Sabtu, 13 Juli 2019

Friends, Family, Fugitives Remember Beth Chapman Of ‘Dog the Bounty Hunter’ In Aurora - CBS Denver

AURORA, Colo. (AP) – Friends and family of the late “Dog the Bounty Hunter” reality TV show co-star Beth Chapman gathered in Colorado on Saturday where they remembered her as tough and irreverent, yet full of love even for some of the fugitives she helped apprehend. Funeral services were held in Chapman’s home state after she died last month at the age of 51 in Hawaii, where she lived with her family.

(credit: WGN)


She had been battling cancer for about two years.

Chapman and her husband Duane “Dog” Chapman starred in the A&E show until it was canceled in 2012. The show followed the couple as they apprehended people who avoided arrest warrants.

(credit: WGN)

They later starred in Country Music Television’s “Dog & Beth: On the Hunt.”

(credit: WGN)

During Saturday’s services at the Heritage Christian Center, Duane Chapman recalled how he met his future wife when he posted her bond after she’d shoplifted a lemon.

(credit: WGN)

The couple married in 2006. By then, Duane Chapman — the self-proclaimed world’s best bounty hunter — already had gained fame for nabbing serial rapist and Max Factor heir Andrew Luster in Mexico in 2003.

“I never admitted she was going to die,” he said Saturday. “She said ‘How are you going to make it without me?’ And I said, “I don’t know … She will never be dead to me.”

(credit: WGN)

Duane Chapman recalled how his wife was prone to “chew people out real good. And I’m one of them. Because she always wanted people to know what happened if they go on her dark side.”

Long-time friend Mary Ellen Pollack, who runs a bail bonds business in Brighton, Colorado, said Chapman’s “tough-as nails” public persona belied a softer side.

(credit: WGN)

“She didn’t let anybody see that, and that’s simply because of the profession she was in,” Pollack said.

(credit: WGN)

(© Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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https://denver.cbslocal.com/2019/07/13/beth-chapman-funeral-aurora-dog-bounty-hunter-wife/

2019-07-14 02:29:00Z
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The killer-alligator movie Crawl is a solid antidote for summer blockbusters - The Verge

As the line between film and television continues to blur, big-screen movies are still supposed to flaunt their scope. In a summer where plenty of would-be blockbusters are withering at the box office, and plenty of potential moviegoers seem to be staying home to watch Stranger Things, size and scale remain selling points for the theatrical experience. Avengers: Endgame hops around planets and time-streams. Men in Black: International zips between continents like a James Bond picture. Even your friendly neighborhood Spider-Man takes a whirlwind tour of Europe.

Some of these big-scope adventures do deliver the requisite cinematic thrills. But as plenty of blockbusters deflate into disappointment, a different sort of summer movie has been making headway. In the lackluster summer of 2016, The Shallows (in which a stranded Blake Lively matches wits with a shark) and Don’t Breathe (in which trapped young people match wits with a wily, murderous blind man) provided more efficient and consistent thrills than a lot of their super-sized, mega-budgeted counterparts. Call them limited-location thrillers. So far this summer, the limited-location thriller to beat is the underhyped Crawl, in which a hurricane-stranded Kaya Scodelario matches wits with a pack of alligators.

Crawl isn’t as well-crafted as either The Shallows or Don’t Breathe, though it shares a producer with the latter: Sam Raimi, whose first two Evil Dead movies are gonzo versions of the limited-location thriller. Hit-and-miss horror auteur Alexandre Aja knows how to deliver lean, mean horror action. Crawl is far less tongue-in-cheek than his Piranha remake, but it doesn’t build to a fever pitch or deliver dynamite setpieces.

It does, however, maintain its tension in a way that outshines many of this year’s summer thrill rides. The setup is an ingenious hybrid of disaster movie and creature feature: College student Haley (Scodelario) drives to her old family home in the midst of a hurricane to make sure her dad (Barry Pepper), who hasn’t been answering his phone, is safe. She finds him gator-bitten and unconscious, and as their house floods, she realizes the alligators are pouring in along with the rainwater. Father and daughter must avoid both drowning and massive alligator teeth; much of the movie’s 87 minutes takes place in the rapidly flooding house.

