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  • Angus Cloud’s Fez Was the ‘Backbone’ of ‘Euphoria’ Season 3 Before His Death Because Sam Levinson ‘Wanted Him to Stay Clean’ and ‘He Needed Something to Look Forward To’

    Angus Cloud’s Fez Was the ‘Backbone’ of ‘Euphoria’ Season 3 Before His Death Because Sam Levinson ‘Wanted Him to Stay Clean’ and ‘He Needed Something to Look Forward To’

    Euphoria” creator Sam Levinson focused much of the HBO series’ third season around Fezco, the character played by Angus Cloud, before the actor’s death from a fentanyl overdose in July 2023.

    In an interview with the New York Times, Levinson spoke about a version of Season 3 that he wrote before the WGA strike began in May 2023. “Angus was the backbone of that season. I used to even talk to him about it because I wanted him to stay clean,” he said. “So I would invite him over and I’d tell him what the plans were for the character. I’d say, look, he’s been in prison for a few years, so you’ve got to get that yoked prison body. Because I wanted him to start working out and taking care of himself.”

    Levinson also revealed that in his original scripts for Season 1, Fez died at the end, but he felt he “couldn’t do it,” saying that Cloud “needed something to look forward to or else he might get lost in the world.”

    “And then when I was writing Season 2 and I got to the end, I thought, OK, I’m gonna have to do it this time: Fezco’s gonna die,” Levinson continued. “And as we got closer, I just couldn’t do it, especially with everything we’d gone through. I wanted him to have something to hold onto, a tangible goal for the future.”

    At the red carpet premiere for Season 3, Levinson spoke to Variety about Cloud’s death. “Losing Angus was really hard for us as a production. I loved him very deeply,” he said. “I fought hard to keep them clean.” In the version of the the season that will premiere on Sunday, Levinson aimed to “keep [Cloud] alive” in the story, and wrote the episodes in honor of him.

  • Metformin May Offer Similar Benefits as Exercise for Those With Prostate Cancer

    Metformin May Offer Similar Benefits as Exercise for Those With Prostate Cancer

    Male stretching outside in a parkShare on Pinterest
    The diabetes drug metformin may provide similar results to exercise in people with prostate cancer. Image Credit: Brothers91/Getty Images
    • A common diabetes drug may mimic one key effect of exercise in those with prostate cancer.
    • Researchers found metformin boosts an “exercise molecule” linked to appetite and weight control, even in those unable to stay active.
    • While not a substitute for exercise, the drug could help individuals manage treatment-related weight gain and metabolic health.

    Regular exercise is associated with a wide range of health benefits, including a reduced risk of cancer.

    Physical activity is also important during the treatment of certain cancers, such as prostate cancer, where treatment itself may lead to weight gain or other metabolic dysfunction.

    Scientists previously identified an exercise-induced molecule — known as N-lactoyl-phenylalanine (Lac-Phe), a compound released during physical activity — associated with weight loss and decreased appetite, and it appears to be stimulated by metformin, a diabetes drug.

    In an exploratory study, researchers found that prostate cancer patients treated with metformin had Lac-Phe levels comparable to those seen after strenuous exercise. The findings were published on April 6 in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine.

    Researchers initially identified Lac-Phe, a molecule produced during exercise, in healthy people and athletes, including ultramarathon runners, and later found elevated levels in people with diabetes treated with metformin.

    “Altered metabolism is one of the hallmarks of cancer. So, what would happen with cancer patients treated with metformin?” said first study author Marijo Bilusic, MD, PhD, a genitourinary medical oncologist at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center.

    “In our study, we were very surprised to see that the level of Lac-Phe in our prostate cancer patients was exactly the same as the level of ultramarathoners. This has never been reported before,” he told Healthline.

    While metformin did not predict improved treatment response, such as PSA levels or tumor growth, it was associated with improved weight management, including among patients prescribed anti-androgen therapy, which is linked with weight gain.

    S. Adam Ramin, MD, board certified urologist, urologic oncologist, and medical director of Urology Cancer Specialists in Los Angeles, CA, who wasn’t involved in the research, called it “an intriguing preliminary study,” but cautioned that larger studies would be necessary to validate the findings.

