Imagine that! On Wednesday, John Mayer joined Andy Cohen, who recently announced he has recovered from coronavirus, for an at-home version of Watch What Happens Live and caught up with his old buddy via video chat.
19.03.2020 - 06:59 / justjared.com
Gal Gadot is trying to lift fans’ spirits during the coronavirus pandemic.
The 34-year-old Wonder Woman actress took to Instagram on Wednesday (March 18) to share a video of she and tons of stars singing John Lennon‘s iconic hit “Imagine.”
“These past few days got me feeling a bit philosophical,” Gal says in the video. “It doesn’t matter who you are, where you’re from. We’re all in this together.”
Celeb cameos in the video include Kristen Wiig, Jamie Dornan, Labrinth, James Marsden, Sarah
Imagine that! On Wednesday, John Mayer joined Andy Cohen, who recently announced he has recovered from coronavirus, for an at-home version of Watch What Happens Live and caught up with his old buddy via video chat.
John Lennon's iconic 1971 ballad "Imagine" returns to Billboard's Hot Rock Songs chart dated March 28, sparked by a celebrity-helmed cover during the global coronavirus pandemic."Imagine" re-enters the tally at No. 15, surging by 7% to 1.3 million U.S.
By Bruce Haring
When Gal Gadot teamed up with a slew of celebrities for a viral cover of John Lennon's "Imagine," the public's reaction was mixed. Some saw the video as a nice, uplifting moment during a hard time for the world, while many others felt it was tone-deaf.So independent queer artist Leadr decided to try something similar, but this time with a different purpose.
Actress' star-studded video has become notorious since its release
If you are under the illusion that the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting self-quarantine will lead to great art, Gal Gadot is here to set you right. Last night, the Wonder Woman actress shared an Instagram video driven by a combination of a looming sense of mortality driven by the crisis and a patronizing urge for unity driven by a viral video of a trumpeter in Italy.
During these tumultuous times, everyone is looking for a form of escape. But a host of celebrities found out that empty gestures of inspiration aren’t exactly what the public had in mind after a cameo-filled cover of John Lennon’s famous anthem, “Imagine,” was roundly criticized across the internet.
Bryan Adams wants to keep things positive during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Imagine there's no bastards"
In this week’s edition of celebrities who remain completely out of touch with reality, we present Gal Gadot’s “Imagine” celebrity coronavirus cover. If you haven’t seen the video in question by now, well, just listen to the Twitterverse’s warning before you dive in: it’s “cringey.” A not so wonderful result for the Wonder Woman star.
Gal Gadot led a host of stars in a rendition of John Lennon’s peace anthem Imagine as they tried to cope with self-isolation measures designed to fight the coronavirus.
Now that self isolating and is a thing, people have a lot more time on their hands. (I, for one, will be trying to develop a personality and an actual hobby these next few weeks.) Since celebrities aren't out doing all the Hollywood stuff they normally do, they've been way to try to save themselves from absolute boredom. Unfortunately in Gal Gadot's case, Twitter is fully roasting her for recording a cover of John Lennon's "Imagine" with her celeb friends.
Gal Gadot led a host of stars in a rendition of John Lennon’s peace anthem Imagine as they tried to cope with self-isolation measures designed to fight the coronavirus.
In a bid to lift spirits in the middle of the current health crisis we are facing, celebrities are coming together for a once-off cover of John Lennon’s Imagine.
To lighten the mood as the world struggled with the coronavirus pandemic, a host of stars took turns to sing John Lennon's hopeful classic "Imagine" in a video posted to Gal Gadot's Instagram on Wednesday. The three-minute clip, which has been liked over half a million times on Instagram, begins with theWonder Woman star talking about "day six in self-quarantine" and how the situation had led to her "feeling a bit philosophical" about the global nature of the pandemic.