Related: Jerry O’Connell Says He Owes ‘Everything’ to Late Director Rob Reiner
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Corey Feldman is addressing his noticeable absence from this year’s emotional on-stage Oscars tribute to the late director Rob Reiner.
“Personally, it felt a little bit like a family reunion I wasn’t invited to, but we’re not going to use this time to get into my feelings about that,” Feldman, 54, told Entertainment Weekly in an interview published on Friday, March 27.
“Instead, I just want to say that I’m, with the rest of us, we’re all very destroyed that things went down the way they did, losing Rob when we all thought he’d be joining us at some point for this tour,” he continued, referring to the theatrical re-release of Reiner’s 1986 film Stand By Me.
The film, starring a young Feldman alongside Jerry O’Connell and Wil Wheaton, is returning to theaters in honor of the movie’s 40th anniversary.
“We all would’ve loved to be able to say goodbye in our own ways,” Feldman continued. “Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. The best way we can say goodbye is honoring him and his work and his film through these tours that we’re doing and these interviews and getting people to take the moment and time to acknowledge the history of his work and art that he created. And hopefully going out there to celebrate him one last time on a big screen where it deserves to be seen.”

Corey Feldman Getty Images
Rob and his wife, Michelle Reiner, were found dead in their California home in December 2025. The late director was 78, while she was 70. The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner later determined Rob and Michele’s cause of death to be “multiple sharp force injuries” from apparent stab wounds.
The couple’s son Nick Reiner, 32, was subsequently arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree murder with special circumstances in connection to his parents’ untimely deaths. In February, Nick pleaded not guilty to the charges. He faces life in prison without the possibility of parole or the death penalty should he be convicted. Nick remains behind bars without bail. His next court date is scheduled for April 29 at the time of publication.
In March, Rob and his wife were honored onstage during Hollywood’s biggest night by some of the stars of the filmmaker’s most prolific movies. Billy Crystal led the way, recalling how he met Rob in 1975 while playing best friends on an episode of All in the Family.
“It went so well Rob said, ‘It was fun playing your best friend, why don’t we keep it going?’” the actor said while on the 2026 Oscars stage. “It was a thrill to see him evolve from a great comic actor to a skilled storyteller.”
Crystal then highlighted some of the late director’s most memorable films, including Misery, When Harry Met Sally and Stand by Me. The actor was then joined by the stars of Reiner’s many films, including Meg Ryan, Kathy Bates, O’Connell and Wheaton.
“I think Jerry and Wil did what had to be done,” Feldman said of the onstage moment featuring his former costars. “It was a fleeting moment, so I don’t feel like I missed much at all. I personally was probably maybe a little bothered by the fact that nobody got to speak or say anything from their own heart. Although they did a wonderful job, I would’ve liked to have heard from Wil and Jerry and a few other people up there.”
Nearly a year after dropping the mic for the last time on “The Really Good Podcast,” Bobbi Althoff is bringing it back to life.
The internet sensation, who gets a mix of love and hate online, recently shared the news in a simple Instagram post. And while she hasn’t exactly been out of the public eye since ending the podcast last July, later joining another, “That’s BS Podcast with Bobbi and Suki,” fans were quick to share their opinions in the comments under her social media announcement.

Last July, Althoff shocked fans when she announced the end of “The Really Good Podcast.” She shared that while she was proud of all her many accomplishments with the podcast, she was shocked that she “fell off” as quickly as she did. And with mounting criticism hitting everything she posts, it may not have come as much of a shock to her day-one fans that she was dropping the mic for a final time.
On Friday, Althoff shared a carousel of photos on Instagram simply captioned, “the really good podcast is coming back from the dead. New episodes returning every Wednesday starting next week.”
The post received more than 100,000 likes in just a day, and tons of comments – some positive and some not so much.

