New Photo - Rarely-Seen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling

RarelySeen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling Isabella TorregianiAugust 1, 2025 at 1:06 AM RarelySeen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling originally appeared on Parade. Soap opera legend Deidre Hall, best known for her iconic role as Dr.

- - Rarely-Seen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling

Isabella TorregianiAugust 1, 2025 at 1:06 AM

Rarely-Seen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling originally appeared on Parade.

Soap opera legend Deidre Hall, best known for her iconic role as Dr. Marlena Evans on Days of Our Lives, was recently spotted during a rare public outing in Los Angeles — and the 77-year-old's appearance sparked concern.

Photographed on Wednesday, July 30, Hall appeared as radiant and ageless as ever, but the noticeable arm sling raised questions about a possible injury.

In the photos obtained by MEGA, Hall is seen strolling through Los Angeles with friends, dressed casually in a blue button-up shirt, black pants and oversized shades. The actress appeared in good spirits despite wearing the sling, though the cause of her injury remains unclear.

This marks her first public sighting since March, when she was last seen running errands in Santa Monica — notably without an arm sling, suggesting the injury occurred more recently.

The outing took an unexpected turn when a parking enforcement officer was photographed seemingly leaving a citation on Hall's Mercedes-Benz. The car was parked alongside several others on a busy street, though it's unknown whether other vehicles were also ticketed.

Hall's appearances have become increasingly rare in recent years, with her last red carpet event being the 92nd Hollywood Christmas Parade supporting Toys for Tots in December 2024. Since then, the veteran actress has maintained a low profile while continuing her work on the long-running NBC daytime drama.

Hall remains active in her iconic role and recently opened up about her early days on Days of Our Lives. While on the "Soapy" podcast, hosted by The Bold and the Beautiful's Rebecca Budig and Days costar Greg Rikaart, she revealed how she nearly passed on the role that would define her career.

NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

"I was screen testing, and they usually try and have people not in the same room," Hall recalled. "... And I happened to see a couple women and I thought, 'My word, look who's testing for this.' "

Convinced she wouldn't be chosen over those well-known actresses, she declined the role after learning she'd been cast. "There must be something wrong with this part, so I'm turning it down too. And I did."

Three weeks later, her agent stepped in and changed her mind. "You said you wanted to do a soap," she remembered him saying. "I said, 'But there's something wrong with it.' He said, 'No.' I said, 'I wasn't their first choice.'

Her agent's reassurance proved to be the turning point, telling her, "Yes, you were." Hall called it a "You like me, you really like me" moment, and, with her doubts gone, she remembered "I love that part."

That decision kicked off one of daytime TV's most iconic partnerships, with Hall's portrayal of Marlena becoming inseparable from Days of Our Lives itself.

The rest, as they say, is soap opera history — and Hall's decades-long commitment to the character has made her one of the longest-tenured actors of the show.

Rarely-Seen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling first appeared on Parade on Aug 1, 2025

This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Rarely-Seen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling

RarelySeen Soap Opera Star, 77, Is Nearly Unrecognizable With Arm Sling Isabella TorregianiAugust 1, 2025 at 1:06 ...
New Photo - Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury Sammi BurkeAugust 1, 2025 at 7:05 AM Photo by: Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty Images Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury o...

- - Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury

Sammi BurkeAugust 1, 2025 at 7:05 AM

Photo by: Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury originally appeared on Parade.

Jean Smart's dedication to her loving fans has left some feeling rather emotional after a video of the Hacks star signing autographs, seemingly from a wheelchair, went viral following her return to her Broadway play, Call Me Izzy, after a knee injury.

In a stage door clip uploaded to TikTok by a recent attendee, the Hollywood legend could be seen sitting behind a table with her leg propped up, engaging with fans who, one by one, made their way down a line to chat and get her signature on their Playbills. However, one fan requested she sign their arm with her Deborah Vance signature to get it tattooed, leading to an "adorable" and "wholesome" reaction that even had one fan "tearing up" in response.

Smart was so committed to getting it perfect that she even hauled herself up out of her seat with a little help from her crew, admitting that she was "nervous" to get it right, and fans were in awe of the commitment.

