A video has gone viral of a passenger who refused to give up her first class seat to a child.
11.07.2023 - 06:19 / justjared.com
Lady Gaga does not owe the woman who played a role in the 2021 theft of her beloved French bulldogs a reward.
If you forgot, the 37-year-old pop star and actress’s pets Koji and Gustav were stolen but made it home safely. Gaga offered a $500,000 reward to anyone who could help with the dogs safe return.
However, she did not give the reward money to Jennifer McBride, who was part of the group arrested in relation to the crime. Jennifer sued but was unsuccessful in her attempt to secure a payment from Gaga.
Keep reading to find out more…
TMZ reported that Gaga emerged victorious when the case was tossed before it even made it to trial. According to legal documents examined by the outlet, Jennifer‘s case didn’t hold up since she had already been convicted.
Jennifer has a chance to update her case to explain her way around her conviction, but it is not immediately clear how she could make a case for deserving the reward money.
Did you know that Lady Gaga‘s “Bad Romance” is another pop titan’s go-to karaoke song?
A video has gone viral of a passenger who refused to give up her first class seat to a child.
Kim Kardashian stepped out into Osaka's Nagai Stadium for the football friendly between Saudi Arabian outfit Al-Nassr and French champions Paris St. Germain on Tuesday. Clothed in a beige-coloured vest and baggy trousers, the 42 year old mum-of-four was seen casually gripping a matching $500k designer handbag as she descended the concrete steps towards her seat.
Tina Turner’s musical legacy will continue to live on following her death at age 83 earlier this year, and now her family line may also be continuing.
White sneakers are everywhere right now and we LOVE Meghan Markle’s fave, the popular Veja sneakers. Right now, there are tons of stylish options from Veja to shop at Zappos and Gilt this summer. The line has become a celebrity favorite since Markle was snapped wearing the casual footwear during a royal visit to Australia with husband, Prince Harry, in 2018.
Elsa Keslassy International Correspondent While Greta Gerwig’s girl-power blockbuster “Barbie” is ruling over the French box office, another much younger female-led franchise, “Miraculous: Ladybug & Cat Noir” has managed to pull approximately €8 million ($8.9 million) at the local B.O., from more than 1.1 million tickets, since bowing on July 5. Budgeted around $80 million and directed by Jeremy Zag, “Miraculous: Ladybug & Cat Noir” ranks as one of France’s most ambitious animated films to date. Featuring eight original songs, a queer storyline and a postcard-worthy Parisian backdrop, the musical film broke ground as the first female-powered superhero movie set in the French capital. Even as it faces stiff competition from “Barbie” and Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer,” “Miraculous: Ladybug & Cat Noir” has enough legs to match or surpass recent non-U.S. animated hits such as “Ballerina,” which sold 1.8 million tickets in France. It garnered 318,144 admissions on its opening day in theaters, a record for a French animated film. In Germany, the movie sold 586,148 tickets in three weeks and is currently the leading family title at the box office.
Nick Vivarelli International Correspondent “God Is a Woman,” a doc by Swiss-Panamanian filmmaker Andrés Peyrot about Pierre Dominique Gaisseau’s 1975 journey to Panama to make a film on the island-dwelling Kuna people — whose women play a unique and sacred role — will open the Venice Film Festival’s Critics’ Week. The section’s out-of-competition opener reconstructs the legend of this film that was passed down from the elders to the new Kuna generation, but never made it to the screen. Gaisseau, a French explorer and filmmaker who won an Oscar in 1961 for the doc “The Sky Above, the Mud Below,” lived with the Kuna people on a Panamanian island for a year and filmed their most intimate ceremonies. He then promised to return with the film, but never did. He ran out of funding and a bank confiscated his reels, which Peyrot unearthed 50 years later.
Key French tax credits aimed at the cinema, audiovisual and video game sectors generated $3.2 billion (€2.9 billion) worth of extra spending in France from 2017 to 2021, according to a study released by EY Consulting.
