Tag Archives: Hal

Gwyneth Paltrow’s Body Double Says She Developed Eating Disorder After Shallow Hal Movie Release – E! Online – E! NEWS

  1. Gwyneth Paltrow’s Body Double Says She Developed Eating Disorder After Shallow Hal Movie Release – E! Online E! NEWS
  2. Gwyneth Paltrow’s Shallow Hal Body Double Claims She Almost Starved to Death After Filming Entertainment Tonight
  3. Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Shallow Hal’ Body Double Developed A Severe Eating Disorder Post-Film HuffPost
  4. Gwyneth Paltrow’s body double in ‘Shallow Hal’ developed eating disorder after filming wrapped NME
  5. Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Shallow Hal’ Body Double Nearly ‘Starved to Death’ Us Weekly
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Gwyneth Paltrow’s body double in ‘Shallow Hal’ developed eating disorder after filming wrapped – NME

  1. Gwyneth Paltrow’s body double in ‘Shallow Hal’ developed eating disorder after filming wrapped NME
  2. Gwyneth Paltrow’s Shallow Hal Body Double Claims She Almost Starved to Death After Filming Entertainment Tonight
  3. Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Shallow Hal’ Body Double Developed A Severe Eating Disorder Post-Film HuffPost
  4. Gwyneth Paltrow’s Shallow Hal body double reveals she had eating disorders post film WION
  5. Just When You Thought ‘Shallow Hal’ Couldn’t Get Any Worse, Gwyneth Paltrow’s Body Double Started Talking Cracked.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Juan Soto trade talks may be telling of Yankees’ Hal Steinbrenner

As caretaker of a special team in 1998, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman correctly gambled at the trade deadline that he could win a title without giving Seattle what it wanted for Randy Johnson. Cashman now faces similar circumstances with the Nationals and Juan Soto, only this time the call is a tougher one to make.

In 1998 Cashman knew the core Yankees could win it all without Johnson, because they had done it two years earlier. The GM has no such source of comfort this summer. His team hasn’t won the big one since 2009, and given the history and expectations that define the franchise, that championship “drought” feels about as long as the Jets’ (January 1969) and the Knicks’ (May 1973).

Cashman has seen it all in his quarter century on the job, and frankly, I don’t think we’re going to learn much about him between now and 6 p.m. on Aug. 2. He’s highly qualified to determine if a prospects-plus package headlined by Anthony Volpe is a price worth paying for Soto. But if the GM does come to temporary terms with his Washington counterpart, Mike Rizzo, I do think we will learn something about Hal Steinbrenner.

As in, just how badly the Yankees owner wants to win.

Yes, of course, everyone wants to win. But there is a vast difference between saying that you want to win and acting like you need to win. Steinbrenner’s decision on whether to approve a Soto acquisition and the potential half-billion dollar contract to come after 2024 — on top of a potential monster contract for Aaron Judge and existing monster deals for Gerrit Cole and Giancarlo Stanton — would identify which camp he’s in.

Up front, understand that employing the 23-year-old Soto for three postseason runs alone would be worth just about anything Rizzo could ask for. Now in Double-A ball, the 21-year-old Volpe might be a long-term Yankees shortstop out of central casting as a supremely talented Jersey Boy who idolized Derek Jeter.

Hal Steinbrenner
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

But measuring his upside requires some educated guessing. There is no educated guessing with Soto, who, by Volpe’s current age, had already delivered a 34-homer, 110-RBI season in the bigs and a three-homer, seven-RBI performance in a winning World Series. Soto needs to drive just four more balls over the fence to have more home runs before his 24th birthday than another slugger who made a loud entry into the sport at age 19. A kid by the name of Mickey Mantle.