So far, Althoff has only announced the podcast’s return on her IG page (where she has 3.7 million followers), with no sign of the news on her TikTok page, (where she has 8.3 million followers).
Many viewers hopped into the comment section to leave their thoughts on both her photo carousel and the podcast beginning again.
“You’ll never see this but lowkey this is one of the hottest photoshoots,” one viewer shared. Another said, “They hate to see a powerful women.” One other wrote, “I aspire to be thissss.”
A few people jumped in to defend Althoff from the hate in the comments.
“Y’all are more concerned about her kids than the dad is! Women are allowed to have jobs and lives outside the house now btw,” one person said. Another added, “You can do a photo shoot and be a mother, what’s everyone’s problem?” One other shared, “Man these comments are ridiculous. Bobbi keep doing you.”
When she first began her podcast, she quickly grabbed the attention of millions of followers. A few of her most notable interviews include Drake, Funny Marco, Shaquille O’Neal, Mark Cuban, Lil Yatchy and many others.
She announced the podcast was ending during the final episode. “Alright guys, I don’t really think there’s any good way to say this, but this is the last episode of ‘The Really Good Podcast,’” she said in the beginning of the episode. This news pretty much blindsided many fans who didn’t see that coming just two-and-a-half years in.
Later in the episode, she shared, “This podcast started off just with a girl with a dream to make more money. I knew when I started that it was gonna go places,” she said. “I didn’t know I’d fall off as quickly as I did. To be honest, I did think this was going to last a bit longer. But nevertheless, it lasted a minute and I’m proud of the accomplishments I had an I’m pretty sad that it has to end like this but okay. Everything in life happens for a reason, well most everything.”
Less than a month ago, Althoff and rapper and reality star Sukihana launched their YouTube series, “That’s BS with Bobbi & Suki.”
As fans know, Suki was a guest on Althoff’s podcast and the two seemed to hit it off, so it’s not a surprise they would once again join forces.
“The idea behind ‘That’s BS with Bobbi & Suki’ started as a joke about how chaotic our interactions can be online,” Althoff told Deadline. “But we realized the chaos is relatable, everyone deals with an unpredictable life, and we just put it on camera. It’s a way to turn viral moments into something intentional.”
Suki added, “We wanted a show where nothing is staged. People can tell when you’re faking it, and we wanted every reaction, laugh, and argument to be real. That authenticity is what makes it stand out, it’s raw synergy captured live.”
Since ending “The Really Good Podcast,” Althoff has managed to stay relevant on social media. She often shares bits and pieces of her life in videos on TikTok and recently shared how she had to spend thousands of dollars undoing what she called a “dumb trend.”
“I just need to have a little talk with you girls,” she said in her video posted in mid-March. “The other day, I spent $4,500 getting my filler that was right here [she motioned to her jawline] dissolved using an ultrasound because that’s really the only way you can make sure you get rid of it all.”
This topic seemed to hit home for many, who shared their stories in the comments.
“I have ruined my face and spent so much money doing it,” one person shared. Another said, “I was just thinking about facial balancing sooo I’m so glad I watched this & I will not be getting it done.” One other viewer wrote, “I literally was just watching videos of people doing the facial balancing .. over here wishing I could do something like that then boom your video was immediately after. If that wasn’t a sign idk what is .. now I shall keep my imperfect face lol thank you for this.”
Many others just dropped into the comments to remind Althoff that “she’s beautiful” and doesn’t need “any of that.”
They say that Spider-Man is perhaps the most foolproof superhero franchise in Hollywood. Even its lowest-grossing installment wasn’t exactly a flop. This can’t be said even of the Harry Potter series, whose otherwise glowing track record was damaged by the Fantastic Beasts prequels. However, even at its lowest, the Spider-Man franchise managed to deliver a 3x return on its reported budget. The franchise will continue this year with a movie destined for box-office success and critical acclaim, like each of its three predecessors. Such was the confidence that Sony had in the series that it revisited the lowest-grossing and least-liked installment while putting together potentially the most high-profile chapter in its history.
The experiment worked, with Spider-Man: No Way Home grossing $1.9 billion worldwide in 2021, without a China release to push it over the $2 billion mark. It might have even overtaken Avengers: Infinity War to become the second-biggest Marvel Cinematic Universe movie of all time. Directed by Jon Watts, the movie featured Tom Holland as the titular character, with Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield reprising their roles from previous iterations of the franchise. For Garfield in particular, it was an opportunity to give the character a send-off he never got the chance to originally, when his series was abruptly canceled after the underperformance of the second installment.
That film, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, is currently streaming on HBO Max, but not for much longer. It was released in 2014, two years after Garfield made his debut as the wall-crawler in The Amazing Spider-Man, which grossed more than $750 million worldwide against a reported budget of around $200 million. Garfield’s first film was compared unfavorably to Maguire’s trilogy with director Sam Raimi, but it received mostly positive reviews for its more grounded approach to the property. The Amazing Spider-Man 2, on the other hand, was a vastly different movie. Also directed by the first film’s Marc Webb, it was dinged for a busy plot and abundance of characters. It was also criticized for focusing too much on setting the table for the franchise’s future, which was set to include the Sinister Six team of supervillains. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 grossed $716 million worldwide against a reported budget of $293 million; it holds a 51% score on Rotten Tomatoes. It will leave HBO Max, along with all four earlier Spider-Man movies, on May 1. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
May 2, 2014
141 minutes
Marc Webb
Alex Kurtzman, Jeff Pinkner, Roberto Orci, James Vanderbilt
Avi Arad, Matt Tolmach
New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel will not be subject to the NFL’s personal conduct policy after photos of him and journalist Dianna Russini spending time together at an Arizona resort came to light.
According to a Friday, April 18, report from ESPN’s Ben Strauss, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league will not be reviewing Vrabel’s conduct under the policy, which states that players, coaches and executives are required to avoid “conduct detrimental to the integrity of and public confidence in the National Football League.”
Russini, 43, resigned from her post at The Athletic on Tuesday, April 14, one week after she and Vrabel, 50, were photographed together holding hands and hugging while seemingly on vacation.
“I have covered the NFL with professionalism and dedication throughout my career, and I stand behind every story I have ever published,” Russini said in a written statement shared via social media on Tuesday. “When the Page Six item first appeared, The Athletic supported me unequivocally, expressed confidence in my work and pride in my journalism. For that I am grateful. In the days that followed, unfortunately, commentators in various media have engaged in self-feeding speculation that is simply unmoored from the facts.”
She continued, “Moreover, this media frenzy is hurtling forward without regard for the review process The Athletic is trying to complete. It continues to escalate, fueled by repeated leaks, and I have no interest in submitting to a public inquiry that has already caused far more damage than I am willing to accept.”

