Kylie Jenner Reveals She Underwent Stem Cell Therapy to Get 'Relief' from Chronic Back Pain Following Pregnancy

Kylie Jener/Instagram

People Kylie Jener/Instagram Kylie Jenner back pain

NEED TO KNOW

  • Kylie Jenner underwent stem cell therapy for her chronic back pain

  • Jenner revealed she has suffered from back pain following her last pregnancy with son Aire, 3

  • The Kylie Cosmetics founder shares daughter Stormi, 7, and son Aire, 3, with ex Travis Scott

Kylie Jennerrevealed she underwent stem cell therapy after experiencing chronic back pain since her last pregnancy.

In a series of posts to herInstagram Storieson Wednesday, Dec. 3, Jenner, 28, took viewers through her medical journey with stem cell therapy. In the first slide, she shared a photo of herself lying in a hospital bed. "I've been dealing with bad chronic back pain for almost 3 years after my last pregnancy, and nothing I tried seemed to help," she began.

"Hearing how much relief Kim got gave me the confidence to look into stem cell therapy: I went to @dr.akhan and his team at @eterna.health, and I'm honestly so grateful for the opportunity and resources," Jenner shared. "Everyone's body is different, but this has been a huge step in my healing: Definitely do your research.. talk to your doctor and medical professionals, but l just wanted to share in case this helps anyone."

In a series of photos, the Kylie Cosmetics founder is seen with bandages on her lower back. She also shared a selfie alongside Dr. Akhan and a photo from his medical office.

Kylie Jener/Instagram Kylie Jenner opens up about chronic back pain

Kylie Jener/Instagram

Jenner shares daughterStormi, 7, and son Aire, 3,with ex Travis Scott. In November, she opened up about her experience as a young mother.

She appeared on her sisterKhloé Kardashian'spodcastKhloé in Wonder Land,and was asked how she balances her personal identity with her parenting. Jenner candidly said that it was difficult for her at first.

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"I think I have a really good balance," Jenner admitted. "I think that I definitely still feel like myself. It was really hard for me having kids so young and you're just...the emotions, and the postpartum."

"And probably being the only one in your circle [to have kids]," Kardashian, 41, responded.

"The only one. Yris [Palmer]. Yris and I became a lot closer. She's a little bit older than me, we had kids together also," Jenner replied. "But I think I did a pretty good job. I think it just takes time."

"You did a great job," Kardashian added.

"It took me like a year, probably, after — both times — to really feel like myself again," said Jenner.

"I think that's normal. I think it just takes a minute to get your f------ mojo back," Kardashian said, to which Jenner replied, "No, it does."

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Kylie Jenner Reveals She Underwent Stem Cell Therapy to Get 'Relief' from Chronic Back Pain Following Pregnancy

Kylie Jener/Instagram NEED TO KNOW Kylie Jenner underwent stem cell therapy for her chronic back pain Jenner ...
Joe Maher/Getty; Jonathan Olley/DC Comics/Warner Bros. Scarlett Johansson in London in September 2024; Robert Pattinson as Batman in 'The Batman'

Joe Maher/Getty; Jonathan Olley/DC Comics/Warner Bros.

IsScarlett Johanssonswitching teams?

Marvel's Black Widow is reportedly in talks to jump toDC Universefor a role in directorMatt Reeves'The Batman Part IIopposite starRobert Pattinson,PEOPLEhas confirmed. The new film is scheduled to begin shooting in the spring.

Johansson played Natasha Romanoff in several films, including 2012'sThe Avengersand as the titular star of 2021'sBlack Widow. She's been clear that she won't be returning to the role, however, after the character died heroically in 2019'sAvengers: Endgame. (It's a complex timeline.)

"Natasha is dead. She is dead. She's dead. Okay?"Johansson said in March. "[Fans] just don't want to believe it. They're like, 'But she could come back!'"

Jay Maidment/Marvel Studios Scarlett Johansson as Natasha Romanoff in Marvel's 'Black Widow' (2021)

Johansson famouslyresolved a legal battle with Disney, which owns Marvel, in September 2021. TheLost in Translationstar had filed a lawsuit against the media giant in July, alleging that the Walt Disney Co. violated her contract when it releasedBlack Widowin theaters and on streaming service Disney+ at the same time. She argued in her lawsuit that her compensation had been tied to how much the film made at the box office and that she'd been assured that the film would be a "theatrical release."

TheJojo Rabbitstar has, however, said she would return to theMarvel Cinematic Universebehind the camera.

