Latest news with #Bateman


USA Today
a day ago
- Sport
- USA Today
Rashod Bateman hints at Ravens WRs hitting another level after adding DeAndre Hopkins
Rashod Bateman hints at Ravens WRs hitting another level after adding DeAndre Hopkins Rashod Bateman Bateman said on NFL Network that DeAndre Hopkins has been teaching the younger Baltimore Ravens wide receivers on the nuances of the position The Ravens have an underrated receiving corps, but this unit could reach another gear after the off-season addition of DeAndre Hopkins to the roster. Playing alongside Zay Flowers, who became the first Ravens player to be named a Pro Bowler at the wide receiver position in 2024, Bateman had a breakout season and played a considerable role in Lamar Jackson's career-high 4,172 yards passing and 41 touchdowns. Enter Hopkins, who rarely drops a pass and is among the most efficient wide receivers in NFL history. He's been with Baltimore for three months, but he's already having a lasting influence on the young duo. 'You could just definitely tell that he's been in the game a while and done a lot of great things,' Bateman said of Hopkins. 'A lot of people respect what he's done and what he brings to the table. But as far as right now, he's been a very good veteran for us, giving all of us advice -- not even just myself -- he's been very vocal about that. All of us are much younger so [our] ears are open and we're taking all the advice we can get from him. He's done great things, so hopefully we can take that, add it to our game, add it to our personalities to go help this team. He's been good for us and I know he's going to be big for us this season.' Bateman, who signed a three-year, $36.75 million extension, is coming off a career-best season in which he recorded 45 receptions for 756 yards and nine touchdowns. Bateman also added this about the Ravens signing Jaire Alexander. "In practice, it's definitely going to be a battle," Bateman said. "It's always a battle -- this defense here is tough and adding Jaire to the group is definitely going to make us better. Going out, putting Jaire in the middle of our defense with the guys that we got now I think is going to be fun to see. It's going to be some Ravens football." As many players and coaches tend to indicate in June, Bateman said Wednesday that "everyone looks fast, strong and powerful" in minicamp and the team is "eager to get back to work and chase this ring."

NBC Sports
a day ago
- Sport
- NBC Sports
Rashod Bateman says Ravens receivers benefit from veteran presence of DeAndre Hopkins
DeAndre Hopkins is 33 years old and his production has declined in recent years, with a career-low 10.9 yards per catch average last season. But fellow Ravens wide receiver Rashod Bateman still brings plenty to Baltimore. Bateman said on NFL Network that Hopkins, who signed a one-year contract with the Ravens in March, has been teaching the younger wide receivers 'You could just definitely tell that he's been in the game a while and done a lot of great things,' Bateman said of Hopkins. 'A lot of people respect what he's done and what he brings to the table. But as far as right now, he's been a very good veteran for us, giving all of us advice -- not even just myself -- he's been very vocal about that. All of us are much younger so [our] ears are open and we're taking all the advice we can get from him. He's done great things, so hopefully we can take that, add it to our game, add it to our personalities to go help this team. He's been good for us and I know he's going to be big for us this season.' The Ravens are Hopkins' fifth NFL team, and perhaps the team that can put a Super Bowl ring on his Hall of Fame résumé.


Elle
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Elle
ELLE Editors Try the New American Psycho Perfume
Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. There are more than nine fragrances mentioned in Bret Easton Ellis's novel American Psycho, and 19-69 perfumer Johan Bergelin doesn't think the main character, Patrick Bateman, would use any of them. There are multiple threads on Reddit devoted to what the hyper-styled Bateman would wear. Some believe it's Platinum Égoïste by Chanel (an easy guess, because of the name), while others are faithful to the movie's depiction of his medicine cabinet and think it's YSL Pour Homme. 'In my mind, he never smelled like [any of those scents],' Bergelin tells me over Zoom, even though the book even references other well-known scents of the '80s like Obsession and Drakkar Noir. To know what he smelled like for sure, you'd have to go back to the source. Thankfully, now Ellis and Bergelin have collaborated to create the first official American Psycho perfume. Over the course of many months, the two worked together to create a perfume that they believed Bateman would actually apply. Bergelin wanted the scent to be contrasting, surprising, and accurate (thus, no aromatic references to blood). He imagined that 'there would be some underlying scent of detergent or cleaning products, to clean up the mess in his very precise apartment—and himself.' In addition to the fresh notes of bergamot, sage, and jasmine, Bergelin created a sparkling water-like accord that is central to the scent and references page 77 of the book. Meant to depict iciness and frozenness, it's a subtle nod to Bateman's fitting preference for chilly, frosty sorbet and the '80s time period, when the usage of notes derived from non-natural sources first became popularized. This is just the first of a few collaborations between Bergelin and Ellis, as the two are working on more scents that befit his novels, including Glamorama and Less Than Zero. Below, ELLE editors took the scent for a spin—and gave their initial impressions. 