Last year, Elton John‘s Oscar viewing party went virtual, but this year, it’s returning in-person.
The event on March 27 in West Hollywood Park will be the 30th annual installment of the event, which over the years has raised $515 million for Elton’s AIDS Foundation and the global fight against HIV/AIDS.
Last year, Elton John‘s Oscar viewing party went virtual, but this year, it’s returning in person.
The event on March 27 in West Hollywood Park will be the 30th annual installment of the event, which over the years has raised $515 million for Elton’s AIDS Foundation and the global fight against HIV/AIDS.
Grammy-winning singer/songwriter Brandi Carlile, a good friend of Elton’s who appears on his Lockdown Sessions album, will perform at the bash. Other performers are expected to be announced in the coming weeks.
In a statement, Elton says, “[My husband and manager] David [Furnish] and I are so grateful to celebrate 30 years of the Foundation and especially grateful to Brandi Carlile and the many fabulous guests supporting us for another magnificent night in West Hollywood Park.”
He continues, “Our success reflects the passion, commitment, and generosity of our supporters. Together, we are making a difference and bringing light and hope to people living with HIV around the world.”
Brandi adds, “Getting to perform for such a significant milestone of one of the most legendary Oscar Parties is an absolute honor.”
Elton currently has a concert scheduled for March 27 in Lincoln, Nebraska, so ABC News has confirmed that unfortunately, he won’t be able to attend the party himself.
Last year, Elton John‘s Oscar viewing party went virtual, but this year, it’s returning in-person.
The event on March 27 in West Hollywood Park will be the 30th annual installment of the event, which over the years has raised $515 million for Elton’s AIDS Foundation and the global fight against HIV/AIDS.
Grammy-winning singer/songwriter Brandi Carlile, a good friend of Elton’s who appears on his Lockdown Sessions album, will perform at the bash. Other performers are expected to be announced in the coming weeks.
In a statement, Elton says, “[My husband and manager] David [Furnish] and I are so grateful to celebrate 30 years of the Foundation and especially grateful to Brandi Carlile and the many fabulous guests supporting us for another magnificent night in West Hollywood Park.”
“Our success reflects the passion, commitment, and generosity of our supporters. Together, we are making a difference and bringing light and hope to people living with HIV around the world,” Elton adds.
“Getting to perform for such a significant milestone of one of the most legendary Oscar Parties is an absolute honor,” Brandi says in a statement.
Elton currently has a concert scheduled for March 27 in Lincoln, Nebraska, so it’s not clear whether or not he’ll attend the party himself.
The nominations are in…but they’re not the ones celebrities want to be awakened for. The folks behind the 42nd Annual Golden Raspberry Awards have made their picks of the best of the worst for 2021.
As always, included this year are all manner of allegedly bad visual entertainment, from critically-panned Broadway productions like Netflix’s streaming of the dead-on-arrival Diana: The Musical, to Bruce Willis, who made so many Razzie-nominated movies in 2021 alone that he earned his own Razzies category this year.
Diana: The Musical swept this year’s nods, topping the competition with nine nominations, from Worst Picture, to Worst Song and Worst Screenplay.
This year’s “winners” will be unveiled on Saturday, March 26th, the evening before the Academy Awards are given out on ABC.
