Selasa, 19 November 2019

'Dancing With the Stars' recap: James Van Der Beek handed heartbreak on top of real sorrow - USA TODAY

Sean Spicer has left the building. But five dancers returned for the "Dancing With the Stars" semifinals that will go down in history as one of the show's most heart-breaking episodes ever.

All the dancing news paled in light of news from James Van Der Beek, who announced tearfully on the show that his wife, Kimberly, pregnant with their sixth child, had miscarried over the weekend..

The pain continued as the night went on. But the show went on too, with each dancer performing two dances in an effort to make next week's finals. The first was a "redemption dance" chosen by the judges as the worst dance from each couple's repertoire, followed by a new routine.

Even by "Dancing With the Stars" drama standards, the tears and pain were flowing at a new level on Monday.

Here's what went down.

How we got here: Last week, Sean Spicer got the judges' boot

Lauren Alaina and Gleb Savchenko

Alaina was in the hot seat after falling into the "bottom two" last week. (The judges took Spicer's scalp and allowed the country singer to continue.) Worse, Alaina had to open the show with her worst dance, a paso doble she double-dribbled in Week 2.

But her dance floor command to the fitting song "What Doesn't Kill You, Makes You Stronger" showed a different Alaina who rocked a Cat Woman-esque black velvet dress cut to show off her scandalous thigh-high stockings.

The final routine had judge Len Goodman, who trained her up in rehearsals, smiling.

"You had lovely expression and aggression," said Goodman, calling it a "terrific routine, so much improved."

The judges gave straight nine scores.

First dance: 27/30

For the second dance, Alaina revealed a Viennese waltz to "Humble and Kind." She floated out in a sheer pink dress and twirled through a number both graceful and seemingly effortless.

Goodman swooned again, calling it "so sophisticated, so classic." Even with the compliments, she didn't get a 10, as the judges rolled out straight nines.

Second dance: 27/30

Total score: 54/60

Kel Mitchell and Witney Carson

Mitchell was compelled to dance a tango after tanking it on Week 1, with judge Bruno Tonioli tutoring and telling the actor to be "like a panther." Mitchell was so game-face in his tango that he wore giant red rose designs on his pants as he executed near-perfect moves to "Get Ready." He showed achingly perfect dance frame. Tonioli was standing and proud at the end.

"You delivered with everything I asked," said Tonioli. calling it "pure, real, proper tango."

Inaba said this dance star has "come the furthest" on the show.

The judges gave straight nines.

First dance: 27/30

For his second dance, Mitchell performed a contemporary routine to "I Will Always Love You" dedicated to the childhood friend he lost to gun violence. Mitchell was all drama in the number, lifting Carson perfectly.

The judges were moved to tears, especially Inaba, who called it "riveting, it was pure. I am so grateful."

Goodman said it all with no words, simply getting to his feet and applauding, starting another standing ovation. The weeping judges reached for the 10 paddles for a perfect score, putting Mitchell in solid position.

Second dance 30/30

Total score: 57/60

Ally Brooke and pro Sasha Farber 

The pop star Brooke is going on a streak of three perfect scores over the past two weeks. But Brooke had to work the Viennese waltz she flubbed in Week 2 (where Goodman gave a six!). Brooke was all spinning dreams, twirling in her sparkling red dress against a night backdrop filled with stars, with Farber spinning her three times before sliding her across the floor to end it. Being Ally Brooke, she cried at the end.

Goodman, who trained her, called it a "wonderful dance. You went from a caterpillar to a butterfly." Still, he gave her a nine, her lowest score as Inaba and Tonioli swooned and pulled out the 10 paddles.

First dance: 29/30

Brooke is no dummy. She's twice been in the bottom two. So she knew her second dance Monday "could be my last." If so, she vowed to go down fighting in a brilliant banana yellow suit for a Charleston dance. 

She tossed off her top hat and did every exhausting dance move possible in the infectious routine, before comically, and literally, falling off the back stage.

The judges were floored, with Inaba saying she belonged in the finals with her "show-stopper."

Goodman called it a "joyful performance." Brooke was still catching her breath as the judges pulled their 10 paddles out for her perfect score.

