Keith Urban & Nicole Kidman’s daughter gets a sweet birthday message “from Mumma and Dad”

Keith Urban & Nicole Kidman’s daughter gets a sweet birthday message “from Mumma and Dad”
Keith Urban & Nicole Kidman’s daughter gets a sweet birthday message “from Mumma and Dad”
ABC

Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman just celebrated a big day in their family: Their youngest daughter, Faith Margaret, turned 11 years old.

Nicole marked the occasion on social media, where she gave fans a peek at Faith’s birthday cake. Decorated with chocolate frosting and a generous helping of sprinkles, the cake was topped with a multi-colored, fringed banner reading “Happy Birthday.”

Faith is the youngest of two girls that Nicole and Keith share. They’re also parents to 13-year-old Sunday Rose.

“Happy birthday our darling Faith. You are loved beyond measure,” Nicole wrote in her post, signing the caption, “Mumma and Dad.”

While the two stars are relatively private about their family life, their two daughters do get a taste of the spotlight every once in a while. In the spring of 2021, for example, Faith and Sunday appeared on Zoom alongside their parents at the Golden Globe Awards.

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Måneskin are “Beggin'” you to watch them ring in 2022 on ABC’s ’New Year’s Rockin’ Eve’

Måneskin are “Beggin'” you to watch them ring in 2022 on ABC’s ’New Year’s Rockin’ Eve’
Måneskin are “Beggin'” you to watch them ring in 2022 on ABC’s ’New Year’s Rockin’ Eve’
Courtesy ABC

After a huge breakout year, Måneskin will close out 2021 with a performance on Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2022. As the “Beggin'” rockers tell ABC Audio, they were rockin’ to the long-running special while growing up in Italy.

“Yeah of course we knew [about NYRE], it’s really famous,” laughs frontman Damiano David.

David adds that getting asked to play this year’s Rockin’ Eve was “unexpected.”

“We were very surprised when they told us that we were gonna perform,” he says. “We’re really happy to be here and play for the New Year.”

Måneskin’s huge year included winning the 2021 Eurovision Song Contest, and earning a worldwide hit with the viral “Beggin’,” a cover of the Four Seasons song. As for how they plan to top that in 2022, Måneskin will do what they do best.

“I think just play many gigs and make new music,” bassist Victoria De Angelis says of the group’s 2022 hopes. “Then we try to just see what happens and not make too many expectations and just enjoy it day-by-day.”

Drummer Ethan Torchio adds, “Yeah, going with the flow.”

NYRE 2022 premieres December 31 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on ABC. Other performers include Masked Wolf, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, OneRepublic, Avril Lavigne with Travis Barker, AJR with Daisy the Great, LL and more.

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Ice Cube responds to accusations of underpaying actors in 1995 film, ‘Friday’

Ice Cube responds to accusations of underpaying actors in 1995 film, ‘Friday’
Ice Cube responds to accusations of underpaying actors in 1995 film, ‘Friday’
Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

After Friday co-star Faizon Love recently revealed he didn’t return for the 2000 sequel film Next Friday because of low pay, Twitter erupted, accusing the film’s star and producer, Ice Cube, of underpaying the actors. Now the former N.W.A. member is responding

Love, who played the character Big Worm in Friday in 1995, told Comedy Hype he was paid only $2,500 for his role. “You can’t be,” he responded when asked if he felt “bitter” about his pay. But Love later confirmed that money was the reason he didn’t return for the sequel, Next Friday. “They wanted to give me double scale. So scale was $2,500, right? So double scale was $5,000,” Love commented. “The day after I said ‘No,’ I got a call to do a film for Warner Brothers called [The] Replacements and they paid me $100,000. So I ain’t crazy.”

One person tweeted, “Yo it’s wild how @icecube act like he for the people and whole time been robbing his own people.”

“I didn’t rob no f***in nobody,” Cube responded. “The 1995 Friday movie cost $2.3m to make. Shot it in 20 days. Faizon worked 1 day, maybe 2. All the actors got paid scale to do the movie. They could’ve simple said ‘No’ but they didn’t. ”

Faizon was surprised his comments ignited a controversy, and showed nothing but “love” for Cube.

“I not only consider Ice Cube a comrade but my brother and I’m still a fan,” he tweeted. “I guess it’s a slow news week so let me say what I got paid is a moot point…I have zero regrets. I want to take this time to thank Cube, DJ Pooh, and Felix Gary Grey for letting me be apart of such an iconic picture.”