Dianna Russini Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for Fanatics
When the photos were originally published on April 7, both Russini and Vrabel released statements claiming that the situation was simply platonic and professional.
“These photos show a completely innocent interaction and any suggestion otherwise is laughable,” Vrabel said at the time. “This doesn’t deserve any further response.”
“The photos don’t represent the group of six people who were hanging out during the day,” Russini said in a statement to Page Six. “Like most journalists in the NFL, reporters interact with sources away from stadiums and other venues.”
The Athletic initially supported Russini, with executive editor Steven Ginsberg saying that the photos were “misleading” and lacking “essential context.”
However, just days later on Saturday April 11, The Athletic opened its own investigation into the photos.
“Rather than allowing this to continue, I have decided to step aside now — before my current contract expires on June 30,” Russini said in her resignation letter. “I do so not because I accept the narrative that has been constructed around this episode, but because I refuse to lend it further oxygen or to let it define me or my career.”
There’s a special kind of cinematic pleasure reserved for movies that fail so spectacularly they become strangely mesmerizing. These are the films that collapse so completely, so undeniably yet entertainingly, that they circle back around to being endlessly watchable, albeit in a morbid sort of way.
The titles on this list are all oddly compelling, whether it’s the incompetence of The Room, the unhinged ambition of Battlefield Earth, or the accidental surrealism of Troll 2. Not because they’re clever, or self-aware, or secretly brilliant, but because they believe in themselves with total, unwavering sincerity.
“I’m a cop, and you will cooperate.” In Samurai Cop, a detective (Matthew Karedas) trained in martial arts is assigned to take down a dangerous gang terrorizing Los Angeles, leading to a series of confrontations… filled with improbable action, awkward dialogue, and narrative detours that defy logic. Here, incompetence, sincerity, and sheer confusion collide to create something endlessly watchable.
Technically, the movie is a disaster. Continuity errors are everywhere, the most famous being a scene where the lead suddenly wears a blatantly fake wig because filming resumed months later, and his hair had changed. However, the whole thing is dead serious. The cast and crew clearly think they’re delivering hard-boiled action dialogue in the vein of classic cop movies. It just misses the mark so completely that it becomes surreal. For this reason, Samurai Cop eventually developed an ardent cult following.
“Too bad YOU… will die!” Some of the Mortal Kombat movies are just outright bad with no redeeming features, ironic or otherwise, but Mortal Kombat: Annihilation‘s ineptitude makes it oddly entertaining. The setup is classic video game stuff: Earth’s warriors must face invading forces from another realm in a battle to save humanity, confronting a succession of villains in elaborate fights. Yet the movie executes that run-of-the-mill premise with relentless energy and pure visual chaos.
Plot-wise, the movie tries to cram what feels like three or four films’ worth of story into 90 minutes. The characters speak in all caps (especially Brian Thompson as Shoa Kahn, who seems to declare a war on subtlety), and many of the actors perform in wildly divergent registers, giving the movie a strange, off-kilter feeling, as if everyone was given a different script and tone note. Throw in PlayStation 2-quality CGI, and you’ve got a so-bad-it’s-good classic.
“Pretty nice planet.” This one is among the worst sci-fi ever and blatantly rips off E.T., but with a ton of ham-fisted product placement shoehorned in. Mac and Me tells the story of a young boy (Jade Calegory) who befriends an alien stranded on Earth after escaping from government agents, embarking on adventures that blend family drama with science fiction whimsy. It’s an almost beat-for-beat imitation of Spielberg‘s masterpiece, but stripped of its emotional intelligence.
From editing to visual effects, the film is full of strange, almost dreamlike decisions. The alien design itself is both goofy and slightly unsettling, scenes cut abruptly, and touching moments are undercut by awkward pacing. A case in point is the now-legendary cliff scene, where the protagonist in a wheelchair falls off a cliff, which comes off unintentionally hilarious. Finally, there’s the aggressive advertising, most strikingly in the McDonald’s dance scene. It’s a full musical number, completely detached from the plot, existing purely as branded spectacle.