That limitation is a major asset. Crawl has plenty of computer effects, but unlike so many movies whose reach exceeds their effects budget (especially in disaster-movie circumstances that seemingly call for large-scale destruction), it doesn’t require its characters to spend the entire movie in front of obvious green screens in a desperate simulation of epic scope. The weather effects are obviously computerized, but the house itself is a real set, flooded with at least some real water. When Haley first ventures into the basement to find her dad, Aja plays up the muck, gunk, and early hints of gore for all they’re worth. Because the set dressing feels so tactile, the movie creates a genuine sense of atmosphere in a potentially generic setting.

Content to explore its small-scale setting, the movie never drifts off into location-hopping weightlessness as Haley swims, jumps, and, yes, crawls around various tight passages and makeshift waterways. When the alligator bites come, they feel especially toothsome thanks to practical gore effects, and the stuntwork creates a more believable athleticism for its character—much moreso than stars who must be replaced by a CGI wire-frame cartoon every time they do something superheroic. If Crawl doesn’t have a standout setpiece, it’s because the whole thing moves so quickly and efficiently.

This includes the obligatory emotional backstory, which is basically a feature-length version of the “gymnastics” foreshadowing involving Malcolm’s daughter in The Lost World. Haley is a competitive swimmer. (Guess what stroke she specializes in?) Her dad is her former coach who may have pushed her too hard. Of course a bizarrely coordinated alligator attack turns into a proving ground for her swim skills, and maybe even a catalyst for family healing. This is all about as corny as it sounds, but like The Shallows, Crawl treats its lead character’s boilerplate with dignity, anchored by Scodelario’s no-fuss lead performance. It’s silly, sure, but it also has a pleasing clarity — nothing in this movie feels like it was frantically and haphazardly rewritten in the editing room. Alligators chase a resourceful swimmer; what’s to rewrite?

Yet even the studios that make movies like Crawl don’t always seem to understand the relative blessings they have on their hands. In spite of Aja’s decent track record, his movie wasn’t widely screened for press. This seems especially strange in a week where extremely mixed reviews for the would-be spectacle and scope of The Lion King popped all across the internet. This summer in particular, no studio should be ashamed to release an unpretentious, well-paced bit of entertainment like Crawl — and audiences shouldn’t feel ashamed to leave the comfort of their homes to check it out.

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/7/13/20693084/crawl-movie-review-alexandre-aja-kaya-scodelario-barry-pepper-thriller-alligator-attack

2019-07-13 18:30:00Z
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Ed Sheeran Feels Like a "Zoo Animal" in Public Because of His Fame - Cosmopolitan.com

"Yesterday" UK Premiere - Red Carpet Arrivals

Mike MarslandGetty Images

  • Ed Sheeran opened up about the anxiety the feels due to his fame.
  • It's caused him to feel like a "zoo animal" when he's in public.

    Ed Sheeran, who you may know as the guy who once sang in an episode of Game of Thrones, just got super candid about his struggles with anxiety in an interview with Charlamagne Tha God. Ed says that he gets anxiety "every day," and it's even lead him to get rid of his phone and cut down his friend group.

    He also takes a lot of time in the interview to talk about why he reallyyy doesn't like it when people take photos with or of him, and says,"I have no problem with talking to people. But it’s when people film me and stare at me. It makes me feel weird...It makes me feel like I’m not human. If you want to come up to me and have a conversation with me, even if we’ve never met, just come up. But what instantly cuts me off is that you’re having a moment with them which is so genuine and so nice and then at the end they ask for a picture."

    When fans ask for a pic, it ruins the interaction for him and sparks his anxiety. Ed says, “It puts you down to earth and you’re just 15 likes on Instagram. That’s all you are...Like if I am eating in a restaurant now, I would prefer to have a private room because if I eat in the public room I have people filming me while I’m eating my food. You feel like a zoo animal. I don’t mean to complain, I have a cool job and life. But I just want to avoid that.”