Here are the nominees for the 42nd Annual Golden Raspberry Awards:
WORST PICTURE Diana the Musical (The Netflix Version) Infinite Karen Space Jam: A New Legacy The Woman in the Window
WORST ACTOR
Scott Eastwood – Dangerous
Roe Hartrampf (As Prince Charles) – Diana the Musical
LeBron James – Space Jam: A New Legacy
Ben Platt – Dear Evan Hansen
Mark Wahlberg – Infinite
WORST ACTRESS
Amy Adams – The Woman in the Window
Jeanna de Waal – Diana the Musical
Megan Fox – Midnight in the Switchgrass
Taryn Manning – Karen
Ruby Rose – Vanquish
WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams – Dear Evan Hansen
Sophie Cookson – Infinite
Erin Davie (As Camilla) Diana the Musical
Judy Kaye (As BOTH Queen Elizabeth & Barbara Cartland) Diana the Musical
Taryn Manning – Every Last One of Them
WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Ben Affleck – The Last Duel
Nick Cannon – The Misfits
Mel Gibson – Dangerous
Gareth Keegan (As James Hewitt, the Muscle-Bound Horse Trainer) Diana the Musical
Jared Leto – House of Gucci
WORST PERFORMANCE by BRUCE WILLIS in a 2021 MOVIE (Special Category)
Bruce Willis – American Siege
Bruce Willis – Apex
Bruce Willis – Cosmic Sin
Bruce Willis – Deadlock
Bruce Willis – Fortress
Bruce Willis – Midnight in the Switchgrass
Bruce Willis – Out of Death
Bruce Willis – Survive the Game
WORST SCREEN COUPLE
Any Klutzy Cast Member & Any Lamely Lyricized (or Choreographed) Musical Number – Diana the Musical
LeBron James & Any Warner Cartoon Character (or Time-Warner Product) He Dribbles on – Space Jam: A New Legacy
Jared Leto & EITHER His 17-Pound Latex Face, His Geeky Clothes or His Ridiculous Accent – House of Gucci
Ben Platt & Any Other Character Who Acts Like Platt Singing 24-7 is Normal – Dear Evan Hansen
Tom & Jerry (aka Itchy & Scratchy) Tom & Jerry the Movie
WORST REMAKE, RIP-OFF OR SEQUEL Karen (Inadvertent Remake of Cruella deVil) Space Jam: A New Legacy Tom & Jerry the Movie Twist (Rap remake of Oliver Twist) The Woman in the Window (Rip-off of Rear Window)
WORST DIRECTOR
Christopher Ashley – Diana the Musical
Stephen Chbosky – Dear Evan Hansen
“Coke” Daniels – Karen
Renny Harlin – The Misfits
Joe Wright – The Woman in the Window
WORST SCREENPLAY Diana the Musical – Script by Joe DiPietro, Music and Lyrics by DiPietro and David Bryan Karen – Written by “Coke” Daniels The Misfits – Screenplay by Kurt Wimmer and Robert Henny, Screen Story by Robert Henny Twist – Written by John Wrathall & Sally Collett, Additional Material by Matthew Parkhill, Michael Lindley, Tom Grass & Kevin Lehane, from an “Original Idea” by David & Keith Lynch and Simon Thomas The Woman in the Window – Screenplay by Tracy Letts, from the novel by A.J. Finn
NOMINATIONS PER PICTURE Diana the Musical – (nine nominations, including Worst Picture, Actor & Actress) Karen – (five nominations, including Picture, Actress, Screenplay & Director) The Woman in the Window – (five nominations, including Picture, Actress & Remake/Rip-Off) Space Jam: A New Legacy – (four nominations, including Picture, Actor & Screen Couple) Infinite – (three nominations, including Worst Picture, Actor & Supporting Actress) The Misfits – (three nominations, including Supporting Actor, Director & Screenplay)
Kenny Chesney‘s summer has become even more exciting with the announcement of an amphitheater tour.
In between his stadium shows, Kenny will headline amphitheaters across the country. The 20-date amphitheater trek kicks off May 5 at the Ruoff Music Center in Indiana, making stops at The Wharf Amphitheater in Orange Beach, AL, Jiffy Lube Live in Bristol, VA, a two-night stay at Lake Tahoe Outdoor Arena at Harvey’s in Nevada and Hayden Homes Amphitheater in Oregon along the way.
Carly Pearce, who serves as one of the opening acts on the stadium-sized Here and Now Tour, will also open for the “Knowing You” singer on his amphitheater tour. Tickets go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. local time.
“There is something about amphitheaters that creates an immediacy that is so intimate. The energy is very different from a stadium show, and it almost opens the songs up in completely different ways,” Kenny describes. “It’s pretty cool to feel that difference between the two kinds of venues, but I can tell you: both are absolutely the greatest sensations in the world.”
The superstar embarks on the Here and Now Tour on April 23 in Tampa, FL, with Dan + Shay and Old Dominion serving as additional opening acts.
Nikki Sixx kickstarted his weekend by dissing Pearl Jam as “one of the most boring bands in history.”
The Mötley Crüe bassist was responding to an interview Eddie Vedder recently gave to The New York TimesMagazine, in which the PJ frontman said he “despised” Sixx’s band.
“I hated it,” Vedder said of the “Girls, Girls, Girls” outfit. “I hated how it made the fellas look. I hated how it made the women look. It felt so vacuous. Guns N’ Roses came out and, thank God, at least had some teeth.”
In a tweet this past Saturday, Sixx fired back with, “Made me laugh today reading how much the singer in Pearl Jam hated @MotleyCrue.”