“Why are they attacking us?” The Birds, this is not. In Birdemic: Shock and Terror, a couple’s (Alan Bagh and Whitney Moore) budding romance is interrupted when flocks of birds begin launching inexplicable attacks on humanity, forcing survivors to band together against the strange threat. From here, unconventional pacing and low-budget effects are the order of the day. Indeed, the birds are rendered with some of the most infamous CGI ever put to screen.
They flap like clip-art, glide in ways that violate the laws of physics, and sometimes just… hover. This mismatch is pure comedy. The movie treats these attacks as terrifying, while the visuals look like they were dragged into the frame from a PowerPoint presentation. In terms of the performances, the stars seem less like they’re acting and more like they’re gently being instructed to “say the line now.” Bagh, in particular, spends much of the film reacting in ways that don’t match what’s happening.
“There is no way out of here.” In Manos: The Hands of Fate, a family becomes stranded near a mysterious lodge overseen by a strange caretaker (John Reynolds), leading them into a surreal world of ritual and eerie encounters. As they attempt to escape, they uncover unsettling secrets that defy explanation. While that premise may sound intriguing, large stretches of the film are just… people driving. Or walking. Or waiting. Shots linger far too long, often repeating similar actions with minimal variation.
The performances likewise exist in a strange emotional vacuum. Characters deliver lines slowly, with odd emphasis, often without reacting to each other in believable ways. The standout is Reynolds as the satyr-like Torgo, whose halting speech and exaggerated physicality make him feel like a character from another reality entirely. Not for nothing, Manos is frequently ranked among the very worst films ever made, yet its dreamlike monotony makes it oddly hypnotic in its own way.
“Tell your children.” Reefer Madness was designed as a cautionary tale about the dangers of cannabis, portraying it as a substance that leads almost immediately to insanity, violence, and death. Characters go from normal teenagers to deranged criminals within minutes of taking a puff, beset by hallucinations and destructive impulses. At the time, this approach aligned (loosely) with broader cultural fears, but today, it feels so exaggerated that it plays like satire.
The film operates on a kind of moral domino effect: once marijuana enters the story, everything else collapses. But the escalation is so abrupt and illogical that it becomes absurd. The production values are decidedly campy, too, explaining why this became a favorite on the midnight movie circuit. Ironic entertainment value aside, Reefer Madness remains a weirdly fascinating artifact of its era.
“While you were still learning how to spell your name, I was being trained… to conquer galaxies!” This movie was a passion project for John Travolta, who clearly envisioned it as Scientology’s answer to 2001: A Space Odyssey. The result was a thermonuclear dumpster fire. Adapting an L. Ron Hubbard novel, Battlefield Earth sees humanity struggling under the domination of an alien race, with a small group of rebels rising to challenge their oppressors.
Here, grand ambitions run headfirst into a brick wall of eccentric creative choices. Let’s start with the imagery. Everything in this movie is tilted, packed with extreme Dutch angles that give nearly every scene a slanted, off-balance look. Combined with heavy color filters (greens, blues, yellows), it creates a visual experience that feels disorienting rather than immersive. Wooden performances and faux-profundity kill off whatever other serious appeal this movie might have had.
“They’re eating her! And then they’re going to eat me!” Troll 2 revolves around a family that visits a small town inhabited by goblins who seek to transform humans into plants so they can devour them. The protagonist must uncover the town’s secret to save the day. While that sounds pulpy but fine, the resulting movie is truly bizarre in so many ways. First of all, it was originally titled Goblins, later changed to Troll 2 to capitalize on the success of the 1986 Troll. However, the films are totally unrelated; there aren’t even any trolls in Troll 2!
Then there’s the acting. Characters deliver lines with strange emphasis and pause at the wrong moments. The most famous example is one character exclaiming, “Oh my Goooood!” before being transformed into a tree. That scene has become a meme because it captures the film’s entire madcap energy in one moment.