'You might be wondering, Why would anyone want to smell like Patrick Bateman, an image-obsessed sociopath with a fragile ego and a compulsive need to conform? And what would that even smell like? According to 19-69, it's a blend of bergamot, jasmine, and cedarwood. I'm not entirely sure how that evokes Bateman's personality, and to be honest, it's a bit too woody and leathery for me. Still, I suppose it's better than the the scent of a decomposing body.'—Claire Stern Milch, digital director 'Having known many a finance man, I can tell you that most of them smell like either Santal 33 or a Polo scent that their mom bought them when they were 15—there's really no in between. I think that this scent would be a welcome refresh for the men at Goldman Sachs, especially because I do think it really captures the lifestyle. It's clean and fresh with a sort of sparkly veneer, but there's something a little sinister about it—almost a vague Windex-y hint at the end. It also is just a tad too strong, which feels a bit on the nose. Smelling it makes me think about an office building with floor-to-ceiling blue-tinted windows and crisp, freshly-pressed suits.'—Katie Berohn, beauty editor 'Smelling this perfume felt like a sneak peak into a world that I was never meant to see, let alone understand. The first word that came to mind when I smelled this was corporate. I pictured pristine offices and perfectly tailored Armani suits worn by men droning on about 'crunching the numbers.' The scent is fresh and clean and, at the first whiff, smells like a your standard finance bro cologne with classic sandalwood and bergamot notes. But then it dries down into something much more complex, darker, broodier even, as notes of pine, vetiver, and sage emerge. Though it came on a bit strong in the beginning, after settling for a while on my skin, the perfume began to warm up, revealing a sweeter scent that I didn't mind at all.'—Tasha Nicole Smith, beauty assistant 'One sniff and I said to myself, 'Yeah, a guy on Wall Street would definitely wear this, but so would a girl in Soho.' Scent has become the great equalizer, women dipping into colognes and men dabbling in parfums, so why not make one for all Bateman-aspirationals? The scent is crisp, clean—the signature combo for a busy New Yorker.'—Alex Hildreth, fashion news editor 'The kind of perfume that a West Village Girl would love to smell on her Hinge date, and I say this in the least shady way possible.'—Kathleen Hou, beauty director 'I'm in a rented white Porsche Boxster doing 80 down the 195 crossing the Biscayne Bay into Miami Beach. I have on my vintage Levi's 505 Orange Tabs, a torn white Margiela T-shirt, a pair of brown leather penny loafers from Alden, Wayfarer-style sunglasses from Thistle, and of course, a few sprays of the new 19-69 x Bret Easton Ellis American Psycho cologne. The scent is warm and cool at the same time. Approachable but a little uneasy. I'm not sure it smells exactly how I'd imagine Patrick Bateman—who conjures spearmint, paper, and dry cleaning chemicals—smells, but it's unmistakably someone from the Ellis universe. Confident and hollow, something that feels impossibly vacant and yet, somehow deep. Borrowed luxury, unearned suntans, going just above the speed limit. Is there such a thing as erotic boredom?'—Harry Gassel, art director


Indian Express
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Indian Express
5 novels with a psychopath or sociopath as narrator
What do a Wall Street banker, a butterfly collector, a teenage thug, a delusional dropout, and a self-styled poet of perversion have in common? Each is the narrator of their own story, and each warps that story to fit their desires. The books featured here dive into the minds of men who distort reality, sometimes to justify violence, sometimes to escape the void within. From Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho to Nabokov's infamous Lolita, these novels are unsettling not just because of what happens, but because of how it's told. Through unreliable narrators, we are invited into worlds of moral decay, manipulation, obsession, and horror. These are philosophical provocations that ask how far can narrative seduce us before we see the truth. Merger and acquisitions or murder and executions? It does not matter what one hears as both are the business of one Patrick Bateman, investment banker by day and murderer by night. Bateman, the narrator, is young and affluent. He goes to nightclubs, snorts narcotics, is particular about his appearance and keeps track of the fashions of the day. However, as Bateman's veneer of control begins to crack, the distinction between real and imagined blurs. He details his morning skincare routine with the same precision as his torture sessions, raising questions about what is real and what is imaginary. Is he a serial killer or just fantasising to fill the spiritual void? Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho is satirical plunge into the hollow soul of 1980s Wall Street culture. It is a picture of a man consumed, literally and metaphorically, by consumerism. First published in 1991, American Psycho, shocked readers with its graphic violence and was banned or censored in multiple countries. However, it also sparked intense academic debate. Most people have passions that keep them going, for some it is gathering collectables. It might be stamps, pebbles, rare books or plants. John Fowles' in his debut novel, The Collector, twists the concept and takes it to its extreme. First published in 1963, The Collector is the story of Frederick Clegg, a socially awkward butterfly collector who adds something new to his collection – a veritable social butterfly, a living, breathing woman. After winning the lottery, Frederick uses his newfound wealth to kidnap Miranda, an art student he has admired from afar, and lock her in the cellar of his secluded countryside home. He hopes that eventually his captive will fall in love with him. The book is divided into two parts, the first narrated through Clegg's eerily calm perspective and the second through Miranda's desperate