He added, “Now considering that [Pearl Jam is] one of the most boring bands in history it’s kind of a compliment isn’t it?”
Vedder, who’s currently on tour in support of his forthcoming solo album Earthling, has not yet publicly responded to Sixx’s comments.
Mötley Crüe, meanwhile, is preparing for the band’s long-in-the-works reunion tour, which is set to kick off this June, which has been delayed since 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
(NEW YORK) — As new cases of COVID-19 decline across the country for the first time in weeks, the debate over face masks for kids is reaching a fever pitch.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat who has imposed some of the strictest pandemic-related mandates in the United States, is expected to announce Monday that the state’s requirements for masks in schools will end the second week of March. The move would follow a decision last month by Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, also a Democrat, to rescind his state’s mask mandate for schools.
More than one dozen states and Washington, D.C., currently require face masks in schools, while the Democratic governors of New York and Connecticut have said that they are reevaluating school mask mandates set to expire later this month. Other states, like Texas and Virginia, have banned mandates, according to an analysis by Education Week, an education-focused news organization.
In Virginia, where Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s executive order allows families to opt their children out of mask requirements at school, at least seven school districts have filed a lawsuit against the order.
Last week, in Loudoun County, Virginia, where the district’s school board voted last month to keep its mask mandate, 29 students were suspended for not wearing face masks. Three families are currently suing the district’s school board over its enforcement of the mask mandate despite the governor’s order.
The mask debate has also moved to the courtroom in Illinois, where a judge last week ruled against Gov. JB Pritzker’s school mask mandate after parents and teachers from more than 150 districts filed lawsuits, according to WLS-TV, an ABC station in Chicago.
Studies show that masking in school dramatically reduces the risk of COVID-19 transmission. Fewer outbreaks means schools can stay open for in-person learning. But some parents wonder how masking might interfere with in-person learning.
Karla Alsop, a mom of three in Virginia, blames masks for her daughter’s difficulty with reading. Alsop’s daughter attends a public school in Stafford County, where schools continue to follow a mask mandate.
“She’s saying that she can’t read like a second grader and she’s afraid to go to school. I can’t, as a parent, let that go,” Alsop told ABC News. “This is about parents having the rights to make the best decisions for their kids regarding their health, regarding their education.”
So far, studies show that for most children, masking at school has minimal effect on development and learning comprehension.
Research shows kids also look at body language and eyes for social cues, according to Dr. Erica Lee, attending psychologist at Boston Children’s Hospital.
“That’s something we can still see and still be very expressive with, even if you’re wearing a mask,” Lee said of body language cues.
In Florida, where mask mandates in schools were dropped last fall, Kimberly Lasher continues to send her three daughters, ages 11, 9 and 6, to school wearing masks.
“We just chose to wear masks, I think, to help protect those who maybe aren’t taking the same precautions,” said Lasher. “Perhaps if my daughter is wearing a mask, that can prevent them from spreading COVID to another student or even a teacher and, in our opinion, every little bit helps, for sure.”
According to a poll released last August, 69% of people of supported their local school districts requiring teachers, students and administrators to wear masks in schools at the start of the school year. The same poll, released by Axios/IPSOS, found one in three Americans support state laws prohibiting local governments from requiring masks.
Pediatric cases of COVID-19 surged over the holidays amid the omicron variant but dropped for the first time since Thanksgiving, according to a report by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.
About 808,000 children tested positive last week, down from a peak of 1,150,000 cases reported the week ending Jan. 20.
The organizations, however, warn that pediatric cases remain “extremely high” and triple the peak level of the delta surge in the summer of 2021.
Though children ages 5 and older are now eligible to be vaccinated against COVID-19, more than 28 million eligible children remain completely unvaccinated, according to federal and census data.
Both the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) continue to recommend universal indoor masking at schools for all people ages 2 and older, regardless of vaccination status.
Dr. Elissa Perkins, a mom and a Boston Medical Center emergency room doctor with expertise in infectious diseases, said she believes there needs to be a more nuanced approach when it comes to kids and masks.
Perkins told ABC News she was a “very early proponent” of community-wide masking, but said her philosophy began to change as vaccines became more widely available, including to kids.
Most health experts counter that because even vaccinated kids can still transmit the virus, removing mask mandates could pose risks to younger siblings.
