Category: Entertainment

  • Trump may live to regret suing Murdoch for libel regarding Epstein’s birthday card

    Trump may live to regret suing Murdoch for libel regarding Epstein’s birthday card

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    Donald Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Rupert Murdoch in New York County Supreme edit. © Alan Woodward/The NewYorkBudgets

    Donald Trump has never shied away from a fight. In fact, it’s practically his brand. But in launching a $10 billion libel lawsuit against Rupert Murdoch, Dow Jones, and two Wall Street Journal reporters over a birthday card allegedly sent to Jeffrey Epstein, Trump may have walked into a legal minefield of his own making.

    The lawsuit centers around a Journal story detailing a bizarre 2003 birthday card supposedly authored by Trump to Epstein. According to the article, the note contained several typed lines framed by the outline of a naked woman, hand-drawn in thick marker. The letter reportedly included a third-person conversation between “Trump” and Epstein, with enigmatic phrases such as “enigmas never age” and the cryptic sign-off: “A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday — and may every day be another wonderful secret.”

    Trump has vehemently denied authorship of the card. In a furious social media post, he declared: “These are not my words, not the way I talk. Also, I don’t draw pictures.” He further asserted the note was a forgery fabricated by “unnamed Democrats,” and called the Journal a “useless rag,” promising “a POWERHOUSE Lawsuit against everyone involved.”

    For Murdoch, 93, and Trump, 78, this isn’t their first confrontation. The media mogul’s outlets — most prominently Fox News and the Journal — were skeptical of Trump during the 2016 primaries before eventually aiding his path to the presidency. Their relationship has since oscillated between strategic alliance and mutual contempt. But this lawsuit could mark a definitive rupture.

    The legal hurdles Trump faces are towering. The landmark Supreme Court case New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) still stands — despite Justice Clarence Thomas’s wish to revisit it. Under Sullivan, public figures suing for libel must prove “actual malice” — that the publisher knowingly printed falsehoods or acted in reckless disregard for the truth. That’s a near-impossible standard to meet when the defendant is The Wall Street Journal, not a tabloid like the National Enquirer.

    Moreover, reports suggest the card came from Department of Justice archives. If so, the Journal’s sourcing may have been both legitimate and well-documented. Dow Jones has vowed to “vigorously defend” its reporting, stating, “We have full confidence in the rigor and accuracy of our journalism.”

    If Trump hoped to intimidate Murdoch into silence or submission, he may have miscalculated. Libel suits, historically, are double-edged swords — especially for the plaintiff. They often invite forensic dissection of the very allegations the plaintiff seeks to bury. Legal legend Roy Cohn, Trump’s onetime mentor, famously advised clients: “Never sue for libel.” The reasons are obvious. Oscar Wilde, Alger Hiss, Gen. William Westmoreland, and Ariel Sharon all sued — and saw their reputations battered further. Some even ended up in prison.

    Trump’s reputation is already uniquely impervious to additional tarnish. A New York jury found him liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll. He’s been convicted of 34 felony counts related to hush money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. His boasts about women and his own sexuality — including in the notorious Access Hollywood tape — are publicly etched in American memory.

    So what’s the damage here, really?

    Legal analysts suspect Trump’s motivations may have more to do with uncovering sources through discovery than restoring his name. His lawyers have already requested that Murdoch be deposed quickly, citing his advanced age and reported health concerns. “I hope Rupert and his ‘friends’ are looking forward to the many hours of depositions and testimonies,” Trump posted. That may sound like bravado, but it betrays an ulterior aim: flushing out who leaked the card and what else they may know.

    But discovery cuts both ways. Murdoch’s attorneys will be free to interrogate the origins and nature of Trump’s long, checkered relationship with Epstein — one that spanned at least 15 years. How close were they? Did Trump know about Epstein’s illegal activities? Did he ever participate, enable, or turn a blind eye? Why did their relationship allegedly sour in 2004 over a Palm Beach mansion? Was that really the end?

    Those depositions may expose far more than Trump bargained for — not just about his ties to Epstein, but about his broader conduct and associations.

    Trump has filed and settled media lawsuits before. He reportedly reached a $15 million agreement with ABC after George Stephanopoulos mistakenly said he had been “convicted of rape.” A recent $16 million CBS settlement over a 60 Minutes segment seemed more about easing Paramount’s merger path than Trump’s legal merit. But those cases were relatively tame compared to what this Journal suit could unleash.

    Murdoch’s legal team is not likely to blink. While The Wall Street Journal ran a curious follow-up story on Epstein’s “Birthday Book” that included letters from Bill Clinton and billionaire Leon Black, it offered little new insight — possibly a strategic nod or an effort to show editorial balance. But sources close to the matter insist Murdoch has no intention of settling.

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    Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein with President Bill Clinton at the White House in 1993. © THE WILLIAM J. CLINTON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY/MEGA

    And perhaps he shouldn’t. Trump is often at his most reckless when wounded. Peggy Noonan aptly observed that “he fights even when he will hurt himself, because the fight is all.” But in this case, the fight may well invite ruin. Trump could inadvertently open the floodgates to evidence, testimony, and revelations far more damaging than a birthday card.

    He may soon learn what every good trial lawyer knows: In libel litigation, the courtroom is often the last place you want your secrets to surface.

  • The Fantastic Four movie’s $218 million opening weekend box office has already surpassed Superman’s total

    The Fantastic Four movie’s $218 million opening weekend box office has already surpassed Superman’s total

    In a clash of superhero titans, The Fantastic Four: First Steps has stormed into theaters with an impressive $218 million global box office debut, officially outpacing Superman’s opening weekend by 11%, according to Deadline. The surprise performance is already reshaping the narrative of the 2025 summer box office and reigniting the long-standing rivalry between Marvel Studios and DC Studios.

    Directed by Matt Shakman, The Fantastic Four: First Steps marks Marvel Studios’ highly anticipated introduction of the iconic superhero team into the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Early buzz was strong, and now the numbers confirm it: Fantastic Four has delivered the biggest Marvel opening of the year so far, outperforming even internal studio projections.