Second dance: 30/30

Total score 59/60

Hannah Brown and Alan Bersten

Inaba has always pushed Brown. So it was fitting that Inaba was the tutor for Brown's rumba after she criticized the lack of hip action from the Week 3 original, calling it a "cheerleading dance." The pre-dance video showed tense standoff in rehearsals that ended with both Inaba and Brown in tears, and hugging it out. Brown then unleashed the hips to "Dancing With a Stranger," with Bersten, shirt fully unbuttoned, leading.

She moved her hips so much her hair fell in her face. Brown finished strong and gave Inaba another make-up hug.

"You improved a heck of a lot," said Inaba, adding Brown was "very comfortable in your hips. I'm proud of you."

The judges gave straight nines.

First dance: 27/30

Brown cried again talking about her "Bachelorette" days gone by and love lost in the video before her second dance. She poured out her heart in a contemporary dance, with some stunning lifts that showed tremendous trust in Bersten.

"The emotion came out; it was a great dance," said Goodman.

Second dance 27/30

Total score 54/60

James Van Der Beek and Emma Slater

The "Dawson's Creek" star is one of the favorites going into the finals, even with a his Achilles heel cha cha cha, which he flopped on during Week 2. Before he announced his tragic news, Van Der Beek's disco cha cha cha to "Canned Heat," with him clad in a silver-glitter disco shirt and tight trousers, was thrilling. It featured a back flip that had fans gasping, fist-pumping, and repeated throwing of hands to the ceiling. He even tossed Slater about before ending sliding on his knees to seal it.

But the judges were not in the mood for disco. Self-proclaimed "nasty guy" Goodman felt there were too many gimmicks.

"I would have like to have seen more cha cha cha. Too much messing about," he said.

Tonioli called it a "Disco cha cha extravaganza," but had problems with the routine. The judges gave straight eights.

First dance: 24/30

Before his second dance, Van Der Beek stunned the audience with news of his wife's miscarriage. There was not a dry eye in the house as Van Der Beek told how his wife, still in the hospital, urged him on to dance. He performed a tango in her honor.

The pain was etched on his face in the passionate dance, which added to the pathos. Inaba was noticeably weeping as she gave her thoughts and scores.

"I don’t know how you got through that," she said, wiping away tears. "But in the midst of all the tragedy you’re going through, you gave me great posture."

The judges gave straight nine scores. But with his scores from both dances, the longtime favorite Van Der Beek was very much at risk of getting voted off.

Second dance: 27/30

Total score: 51/60

So what happened:

Could Van Der Beek actually get sent home on the night he had delivered such tragic personal news? That was the question on everyone's mind as the judges' scores were tallied with viewers votes to determine who would be cut, and who would be in the finals.

Kel and Whitney were the first saved, followed by Hannah and Alan and a comically shocked Lauren and Gleb.

Sure enough, the last two couples were Ally and Sasha along with James and Emma. Jaw-dropping real pain on the show for Van Der Beek who kept his composure.

The judges had to make the awful decision over who was spared and who was sent home.

"Do I really have to?" Inaba pleaded tearfully. "The couple I want to save is Ally and Sasha. I'm so sorry, James." She then put her head in her hands.

The next, decisive vote went to Tonioli 

"It's incredibly hard," said the judge. "I have to say Ally and Sasha."

There was pure shock in the audience as it became clear, Van Der Beek was voted off.

The newly voted-off Van Der Beek hugged Slater with a look of peace on his face as the spared dancer Ally Brooke broke into tears, pleading to give her spot in the finals to Van Der Beek from the stage.

"Can I give it to James, please?" Brooke sobbed. It was not to be. Van Der Beek will not be competing in next week's finals.

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/tv/2019/11/19/dancing-stars-recap-real-tragedy-and-double-heartbreak/4234750002/

2019-11-19 07:09:31Z
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Senin, 18 November 2019

9 Hits And Misses During Disney Plus's Launch Week - The Federalist

In response to an interview question about the proliferating theme parks of the late 1950s, entertainment pioneer Walt Disney spoke on the unique ideas that drive Disneyland.

