If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, The Hollywood Reporter may receive an affiliate commission.
Following Bath & Body Works’ second iteration of its fan-favorite Disney Princess Collection, the beloved brand is delivering yet another buzzy collaboration. This time, it’s with lifestyle and accessories label Vera Bradley. Released with Mother’s Day gifting top of mind, the limited-edition fashion-meets-fragrance drop makes for the ultimate token of appreciation, offering wallet-friendly luxury for moms with impeccable taste.
Available while supplies last at BathAndBodyWorks.com, the 22-piece collection spans perfume, body care, home fragrance, gift sets and accessories. Exclusive to this collaboration, the two coveted brands came together to create a brand-new fragrance, Peach Blossom & Nectar, and a brand-new Vera Bradley print — fittingly, decked out in peaches. Prices range from $1.95 for the PocketBac Hand Sanitizer to $69.95 for the Eau De Parfum.
Bath & Body Works x Vera Bradley Peach Blossom & Nectar Eau De Parfum
1.65 fl oz.
Bath & Body Works x Vera Bradley Peach Blossom & Nectar 3-Wick Candle
14.5 oz.
Bath & Body Works x Vera Bradley Peach Pedestal 3-Wick Candle Holder
Back to Vera Bradley x Bath & Body Works’ limited-release lineup, the partnership welcomes two Rewards member-exclusive gift sets, each containing a paisley-patterned cosmetics case — one in blue and one in pink — filled with three coordinating products from the collaboration. (Bath & Body Works’ Loyalty Rewards is free to join here.) Each gift set retails for $34.95, and will be available in store and online through May 11, 2026, while supplies last.
Bath & Body x Vera Bradley Blue Paisley Gift Set
Fragrances include Blue Washed Sky and Pink Berry Burst.
Bath & Body x Vera Bradley Pink Paisley Gift Set
Fragrance notes include berry punch, apple blossom and sparkling florals.
Check out a few more gifting favorites from the Vera Bradley x Bath & Body Works collection below, and shop the full inventory at BathAndBodyWorks.com. And for even more Mother’s Day gifting inspiration, visit Bath & Body Works’ dedicated gift shop here.
Bath & Body x Vera Bradley Peach Spray Sanitizer & Lip Holder
United States President Donald Trump is considering asking Arab countries to cover the cost of the US-Israel war on Iran, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt has said.
“I think it’s something the president would be quite interested in calling them to do,” Leavitt told reporters at a news briefing on Monday.
“I won’t get ahead of him on that, but certainly, it’s an idea that I know that he has and something that I think you’ll hear more from him on.”
Such a mechanism would be similar to how US allies helped fund Washington’s intervention during the Gulf War in 1990.
On Monday, Trump also indicated that he may be satisfied with bringing the war to a close even without the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, suggesting that “other partners” who rely more heavily on exports shipped through the narrow waterway, which Iran closed shortly after the war began at the end of February, should take on the burden of managing that crisis.
In peacetime, about 20 percent of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas supplies are shipped through the strait. This has forced the price of Brent crude oil, the global benchmark, as high as $116 per barrel this week, compared with a pre-war price of about $65 and has sparked major supply concerns across the globe. The US, however, is largely self-sufficient when it comes to these resources.
For its part, Tehran has stated that the US should pay reparations to compensate victims of the war in Iran as a condition for any ceasefire to take effect.
So far, there has been no indication from Middle Eastern governments – particularly members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), which have themselves been directly affected by Iranian strikes on US military assets and infrastructure in their territories – about whether they are prepared to help fund the war. The overall cost, which could run to tens of billions of dollars, analysts said, is still unclear.
Unlike in the 1990-1991 Gulf War, GCC and other Arab states did not ask the US to intervene in Iran before strikes began on February 28, experts pointed out.
“This would have made sense if it was those GCC states that advocated for this war to happen, but they actually advocated for the war not to happen in the lead-up to the war. They continue to call for diplomacy and de-escalation,” Zeidon Alkinani, founding director of the Arab Perspectives Institute, told Al Jazeera.