    Bilusic and his team analyzed blood samples from men with prostate cancer enrolled in a clinical trial called BIMET-1, along with an additional group of individuals treated at a cancer center.

    In the trial, 12 patients with overweight or obesity (but not diabetes) were studied in detail out of 29 originally enrolled in the cohort. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either standard care alone or metformin at a dose of 1,000 mg twice daily, followed by combination treatment with the hormone therapy drug bicalutamide.

    To confirm their findings, the researchers also studied an additional 25 individuals with prostate cancer across a range of disease stages, including advanced cancer. Of these, seven were taking metformin. Across both groups, the team measured Lac-Phe levels and compared them before and after treatment.

    The researchers found that metformin consistently increased levels of Lac-Phe in prostate cancer, regardless of cancer stage, body weight, or other treatments. In the clinical trial group, Lac-Phe levels rose significantly after metformin treatment. In the broader participant group, those taking metformin clearly had higher levels than those who were not. The increases reached ranges similar to those seen after intense exercise.

    Importantly, people taking metformin also showed better weight control during hormone therapy, which is known to cause weight gain. In the trial, nearly all individuals on metformin avoided weight gain over several months of treatment, while those not taking it were more likely to gain weight. Although not conclusive, researchers believe this may be linked to levels of Lac-Phe in the body, which are associated with reduced appetite and food intake.

    While Lac-Phe is thought to act on the brain to suppress appetite, how it does so remains unclear. And higher Lac-Phe levels did not predict whether a person’s cancer responded to treatment. The study builds on the findings of the STAMPEDE trial, a major prospective trial published in 2025 that found that metformin improved weight management and lowered glucose levels in patients with prostate cancer, but showed no evidence of improved survival.

    “We know that men on hormone therapy, such as oral anti-androgen therapy, tend to gain weight, develop obesity, and metabolic syndrome. Metformin may prove to be effective in preventing these complications,” said Ramin.

    But, he added, “At this point, it is premature to recommend metformin to patients with prostate cancer on hormone therapy.”

    The importance of exercise after a prostate cancer diagnosis cannot be overstated.

    Research suggests that staying physically active is associated with a roughly one-third reduction in cancer-related mortality and nearly a one-half reduction in all-cause mortality.

    It is too early to predict the role metformin and, by extension, Lac-Phe might play in supporting prostate cancer treatment, but the findings are intriguing.

    Because people with prostate cancer tend to be older, they may be less likely to engage in regular physical activity. A pharmacological intervention that could help fill that gap would represent a meaningful addition to current treatment options.

    However, Bilusic cautioned that metformin is not an “exercise pill.”

    Exercise affects numerous systems in the body, including muscles, the cardiovascular system, neurotransmitters, and bones.

    Metformin doesn’t act on the body in the same way, nor does it have the same spectrum of effects. But in one specific pathway, increasing Lac-Phe, it appears to be meaningful.

    “There are many other aspects of the exercise that Metformin is probably not replacing,” Bilusic said. “But for some patients, they can’t exercise because they are in pain, [or] cancer therapy is making them fatigued. They are gaining weight. So, how can we reverse that? Taking a pill a day, that’s easier than running for a half hour in the gym.”

  • YouTube Premium’s US pricing is going up

    Another day, another subscription price hike, this time for YouTube Premium. Every plan for YouTube’s ad-free tier is going up, and depending on which one you have, you could be paying as much as $4 per month more.

    As reported by 9to5Google, YouTube has started emailing subscribers about the price changes, rather than announcing them publicly, and some Reddit users have posted screenshots of the emails they’ve received. The emails say that the increases will kick in during the June 2026 billing period. Individual plans are now $16 per month, up from $14, so a $2 hike. If you’re on a YouTube Premium family plan, you’ll now pay $27 per month, a $4 increase from the previous price of $23.

    As a reminder, YouTube Premium unlocks ad-free viewing and listening on YouTube (including YouTube Kids) and YouTube Music, as well as offline viewing and the ability to continue listening in the background with other apps open. A family plan allows up to six accounts to enjoy all of the same benefits.

