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    Donald Trump Lost His Battle. The Culture War Goes On.

    #masthead-section-label, #masthead-bar-one { display: none }The Best of 2020Best ComedyBest TV ShowsBest BooksBest MoviesBest AlbumsAdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyCRITIC’S NOTEBOOKDonald Trump Lost His Battle. The Culture War Goes On.The reality-TV president was a practitioner, and a product, of a style of pop-cultural grievance that will outlast him.President Trump gloried in inviting conservative celebrities like Kid Rock, right, to the White House.Credit…Gabriella Demczuk for The New York TimesDec. 14, 2020You could say that the Trump presidency effectively ended when the polls closed election night or when news outlets called the contest for Joseph R. Biden Jr. four days later. You could say that it ended when the Electoral College voted on Monday to make Mr. Biden the president, or that it will end when Mr. Biden is sworn in on Jan. 20.But by one measure, the Trump presidency ended in mid-November, when online conservatives went bonkers over a picture of Harry Styles in a dress.The photo of the British singer on the cover of the December Vogue prompted the YouTube personality Candace Owens to tweet, “Bring back manly men.” To Ben Shapiro, the photo shoot was an assault on the concept of manhood itself: “Anyone who pretends that it is not a referendum on masculinity for men to don floofy dresses is treating you as a full-on idiot.”What does all this have to do with the president’s impending exit? First, it suggests that other conservatives are retaking the role of Troll-Warrior-in-Chief that Mr. Trump conferred on himself.But it’s also a reminder that the kind of button-pushing cultural politics that predated him — that in many ways helped make a President Trump possible — will survive his tenure.‘Duck Dynasty’ PoliticsA million years ago in the Obama era, proxy wars over culture were handled on the periphery of conservatism, in social media and right-wing talk. It was the era of the Gamergate attacks on feminists in the video gaming community, of umbrage over the foreign-language lyrics of a Coca-Cola commercial and over a female-cast reboot of “Ghostbusters.”With the election of President Trump, a pop-culture figure himself who intuited the connection between cultural fandom and political tribalism (he himself made a “Ghostbusters” outrage video the year he announced his campaign), the political and culture-war wings of conservatism merged.For four years, we had a president whose portfolio of concerns included protests at N.F.L. games, speeches at TV awards ceremonies, the loyalty of Fox News and the reboot of “Roseanne.” He scoured and fretted over Nielsen ratings — his own and those of shows he saw as allies and enemies — with the intensity a wartime president might devote to troop movements.Now, with a waning Mr. Trump self-soothing with OANN and Newsmax and tweeting out the elaborate sci-fi serial that the election was stolen from him, command of that battle is returning from the White House to the field.Phil Robertson, who was briefly suspended from the reality show “Duck Dynasty” in 2013 for homophobic and racist comments, with Mr. Trump at a 2019 rally.Credit…Larry W Smith/EPA, via ShutterstockFor decades, the expression of politics through culture war has been a staple of conservative media. Andrew Breitbart, the right-wing online publisher, declared that “politics is downstream from culture” (borrowing an idea from Marxist theorists like Antonio Gramsci). Fox News made an annual production of the “war on Christmas” (with occasional spinoffs like “Santa Claus and Jesus are white”).The appeal was emotional; people have a personal connection to family holidays and their favorite shows that they don’t to, say, marginal tax-rate policy. But it was also a way to appeal to a specific audience in a country where, increasingly, people had not just different political beliefs but entirely different cultural experiences.As far back as the early 1970s, the “rural purge” in TV — which eliminated bucolic sitcoms like “Green Acres” to make room for urban ones like “All in the Family” — reinforced the idea that there were different Americas with different, and even competing, popular cultures. This dynamic only spread with cable TV and the internet, which sliced and diced us into a nation of niche demos, sharing a geography but occupying different psychic spaces.As the historians Kevin M. Kruse and Julian E. Zelizer write in “Fault Lines,” their study of American polarization since the 1970s, all this led to “a world with fewer points of commonality in terms of what people heard or saw.” This was true in politics and in entertainment, and the two often overlapped.There was now identifiable red and blue pop culture. A 2016 Times study found a TV divide that mirrored the rural-urban split in the election. “Deadliest Catch,” the reality show about Alaskan crab fishing, was popular in red America; in blue zones, “Orange Is the New Black,” the Netflix drama and critique of the prison system.The brief suspension of Phil Robertson, the patriarch of the “Duck Dynasty” clan, had divided the country.  Credit…Gerald Herbert/Associated PressA 2014 poll found that 53 percent of Democrats, compared with 15 percent of Republicans, believed “Twelve Years a Slave” should win the best-picture Oscar. Neither party had taken a position on the movie; the culture war was just well-enough ingrained that people could intuit where their side would land, just as the Iraq War movie “American Sniper” became a conservative favorite and liberal target.Knowingly or not, audience members enlisted in the culture war as volunteers. For conservatives in particular, the liberal tilt of Hollywood was a useful font of grievance, allowing them to claim cultural victimhood no matter how much political and judicial power they held.And people increasingly saw their favorite stars as their proxies and champions. When Phil Robertson, the bayou patriarch of “Duck Dynasty,” was briefly suspended from the reality show in 2013 for homophobic and racist comments, one America saw it as political correctness taking down a beloved star for speaking his mind. Another America — if they had ever heard of “Duck Dynasty” at all — saw a bigot getting what he had