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Diddy Trial Latest: Court Unexpectedly Cancelled

Diddy Trial Latest: Court Unexpectedly Cancelled

Fox News2 days ago

The Diddy trial hit a pause after a juror reported a medical issue, just one day after jurors saw intense video evidence in court. Bill Belichick's girlfriend may have thrown subtle shade at his ex in a cryptic Instagram caption referencing high-society drama. Plus, a Southwest flight turned turbulent when a woman unleashed chaos mid-air, leading to her arrest once the plane landed.
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‘An Iliad': A One-Man Triumph at the Court Theatre
‘An Iliad': A One-Man Triumph at the Court Theatre

Epoch Times

time9 minutes ago

  • Epoch Times

‘An Iliad': A One-Man Triumph at the Court Theatre

CHICAGO—Imagine being in a room with the most famous poet in antiquity, the man whose storytelling influenced literature for ages, and listening to him regale you with events that took place during the most important event in ancient Greek history: the siege of Troy. This unforgettable experience is unfolding at the Court Theatre in Chicago. Based Homer's 'The Iliad,' (circa 850 century B.C.), this work, titled 'An Iliad,' is co-authored by Lisa Peterson and Denis O'Hare. It's a one-man play of Homer's epic poem that tells the story of the 10-year war between two civilizations. It's also a perfect choice for the Court's mission to reimagine classic works for contemporary audiences. A Classic Work of Great Depth For the longest time, scholars believed that Troy was a mythological place, but recent archeological excavations have led many archeologists to believe that Troy really existed. Its remains are at Hisarlik, a city situated in modern-day Turkey.

Crumbl announces its newest celebrity collaboration cookie
Crumbl announces its newest celebrity collaboration cookie

Miami Herald

time10 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Crumbl announces its newest celebrity collaboration cookie

Crumbl Cookies is a business that grew so fast, it leaves people wondering what it did to achieve such explosive success. Originally founded in 2017 in Utah by Sawyer Hemsley and Jason McGowan with the intention of creating the world's best chocolate chip cookie, today Crumbl sells one million desserts a day and has 1,071 locations nationwide. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter Crumbl attributes a lot of its success to both a robust social media presence and its formula of limited weekly drops of new flavors, which one founder says is an idea they got from another industry. Related: Costco adds new food item members already love "In the fashion industry, they really came up with the idea of these drops," McGowan said in a CNBC interview, "and it's an idea we use in our business. It creates that hype, excitement. And it also creates scarcity, because you can only have that cookie for that week." Crumbl also started doing celebrity and film collaborations in December 2023, starting with a partnership to commemorate the launch of the "Willy Wonka" film with its Wonka's Wildly Wonderful Red Velvety Cookie. It teamed up with singer Olivia Rodrigo next to promote her album "Guts." This was excellent timing for the brand, as Rodrigo's popularity was at an all-time high. Now Crumbl has another celebrity collaboration on the way, and it's safe to say fans of the brand are probably going to love it. On June 19, Crumbl shared via its Instagram account that it would drop a new cookie next week in partnership with Benson Boone, the pop-rock sensation and "Beautiful Things" singer who just released the new album "American Heart." The company describes its Moonbeam Ice Cream Cookie, which will be on sale at Crumbl stores only from June 23-28, as "a mystical, magical chilled chocolate cookie packed with cookies and cream pieces, crowned with vibrant moonbeam ice cream-inspired lemon, berry, and marshmallow toppings, finished with a sweet white drizzle and a final sprinkle of cookies and cream." Comments on the complicated-sounding new treat were mixed, with some fans thrilled and eager to try it, and others not so much. "I'm gonna backflip in the store when I get my paws on this," Instagram user eggtyler said. "I'M DEFINITELY GETTING THIS! Love Benson Boone! Seeing him in September!" Instagram user tfnice18 said. However, some Crumbl employees seemed less than enthused about the new collaboration. Related: General Mills quietly discontinues three cereals fans loved "Great. No one asked for another celebrity partnership, especially not the employees," said Instagram user sammy_slocum. Several commenters also asked for Crumbl's take on another viral food sensation that's been sweeping TikTok lately. "Give us a release date for the Dubai chocolate cheesecake and the Dubai chocolate brownie," Instagram user itstheavarose said. While Crumbl's viral popularity has softened a bit since it first exploded a few years back, the brand still has plenty of pull. The privately owned company has more than 10 million followers on TikTok alone, and fans still regularly flock to its stores to try out new flavors or search online for the weekly menu. In a Reddit thread hosted by a franchise owner who offered to answer questions about what it's like to run a Crumbl, Reddit user FromCustomertoFP revealed how much it cost to invest. "It depends on many factors, but it is between $500K to $1M," the user wrote. "Equipment is the biggest chunk of the initial investment. Crumbl is not a cheap franchise to get into." While the franchise owner did not answer when asked if the investment was profitable, they did share some thoughts on Crumbl's growth. "Let's say a Crumbl franchise is a good investment if 1. You can afford it, and 2. You put it in a good location. The last point sounds easy, but it's not. In my opinion Crumbl expanded too much and in some areas allowed stores to be too close, and that is hurting some owners. I think Crumbl stores should be no less than 45 mins. apart from each other," they wrote. Related: Taco Bell adds new beverages to hop on viral fast-food trend The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