“The country that seems to be worthy to take and handle the costs would be Israel. The Israeli government … is the party and the agency that has convinced and pushed the United States to take this war on,” Alkinani added.
If the US were to press Arab countries to fund the war on Iran, it would not be the first time the US has tried to – often successfully – make other nations pay for wars it has started or been heavily involved in.
Gulf War
In August 1990, then-Iraqi President Saddam Hussein ordered the invasion of Kuwait, accusing it of overproducing oil to drive down prices and harming its northern neighbour’s war-battered economy after its protracted conflict with Iran for much of the 1980s.
Iraq also revived a longstanding territorial claim over Kuwait dating back to Ottoman- and British-era borders to justify its invasion.
The Iraqi army rapidly overran Kuwait, occupying its capital within days and forcing the 13th emir of Kuwait, Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah, to flee to Saudi Arabia, where he led the government in exile while Iraqi forces controlled the country.
In January 1991, the US led a global coalition of several dozen countries, including Western, Arab and other Muslim-majority states, to force out Iraqi forces at the request of Kuwait and several of its Gulf neighbours, especially Saudi Arabia. The invasion was named Operation Desert Storm.
The conflict lasted just over six weeks with its main combat phase running from mid‑January to the end of February 1991. The war cost the coalition $61bn at the time, worth about $140bn today.
The war was mostly funded as it progressed by a group of nations comprising Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Germany and Japan. Together, they provided $54bn, about 88 percent of the cost of the war.
Most of those contributions were footed by Saudi Arabia, which paid $16.8bn at the time, covering 27 percent of the war costs, and Kuwait, which provided $16bn, or 26 percent of the war costs.
Japan contributed $10bn (16 percent), Germany spent $6.4bn (10 percent), the UAE provided $4bn (6.5 percent) and South Korea chipped in $251m (0.5 percent).
The US covered 12 percent of the costs of the war – $7.3bn, according to figures published by the Pentagon in the early 1990s.
Post-World War II
World War II officially began when Germany invaded Poland in 1939 amid Nazi expansionism.
As a result, Britain and France declared war on Germany a couple of days later.
Japan had already been at war in China since 1937, and in 1941, Japan attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. This pulled the US into the war.
The war ended in 1945: Soviet troops took Berlin, and Germany surrendered; weeks later, the US dropped two atomic bombs on Japan, which too then surrendered.
From 1948 to 1951, the US implemented the Marshall Plan, a US aid plan for Europe’s recovery from the devastation of the war. The US provided more than $13bn in economic support to rebuild Western European economies and contain Soviet influence.
But war reparations were also paid by Japan and Germany, who were forced to accept occupation.
Japan paid more than $1bn from the 1950s to the 1970s to several Asian countries through a patchwork of bilateral treaties and “economic cooperation” agreements.
Germany paid tens of billions of dollars of reparations and compensation. However, there is no single, universally agreed total figure.
While Japanese and German reparations did not go to the US, both countries have spent billions of dollars on the upkeep of US military bases on their territories since World War II. Japan spends about $1.4bn a year, and Germany in excess of $1bn annually, on these bases.
While it was not an instigator of this conflict, the US was at first a key ally of Ukraine, providing Kyiv with military support to counter Russian attacks.
Indeed, the US committed the largest amount of aid to Ukraine – 114.64 billion euros ($134bn) – from January 24, 2022, to June 30, 2025.
This included 64.6 billion euros ($75bn) in military aid, 46.6 billion euros ($54bn) in financial aid and 3.4 billion euros ($4bn) in humanitarian aid.
The European Union has been the second biggest donor at 63.19 billion euros ($74bn), followed by Germany (21.29 billion euros or $25bn), the United Kingdom (18.6 billion euros or $21bn) and Japan (13.57 billion euros or $15bn).
At the same time, Washington has urged European allies to supply weapons to Ukraine and ramp up their own defence spending, helping drive US foreign arms sales to a record $318.7bn in 2024.