    James Gunn’s reboot of Superman, released just two weeks prior, was also met with enthusiasm from fans and critics alike. With a Rotten Tomatoes score of 83%, the film has earned more than $500 million globally to date — a solid post-pandemic showing for DC Studios and a much-needed win for the brand.

    But Fantastic Four edged it out where it matters most: the launch. Despite Superman benefitting from early Amazon Prime-exclusive screenings that extended its earning window, Fantastic Four has managed to outgross it in pure weekend performance, with its $218 million debut happening over the standard Friday–Sunday window.

    Critically, Marvel’s latest entry also has a slight edge. The Fantastic Four holds an 87% critics score on Rotten Tomatoes, topping Superman’s 83% — a sign that audiences and critics may be more aligned with the cosmic adventures of Reed Richards and his team.

    It’s been nearly a decade since Marvel and DC Studios directly competed in the same box office window. In 2016, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice debuted in March, followed closely by Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War in May. While Batman v Superman posted a respectable $873.6 million worldwide, Civil War ultimately took the crown with $1.153 billion.

    Now, in 2025, that rivalry is back in full force. While DC’s Superman is poised to keep building momentum through August, Fantastic Four’s red-hot start is positioning Marvel for a strong second half of the year. Industry analysts suggest that the film’s performance is not just a one-off success but a sign of renewed strength for Marvel Studios — especially following a string of lukewarm box office showings in 2023 and 2024.

    More than just a standalone hit, Fantastic Four: First Steps is designed to lay critical groundwork for Marvel’s 2026 mega-event, Avengers: Doomsday. Insiders at Marvel have hinted that post-credit scenes from First Steps directly tease the cosmic-level threat to come, possibly tying in Doctor Doom and Galactus — two of Marvel’s most iconic villains.

    If fan excitement continues, Fantastic Four could easily join the billion-dollar club, something only a handful of post-COVID releases have achieved. For Marvel, which has faced recent criticism and questions about superhero fatigue, this strong debut may prove the franchise still has plenty of firepower left in its storytelling arsenal.

    While Superman continues to perform well globally, and Fantastic Four is just getting started, the box office showdown is far from over. With both franchises planning expansive future slates — including DC’s Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow and Marvel’s X-Men: Genesis — fans can expect more face-offs in the years to come.

    But for now, the torch has been passed. The Fantastic Four isn’t just living up to expectations — it’s exceeding them.

  • Hulk Hogan, Pro Wrestler and Hollywood actor, Dies at 71: The Man Who Defined ‘Hulkamania’

    Hulk Hogan, Pro Wrestler and Hollywood actor, Dies at 71: The Man Who Defined ‘Hulkamania’

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    Hulk Hogan shown flexing in 1994. © British Sky Broadcasting Ltd/Shutterstock

    Hulk Hogan, the towering, charismatic figure who revolutionized professional wrestling in the 1980s and became the first true household name in the sport, passed away on Thursday at the age of 71. His death, confirmed by longtime partner Eric Bischoff and other sources close to the wrestling legend, was reportedly due to a cardiac arrest. Hogan’s passing marks the end of an era for both wrestling and popular culture, where his influence transcended the ring.

    Hogan — born Terry Gene Bollea on August 11, 1953, in Augusta, Georgia — changed the landscape of professional wrestling, helping it become a mainstream entertainment spectacle. In a career that spanned over four decades, Hogan became one of the most recognizable celebrities in the world, known for his larger-than-life persona, trademark yellow trunks, bandana, and his signature move, the leg drop.

    A Wrestling Legacy Like No Other

    Hogan’s journey to wrestling superstardom began in Florida, where he was first discovered by wrestling scouts while playing in local rock bands and pitching for Little League baseball teams. Trained by Hiro Matsuda and inspired by legends like Dusty Rhodes, Hogan’s early career was marked by several lesser-known ring names, including Super Destroyer and Sterling Golden, before settling on the iconic Hulk Hogan.

    Hogan’s WWE debut in the 1980s heralded the beginning of Hulkamania, a cultural phenomenon that spanned beyond the squared circle. He became the face of the WWE, winning the WWE Championship six times and headlining WrestleMania an unprecedented eight times. His most memorable moment came in 1987 when he faced his mentor, Andre the Giant, in a historic match at WrestleMania III, where Hogan body-slammed the 520-pound Giant before a then-record crowd of 93,173 fans in the Pontiac Silverdome.

    WrestleMania III event venue: Pontiac Silverdome © WWE

    Hogan’s connection with the audience was unparalleled. He embodied the spirit of the American hero, often invoking his “Real American” entrance theme, flexing his 24-inch pythons, and posing with an American flag to the thunderous cheers of his fans. Hogan’s catchphrases, like “Whatcha gonna do when Hulkamania runs wild on you?” became as famous as his wrestling bouts.

    Hollywood and Beyond: The Wrestler Who Became a Pop Culture Icon

    Beyond the ring, Hogan’s acting career took off when he starred as Thunderlips in Rocky III (1982), marking his big-screen debut opposite Sylvester Stallone. His larger-than-life personality translated to Hollywood, where he appeared in films like No Holds Barred (1989), Suburban Commando (1991), Mr. Nanny (1993), and Santa With Muscles (1996). He also starred in the syndicated TV series Thunder in Paradise (1994).

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    Hulk Hogan and Sylvester Stallone in ‘Rocky III’ . © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

    Hogan became a fixture in popular culture, appearing in iconic TV shows such as The A-Team, Baywatch, Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990), and even voicing characters in Robot Chicken and American Dad! He co-hosted Saturday Night Live with Mr. T in 1985, solidifying his place in the mainstream entertainment world.

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    “Mr. Nanny 1993”. © New Line Cinema

    But it wasn’t just acting that defined Hogan’s legacy. He became a beloved figure, especially for charity work — notably for the Make-a-Wish Foundation, where he was one of the most requested celebrities for children facing life-threatening illnesses.