“Give the public everything you can give ’em,” said Disney, as featured in newly released “The Imagineering Story” docuseries. “Keep the place as clean as you can keep it, and keep it friendly. … Our young group of executives are going to stay with that policy because it’s a good business [model].”

Now the largest entertainment enterprise in the world, the company that bears his name seems to be hewing to that principle with last week’s launch of its family-centric streaming service, Disney Plus. Despite early technical hiccups, Disney announced its service — which launched with more than 530 films and 7,000 TV episodes — had 10 million subscribers on day one.

Its extensive library does not give the public quite everything, but Disney did over-deliver on its announcement, which under-promised. Executives stated early on the streamer would launch with four Marvel films and a limited Star Wars library due to existing contracts. With some wheeling and dealing, such as allowing the Starz channel a small ad on its website, Disney Plus actually featured 16 Marvel movies and all but two Star Wars entries at launch.

Even Disney’s treasured animation titles proved negotiable. The April launch event noted about 20 of its 57 feature-length animated movies would premiere. After fan demands, all but two (still on Netflix for a few months) went live Tuesday.

Some may consider the launch of a streaming video app hardly worth analysis. Yet Disney jumping into streaming media with this $4 billion investment — not counting how it potentially cannibalizes its own profitable DVD/Blu-ray sales and TV network businesses — represents a tectonic shift in entertainment.

Here are nine hits and misses from launch week of Disney Plus, along with some questions yet to be answered.

Miss: Technical Difficulties Blemish Launch Day

After two months of testing — even releasing the service free nationwide in the Netherlands to work out bugs and stress-test the service — Disney Streaming Services could not quite handle the demand as millions of new users tried to log on Tuesday morning.

Expert analysts note problems arose not from video-streaming infrastructure, which can apparently handle extensive traffic, but the process of verifying so many new users at once. According to one site that tracks tech outages, Disney Plus has been essentially stable since Tuesday. Some observers took the reports in stride.

“They’re trying to catch up to Netflix in a day,” said one entertainment analyst. “Netflix has had a long run, going from a mail-by-DVD service to an app that had like a thousand users then slowly built up. To start with millions of users trying to get on Disney Plus? I didn’t expect it to work smoothly until about three days after launch.”

Miss: Confusion About Devices, Compatibility

As technology changes how families enjoy entertainment, Disney has long been at the forefront. Yet transitioning to the streaming video era this week has had its challenges.

Last week, Disney finally announced its upcoming streamer would work on Amazon devices. But the exact specs of which smart devices are compatible weren’t available until Monday. Learning Apple TV second generation and prior would not work, for instance, sent some eager users into a mad dash for new tech.

Hit: Broad Selection of Past Disney Hits

With 4,000 hours of films and shows at launch, Disney Plus has only a fraction of the more than 32,000 hours of entertainment on Netflix. Yet the higher quality of these titles — from Marvel to Pixar, from Star Wars to Disney theatrical releases, and beyond — seems a treasure trove to many families with kids. “My family’s weekend movie viewing is set for the next 50 weeks and that’s not an exaggeration,” said Michael Foust, who reviews family entertainment for several media outlets.

Comedies such as “Monsters, Inc.,” “The Great Muppet Caper,” “The Kid” with Bruce Willis, and the “Home Alone” movies are all there, along with action adventures such as “The Three Musketeers,” sports biopics such as “Remember the Titans,” and rarely seen classics such as “Almost Angels.”

Miss: Most Originals Leave Audiences Unimpressed

A small selection of a dozen titles currently awaits those seeking out new content. Two are must-watch: “The Imagineering Story” docuseries from Oscar-nominated filmmaker Leslie Iwerks, and the Star Wars series noted below. The rest? A few could easily be YouTube videos (“Pixar in Real Life”), while others are typical reality TV fare (“Marvel Hero Project”).

Without the guiding hand of director and choreographer Kenny Ortega, the latest iteration of “High School Musical” has been panned as “lacking the earnest charm and infectious energy” of the original HSM films. Reviews are also mixed on new films “Noelle” and live-action “Lady and the Tramp.”

