moody from the Harry Potter films or Knuckles from Paddington 2. He’s got incredible range! Willow will be the musical guest ahead of her fifth album COPINGMECHANISM which drops on Oct 7th.

Finally, Megan Thee Stallion will be making her triumphant return as not only musical guest, but first-time host as well on October 15th. The rapper recently released Traumazine. This is great and all, but when will Keenan Thompson be asked to be the first host who is also a current cast member?

The 48th season of SNL premieres October 1st on NBC and Peacock.

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Nipsey Hussle Killer Eric Holder’s Sentencing Has Been Postponed

Nipsey Hussle killer Eric Holder was convicted of the Los Angeles rapper’s murder earlier this year but will be waiting for another month until he finds out his sentence, according to local news. Holder’s sentencing hearing was scheduled for this month but has been postponed to November 3 — which is par for the course for this case. The actual trial was delayed a number of times since Holder’s initial arrest just days after shooting and killing Nipsey in front of his Marathon Clothing store at the end of March 2019.

Holder was found guilty of first-degree murder in July for Nip’s death, as well as voluntary manslaughter and possession of a firearm by a felon. In his defense, Holder argued that he could only be charged with voluntary manslaughter, claiming that the shooting was in the heat of the moment and not premeditated — the requisite for murder. However, as he had initially left the scene before returning and opening fire, jurors agreed with prosecutors that he’d had plenty of time to cool off. As the death penalty is currently suspended in the state of California, Holder faces 25 years to life in prison.

Nipsey Hussle is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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All The Best New Indie Music From This Week

Indie music has grown to include so much. It’s not just music that is released on independent labels but speaks to an aesthetic that deviates from the norm and follows its own weirdo heart. It can come in the form of rock music, pop, or folk. In a sense, it says as much about the people that are drawn to it as it does about the people that make it.

Every week, Uproxx is rounding up the best new indie music from the past seven days. This week we got new music from Death Cab For Cutie, The Beths, Djo, Dehd, and more.

While we’re at it, sign up for our newsletter to get the best new indie music delivered directly to your inbox, every Monday.

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Death Cab For Cutie — Asphalt Meadows

Veteran indie rockers Death Cab For Cutie managed to prove that comeback albums don’t need to play on nostalgia to be successful. Released the predecessor to their 2018 LP, Asphalt Meadows is one of their most pensive and self-assured albums to date, which is saying a lot since the band has released 10 albums in a little over two decades. Throughout 11 tracks, Death Cab trade in melancholy ballads for eloquent and meaningful anthems that carry a message.

The Beths — Expert In A Dying Field

Aussie rockers The Beths issue their bid for masterful power pop with their third studio album Expert In A Dying Field. The album sparkles with colorful tracks which include catchy hooks, earnest lyrics from vocalist Liz Stokes, and propulsive guitars that will leave you invigorated and wanting more.

Whitney — Spark

Chicago duo Whitney may have cultivated a reputation for pastoral folk-rock on their first two albums, but with their latest LP Spark, the band take things in a new, pop-leaning direction. Trading in acoustic riffs for vibrant synths, Spark marks Whitney’s most opulent and playful effort yet, leaning on synths and groovy instrumentals to deliver irresistible, dance-forward tracks like “Real Love” and “Memory.”

Djo — Decide

Actor/musician Joe Keery spearheaded the project Djo in 2019 as a way to experiment after leaving his former band, Post Animal. His sophomore album Decide leans even more into innovative territory, bringing vibrant, ’80s-inspired synths into the current decade with thoughtful, psych rock-inspired production. Featuring groovy and danceable tracks like “Gloom” and “Climax,” think of Decide as Chromeo’s mid-aughts catalog, but revamped for 2022.

No Devotion — No Oblivion

Seven years after No Devotion’s self-titled debut LP, the space rock band reunite for the dreamy and awe-inspiring LP No Oblivion, featuring silky smooth vocals from Thursday’s Geoff Rickly. The album is strung together with sprawling, atmospheric songs that mark the group’s most personal and vulnerable work yet.