    Hogan’s personal life was as tumultuous as his wrestling career. In 1994, he admitted to using steroids for 13 years, a moment that would mark one of the first of many controversies in his life. Twelve years later, he was embroiled in scandal after a sex tape was leaked, containing racial slurs that led to his removal from the WWE Hall of Fame. However, Hogan made a dramatic comeback in 2016, when he won a $140 million lawsuit against Gawker after the website released the tape. The legal victory sent shockwaves through the media world, leading to Gawker’s bankruptcy and eventual sale to Univision.

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    Terry Bollea, aka Hulk Hogan, testifies in court during his trial against Gawker Media at the Pinellas County Courthouse on March 8, 2016 in St Petersburg, Florida. © John Pendygraft-Pool/Getty Images

    Hogan was reinstated into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2018, cementing his status as one of the most influential figures in wrestling history.

    In recent years, Hogan stayed active in the wrestling world. In April 2025, he and longtime partner Eric Bischoff launched the Real America Freestyle Wrestling League, securing a TV rights deal with Fox Nation. Despite his age, Hogan remained passionate about promoting wrestling to new generations, never straying far from his roots.

    Hogan’s Impact on the Wrestling and Entertainment Industry

    The impact of Hulk Hogan’s death reverberates across both the wrestling industry and entertainment. His transformation from a regional wrestler to a global sensation helped propel WWE into the mainstream, and his legendary rivalries with wrestlers like Roddy Piper, Andre the Giant, Ric Flair, and Macho Man Randy Savagebecame the stuff of legend. His heel turn in 1996, as the leader of the New World Order (NWO) in WCW, remains one of the most shocking moments in wrestling history.

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    In 1996, wrestling entertainment got a new trio of bad guys who ended up winning over the crowd and dominating the WWE for years. © WWE

    Hogan’s influence on professional wrestling is immeasurable — he helped shape the modern spectacle of wrestling, where entertainment and athleticism go hand in hand. His “Hulkamania” became a symbol not only of pro wrestling but of the broader entertainment culture that exploded in the 1980s and 1990s.

    Hogan is survived by his wife, Sky, whom he married in 2023, and his two children, Nick and Brooke, from his first marriage to Linda Claridge. He was also married to Jennifer McDaniel from 2009 until their separation in 2021.

    For the millions of fans who followed his career, Hulk Hogan was more than a wrestler — he was an icon, an inspiration, and a symbol of perseverance. In his own words, “Hulkamania will live forever.” Now, as the world mourns his passing, it is clear that Hogan’s legacy will continue to endure, immortalized in the hearts of fans and the annals of professional wrestling history.

  • Loretta Swit, Best Known as ‘Hot Lips’ on TV’s ‘MAS*H,’ Dies at 87

    Loretta Swit, Best Known as ‘Hot Lips’ on TV’s ‘MAS*H,’ Dies at 87

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    Loretta Swit, in costume as Maj. Margaret Houlihan, on the set of the hit TV series “M*A*S*H” in 1975. (CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images)

    Loretta Swit, the Emmy-winning actress who made the high-strung and relentlessly militaristic Maj. Margaret Houlihan human, dignified and, against all odds, sympathetic on the acclaimed television series “M*A*S*H,” died on Friday at her home in Manhattan. She was 87.

    Her death was announced by her publicist, Harlan Boll.

    In the Oscar-winning 1970 film “M*A*S*H,” directed by Robert Altman, Major Houlihan (whose blatantly sexist nickname was Hot Lips) was played by Sally Kellerman. When the movie became a CBS series, Ms. Swit stepped into the role and made it her own, adding heretofore unseen nuance. She was nominated 10 years in a row for the Emmy Award for best supporting actress in a comedy series, and she won twice, in 1980 and 1982.

    “M*A*S*H,” which aired from 1972 through 1983 on CBS, was, like the movie that inspired it, set at a mobile Army hospital during the Korean War. Major Houlihan spent the first five seasons distracted by her open secret of an affair with the sniveling, very married Maj. Frank Burns (Larry Linville).

    Around the time Major Burns returned to the United States, she married a handsome officer whom she had met in Tokyo. But he proved unfaithful, and she was soon divorced and newly dedicated to her career as the unit’s head nurse. In a post on social media, her “M*A*S*H” co-star Alan Alda wrote, “We celebrated the day the script came out listing her not as Hot Lips, but as Margaret.”

    “It was the greatest time in my career,” Ms. Swit told the British newspaper The Guardian in 2001. Margaret’s ambition throughout the series was to be “the best damned nurse in Korea, and that motivated everything I did, even when it came to sex.” Major Houlihan did seem to be on a flirtatious first-name basis with every general who visited the camp.

    As early as Season 2, her nemesis, Capt. Benjamin Franklin Pierce (Alan Alda) — better known as Hawkeye — saw her good side, referring to her as “nurse, friend and all-around good egg.” Col. Sherman T. Potter (Harry Morgan) called her “the finest nurse I’ve ever scrubbed with.”

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    Ms. Swit with other members of the “M*A*S*H” cast, from left: Larry Linville, Wayne Rogers, Alan Alda (seated front), Gary Burghoff and McLean Stevenson. (CBS/Reuters)

    The character only grew in perceived stature as the seasons passed, wrestling violent patients into submission and performing triage in her wedding dress.

    Ms. Swit firmly believed that “if you’ve got a long-run series, then there’s always got to be room for growth,” she told The Toronto Star in 2010. “Of all the places you’d be inclined to grow, I certainly think somewhere you’re in danger every day and healing people every day would be just the right place.”

    The show explored Major Houlihan’s feelings about her proud military heritage, as the daughter of a general who would have preferred a son. And it looked in on the night of passion — under enemy fire — that she and Captain Pierce shared and, as soon as the morning-after dust settled, never spoke of again.

    Loretta Jane Szwed was born on Nov. 4, 1937, in Passaic, N.J., to Lester Szwed, a salesman, and Nellie (Kassack) Szwed.