Hit: ‘The Mandalorian’ Wows Star Wars Fans

When Disney acquired Lucasfilm in 2012, fans were skeptical of what the family entertainment empire would do with the “Star Wars” saga. It announced a new trilogy of films to feature Han, Luke, and Leia in supporting roles. Then Disney promptly canceled animated series “The Clone Wars” from producer Dave Filoni, which had been gaining a following for its sharp storytelling.

Fast-forward seven years. Since “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” released in 2017, some have gone from cynical to boycotting their childhood-favorite series. The new trilogy wraps in December. Yet even Star Wars detractors are being won over by “The Mandalorian,” a multi-layered serial from producers Jon Favreau and Filoni that expands the galaxy far, far away.

Fans are also psyched that long-awaited season seven of “The Clone Wars” drops on Disney Plus in February.

Miss: Year-Long Wait for New Marvel Shows

More than any of the other mega-studio’s franchises, Marvel has gone all-in for Disney Plus. Eight original Marvel TV series are in development for the streamer. The first, “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,” starring Anthony Mackie, Sebastian Stan, and Daniel Brühl reprising their roles from “Captain America: Civil War,” is currently filming in Atlanta.

However, it will not premiere on the service until next fall, with further Marvel exclusive series to follow every four months or so. Considering what went into making “Avengers: Endgame” the highest-grossing box-office hit of all time, having to wait for Marvel TV to ramp up is an understandable discontent. At least fans can stream Marvel’s “Agent Carter” in the meantime.

Hit: Unexpected Titles Surprise Longtime Disney Fans

Old-school Disney fans are the hardest to please. After they heard of plans to launch with only eight of the 575 cartoon shorts produced during Walt’s lifetime, Disney got an earful. At the D23 Disney convention, film historian Leonard Maltin urged fans to demand more legacy titles on Disney Plus. Disney listened, including 62 classic shorts in the initial roll-out with more to be added soon.

Even more surprising were four other titles that arrived on launch day unannounced. Maltin worked for years on “Walt Disney Treasures,” a series of 30 DVD titles all currently out-of-print; he could get no confirmation the programs would hit the streaming service. Yet Disney Plus premiered with segments pulled from four “Treasures” DVDs, a welcome indicator Disney may also release the rest. With the excellent new docuseries “The Imagineering Story” and animation docs such as “Waking Sleeping Beauty,” it seems Disney values catering to longtime fans.

Toss-Up: How Are Deals Tying Up Past and Present Titles?

Disney CEO Bob Iger has continually stated that his team made its largest acquisition ever — buying out 84-year-old film studio 20th Century Fox for $71 billion — in large part to bulk up its Disney Plus and Hulu streaming services. However, only 17 Fox titles (most of them decades old) premiered on Disney Plus at launch.

In August 2012, Fox entered a decade-long deal with HBO for all current Fox releases to air on HBO networks and stream on its apps. (When announcing its upcoming HBO Max service, HBO even featured a few Fox family titles.) The Fox purchase included National Geographic Channel. NatGeo has produced documentaries for decades, but there’s no word on whether those legacy titles could make it to Disney Plus.

Hit: Nostalgic Fans Obsess Over Animated Shows

Nostalgia dominates entertainment today, illustrated again by what’s getting the most buzz on Disney Plus: dozens and dozens of animated TV shows. While Star Wars fans are notoriously obsessive, millennials will give them a run for their money, binging “The Simpsons,” “DuckTales,” “Recess,” “Kim Possible,” “X-Men: The Animated Series,” and especially “Gargoyles.”

In fact, aside from “The Mandalorian,” only one Disney Plus show has been trending online. Producer Greg Weisman, creator of comic-book drama “Gargoyles,” hopes through online activism to revive the animated show that is equal parts mythology, action, and science fiction.

With Disney’s past penchant for placing movies in the “vault,” might favorite shows disappear? Hakuna matata, if your subscription is current. Executives call Disney Plus the “permanent home” for Disney films and shows, with Disney continually adding legacy titles without rotating any out. Seven bucks a month covers all the Disney magic one can binge.