Young Jesus — Shepherd Head

Following the band’s acclaimed breakthrough album Welcome To Conceptual Beach, Young Jesus deliver a stunning 7-track project that dives deeper to the heart of the band’s sound. Shepherd Head delicately explores themes of love, loss, and spirituality accompanied by haunting instrumentals and lead singer John Rossiter’s deep and comforting vocals.

Hand Habits — “Greatest Weapon”

After releasing their pop-leaning effort Fun House, Hand Habits shares a pair of one-off singles, including the delicate number “Greatest Weapon.” The song was written with Ethan Gruska and features Sylvan Esso on backup vocals, which compliment the wonderfully twangy guitar. About the song, Duffy says “Greatest Weapon” “is about coming to grips with the dance of time.”

Cate Le Bon — “Typical Love”

Cate Le Bon consistently proves herself as one of indie’s most innovative songwriters, and her standalone single “Typical Love” is an example. The captivating song was written during her Pompeii songwriting sessions with Warpaint’s Stella Mozgawa. “It always felt like a second cousin to the other tracks so was put aside for a rainy day,” Le Bon said.

Dehd — “Eggshells”

Prolific indie rockers Dehd may have just shared their 2022 album Blue Skies a few months ago, but that doesn’t mean there’s a shortage of new music from the trio. While most of the songs on Blue Skies were fast and energetic, the new track “Eggshells” is sparse and languid. It’s led by a rambling guitar and has slight instrumentation, leaving room for duel vocalists Emily Kempf and Jason Balla to sing about cutting out toxic relationships.

Jean Dawson — “Pirate Radio*”

Ahead of his highly anticipated album Chaos Now*, alt-rock innovator Jean Dawson shows off his skill for ballad-like songwriting with the new track “Pirate Radio*.” The song juxtaposes Dawson’s previously released singles, which lean invigorating and hard-hitting. “Pirate Radio*” is led by an acoustic guitar and a delicate string section, creating a divine and comforting melody as Dawson sings of reaching out for help.

Jaws Of Love. — “5 Years”

Kelcey Ayer has been making music as Local Natives since co-founding the band in 2005. But in 2017, Ayer decided to take on a solo project as Jaws Of Love., which led to his debut solo album Tasha Sits Close To The Piano. But now, five years later, Ayer is reviving is solo project with his sophomore release, Second Life. This time around, Ayer decided to let go of genre and have fun experimenting with new sounds. His album’s lead single “5 Years” is an example of that, as it manages to be both a playful and atmospheric reflection on a past relationship.

Petal Crush — “Playing Dead”

Petal Crush’s Andy Petrusky hasn’t had the typical music trajectory. He started a promising professional tennis career before deciding to move to NYC to pursue music full-time following the death of his brother, who coined the band name. Following his 2016 debut album and a 2019 EP, Petal Crush are gearing up for the new project Playing Dead, which they’ve previewed with the electrifying title track. The song features a frenetic beat and points to what is expected to be an all-around captivating EP.

Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Vladimir Putin Seems Worried While Telling Weapon Makers To ‘Urgently’ Ramp Up Production While Ukraine Gains Ground

Following reports that Ukrainian forces destroyed a Russian barge carrying weapons and troops to the border where fighting has intensified, Vladimir Putin is now pleading with weapon manufacturers to ramp up production. Putin’s plea also arrives after the the MOEX Russia Index — “the ruble-denominated benchmark of the Russian stock market” — fell in response to the battlefield losses and troop mobilization. In short, things are not going great for the Russian leader, who is reportedly in danger of being ousted by the country’s wealthy elites.

Via Newsweek:

A video posted by journalist Mary Ilyushina shows Putin meeting with military complex higher-ups on Tuesday. Quoting Putin, she wrote on Twitter that a boost in production is necessary to “urgently” supply the armed forces while ensuring “100% import substitution in this sector.”

It’s a change in tone from just over a month ago, when Putin bragged at the opening of the Army-2022 International Military-Technical Forum and the International Army Games 2022 in Moscow about Russia’s weapons being “decades ahead of their foreign counterparts.”

To illustrate how poorly Russia’s invasion is going, the state-sponsored Kremlin TV has been calling out Putin and calling the war a “serious failure.” The network defiantly aired one propagandist who urged Putin to admit defeat and end the whole thing.