"I love that she realized the gravity of this being permanent and felt anxious to get it right," one gushed. "It says so much about her as a human☺️."

"Something about her yelling 'OH MY GOD IM NERVOUS!!!' makes me like her more," another admitted. "So human and real lmao."

"she was genuinely moved by this!!" someone else observed. "it's like when kids get their teacher's signature or quote tattooed. nothing is more powerful."

She was also praised for being so "accommodating to sign at the stage door after being injured," with one assuming that "Most people would have left."

"What an ICON!" another agreed. "We must protect Jean Smart at all costs!!"

"Jean Smart is the total package. Always has been, always will be. 😍," someone else declared, with another agreeing that she's "one of the classiest and kindest women ever!"

"Why do I always tear up when I see her?!?" another fan wondered. "Jean is a true gem! I just love her!"

Another hoped that the actress knows just "how legendary and amazing she is."

Related: Film Legend, 66, Makes Bold Statement on Aging—and Meryl Streep, 76

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury first appeared on Parade on Aug 1, 2025

This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After In...
New Photo - Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation

Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation Ingrid VasquezAugust 1, 2025 at 5:29 AM Ethan Miller/Getty Jenna Ortega Jenna Ortega stars as Wednesday Addams on Wednesday The actress talked about why she believes the show resonates with a younge...

- - Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation

Ingrid VasquezAugust 1, 2025 at 5:29 AM

Ethan Miller/Getty

Jenna Ortega

Jenna Ortega stars as Wednesday Addams on Wednesday

The actress talked about why she believes the show resonates with a younger audience in a new interview

She also addressed how she thinks social media is affecting today's world

Jenna Ortega believes Wednesday has resonated with audiences for more reasons than one.

The actress, 22, who stars as the titular character, told the BBC in an interview published on Wednesday, July 30, that she believes the Netflix show has found success because it explores themes of "where we find our sense of community now."

"I wasn't around in the 70s, but I hear stories of people knocking on their neighbors' doors, and the bikes going all throughout the city, and just expecting to meet someone at a certain time on a certain location," she said.

https://ift.tt/8UcjsNm

Ortega believes that nowadays people are not talking in person, instead "interacting and finding their community online" — something she said "can be very isolating."

Jonathan Hession/Netflix

Jenna Ortega as Wednesday in episode 202 of Wednesday

The Beetlejuice Beetlejuice star said that social media makes people exposed to "so many voices and so many opinions."

"Much more than you would typically be, or that humans are kind of meant to be exposed to," she said. "So I think it's harder to find a sense of self. Young people are struggling to find, 'What makes my voice stand out? What is it about me in this world and this society today that gives me a sense of purpose or control or authority?' "

During an appearance on The Interview podcast with The New York Times last August, Ortega opened up about the negative experiences she's had with social media, particularly when she was a kid.

"I hate AI," she said at the time. "... Did I like being 14 [years old] and making a Twitter account because I was supposed to, and seeing dirty edited content of me as a child? No. It's terrifying. It's corrupt."

Michael Loccisano/WireImage

Jenna Ortega attends Hurry Up Tomorrow World Premiere on May 13, 2025 in New York City

"It's wrong. It's disgusting," added Ortega. "...Here's the problem, though. We've opened Pandora's box. Well, it is what it is. It's out there now. We're gonna have to deal with the consequences."

— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Season 2, part 1 of Wednesday will debut on Netflix on Wednesday, Aug. 6, followed by part 2 on Wednesday, Sept. 3. Season 1 of Wednesday is available to stream in full on Netflix.

on People

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It ‘Harder to Find a Sense of Self’ for the Younger Generation

Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation Ingr...
New Photo - Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis

Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis Joey Garrison, USA TODAY August 1, 2025 at 12:24 AM WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump is sending two top White House officials to Gaza on Aug.

- - Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis

Joey Garrison, USA TODAY August 1, 2025 at 12:24 AM

WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump is sending two top White House officials to Gaza on Aug. 1 to inspect food distribution centers and meet with Gazans amid intensifying global scrutiny over the hunger crisis in the territory.