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https://thefederalist.com/2019/11/18/9-hits-and-misses-during-disney-pluss-launch-week/

2019-11-18 11:56:57Z
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Kylie Jenner Sells $600 Million Stake in Beauty Business - The Wall Street Journal

Kylie Jenner’s cosmetics brand was valued at $1.2 billion in a deal with beauty giant Coty. Photo: lucy nicholson/Reuters

Coty Inc. COTY 3.96% is paying $600 million for a controlling stake in Kylie Jenner’s cosmetics startup, wagering that the celebrity’s brand can revive a struggling beauty business based on CoverGirl and MaxFactor.

The fragrance and cosmetics company said it plans to buy 51% of Kylie Cosmetics, valuing it at $1.2 billion. Ms. Jenner, the youngest of the five Kardashian-Jenner sisters, founded the brand in 2015. She will remain the public face of the brand, which will be renamed Kylie Beauty.

Known for nude lip liners and lipsticks, Kylie Cosmetics this spring added a skin-care line. Ulta Beauty Inc. last year started carrying the makeup at its more than 1,100 stores.

Ulta Beauty last year started carrying Kylie Cosmetics makeup line at its more than 1,100 stores. Photo: Rick Kern/Getty Images for Ulta Beauty

Kylie Cosmetics is on track for roughly $200 million in sales this year, Coty said. It is part of a wave of fledgling cosmetics lines capitalizing on celebrity founders and social media-driven marketing. As sales of mass-market mainstays such as CoverGirl has floundered in recent years, upstarts such as Kylie and Glossier, a skin-care and makeup line developed by the founder of a popular beauty blog, are growing fast.

“This is where the growth of the market is,” Coty finance chief Pierre-André Terisse said in an interview. The brand is attractive both for its skin-care business and online presence, he said.

Coty, which is controlled by European investment firm JAB Ltd., has struggled with weak sales and executive turnover. The company is restructuring its operations and looking to sell its hair-care and professional beauty businesses, a collection of brands that account for nearly a third of its annual revenue. Last year, Coty’s annual sales were $8.6 billion.

The maker of CoverGirl, Clairol hair dye and OPI nail polish has floundered since acquiring dozens of beauty brands from Procter & Gamble Co. in 2016.

Coty stock has lost half its value since the deal, and the company this year took $4 billion in write-downs on the P&G business as it struggled to digest the brands. Shares were up 4% in premarket trading on Monday.

Write to Sharon Terlep at sharon.terlep@wsj.com

Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/kylie-jenner-sells-600-million-stake-in-beauty-business-11574084772

2019-11-18 14:00:00Z
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Minggu, 17 November 2019

The Scooter Braun-Taylor Swift feud just took a wild turn - Page Six

Scooter Braun’s Nashville, Tenn., office was shut Friday following threats allegedly sparked by Taylor Swift’s claim she was being bullied and barred from performing her old hits.

Braun’s company, Ithaca Holdings, was deluged with calls after Swift alleged that he and Big Machine Label Group co-founder Scott Borchetta were preventing her from performing her hits at the American Music Awards, and refused to permit her music to be used in a Netflix doc. She had asked her fans, “Please let Scott Borchetta and Scooter Braun know how you feel about this.”

Big Machine has denied Swift’s claims they tried to block her from performing certain songs at the AMAs or in her Netflix special and said, “Despite our persistent efforts to find a private and mutually satisfactory solution, Taylor made a unilateral decision . . . to enlist her fan base in a calculated manner that greatly affects the safety of our employees and their families.” Nashville Police said no threats were reported.

Swift’s team doubled down on her claims, “Scott Borchetta . . . flatly denied the request for both the AMAs and Netflix.” The star also claimed he told her she could only use her music if she agreed not to re-record her masters and “stop talking about him and Scooter Braun.”

Ithaca bought the masters of Swift’s first six albums and her former record label Big Machine for $300 million in June.

According to a source, Braun has repeatedly reached out to Swift since June to meet in person and broker a partnership, but she has ignored him. But Swift insiders say, “He should have reached out before the deal closed.”

