
Emma Roberts' secret hobby revealed as she makes surprise appearance at Fanatics event
Emma Roberts ' secret hobby has been revealed as the star made an appearance at Fanatics Fest 2025 on Friday in New York City.
The American Horror Story actress, 34 - who turned heads at the Zimmermann Summer event this week - joined other celebrities during the festivities, such as retired NFL player Tom Brady.
The mom-of-one is no stranger when it comes to the world of sports, and has dropped hints about one of her passions: collecting trading cards.
Earlier this year in January, Roberts jumped to her Instagram stories to reveal that she pulled a Jackson Holliday Topps Chrome card. Holliday is an infielder for the Baltimore Orioles.
She uploaded a snap of herself at the time as she held the card and placed one of her hands over her mouth in excitement.
In text added towards the top of the photo, Emma penned to her followers: 'the face of pulling my most covered 1/1. #1of1day @topps.'
And earlier this year in April, the beauty shared a photo dump onto her main page - and showcased more cards that she had pulled.
One of them included an autographed Caleb Williams card - who is known as the quarterback of the Chicago Bears.
Roberts was pictured sitting at a table inside what appeared to be restaurant with cards and unopened foil packages placed in front of her.
She gave a look at the Williams card by holding it up towards the camera and held a big smile on her face.
The last image in the post showed two Star Wars cards, with one of Darth Vader and the other Mustafar.
At the time, some social media users jumped to the comment section of the post to share their thoughts of the actress's subtle hint at her secret hobby.
One had penned, 'A collector!' followed by clapping hand emojis, while another typed, 'Those cards are awesome, good pulls!'
'Sweater matching the pack foils??? Operating on elite levels at the moment,' a fan added, referencing to the card packaging.
At the time, some social media users jumped to the comment section of the post to share their thoughts of the actress's subtle hint at her secret hobby
One had penned, 'A collector!' followed by clapping hand emojis, while another typed, 'Those cards are awesome, good pulls!'
One shared, 'And you rip cards?!' while another commented, 'Bro we need pack opening videos. Let us scratch that itch.'
Emma had the chance to take part in a discussion at 2025 Fanatics Fest on Friday for the panel: Ready. Set. Collect.
On the stage, she was also joined by retired NFL quarterback Tom Brady as well as Logan Paul.
The Scream Queens alum wore a sleeveless, dark blue-patterned dress which was paired with sheer black tights and heels.
Her reddish locks were parted in the middle and effortlessly flowed down past her shoulders in light waves.
The star - who has previously sported blonde locks - debuted the new hair color earlier this year in February.
Just days earlier before whisking herself to NYC, the actress put on a stylish display as she enjoyed time in Mykonos, Greece.
On Tuesday, she attended the Zimmerman Summer lunch and wore a patterned sundress as well as a pair of open-toed, tan pumps.
Her locks were styled into two braids and she also carried a fashionable bag in her hands to hold items she needed during the event.
Emma additionally sported a pair of large shades to protect her eyes from the bright sunshine at the venue near the ocean.
And one day earlier on Monday, the star was spotted posing for a brief photo session on a sandy area near the water.
She wore a semi-sheer dress that fell down past her ankles at the Zimmerman Summer event. Other stars were also in attendance including actress Olivia Wilde.
While Roberts recently revealed her passion for trading cards, the star has another known hobby: reading books.
Back in 2017, she notably launched the online reading community Belletrist with close friend Karah Preiss.
During an interview with People last year, Emma opened up about choosing books for the club and admitted that 'there is no formula.'
She added, 'It's genuinely whatever moves us. But I will say this...we try to pick books that we read and then need to talk about. That's what makes a good Belletrist pick. You read it and you're like: I gotta talk to someone about this - now!'
Roberts has been in a relationship with actor Cody John since 2022, and the couple announced their engagement last year in July.
The actress is also mom to son Rhodes, four - whom she shares with ex Garrett Hedlund.
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The Guardian
40 minutes ago
- The Guardian
America is showing us football in its final dictator form – we can't afford to look away
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Nobody gave Fifa a mandate to behave like this. Its mission is to promote and regulate. And yet here is it acting as a commercial disruptor in its own sport and as a lickspittle to the powerful, disregarding the human rights fluff and political neutrality enshrined in its 'statutes', offering zero transparency or accountability. To date Infantino's only public interface in the US is a 'fireside chat', AKA approved PR interview, at the Dick's Sporting Goods stage in New York. There he is, up there on the Stage of Dick's, mouthing platitudes to pre-programmed questions, high on his own power supply, the newly acquired Gianni glow-up eyebrows arched in a patina of inauthenticity. They say celebrity is a mask that eats into the face. Take a look at what football can do to you. And so far this tournament has presented the full grotesquery in store. What is the Club World Cup like on the ground? Pretty much the same as it is on the screen given this event is invisible in physical form beyond the stadiums. The key takeaway is confirmation of the weirdly jackboot, cult-like nature of the Infantino-shaped universe. Even the optics are trying to tell you something, all black holes, hard surfaces, gold, power-flash. Why does Fifa have its own vast lighted branding on the pitch like a global super-corporation or a military dictatorship? What is the Club World Cup logo supposed to represent, with its weird angular lines, the void at its heart? An obscure Stalinist plug socket? Darth Vader's space fighter? Not to mention the bizarre obsession with that shapeless and indefinable trophy, present on the big screen in every ground in weird scrolling closeup, one minute a Sauron's eye, the next some kind of finger-snapping torture instrument, with its secret draws full of ectoplasm, a dead crow, the personal effects of Pol Pot. Mainly there is the very openly manipulative nature of the spectacle, football in its final dictator form, with a sense of utter disdain for its captive consumer-subjects. Yes, they will literally put up with anything if we pipe it into their smartphones. So here is beauty, love, colour, connection, the things you're hard-wired to respond to, cattle-prodded into your nervous system for the benefit of assorted interests. Here is football reimagined as a kind of mass online pornography. Fifa even calls its media website Fifahub. With all this in mind some have suggested a World Cup and US boycott is the correct and logical response, not least in two recent articles published in these pages. The organisation Human Rights Watch has carried a warning about the implications of staging the tournament under the Trump regime. Guardian readers and social media voices have asked the same question from all sides of discourse. The hostile versions of this: if you don't like it then just don't come, we don't want you anyway [expletives deleted]. If you were worried about us in Qatar, western imperialist, why are you going to the US? And from the liberal left a concern that to report on sport is also to condone a regime that sends deportation officers to games, imposes travel bans on Fifa members and is edging towards another remote war. And all the while marches football around in a headlock, snapping its underwear elastic, saying thanks, Gianni, for the distracting firework show. This is not a normal situation. So why normalise it? Why give it legitimising light and heat? And yet, one week into the World Cup's rehearsal dinner, the only logical response is: you just have to go. Not only would a boycott serve no practical purpose; it would be counterproductive, an act of compliance for a regime that will happily operate without an opposing voice on the stage. There are two structural reasons for this. 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