diary entries. Narrated from the cellar, one can feel claustrophobia closing in. Zooming out, it is allegory of a world with constant struggles between power, class and control. Critics have called it everything from a twisted love story to a modern Gothic masterpiece. Horrifyingly, some serial killers have listed the book as an influence. In A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess, presents a dystopian future where teenage gangs roam the streets. It is told entirely from the point of view of 15-year-old Alex, who leads a gang of 'droogs' through a nightmare of 'ultra-violence.' One cannot help but observe that he is smart, sadistic, and obsessed with Beethoven. Strangely, he is both self-aware and of a philosophical bend of mind. He speaks in Nadsat, a teenage slang mashup of English and Russian. Through this strange language and his charisma, Alex invites us into his nightly adventures of 'ultra-violence,' classical music, and drug-laced milk. This continues until he's betrayed, arrested, and subjected to a government experiment that forces him to become 'good.' First published in 1962, it raises the question that if a person's ability to choose evil is taken away, can they still be considered human? The novel's original UK version includes a controversial final chapter where Alex begins to seek redemption, and even imagine a future family. But for decades, American readers got a bleaker version, ending just as Alex reverts to his violent ways. Even Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film adaptation left that final chapter out. Set in the gritty chaos of early '90s New York, The Stalker introduces us to Robert Doughten Savile, known as 'Doughty' to those unfortunate enough to know him. Doughty's a privileged dropout from Darien, Connecticut, coasting on ego and delusions of grandeur while sinking ever deeper into the city's underbelly. He cons his way into the lives and homes of women who mistake his empty confidence for charm. He gaslights, manipulates, and lies with ease. While pretending to be a high-flying real estate mogul, Doughty is actually spending his days smoking in Tompkins Square Park and hustling in train station bathrooms. What he lacks in self-awareness or skill, he makes up for in calculated predation. Bomer through her dark humour peels back the layers of privilege, misogyny, and narcissism. If you're a fan of unreliable narrators, The Stalker is a must-read. In Lolita, Nabokov hands the pen to a predator. Like any storyteller worth his salt, Humbert Humbert is free to drive the narrative as he wishes. He paints himself as a tragic romantic, a man cursed by an 'overwhelming love' for nymphets. He is never a predator, always a poet. He quotes Poe, rhapsodises about beauty, and drops literary allusions, luring us into his warped perspective, until it is too late and the reader complicit in his crime. He calls Dolores 'Lolita,' cloaking her in a fantasy and silence. He blames her for his obsession. Even his name, a pretentious doubling, hints towards his tendency to self-mythologise. He is an unreliable narrator, spinning child abuse as a grand passion while casually admitting to drugging Dolores, gaslighting her, and isolating her from the world. Here's the genius, one catches oneself listening and pitying him. Nabokov forces us to confront how monstrosity wears a charming mask. It also forces one to consider how art aestheticises evil.
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
NFL rumors: Rashod Bateman explored trade prior to Ravens contract extension
The post NFL rumors: Rashod Bateman explored trade prior to Ravens contract extension appeared first on ClutchPoints. Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Rashod Bateman signed a three-year, $36.75 million contract extension with $20 million guaranteed this offseason. However, reports are now that the Ravens' pass catcher actually looked into trade opportunities ahead of signing the deal. Advertisement 'What led to his contract extension is that he was almost traded during this offseason,' ESPN's Jeremy Fowler told the NFL Live crew. 'He went to the Ravens, wanted a new deal, they simply said, 'no,' but they gave him permission to seek a trade. So, he went out on the open market, talked to teams, and I was told there were several involved … the Dallas Cowboys, New England Patriots, Green Bay Packers. So, he saw he had a market. The Ravens saw that and said, 'OK, we'll just pay you instead. We won't trade you.'' Bateman is the definition of a middling wide receiver. Last season, he caught 45 balls for 756 yards and nine touchdowns, which ranked 95th, 43rd, and ninth, respectively. Those numbers represent the fifth-year wideout's best NFL season, although he had one more catch during his rookie campaign. Talent and production aren't Bateman's biggest problems, though. Last season was his best campaign because it was the first time he played in all 17 games. He was available for 12, six, and 16 games during his first three seasons. Advertisement The injury concerns aside, this was probably a smart deal for the Ravens. The team has a WR1 in Zay Flowers and made an interesting veteran acquisition this Spring by bringing in DeAndre Hopkins. So, there will be little pressure on Bateman and he can continue to put up solid numbers in the background. What this Rashon Bateman trade/contract extension scenario illustrates most, though, is the growing value of WR2s in the league. With top wideouts now regularly making over $30 million per season, the value of proven commodities who will produce at $10-$12 million per year has gone up. That is what the 2021 first-round pick found out on the open market, and the Ravens found out before they opened their checkbook and wrote a big fat check to Batman. Related: Rising Baltimore Ravens rookie turning heads in 2025 OTAs Related: Ravens in early stages of Lamar Jackson contract extension talks