coming to him.The Culture-Troll-in-ChiefAll of this, in retrospect, was an advance trailer for the it-came-from-“The Apprentice” Trump era.Politicians, especially on the right, have dabbled in culture war before: George H.W. Bush vs. “The Simpsons,” Dan Quayle vs. “Murphy Brown,” Bob Dole vs. rap. But their forays tended to be awkward, tone-deaf and often as not, self-defeating.But Mr. Trump, a child of TV who made himself into a TV character as an adult, understood media instinctively. It was where he lived, ever since he gave up his youthful fantasies of running a movie studio, vowed to “put show business into real estate” and forged his tabloid persona in the 1980s.Having used media to build a reality-show career and a business-success myth, having experienced the rush of primetime celebrity, he knew that culture makes the kind of gut connection that mere politicians can only dream of. Ordinary politics argues: Those other people don’t believe what you believe. Culture-war politics argues: Those other people don’t love what you love.So Mr. Trump’s campaign, as much as it was about wall-building or Islamophobia or “law and order,” was also about a promise to defend and uphold his followers’ culture over the enemy’s. His rallies combined a concert vibe with the theatrics of pro wrestling (another genre Mr. Trump had experience with).To an audience that had been told for years that showbiz celebrities disdained their values, here was one of their celebrities, a real celebrity from TV, taking their side. An alt-rightist essay on Breitbart.com hailed the erstwhile NBC host as “the first truly cultural candidate for President” since Patrick J. Buchanan, the CNN “Crossfire” co-host who declared a “cultural war” for “the soul of America” at the 1992 Republican National Convention.Ted Nugent performed at a campaign event for Mr. Trump in Michigan in October.Credit…Rey Del Rio/Getty ImagesTrump’s 2016 RNC didn’t have a lot of high-profile politicians, but it did have a “Duck Dynasty” star. As president, he gloried in inviting conservative celebrities like Kid Rock and Ted Nugent (who once called President Obama a “subhuman mongrel”), as well as the newly conservative-curious Kanye West, to take photos in the Oval Office.The pictures felt like spoils of war, a political end-zone dance. And his fiercest celebrity critics often played into his me-vs.-Hollywood narrative, cursing him out at the Tony Awards or feuding with him on Twitter.He praised Western culture as superior because “we write symphonies,” tooting a white-nationalist dog whistle from the orchestra pit. And he threw himself wholeheartedly into fights like the one over ABC’s reboot of “Roseanne,” whose star, Roseanne Barr, had become a real-life, vituperative Twitter Trumpist, and which worked her politics into the story lines.He didn’t, like previous presidents attending the Kennedy Center honors or sharing a something-for-everyone Spotify playlist, see culture as a way to find common ground. He saw it as a battleground with winners and losers, and one full of opportunities to inflame divisions.When the “Roseanne” premiere dominated the ratings, he crowed about it as his team trouncing the enemy. “It’s about us!” he told a crowd of supporters.Later, when ABC fired Ms. Barr from the show over a racist tweet, Mr. Trump joined the argument, not to condemn Ms. Barr’s remarks but to accuse the network of hypocrisy because of “HORRIBLE statements made and said about me on ABC.” It echoed his Twitter attack on the network in 2014 when it picked up the sitcom “black-ish”: “Can you imagine the furor of a show, ‘Whiteish’! Racism at highest level?”His bellyaching against Hollywood wasn’t just a bread-and-circuses distraction. It was political messaging. Pushing back on Ms. Barr’s firing — for likening a Black former Obama aide to an ape — echoed the right’s fixation on “cancel culture.” The message: Your stars are being canceled. Your shows are being canceled. You are being canceled. Only I am the network executive who can ensure your renewal.After ABC fired Roseanne Barr from the reboot of “Roseanne” over a racist tweet, Mr. Trump accused the network of hypocrisy.Credit…Brinson+Banks for The New York TimesHis fixation on ratings (dating back to “The Apprentice,” whose ratings he routinely lied about) vibed with his worldview of competition and scorekeeping. Fights about representation, American identity and the boundaries of acceptable speech aligned with messages expressed, in more blunt and ugly ways, by Mr. Trump’s campaign and supporters — especially the insidious language of “replacement.”“Now they’re making ‘Ghostbusters’ with only women. What’s going on!” was a way of telling men that he would protect them from becoming superfluous. “We can say ‘Merry Christmas’ again” was a way of saying: Your culture used to be the assumed default in America, and I’m going to bring that back. The enemy wants to demote you to a supporting player; I’m going to make you the star again.The Tug-of-Culture-War Goes OnMuch of this, of course, was a reaction to the expansion of the American story implied by the election of America’s first Black president and by the representative pop culture of Obama’s era, like “black-ish” and “Hamilton.” Often, there’s a sense (at least in retrospect) of a new cultural era beginning with a new presidential administration: JFK, the New Frontier and youth culture; Reagan, “Family Ties” and “greed is good.”Though the Biden administration has yet to begin, it doesn’t feel like that kind of definitive shift at the moment, so much as the flag moving to the other side of the centerline in a continuing tug of war. Things may get quieter on the surface; Mr. Biden is neither as big a pop-culture guy nor as zealous a culture warrior as the president he’s replacing.But as every tempest over a Vogue cover proves, the fight goes on. The divides are too deep, the incentives for widening them too great. Whether Mr. Trump continues to have a major part in this after he leaves office, or whether his ratings ragetweets simply echo in some musty corner of the internet, the ongoing narrative he has left us with will continue.The secret of a long-running show, after all, is that it can survive a cast change.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton Tapped for New Year's Eve TV Special