Soto would be something with that right-field porch in The Bronx. He also draws more walks than anyone in baseball, giving him a better career on-base percentage (.427) than Mantle or Mike Trout. And the fact he could absorb an extended media grilling about the reported $15-year, $440 million Nationals offer he rejected, then win the Home Run Derby hours later, suggests … well … what everything else on his résumé suggests:

That the Yankees (64-28) with Soto would be a near death-and-taxes lock in the postseason to beat Houston and everyone else in their way. Oh, and that a Yankees team anchored by Judge and Soto would have a chance to win multiple titles, 1990s style.

Assuming that ownership is willing to pay them both.

Juan Soto
USA TODAY Sports

Though Hal Steinbrenner is no Steve Cohen, never mind Jeff Bezos or Bill Gates, when it comes to net worth, the family-run Yankees are still worth $6 billion (and closer to $7 billion when factoring in the YES Network and other properties), according to Forbes. That puts their valuation at nearly $2 billion more than the Dodgers’ and $3.35 billion more than that of the Mets, and those teams are committing more to payroll than the Yankees’ $250 million, according to Spotrac.

Steinbrenner said in the spring that it’s his responsibility every year “to make sure that we’re financially responsible. I’ve got a lot of partners and banks and bondholders and things like that that I answer to. But at the same time, it’s always the goal to win a championship.”

If that’s the goal, landing Soto in the dawn of his prime is the ultimate slam dunk. Soto isn’t Kevin Durant, who will be 34 on opening night in the fall. But he is good enough to be a franchise player long after Judge, Stanton, and Cole start to decline.

And given the Yankees’ value, this shouldn’t be an either/or call between Judge and Soto, though the latter would represent one hell of an insurance policy in case the former bolts in free agency. Judge has earned a contract far north of the seven-year, $213.5-million extension offer he rejected in the spring, and Steinbrenner should give it to him.

The owner would then have two years to figure out how to pay Soto about $500 million on top of that, assuming the outfielder keeps playing the way he’s playing.

So if Cashman and Rizzo can agree on the All-Star’s worth, Steinbrenner should be willing to eat Patrick Corbin’s contract and sacrifice the payroll balance that Yankees prospects provide in their early years on the roster.

In the end, as unfair as it might be to forever compare Steinbrenner to his father, a flawed man and leader, there’s no doubt what George Steinbrenner would do here. He would add Soto to Judge just like he once added Alex Rodriguez to Jeter.

Hal Steinbrenner might soon get the chance to pick up a very big check, or two, and whether he does or doesn’t will tell us an awful lot about him.

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HAL Laboratory Talks About Kirby’s 3D Future, Hopes New Entries Can Be “Even More Wild And Free”

Image: via Nintendo Switch

Kirby and the Forgotten Land is now available on the Nintendo Switch in certain parts of the world, and as part of this, Nintendo has released a new volume of its ‘Ask The Developer’ series – providing all sorts of insights about the pink puff’s first full 3D action game.

Towards the end of the interview, HAL Laboratory was questioned about the future of the Kirby, and if the team would continue to explore “3D action gameplay”. The short answer is – yes, HAL is eager to build on Kirby and the Forgotten Land for Switch.

Game director Shinya Kumazaki believes Kirby’s latest outing is a “masterpiece” within the history of the series and mentioned how Kirby still had “unlimited potential”. From here on out, he hopes the team can be “even more wild and free” when it comes to creating Kirby titles in the future and told fans to look forward to new Kirby games.

Nintendo’s Kei Ninomiya – associate producer of the latest Kirby game – was just as supportive of 3D Kirby games moving forward, revealing how this title has encouraged the Kirby development team to keep doing new things in the future, in “both 2D and 3D”.

What sort of 3D projects would you like to see from Kirby and the team at HAL Laboratory? Tell us below.



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Joyce Beatty says Hal Rogers poked her and said ‘kiss my a**’ after she asked him to put on a mask

Beatty, who chairs the Congressional Black Caucus, said in a string of tweets, “Today, while heading to the House floor for votes, I respectfully asked my colleague @RepHalRogers to put on a mask while boarding the train. He then poked my back, demanding I get on the train. When I asked him not to touch me, he responded, ‘kiss my ass.'”