Steven Witkoff, Trump's Middle East envoy, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will "secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear firsthand about this dire situation" during the rare trip, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on July 31.

Following their visit, Witkoff and Huckabee are expected to meet with Trump to approve the administration's final plan for food and aid distribution in the region amid Israel's ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza.

More: 'Every ounce of food': Trump presses Israel on starvation in Gaza; 'children look very hungry'

Witkoff and Huckabee spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the morning of July 31 about delivering food and aid to the area, Leavitt said.

"It's terrible what's occurring there. It's a terrible thing. People are very hungry," Trump told reporters. "You know, the United States gave $60 million for food and it's a shame, because I don't see the results of it. And we gave it to people that in theory are watching over it fairly closely. We wanted Israel to watch over it."

More: One meal a day. $20 for an egg. Choosing which kid gets fed. Starvation stalks Gaza

More: Gaza death toll hits 60,000 as global monitor demands action to avert famine

An alert issued this week by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification raised the prospect of a famine unfolding in Gaza. The United Nations' World Food Programme said a third of Gaza's population does not eat for several days at a time and that one in four Gazans are "enduring famine-like conditions." The Hamas-run health ministry, the chief source of health data in Gaza, said more than 100 people have died from malnutrition in recent days.

Trump broke with Netanyahu earlier this week by saying he disagrees with the Israeli prime minister's claim that no starvation is taking place among the people of Gaza, and he urged Israel to let more food into the enclave.

Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff (L) speaks as US President Donald Trump looks on during a swearing in ceremony for interim US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 28, 2025.

As images of emaciated children in Gaza have alarmed the world, Netanyahu denied Israel is conducting a starvation campaign, calling such accusations a "bold-faced lie" and even rejecting that starvation is occurring.

Trump also said July 31 that Witkoff will later travel to Russia ahead of a new 10-day deadline the president set for the country to agree to a ceasefire with Ukraine or face U.S. tariffs and other penalties. "Going to Israel, and then he's going to Russia, believe it or not," Trump said.

Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump sends Witkoff, Huckabee to Gaza amid hunger crisis

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL General News"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis

Trump officials headed to Gaza to inspect food distribution centers amid hunger crisis Joey Garrison, USA TODAY A...
New Photo - Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

Todd Marinovich, former phenom QBturnedcautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book Jay BusbeeAugust 1, 2025 at 2:08 AM Todd Marinovich, seen in a 2017 photo, tells his side of his infamous football story in his new book, 'Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addicti...

- - Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

Jay BusbeeAugust 1, 2025 at 2:08 AM

Todd Marinovich, seen in a 2017 photo, tells his side of his infamous football story in his new book, 'Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction.' (Jeff Gritchen/Digital First Media/Orange County Register via Getty Images) (MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images via Getty Images)

The bond between fathers and their athletic-genius children is a complex, fragile and often treacherous one. If the father pushes too hard, the child rebels. If the father doesn't push hard enough, the child might never reach their astronomical potential. And either way, the traditional protective and nurturing role of the father becomes transactional rather than emotional. When fathers take an active interest in their children's athletic development, approval and support are conditional; blasting all those reps and showing up big at game time are what's mandatory. The resulting generational wreckage can last much longer than any career ever could.

Before Tiger Woods and his father Earl, before Venus and Serena Williams and their father Richard, and long before the feel-good tale of Home Run Derby champ Cal Raleigh and his pitching pop, there came Todd Marinovich and his father Marv — the ultimate sports-dad cautionary tale. Nationally famous long before he graduated high school, Todd Marinovich became the grim answer to the question: What if you attempted to genetically engineer an NFL quarterback?

The answer, in Marinovich's case, was chaos, chaos that still echoes today more than three decades later.

Marinovich, a Southern California quarterback who played his college ball at USC and took snaps in the NFL for the Raiders, crashed and burned shortly into his NFL career, a victim of his own bad choices and — most everyone assumed — the immense pressure his father Marv placed on him practically from birth.