"I think the movies that I like, that are big action movies, also have the human connectivity piece,"she said during the Cannes Film Festival. "Even producingBlack Widowand being a part of the production of that, and the development of the story, and the story between Natasha and Yelena [Florence Pugh]... [there is,] I think, a way of doing it, a way of maintaining the integrity of the idea of human connection, family, disappointment, all of the things that were themes in [her directorial debut,Eleanor the Great], and doing it in a giant way in a giant universe — there's ways of doing that... So, yeah, definitely, it could be, it would be fun."

The Oscar-nominated actress would appear in front of the camera inThe Batmansequel.

Jonathan Olley/DC Comics Robert Pattinson in 'The Batman' (2022)

Jonathan Olley/DC Comics

The Batman Part IIdirector Reeves confirmed in June that he had handed in the finished script, co-written by Mattson Tomlin. The film is scheduled to begin filming in spring 2026, David Zaslav, head of parent company Warner Bros. Discovery, revealed in an August earnings call with investors.

With Pattinson set to reprise his role as the Dark Knight,The Batman Part IIis scheduled for release on Oct. 1, 2027. Costar Zoë Kravitz, who played Selina Kyle (a.k.a. Catwoman), is not expected to appear in the sequel, according toVariety.

Entertainment Weeklyhas reached out to DC, Warner Bros., and Johansson.

Meanwhile,Johansson will starin Mike Flanagan's newExorcistmovie, the director announced last month. Universal and Blumhouse hope to reboot the religious horror franchise again after scrapping a trilogy that was planned around 2023'sThe Exorcist: Believer. The as-yet unnamed film will be the franchise's seventh in just over 50 years and is set to shoot in New York City. Flanagan's film will tell an all-new story set inThe Exorcistuniverse and is not a sequel, according to a November press release.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Scarlett Johansson eyes move to DC Universe with “The Batman Part II” role opposite Robert Pattinson

Joe Maher/Getty; Jonathan Olley/DC Comics/Warner Bros. IsScarlett Johanssonswitching teams? Marvel's Black Widow is reportedly in tal...

Opening credits sequences have evolved from plain text to some of the most engaging and entertaining parts of the movie. They're designed to capture your attention in a way that keeps you glued to the screen. Experimentation of beloved designers, cute hand-crafted animations, surreal CGI scenes, anything works! This variety has given way to some of the most iconic images on the big screen. Let's check how many you can recognize!

In this quiz, you'll be presented with stills from 28 iconic movie opening credits sequences, and your job will be to match them to the right titles. Sounds easy enough, right?

After you're done, check out the TV show opening credits quiz byclicking here!

🚀 💡 Want more or looking for something else? Head over to theBored Panda Quizzesand explore our full collection of quizzes and trivia designed to test your knowledge, reveal hidden insights, and spark your curiosity.💡 🚀

Photo credits:Quark Studio

Which film is this iconic animated title sequence from?

◯ Zodiac◯ Catch Me if You Can◯ Knives Out◯ Heat

Which movie used food items and other supplies to spell out the opening credits?

◯ Napoleon Dynamite◯ Happy Gilmore◯ Dumb and Dumber◯ The Menu

Which film's opening sequence begins with this simply animated horse rider?

◯ Django Unchained◯ The Good, the Bad and the Ugly◯ No Country for Old Men◯ The Revenant

Which film's opening credits feature these symmetric white symbols?

◯ Alien◯ Interstellar◯ Pacific Rim◯ Ad Astra

Which movie's title sequence features these disturbing close-up images?

◯ Mystic River◯ The Silence of the Lambs◯ The Guilty◯ Se7en

Which film's opening credits make use of this simplistic but effective parallel line design?

◯ The Thing◯ Misery◯ Psycho◯ The Exorcist

Which movie's opening sequence uses this dark CGI imagery?

◯ The Girl on the Train◯ The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo◯ A Girl Like Her◯ Working Girl

Which film's opening credits use these scenes set to electronic synthwave music?

◯ Drive◯ Blade Runner◯ John Wick◯ Collateral

🧠 Curious to see the rest? Take the full quiz here 🧠

“Cinephiles, This One’s For You”: Prove You Can Recognize 28 Movies By Their Opening Credits

Opening credits sequences have evolved from plain text to some of the most engaging and entertaining parts of the movie. ...
A seal galumphs into a bar. The bartender says 'Grab the salmon!'

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Asealwalked into a bar. Or to use a technical term, it galumphed.