    Instagram

    The engaged couple are set to ring in New Year together as they have been enlisted to perform at the upcoming New Year’s Eve celebration hosted by Carson Daly.

    Dec 15, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Engaged singers Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton will celebrate New Year’s Eve together by hitting the stage as part of a TV special.
    New Year’s Eve 2021 will be hosted by media personality Carson Daly and broadcast live from Times Square in New York City on 31 December (20) when performances will be beamed in from across the country.
    In addition to Gwen and Blake, fans can also expect to see sets from Sting and Shirazee, Jason Derulo, Kylie Minogue, Busta Rhymes and Anderson .Paak, Goo Goo Dolls, CNCO, Chloe x Halle, Bebe Rexha and Doja Cat, and Pentatonix.

      See also…

    Daly will be joined by comedienne Amber Ruffin and “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” house DJ, Stephen”tWitch” Boss, to co-host the event, which will take place without the traditional live audience due to the coronavirus pandemic.
    In a statement, Daly said, “Nothing will make me happier than to have a front row seat to watch 2020 disappear and usher in the hope for brighter days in 2021.”
    “I’m excited to be with Amber and tWitch live in Times Square to broadcast the iconic ball drop to millions of viewers on TV, but will miss the revelers who can’t attend live. Our diverse music lineup offers something for everyone in your family. See you on NBC!”
    Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton got engaged in October this year. The upcoming wedding will be the second one for both. She was previously married to Gavin Rossdale and he previously tied the knot with Miranda Lambert.

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    Meghan Markle Makes First Public Appearance Since Miscarriage on 'CNN Heroes'

    CNN

    The Duchess of Sussex pays tribute to those who have made a difference on ‘CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute’, marking her first appearance since miscarriage reveal.