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Camila Cabello unloads Hollywood Hills home for $4.3 million

Camila Cabello unloads Hollywood Hills home for .3 million
Camila Cabello unloads Hollywood Hills home for .3 million
Rodrigo Varela/Getty Images

Camila Cabello is $4.3 million richer after selling her gorgeous Mediterranean-style villa in Hollywood Hills, California.  According to Dirt, the price was escalated by over a quarter-million dollars after a bidding war broke out.

Camila purchased the massive home in April 2019 from Bollywood actor Uday Chopra for a cool $3.4 million.  The Grammy nominee then listed the home in November and originally set the selling price at a relatively modest $3.95 million, sparking the bidding war.

In the end, Camila got to live practically every home seller’s dream after watching the bids surge past the initial listing number, with the winning bid a full $350,000 over her asking price — meaning Camila has bagged a profit of nearly $1 million.  

Dirt reports that a person from Mainland China scored the keys to Camila’s old castle and will now enjoy the 6,300 square foot home. The villa offers four bedrooms with the master boasting its own fireplace and balcony, plus four bathrooms, a tree-shaded courtyard with an adjacent pool, a Jacuzzi, a gourmet kitchen and a recording studio, among other perks.

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Dwayne Johnson turns down Vin Diesel’s pleas to rejoin the ‘Fast & Furious’ franchise

Dwayne Johnson turns down Vin Diesel’s pleas to rejoin the ‘Fast & Furious’ franchise
Dwayne Johnson turns down Vin Diesel’s pleas to rejoin the ‘Fast & Furious’ franchise
Buda Mendes/LatinContent via Getty Images

Dwayne Johnson says he won’t be returning to the Fast & Furious franchise, despite Vin Diesel’s recent pleas on social media.

Johnson tells CNN that back in June, he told Diesel privately that there was “no chance” he’d return, so he was surprised when Diesel shared an Instagram post in November begging him to come back.

“Vin’s recent public post was an example of his manipulation,” Johnson, who played Luke Hobbs in the series, says. “I didn’t like that he brought up his children in the post, as well as Paul Walker‘s death. Leave them out of it. We had spoken months ago about this and came to a clear understanding.”

Johnson adds that his goal was “to end my amazing journey with this incredible Fast & Furious franchise with gratitude and grace” and says “it’s unfortunate that this public dialogue has muddied the waters.”

Still, Johnson says, he wishes his former co-stars and crew member “the best of luck and success in the next chapter.”

In Diesel’s Instagram post on November 7, he wrote, “My little brother Dwayne… the time has come. The world awaits the finale of Fast 10,” adding, “I say this out of love… but you must show up, do not leave the franchise idle you have a very important role to play.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Vin Diesel (@vindiesel)

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The Year in Rock 2021: Marilyn Manson accused of abuse

The Year in Rock 2021: Marilyn Manson accused of abuse
The Year in Rock 2021: Marilyn Manson accused of abuse
Stephen J. Cohen/Getty Images

Allegations of abuse against Marylin Manson dominated rock music news headlines in 2021.

In February, Manson’s ex-fiancée, Evan Rachel Wood, who had spoken previously about being sexually and physically abused by an unnamed perpetrator, publicly named the shock rocker, born Brian Warner, as her abuser.

“[Warner] started grooming me when I was a teenager and horrifically abused me for years,” Wood wrote. “I am here to expose this dangerous man and call out the many industries that have enabled him, before he ruins any more lives. I stand with the many victims who will no longer be silent.”

Warner responded with a statement that did not mention Wood’s allegations specifically, only that “recent claims about me are horrible distortions of reality.”

Following Wood’s post, more women came forward with accusations of sexual, physical and mental abuse against Warner, including actor Esmé Bianco, model Ashley Morgan Smithline, and Warner’s former assistant, Ashley Walters, all of whom filed lawsuits against him. Through lawyers, Warner has denied the allegations.

Warner has mostly stayed out of the public eye amid the allegations, save for an appearance at a listening event for rapper Kanye West‘s latest album, Donda. Having co-written a song on Album of the Year-nominated Donda, Warner would receive a Grammy should it win the award at next year’s ceremony. Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. addressed the controversial nomination in a statement to The Wrap, declaring, “We won’t look back at people’s history, we won’t look at their criminal record.”

For anyone affected by abuse and needing support, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233, or if you’re unable to speak safely, you can log onto thehotline.org or text LOVEIS to 1-866-331-9474.