Since returning to office in January 2025, Trump has withdrawn 99 percent of US support, shifting the financial burden to European nations instead.
Rather than provide aid, Washington is now selling weapons to Ukraine’s European allies. In July, for example, the US and Germany struck a deal through which Germany will buy US-made air defence systems, such as Patriot systems, to make them available to Ukraine.
(Al Jazeera)
That same month, Trump announced he had approved $10bn in sales of weapons for Ukraine to be paid for by Ukraine’s European allies.
He told reporters that after spending billions to help Ukraine since 2022, “we’re getting our money back in full.”
The Kiel Institute’s Ukraine Support Tracker shows that support to Ukraine has remained stable since the withdrawal of nearly all US funding because Europe has ramped up its support by about two-thirds.
In 2025, Europe contributed about $70bn in military and financial aid to Ukraine while the US contribution fell to $400m.
Mario and Luigi are about to turbocharge the box office.
“The Super Mario Galaxy Movie” is aiming for $175 million to $180 million in its first five days of release. Since its predecessor, 2023’s “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” was enormously popular, exhibitors and independent tracking services believe that initial ticket sales will power to $190 million to $200 million. Like the original, Universal is getting a jump on the weekend by launching the family film in 4,000 North American theaters on Wednesday.
At the international box office, “Mario” is expected to generate at least $175 million, bringing its global tally to somewhere around $350 million to $375 million. “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie” will easily rank as the biggest debut of the year, ahead of March’s “Project Hail Mary” with $80.5 million in North America and $140 million globally over the traditional three day weekend.
These are blockbuster figures, but “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie” will need to climb toward the higher end of projections to match the start of the first film. “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” powered to $204 million in its five-day domestic debut (including $146 million over the traditional weekend) and $173 million overseas, resulting in a stellar $377 million worldwide. Thanks to four-quadrant appeal and multi-generational love for the Nintendo video game, “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” ended up as the second-highest grossing release of 2023 with $1.3 billion.
“The Super Mario Galaxy Movie” cost $110 million to produce, not including the studio’s global promotional efforts. Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic returned to direct the sequel, which follows the Brooklyn-based plumbers known as Mario and Luigi as the venture into outer space. They’re joined by new and old pals including Yoshi, Princess Peach and Toad as they face off against Bowser and his son, Bowser Jr. The voice cast is led by Chris Pratt as Mario, Anya Taylor-Joy as Princess Peach, Charlie Day as Luigi, Jack Black as Bowser, Keegan-Michael Key as Toad, Donald Glover as Yoshi and Benny Safdie as Bowser Jr.
This weekend’s other new release is A24’s twisted romance tale “The Drama,” starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson. Bolstered by positive reviews, it’s targeting a solid launch around $12 million to $15 million from 4,000 domestic venues. That’s in line with A24’s breakout hit “Materialists” ($11.3 million to start) and Zendaya’s last film “Challengers” ($15 million to start), which appealed to similar demographics as “The Drama.” Directed by Kristoffer Borgli, the R-rated film follows a happily engaged couple whose wedding week goes off the rails after an unexpected revelation. It carries a budget of around $28 million.
“Mario” will tower over the domestic box office and knock down the reigning champ, Amazon MGM’s “Project Hail Mary.” The space odyssey, starring Ryan Gosling, is projected to add $30 million in its third weekend of release. So far, the film has grossed $164 million domestically and $300 million globally after 10 days on the big screen. It already ranks as Amazon’s highest grossing film of all time, overtaking 2023’s “Creed III” with $276 million worldwide.
“Heated Rivalry: The Unauthorized Musical Parody” will run Off-Broadway this spring following eight sold-out concert performances earlier this month. Inspired by the hit show about hockey and gay romance, “Heated Rivalry: The Unauthorized Musical Parody” follows starry-eyed golden boy Shane Hollander on “his journey from power center to power bottom,” according to a press release. Written by Dylan MarcAurele, the production will star Jay Armstrong Johnson as Ilya Rozanov and Jimin Moon as Shane Hollander.