“Future events such as these will affect you in the future.” One of the progenitors of the whole ‘so bad it’s good’ genre, Plan 9 from Outer Space is the marvelously terrible magnum opus from filmmaker Ed Wood. In it, aliens attempt to prevent humanity from developing a destructive superweapon by resurrecting the dead, leading to a series of encounters that blend science fiction with horror. Through all this mayhem, the director’s boundless enthusiasm shines through (despite several technical limitations).
Wood clearly had a big, bold vision for the movie, but neither the budget nor the skill to pull it off. Instead, we get flying saucers clearly hanging on strings, cardboard gravestones, and sets that look like they might collapse if someone leans too hard. On top of that, there’s the strange presence of Bela Lugosi, whose footage was shot before his death and awkwardly stitched in.
“You’re tearing me apart, Lisa!” When it comes to the top spot on this list, nothing can compete with The Room. It’s the anti-Citizen Kane, the most entertainingly bad movie of all time. Writer-director-producer Tommy Wiseau stars as Johnny, a successful banker whose life unravels as his fiancée (Juliette Danielle) begins an affair with his best friend (Greg Sestero), leading to escalating confrontations and emotional turmoil. The narrative is built like a normal romantic drama… and then quietly collapses.
Subplots appear (a cancer diagnosis, a drug dealer conflict) and then vanish. Wiseau is the eye of the story; his performance swings wildly between accents, emotions, and intensity levels, sometimes within the same scene. Lines like “I did not hit her, it’s not true!” have become iconic because they feel almost human, but not quite. Despite (or because of) all these qualities, The Room is a before-and-after in bad cinema, a deeply quotable trainwreck and great fun to watch in a group.
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Creator Jacob Tierney joined author Rachel Reid at a BookCon 2026 panel on Saturday, teasing what’s to come in the series’ next installment.
Some sci-fi movies get remembered for their story, some for a single image, and some because they swing so hard that people can’t quite stop arguing about them. The Creator definitely falls into that third category. Gareth Edwards’ 2023 film was always an unusually bold studio gamble, built around original worldbuilding and a scale that looked far more expensive than it actually was. It didn’t become the culture-owning blockbuster some hoped for, but it clearly left an impression. Now it’s back in the mix thanks to a fresh streaming surge on HBO Max.
The film stars John David Washington, Madeleine Yuna Voyles, Gemma Chan, Ken Watanabe, Sturgill Simpson, Amar Chadha-Patel, Marc Menchaca, and Allison Janney. Set in a future war between humanity and artificial intelligence, it follows a hardened soldier tasked with hunting down a mysterious weapon that could end the conflict. Instead, he finds a child with the power to change everything. Whether you loved the movie or bounced off it, the ambition was never in doubt.
Collider’s review, by Maggie Lovitt, opined that The Creator was a stunning visual experience even if the plot itself doesn’t quite nail it. Gareth Edwards returns to big science fiction with his own story about war, artificial intelligence, and what it really means to be human. The movie has a lot on its mind, and while not all of its ideas come together smoothly, it is still hard not to admire what it is trying to do.
“While The Creator is far from a masterpiece, it is a very impressive film to debut in 2023, when vapid superhero films and franchise fodder fill the airways—especially when one considers its tidy $80 million budget, which seems unthinkable considering the intricate AI designs it features. The script might have glaring flaws and painfully ambiguous morals, but The Creator is a truly remarkable piece of original science fiction storytelling. Even when it borrows from ideas established in films that preceded it, Edwards manages to make it feel fresh and new. The Creator is a beautifully crafted, albeit imperfect, science-fiction thriller that tries to unravel what it means to be a good human in a bad world.”
The Creator is streaming now.
September 29, 2023
134 minutes
Miles Teller isn’t stepping away from Hollywood just yet. Fresh off a reported $325 million sale of his canned cocktail brand Long Drink, the actor is opening up about what comes next and making it clear he has no plans to walk away from acting.
In a candid update, Teller also addressed his continued absence from social media, admitting he has little interest in sharing his personal life publicly.
Away from the spotlight, he showed a more sentimental side. He revealed he surprised his wife, Keleigh Teller, with a recreated version of her wedding dress after the original was destroyed in the California wildfires.