    So, note to self: If you ever see Ed Sheeran in public, don't ask him for a photo!

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    https://www.cosmopolitan.com/entertainment/celebs/a28385724/ed-sheeran-zoo-animal-fame-anxiety/

    2019-07-13 17:16:00Z
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    Camila Cabello & Shawn Mendes Spotted Kissing In San Francisco After Getting Cozy On Date – Watch - Hollywood Life

    It definitely looks like Camila Cabello and Shawn Mendes are more than friends! The pop stars were seen kissing passionately at a San Francisco restaurant in a new video.

    Despite recent claims that they’re just friends, Camila Cabello, 22, and Shawn Mendes, 20, were seen kissing tenderly in San Francisco. The two snuggled up in the new video, with Shawn lovingly placing his arm around the former Fifth Harmony star, and kissing her. Camila and Shawn have denied recently that they’re together, even though they’ve increased their PDA recently, coinciding with their new duet “Señorita.”

    Camila and Shawn were at Dottie’s True Blue Cafe on July 12, according to TMZ. Shawn had a show in Oakland last night, and another tonight. We’d be willing to bet that a certain brunette-haired beauty was at the show last night, and will be there tonight, as well.

    “Camila had just spoken at length about her bond with the “In My Blood” crooner with Clash in an interview. “I’ve never had a lot of friends,” Camila said. “I’ve always just had a few people in my life that I trust. I feel like it’s so rare to meet someone in this industry and find a person of that quality, and I feel like Shawn is that person for me.”

    “I just trust him, and no matter the level of intensity that he has around his career or I have, he is just normal, and that is so rare and precious to find in this industry,” she gushed about the star two years her junior. “To be able to hang out with someone and you don’t really care that they’re Shawn Mendes, you know what I mean? You’re just people, and that is definitely something that is rare.”

    Now that a video of them kissing has been spotted, we wonder if Camila and Shawn will come forward with their seemingly new relationship status. If anything changes, we’ll be sure to let you know!

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    https://hollywoodlife.com/2019/07/13/camila-cabello-shawn-mendes-kissing-san-francisco-date-video-watch/

    2019-07-13 15:26:00Z
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    Box Office: 'Spider-Man: Far From Home' Tops Friday With $13.4 Million - Forbes

    In holdover news, Spider-Man: Far From Home earned another $13.365 million on its second Friday of domestic release. That's a reasonable 59% drop from its $32.68 million first Friday. Since the Sony tentpole opened on a Tuesday, that was actually its fourth day of release.

    It's a better hold than Spider-Man: Far From Home's 73% drop on its second Friday in 2017. It is, however, a sharper drop for second Friday grosses compared to Transformers (-52%), Spider-Man 2 (-57%) and Amazing Spider-Man 2 (-50%). That might be cause for concern, but the MCU flick has already earned over $242 million domestic as of yesterday, so it's not exactly hanging by a thread.

    It has passed the likes of Doctor Strange, X-Men: Days of Future Past and X-Men: The Last Stand. It will swing past, sans inflation, Men in Black, Batman, Incredibles 2 and Amazing Spider-Man either tonight or early tomorrow as it sets the stage for a $43.5 million (-53%) second-weekend gross. If that comes to pass, it'll have earned $272 million in its first 13 days of domestic release.

    That 53% drop will be well above the 44% and 48% drops of Amazing Spider-Man (opened on a Tuesday in 2012) and Spider-Man 2 (opened on a Wednesday in 2004), But the movie so over-performed in its first six days that a lot of the demand has already been met. The concern, relatively speaking, is that The Lion King will do to Spider-Man: Far From Home what The Dark Knight Rises did to Amazing Spider-Man in 2012.

    Spider-Man 1 version dropped a brutal 68% in weekend three, but it recovered. Andrew Garfield's Peter Parker mostly had to contend with The Dark Knight Rises, The Bourne Legacy, Total Recall and Expendables 2 at the end of the summer. Comparatively, Tom Holland's Peter Parker will have to defend itself against Lion King, Once Upon A Time in Hollywood and Hobbs & Shaw in a potentially brutal one-two-three punch.