    Dec 15, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Meghan, Britain’s Duchess of Sussex, has made her first appearance since announcing her miscarriage by paying tribute to those who have made a difference during the “CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute”.
    The former “Suits” star appeared in a surprise video aired during the special on Sunday night (13Dec20), in which she thanked the “individuals who stood up and made sure the most basic needs of our communities were met.”
    Admitting this year has been “universally challenging for everyone,” Meghan added, “They made sure those around them did not have to suffer in isolation.”
    “We saw the good in people, in our neighbours and in entire communities coming together to say they would not stand by while our neighbours went hungry.”
    [embedded content]

      See also…

    Meghan’s video was her first appearance since she revealed she had suffered a miscarriage earlier this summer in a piece written for the New York Times.
    “I lay in a hospital bed, holding my husband’s hand. I felt the clamminess of his palm and kissed his knuckles, wet from both our tears. Staring at the cold white walls, my eyes glazed over. I tried to imagine how we’d heal,” she wrote.
    Meghan and her husband, Prince Harry, are parents to 18-month-old son Archie.
    The Duchess, who urged people to make the discussion of miscarriage less of a taboo subject, received mixed reactions following her miscarriage reveal. British reporter Marco Giannangeli commented, “Is anyone really questioning the pain and sheer awfulness of suffering a miscarriage, or are they perhaps critising Meghan’s decision to write a 1,000 word op-Ed about herself? What does it add to the resources already available for those who go through a tragedy like this?”
    But Meghan was defended by Chrissy Teigen who experienced the tragic loss of her own unborn son at the end of September.

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    Lisa Vanderpump Mourns the Death of Her Dog Giggy: 'We Are Devastated'

    Instagram

    The Bravo personality, who had brought Giggy to numerous TV and public appearances, revealed last year that the pup had alopecia, a condition that causes hair to fall in small patches.

    Dec 14, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Lisa Vanderpump is bidding farewell to one of her fury friends. The former “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” cast member took to her Instagram account on Saturday, December 12 to share heartbreaking news that her Pomeranian Giggy died.
    Alongside some pictures of her late pup, Lisa released a joint statement from her and husband Ken Todd which read, “We are devastated to say that our beloved Giggy has passed away this morning. He was truly loved, and we know how many of you loved him too. Our sweet Gigolo was such an incredible, unique dog, but mainly, because of him, we started The Vanderpump Dog Foundation and embarked on our mission to save as many dogs as possible.”
    The statement continued, “He inspired us to start our work in rescue, and for that we will always be grateful. Giggy’s legacy will live on, through every dog @vanderpumpdogs saves. Thank you all for your support. Rest In Peace Giggy, we love you. – Ken & Lisa.”

      See also…

    Lisa later shared a pet remembrance poem titled “I loved you best” by Jim Willis. The poem read, “So this is where we part, My Friend, and you’ll run on, around the bend, gone from sight, but not from mind, new pleasures there you’ll surely find. I will go on, I’ll find the strength, life measures quality, not its length. One long embrace before you leave, share one last look, before I grieve.”
    “There are others that much is true, but they be they, and they aren’t you. And I, fair, impartial, or so I thought, will remember well all you’ve taught,” the poem went on to read. It concluded, “Your place I’ll hold, you will be missed, the fur I stroked, the nose I kissed. And as you journey to your final rest, take with you this…I loved you best.”

    Lisa had brought Giggy to numerous TV and public appearances. The Bravo personality revealed last year that the pup had alopecia, a condition that causes hair to fall in small patches.
    The reality TV star, who is known as a dog lover, previously explained why she and her husband started the Vanderpump Dog foundation in May 2017. “Ken and I have been fighting for the kind of more humane treatment of dogs worldwide,” she said at the time. “One of the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle was really to open a rescue center but we wanted to open a rescue center that wasn’t, like, depressing and I know it’s like nothing else you’ve ever seen.”