    Both the Lite — which allows ad-free viewing and downloads for most, but not all, YouTube videos, and excludes music — and Music Premium plans are getting $1 increases, so the former now costs $9 per month, while the music streaming service is up to $12 per month from $11 before, according to 9to5Google. This makes it more expensive than Apple Music when taken on its own (YouTube Music Premium is also bundled with the YouTube Premium individual and family plans at no extra cost).

    YouTube Premium last raised its prices (also rather quietly) in 2023, also by $2 for the regular plan. The latest price hikes follow Spotify putting its prices up by comparable amounts back in February. Netflix also jacked up the cost of all of its plans last month.

  • How to watch the Artemis II landing

    After its history-making trip around the Moon, NASA’s Artemis II mission is set to return to Earth later today. The Orion spacecraft carrying astronauts Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch, Victor Glover and Jeremy Hansen is scheduled to splash down off the coast of San Diego at approximately 8:07PM ET. NASA will stream the landing on YouTube and its NASA+ website, as will Netflix and HBO Max. The official broadcast will begin at 6:30PM ET.

    After leaving Earth on NASA’s super heavy-lift SLS rocket and spending nine days in space, the most dangerous part of the Artemis II mission still lies ahead. It will take approximately 13 minutes for the Orion spacecraft to complete re-entry. During that time, it will be subject to temperatures of up to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit (2,760 degrees Celsius).

    Reentry is dangerous for any crewed spacecraft, but is of particular concern here because of a “skip reentry” during the Artemis 1 mission. At that time, the Orion crew vessel briefly used its own lift to “skip” back out of Earth’s upper atmosphere before re-entering for the final descent, suffering excess charring in the process. NASA spent months investigating and determined the craft was safe to fly, but Artemis II will take a more gradual approach back to Earth in hopes of reducing its exposure to excess heat.

    Still, this is the first time in 53 years that NASA will need to guide a human crew back from the Moon. Once all is said and done, however, the Artemis II crew will have traveled 695,081 miles (1,118,624 km), captured amazing images along the way and reminded the world what’s possible when nations work together.

  • Bitget Launches IPO Prime With Tokenized SpaceX Access Through Republic

    Bitget Launches IPO Prime With Tokenized SpaceX Access Through Republic

    Bitget has launched IPO Prime, a new product that gives eligible users access to tokenized pre-IPO offerings through a subscription model.

    • The first asset under the program is preSPAX, a digital instrument tied to the economic performance of SpaceX.

    Bitget is moving into tokenized private market access with a product that aims to bring pre-IPO exposure closer to retail users, not just institutions and private wealth circles.

    The exchange said Friday that its new offering, called IPO Prime, will begin with preSPAX, a digital asset linked to the economic performance of SpaceX. The private rocket company is currently valued at $1.54 trillion on secondary trading venue Nasdaq Private Market, according to the report.

    Bitget and Republic push pre-IPO access into tokenized form

    IPO Prime is powered by Republic and built around a subscription model. Eligible users apply for allocations in tokenized offerings, with allocation limits determined by user tier.

    Higher VIP levels receive access to larger thresholds, which gives the product a familiar exchange-style structure even though the underlying theme is private market investing.

    Once the subscription phase ends, the digital assets move into an over-the-counter market on Bitget, where they can continue trading. That is an important detail. The pitch here is not only early access, but also liquidity. Traditional pre-IPO exposure is usually defined by waiting. Bitget is trying to shorten that distance.

    The first use case, tied to SpaceX, gives the product immediate visibility. SpaceX is one of the most closely watched private companies in the world, and demand for indirect exposure has been strong for years.

    The bigger bet is on how private market investing gets distributed

    Bitget chief executive Gracy Chen said the product is meant to shift access to pre-IPO opportunities beyond institutional investors. That is the core argument behind IPO Prime. Let users participate earlier in a company’s growth cycle, then give them ongoing trading flexibility rather than locking them into a static private market position.

    There is a broader industry angle here too. Crypto exchanges have spent years trying to prove they can offer more than token speculation. Products like this suggest the next phase may involve using crypto infrastructure to repackage traditional private market access in a more liquid, app-based format.

  • Analytics Company Examines Critical Metric, Reveals Timeline for Bitcoin’s Bottom!