[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season]

The truth, however, is far more complex and, to Marinovich's mind, far more favorable to Marv, who died in 2020. Marinovich — once dubbed the "Robo QB," or, even less charitably, "Marijuanavich" — has at last put his own story, in his own words, into print. "Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction" documents, in painful detail, the battles that the onetime quarterback and present-day artist fought throughout his career and continues to fight even now — with addiction, with perception, with himself. It's a harrowing but ultimately impressive and inspiring look at reconciling a public image with personal belief.

"My most fundamental flaw was both a tremendous blessing and a horrible curse, but it was my reality," he writes. "Without the zeal accompanying obsession, who knows if I would've succeeded in football? Someone else could have been the first college sophomore in history to declare for the NFL Draft. Yet, on the flip side, there wouldn't have been a soul-crushing dozen arrests, five incarcerations, and over seven trips to rehab."

There's a reason, then, that he begins the book with this epigram: "This book is an act of self-love after decades of self-defiance." (Disclaimer: Marinovich and this writer share an agent.)

For Marinovich, now 56, training began virtually at birth. His father, a former strength coach with the Raiders, developed a relentless regimen designed to maximize Todd's potential and hone his discipline. But early in his autobiography, Marinovich makes sure to draw a line in the sand:

"No one pushed me into football, least of all my dad, Marv," he writes. "I chose it. Any suggestions to the contrary were lies offered freely by the media to manufacture a Greek tragedy."

And yes, the media dove deep into the Marinovich story, starting long before he suited up for USC. Even as a high schooler, Marinovich was drawing national attention.

"That was a really trippy time for me, because I was so shy going into high school," he told Yahoo Sports recently. "And then articles were talking about my diet, like I was a freak show — 'He's never had a Big Mac!' It just wasn't true. I was healthy, and I ate healthy, but, you know, living in America, you're going to have a Big Mac."

Todd Marinovich (center) signs his Letter of Intent to attend USC with parents Marv (left) and Trudi, on Feb. 10, 1988 in Mission Viejo, California. (Photo by Bob Riha, Jr./Getty Images) (Bob Riha Jr via Getty Images)

During this time, Marinovich honed his ability to remain cool under pressure. An immensely talented basketball player, he played in dozens of hostile gyms, sinking last-second shots to win games in front of rabid crowds. It's the kind of training you can't teach, you just have to experience.

"I felt really comfortable when the time was running out that I want the ball," he recalls. "Not everybody wants the ball when time's running out. And that's OK. Just give it up, just pass it to the guy that does."

As much as he loved basketball, however, Marinovich loved football even more. Speaking today, he notes that there's an almost otherworldly component to the game when it's functioning at its highest.

"It's truly spiritual," he says. "It's 11 of us who are out there at once. It's so special when everyone has just got your back. All you've got to do is handle your guy, don't let the guy down next to you. You're looking at guys in the eye, and they know that you are not going to let them down. You're going, I'm going to die trying not to let you down, bro."

At his finest, Marinovich was something to behold at quarterback. He threw for 9,914 career yards in high school, a mark that was a national record at the time. (It's since been nearly doubled.) Marinovich threw for 2,477 yards his senior year, more than contemporaries John Elway, Jim Kelly or Dan Marino did in theirs. In two years at USC, he crafted some instantly indelible memories — a last-second drive to beat Washington State in 1989, a triumphant 45-42 victory over rival UCLA in 1990.

Those were good days for Marinovich and anyone in the Marinovich business. He was winning nationwide acclaim and shaking off his shyness to become a fixture on the L.A. party scene. He counted Charlie Sheen and Flea among his friends, and he was an unmistakable redheaded presence wherever there was a party to be had.

"There were some really amazing next-level times that I had before it got really bad," he laughs, "and that's just, that's all I'll say."

But the cracks were already starting to show. He engaged in an on-camera shouting match with his head coach in what was then called the John Hancock (now Sun) Bowl on the last day of 1990. A few weeks later, he was busted for cocaine possession, but still got selected in the first round of the 1991 NFL Draft.