The creature was apparently lost, curious and well belowNew Zealand's legal drinking age. It lodged itself under the dishwasher and showed no interest in calling a cab.

It was a wet, lazy Sunday evening when the baby fur seal waddled into the Sprig + Fern The Meadows craft beer bar in Richmond, at the top of New Zealand's South Island. Accustomed to seeing animals in the pet-friendly bar, co-owner Bella Evans assumed the visitor was a dog before she took a closer look.

"Everyone was in shock," Evans said. "Oh my gosh. What do we do? What's going on?"

A patron grabbed a sweater and tried to usher the seal out of the back door. Evading its pursuers, the creature dashed into a restroom and then hid under the dishwasher, which was swiftly unplugged.

Another customer fetched a dog crate from home, and Evans made a plan to lure the unruly visitor out of its hiding place using a pizza topping the pub was offering as a special.

"I just went to my fiancé, I said, grab the salmon! Grab the salmon!"

Then it was a brief wait for conservation rangers to arrive. It turned out they were already tracking the wandering seal.

"It was their fourth call for the day," Evans said. "They had been driving around this new-build subdivision trying to find this baby seal."

New Zealand's conservation agency confirmed it received "numerous" reports from the public about a seal spotted in Richmond on Sunday before the fugitive turned up at the pub. Bar staff "did a great job keeping the seal safe" until rangers arrived, said Department of Conservation spokesperson Helen Otley.

The seal was released on nearby Rabbit Island, considered a safe location because of its dog-free status, Otley said. It's not unusual for curious young seals to show up in unexpected places at this time of year, she added, as they follow rivers and streams up to 15 km (9 miles) inland.

"They can turn up in unusual places, like this pub, but this is normal exploratory behavior," Otley said.

Successful conservation programs in New Zealand have resulted in growing seal and sea lion populations, bringing them into closer contact with humans than before. Scientists refer to an annual "silly season" for both species, a period of months during which they regularly appear in strange places – houses, golf courses or busy roads.

Evans, who has owned the pub with her partner for just a few months, said the baby fur seal was the first unruly patron she's had to evict. But she said the animal, named Fern by staff, was welcome back.

"There's been the running joke that we've got the seal of approval," she said.

Salmon will remain on the menu.

A seal galumphs into a bar. The bartender says 'Grab the salmon!'

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Asealwalked into a bar. Or to use a technical term, it galumphed. The creature wa...
Hong Kong residents and experts defend bamboo scaffolding after deadly fire

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong residents, construction professionals and former senior officials are pushing back against the idea that bamboo scaffolding was a main reason flames spread so quickly in the city'sdeadliest blaze in decades, as a debate flares over whether it should be replaced.

Authorities were quick to focus on the traditional scaffolding enveloping the apartment buildings at the Wang Fuk Court complex -- where the fatal Nov. 26 blaze spread from one tower to seven, killing at least 159 people. While much of the green netting covering the scaffolding incinerated, some of the bamboo scaffolding also burned and fell, and officials have stepped up plans to replace it.

Bamboo scaffolding is a common sight on Hong Kong high rises, though mainland China and places elsewhere in Asia have mostly begun using metal alternatives.

An industry union says Hong Kong has an estimated 3,000 workers registered to erect bamboo scaffolding, a construction techniquedating back hundreds of years.

Experts are skeptical about blaming bamboo

"I would be very cautious about blaming bamboo itself before the full investigation reports are published," said Kristof Crolla, an associate professor of architecture at the University of Hong Kong whose focus includes bamboo architecture.

As a natural material, bamboo can be combustible, Crolla said. But "when it is properly used and combined with certified fire-retardant netting it is comparatively hard to ignite."

During the fire, flames shot up the bamboo scaffolding erected for external maintenance work,-as well as the green netting draping it. But bamboo is usually not "easily ignited," said Raffaella Endrizzi, an architect who researches bamboo scaffolding who teaches at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. "Focusing on bamboo alone risks obscuring more systemic safety issues," she said.

Last week, as firefighters battled the deadly inferno for a second day, the city's chief secretary for administration, Eric Chan, told reporters that bamboo scaffolding's fire resistance was"inferior" to that of metal scaffolding.

The city's top leader, John Lee, said officials had met with construction industry representatives to discuss timelines for switching to metal scaffolding. Metal should be used for safety reasons when possible, Chan said.