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Maggie Gyllenhaal explains how ‘The Lost Daughter’ lets women feel seen

Maggie Gyllenhaal explains how ‘The Lost Daughter’ lets women feel seen
Maggie Gyllenhaal explains how ‘The Lost Daughter’ lets women feel seen
Olivia Colman as Leda. CR: YANNIS DRAKOULIDIS/NETFLIX © 2021.

Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal makes her directorial debut in The Lost Daughter, one of the most critically acclaimed movies of the year that’s racking up award nominations left and right. 

Maggie tells ABC Audio the movie takes a hard look at a little-shown side of the female psyche and features two mothers acting out in different ways after struggling to live up to expectations.  That experience, says Gyllenhaal, is universal but not explored enough in film.

“Many many women have spent a whole long time watching movies where there was no one for us to immediately identify with,” she explained, adding she wanted the audience to think, “This person doesn’t look exactly like me, but I’m going to find a way in to understand their experience and have it be important to my experience.” 

Peter Sarsgaard, Maggie’s husband, who co-stars in the movie, recalled when the audience at the Venice International Film Festival, where the movie premiered globally, praised Maggie’s vision.  “I remember several people who came up to her and they feel that need to say, ‘You did something to me.  I’m thinking.  I’m feeling,'” he said.

Another cast member, Olivia Colman, explained why she jumped at the opportunity to star in the film, saying, “I’ve never seen this woman depicted so honestly before on screen and I wanted to have a crack at it.”

Echoing those remarks was Dakota Johnson, who was interested because the movie explored “an unhappy mother and wife — you’re not supposed to be that.”

“This idea that Nina wanted more for herself and had never really been seen and wasn’t being nourished in her heart and her mind just resonated with me,” she continued. “I found it heartbreaking and so real and so common.” 

The Lost Daughter premieres Friday on Netflix.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

New files reveal plea from Westminster Abbey for Elton John to perform at Princess Diana’s funeral

New files reveal plea from Westminster Abbey for Elton John to perform at Princess Diana’s funeral
New files reveal plea from Westminster Abbey for Elton John to perform at Princess Diana’s funeral
Anwar Hussein/WireImage

Perhaps the most memorable moment of the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales on September 6, 1997 was Elton John‘s emotional performance of his rewritten version of “Candle in the Wind,” in which he sang, “Goodbye England’s Rose.”  Now, new files released from the British National Archives reveal that the head of Westminster Abbey, where the funeral took place, made a personal plea to Buckingham Palace to have Elton included in the service.

According to the BBC, the files reveal that the Very Rev. Wesley Carr, Dean of Westminster at the time, wrote to the Palace and pointed out that having Elton sing at the service would be “imaginative and generous,” and would help the millions of people who felt “personally bereaved” by the Princess’ tragic death.

Carr urged “boldness” and the “inclusion of something of the modern world that the princess represented” in the service.  If Elton was a no-go, the files show that the backup plan was to have a saxophone player perform a solo.

In his autobiography ME, Elton writes that a few days after Diana’s death, Richard Branson called him and told him that many people were signing the book of condolence at St. James’s Palace by quoting from the original “Candle in the Wind,” and that radio stations were playing it a lot as well.  According to Elton, it was Branson who then asked Elton to rewrite the lyrics and sing it at the funeral, and he surmised that Branson had been contacted by Diana’s family to make the request.

After singing the song at the funeral, Elton went straight into the studio and recorded “Candle in the Wind 1997” as a charity single. It went on to became the best-selling single in both U.K. and U.S. history.   But Elton has never performed the song since and says he never will, unless Princes William and Harry ask him to.

 

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Biden, Putin to talk Thursday amid heightened tensions over Ukraine

Biden, Putin to talk Thursday amid heightened tensions over Ukraine
Biden, Putin to talk Thursday amid heightened tensions over Ukraine
SAUL LOEB/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden will speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday — their second conversation this month amid heightened fears of a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

The call, which the Biden administration said comes at Putin’s request, is the latest effort to defuse those tensions diplomatically.

But tens of thousands of Russian troops remain near Ukraine’s borders, and bellicose rhetoric from Russian officials and state propaganda have Western officials on edge still.

The U.S. and European allies have threatened unprecedented economic penalties for Moscow if it attacks Ukraine, nearly eight years after its forces seized the Crimean Peninsula and sparked a war in Ukraine’s eastern provinces known as Donbas.