Here’s the official logline: “Relive all of the moments from the show that made you wet (with tears) up close on the small-stage by an incredible cast of Broadway actors who thought they were auditioning to be in Season 2. Sporting a bop-infused score, scene-stealing cameos by characters like ‘Rose Landry’ and ‘Ilya’s Ass,’ and time jumps absolutely no one can keep track of, audiences will find themselves hot, bothered, and probably saying, ‘….Girl!’ Because with love, sometimes it comes when you least expect it… and sometimes, it comes hands-free. So, grab a Canada Dry and join us for this hot and steamy romp!”
Performances for the full, staged run of “Heated Rivalry: The Unauthorized Musical Parody” will begin on May 12 at the 6th Floor Theater (formerly The McKittrick Hotel) ahead of an official opening night on May 26 for eight-weeks only.
The show’s creative team includes Dylan MarcAurele (book, music, lyrics and orchestrations), Alan Kliffer (direction), Brooke and Tiffan Engen (choreography), Sully Ross (scenic design), Brendan McCann (costume design), Devin Cameron (lighting design) and Germán Martinez (sound design).
Based on the “Game Changers” book series by Rachel Reid, “Heated Rivalry” became an instant phenomenon when the Canadian-produced show landed last year on HBO Max. Production on Season 2 is slated to begin this summer, with an expected release date in April 2027.
S&P Dow Jones Indices, a division of S&P Global that tracks more than 125,000 benchmarks used across global investment markets, has joined forces with Kaiko, a digital assets data infrastructure firm, to bring the iBoxx US Treasuries Index to the Canton Network, making it the first major financial benchmark issued as a native blockchain asset.
The index is not a tradeable or investable instrument. It is issued as a non-fungible token that embeds data distribution, licensing rights, and permissioning directly into its structure, according to the companies.
While not investable, it enables institutional users authorized by S&P DJI to access end-of-day and intraday data, corporate actions, and automated compliance features through a single token.
The system also introduces lifecycle controls, usage tracking, and streamlined reporting, reducing operational friction. This move aligns with the growing role of US Treasuries as core collateral in blockchain-based finance. It signals a broader shift toward a programmable, blockchain-native infrastructure for institutional financial markets
Explaining the decision to tokenize the iBoxx US Treasuries Index, Cameron Drinkwater, Chief Product & Operations Officer at S&P Dow Jones Indices, highlighted that the rising role of US Treasuries as onchain collateral is driving demand for high-quality index data that is directly accessible on blockchain networks.
“This collaboration with Kaiko allows us to bring the iBoxx US Treasuries Index onchain with the same intellectual property protections and licensing standards our clients depend on in traditional markets while unlocking new efficiencies and expanded revenue opportunities,” Drinkwater stated.
With the iBoxx available natively on-chain, asset managers, exchanges, and decentralized finance protocols can reference an institutional-grade benchmark without the cumbersome off-chain integrations that previously characterized such efforts, as noted by Kaiko CEO Ambre Soubiran.
“With S&P Dow Jones Indices, Kaiko has built something the market has not seen before: a financial benchmark tokenized as a programmable, permissioned data asset with compliance and licensing built in,” Soubiran stated. “This fundamentally changes the economics of building index-linked financial products on distributed ledger networks.”
S&P DJI is expanding its indices into digital-native environments, making them programmable, onchain, and usable in real-time trading.
Earlier this month, the team announced its partnership with Trade[XYZ] to launch the S&P 500 as a perpetual contract on Hyperliquid.
Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett said he would buy “a whole lot” of Apple shares if the stock became cheap enough, but the current market isn’t offering the right opportunity yet.
“I will buy them if they’re cheap. I’ll buy a whole lot of them if they’re cheap,” Buffett said a morning interview with CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box.’
“It’s not impossible that Apple would get to a price. We would buy a lot of it, but not in this market,” he noted. “This just isn’t going to happen in this market.”