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    Ms. Swit at her home in 1971. She was a relatively unknown actress at the time; a year later, “M*A*S*H” would change everything. (Everett Collection)

    After graduating from high school in Passaic, Loretta attended the Katharine Gibbs School in Montclair, N.J., and began a secretarial career. Her employers included Elsa Maxwell, the society hostess and gossip columnist.

    But she was also preparing for an acting career; she enrolled in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and studied with the director Gene Frankel.

    “That’s kind of all I ever wanted to be,” she recalled in a 2004 Archive of American Television interview. She remembered going to two movie double features a day with her mother, separated only by a dinner break, when she was growing up.

    She took voice lessons and dance lessons, but her parents were horrified by her choice of entertainment as an actual career. As Ms. Swit told The Toronto Star in 2010, after they saw her in a play at a small Greenwich Village theater, “My mother said to my father, ‘If you don’t stop her now, she may wind up doing this for the rest of her life.’”

    Her Off Broadway debut was in Ibsen’s “An Enemy of the People” in 1961. She was the understudy for the lead female role in the national tour of the romantic comedy “Any Wednesday.”

    She also appeared onstage in the musical “Mame,” in the comic role of Agnes Gooch, the lead character’s mousy secretary-nanny, who bursts out of her sheltered existence and comes home pregnant. She appeared alongside Celeste Holm on the national tour and Susan Hayward in the Las Vegas production.

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    Ms. Swit appeared with Ted Bessell in “Same Time, Next Year” on Broadway in 1975.(Everette Collection)

    Later in her career, she also appeared on Broadway with Ted Bessell in “Same Time, Next Year” (1975) as a chronic adulterer and in “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” (1985), replacing Cleo Laine.

    Before“M*A*S*H,” Ms. Swit appeared on the television series “Mission: Impossible,” “Mannix,” “Gunsmoke” and “Hawaii Five-O,” all in 1970.

    And she kept busy with other projects during the show’s run. She played an obnoxious gossip columnist in a body cast in Blake Edwards’s Hollywood farce “S.O.B.” (1981), with Julie Andrews and William Holden. She was a crime boss’s unfaithful wife in “Freebie and the Bean” (1974), with Alan Arkin and James Caan. She appeared in the television movies “Mirror, Mirror” (1979), “The Love Tapes” (1980) and “Games Mother Never Taught You” (1982). And she made an enemy (temporarily) of Miss Piggy when she guest-starred in a 1980 episode of “The Muppet Show.”

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    Ms. Swit appeared with Tyne Daly in the pilot of the police series “Cagney & Lacey” in 1981, but her part was played by Meg Foster, and then by Sharon Gless, when the show became a series. (Jeff Goode/Toronto Star/Getty Images)

    In 1981, she played Detective Christine Cagney in the pilot of the police series “Cagney & Lacey,” and she was set to take on the role for the run of the new show. But she was unable to get out of her commitment to “M*A*S*H,” and first Meg Foster (for six episodes) and then Sharon Gless ended up with the part instead.

    After “M*A*S*H” ended, Ms. Swit played the president of the United States in the satirical British movie “Whoops Apocalypse” (1986). She also continued to be seen regularly on TV series, including “Murder, She Wrote” (1994) and “Burke’s Law” (1995). And she continued her stage career, appearing in regional theater, graduating to the title role in “Mame” and winning the Sarah Siddons Award in Chicago for her performance in “Shirley Valentine.”

    She had planned to retire from acting after appearing in the 1998 comedy “Beach Movie,” but she returned to the screen two decades later in “Play the Flute” (2019), about a youth pastor with a wayward flock. It was her last movie.

    In 1983, Ms. Swit married Dennis Holahan — an actor who was also a lawyer, and who coincidentally bore an approximation of her most famous character’s surname — after they appeared together in an episode during the final season of “M*A*S*H.” They divorced in 1995.

    No immediate family members survive.

    As for concerns like aging and mortality, she shrugged them off in an interview with The Express, the London newspaper, in 2020.

    “I don’t think about the passage of time,” Ms. Swit said, “just what I’m doing with it.”

  • Lilo & Stitch vs. Mission: Impossible Has One Clear Winner

    Lilo & Stitch vs. Mission: Impossible Has One Clear Winner

    One key actor plays notable roles in both Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning and the Lilo & Stitch live-action remake, making them an undisputed winner of what should become one of the biggest box office weekends of 2025. Tom Cruise’s Mission: Impossible franchise may be coming to an end with the eighth installment after running strong for three decades, although Cruise’s recent comments saying that he plans to be the first 100-year-old action star cast doubt that Final Reckoning will truly be the last, although Cruise insists that it will be (via The Hollywood Reporter).

    Lilo & Stitch, on the other hand, looks to turn things around for Disney and fix their slump with live-action remakes of their classic animated films. Snow White’s disappointing box office performance failed to break even with its reported production budget of $240-270 million in March 2025. While The Lion King: Mufasa pulled in an impressive $722.6 million as a prequel to 2019’s The Lion King, its highest-grossing live-action remake of all time, Mufasa is both an original work and a prequel, not a remake. Lilo & Stitch has already shown box office promise with its massive $14.5 million gross in previews alone (via THR).

    Hannah Waddingham Is In Both Lilo & Stitch And Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning

    Waddingham Plays 2 Very Different Characters In The May 2025 Blockbusters

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    While she is not the star of either film, Emmy-winner Hannah Waddingham interestingly plays key supporting character roles in both Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning and the Lilo & Stitch live-action remake. Waddingham is the only actor appearing in both films, although she only lends her voice as the Grand Councilwoman character in Lilo & Stitch. The late actress Zoe Caldwell, known for films such as Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, originally voiced the character in the 2002 animated original film. Caldwell also voiced Grand Councilwoman in 2003’s Stitch! The Movie and Lilo & Stitch: The Series.

    Waddingham makes her franchise debut in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning as Admiral Neely, the commander of an American aircraft carrier stationed off the coast of Alaska, not far from the Russian border. Waddingham is best known for her award-winning role as Rebecca Welton in Apple’s hit comedy series Ted Lasso​​​​​​. She has typically played more lighthearted and comedic characters in recent years, including the relentless movie producer Gail Meyer in 2024’s The Fall Guy and Jinx in The Garfield Movie. There is nothing funny, however, about the ultra-serious role of Admiral Neely in Mission: Impossible 8.