‘The Berlin Diaries' is a twisting and resonant search for lost family
‘The Berlin Diaries' is a twisting and resonant search for lost family

Washington Post

time27 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

‘The Berlin Diaries' is a twisting and resonant search for lost family

Playwright Andrea Stolowitz is a central character in her own 'The Berlin Diaries.' She is played by Dina Thomas in a delicately moving production at D.C.'s Theater J — except when she's played by actor Lawrence Redmond, who also inhabits the long-dead grandfather whose inherited journals set the show's affairs in motion. Except when Redmond is stepping into the role of the playwright's Uncle David. Or one of a dozen other characters, based everywhere from Brazil to South Africa to New York to the Pacific Northwest. With me? Fret not: If the play's structural quirkiness initially feels adventurous to the point of mild madness, it quickly reveals a method, even as its novelty settles into something like normalcy. In fact the dialogue-juggling — in which the two actors often divide a thought mid-phrase while inhabiting the same character — deftly suggests the sort of wait-who-was-that? conundrums that any genealogist grappling with a knotty ancestral puzzle might get tangled in. For instance, I bear the same name as both my father and my grandfather, and there's another handful perched a few generations back in the family tree. This means that 'No, the Thomas who was killed when a branch fell on him in 1762 was a farmer; his son Thomas was the Presbyterian minister,' is the kind of thing I find myself clarifying mid-story, as if anyone other than a desperate family-history nerd could possibly follow. One intriguing dynamic with 'Berlin Diaries' is precisely that Andrea Stolowitz, or at least the character with her name, doesn't seem that sort of nerd at all. She's a mildly jaded playwright and teaching artist whose family isn't all that large or all that close, and who's not particularly interested in the diary her mother has been saving all this time. Yes, they're Jewish, and yes, they emigrated from Germany — but as Uncle David shrugs, 'Everyone made it here alive. … There's nothing to find out.' Unconvinced, but also under-inspired, and entirely uncertain what she's actually looking for, Andrea does what teaching artists do when confronted with things like old diaries: She writes a grant proposal and takes off for Europe. Unsurprisingly, she'll uncover rather more than Uncle David's shrug suggests, and in its clean 90 minutes 'Berlin Diaries' chronicles developments as concrete as confusion about a street address and as esoteric as the singular frisson that comes with stumbling across a headstone and knowing that a faded name on a dusty page really lived and died in this actual place, at that actual time. And its protagonist will confront the reality that even now, even after decades of diligent documentation, even given the famously meticulous recordkeeping that accompanied the Holocaust, it's possible for people — for whole swaths of whole families — simply to be verschollen, lost. Theater J's handsome production, steered with a light touch and admirable clarity by director Elizabeth Dinkova, deploys warm woods (in a set by Sarah Beth Hall) and plenty of papers (props are from Pamela Weiner), along with one of the most quietly lyrical visual vocabularies I've seen in a theater lately. (Colin K. Bills is responsible for the lighting, and Deja Collins the subtle and exquisite suite of projections.) Redmond and Thomas navigate a tricky script with the ease of veterans and a wry, low-key charm that helps find an appropriate unifying tone for a narrative that involves the soberest of considerations — but also at least one anatomical joke and (rather boldly) the employment of mild sarcasm in the vicinity of the words 'never forget.' And Stolowitz manages, without belaboring or dwelling on grim specifics, to convey the quiet horror of discovering the name of a lost relative in the same moment you realizing that that person's story is largely and irremediably lost. 'He who forgets what he cannot change is happy,' muses Andrea at one point, echoing a line from her grandfather's journal, though it's not clear she can bring herself to agree. 'The Berlin Diaries' will resonate, and vividly, with audiences who caught Tom Stoppard's similarly aching family chronicle 'Leopoldstadt' at the Shakespeare Theatre Company late last year – and I should imagine with any member of a Jewish American generation whose parents and grandparents simply couldn't bear to pass on the stories of the lost. The Berlin Diaries, through June 29 at Theater J. About 90 minutes without intermission.

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