“This is the kind of disrespect we have been fighting for years, and indicative of the larger issue we have with GOP Members flaunting health and safety mandates designed to keep us and our staff safe,” Beatty continued. “@RepHalRogers, when you are ready to grow up and apologize for your behavior, you know where to find me.”

Rogers told CNN Tuesday, “My words were not acceptable” and said he apologized to Beatty on the House floor and in a statement said he “expressed my regret to her, first and foremost.”

Beatty said she accepted Rogers’ apology and was “moving on.” In recounting the incident to CNN’s John Berman on “New Day” Wednesday morning, Beatty said Rogers’ original apology on the House floor was insufficient because “he mumbled some words” which led her to demand a public apology.

She also suggested the situation would have unfolded differently had the race roles been reversed.

“Maybe the question is, had a Black man poked a White woman and then told her to kiss his blank blank, you tell me what you think would have happened,” she told Berman.

Rogers’ apology came after members of the Congressional Black Caucus gathered on the House steps to condemn Rogers for “assaulting” Beatty and demand a public apology.

“It’s despicable that someone could physically and verbally assault another member of this chamber,” said Nevada Democratic Rep. Steven Horsford, the first vice chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. “We are here in solidarity to call on that member to formally apologize to our Chair, and to understand the seriousness of his actions, and the lack of decorum that he exhibited today.”

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Hakeem Jeffries echoed that message, saying, “He needs to apologize, man up, apologize immediately, before this escalates to a place he doesn’t want this to go.”

“Who does Hal Rogers think he is? How dare he put his hands on anyone, man, woman or child? How dare he assault Joyce Beatty? How dare he jab her aggressively in the back? How dare he verbally attack her? How dare he say ‘kiss my a**’? Who do you think you are?” the New York Democrat added.

Beatty’s account of the exchange underscores the larger Democratic frustration with Republican lawmakers who have defied the stepped-up health protocols in the Capitol.

While masks aren’t mandated on the Capitol subway system, a number of House GOP lawmakers have been fined for refusing to wear masks in Congress. The fines are automatically docked from lawmakers’ paychecks.

This story has been updated with additional information and reaction.

CNN’s Annie Grayer and Shawna Mizelle contributed to this report.



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Hal Holbrook Dies: Actor Who Portrayed Mark Twain Was 95

Emmy and Tony winner Hal Holbrook, an actor best known for his role as Mark Twain, whom he portrayed for decades in one-man shows, died on Jan. 23. He was 95.

Holbrook’s personal assistant, Joyce Cohen, confirmed his death to the New York Times on Monday night.

Holbrook played the American novelist in a solo show called “Mark Twain Tonight!” that he directed himself and for which he won the best actor Tony in 1966. He returned to Broadway with the show in 1977 and 2005 and appeared in it more than 2,200 times (as of 2010) in legit venues across the country. He began performing the show in 1954.

He received an Emmy nomination for a TV adaptation of “Mark Twain Tonight!” in 1967, the first of multiple noms. He won four Emmy Awards.

He also drew an Oscar nomination for supporting actor for his role in the film “Into the Wild” in 2008. At the time of the nomination, the 82-year-old Holbrook was the oldest performer to ever receive such recognition.

Holbrook’s craggy voice and appearance lent itself to historical portrayals and other parts that required gravitas. Indeed, he also played Abraham Lincoln, winning an Emmy in 1976 for the NBC miniseries “Lincoln” and reprising the role in the ABC miniseries “North and South” in 1985 and its sequel the following year. Moreover he won his first Emmy, in 1970, for his role as the title character in the brief but highly regarded series “The Bold Ones: The Senator.” He played the commander-in-chief in 1980 film “The Kidnapping of the President”; a senior judge tempted into vigilante justice in “The Star Chamber”; and John Adams in the 1984 miniseries “George Washington.” Much later, he played the assistant secretary of state on a couple of episodes of “The West Wing,” and most recently he played a conservative Republican congressman in Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln” and a judge in the 2013 historical drama “Savannah.”

