According to TMZ, the superstars are in Jamaica to shoot a video content that will be used for their upcoming On the Run II Tour. In case you are wondering what part of Jamaica Jay Z and Beyonce are cruising, then wonder no more as they were at the famous Trenchtown where the music legend, Bob Marley lived for a while and always sang about. Jay Z and Beyonce will be shooting at Tuff Gong, Bob Marley's home, and studio.
Remaking History | TIME
2024-08-16
Tom Hanks is feeling frisky. Inexplicably, the bathroom of the hotel suite we’re in has a glass door. When Julia Roberts announces she needs to go, he gleefully pulls up a chair for a better view before giving Philip Seymour Hoffman a little lecture about turning 40 and getting rid of the extraneous–like, say, smoking. The three Oscar winners have gathered to chat with TIME’s BELINDA LUSCOMBE about their new film Charlie Wilson’s War, written by The West Wing’s Aaron Sorkin, directed by Mike Nichols and produced by Playtone, Hanks’ company.
How to watch the Republican debate airing on September 16
Don’t have a cable subscription? Unfortunately, there are limited online options to watch Thursday’s Republican primary presidential debate hosted by Fox News.
The main debate will be broadcast live from Cleveland at 9 p.m. ET on FOX News Channel, according to the network. It will also be streamed live at FOXNews.com and on the Fox News app, both of which require a cable subscription login.
scariest places on earth | Pulse Nigeria
2024-08-16
These are the five scariest places on earth: 1. Taos Hum ADVERTISEMENT
Taos residents in New Mexico are constantly hearing a low humming sound, similar to an engine in the distance. The sound, which could be outside or inside the head, is a disturbing phenomenon that has led to at least three people committing suicide because they couldn't bear the constant humming. One wonders who or what is responsible for that sound.
Dead of Night is directed by Chiemeka Osuagwu, whose credits include Far From Home (2022), Blood Covenant (2022), and A Weekend to Forget (2023). Set in a tiny village Ekeoba, the movie follows three teenage girls – Chinaza, Onyi and Ihuoma, played by Nollywood fresh faces Favour Etim, Diana Egwatu, and Nene Aliemeke - as they try to rob an abandoned house. But things take a terrifying turn when they become trapped in the house and find out it might be haunted by mysterious forces.
The cultural history of waist beads
2024-08-16
Waist beads are adornments or decorative pieces made from cowries, precious shells, beads, pearls, or small metal strung onto a wire or fish line(not the one used for fishing). These waist beads come in different lengths, waist sizes, colours, and shapes and could be worn in single strands or multiple strands as they sit beautifully on the waist of the wearer. As earlier stated, waist beads have been a part of African culture, especially West Africa’s, for the longest time.
Disreputability is tragically undervalued in modern movies. Streaming has virtually erased the concept, and the allure, of the “straight-to-video” release. Cheap, sensationalistic films are still being made, but they’re more likely to be appreciated only by niche audiences. There’s no such thing as a mainstream B movie—made truly with just a few nickels and not backed by a cool, name-brand studio—that hungry moviegoers, en masse, will trek out to see. Cheap thrills have become so scarce that they now feel as rare as gold.
The Terror of War: Nick Uts Napalm Girl
2024-08-16
This week, Facebook briefly removed and quickly reinstated one of the most powerful images to emerge from war—a 1972 photograph of a nine-year-old Vietnamese girl—after initially saying the image violates the company’s policies on displaying nudity. A censorship battle ensued.
Espen Egil Hansen, the editor-in-chief of Norway’s Aftenposten, slammed Mark Zuckerberg for a perceived abuse of power, calling the CEO of Facebook “the world’s most powerful editor.” On Friday, the company reinstated the picture and said “the value of permitting sharing outweighs the value of protecting the community by removal.
For a few months now, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly invoked the name of the Gaza Strip’s southernmost city: Rafah. His government has relentlessly threatened Hamas—and promised its own public—that it will soon send ground troops into the only part of Gaza that Israel has yet to invade. Netanyahu dangles the threat in almost every meeting and press conference, without mentioning that the manpower and logistics required to both recruit the required IDF troops and evacuate the civilian population would take weeks to organize.