Teller is making it clear his recent massive payday won’t pull him out of Hollywood.
The “Top Gun” star has opened up about his future after cashing in on the reported $325 million sale of The Finnish Long Drink, a canned cocktail brand he backed as an early investor in 2019. The Mark Anthony Group (the company behind White Claw) recently acquired the ready-to-drink spritzer in a blockbuster deal.
While Teller is set to earn a share of the windfall, he says the money isn’t enough to make him step away from acting.
“I don’t really talk numbers,” the actor told The Hollywood Reporter, declining to reveal his exact earnings. “I was always taught that’s not in good taste. All I’ll say is that I’m not retiring from acting anytime soon.”

Teller took a hands-on approach to building the brand, traveling from bar to bar across the country to promote it and help grow its reach. He was also closely involved in its marketing strategy, playing a role in turning it into one of the largest ready-to-drink alcohol brands in the U.S.
The actor compared the experience of being involved in business with acting, saying the two are more alike than people might think.
“It’s very easy to support something that you believe in,” he said. “So, when I go to those places, and everybody is wearing Long Drink stuff, I take as much pride in that as I do when somebody tells me they really loved a movie that I was in.”

Teller says fans shouldn’t expect to see him on Instagram or TikTok anytime soon.
Despite ongoing pressure to join social platforms, the actor revealed he has no interest in putting his life online.
Teller admitted people often warn him he could lose opportunities by staying off Instagram, but said the trade-off isn’t worth it. He explained that he’s never felt the need to share constant updates about his life or invite that level of public access.
“I like to keep my personal life private and have people get to know me through the movies I align myself with and my association with Long Drink,” he said.

Teller admitted that staying off social media hasn’t come without its drawbacks, especially when it comes to business.
Despite helping grow Long Drink into a major player in the ready-to-drink space, the actor revealed that some brands are hesitant to work with him because he doesn’t have a personal platform to promote their products.
Still, he pointed to his work with the brand as proof that influence doesn’t always have to come from an app. Teller noted they found “great ways” to promote the drink that aligned with his style, allowing him to advocate for it on his own terms.

Following the California wildfires of 2025, Teller showed a deeply personal side, surprising his wife with a remade version of her wedding dress after the original was destroyed.
Teller and his wife were forced to evacuate as the fires tore through their neighborhood, ultimately losing their home in the devastation. Among the items lost was Keleigh’s wedding dress.
Months later, Teller quietly recreated the wedding dress. In a clip shared on her TikTok, the model was seen opening a gift box before asking, “Is this my wedding dress?”
“Yeah,” Teller responds.
“Miles had my wedding dress that burned in the fire remade,” she captioned the video, adding that she was “so happy.”
The Los Angeles Angels honored the late Garret Anderson during their game on Friday, April 17, against the San Diego Padres.
The team wore a memorial patch during the game in Anderson’s honor, and will wear that patch for the remainder of the season. They also played a video tribute at Angels Stadium and held a moment of silence before the game.
“He was a baseball player, and he did everything right,” Angels manager Kurt Suzuki told MLB.com of Anderson. “There was nothing flashy. … He never pimped home runs. That’s who I want my kids to model themselves after. Just play the game right, do the things right, and never bring attention to yourself.”
Suzuki played with Anderson during his MLB career.
The Angels went on to win 8-0 on Friday in dominant fashion on a night honoring one of the greats.
Anderson, a three-time All-Star and staple of the Angels franchise, died on Thursday, April 16 after suffering a “medical emergency” at his home in Newport Beach, California. He was 53.