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    What’s on TV This Week: ‘The Art of Political Murder’ and CBS Specials

    #masthead-section-label, #masthead-bar-one { display: none }The Best of 2020Best MoviesBest TV ShowsBest BooksBest TheaterBest AlbumsAdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyWhat’s on TV This Week: ‘The Art of Political Murder’ and CBS SpecialsA documentary about the murder of the Guatemalan bishop Juan José Gerardi debuts on HBO. And two celebrity benefit shows air on CBS.A funeral parade for Bishop Juan José Gerardi, as seen in “The Art of Political Murder.”Credit…HBODec. 14, 2020, 1:00 a.m. ETBetween network, cable and streaming, the modern television landscape is a vast one. Here are some of the shows, specials and movies coming to TV this week, Dec. 14-20. Details and times are subject to change.MondayTHE SHOT: RACE FOR THE VACCINE — A SPECIAL EDITION OF 20/20 10 p.m. on ABC. The recent rush of news regarding coronavirus vaccines has given some hope to a weary world. The process of getting here hasn’t been easy, to put it mildly, and there’s still an enormous amount of work to do. This special looks at the efforts by scientists and government officials to get a vaccine created and distributed in record speed. Its interview subjects include Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Food and Drug Administration commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn and one of the chairs of President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s Covid-19 task force, the Yale professor Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith.TuesdayFrom left, Maren Morris, Brandi Carlile, Amanda Shires and Natalie Hemby — the Highwomen — in 2019.Credit…Cody O’Loughlin for The New York TimesPLAY ON: CELEBRATING THE POWER OF MUSIC TO MAKE CHANGE 8 p.m. on CBS. A grab bag of musical acts including the Highwomen, Bruce Springsteen, John Legend and Sheryl Crow are set to perform in this benefit concert, which raises money for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the nonprofit WhyHunger. The variety of acts comes with a variety of venues: performances will be filmed at the Troubadour in Los Angeles, the Apollo Theater in New York and the Bluebird Cafe in Nashville.WednesdayTHE ART OF POLITICAL MURDER (2020) 9 p.m. on HBO. This documentary from the British director Paul Taylor (“We Are Together”) investigates the killing of Juan José Gerardi, a Guatemalan bishop who was murdered in April 1998, days after he released results of an investigation into human rights abuses committed during the country’s decades-long civil war. The film is built around interviews with the investigators who worked on the case; it’s based on the book of the same name by Francisco Goldman.MARNIE (1964) 10:15 p.m. on TCM. A year after Tippi Hedren broke out with her debut screen role in Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds,” she acted opposite Sean Connery in this Hitchcock thriller about a bad romance and sexual abuse. (The story was adapted from Winston Graham’s 1961 crime novel of the same name.) Connery was also a rising star: He’d broken out just couple years earlier, in “Dr. No.” Initial reception for “Marnie” was mixed. In his review for The Times, Eugene Archer took issue with most every aspect of it, including Connery and Hedren’s performances (“their inexperience shows”); Hitchcock’s direction (“the timing of key suspense scenes is sadly askew”); the set (“the most glaringly fake cardboard backdrops since Salvador Dalí designed the dream sequences for ‘Spellbound’”); and the script (“reduces this potent material to instant psychiatry — complete with a flashback ‘explanation scene’ harking back to vintage Joan Crawford and enough character exposition to stagger the most dedicated genealogist”). Still, some contemporary critics have been more kind to “Marnie” — including Richard Brody of The New Yorker, who has written that he considers it Hitchcock’s best film.ThursdayDenzel Washington in “The Equalizer 2.”Credit…Glen Wilson/Columbia PicturesTHE EQUALIZER 2 (2018) 5:30 p.m. on FX. The Times’s chief film critics Manohla Dargis and A.O. Scott recently released their list of the 25 greatest actors of the 21st century so far, and they placed Denzel Washington at the very top of the pack. Dargis wrote that Washington makes acting “look like breathing,” adding that he’s “played a lot of characters who embody law or criminality, and some who exist in the space dividing the two.” Washington’s character in “The Equalizer 2” falls into that second category. In the film — the most recent of several high body-count collaborations with the director Antoine Fuqua — Washington plays Robert McCall, a former military officer who gets pulled into vigilantism after a friend and former colleague is killed. In her review for The Times, Dargis wrote that the movie helps solidify Washington’s place in the pantheon of American screen actors like John Wayne, who played violently avenging heroes. “Like so many of the greatest American male stars,” she wrote, “violence becomes him.”THE GENTLEMEN (2020) 8:05 p.m. on Showtime. It takes a very particular kind of director to helm a live-action “Aladdin” for Disney, then follow it up months later with a lavishly brutal crime caper. Guy Ritchie is that kind of director. In “The Gentlemen,” he casts Matthew McConaughey as a pot kingpin whose talk of retirement kicks up a power struggle. McConaughey is surrounded by a slate of other famous performers whose characters are bad actors, in the criminal sense: Hugh Grant, Charlie Hunnam, Jeremy Strong and Colin Farrell.FridaySHREK (2001) 7 p.m. on Syfy. The mostly young voters who participated in the 2002 Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards had a difficult call to make: Was it Mike Myers, Cameron Diaz or Eddie Murphy who delivered the very finest vocal performance in “Shrek”? (All three were nominees for the “favorite voice from an animated movie” award, along with Billy Crystal for his role in “Monsters, Inc.”) The honor ultimately went to Murphy. Tune in Friday night to judge whether the kids made the right choice.SaturdayMaya Angelou in “Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise.”Credit…Wayne Miller/ARC EntertainmentAMERICAN MASTERS: MAYA ANGELOU: AND STILL I RISE (2016) 8 p.m. on PBS (check local listings). The life of the poet, writer and civil rights activist Maya Angelou — also sometimes a performer, and more — is revisited in this documentary, which explores Angelou’s many talents. The film may be too broad for those already deeply familiar with her work, but newcomers diving into her prolific life will find a wide overview here. “This is a documentary interested in breadth rather than depth,” Ken Jaworowski wrote in his review for The Times, “and on those terms it succeeds.”Sunday22ND ANNUAL A HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS 9:30 p.m. on CBS. CBS’s annual foster care adoption benefit show will include several virtual adoption ceremonies this year. As usual, it will also include performances from many celebrities, including Josh Groban, Miranda Lambert, Meghan Trainor, Leslie Odom, Jr. and Andrea Bocelli. Gayle King will host.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Keri Hilson Gets Playful With Fake Baby Bump