The initial cause of the fire is under investigation. So far, experts have found thatsome of the green nettingwrapped around the bamboo scaffolding was substandard and that flammable foam boards were used to seal windows during the months' long renovations. Those were the main factors causing the fire to spread to seven of the eight buildings in the Wang Fuk Court complex, said Secretary for Security Chris Tang.

Pushback from residents and former officials

One note in Chinese left among a mountain ofbouquets placednear the disaster site stood out: "it's not the bamboo scaffolding that should be reviewed, but the whole system." Many others have posted similar comments on social media.

Putting the blame on bamboo scaffolding is a "lazy, scapegoating" move that distracts from deeper issues, Regina Ip, a former Hong Kong secretary for security who is an adviser to the chief executive, Lee, wrote Tuesday in the local newspaper Ming Pao.

"It would be a great pity to hastily decide on banning bamboo scaffolding -- which is flexible to use -- because of this incident," John Tsang, a former Hong Kong financial secretary, wrote on his Facebook page.

"Anyone with common sense knows that bamboo isn't so easy to burn," he said.

Challenges in replacing bamboo scaffolding

Those defending bamboo scaffolding say it's uniquely suited toHong Kong'sdense, irregular urban landscape.

"It's light, fast, adaptable, and supported by generations of skilled scaffolders -- qualities that have shaped the city's skyline and construction pace," said Endrizzi, of the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

The two cannot be so easily substituted, said the University of Hong Kong's Crolla.

For one, "bamboo scaffolding (can) be threaded through very tight urban conditions and irregular façades in ways that metal systems often cannot," he said.

Ehsan Noroozinejad, a senior researcher focusing on construction and infrastructure at Western Sydney University, said aluminum or steel scaffoldingis non-combustible and could last longer. But it's also heavier and can take more time to set up and dismantle.

Bamboo costs half or less than metal scaffolding, said Ho Ping-tak, chairman of the Hong Kong and Kowloon Bamboo Scaffolding Workers Union. He questioned how willing residents at older buildings needing external renovations would be to pay more.

Wider issues have surfaced

Broader issues of suspectedbid-riggingand use of substandard construction materials in other building maintenance and renovation projects have dominated discussions as the city mourns victims of the fire.

"Switching materials alone (from bamboo to metal scaffolding) won't address underlying problems around specification, enforcement, and site supervision," said Endrizzi. Policy changes should be based on evidence because otherwise Hong Kong risks disrupting a system that has worked for decades, while failing to crack down on regulatory problems and the use of unauthorized construction materials, she said.

Authorities have arrested at least 15 people in a probe into suspected corruption and negligence at the renovation project.

That has raised questions about government oversight, since residents at Wang Fuk Court raised fire safety concerns about the construction materials, including the netting, a year earlier.

After the fire, contractors at several other Hong Kong housing estates undergoing exterior maintenance work began removing netting covering scaffolding. On Wednesday, officialsordered the removalof external scaffolding nets at hundreds of buildings undergoing major renovations or maintenance. They are to be tested before they are reinstalled.

An independent committee will investigate the cause of the fire, said Hong Kong's top leader Lee. He pledged systemic changes in the construction industry to prevent further such tragedies.

"We must uncover the truth, ensure that justice is served," he said.

AP photographer Chan Long Hei in Hong Kong and AP business writer Elaine Kurtenbach contributed to this report.

Hong Kong residents and experts defend bamboo scaffolding after deadly fire

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong residents, construction professionals and former senior officials are pushing back against the...
Turkey's energy minister warns of threat to oil and gas supplies after tankers targeted

ISTANBUL (AP) — Turkey's energy minister issued a call for the supply of oil and gas in the Black Sea to be protected after threeRussian tankers were targetedoff the Turkish coast.

Alparslan Bayraktar said Turkey was concerned not just by the threat to shipping but also to two undersea pipelines, Blue Stream and Turk Stream, that carry natural gas from Russia to Turkey.

Referring to the 2022sabotage of the Nord Stream pipelinebetween Russia and Germany, Bayraktar pointed out Turkey's reliance on imported gas.

"We call on all parties to keep the energy infrastructure out of this war because it's part of people's daily lives," he said during a news conference Wednesday. "We need to keep the energy flows uninterrupted in the Black Sea and the (Bosphorus and Dardanelles) straits."

Ukraine said its naval drones struck two tankers on Nov. 28. The third vessel was struck Tuesday as it headed toward the Turkish port of Sinop. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the earlier attacks as a threat to "navigational safety, life and the environment, especially in our own exclusive zone."

