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| Kirsten Dunst on meeting Jesse Plemons: 'Immediately I felt safe' and free' | Added 233 days ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
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Before Kirsten Dunst met Jesse Plemons, she had a good sense of what she wanted. I remember her interviews from the pre-Jesse era very well she was actively looking for a man to ?settle down.? She wanted to get married and have babies and she was very clear about it. Then in 2015-ish, she was cast in a season of Fargo and Jesse was cast as her character?s husband. The rest is history. They ended up dating after filming Fargo, and everything came together. She gave birth to their two sons Ennis and James, and Kirsten and Jesse reportedly married in 2022. They seem really happy and they seem like they really ?get? each other. Well, it turns out, they both just ?knew.?
The connection between Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons was instant. In a recent cover profile for Texas Monthly highlighting Plemons, 35, Dunst recalled first meeting her now-husband on the set of FXs Fargo series almost a decade ago.
?Immediately I felt safe, and he did too,? said the actress, 41. ?And free.?
Dunst also referred to her husband as one of the kindest humans I?ve ever met during the couples chat with the magazine.
?I think that sensitivity makes him very astute when it comes to other people, she added.
The couple first met when they played a married couple on season 2 of Fargo in 2015, though their romantic relationship didnt develop until about a year and a half later. And Plemons and Dunsts onscreen collaboration didnt stop at Fargo. They were later both nominated for Academy Awards in the Best Supporting Actress and Actor categories, respectively, for their roles in 2021s The Power of the Dog. They will also star together in the upcoming movie Civil War, which follows a group of people in a race to the White House in a near-future America balanced on the razor?s edge.
In a 2020 interview with The New York Times, Dunst said they bonded over being former child stars: We laugh about the fact that we were two child actors, and we both made it out okay. About working with Dunst for the first time, Plemons added, I knew that she would be in my life for a long time.
[From People]
I love these kinds of couples, the ?we just knew? couples who meet and everything just falls into place. It?s sweet and you can just feel how they make so much sense together. No drama, no chaos. I love how they constantly work with each other too, like they?re a package deal. Whenever Dunst gets cast in anything, she suggests Jesse for other available parts. She did that with her latest film, Civil War she suggested Jesse to director Alex Garland. She?s done that a few times.
Here are some photos of Kirsten at a London screening of Civil War on March 26th. I really dislike this Dice Kayek dress!
Photos courtesy of Cover Images.
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| Jon Bon Jovi 'got away with murder' early in his marriage, 'I?m a rock 'n' roll star' | Added 234 days ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
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New Jersey rockstar hero Jon Bon Jovi and his wife, Dorothea Hurley, have been married for 35 years. In fact, their 35th wedding anniversary was on Monday, April 29. In honor of their anniversary (not really, lol), Jon?s been giving some personal interviews lately. Jon?s promoting his documentary, Thank You Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story, which is streaming on Hulu. Last week, Jon told The Independent that he hadn?t been ?a saint? during their marriage, admitting that he indulged in the ?wonderful clichs of rock stardom.? (Psst, he meant groupies.) Dorothea and Jon have four children together, Stephanie, 30, Jesse, 29, Jake, 21 (engaged to Millie Bobbie Brown), and Romeo, 20. In an interview with ABC?s Michael Strahan earlier this week, Jon elaborated a bit more on his past infidelities, explaining, ?I?m a rock ?n? roll star.?
Jon Bon Jovi has more to confess. After making headlines for saying he was not a ?saint? in his marriage to his high school sweetheart, Dorothea Hurley, the rock star admitted to getting ?away with murder.?
Bon Jovi, 62, spoke to Michael Strahan about his early days in the music industry during ABC?s ?Halfway There? special Monday, joking that he was ?not saying that there weren?t 100 girls in [his] life? at the time.
?I?m a rock ?n? roll star. I?m not a saint,? he said. ?I?m Jon Bon Jovi. It was pretty good.
?But if you think I was ever going to jeopardize ? anything for believing the narcissist in me was real? What a stupid thing to do. What kind of excesses does a man need that?s going to fuel that fire? It?s just not worth it.?
The Grammy winner went on to praise Hurley, 61, for not being ?afraid to call [him] out on something.?
However, he added, ?She?s also there when I fall. And I?m there for her when she falls. No matter where I went in my career, the ups or the downs, we went there together.?
The couple began dating in 1980, four years before the release of Bon Jovi?s eponymous first album. The duo briefly split in 1985 before reconciling and eventually eloping in Las Vegas in 1989. Bon Jovi and the karate instructor share four children ? Stephanie, 30, Jesse, 29, Jake, 21, and Romeo, 20 ? with the third making headlines for his 2023 engagement to ?Stranger Things? star Millie Bobby Brown.
While sharing marriage advice for the young couple with ?Good Morning America? viewers Thursday, the ?Livin? on a Prayer? singer said ?every day is a challenge and a change.?
He encouraged Jake and Brown, 20, to focus on ?growing together.?
[From Page Six]
Okay, so, what goes on between Jon and Dorothea in terms of the rules and terms of their marriage is obviously strictly their business. It sounds like Dorothea knows exactly who she married, has come to terms with it, and accepts Jon for all of his weaknesses and flaws. And if that works for them, then power to them. They clearly still love each other 35 years and hundreds of female groupies later. That said, I would be sooo pissed if my husband and I had an agreement like that and he kept giving interviews alluding to how much he cheated on me while simultaneously praising me. If anything, I?d probably want to be a part of any of that kind of talk, similar to how Oliver Hudson?s wife was a part of his big infidelity confessions. This isn?t the first time Jon?s alluded to being unfaithful, either. He?s done it several times in past interviews, too. No one?s marriage is perfect, but I really hope she?s okay with all of this sharing.