Sanctions and other penalties have not brought that conflict to an end, with approximately 14,000 people killed and Russian-led separatists still fighting Ukrainian forces. U.S. officials say it’s unclear if Putin has decided to attack again in an all-out invasion, but Biden has already made clear U.S. forces will not come to Kyiv’s aid on the battlefield.

Instead, the Biden administration is hoping deterrence and diplomacy will stop Putin. A senior administration official said they “cannot speak to why the Russian side has requested the call,” but added both leaders believe there is “genuine value in direct leader to leader engagement.”

“I think we are at a moment of crisis and have been for some weeks now given the Russian build-up and that it will take a high level of engagement to address this and to try to find a path of de-escalation,” the official told reporters Wednesday.

In addition to the leaders’ call, U.S. and Russian diplomats will meet on Jan. 10, the two sides confirmed Tuesday, to discuss stated security concerns on either side.

“Open lines of dialogue, open lines of diplomacy have the potential to be constructive as we seek to de-escalate the potential for conflict in and around Ukraine,” State Department spokesperson Ned Price said of the talks.

After those meetings, NATO will hold a meeting with Russia on Jan. 12, while the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, a key security forum that has deployed a war monitor in eastern Ukraine, will hold a session Jan. 13.

“The Biden administration continues to engage in extensive diplomacy with our European allies and partners, consulting and coordinating on a common approach in response to Russia’s military build-up on the border with Ukraine,” Emily Horne, Biden’s National Security Council spokesperson, said in a statement.

But some European allies have called for greater involvement. The European Union “must be involved in these negotiations,” its top diplomat, Josep Borrell, told the German newspaper Die Welt.

“It’s about us. This is not simply the case for two states, i.e. America and Russia, or NATO and Russia — even if Moscow imagines it,” he added in the interview, published Wednesday.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken has said repeatedly the U.S. will not negotiate any arrangement about European security without first consulting European allies — speaking again to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy Wednesday, just as the two spoke before Biden and Putin’s first call this month.

He reiterated “unwavering” U.S. support for Ukraine, per Price, and “discussed efforts to peacefully resolve the conflict in eastern Ukraine and upcoming diplomatic engagements with Russia” — a nod to both Thursday’s call and the Jan. 10 meetings.

Zelenskiy tweeted that he was assured of “full” U.S. support “in countering Russian aggression.” U.S. officials have already publicly rebuked Russia’s demand heading into talks — that Ukraine be barred from NATO membership, saying the Western alliance’s military activity in former Soviet states threatens Russia.

But other items on Russia’s public demands are not “unacceptable” and could be addressed through diplomacy, Blinken, Price and others have said — provided that Russia de-escalate as well by pulling back its forces from Ukraine’s borders.

Instead, while Russian state media reported Monday that more than 10,000 were withdrawn, the senior administration official said there’s still a “significant Russian troop presence in and around the border.”

The ominous language from Russian officials has also continued. Putin himself said Sunday that he is weighing “diverse” military and technical options if Russia’s demands aren’t addressed.

Amid that heightened threat, the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv is making “emergency preparations” in case it evacuates non-emergency personnel or diplomats’ families, according to internal emails obtained by ABC News.

The embassy is seeking additional security staff to temporarily fill in next month, as the “permanent staff continue Emergency Preparations in case of Authorized or Ordered Departure” — when an embassy allows diplomats’ families and non-emergency personnel to relocate because of a threat.

A State Department spokesperson confirmed Wednesday they are “conducting normal contingency planning, as we always do, in the event the security situation severely deteriorates.” But they told ABC News they are not “currently considering evacuations of U.S. government personnel or American citizens from Ukraine.”

Earlier this month, the State Department updated its travel advisory for Ukraine to include a warning about “increased threats from Russia.” The advisory had been at the agency’s highest level, “Level 4: Do Not Travel,” for months because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it now warns, “U.S. citizens should be aware of reports that Russia is planning for significant military action against Ukraine.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

White House pushes back on criticism of isolation guidance, says omicron likely less severe

White House pushes back on criticism of isolation guidance, says omicron likely less severe
White House pushes back on criticism of isolation guidance, says omicron likely less severe
Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defended the latest guidelines shortening the isolation period for certain people who test positive for COVID amid criticism from public health experts who believe a negative test should also be included in the recommendation.