    Instagram

    The ‘Knock You Down’ hitmaker tricks many into thinking she’s pregnant by showing off a social media picture of her cradling a large bump on what appeared to be a film set.

    Dec 14, 2020
    AceShowbiz – R&B star Keri Hilson appears to have tricked fans into thinking she’s pregnant after showing off a baby bump on social media.
    The “Pretty Girl Rock” hitmaker took to Instagram on Friday, December 11, to share two shots of herself smiling as she cradled a large bump on what appeared to be a film set.

    She captioned the image with an upside-down smiley face emoji, and another with hearts, but tellingly tagged her makeup artist and hairstylist, as well as independent production company Swirl Films, U.S. network Lifetime, and producer, author and religious leader Bishop T.D. Jakes.
    Her tags suggested the baby bump was fake, but that didn’t stop some of her celebrity friends from sending her well wishes.
    “WAIIIIIIIITTT!!!!!! Keriiii! Sis! Congratulations!!!!! My heart is so full for you (sic),” wrote actress Meagan Good, while singer Lil’ Mo commented, “Congratsssessssssssss (sic)”.

    Meagan Good and Lil’ Mo congratulated Keri Hilson after the latter posted photo of her baby bump.

      See also…

    VH1’s Twitter account further spread the pregnancy speculation as it posted, “Congrats are in order! @KeriHilson is expecting!” A fan, meanwhile, tweeted, “Congratulations Keri Hilson. It’s okay. I can wait another 10 years for the album.”
    However, Hilson didn’t fool everyone – singer and reality star Kandi Burruss remarked, “I sense a big movie coming?”

    Kandi Burruss was not tricked by Keri Hilson’s baby bump post.
    Porsha Williams had a similar guess, writing, “Come on actress. I can’t wait for whatever it is.”
    The star subsequently returned to her Instagram page to joke about the lyrics to her 2009 track “Knock You Down”, suggesting her pregnancy was just for the cameras.
    “Guess love knocks you up, too,” she wrote, adding a pregnant woman emoji and a crying with laughter graphic.

    Keri Hilson suggested her pregnancy was just for the cameras.
    Hilson has yet to name the project she is currently working on.

