the caption of a video of them sipping wine. The video later shows the pair in identical pink dresses and matching hairstyles sipping — or, in Skinner’s case, chugging — her wine.
15.04.2022 - 15:35 / nypost.com
“MMMBop,” but Hanson’s No. 1 smash hit — which had everybody bopping 25 years ago — is deeper than you might think.“The song [is] all about the passage of time and how very few things will last,” Zac Hanson told The Post.
“‘In an mmmbop, they’re gone/In an mmmbop, they’re not there.’ And so it’s really saying, ‘Life comes and goes … so you better be conscious, you better dive into what you really want from it, because it’s just gonna be gone.’”But a quarter-century after the signature single from this band of brothers was released on April 15, 1997, Hanson and “MMMBop” are still jangling along, continuing their steady output of music with a new album, “Red Green Blue,” out May 20. And drummer Zac, keyboardist Taylor and guitarist Isaac Hanson — who were only 11, 14 and 16, respectively, when the bouncy ditty catapulted them to pop stardom — are still bonded together by, as the song goes, the “secret no one knows.”“It’s wild to see ‘MMMBop’ have that much longevity,” said Zac, who is now 36.
“To sit here and have people still care about that song, it’s kind of this crazy inward spiral of the song’s meaning.”“At the very beginning of our career, we had such a sense of wanting to … be an artist that could have that history,” added Taylor, now 39. “It feels good to just have reached some milestone and still at least be kicking and making some noise.”Growing up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the classically trained Hanson brothers began making music together around their family home when other boys were going to soccer practice.
the caption of a video of them sipping wine. The video later shows the pair in identical pink dresses and matching hairstyles sipping — or, in Skinner’s case, chugging — her wine.
TULSA, Okla. -- A bronze statue depicting one of Oklahoma's most famous Native American ballerinas was cut from its base outside a Tulsa museum and sold for scrap to a recycling company, authorities said Monday.Museum officials say the Five Moons statue of Marjorie Tallchief was likely removed Thursday from its plinth outside the Tulsa Historical Society, the Tulsa World reported.Museum officials received a call Monday from CMC Recycling in southwest Rogers County to identify what was believed to be pieces of the bronze statue, the newspaper reported.Michelle Place, director of the Tulsa Historical Society and Museum, checked out the recovered pieces late Monday morning and verified that they came from the statue.“The Tulsa Police Department is working diligently to apprehend the thief,” the historical society said in a statement.Pieces of the statute, including the head and part of an arm, are still missing.Place said the original mold for the statue burned in a foundry fire, so recreating the statute will be much more complicated.“I am devastated by this,” she said.The statues known as the Five Moons were created by Tulsa-area artists Monte England and Gary Henson.
It’s been a long road since “Jurassic Park”.
In Starz’s new Gaslit, premiering Sunday, central Watergate figure John Dean is played by Dan Stevens. In White House Plumbers, an upcoming HBO limited series, Dean is portrayed by Domhnall Gleeson. And in The Last Witness: Watergate, an upcoming four-part CNN original series, Dean himself will “confront his own involvement in the biggest presidential scandal of the 20th century,” in the words of the network.
A suspect has been finally declared in the cold case of the missing toddler Madeleine McCann.
child star in the 1980s and his work with the Oscar-winning director.Thomas told Yahoo! Entertainment that he met the “West Side Story” filmmaker, 75, after starring in the 1980 film, “Raggedy Man.”“‘E.T.’ was a Universal [Studios] film, and ‘Raggedy Man’ was a Universal film,” Thomas — who played a kid named Eliot who befriends an alien — said. “So by getting the part for ‘Raggedy Man,’ I was on the radar for people who were working at Universal.
Preview in new tabHe’s been reha-bully-tated.An Oklahoma comedian who copped to repeatedly stealing his elementary schoolmate’s pizza lunch has made amends more than 15 years later after tracking down his victim online — and he even plans to buy him a slice (or two) as reparations. Videos detailing the reformed bully’s atonement are amassing millions of views on TikTok.“Hopefully he [the victim] reaches out and me and him can get together,” said Joe Erwin, 24, in one of the now-viral clips describing his transformation from pie-jacker to pen pal. The Tulsa resident’s saga came to light in a March 15 TikTok video with nearly 10 million views.
Jennifer Grey is getting candid about her plastic surgery.
Julia Roberts got nostalgic about her 1997 hit romantic comedy “My Best Friend’s Wedding”.
’s 15th anniversary in July, Alison Brie and Kiernan Shipka are reflecting on the impact of creator Matthew Weiner’s AMC series about the professional and personal lives of employees at an advertising firm set in the 1960s. “I was like, ‘15 years, but I haven’t aged a day,’” Brie joked about looking back on the series.The actress played Trudy, the wife of young, ambitious account executive Peter Campbell (Vincent Kartheiser), while Shipka played Sally, the wide-eyed daughter of charismatic and often-troubled creative director Don Draper (Jon Hamm). For Brie, the series was her first major onscreen role, quickly followed by her breakout part as Annie on NBC’s, which overlapped for several seasons.
Rebel Wilson is going back to school! In the official trailer for, the actress plays a popular high school senior who had it all — the perfect boyfriend, the perfect friend group and life. But before she could top it all off by claiming the throne as prom queen, she fell off the top of the human pyramid of cheerleaders and landed in a coma. Flash forward 20 years, where she wakes up and the year is 2022.