“This is our most serious defeat during the last six months, and the most significant success of our adversary,” political scientist Sergey Mikheyev told Kremlin TV. “Perhaps this failure is beneficial, because being so obvious, now it’s impossible to pull the wool over our eyes, pretending that everything is wonderful.”

(Via Newsweek)

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Alex Jones Is Very Upset That He Just Can’t Say Whatever He Wants To Say Without Consequences: ‘This Is Serious Tyranny… This Judge Is A Tyrant’

Did Alex Jones learn nothing from the public humiliation of his first Sandy Hook defamation trial? We ask only because the latest news surrounding the InfoWars host suggests he either has selective amnesia about how that first court case turned out, or he really is just that hardheaded.

Here’s the update: Jones, who was already ordered to shell out $49 million to the family of one Sandy Hook victim, is now heading into a second defamation trial set to take place in Connecticut. This latest lawsuit was filed by parents of more victims of the 2012 school shooting plus one FBI officer who responded to the scene. Even though Jones should know how to act after making an enemy out of his last presiding judge, the TV snake-oil salesman is apparently up to his old tricks, as evidenced by his behavior in court earlier today.

“This has never before been done in U.S. history. It’s a struggle session, right out of communist China or South Africa,” Jones said of the proceedings, via Mediaite. “This is serious tyranny, regardless of what you think about me or how the media has twisted what I said over the years, I’ve apologized for past things I said that hurt people’s feelings.”

Jones has already been found liable in the case for using the tragic massacre to spread unfounded conspiracy theories that banked InfoWars millions in revenue over the years. The hearings this week are to determine how much he owes his victims, and whatever remorse the right-wing blowhard seemed to have after the verdict of his first case was rendered — he’s not feeling sorry anymore.

“I wasn’t the first person to question Sandy Hook,” he continued. “And I apologized, years ago, they have misrepresented what I’ve said and done. There is a whole industry of lawyers around these families that have sued Remington and won $73 million and won all these other lawsuits. And they simply now are not just coming for the second amendment, but the first amendment, this is a travesty of justice.”

In fact, Jones pulled from his old playbook, eventually lumping the judge in with the people who are “out to get him.”

“This judge is a tyrant,” he ranted. “This judge is ordering me to say that I’m guilty. And to say that I’m a liar. None of that’s true. I was not wrong about Sandy Hook on purpose. I questioned it.”

Just a reminder to Jones and anyone else wondering: The first amendment protects the right to free speech, it doesn’t protect you from the consequences of the things you say — especially when those things involve labeling one of the worst school shootings in our country’s history as a “hoax,” targeting grieving families who suffered unimaginable loss and profiting off the death of six-year-old children.

(Via Mediaite)

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Adam Levine’s Alleged Mistress Says She’s ‘Embarrassed And Disgusted’ With Herself And That She Thought His Marriage Was ‘Over’ At The Time

Model Sumner Stroh surprised the world with a new TikTok video yesterday, in which she claimed that she and Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine, who is married to Victoria’s Secret model Behati Prinsloo, had a year-long affair. Furthermore, Stroh alleged Levine actually wanted to name is and Prinsloo’s forthcoming third child after her.

Hours after that post, Stroh felt the need to clarify a few things, so she shared another video.

@sumnerstroh

Replying to @alanasanders89 addressing a few things I wish I had said in the first video

♬ original sound – Sumner Stroh

The new video is a response to a comment that reads, “It’s no secret he’s been married for a decade. The only victim here is his wife and children.” In the video, Stroh says she’s “embarrassed and disgusted” with herself and that she didn’t want people to think she was trying to portray herself as a victim.

Elsewhere, she noted that during her and Levine’s affair, she was “under the impression that their marriage was over.” She continued, “I believed that they were keeping it quiet to avoid the negative press because, as I had said, I was new to LA, so I just assumed that with celebrities of that caliber, that’s just how it was. And that’s why I feel exploited, because he knew I believed everything that he said, because of my vulnerable position, being new to LA.”

She concluded, “Again, in no way was I trying to gain sympathy and I fully realize I’m not the victim in this. I’m not the one who’s really getting hurt here: it’s Behati and her children, and for that, I’m so, so sorry.”