He saw little NFL action, playing in just eight regular-season games, with one playoff appearance, over parts of two seasons. He threw for eight touchdowns and nine interceptions, plus a zero-TD, four-INT game against the Chiefs in a 1991 wild-card game. He dodged NFL investigators, often with grimly comical results — he would use teammates' urine to pass drug tests, but got popped when one of his teammates gave him urine while drunk at four times the legal driving limit.

After multiple failed drug tests and failed attempts at rehab, Marinovich was suspended for the 1993 season, and never played in the NFL again. He attempted to catch on with the Canadian Football League, the Arena Football League and other organizations, but nothing stuck. Eulogies for his career pointed the finger at Marv, but Marinovich is adamant that the blame belongs on himself, and only himself.

"Marv was a thorny scapegoat, as he'd delivered the genes and created the environment offering addiction fertile ground," Marinovich writes. "He could be a ruthless tyrant obsessed with perfection, but ultimately, his criticism was child's play. The most damaging voice came from within. At the height of addiction, I needed drugs to silence my mind as much as others require air."

These days, Marinovich lives on the Big Island of Hawaii, hanging out with his dog and creating art. (Check out his work on Instagram.) Creating art isn't a bad life, he admits.

"Art takes me away," he says. "I can escape into a place that … it's hard to describe, but time is non-existent in this place, and there's a flow to it. It's kind of similar to athletics, there's a flow to athletics. But with art, there are no rules, and in football, there are."

Todd Marinovich remains one of football's great what-ifs. But even though his NFL career was a spark at best, he still tries to look back on his days at quarterback with pride.

"For me, it's truly about the experience," he says. "And I had some just beautiful, amazing — all the adjectives — experiences that the game has given me, and I'm grateful for it."

"Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction," by Todd Marinovich with Lizzy Wright, goes on sale Aug. 5.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Sports"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

Todd Marinovich, former phenom QBturnedcautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book Jay BusbeeAu...

Fans Suspect That This Subtle Dress Detail Could Determine the Ending of "The Summer I Turned Pretty" Madison E.

- - Fans Suspect That This Subtle Dress Detail Could Determine the Ending of "The Summer I Turned Pretty"

Madison E. GoldbergAugust 1, 2025 at 5:18 AM

Amazon Prime

Lola Tung in The Summer I Turned Pretty

In season 3, episode 4 of The Summer I Turned Pretty, a dress that looks a lot like Belly's purple prom dress was seen in the background as she shops for a dress for her wedding to his brother Jeremiah

Belly wore the purple dress while with her then-boyfriend, Jeremiah's brother, Conrad, in season 2

Some fans feel this easter egg was meant to subtly illustrate Belly's lingering feelings for Conrad

Astute fans have noticed a possible easter egg for The Summer I Turned Pretty's ending after watching the Wednesday, July 30, episode.

In season 3, episode 4, Belly (Lola Tung) begs her mother Laurel (Jackie Chung) to go wedding dress shopping with her, while Laurel disapproves of her engagement to Jeremiah Fisher (Gavin Casalegno) on account of their ages and Belly's status as a college student.

While dress shopping with her best friend Taylor Jewel (Rain Spencer) and her mom Lucinda (Kristen Connolly), she settles on a simple floor-length white satin gown – but because of her tight budget, they are shopping in a prom dress store. A near-exact replica of the season 2 prom dress Belly wore with Conrad Fisher (Christopher Briney) is seen in the background.

Prime Video

Gavin Casalegno as Jeremiah and Lola Tung as Belly in The Summer I Turned Pretty.

In the scene, the lavender floral-decal and chiffon dress can be seen hanging from a hook in the fitting room behind Belly. Since Conrad was Belly's first love before Jeremiah, some fans feel that this could be a hint that she ends up with Conrad due to her lingering feelings for her history with him.

One user wrote in a post shared on X about the scene, "her choosing a simple/plain dress but the one in the back looks just like her prom one which reminds us belly doesn't just want simple."

https://ift.tt/8UcjsNm

Others cracked jokes about the simplicity of the dress after the tiny engagement ring that Jeremiah gave her the previous week. "belly's wedding dress at least it'd match the small ring Jeremiah got for her lmfao #tsitp3 this is so unserious oh my lord .. 'wedding dress' from a prom dress store mind u," another user wrote on X.