    Spider-Man: Homecoming dropped a record (for an MCU movie) 62% on its second weekend but then had clear skies in terms of kid-targeted biggies until Thor: Ragnarok in early November. Far From Home won't have that advantage, so I was hoping for a better hold this weekend just in case. Of course, if Far From Home continues to soar overseas (it should be over/under $750 million worldwide as of today as it crosses $800 million tonight or tomorrow morning), and if it thrives concurrently alongside the last three summer biggies, then the drop this weekend will be trivia.

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    https://www.forbes.com/sites/scottmendelson/2019/07/13/spider-man-holland-tomei-zendaya-gyllenhaal-lion-king-hobbs-shaw-tarantino-dark-knight-rises-box-office/

    2019-07-13 15:03:24Z
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    Ed Sheeran opens up about battling anxiety: 'I closed off from reality' - Fox News

    Global superstar Ed Sheeran has cut his friendship group to just four people and got rid of his phone as he battles social anxiety.

    The 28-year-old "Shape of You" singer admitted: “I get anxiety every day.”

    Ed added: “It creeps up on you. I’ve been working on it for eight years and I closed off from reality. Whether it’s getting rid of your phone or only looking at emails twice a day. Or cutting down my friendship group to the bare minimum just so I can trust everyone. I let people in from a, ‘Let’s hang out place’. There is letting in and then there is letting in.”

    Ed — who has sold 150 million albums and saw the success of his last tour make an incredible $628 million — said his crippling condition was sparked by the pressures from his worldwide fame.

    The singer, raised in Ipswich, Suffolk, spoke of his mental health battle in an interview to launch his latest album — No.6 Collaborations Project, above. He expressed his frustration at people talking to him with the sole intention of having a photograph.

    SWANSEA, WALES - MAY 26: Ed Sheeran performs during day 1 of BBC Radio 1's Biggest Weekend 2018 held at Singleton Park on May 26, 2018 in Swansea, Wales. (Photo by Dave J Hogan/Dave J Hogan/Getty Images)

    SWANSEA, WALES - MAY 26: Ed Sheeran performs during day 1 of BBC Radio 1's Biggest Weekend 2018 held at Singleton Park on May 26, 2018 in Swansea, Wales. (Photo by Dave J Hogan/Dave J Hogan/Getty Images)

    He even questioned why his wife Cherry Seaborn, 26, stays with him in the extremely revealing interview. He admitted fame has left him feeling disconnected and revealed he avoids going out.

    Ed opened up to explain: “I have social anxiety. I don’t like large groups of people, which is ironic given I play shows to thousands of people. I feel claustrophobic and I don’t like being around many people. I have no problem with talking to people. But it’s when people film me and stare at me. It makes me feel weird.

    “It makes me feel like I’m not human. If you want to come up to me and have a conversation with me. Even if we’ve never met, just come up. But what instantly cuts me off is that you’re having a moment with them which is so genuine and so nice and then at the end they ask for a picture.

    “It puts you down to earth and you’re just 15 likes on Instagram. That’s all you are. I was at a Marilyn Manson show and a man shook my hand and said he liked my music, and that was it. That was so nice. Like if I am eating in a restaurant now, I would prefer to have a private room because if I eat in the public room I have people filming me while I’m eating my food. You feel like a zoo animal. I don’t mean to complain, I have a cool job and life. But I just want to avoid that.”

    Never before has Ed, a naturally private person, revealed such personal information. He said his torment was sparked by the surge in fame which came from the release of his 2017 single Shape Of You from his album Divide. Up until then he had managed to live his life away from the spotlight.

    The record went platinum and Ed became a public figure overnight — meaning he was unable to go anywhere without being recognized. In that year, he was also awarded an MBE for his services to music.

    Speaking about the transformation, Ed said: “I used to live in New York and I went out every night but releasing Shape Of You took me to a new level of fame. I was meeting people every day from movies and music.

    “I was getting sucked up into it. I felt myself getting drained. If I lived in central London and hung out with people, I wasn’t sure if they were friends with me because of me, or who I am. That’s why I moved here.”