    The Final Reckoning Has The Better Role For Hannah Waddingham Than Lilo & Stitch

    Admiral Neely Becomes One Of The Many Crucial Players In Ethan’s Plan

    Waddingham has a more prominent role in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning than she does in the live-action Lilo & Stitch remake. Not only is her character in The Final Reckoning a bit more than Grand Councilwoman in Lilo & Stitch, but she is actually seen on screen in Mission: Impossible, whereas she only portrayed an animated character in the Disney movie. Waddingham now joins the likes of Henry Cavill, Jeremy Renner, and Rebecca Ferguson in playing a key supporting character in a Mission: Impossible movie, an opportunity that may never be available ever again.

    Hannah Waddingham Is The Winner Of Lilo & Stitch vs Mission: Impossible (No Matter What Happens At The Box Office)

    Waddingham Should Continue Her Box Office Success With July’s Smurfs Release

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    No matter who wins the box office battle between Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning and the live-action Lilo & Stitch remake, Waddingham has put herself in the rare position of being on the winning side no matter what. She’s a winner either way, as both movies are projected to be massive at the box office and should end up being two of the highest-grossing films of 2025.

    Waddingham’s box office success should also continue with the upcoming release of Smurfs in July, in which she is set to appear in a currently undisclosed role.

    Waddingham’s box office success should also continue with the upcoming release of Smurfs in July, in which she is set to appear in a currently undisclosed role. Waddingham will join an enormous ensemble cast in Smurfs, including Rihanna, James Corden, John Goodman, Kurt Russell, Natasha Lyonne, Dan Levy, and Nick Offerman, who was also cast as an American military figure in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning.

  • A Surreal Evening on the French Riviera With Jeff Bezos and Duran Duran

    A Surreal Evening on the French Riviera With Jeff Bezos and Duran Duran

    From left, Jeff Bezos, Heidi Klum and Lauren Sánchez inside the amfAR gala on Thursday. (Pascal Le Segretain/amfAR/Getty Images)
    From left, Jeff Bezos, Heidi Klum and Lauren Sánchez inside the amfAR gala on Thursday. (Pascal Le Segretain/amfAR/Getty Images)

    Every year, as the Cannes Film Festival winds down, hundreds of celebrities and philanthropists gather at the palatial Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc for the amfAR gala, an event that raises millions for biomedical research and also prides itself on being a lavish, fashion-forward party.

    That was certainly the case at the 31st installment Thursday, which featured performances from Ciara, Adam Lambert and Duran Duran.

    At blustery cocktails in the seaside town of Antibes overlooking the vast blue water of the French Riviera, the Oscar-nominated actor Colman Domingo, wearing a custom Valentino suit and Boucheron jewelry that he said made him feel like a “peacock,” admitted that it’s a surreal night.

    “It’s so maximalistic in all of this expression,” he said. “And it is all to draw eyes toward H.I.V. and AIDS research.”

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    From left, Spike Lee, Tonya Lewis Lee and Colman Domingo. (Andreas Rentz/amfAR,/Getty Images)
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    Adrien Brody, left, and Georgina Chapman. (Le Segretain/amfAR, /Getty Images)
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    The gala took place at the Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc on the French Riviera.(Colby Tallia/amfAR,/Getty Images)

    The cause was the reason the actress Teri Hatcher, dressed in a sleek black gown, said she was excited to attend, “especially as an American wanting to, at this time, be putting light on causes that are important, that need funding.”

    It was her first time at the event, which was initially hosted by Elizabeth Taylor in 1993. The night raised more than $17 million.

    In his opening remarks at the dinner, the outgoing amfAR chief executive, Kevin Robert Frost, also alluded to the Trump administration’s cuts affecting H.I.V. prevention.

    “As you all know, this is not a great time for global health,” he said. “Many governments, especially mine, the U.S., but also the United Nations and others, are cutting back on investments in health, and many communities are already feeling the consequences, especially people living with H.I.V., who depend on daily medications for their survival.”

    Sitting near the stage was Kimberly Guilfoyle, Mr. Trump’s choice to be ambassador to Greece, in a bright red dress.

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    Kimberly Guilfoyle. (Pascal Le Segretain/amfAR,/Getty Images)
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    Taraji P. Henson. (Sameer Al-Doumy/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)
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    Adam Lambert. (Sameer Al-Doumy/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)

    Earlier Kyle Clifford, who is set to take over for Mr. Frost, said that the organization keeps politics outside of the gala tent, which this year was dressed up with hanging lanterns and moody red lighting.

    “We’re a nonpartisan organization and it’s a safe, fun place for people to do their philanthropy,” he said.

    Indeed, the night drew more than 850 people and many famous faces, including Jeff Bezos, Lauren Sánchez, Kevin Spacey, who was found not guilty of sexual assault charges by a British jury in 2023, and Leonardo DiCaprio, who tried to remain incognito in a black baseball cap.

    On the hotel’s perfect lawns, Ms. Guilfoyle was spotted posing for photos opposite Heidi Klum, the model and “Project Runway” host, who later bemoaned the adjacent film festival’s new dress code that prohibited nudity and “voluminous” outfits.

    “I think it’s boring,” she said, dressed in a strapless gown, with a sheer skirt and large feathered train.

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    Teri HatcherCredit…Andreas Rentz/amfAR, via Getty Images
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    Leonardo DiCaprioCredit…Kennedy Pollard/amfAR, via Getty Images
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    Ciara performed.Credit…Ryan Emberley/amfAR, via Getty Images

    At the bar, the director Spike Lee, who had just premiered his latest movie, “Highest 2 Lowest,” at the festival, chatted with the Oscar-winner Adrien Brody. Upon entering the party, Mr. Lee, a dedicated New York Knicks fan, said he was glad he missed the previous night’s playoff game, in which his team suffered a heartbreaking loss to the Indiana Pacers.