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    'The Bachelorette': Tayshia Adams' Season Might End Without Proposal, According to Chris Harrison

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    ‘She is falling in love. These men are in love, but are they all willing to go where she wants this to go?’ the host of the long-running ABC dating competition show spills in a new interview.

    Dec 14, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Fans of “The Bachelorette” might need to prepare themselves. Host Chris Harrison appeared to share a hint at how Tayshia Adams’ season will end, and that is not something that fans who hope for a happy ending might want to hear.
    During his interview with Us Weekly, Chris shared, “You see that in the previews she’s in the dress and there’s a couple of close calls.” He went on hinting, “Look, she is falling in love. These men are in love, but are they all willing to go where she wants this to go? Are they willing to take that last step? And maybe those previews show you, it’s not gonna end well.”
    “In my mind, I don’t think you can go wrong,” Chris added. Naming the suitors in the current season 16 of the long-running ABC dating competition show, the host continued, “These guys, whether it’s Ivan, Riley, Brendan, Zac, Ben, these are good dudes. These are really good guys. And I even told Tayshia towards the end, I said, ‘You can’t make a wrong decision. You just need to make the right decision for you, who fits in your life, where do you see your life going?’ And this is where it starts to align. When you have those long conversations, ‘Do you want to get married? Where are we going to live?’ ”

      See also…

    That aside, Tayshia’s stint on “The Bachelorette” caused tension between her and her ex-husband Josh Bourelle. During an interview on “Reality Steve” podcast on Thursday, December 10, Josh criticized his ex for using their divorce as her sob story.
    “I figured we had a mutual respect that we wanted the best for each other after the divorce,” he said. “Now, her going out and saying that I cheated on her and that was the reason for our divorce on national TV, I felt like kind of crossed the line on that a little bit because I feel like she was using that as her sob story to make her look better and it was hurtful to me because it wasn’t just me that heard about that.”
    Josh claimed that he didn’t mind when Tayshia addressed their failed marriage on TV when she appeared in Colton Underwood’s season of “The Bachelor”. “When that first happened, I said, ‘Well, okay, I guess it’s fine for her to say it one time,’ but now it just continues to happen,” shared Josh, before adding that it started to hurt his reputation.
    Later in the interview, he also called out Tayshia for accusing him of cheating on her. “I mean, it’s kind of hypocritical in a way because you’re calling me a cheater, yet you’re dating 25 different guys at the same time or whatever,” he reasoned. “It’s been a tough situation for me and I’m kind of over it at this point.”

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    'The Witcher' Resumes Production Without Injured Henry Cavill

    Netflix

    The actor playing Geralt of Rivia in the Netflix hit series is said to be in recovery after sustaining a leg muscle injury during filming and was allegedly unable to walk properly following the set incident.

    Dec 14, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Production on Netflix hit “The Witcher” has resumed without leading man Henry Cavill after he injured his leg on set.
    According to sources, the actor was wearing a safety harness above the set when the injury occurred, and although Henry was not hospitalised, filming was halted as the star couldn’t walk properly, according to The Sun, and doctors told him to rest.
    A source tells the publication: “The filming has been hit because of what happened to Henry. He was on an assault course and injured his leg. He just suddenly pulled up and was clearly in a lot of pain. It wasn’t clear if an object had hit his leg or it was some sort of hamstring or muscle injury.”

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    “It wasn’t bad enough to need an ambulance but it’s messed up the filming schedule as he can’t walk properly.”
    Filming at Arborfield Studios in London has now continued without Cavill, who is recovering from what Deadline sources claim is a minor leg muscle injury sustained during production.
    Production on “The Witcher”‘s second season has already been suspended twice – first in March, when actor Kristofer Hivju revealed he had tested positive for the coronavirus, and then last month following multiple positive COVID-19 cases.
    Season 2 official logline reads, “Convinced Yennefer’s (Anya Chalotra) life was lost at the Battle of Sodden, Geralt of Rivia (Henry Cavill) brings Princess Cirilla (Freya Allan) to the safest place he knows, his childhood home of Kaer Morhen. While the Continent’s kings, elves, humans and demons strive for supremacy outside its walls, he must protect the girl from something far more dangerous: the mysterious power she possesses inside.”

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