    The leading cryptocurrency, Bitcoin (BTC), surged above $70,000 following the ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran.

    With this rise fueling talk of Bitcoin reaching $80,000 and above, a CryptoQuant analysis revealed that the bear market in Bitcoin is far from over and outlined a timeline for Bitcoin’s next “bottom.”

    According to new CryptoQuant analysis, Bitcoin could find a bottom around $55,000 in the second half of 2026.

    In their latest analysis, CryptoQuant analysts examined the Bitcoin MVRV Z-score metric. According to their findings, the MVRV Z-score still needs to match previous bear market lows to signal a trend reversal in Bitcoin.

    Historically, for the MVRV Z-score to signal a bear market bottom, it needs to fall below zero into negative territory.

    “This metric is showing a decline, but it hasn’t yet entered the negative/below-value zone.”

    Because, at every low point in history, this value has fallen below zero. Right now, the market is just cooling down, it’s not in despair.”

    At this point, a CryptoQuant analyst stated that the last time the MVRV Z-score dropped below zero was the bottom of Bitcoin’s last bear market in 2022, adding that for 2026, this date aligns with October and December.

    “The target for Bitcoin is the $55,000-$60,000 range. This range aligns with a sub-zero MVRV Z-Score and historical data.”

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Stranded porpoise returned to open waters in Guernsey

    Stranded porpoise returned to open waters in Guernsey

    Odd News // 3 weeks ago

    Prosthetic leg, surfboard among Los Angeles Metro’s Lost & Found

    March 13 (UPI) — The Los Angeles Metro revealed some of the most unusual items in its Lost & Found, including a surfboard, a prosthetic leg and a 55-inch TV.

  • Al Gore to Lead Keynote Conversation at 2026 Sustainability in Entertainment Honors Hosted by THR and the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance

    Al Gore to Lead Keynote Conversation at 2026 Sustainability in Entertainment Honors Hosted by THR and the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance

    Three of the year’s most buzzed-about small-screen stories will receive big kudos at The Hollywood Reporter’s inaugural Sustainability in Entertainment Honors event taking place on April 23 in partnership with the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance.

    The invitation-only celebration will be held at the Bel-Air Hotel and highlight three hourlong series for their trailblazing work in crafting onscreen narratives that bring sustainability issues to the forefront, and behind-the-scenes sustainable production practices.

    The awards given will include: Legacy of Sustainable Storytelling, presented to ABC’s Grey’s Anatomy; Achievement in Sustainable Storytelling, presented to Hulu’s Paradise; and Achievement in Sustainable Production, to the Duffer Brothers’ upcoming Netflix series The Boroughs, which debuts May 21.

    Longtime Grey’s stars Chandra Wilson and James Pickens Jr. are confirmed to present their show’s award to Grey’s executive producer and showrunner Meg Marinis and Shondaland chief content officer Allison Eakle. Paradise executive producer/writer John Hoberg and writer Stephen Markley will accept on behalf of their show from series star Sarah Shahi. And the showrunners, creators and EPs of The Boroughs, Jeffrey Addiss and Will Matthews, will receive their series’ honor. Additional program talent will be announced before the event.

    “We are thrilled to partner with The Hollywood Reporter to shine a spotlight on remarkable leaders across film and television who are raising the bar for sustainability, both in how stories are made and in the stories themselves,” says Sam Read, executive director of the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance. “These three series exemplify the unique power of entertainment to connect with broad audiences by reflecting the world we live in, and the one we want to build.”

    Says THR editor-in-chief Maer Roshan, “We are proud to once again partner with the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance to celebrate great work being done to help make Hollywood and the entertainment industry more sustainable. And our fourth annual sustainability digital issue, publishing April 22, is the perfect editorial companion to these efforts.”

    Former Vice President Al Gore, who narrated and starred in director Davis Guggenheim’s Oscar-winning 2006 documentary An Inconvenient Truth, will appear at the event to mark the film’s 20th anniversary and take part in a conversation on the state of sustainability.

    The program will also feature a lively panel discussion among leading Hollywood sustainability-focused executives and creatives.

