Celeb

News anchor walks out on live show in protest of Kylie's birthday coverage

News Anchor John Brown said, 'I'm having a good Friday, so I refuse to talk about the Kardashians!' before walking out on air, leaving his co-host, Amy Kaufeldt, by herself on the couch of the Good Day Orlando show on Fox. Amy was left to carry on the rest of the show. ADVERTISEMENT The surprise storm-out came after the news anchors invited radio host and broadcast guest, Jenny Castillo, to discuss the Kardashians news.

Pastor Jimmy Odukoya responds to queries on why he keeps dreadlocks

During a recent interview with BBC Pidgin, he noted that his appearance has nothing to do with his calling as a minister. He went on to stress that everything he does has a spiritual backing to it and nothing is done on a whim. Odukoya said, "God called me the way I am, just as I am. As for my dreads, the story behind it is long but the thing is everything I do is backed up by scriptures.

Photojournalist Stars in New Squarespace Commercial

The ad spot shows a young boy running through the cornfields of Iowa, his grandfather’s Polaroid camera in his hands. In the background, a grain silo is burning. As the shot blends into a scene in which a photographer trails a group of soldiers in Afghanistan, the voice of photojournalist David Guttenfelder is heard: “My camera’s led me everywhere I’ve ever gone,” he says. “I saw what was happening on the other side of the world.

Should You Wear Shoes in the House?

Every day, people with foot pain hobble into Dr. Priya Parthasarathy’s podiatry office, and she asks them the same three questions: “What do you do for work? Where do you work? And what do you put on your feet when you’re working?” More often than not, they work from home, barefoot. Over the past few years, there’s been a “significant increase” in people experiencing foot pain, says Parthasarathy, a podiatrist with Foot and Ankle Specialists of Mid-Atlantic in Silver Spring, Md.

Show Business: As a Matter of Fat . . .

Scales-tipping actors must stay heavy to keep working While half of America skips lunch, or pledges to, and bemoans the thousand extra ounces flesh is heir to, one glamorously employed elite has a perfect excuse for staying plump. Fat actors and actresses—those who won their fame with an expansive physical image—often feel they must stay heavy to keep working. Acting is usually a kind of seduction of the audience, and the conventionally unseductive, unless they are established stars, pay a price.

Singer Reveals How He Sold His Sister On Ebay

The singer during an interview with the Guardian, said he put up his sister for sale on Ebay after his obsession with the auctioning website got a tad out of hand. " I was a big Ebay addict before my first album became a hit. I wanted to go on this tour of the world, so I started selling everything on eBay. I just sold all my shit. I literally came back to my empty, empty flat.

Snoop Dogg Brings Dr. Bombay NFT Ape to Life in New Skechers Collection

Partner Content The rapper teamed up with the footwear brand on a new collection inspired by his very stylish BAYC. If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission. Snoop Dogg is bringing his alter ego Dr. Bombay, named after his NFT Bored Ape of the same name, to his second collaboration with Skechers. The brand new lineup, which launched on Skechers’ website last week, features dozens of streetwear silhouettes adorned with playful images of his beloved BAYC, and other imagery and patterns inspired by the rapper’s famed career.

St. Jude's Fundraising Chief on Space and Pushing Boundaries

TIME Studios is producing the Netflix documentary series Countdown: Inspiration 4 Mission to Space, starting Sept. 6. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, which looks after children with cancer while also researching how to eliminate the pediatric form of the disease, raised $2 billion in donations in its last fiscal year. It’s a record for an independent charity, and an impressive feat in a year when donors had more causes than ever vying for their attention and money.

Steve Jobs to Leonardo Da Vinci: Walter Isaacson on Geniuses

Being a genius is different than merely being supersmart. Smart people are a dime a dozen, and many of them don’t amount to much. What matters is creativity, the ability to apply imagination to almost any situation. Take Benjamin Franklin. He lacked the analytic processing power of a Hamilton and the philosophical depth of a Madison. Yet with little formal education, Franklin taught himself to become the American Enlightenment’s best inventor, diplomat, scientist, writer and business strategist.