This new video came before Levine shared a statement about the situation today. He told TMZ, “I used poor judgment in speaking with anyone other than my wife in ANY kind of flirtatious manner. I did not have an affair, nevertheless, I crossed the line during a regrettable period of my life. […] In certain instances it became inappropriate. I have addressed that and taken proactive steps to remedy this with my family. […] My wife and my family is all I care about in this world. To be this naive and stupid enough to risk the only thing that truly matters to me was the greatest mistake I could ever make. I will never make it again. I take full responsibility. We will get through it and we will get through it together.”

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Eli Manning Tried His Very Best To Join Penn State As A Walk-On

Eli Manning’s football career includes two Super Bowls, two Super Bowl MVPs, four Pro Bowls, and his number retired by the New York Giants. It is the only NFL team for which the youngest Manning brother played after a sterling career as the starting quarterback at Ole Miss, which led to him getting picked No. 1 overall in the 2004 NFL Draft.

Basically: At no point in Eli Manning’s life has he ever had to wonder what life is like for walk-ons. Despite that, Manning, as part of his program Eli’s Places on ESPN+, decided to see what it is like to join a college football program without the promise of a scholarship during a trip to Penn State earlier this year. Manning met with Nittany Lion coach James Franklin — who was in on the whole thing — before getting fitted for a mask and wig that he wore to the try-out as Chad Powers.

Two things are especially funny here. One, obviously, is Eli Manning, who is 41 years old and wasn’t exactly known for his athleticism during his playing days, running a terrible 40-yard dash time, which assuredly stuck out like a sore thumb among the 18-22 year olds who were seriously trying for walk-on spots. The other is that Manning absolutely knocked the “throwing the football” portion of all of this out of the park, to the point that one offensive analyst for the Nittany Lions, former Maryland QB Danny O’Brien, wanted to bring him on board. In a way, this is a testament to O’Brien’s ability to identify talent, so he can take solace in that.

Anyway, it turns out there is some interest in turning this into the next Ted Lasso, so it is possible this is not the last we see of Chad.

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Freddie Gibbs’ ‘Soul Sold Separately’ Tracklist Features Pusha T, Offset, Rick Ross, And Anderson .Paak

Although he’s seemingly spent the bulk of this year engaged in a prickly feud with Buffalo rapper Benny The Butcher, Gary, Indiana MC Freddie Gibbs has also been hard at work on his next album, the fifth solo full-length of his career and first since 2017’s Freddie. Today, he finally revealed its title, release date, and tracklist, which features Anderson .Paak, Kelly Price, Moneybagg Yo, Offset, Pusha T, Raekwon, Rick Ross, and hip-hop legend Scarface. Titled Soul Sold Separately, the album is due September 30 on Warner Records.

While Freddie’s been spending the past few years cultivating a reputation as rap’s favorite troublemaker, he re-emerged earlier this year to remind fans that he’s still one of the hardest rappers in hip-hop on his singles “Ice Cream” featuring Rick Ross and “Too Much” with Moneybagg Yo. To accompany the announcement of the album’s release date, Benny timed his tweet to the debut of his Funk Flex freestyle, in which he raps over the instrumental from R&B singer Amerie’s 2002 hit “Why Don’t We Fall In Love.” Beginning at the 4-minute mark in the video above, Freddie appears to be caught off-guard when the beat starts but instantly launches into a fiery freestyle with no preamble. You can watch the video above and see the tracklist below.

“Couldn’t Be Done” Feat. Kelly Price
“Blackest In The Room”
“Pain & Strife” Feat. Offset
“Zipper Bagz”
“Too Much” Feat. Moneybagg Yo
“Lobster Omelette” Feat. Rick Ross
“Space Rabbit”
“Feel No Pain” Feat. Anderson .Paak & Raekwon
“Rabbit Vision”
“PYS” Feat. DJ Paul
“Dark Hearted”
“Gold Rings” Feat. Pusha T
“Grandma’s Stove” Feat. Musiq Soulchild
“CIA”
“Decoded” Feat. Scarface (Bonus Track)

Soul Sold Separately is due 9/30 via Warner Records. Get it here.