Photos credit: Cat Morley/Chris Taylor/WENN/Dennis Van Tine/Avalon, Backgrid
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| Drew Barrymore to VP Kamala Harris: 'We need you to be Mamala of the country' | Added 234 days ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
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Y?all know I?m a big fan of Vice President Kamala Harris. VP Harris has gotten a raw deal from a lot of beltway pundits and the media. So much so, I think the Biden-Harris administration is really leaning into the ?get the hell out of Washington? route to speak directly to Americans. Why would President Biden give an interview to the New York Times when he can chat with Howard Stern (as he did last week). Why would VP Harris sit down with The Atlantic when she could appear on Drew Barrymore?s talk show? Here?s why this was such a good choice for Kamala Harris: Drew is sort of crazy, cringe and extra and she doesn?t have personal space so she makes VP Harris look good in comparison. The number of people expressing sympathy for VP Harris for getting through Drew?s interview is amazing. For what it?s worth, I don?t think VP Harris actually minded any of it. This is part of a strategy to humanize Kamala and show people what she?s like as a woman, stepmother, wife, etc.
?We need you to be Mamala of the country? lmao. As I said, I adore VP Harris but y?all know even she was stifling a laugh. Speaking of, Drew asked VP Harris about her widely-mocked laugh. Kamala has a great laugh, she laughs with her whole body when she gets really tickled by something. Kamala told Drew that she has her mother?s laugh and people need to get a grip, basically.
?Don?t be confined to other people?s perception.? Vice President Kamala Harris hits back at the MAGA trolls who criticize ?the way I laugh?. (
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| Jerry Seinfeld complains about 'the extreme left & PC crap' ruining comedy these days | Added 234 days ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
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Jerry Seinfeld has been promoting Unfrosted, a movie about Pop Tarts, in recent weeks. He was recently profiled by GQ, and he took a dump on the film industry, saying in part: ?Film doesn?t occupy the pinnacle in the social, cultural hierarchy that it did for most of our lives.When a movie came out, if it was good, we all went to see it. We all discussed it. We quoted lines and scenes we liked. Now we?re walking through a fire hose of water, just trying to see.? I put that in the links last week and there was some debate. For what it?s worth, I think it?s true that the film industry has changed radically in the past 15-20 years, but all of the changes haven?t been bad. There?s more diversity across the board, more niche-market art being made and we?re living in a more stratified culture rather than the more homogenous pop culture of the 1990s. While Seinfeld might have been on the verge of making a decent point last week, this week he?s just an old man yelling at the politically correct youths.
Jerry Seinfeld said in an interview with The New Yorker while touting his feature directorial effort ?Unfrosted? that ?P.C. crap? and the ?extreme left? is making television comedy go extinct. Seinfeld is a sitcom icon thanks to his eponymous NBC sitcom that ran between 1989 and 1998, but he says viewers no longer flock to their television sets in order to get their comedy fix like they did for decades.
?Nothing really affects comedy. People always need it. They need it so badly and they don?t get it,? Seinfeld said. ?It used to be, you would go home at the end of the day, most people would go, ?Oh, ?Cheers? is on. Oh, ?MASH? is on. Oh, ?Mary Tyler Moore? is on. ?All in the Family? is on.? You just expected, ?There?ll be some funny stuff we can watch on TV tonight.? Well, guess what?where is it? This is the result of the extreme left and P.C. crap, and people worrying so much about offending other people.?
Seinfeld noted that comedy fans are ?now going to see stand-up comics because we are not policed by anyone. The audience polices us. We know when we?re off track. We know instantly and we adjust to it instantly. But when you write a script and it goes into four or five different hands, committees, groups??Here?s our thought about this joke.? Well, that?s the end of your comedy.?
?We did an episode of the [?Seinfeld?] in the nineties where Kramer decides to start a business of having homeless people pull rickshaws because, as he says, ?They?re outside anyway,? he continued. ?Do you think I could get that episode on the air today??We would write a different joke with Kramer and the rickshaw today. We wouldn?t do that joke. We?d come up with another joke. They move the gates like in the slalom. Culture?the gates are moving. Your job is to be agile and clever enough that, wherever they put the gates, I?m going to make the gate.?
Seinfeld went on to stress that it?s the ?stand-ups? who ?really have the freedom? to cross the line when it comes to comedy nowadays, further suggesting that television networks are no longer interested in doing anything that will ruffle feathers and offend the P.C. crowd.
[From Variety]
?Culture?the gates are moving. Your job is to be agile and clever enough that, wherever they put the gates, I?m going to make the gate.? Yes, that?s the point? Comedy evolves, the audience evolves, jokes evolve, and comedians need to move with the times so they aren?t spending the latter half of their careers doing ?comedy? about how much young people suck because they don?t think it?s funny to make fun of gay folks anymore. I agree that there?s a real lack of network comedies these days, but again, that?s not the fault of comedy writers or, you know, the audience. At some point, networks just decided that game shows and singing competitions were more profitable and ?safer.? Comedy writers fled to cable, premium cable and streaming. It should be said though, in the past two decades, there were some excellent network sitcoms 30 Rock, Parks & Rec, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, New Girl, The Office, Modern Family, Happy Endings. Streaming and cable widened the options Veep, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Archer, Ted Lasso, Hacks, It?s Always Sunny, etc.
Also, the idea that Seinfeld (the show) was, like, pushing the envelope or incredibly dangerous or ribald is just false its comedy was mostly mining the banalities of life. ?I can?t do the comedy I want to do because the audience will be offended!? You can literally make all of the offensive jokes you want and punch down as hard as you want. No one will stop you. There just won?t be an audience for it.
Photos courtesy of Cover Images.
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