    “I was on another continent, a thousand miles away,” he said. “They cannot blame that disaster on me.”

    Mr. Brody had donated one of his artworks, a mixed media piece centered on Marilyn Monroe, to the night’s auction. He was not the only actor to do so. James Franco, who has recently been less visible following sexual misconduct allegations, also supplied a painting.

    Ciara kicked off the dinner with a performance of her hits including “1, 2 Step,” flanked by two backup dancers.

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    James FrancoCredit…Andreas Rentz/amfAR, via Getty Images
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    Kevin SpaceyCredit…Scott a Garfitt/Invision, via Associated Press

    And while the night was hosted by Taraji P. Henson, the affair was dominated by the flashy live auction where items included Chopard diamond earrings, an Andy Warhol screenprint, and a Dodge Charger used in “Fast X,” the most recent installment in the “Fast & Furious” franchise, which the movie’s star, Michelle Rodriguez, hyped up with a giggly introduction.

    A George Condo painting, made specially for the occasion, was the big seller at 1,150,000 euros, or about $1.3 million. Mr. Lee contributed a surprise item of a walk-on role in his next movie, and added during the bidding he would take the winner to a Knicks game next season.

    As is now tradition at the gala, the auction featured a fashion show curated by the French fashion editor Carine Roitfeld, with a collection that immediately sold. This year’s theme was “From Cannes With Love,” a tribute to James Bond. Ms. Hatcher, who played a Bond girl in the 1997 film “Tomorrow Never Dies,” walked the runway.

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    Kevin Robert Frost, the chief executive of amfAR.Credit…Tristan Fewings/amfAR, via Getty Images

    After a brief intermission in bidding, Mr. Lambert performed a series of songs by Queen with accompaniment from the band’s drummer Roger Taylor.

    But it wasn’t until the end of the long event, well after midnight, that the 1980s pop dandies, Duran Duran, who are about to embark on a European tour, took the stage.

    While guests lit up cigarettes inside, Mr. Domingo, Mariska Hargitay and Georgina Chapman grooved along to songs like “Notorious” and “Ordinary World.”

    But the night, and the world, felt far from ordinary.

  • Paris Court Convicts 8 in 2016 Kim Kardashian Robbery, but None Will Serve Prison Time

    Paris Court Convicts 8 in 2016 Kim Kardashian Robbery, but None Will Serve Prison Time

    A Paris court on Friday found the ringleader and seven other people guilty in the robbery of Kim Kardashian at her residence in the French capital in 2016. But none of them will face prison time.

    The court acquitted two of the 10 defendants. The sentences being read out by the court president range from prison terms to fines.

    Aomar Aït Khedache, 69, the ringleader, got the stiffest sentence, eight years imprisonment, but five of those are suspended. 

    Three others who were accused on the most serious charges got seven years, five of them suspended. 

    With time already served in pretrial detention, none of those found guilty will go to prison. The trial was heard by a three-judge panel and six jurors.

    The chief judge, David De Pas, said the ages of the defendants – the oldest is 79 and some others are in their 60s and 70s — weighed on the court’s decision not to impose harsher sentences that would have sent them to jail. He said the nine years between the robbery and the trial was also taken into account in the sentencing.

    Still, he said that Kardashian had been traumatized by the robbery in her hotel. 

    “You caused harm,” he said. “You caused fear.”

    Kardashian ‘deeply grateful’ to French authorities

    Kardashian, who wasn’t present for the verdict, issued a statement after the ruling was announced. 

    “I am deeply grateful to the French authorities for pursuing justice in this case,” she said. “The crime was the most terrifying experience of my life, leaving a lasting impact on me and my family. While I’ll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all. I remain committed to advocating for justice, and promoting a fair legal system.”

    Khedache arrived at court walking with a stick, his face hidden from cameras. 

    His DNA, found on the bands used to bind Kardashian, was a key breakthrough that helped crack open the case. 

    Wiretaps captured him giving orders, recruiting accomplices and arranging to sell the diamonds in Belgium. 

    A diamond-encrusted cross, dropped during the escape, was the only piece of jewelry ever recovered. 

    The crime took place on the night of Oct. 2, 2016 during Paris Fashion Week. 

    The robbers, dressed as police, forced their way into the glamorous Hôtel de Pourtalès, bound Kardashian with zip ties at gunpoint and escaped with her jewelry — a theft that would force celebrities to rethink how they live and protect themselves. 

    The accused became known in France as “les papys braqueurs,” or the grandpa robbers. Some arrived in court in orthopedic shoes and one leaned on a cane. 

    But prosecutors warned observers not to be fooled. 

    The defendants faced charges including armed robbery, kidnapping and gang association.

    Kardashian forgave ringleader after he wrote letter

    Khedache had said he was only a foot soldier. He blamed a mysterious “X” or “Ben” — someone prosecutors say never existed. 

    His lawyer pleaded for clemency, pointing to one of the trial’s most visceral moments: Kardashian’s earlier courtroom encounter with the man accused of orchestrating her ordeal. Though she wasn’t present Friday, her words — and the memory of that moment — still echoed.

    “She looked at him when she came, she listened to the letter he had written to her, and then she forgave him,” lawyer Franck Berton told The Associated Press.

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    Defendant Aomar Aït Khedache pictured during a break in court proceedings in April. (Aurelien Morissard/The Associated Press)

    Kardashian, typically shielded by security and spectacle, had locked eyes with Khedache as the letter was read aloud.

    “I do appreciate the letter, I forgive you,” she said. “But it doesn’t change the feelings and the trauma and the fact that my life was forever changed.” A tabloid crime had become something raw and human.

    Khedache on Friday asked for “a thousand pardons,” communicated via a written note in court. Other defendants also used their final words to express remorse.

    ‘I absolutely did think I was going to die’

    Kardashian’s testimony earlier this month was the emotional high point. In a packed courtroom, she recounted how she was thrown onto a bed, zip-tied, and had a gun pressed to her on the night of the robbery.