“That, for me, was the start of the inflection point when it became time to think about what are we accomplishing with mandatory masks,” she said. “At the same time, masks went from being what were what were initially a short-term intervention to a long-term intervention.”
Perkins continued, “Masks have become a long-term intervention, and we need to examine what the possible downsides might be if we plan to continue them.”
Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have heard parents’ concerns and are now studying the potential downstream effects of prolonged masking for children, according to Dr. James A. Griffin, chief of the NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
“We do understand that one of the areas where masks do impair children is in their ability to understand what is being said to them,” said Griffin. “The difference between being able to understand a ‘bill’ and a ‘dill’ with the mask on that ‘d’ and ‘b’ sound can be very hard to distinguish without being able to see the lips, so there are challenges … we do recognize.”
Rachel Simmons, a parenting expert and the author of of the bestselling book Odd Girl Out, said if parents are concerned about their child’s struggles due to mask-wearing, they can help their kids cope by creating a plan.
“When our kids have a plan for who they can go see, what they can do when they get stressed out, research tells us they will have the tools to deal with the situation when it comes up,” said Simmons, who also recommends teaching kids mindfulness exercises, like feeling their feet on the ground, and supplying them with something calming, like a fidget toy, note or mint, to use during the day.
For parents who are struggling with how to respond to their child’s school if they don’t agree with the mask policy, Simmons said the best approach is to be a “partner” to the school.
“If you’re difficult to deal with as a parent, it will be harder to get heard,” she said. “So don’t send emails late at night. Be a partner to the school. Show your kids that you can respect someone even when you disagree.”
Simmons added, “And remember, your best way to be heard is if you have other parents standing with you.”
Over the weekend, the “Truth Hurts” singer bared it all while promoting a powerful message about love. Taking to social media, she shared an 11-second video of herself in the buff as she caressed her arm before looking deeply into the camera.
“If you love me… you love all of me. You don’t get to pick and choose,” she captioned the clip. “We should be unconditionally loving of one another, starting with being unconditionally loving to ourselves. Take a moment today and think about the conditions we hold so tightly to that keep us from the freedom of true love. Do you really wanna be so tightly wound?”
“Free yourself in love. You deserve it,” the 33-year-old singer concluded.
In the background of the video, Lizzo sings a cappella, “If you love me, you love all of me / Or none of me at all.”
She later shared a snapshot taken from the same set and simply titled it, “Art.”
Although Lizzo didn’t explicitly state any plans for releasing a song, fans are eagerly awaiting it.
“Release the song lizzo please,” one Instagram user commented, while another raved, “New music Lizzo yess Queen.”
On Sunday, alongside a heartfelt caption about her experience as a mom, the comedian, 40, shared a rare photo of her son Gene, whom she and husband Chris Fischer welcomed in May 2019.
“Being his mom is heaven on earth and also means a constant feeling of guilt and vulnerability I will never get used to,” Amy wrote on Instagram. “Your heart feels like it’s outside your body and you’re too old to drink the feelings away like you used to. When you were in love and scared. Send help!!!”
Many flooded to the comments section to provide some comfort and assure Schumer she’s not alone.
Tan France, one of the stars of Netflix’s Queer Eye, confirmed, “Yep, that’s exactly how it is and feels. It’s beautiful and terrifying.”
Singer-songwriter Elle King took the humor route, commenting, “Aww that’s why there’s cake.”
Last year, Roger Daltrey said that The Who would return to the stage in April of 2022, and he wasn’t lying. The band has announced The Who Hits Back! Tour for North America, kicking off April 22 in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
The spring leg of the tour wraps May 28 in Bethel, NY and the fall leg gets underway October in Toronto. Those dates are scheduled through two shows in Las Vegas on November 4 and 5. In May, for the first time in 43 years, the band will perform in Cincinnati, the site of the 1979 incident in which 11 people were killed when fans rushed the doors of the Riverfront Coliseum ahead of the Who’s show there.
The dates will feature the Who’s full live band — including Zak Starkey on drums, Jon Button on bass and Simon Townshend on guitar and vocals — as well as local orchestras.
In a statement, Daltrey says, “Pete and I said we’d be back, but we didn’t think we’d have to wait for two years for the privilege. This is making the chance to perform feel even more special this time around. So many livelihoods have been impacted due to Covid, so we are thrilled to get everyone back together — the band, the crew and the fans”.
We’re gearing up for a great show that hits back in the only way The Who know how: by giving it everything we’ve got,” Daltrey adds.