Adele has revealed what she thinks is the best karaoke song ever while answering fan questions during a recent show.The Tottenham-born singer has been performing at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace during her ‘Weekend With Adele’ residency. Earlier this month (July 1), a video surfaced from one of her recent concerts in the series where she answered a fan’s question about what her go-to karaoke song is.At first, the record-breaking star mentioned that she normally sings ‘Proud Mary’ by the late Tina Turner.
Christina Hall (née Haack) is turning over a new leaf after celebrating her milestone 40th birthday.
Lady Gaga doesn’t have to pay a penny to the woman who was an accomplice in the stealing of her French bulldogs back in 2021.
Brad Pitt’s relationship with ex-wife Angelina Jolie might be rocky amid their ongoing legal drama, but his romance with Ines de Ramon is still going strong.
A remarkable artist living an off-grid life in her campervan is using her illustrations to encourage others to respect the ocean and campaign for a cleaner planet. Jasmine Hortop, a 32-year-old illustrator embarked on a nomadic lifestyle, travelling across the UK with her rescue dog, Darla, in the campervan that she and her father built during the Covid lockdowns.
Le Creuset, the iconic cookware brand, is part of Amazon’s Prime Day sale, and many of the items are on sale today!
Manchester United are reportedly keen on AS Monaco defender Axel Disasi.
Ferne McCann has announced she has given birth to her second child. The former The Only Way is Essex (TOWIE) star said her 'angel' baby with fiancé Lorri Haines earlier this week.
Nick Vivarelli International Correspondent Unlike in the U.K., Spain and Sweden — where kings and queens are still formally heads of state — Italy’s royal family, the House of Savoy, no longer rules. The last heir to the Italian throne, Vittorio Emanuele of Savoy and his family were forced into exile in 1946, when the prince was 9. That year, the Italian people voted in a referendum about whether the monarchy should continue. They chose to create a republic and punished the royals for failing to save their country from Mussolini’s fascist regime. The Savoys were allowed to return in 2003 after 57 years of exile. In 1978, Vittorio Emanuele – the king who never was – got into trouble while he and his wife and kids were living on the island of Cavallo, on the south coast of Corsica, France. As reconstructed from eyewitness interviews in a new Netflix documentary, on a hot August night he became enraged when some loud “shitty Italians” “borrowed” the dinghy off his yacht and tied it to another nearby boat. Fuming, he took a rifle, went to one of their boats and, after shots from his rifle rang out – that were just meant to scare – someone got hurt. Dirk Hamer, a 19-year-old sleeping on another boat nearby, died of gunshot injuries in early December. Though it was never legally proven that Vittorio Emanuele killed Hamer, this incident had a big impact on the prince’s life.
EXCLUSIVE: Susan Rovner has praised her colleagues and acknowledged the tough decision to leave after NBCUniversal’s latest restructure was unveiled.
EXCLUSIVE: SquareOne Entertainment CEO Al Munteanu tells us new European studio Vuelta Group is about “distributors who morph into producers — that’s our DNA, believing in film as a theatrical proposition, but also in TV production.”
A woman who has accused Benjamin Mendy of rape 'looked like a ghost' after the alleged attack, a jury heard.
Guy Lodge Film Critic A lacquered Czech period piece with surprisingly topical interests at its core, “We Have Never Been Modern” rather ambitiously borrows its title from a key text by the late French philosopher Bruno Latour — in which he argued that humanity’s distinction between nature and our own culture is a wholly modern development, and one we’d do best to move away from. While Latour’s ideas can indeed be mapped onto a story that charts modern society’s fixation on human advancement against its rejection of human difference, Matěj Chlupáček’s gripping, gleamingly produced second feature isn’t as academic as all that: Ultimately a humane message movie planting flags for both women’s liberation and queer rights, this Karlovy Vary competition premiere could easily resonate with festival and arthouse audiences away from home turf.