The Summer I Turned Pretty, based on author Jenny Han's series of novels of the same name originally published in 2009, follows Belly (Tung, 22) as she navigates adolescence, and a love triangle between brothers Jeremiah (Casalegno, 25) and Conrad Fisher (Briney, 27).

While viewers share the easter eggs they spot every week, Han's books conclude with Belly choosing Conrad over his brother Jeremiah, ending the long-running love triangle. However, some viewers aren't convinced – especially since Han, 44, once said that she doesn't like "too neat of an ending" in an interview with the Wild Card with Rachel Martin podcast.

— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

The first four episodes of season 3 are available to stream on Amazon Prime Video. The following episodes drop weekly on Wednesdays, through Sept. 17.

on People

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Fans Suspect That This Subtle Dress Detail Could Determine the Ending of “The Summer I Turned Pretty”

Fans Suspect That This Subtle Dress Detail Could Determine the Ending of "The Summer I Turned Pretty" Ma...
New Photo - Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value

Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value Steve KopackJuly 31, 2025 at 11:02 PM Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella.

- - Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value

Steve KopackJuly 31, 2025 at 11:02 PM

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. (Mark Kauzlarich / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)

Shares of tech giants Meta and Microsoft were soaring Thursday, with the two companies adding a combined $400 billion to their market values.

The two companies together are worth more than JPMorgan Chase, America's largest bank, or Walmart, the country's largest retailer, more than seven times over.

For Microsoft, its value briefly crossed $4 trillion, making it only the second company ever to reach that milestone after Nvidia. The company's market value retreated slightly to $3.97 trillion at the close of trading for the day.

Facebook and Instagram's parent company, Meta, is now on the verge of crossing $2 trillion. Meta shares closed 11.25% higher with Microsoft shares up about 5%.

The soaring stock prices come on the heels of better-than-expected financial results, fueled in part by the artificial intelligence revolution. Meta and Microsoft have each added $200 billion to their market value since Wednesday's close.

Microsoft reported that in the last three months revenue rose 18% to $76 billion, and said it plans to spend more than $30 billion in just the next three months, the majority of which will likely go to the continued expansion of its cloud services to support booming AI usage.

Meta said its revenue surged 22% to almost $50 billion. The number of people who use Meta's services on a daily basis is now almost 3.5 billion, the company said in a statement. Meta said its total expenses for 2025 will be between $114 billion and $118 billion, much of that likely going to investing in AI and its fleet of data centers around the world to power it all.

Investors will be closely watching another major artificial intelligence player on Thursday afternoon, when Amazon reports its earnings. Amazon's value currently sits just below $2.5 trillion and its stock was higher by around 2% on hopes that it too will see blockbuster results.

So far this year, shares of Nvidia have soared 30% and Microsoft's have risen 27%. Meta is also riding the AI wave higher, with its stock seeing a gain of 32% this year.

By contrast, Apple, which was the first company to ever hit $1 trillion, $2 trillion and $3 trillion, has been sinking this year. The iPhone maker's shares are down 18% as investors and analysts worry that its AI ambitions may be falling short of others such as OpenAI and Microsoft, even though the company often takes a wait-and-see approach to new technologies.

Shares of Alphabet, another trillion-dollar tech giant trying to compete in the AI space, are up only 1.5% for the year. The company has the third-largest cloud service, behind Amazon and Microsoft, and has faced concerns that use of its Google search engine could be declining due to the rise of chatbots like ChatGPT.

In May, an Apple executive testifying in Google's antitrust trial said traditional searches in Apple's Safari browser dropped for the first time ever in April. Google said it continues "to see overall query growth in Search."

At the end of 2023, the total market value of all publicly traded companies in the European Union was about $12.5 trillion. Apple, Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft's values are currently just short of that, at $11.4 trillion.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Money"

Read More


Source: Astro Blog

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value

Microsoft briefly becomes the second company to hit $4 trillion in market value Steve KopackJuly 31, 2025 at 11:02...

 

GEAR JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com