    British singer Ed Sheeran performs "I Was Made To Love Her" during the taping of "Stevie Wonder: Songs In The Key Of Life - An All-Star GRAMMY Salute."

    British singer Ed Sheeran performs "I Was Made To Love Her" during the taping of "Stevie Wonder: Songs In The Key Of Life - An All-Star GRAMMY Salute." (Reuters)

    Here, for Ed, is the $2.5 million estate he bought in Suffolk where he can remain completely out of the public eye. His house sits in the middle of the sprawling site — with Ed having purchased all of the houses on the grounds. He said of his decision to cut himself off: “All of these things are in place to protect my mind and it’s working, I think.”

    Following the success of "Shape Of You," Ed became locked into an endless cycle — going on two world tours which saw him on the road for four years straight. His career has seen him win a huge number of industry awards, including six Brits and four Grammys.

    A major turning point in Ed’s life was reconnecting with childhood sweetheart Cherry. The couple met aged 11 but they grew apart when they finished school. Cherry moved to America while Ed remained in the UK to work on his music.

    But after meeting up again in 2015, the pair started dating. The Sun exclusively revealed in February how the pair had tied the knot in an intimate ceremony at a church on Ed’s estate.

    He said he now tries to balance his life and make more time for Cherry and his four pals, who travel around the world with him. However, he still struggles to comprehend why Cherry chose to marry him.

    Ed admitted: “I constantly wake up every day and look at Cherry and think, why the f*** are you with me? She could be with anyone she wants to but she has chosen me.

    And I am saying all of the things that are wrong with me and you still want to be with me. She doesn’t add fuel to the flames. If she said, ‘Yeah, why am I with you?’ then you would get anxiety.

    “But I think it’s sweet to think the person you’re with is out of your league.  Imagine if you thought, you’re with me because I’m f***ing amazing. That would be the worst thing, just to take it for granted.”

    Ed’s candid interview is matched by some of the 15 tracks on his latest studio album, in which he sings about his insecurities about his marriage and his looks. The No.6 Collaborations Project contains a collection of duets with some of the biggest names in music, including Brit grime artist Stormzy and Canadian pop star Justin Bieber.

    In lyrics which feature in one of the tracks, Remember The Name — a collaboration with US rappers Eminem and 50 Cent — Ed suggests his insecurities are born from the fact he thinks he is a “misfit”.

    He raps: “I was born a misfit, grew up ten miles from the town of Ipswich.”

    In another track, "Best Part Of Me," he nods toward a lack of confidence and sings: “I go from thin to overweight from day to day it fluctuates — why the hell does she love me.”

    He also croons about his hair starting to thin and looking pale, which affects the way he feels. But he explained that being with Cherry and keeping his friends close have helped him to cope. Ed said: “I spend a lot of time on the road and I have to believe that what we have is everything.

    “Before I spent 800 nights on tour. I don’t remember 2014-2015, it’s a blur. Cherry has an office job so she can’t come out as much as she likes to. But now I take my friends on tour. I have four best friends and it’s not a blur now. We do nice dinners or we finish and we go and relax and have a bottle of wine in my room.”

    While his superstardom has caused anxiety, Ed said it had given him opportunities he would never have afforded if it was not for his success. He said: “I can get a private jet, so I can get another day with Cherry.

    “Money isn’t the object, time is. And my success has allowed my parents to slow down. I get more quality time with my dad now because he doesn’t work now, he comes on tour with me. I achieved a level of success financially very early.  I can’t be bought. I don’t need to be bought now.”

    And while he is adamant that he will never stop singing, Ed said he has started to think about the future and slowing down his career.  He added: “Something has to give. I’m starting a life with Cherry and I can’t spend the next 20 years on the road.

    “Kids would be the different thing. I wouldn’t mind sacrificing for them.  If someone told me you can’t tour again for the next ten years if you have kids that is fine, because that is what I have signed up for.  I’ve already achieved more than I thought I would, so now I’m just trying to have fun.”

    This article originally appeared in The Sun

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    https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/ed-sheeran-anxiety

    2019-07-13 14:47:36Z
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