BMW has some major star power for its commercial airing during the 2022 Super Bowl!
25.01.2022 - 04:21 / msn.com
falling prey to substance abuse and other less-than-positive situations. That’s not so much the case for Saved by the Bell vet Tiffani Thiessen, who has enjoyed both a successful professional career and a successful private life as a wife, mother, and kickass innovator in the kitchen.
The actress, who shined once more as Kelly Kapowski in Season 2 of Peacock’s Saved by the Bell revamp, celebrated her 48th birthday over the weekend, and seemed to prove in a series of pics that she has the same eternal youth gene as co-star Mario Lopez. Check out the Instagram birthday shots below and join me in wondering how Tiffani Thiessen has managed to look better in her late 40s than many of us did in high school, or any other point in life.
A post shared by Tiffani Thiessen (@tiffanithiessen)A photo posted by onTiffany Thiessen has long been one of America’s sweethearts, with everyone who experienced adolescence in the 1990s having likely spent as much time watching Saved by the Bell reruns as they did doing homework or eating and breathing. The actress, who had a shot at playing Rachel on Friends, ran the short gamut from playful to sultry to adorbs with her birthday imagery, and I dare say I could have been fooled into believing the photos were from a SBTB: The College Years shoot, or possibly from her years as a rabble-rousing star of Beverly Hills 90210.
Perhaps the biggest sign that this wasn’t from the ‘90s is the lack of, let’s say, ”unique” fashion choices. To be expected, Thiessen’s age-defying pics inspired some loving comments from others in the entertainment world, including her SBTB co-star Haskiri Velazquez, model and actress Brooklyn Decker, The Office vet Angela Kinsey, ‘NSYNC member Lance Bass, The Rookie’s Jenna
.BMW has some major star power for its commercial airing during the 2022 Super Bowl!
Sam Fender returned to North Shields after picking up the award for Best Alternative/Rock Act at the BRITs 2022 and swiftly put it to good use.Before handing it over to his local pub, the Low Lights Tavern, Fender used the trophy to destroy a piñata made to look like Boris Johnson that he’d brought with him, while family and fans cheered him on. Watch footage below.In another clip, Fender is heard telling the crowd “let’s get fucking pissed” before admitting that he hadn’t slept since the awards, which took place on Tuesday evening (February 8).
Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, was ushered out of a Washington, D.C. high school due to a bomb threat.
The star of “Caddyshack” is proving his bona fides.
Saved by the smell! Tiffani Thiessen, in addition to being an accomplished actress, is a burgeoning chef in her own right. In fact, she frequently shares her favorite meals via her blog. One of her favorites to prepare? A delightful helping of butternut squash quesadillas that are served with a smoky crème fraîche.
Tegan and Sara are getting excited about their forthcoming “High School” TV series after the show began pre-production in Calgary last week.
Jennifer Lopez is setting the record straight after fans assumed she and Ben Affleck were deliberately re-enacting that infamous scene from the Jenny From the Block music video last year!
If you've been softening your butter in the microwave - like pretty much the rest of us - it looks like you may have been doing it all wrong in the first place.
Concern has been raised over the length of time taken for firefighters to attend fire alarms at a Perthshire school.
As voters across the Academy branches mull over their Oscar nomination ballots, among the films they’re considering are two that deal with the Deaf experience. One, CODA, is the fictional coming of age story of a girl raised by Deaf parents. The other – Audible – tells a coming of age story as well, but this one is real.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticSPOILER ALERT: This review includes some spoilers for Netflix’s “All of Us Are Dead,” which premiered Friday, January 28.As the last, desperate teen survivors in “All of Us Are Dead” do their best to stay alive through a zombie apocalypse, hoping beyond hope that adults are coming to rescue them, it takes a full day of horrors to make them realize that they’re on their own. With their high school labeled Ground Zero for the escalating outbreak, the students are left for dead (or, as is the case with zombies, something in between).
Staying fabulous! After battling COVID-19 and gaining weight amid the pandemic, Todd Chrisley and his wife, Julie Chrisley, aimed to get in shape together. Now, the Chrisley Knows Best patriarch is glowing over his impressive results.
debuted at Sundance this week, unravels Lee’s bizarre story with actor Alan Cumming sitting in for the man himself by lip-syncing to Lee’s narration (Lee agreed to tell his story, but didn’t want to appear on camera). Director Jono McLeod, who knew Lee as a fellow student, tells the tale via interviews with his now-50-something classmates, animated sequences and snippets of old video. Cumming, who was originally attached to star in a now-defunct feature adaptation of the story, remembers the saga as a news bombshell in Scotland.
Brenda Robinson, an entertainment attorney, producer and partner at film financing and development company Gamechanger Films, has been elected the new chair of the board of directors at Film Independent, the nonprofit arts organization behind the Spirit Awards.
‘Run Rabbit Run’ Adds Cast
almost – to make up for the fact that the story itself is something of a letdown.A classic unreliable-narrator doc, the film is always fun to watch. But unlike, say, Ramin Bahrani’s “2nd Chance” — a 2022 Sundance doc that is intricately constructed to take the viewer through the twists and evasions doled out by its own unreliable narrator — “My Old School” works hard to put a stylish spin on a story whose surprises are telegraphed from the beginning.It gets off to a promising start, as we see actor Alan Cumming sitting down at a desk in a Scottish classroom, with titles letting us in on the film’s central conceit: “The man at the heart of this story does not want to show his face, but you will hear his voice.