A music source added, “Scooter never had a relationship with Taylor, he should have offered her a partnership when he bought the company. Even if he offers Taylor a 50-50 deal now and allows her to buy in, her masters have dramatically increased in value since the sale. Taylor is very unlikely to give Scooter hundreds of millions given the bad blood.”

Reps for Swift and Braun declined to comment.

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https://pagesix.com/2019/11/17/the-scooter-braun-taylor-swift-feud-just-took-a-wild-turn/

2019-11-17 14:23:00Z
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Ariana Grande 'very sick,' may cancel tour dates - Fox News

Ariana Grande told her fans she is "very sick" due to a bad sinus condition that may force her to cancel upcoming shows on her world tour.

The 26-year-old said on her Instagram Story on Saturday that “my throat and head are still in so much pain.”

ARIANA GRANDE ROCKS 'TWILIGHT ZONE'-INSPIRED HALLOWEEN COSTUME

While she sounds OK, “I’m just in a lot of pain and it’s difficult to breathe during the show,” she says in a message to her fans. “I just really don’t know what’s happening with my body right now and need to figure it out.”

Grande says she plans to see a doctor soon.

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She adds: “I’m scared that I might have to cancel some things, so this is kind just a heads up of like I don’t know what’s happening with my body, and I’m really disappointed and freaked out of why I can’t get better because it’s been over three weeks at this point.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/ariana-grande-very-sick-may-cancel-tour-dates

2019-11-17 14:24:25Z
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Prince Andrew claims photo with Epstein 'sex slave' is fake because he doesn't hug - New York Post

In an explosive new interview with the BBC, Prince Andrew stopped short of calling the infamous, 2001 photo in which he hugs one of Jeffrey Epstein’s “sex slaves” a fake — but he insisted it couldn’t have been him because as a royal, he doesn’t often hug.

At least not in public.

“I have no recollection of that photograph ever having been taken,” Andrew said of the controversial snapshot, which Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre has said was taken upstairs in the London mansion of Ghislaine Maxwell — a mutual friend of Andrew and Epstein.

The photo was taken on the day Maxwell told the then 17-year-old Giuffre that she was to do for the prince what she did for Epstein.

Prince Andrew with Virginia Giuffre in 2001
Prince Andrew with Virginia Giuffre in 2001

“It’s a photograph of a photograph of a photograph,” Andrew huffed in his interview with BBC journalist Emily Maitlis — and therefore impossible to confirm as a fake, he said.

“Nobody can prove whether or not that photograph has been doctored,” he said.

But it can’t be real, he reasoned, because “as a member of the royal family” he’s not big on hugging, he said.

“I’m terribly sorry, but if I, as a member of the royal family, and I have a photograph taken — and I take very, very few photographs — I  am not one to, um, as it were, hug,” he averred.

“Public displays of affection are not something that, that I do. So. That’s the best explanation I can give you.”

At other points in the interview, Andrew used the unfortunate word, “unbecoming” to describe Epstein’s pedophilia.

He also claimed he had a “peculiar” medical condition that would have prevented him from sweating on the 2001 night Giuffre says he perspired all over her on a London dance floor.

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https://nypost.com/2019/11/17/prince-andrew-claims-photo-with-epstein-sex-slave-is-fake-because-he-doesnt-hug/

2019-11-17 13:24:00Z
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Ariana Grande says she's struggling with 'so much pain' and may have to cancel a show - CNN

In an Instagram post Saturday, the pop star said her throat and head "are still in so much pain," and it's difficult to breathe during a show. She said she'd been struggling with the illness since her concert in London last month.
"I just really don't know what's happening with my body right now and need to figure it out," Grande said.
Although canceling the show is "the last thing i would ever want to do," Grande wrote, fans should take the post as a "gentle heads up" in case she can't "make the show happen" on Sunday.
Grande is scheduled to perform in Lexington, Kentucky, Sunday, the next stop on her world tour that ends in December.
Grande said she's taking medication and is on IV drips, "doing everything i possibly can to pull through."
Her fans wished her well and encouraged her to take care of her health first.
"We wouldn't want anything happening to our beloved Ari," Ayoade Fridaos tweeted.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/17/entertainment/ariana-grande-sick-trnd/index.html

2019-11-17 07:33:00Z
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