    “I absolutely did think I was going to die,” she said. “I have babies. I have to make it home. They can take everything. I just have to make it home.”

    She was dragged into a marble bathroom and told to stay silent. When the robbers fled, she freed herself by scraping the tape on her wrists off against the sink, then hid with her friend, shaking and barefoot.

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    Franck Berton, left, and Chloe Arnaux, lawyers for Aomar Aït Khedache, one of the men accused in the 2016 armed robbery of Kim Kardashian, react after the verdict in the trial of Kim Kadashian heist, Friday in Paris. (AP)

    She said that Paris had once been her sanctuary — a city she would wander at 3 a.m., window shopping, stopping for hot chocolate. That illusion was shattered.

    The robbery echoed far beyond the City of Light. It forced a recalibration of celebrity behaviour in the age of Instagram. For years, Kardashian had curated her life like a showroom: geotagged, diamond-lit, public by design. But this was the moment the showroom turned into a crime scene. In her words, “People were watching.… They knew where I was.”

    Afterward, she stopped posting her location in real time. She stripped her social media feed of lavish gifts and vanished from Paris for years. Other stars followed suit. Privacy became luxury. 

    Even by the standards of France’s famously deliberate legal system, the case took years to reach trial.

  • Billy Joel Cancels All Tour Dates Following Brain Disorder Diagnosis

    Billy Joel Cancels All Tour Dates Following Brain Disorder Diagnosis

    U.S. singer-songwriter and pianist Billy Joel said Friday he is cancelling all of his scheduled concerts — including a stop in Toronto — after he was recently diagnosed with normal pressure hydrocephalus, a brain disorder.

    The 76-year-old singer is undergoing physical therapy and has been advised to refrain from performing while he recovers, according to a statement on social media.

    “I’m sincerely sorry to disappoint our audience and thank you for understanding,” Joel said.

    Joel’s condition was exacerbated by recent concert performances, leading to problems with hearing, vision and balance, according to the statement.

    The condition, which is more likely in people over the age of 65, occurs when fluid builds up inside the skull and presses on the brain, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Symptoms, such as shuffling feet with short steps as well as memory challenges, resemble those of dementia and can sometimes be reversible within surgery. 

    The tour, which had 17 stops in the United States, Canada and England, had been due to start in February, but it was initially rescheduled to July due to an undisclosed medical condition.

    Joel, known for hits like Piano Man and Uptown Girl, ended his record-breaking monthly Madison Square Garden residency — which had begun in 2014 — last year.

  • Why Is IMAX Popping Up Everywhere All of a Sudden?

    Why Is IMAX Popping Up Everywhere All of a Sudden?

    Tom Cruise had a major request. He wanted IMAX to show his latest “Mission: Impossible” movie — and only his movie — on its giant screens for three weeks. It is the kind of exclusive run that few films get.

    So Mr. Cruise went straight to the top. He reached out to IMAX’s chief executive, Rich Gelfond, who had some requests of his own. He wanted all the “Mission: Impossible” premieres, along with press screenings and influencer screenings, to be held at an IMAX theater. And he wanted Mr. Cruise to endorse the company’s screens during his global press tour for the film, which opens this weekend.

    “As a joke I said, ‘Tom, no matter what question the press asks you, you’ve got to answer IMAX.’ ‘What’s your favorite scene?’ ‘IMAX,’” Mr. Gelfond, 69, said in an interview. “He agreed to do that.”

    In order to get something from IMAX these days, even Hollywood’s top power players have to give some, too.

    As movie theater audiences wane and at-home streaming audiences grow, IMAX increasingly stands out as a bright spot in the theater business. The company, founded in Toronto, aims to give moviegoers a more immersive experience with larger screens, better sound and steeper seating, which brings viewers closer to the screen. It now has 416 locations in North America and 1,322 overseas. That is only 1 percent of all the screens in the world, but they often account for a larger percentage of a movie’s box office return, drawing significant crowds for a more expensive ticket than a typical theater seat.

    In the past two months, IMAX screens delivered $39 million to the global box office for “Sinners” (out of $321 million total), $30.6 million for “A Minecraft Movie” ($930.1 million total) and $30.5 million for “Thunderbolts*” ($330 million total). (“Thunderbolts*” and “Minecraft” each played in IMAX theaters for two weeks. “Sinners” was brought back to nine locations for a third week.)

    As a result, Hollywood studios are putting more emphasis on the IMAX brand, even making the IMAX logo in larger type than the title of the movie in some marketing materials. Disney started this last year with “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” and “Alien: Romulus.” For “The Amateur,” a small action movie made by 20th Century Studios this year, the tagline “Vengeance is bigger in IMAX” appeared larger than the movie title. Marvel’s “Thunderbolts*” received similar treatment.

    “For some of these movies that have a franchise history — and are also available at home — the IMAX brand can help speak to the big-screen-worthiness of a film and the spectacle,” said Asad Ayaz, the president of marketing at Disney, which owns Marvel and 20th Century Studios. “It differentiates it from streaming, which is also a big business for us, so it can be helpful.”

    Yet not everyone in the movie business is thrilled with IMAX’s ascension. Some worry that its limited number of screens, and higher prices for admission, could turn moviegoing from a frequent activity into a luxury experience that further reduces overall attendance.

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    Imax Keeps Updating Itself at Breakneck Pace. (Courtesy of Imax)

    “It’s great to be able to provide premium experiences to people who want it,” said Greg Marcus, chief executive of the company that operates Marcus Theaters, the fourth-largest chain in the country, but with only three IMAX screens. “But 80 to 85 percent of our business is coming from traditional theaters. And so you have to be very careful to not put down the traditional experience in promoting the other.”

    Complicating matters further, most theater chains have their own large-format screens. Regal Cinemas has RPX. Cinemark Theaters has CinemarkXD, and Marcus has both UltraScreenDLX and SuperScreenDLX. AMC, the largest theatrical exhibitor, has several: Dolby Cinema, Prime and Laser.

