By Dino-Ray Ramos
07.05.2020 - 22:15 / us.hola.com
Before Michelle Obama became the first lady of the United States, she was a girl from the south side of Chicago, who went to Whitney Young High School and did her best to excel. Thanks to MyHeritage, fans can see what that bright-eyed young woman looked like in her teen years and her resemblance to daughters Sasha and Malia.
The site released a newly colorized image of her high school yearbook photo where she is listed as Michelle Robinson. It’s not hard to recognize the Becoming author, whose
.By Dino-Ray Ramos
Salma Hayek and her younger brother Sami are rarely seen in public together, but when they are you know they’re related. The 53-year-old actress honored her hermano on National Brother’s Day with a sweet social media homage. “Today Brother’s Day in the United States which is where my angel Sami is!” she exclaimed in her caption. “Happy Day my bro!!! I love you!!!” Her loving words were accompanied by a colorful photo of the pair, showing just how much they look alike.
Michelle Obama’s former hair stylist, Johnny Wright, is teaming up with Tamar Braxton “To Catch a Beautician” on VH1.
Downton Abbey star Michelle Dockery has revealed she used to perform alongside a grunge band.
A new American Idol has been crowned. Although the Sunday, May, 17, finale wasn’t what the stars are used to, the remaining singers were ready to compete. Dillon James, Jonny West, Arthur Gunn, Francisco Martin and Just Sam were announced as the final five at the top of the show, eliminating Julia Gargano and Louis Knight from the competition.
Reading romance! Michelle Obama and Barack Obama teamed up on Thursday, May 14, as guests on Chicago Public Library’s “Live from the Library” Storytime sessions.
Former US president Barack Obama, 58, and Former First Lady Michelle Obama, 56, posted a clip of themselves reading a kid’s book to give parents across the country “a break” from home schooling their children. The couple read The Word Collector by Peter H. Reynolds and emphasized the importance of libraries. “It’s a fun book that vividly illustrates the transformative power of words, and we hope you enjoy it as much as we did,” Barack said of the kid’s book.
Barack and Michelle Obama are spreading the joy of reading.
In a very short period of time, former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama have become a documentary force with their production company Higher Ground. Partnered with Netflix, they won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature last year (for American Factory), and are likely to be in Oscar contention again this year for Crip Camp.
Barack Obama is doing his best to ensure that high school seniors across the country still get to celebrate graduation amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The former WWE star Nikki Bella in the new memoir titled Incomparable reveals that she was raped twice in high school. Nikki goes on to reveal that she was first raped at the age of 15 by a person who she felt was her friend.
As the world continues to combat the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, high schools across the United States have closed, and college campuses have completely emptied out. With many institutions turning to online learning to help students finish out their academic years, that leaves many seniors, in particular, attending virtual graduation ceremonies and proms to make up for the pivotal life moments they might otherwise miss out on.
Barack and Michelle Obama will be delivering words of wisdom in a few commencement speeches in some upcoming graduation specials.
Just when you thought that you had watched all that Netflix has to offer, a Michelle Obama documentary drops and we can only imagine how inspiring it will be.
Michelle Obama gives an intimate look at her life before, during and after her role as the first lady of the United States of America in the trailer for Netflix's Becoming. The documentary feature shares the name of Obama's best-selling 2018 memoir and recounts some of the same history of her life, including her time at the White House.
In Ryan Murphy’s revisionist take on the Golden Age of Tinseltown,, the stories of real-life, marginalized people get a rewrite — and a happy ending they deserve.
Where other docs go deep, Netflix’s Michelle Obama portrait stays shallow, but the former FLOTUS’s inspirational personality comes through loud and clear.