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said that the new guidelines of five days isolation for asymptomatic people or people who have seen their symptoms largely resolve stemmed from “two years of understanding transmissibility,” and that the period was shortened from 10 days to reduce staffing shortages in hospitals. The guidance recommends an additional five days of masking after the isolation period.

“Let me make clear that we are standing on the shoulders of two years of science, two years of understanding transmissibility, and a lot of information that we have gleaned from the wild type virus, as well as the alpha and delta variants and more that we continue to learn every single day about omicron,” Walensky said on Wednesday at a White House briefing on the virus.

She also said the CDC did not recommend getting a negative test before leaving isolation because scientists aren’t confident that rapid tests provide a good indication of contagiousness and PCR tests can show a positive result for months. But, she said, data shows people are largely less infectious after five days.

“We do know the vast majority of viral transmission happens in those first five days, somewhere in the 85 to 90% range. So if a person can isolate for the first five days they absolutely should,” she said.

“We also don’t know that antigen tests give a good indication of transmissibility at this stage of infection. On the other hand, we know that after five days people are much less likely to transmit the virus and that masking further reduces that risk. And this is why people need to mask for five days after the five days of isolation,” she said.

Some infectious disease experts expressed frustration with the new guidlines on social media, with Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, saying rapid antigen tests are a good additional layer of assurance before leaving isolation.

“​​The CDC should have included a negative antigen tests to end isolation,” Jha wrote, and rapid tests are “great when used properly.”

Dr. Jerome Adams, the U.S. surgeon general under former President Donald Trump, also slammed the CDC in a Twitter thread, criticizing the agency’s decision to omit the recommendation for COVID-19-positive individuals to take a test prior to ending isolation.

The current guidelines are that a person with a positive COVID-19 test should isolate for five days, regardless of their vaccination status. If a person never had or no longer has symptoms after five days, they can leave isolation. They should then wear a mask for the next five days, even at home, according to the guidance.

“After five days, if you’re asymptomatic or if your symptoms have largely resolved, you may leave isolation as long as you continue to wear a mask around others, even in the home for an additional five days,” Walensky said.

Rapid tests, which are a faster and often more convenient option for testing, have always been slightly less accurate than PCR tests, which can take days to get back.

Most major test makers, such as Abbott, say their rapid tests still work to detect the omicron variant. But without naming specific tests, the Food and Drug Administration said preliminary research indicates some of these tests could be less sensitive.

The FDA says rapid tests still work, and the agency is now studying how much of an impact the omicron variant might make on accuracy. Walensky and other members of the White House COVID team said Wednesday that the FDA did not intend to dissuade Americans from taking the tests but wanted to be “transparent.”

“What the FDA was saying was that when they were looking at the sensitivity with regard to omicron in some of the tests, there appears to be somewhat of a diminution, not a disappearance, but a diminution of the sensitivity,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical advisor to the White House, said at the briefing.

“The fact that the sensitivity is diminished somewhat does not obviate the importance of the still advantage and usefulness of these tests under different circumstances,” Fauci said.

“That was the message of the FDA. They wanted to make sure they were totally transparent in saying the sensitivity might come down a bit, but they did emphasize there still is an important use of these tests,” Fauci said.

Walensky added that “another important use is where we use them for serial testing in places like tests to stay, to keep children in school, in higher ed to keep our college campuses safe” — all situations in which the quantity of tests being used can make them more useful.

Fauci also presented some data from around the world about the apparent lessened severity of omicron.

In the U.K., a study has found the risk of hospitalization admission with omicron was 40% of that for delta, and in Scotland, preliminary data suggested a two-thirds reduction in the risk of COVID-19 hospitalization with omicron, Fauci said.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., data from the last 14 days shows “the spike in cases is out of proportion to the increase in hospitalization,” he said.

There has been a 126% increase in cases and an 11% increase in hospitalizations, and while deaths and hospitalizations tend to lag weeks behind cases, “the pattern and disparity between cases and hospitalization strongly suggest that there will be a lower hospitalization to case ratio when the situation becomes more clear,” he said.

“So in conclusion, the data are encouraging, but still, in many respects, preliminary, yet they are getting stronger and stronger as additional data are accumulated,” he said.

“All indications point to a lesser severity of omicron versus delta.”

Still, Fauci warned that severity on its own is good news, but it is paired with higher transmissibility.

“Increased transmissibility of omicron resulting in an extremely high volume of cases may override some of the impact of the lower disease severity,” he said.

“And so we should not become complacent since our hospital system could still be stressed in certain areas of the country.”

ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos conributed to this report.

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