    When a moviegoer buys a ticket to the majority of these large format screens, the exhibitor traditionally evenly splits the revenue with the studio. But when a moviegoer buys a ticket to an IMAX theater, the exhibitor and the studio must give a cut of their shares, often up to 12.5 percent, to IMAX. (Theaters also have to pay a yearly fee to IMAX for the upkeep of their projectors and screens.)

    Yet IMAX is the premium large-format option the studios promote more than the others.

    “Theaters are struggling, and what seems to really make a different to audiences is the premium format,” said Jeff Goldstein, the president of distribution for Warner Bros. “Each individual exhibitor doesn’t want to give up their brand, and I think their strategy is smart. Any way that brings audiences out for movie going is good, and I think IMAX leads that.”

    Mr. Gelfond bought IMAX in 1994 through an investment company he co-founded. At the time, IMAX was primarily known for theaters inside museums and other cultural institutions, showing what he calls “bears, whales and seals” films. It was not until 2003 that the company ventured into partnerships with Hollywood. When “Avatar” was released in 2009, it grossed $250 million on 282 IMAX screens. Hollywood noticed.

    IMAX expects to generate $1.2 billion in box office revenue this year, its most ever. But the company is still relatively small. It reported $87 million in revenue last quarter, and $8 million in profit. The majority of the company’s screens are operated by other theater owners as a joint venture, and they share revenue for ticket sales. In those cases, IMAX receives a cut of the box office only from the studios and not the exhibitors, yet it still controls the programming.

    The fact that IMAX works with theater chains does not stop Mr. Gelfond from insulting them. “Their premium screens are just regular screens that are just bigger,” he said. “We are investing in a great experience. They are investing in buying a standard projector and putting it on a bigger screen.”

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    Imax CEO Richard Gelfond. (AP Images)

    Not everyone agrees with Mr. Gelfond’s assessment about his competitors, including his competitors themselves. Yet his pugilistic style has gotten him far in Hollywood. Recently, he waded into the thorny world of Netflix and theatrical distribution. The entertainment giant has long eschewed releasing movies in theaters before its streaming service. Last month, Ted Sarandos, Netflix’s co-chief executive, called the communal experience of watching a movie in a theater “an outmoded idea.”

    But IMAX reached a deal to show Greta Gerwig’s upcoming adaptation of “The Chronicles of Narnia,” a Netflix film, for two weeks in fall 2026 before it goes on the streaming service. That has left some industry insiders wondering whether theaters would be willing to play a Netflix film at all, even if they are contractually obligated to under their deal with IMAX.

    “It does cause a conflict in the sense that Netflix has been quite public with negative comments,” Adam Aron, AMC’s chief executive, said in an interview. “But to support Rich we are going to play ‘Narnia.’ And we’d love to be able to convince Ted Sarandos that Netflix would be advantaged if it embraced movie theaters.”

    Some say Mr. Gelfond’s direct relationships with some top Hollywood directors have often put him ahead of the studios when it comes to knowing filmmakers’ intentions. Christopher Nolan (“Oppenheimer”) and Ryan Coogler (“Sinners”), both of whom have shot with IMAX cameras, and others have become evangelists for the brand. At the Cannes Film Festival this month, Mr. Gelfond revealed that Mr. Nolan would film the entirety of his next movie, “The Odyssey,” with IMAX cameras.

    His connections with some movie stars can help, too — and he’s happy to boast about them. Mr. Gelfond was quick to pull out his phone to share his text exchange with Mr. Cruise moments after the actor rappelled into the stadium at the closing ceremony of the Paris Olympics last summer.

    “Beyond awesome!! You’re the best,” Mr. Gelfond messaged the actor. A minute later, Mr. Cruise responded: “Thank you, my friend. We are going to crush it next summer.”

  • Leaving the Middle East, Trump Attacks His Critics in the U.S.

    Leaving the Middle East, Trump Attacks His Critics in the U.S.

    After spending much of the week touring the Middle East in the company of Gulf leaders not known for tolerating dissent, President Trump was reminded on Friday that in his own country, people are free to say whatever they would like about their president.

    He did not seem terribly comforted by this reality.

    While flying back to Washington on Air Force One, he had evidently become aware that Bruce Springsteen had slammed him on Wednesday while performing in England. Shortly after the plane took off from Abu Dhabi’s international airport, Mr. Trump posted on social media: “This dried out ‘prune’ of a rocker (his skin is all atrophied!) ought to KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT until he gets back into the Country, that’s just ‘standard fare.’ Then we’ll all see how it goes for him!”

    There were other posts aimed at other critics.

    “Has anyone noticed,” Mr. Trump wrote in one of them, “that, since I said ‘I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT,’ she’s no longer ‘HOT?’” Shortly after that one, he took a swipe at “grandstanders” in the Republican Party and “radical left losers” getting in the way of his agenda and the Supreme Court, which he said was “being played.”

    It is not unusual for this president to be fighting on the internet with celebrities or political opponents or even the Supreme Court, but his posting spree read like a comedown of sorts after four days spent basking in the kind of opulent splendor and lavish praise he found in the Middle East, which so delight him.

    And his vague threat on Friday about what may await Mr. Springsteen upon his return to the United States seemed ominous, since these days so many of his threats have turned out not to be empty ones.

    Asked what exactly Mr. Trump was implying, Steven Cheung, the White House communications director, would only send back a string of insults about Mr. Springsteen’s career.

    “The America I love,” he said during his show in Manchester, “is currently in the hands of a corrupt, incompetent and treasonous administration.”

    Mr. Springsteen went hard at the White House.

    “They’re rolling back historic civil rights legislation that has led to a more just and plural society,” he said. “They’re abandoning our great allies and siding with dictators against those struggling for their freedom. They’re defunding American universities that won’t bow down to their ideological demands.”

    The remarks by Mr. Springsteen, who campaigned for Kamala Harris, got a lot of attention at a time when many public figures in American life have avoided criticizing a president who campaigned on enacting retribution and has in many ways delivered on that promise.

    A representative for Mr. Springsteen did not return requests for comment.