In 1978 he was nominated for an Emmy for his role in a TV adaptation of Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town” as the Stage Manager, another role with which he is strongly associated.

Earlier, he drew an Emmy nomination for a noted role as a man who reveals his homosexuality to his son, played by Martin Sheen, in the ahead-of-its-time ABC 1972 telepic “That Certain Summer.”

He recurred on the late ’80s Linda Bloodworth sitcom “Designing Women” as the boyfriend to his real-life wife, Dixie Carter; his character on that show was killed off so he could take one of the starring roles in another CBS-Bloodworth effort, the Burt Reynolds starrer “Evening Shade,” in which he played Reynolds’ irascible father-in-law. He appeared in 79 episodes of the show from 1990-94.

Holbrook also directed four episodes of “Designing Women.”

In 2006 the actor guested on “The Sopranos” as a terminally ill patient who imparts some wisdom to the hospitalized Tony Soprano.

Holbrook’s inimitable voice, full of a world-weary integrity, was inevitably attractive to documentary makers and feature film directors requiring narration or voiceover. He narrated docus such as “The Might Mississippi” and “The Cultivated Life: Thomas Jefferson and Wine” and movies including 2011’s “Water for Elephants.” He won an Emmy in 1989 for narrating the “Alaska” segment of the “Portrait of America” documentary series.

The actor made a deep impression on the bigscreen as well, playing Deep Throat in “All the President’s Men” — it was he who intoned the famous words “Follow the money!”; a power-mad police lieutenant in the Dirty Harry movie “Magnum Force”; and, in a brief and underappreciated performance, a stockbroker warning of the dangers of ethical lapses in Oliver Stone’s “Wall Street.”

Harold Rowe “Hal” Holbrook, Jr. was born in Cleveland; his mother was a vaudeville dancer. He was raised in South Weymouth, Mass., and graduated from Ohio’s Denison U., where an honors project about Twain led him to develop “Mark Twain Tonight.” Serving in the Army in WWII, Holbrook was stationed in Newfoundland, where he performed in theater productions including the play “Madam Precious.”

Ed Sullivan saw him perform “Mark Twain Tonight” and gave the young thesp his first national exposure on his television show in February 1956.

Holbrook was a member of summer stock legit troupe the Valley Players, based in Holyoke, Mass., and opened its 1957 season with a perf of “Mark Twain Tonight.” The State Dept. sent him on a tour of Europe that included appearances behind the Iron Curtain, and Holbrook first played the role Off Broadway in 1959. Columbia Records recorded an album of excerpts from the show.

On Broadway, Holbrook played the role of the Major in the original production of Arthur Miller’s “Incident at Vichy” in 1964. In 1968 he was one of the replacements for Richard Kiley in the original Broadway production of “Man of La Mancha” despite limited ability as a singer.

As Holbrook approached his mid-80s, he remained a busy actor, including multi-episode appearances on FX’s “Sons of Anarchy” and NBC’s “The Event.” In 2011 he was also in an independent film, the thriller “Good Day for It,” in whose conception he was intimately involved, and he appeared as a science teacher who knows the truth in Gus Van Sant’s anti-fracking film “Promised Land.”

Holbrook’s memoir “Harold: The Boy Who Became Mark Twain” was published in September 2011.

In 2014, Holbrook was the subject of the documentary “Holbrook/Twain: An American Odyssey,” directed by Scott Teems, which premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival and depicted Holbrook’s career portraying Twain. Holbrook appeared as Red Hudmore on the final season of “Bones” in 2017, and appeared in an episode of “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Hawaii Five-0” that same year. In September 2017, Holbrook announced his retirement from “Mark Twain Tonight.”

Holbrook was married three times. He and Carter were married in 1984 and remained together until her death in 2010.

He is survived by his three children and two stepdaughters, as well as two grandchildren and two step-grandchildren.



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