Russian oil and gas provide nearly half of Turkey's total energy needs. The NATO member has come under pressure from Washington to reduce its reliance on Russia 's hydrocarbons.

When Erdoganvisited Donald Trumpin September, the U.S. president urged him to ease ties to Moscow, including in the energy sector. During the same trip, Turkish companies signed a multibillion-dollar deal with U.S. firms to buy liquefied natural gas.

Defending Turkey's purchase of Russian oil and gas, Bayraktar said Russia had proved to be "a very reliable supply to the Turkish market" since Turkish households started switching to gas in the 1980s.

He said, however, "it's not a secret that we need to have a balanced supply portfolio. We don't want to rely on one supply country or a few countries."

Turkey was "trying to diversify our supply countries and get competitive gas," Bayraktar added.

Turkey's state-owned oil and gas company, BOTAS, recently finalized a contract with Russia's Gazprom to supply gas, the minister said.

Turkey also is engaged with Russia in nuclear energy. Rosatom, a Russian state corporation, is building a nuclear power plant on Turkey's Mediterranean coast.

TheAkkuyu power plant'sfour reactors are expected to generate around 10% of Turkey's electricity when it comes online. However, the project has been beset by delays exacerbated by sanctions imposed on Russian entities in the wake of Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

The first electricity from Akkuyu would be produced next year, Bayraktar said.

The project's administrators had turned to China to provide components that western companies were unwilling to offer due to sanctions, but it still suffers financing issues including $2 billion "stuck in JP Morgan for a long time" when the West froze Russian assets, Bayraktar said.

"We need to play a moderator role to help release this money because this is going to be used in the project," he added.

Turkey's energy minister warns of threat to oil and gas supplies after tankers targeted

ISTANBUL (AP) — Turkey's energy minister issued a call for the supply of oil and gas in the Black Sea to be protected...
Amy Sussman/Getty; Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage Goldie Hawn on Dec. 3, and Diane Keaton in 2019

Amy Sussman/Getty; Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage

Goldie Hawnwas deeply affected by the death ofDiane Keaton.

The women, who began their careers around the same time — the late '60s for Hawn, the early '70s for Keaton — famously costarred in the hit 1996 movieFirst Wives Club. But, as Hawn noted in an emotional speech Wednesday atThe Hollywood Reporter's Women in Entertainment event, they were also neighbors.

So it was a shock to Hawn, she explained, when Keaton, 79,died Oct. 11.

"Diane lived right below me. My house was higher up, and I went down, and I said, you know, we can talk to each other," Hawn recalled tearfully from the podium. "We would laugh, because we were so close, and, literally, I said, 'Let me get a megaphone.'"

Hawn said there was a comfort in knowing the star of movies includingAnnie Hall,Father of the Bride,Baby Boom, andSomething's Gotta Givewas nearby.

"It was just the greatest thing knowing that she was just below me," Hawn said. "I would go and do my flowers and stuff, my rose garden, and it was right on the edge there. And I remember looking over and wondering, 'What in the world is she doing now?' She was always on my mind. She was so close to me."

She was in her rose garden when she found out that Keaton had died.

"I happened to learn in my backyard. And I went over to my backyard, to my rose garden, and I just looked down at her house and [thought],She can't be gone. She just cannot be gone," Hawn said. "No one like that should ever die. She just brought so much joy, so much life, so much exuberance. She was like lightning in a bottle. There wasn't anything that she couldn't do. There wasn't any world that she couldn't live in. She was just an extraordinary human being."

Paramount/Courtesy Everett  Diane Keaton, Goldie Hawn, and Bette Midler star in 'The First Wives Club' in 1996

Paramount/Courtesy Everett

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Hours after Keaton's death, Hawnpaid tribute to heron social media.

"We agreed to grow old together, and one day, maybe live together with all our girlfriends," she wrote. "Well, we never got to live together, but we did grow older together. Who knows... maybe in the next life. Shine your fairy dust up there, girlfriend. I'm going to miss the hell out of you."

TheirFirst Wives Clubcostar Bette Midler alsolamented the loss.

Midler called Keaton "hilarious, a complete original, and completely without guile, or any of the competitiveness one would have expected from such a star." She added, "What you saw was who she was."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Goldie Hawn breaks into tears honoring late “First Wives Club” costar Diane Keaton: 'She was like lightning in a bottle'

Amy Sussman/Getty; Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage Goldie Hawnwas deeply affected by the death ofDiane Keaton. The women, who began their caree...

 

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