    The Sustainability Honors event marks the next phase in THR’s growing partnership with the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance, which kicked off at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival.

    Writer, director and producer Guillermo del Toro and his 2026 Oscar-winning Netflix film Frankenstein received awards at a special TIFF ceremony for Sustainable Production, while filmmaker Clint Bentley and star-producer Joel Edgerton received an award for Sustainable Storytelling for their 2026 Oscar-nominated Netflix film Train Dreams.

  • Lionsgate Promotes Laurel Pecchia, Expands Corp Comms Role

    Lionsgate Promotes Laurel Pecchia, Expands Corp Comms Role

    Lionsgate’s Laurel Pecchia is climbing at the Hollywood studio with a promotion to senior vp, corporate communications.

    Having joined in June 2022 as vp of corporate communications, Pecchia in her expanded role will work with Lionsgate’s Motion Picture and Television Groups on communications around film and television slates and its 20,000-title library sales.

    She will also manage communications for the studio’s AI, live and location-based entertainment, digital media and 3 Arts talent management and production efforts. Lionsgate is the studio behind John WickThe Hunger Games and other movie franchises. 

    “Laurel is an exceptionally talented and versatile spokesperson whose responsibilities have expanded across the full range of our communications activities,” Lionsgate chief communications officer Peter Wilkes said in a statement on Friday. “She combines a strong grasp of our fast-changing business environment with a remarkable work ethic, and she is well liked and highly regarded by her Lionsgate and media colleagues alike.”

    Her promotion follows Lionsgate having separated from the Outlander premium network Starz to create two standalone companies and comes as the studio potentially may participate in the current round of industry consolidation in Hollywood.

    Pecchia will also work on Lionsgate’s corporate media relations strategy, executive communications, employee communications and preparing quarterly board of directors presentations and earnings calls. 

    That follows Pecchia previously handling corporate and client media relations, writing executive scripts and press releases and managing internal communications at WME. Before that, Pecchia handled publicity at CBS Films. She holds a B.A. in Communications and French at Stanford University.

  • Cuban president defiant despite Trump pressure to resign

    Cuban president defiant despite Trump pressure to resign

    Cuba’s Diaz-Canel vows to resist US pressure to resign as Trump escalates threats, tightens oil blockade on the island.

    Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel says he will not bow to pressure by the United States to resign.

    “Stepping down is not part of our vocabulary,” he said in an interview with US broadcaster NBC News on Thursday.

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    The president described communist-ruled Cuba as a “free sovereign state” with the right to “self-determination,” adding that the island is not “subject to the designs of the United States”.

    “In Cuba, the people who are in leadership positions are not elected by the US government,” he said.

    The president since 2018 faces increasing pressure and demands for regime change from President Donald Trump’s administration.

    Trump has hinted that Cuba could face the same fate as Venezuela and Iran.

    “I built this great military. I said, ‘You’ll never have to use it.’ But sometimes you have to use it. And Cuba is next,” the US president said last month.

    Cuba’s main oil supply was cut off after Trump ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in January. The US has since imposed an oil blockade on the island and threatened tariffs on any country that sells oil to Cuba.

    ‘Hostile policy’

    Diaz-Canel condemned the US “hostile policy” that has left Cuba reeling from widespread power blackouts, fuel shortages and disruptions to water and food distribution.

    He also said the Trump administration has “deprived the American people from a normal relationship with Cuba.”

    Since returning to office last year, Trump has labelled Cuba an “unusual and extraordinary threat” to US national security and threatened a “takeover” of the island.

    Current tensions stretch back to the Cold War, when the US took an adversarial stance against left-wing governments across the Americas.

    The Cuban Revolution in the 1950s led to the overthrow of a US-backed military government. By the early 1960s, Washington had imposed a comprehensive trade embargo aimed at weakening revolutionary leader Fidel Castro.

    ‘We cannot betray Cuba’

    Despite US pressure, Russia has remained a close ally of Cuba.

    “We cannot betray Cuba. That is out of the question. We cannot leave it on its own,” Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said at a news conference in Havana on Friday.

    Last month, a Russia-flagged tanker carrying 730,000 barrels of oil docked in Cuba – the first to reach the island in three months.