Sunday, October 2, 2022

Mark Consuelos celebrates 'sexy' Kelly Ripa on her 52nd birthday - Page Six

Mark Consuelos is celebrating “sexy” Kelly Ripa on her 52nd birthday.

The soap opera star took to Instagram on Sunday to pay tribute to his wife with seven stunning photos snapped over the years.

“Happy Birthday Sexy!!!” Consuelos, 51, captioned it. “What a year of accomplishments. So proud of you.❤️❤️❤️.”

Many of the couple’s celeb pals took to the comments section to echo Consuelos’ sentiments, including Lee Daniels, Amy Sedaris and Rachel Harris.

“Ageless,” actor Benjamin Bratt gushed, with producer Gary Janetti adding, “HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KELLY!! ❤️”

Consuelos and Ripa, who met while starring in “All My Children” together, tied the knot in 1996. They share three kids – Michael, 25, Lola, 21, and Joaquin, 19 – and recently celebrated their 26th wedding anniversary in May.

Earlier this month, Ripa admitted to People that she and Consuelos were “too young” when they got married. At the time, they were both 25.

“On paper, it should not have worked, and when it didn’t work, we really worked at it,” she explained.

“We fought for our marriage when it would have been easier to quit and throw in the towel. We didn’t know any other way.”

Haute Living Celebrates Kelly Ripa And The Release Of "Live Wire" With Parfums de Marly And Telmont Champagne At Scarpetta
Ripa and Consuelos recently celebrated their 26th wedding anniversary in May.

Getty Images for Haute Living

92nd Annual Academy Awards - Arrivals
Ripa and Consuelos recently celebrated their 26th wedding anniversary in May.

Getty Images

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In that same interview, Ripa said she was worried she and the former “Riverdale” star would “get divorced” as their kids went to college and they became empty nesters.

“It’s scary, thrilling, liberating, shocking … and quiet,” the “Live with Kelly and Ryan” co-host explained. “There were moments when I was like, ‘We’re going to be that couple: Our third child goes to college, and we get divorced because this is it.’”

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Eliza Carthy: ‘Folk music is sexy and filthy and at the end of the night you fall over. That’s how I live’ - The Guardian

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Eliza Carthy: ‘Folk music is sexy and filthy and at the end of the night you fall over. That’s how I live’  The Guardian

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Woman dances to 'I'm Sexy' song at Temple Mount, enrages Palestinians - The Jerusalem Post

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Woman dances to 'I'm Sexy' song at Temple Mount, enrages Palestinians  The Jerusalem Post

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Interview With the Vampire Review: AMC Series Is Sexy, Smart - TheWrap

There’s nothing new about TV vampires, and the tale of “Interview With the Vampire” is even less new. And yet somehow, AMC’s adaptation of the Anne Rice classic feels like something we haven’t seen before. It’s sensitive, disturbing, campy and beautiful, and while it’s violent, there’s a gorgeous creativity to the violence, as seen in Episode 1 when Lestat (Sam Reid) punches right through a man’s head. If you’re feeling like there’s nothing new to say about vampires — which would be understandable, given pop culture’s fondness for them — you might be surprised by what you find here.

For the most part, the new series keeps to the broad strokes of the original story and the 1994 film adaptation. A journalist, Daniel Molloy (Eric Bogosian), is interviewing a man named Louis de Pointe du lac (Jacob Anderson), who is a vampire who has a lot to say about the complicated relationship he had with his maker, Lestat de Lioncourt. But in this story, Daniel is much older and dealing with a Parkinson’s diagnosis.

It’s 2022, and he’s managed to stay healthy despite the pandemic, and he and Louis are old … not exactly friends. They’re tense acquaintances, having met for multiple interviews in the past — including one in San Francisco, like in the movie. Louis has summoned Daniel halfway around the world for one last chat, hoping to get Daniel to understand him, his lifestyle and the people he has loved. But no longer is Louis a plantation owner in the 1700s who chastises his cohorts for feeding on slaves. Now, Louis is a queer Black man who was born in the late 1800s and made a living and did his best to avoid trouble by running a brothel in a New Orleans neighborhood called Storyville.

‘Interview With the Vampire’ Cast on Comparisons to ’94 Film: ‘Why Compete?’ Both ‘Can Exist at the Same Time’

Lestat, a hundred year old vampire with few cares in the world, is impressed by Louis after witnessing him in a fight in front of the brothel, and strikes up a friendship that quickly turns into more than that. The question then becomes what “more” actually means. Louis admits that he’s always known he was gay, and he and Lestat certainly share an attraction and many steamy sex scenes (including a threesome or two), but do they love each other? Can they ever really equally love each other, when Lestat is the one who forced Louis into becoming a vampire?

And then there’s Claudia (Bailey Bass), the young girl who Louis wants to save from dying in a fire. She’s Black, and older now than she was in the original story, but she’s still very much a child whose existence complicates Louis and Lestat’s relationship even further. To Louis, she’s the daughter, or at least the loving family, he could no longer have as a vampire. To Lestat, she’s just a small vampire who needs to learn how to survive and thrive. Louis is trying to have his cake and eat it too, which irritates Lestat to no end. Meanwhile, Claudia is growing up mentally but not physically, and senses that she’s stuck in a messed up situation with these two men, which leads her to act out in increasingly violent ways.

Five of the first season’s eight episodes were given to critics for review, so it’s not yet clear if the show sticks the landing, or how it sets up Season 2 (which has already been ordered). But what is clear is that this adaptation found a way to breathe new life into a story written almost 50 years ago, turning it on its head while still honoring the original idea.