Tickets go on sale February 11 at 10 a.m. local time via LiveNation.com. The Who Fan Club pre-sale starts Tuesday, February 8th at 10:00 a.m. local time and runs through Thursday, February 10th at 10:00 p.m. local time.
(NEW YORK) — Groundbreaking research by several top American medical centers has identified a COVID pandemic spike in cases of so-called “broken heart syndrome,” a potentially deadly stress-induced heart condition that doctors say is disproportionately impacting women.
“My heart felt like it was pounding out of my chest,” said Mary Kay Abramson, 63, of Brookeville, Maryland, who was diagnosed with the condition last year. “It just felt like the blood just couldn’t get through the heart fast enough.”
An otherwise healthy and active corporate travel agent, Abramson said the episode occurred without symptoms or warning signs and even surprised the doctors trying to diagnose it.
“[My cardiologist] comes up to my head and says, ‘have you been under a lot of stress, because your arteries look fine?'” Abramson said of the hospital bed conversation last year. “So, yeah, a little bit: I’ve been furloughed for three months. COVID is going on. You know, can’t get out and do things. We’re shut down. So, yeah, I have been under a lot of stress!”
It was a classic case of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy, or broken heart syndrome, her doctors say. The rare but dangerous form of heart disease is triggered by intense emotional or physical stress when a sudden flood of hormones is believed to stun the heart into pumping less efficiently.
Teams of experts at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles, Cleveland Clinic and Johns Hopkins have each been tracking a recent surge in cases, likely spiking substantially during the pandemic, they say. The data is still being gathered and long-term implications examined.
“I don’t know how much we can really blame COVID, or how much of this is that we’re just recognizing more of it,” said Dr. Noel Bairey Merz, director of the Barbra Streisand Heart Center at Cedars-Sinai. “But heart disease is the leading killer of women and all ages, including teenagers, midlife women and older women. This is just a component of that major killer. So it’s really something that needs to be addressed.”
Bairey Merz says cases of broken heart syndrome have risen up to 10 times faster among middle-aged and older women than among younger women and men over the last decade. The disease is most common in this group as well.
Thirty-four-year-old tech recruiter Jenna Pilja of Huntington Beach, California, thought she was mentally prepared to give birth to her first child during COVID but was suddenly overcome last year after an emergency Cesarean section, potentially triggering a broken heart episode.
“Hearing that my son might not have been OK, that certainly could have triggered me, maybe more because of past trauma,” Pilja said. “Despite being on pain medication, I was able to feel some concerning symptoms. I had really bad dizziness and I had the worst headache I’ve ever had in my life.”
Her doctor later diagnosed the episode as a probable case of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy. Pilja is still undergoing evaluation but is expected to make a full recovery.
“As cardiologists we always think the heart is the most important organ. It’s the brain and the brain controls everything,” said Bairey Merz.
The brain-heart connection is at the center of Dr. Bairey Merz’s research at the Cedars-Sinai Smidt Heart Institute. ABC News got an exclusive look inside the hospital’s high-tech simulation center where imaging data illustrates how stress can literally break a heart.
“You hear people say, ‘oh, she’s broken-hearted’ or somebody is broken-hearted because they had a breakup… but they may come in with this and it’s a real diagnosis. It was just, like, unbelievable to me,” said Zearlisha Kinchelow, 35, a single mom and nursing student in Kansas City, Missouri, who was diagnosed with a broken heart.
“They just told me I was at 10% heart function,” she said. Her heart function has since returned to normal with therapy and changes to her diet and exercise, she said.
For Elaine Kamil, 75, a pediatric nephrology specialist in Los Angeles, immense grief after the unexpected death of her 31-year-old-son physically took a toll on her heart.
“The pain was severe. I got lucky,” said Kamil, who believes she has had multiple episodes of broken heart syndrome in the past few years. “I think it’s important to make sure that whoever you’re seeing — cardiologists understand Takotsubo [cardiomyopathy] and what the best treatments there are.”
While many hearts heal quickly, Bairey Merz says one in five people who suffers a broken heart will have another attack within 10 years.
“Taking care of yourself is definitely more than, you know, just taking care of your body,’ said Pilja. “It’s really about looking after your mental health and your overall well-being and making sure that you’re taking time to engage in activities that help relax you and help you process your emotions in a useful way.”
Growing evidence suggests doing so is one key to maintaining a healthy heart.