A tribute in the outfield grass to former player Garret Anderson Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images
“We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Angels Hall of Famer Garret Anderson,” the team posted via social media on Friday. “Garret will forever hold a special place in the hearts of Angels fans for his professionalism, class, and loyalty throughout his career and beyond.”
The two-time Silver Slugger — who played almost his entire career with the Angels — holds the franchise records for games played, at bats, hits, runs, RBIs, total bases, extra base hits, singles, doubles and grand slams. He was the foundation of the team during its 2002 World Series championship run.
“The Angels organization is mourning the loss of one of our franchise’s most beloved icons, Garret Anderson,” Angels owner Arte Moreno said in a statement. “Garret was a cornerstone of our organization throughout his 15 seasons and his stoic presence in the outfield and our clubhouse elevated the Angels into an era of continued success, highlighted by the 2002 World Series championship.”
Anderson is survived by his wife, Teresa, his daughters, Brianne and Bailey, and his son, Garret ‘Trey’ Anderson III.
He was inducted into the Angels Hall of Fame in 2016.
“Being a good teammate goes a long way with a lot of people,” he said at the time. “If you go out and respect your teammates and pull for ‘em and give ‘em tough love when you have to, it goes a long way. … So that was the biggest compliment for me, people saying I was a good teammate.”
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The singer claimed that Allman is “gravely disabled” and has “no concept of money.”
Justin Baldoni is pushing back hard against Blake Lively’s latest legal move, and he’s making it clear her finances should be part of the conversation. In newly filed court documents, Baldoni argues that Lively’s net worth and income are directly relevant to their upcoming trial, especially since Blake Lively previously claimed she suffered massive financial losses tied to the ongoing dispute.

According to TMZ, the filing states that Baldoni believes Lively opened the door to financial scrutiny by alleging she lost $161 million due to an alleged smear campaign. He’s now telling the judge that her earnings and overall financial standing should be presented to the jury as part of the case.
But Baldoni isn’t stopping with Lively. He’s also asking the court to allow discussion of her husband Ryan Reynolds’ income, claiming their professional decisions are often intertwined, allegedly Lively “typically does not accept acting opportunities which conflict with Reynolds’ acting schedule, particularly when he is able to garner a higher income for his movies than she can.”

Another surprising element Baldoni wants included in the trial is a character from “Deadpool & Wolverine.” Lively previously attempted to block references to Reynolds’ “Nicepool” character, but Baldoni argues it’s relevant, claiming the portrayal mocks him and contributes to public perception.
The actor says this alleged depiction is part of what led him to hire a crisis management team, countering Lively’s claim that he brought in the team to retaliate against her.

The case has already seen significant developments ahead of trial. A judge recently dismissed 10 out of 13 claims Lively brought against Baldoni, including her defamation and harassment allegations, potentially weakening arguments tied to financial damages.
As The Blast reported, Judge Liman ruled that several of Lively’s claims couldn’t move forward legally, especially those relying on her being considered an employee, but found that others, including key retaliation allegations, had enough backing to continue.
The ruling knocks out multiple claims, including her Title VII and California Labor Code retaliation claims, as well as some claims against individual defendants. Still, at least one retaliation claim against Wayfarer and related entities survived, keeping the case on track for trial on May 18.

Following the decision, Lively’s lawyer, Michael Gottlieb, pushed back, saying the claims were thrown out due to legal technicalities. “Ms. Lively’s sexual harassment claims could not go to a jury because Ms. Lively did not sign a contract, that she is an independent contractor instead of an employee, and that the offensive conduct occurred in New Jersey instead of California,” he said.
Lively herself took to Instagram Stories to address the court’s decision, expressing gratitude that key parts of her case will still move forward. “I’m grateful for the Court’s ruling, which allows the heart of my case to be presented to a jury next month, and for the ability to finally tell my story in full at trial…” she wrote.
The “It Ends With Us” actress went on to highlight what she described as the broader implications of the case, calling attention to the dangers of “retaliation and digital warfare” while making it clear she has no plans to back down. “I know it’s a privilege to be able to stand up. I will not waste it,” she concluded.

Meanwhile, efforts to resolve the case outside the courtroom appear to have hit a wall. On April 6, attorneys for both sides met separately with Magistrate Judge Sarah Cave in New York in a renewed attempt to reach a settlement. Shortly after, Judge Lewis J. Liman allowed both parties to submit their “updated settlement position” following their latest court appearance.
Despite the setbacks, several claims, including breach of contract and retaliation, are still moving forward. The long-running legal feud between Baldoni and Lively is now heading toward a courtroom showdown in May, where both sides are expected to present their arguments in full.
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