Louis is a Black man who has to deal with the overt racism of the early 20th century as well as the trauma that comes with being a vampire in an emotionally abusive relationship with a manipulative older white man. That is very much a part of the story, but it’s not all. He’s also a gay man with complicated feelings for someone who gave him a new life, and for his new abilities as a vampire. He can’t visit his family during the day or have his own kids, but he can read thoughts and live forever. Is that enough of a tradeoff?

Since the 1994 movie version of “Interview,” we have been inundated with humanized, romanticized vampires. “Twilight,” “The Vampire Diaries” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” gave us centuries-old vampires becoming obsessed with human teen girls to the point of self-destruction. Immortal men with magical powers fight off their monster instincts to cradle a fragile human who is way less afraid than she should be, while we fight about which team we’re on. Which undead murderer should she date? Whose history of brutal slayings can we more easily forgive? That’s not what’s happening here, and it allows for a different exploration of what it means to live forever. There’s still romance here, but vampirism is somehow made both more and less attractive than previous shows have depicted it.

The only downside is that the framing device leaves little room for suspense. Much of the story, at least in the first few episodes, is told through voiceover and montage, and time passes quickly, making it harder to feel really engrossed in what’s happening. The true test of the series will be what comes next, as the relationship between Louis, Lestat and Claudia explodes and the present day story with an increasingly irritated Daniel comes to a head.

Based on what we’ve seen so far, there’s no reason to think the back half of the season won’t be as good as the front half, but there’s also room for it to be even better.

“Interview With the Vampire” premieres on AMC and AMC+ on Oct. 2 at 10:05 p.m. ET/PT.

Anne Rice’s ‘Interview With the Vampire’ Trailer Finds ‘Thrones’ Alum Jacob Anderson ‘Hunted’ by Lestat (Video)

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'I very rarely feel sexy' - New Chelsea boss Potter vows not to change... and there's no Lamborghini! - Goal.com

Graham Potter says that he won't become a "sexy" manager after taking over at Chelsea and will stay true to himself and his managerial philosophies.

  • Potter won't become a 'sexy' manager
  • Sticking to his Brighton principles
  • Takes charge of first PL game as Chelsea boss

WHAT HAPPENED? During his time at Brighton, Potter had claimed he'd never become a "sexy" manager after he'd been linked with taking over at Everton in January 2022. Will he be forced to change now he's at an elite club? Not a chance!

WHAT THEY SAID: Asked whether he was going to be reviewing his previous "sexy" manager rebuttal, Potter said: "I sincerely hope not, would be my instinctive answer. I very rarely feel sexy! If you ever have any success or you’re trying to do anything, you have to be true to yourself, I think. There's no Lamborghini on order, I'm still driving the same car that I picked up in England when I returned from Swansea."

THE BIGGER PICTURE: Sexy or not, this is Potter's time to shine. The new man in charge at Chelsea proved himself an intelligent and shrewd operator at the highest level of English football during his time at Brighton and it will be intriguing to see how he now copes with the demands of a side that will expect almost instant success.

IN A PHOTO:

Graham Potter Chelsea 2022-23Getty Images

WHAT NEXT FOR POTTER? The 47-year-old takes charge of his first Premier League game as Chelsea boss when the Blues face Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park on October 1.

How will Potter fare? 🔵

Where will Chelsea finish in the table at the end of the 2022-23 Premier League season?

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Saturday, October 1, 2022

'I very rarely feel sexy' - New Chelsea boss Potter vows not to change... and there's no Lamborghini! - Goal.com

Graham Potter says that he won't become a "sexy" manager after taking over at Chelsea and will stay true to himself and his managerial philosophies.

  • Potter won't become a 'sexy' manager
  • Sticking to his Brighton principles
  • Takes charge of first PL game as Chelsea boss

WHAT HAPPENED? During his time at Brighton, Potter had claimed he'd never become a "sexy" manager after he'd been linked with taking over at Everton in January 2022. Will he be forced to change now he's at an elite club? Not a chance!

WHAT THEY SAID: Asked whether he was going to be reviewing his previous "sexy" manager rebuttal, Potter said: "I sincerely hope not, would be my instinctive answer. I very rarely feel sexy! If you ever have any success or you’re trying to do anything, you have to be true to yourself, I think. There's no Lamborghini on order, I'm still driving the same car that I picked up in England when I returned from Swansea."

THE BIGGER PICTURE: Sexy or not, this is Potter's time to shine. The new man in charge at Chelsea proved himself an intelligent and shrewd operator at the highest level of English football during his time at Brighton and it will be intriguing to see how he now copes with the demands of a side that will expect almost instant success.

IN A PHOTO:

Graham Potter Chelsea 2022-23Getty Images

WHAT NEXT FOR POTTER? The 47-year-old takes charge of his first Premier League game as Chelsea boss when the Blues face Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park on October 1.

How will Potter fare? 🔵

Where will Chelsea finish in the table at the end of the 2022-23 Premier League season?

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Sexy - Artsy

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Sexy  Artsy

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In ‘Hedda,’ Tessa Thompson Puts a Sexy, Messy Spin on the ‘Female Hamlet’ - The New York Times

[unable to retrieve full-text content] In ‘Hedda,’ Tessa Thompson Puts a Sexy, Messy Spin on the ‘Female Hamlet’    The New York Times fr...