Berkshire entered Apple in Q1 2016 with a $1 billion position of 9.8 million shares. Trimming began in late 2023, accelerated in 2024, and continued through 2025, reducing the stake by nearly 50% by mid-2024.
Buffett admitted he sold Apple “too soon,” but said he didn’t regret the decision.
“I sold it too soon,” the 95-year-old investor said. “But I bought it even sooner. I think we’ve made over $100 billion in that pre-tax.”
Even with these sales, Apple stays Berkshire’s top equity holding.
Buffett values Apple as a business with strong consumer demand, durable competitive advantages, and excellent management.
“It’s a remark. It’s better than any business we own outright. Now, we own a railroad that’s worth more money than our Apple position, for example,” Buffett said.
“But it doesn’t earn the rate remotely on capital that Apple does,” he noted. “Apple is a business that, you know, you’ve got one probably and your kids have got them.”
On the current market drawdown, Buffett called it “nothing” compared to past episodes when Berkshire’s stock fell more than 50%, including the 2007–2008 financial crisis.
He said he would deploy cash when stocks or businesses are attractive, but not based on short-term market timing.
Buffett also said Berkshire, now led by CEO Greg Abel, is sitting on roughly $350 billion in cash and Treasury bills and recently purchased $17 billion in T-bills in a single week.
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, The Hollywood Reporter may receive an affiliate commission.
Following Bath & Body Works’ second iteration of its fan-favorite Disney Princess Collection, the beloved brand is delivering yet another buzzy collaboration. This time, it’s with lifestyle and accessories label Vera Bradley. Released with Mother’s Day gifting top of mind, the limited-edition fashion-meets-fragrance drop makes for the ultimate token of appreciation, offering wallet-friendly luxury for moms with impeccable taste.
Available while supplies last at BathAndBodyWorks.com, the 22-piece collection spans perfume, body care, home fragrance, gift sets and accessories. Exclusive to this collaboration, the two coveted brands came together to create a brand-new fragrance, Peach Blossom & Nectar, and a brand-new Vera Bradley print — fittingly, decked out in peaches. Prices range from $1.95 for the PocketBac Hand Sanitizer to $69.95 for the Eau De Parfum.
Bath & Body Works x Vera Bradley Peach Blossom & Nectar Eau De Parfum
1.65 fl oz.
Bath & Body Works x Vera Bradley Peach Blossom & Nectar 3-Wick Candle
14.5 oz.
Bath & Body Works x Vera Bradley Peach Pedestal 3-Wick Candle Holder
Back to Vera Bradley x Bath & Body Works’ limited-release lineup, the partnership welcomes two Rewards member-exclusive gift sets, each containing a paisley-patterned cosmetics case — one in blue and one in pink — filled with three coordinating products from the collaboration. (Bath & Body Works’ Loyalty Rewards is free to join here.) Each gift set retails for $34.95, and will be available in store and online through May 11, 2026, while supplies last.
Bath & Body x Vera Bradley Blue Paisley Gift Set
Fragrances include Blue Washed Sky and Pink Berry Burst.
Bath & Body x Vera Bradley Pink Paisley Gift Set
Fragrance notes include berry punch, apple blossom and sparkling florals.
Check out a few more gifting favorites from the Vera Bradley x Bath & Body Works collection below, and shop the full inventory at BathAndBodyWorks.com. And for even more Mother’s Day gifting inspiration, visit Bath & Body Works’ dedicated gift shop here.
Bath & Body x Vera Bradley Peach Spray Sanitizer & Lip Holder
The game will debut the same day as the upcoming Masters of the Universe theatrical release from Amazon MGM Studios, creating a coordinated cross-platform rollout that allows fans to watch the film and play the game on the same day.
“Legends Unite” is a couch co-op experience that blends roguelike deck-building with arcade-style mini-games, designed for both solo and group play. The title draws inspiration from the new film’s world and characters while telling a standalone story, reintroducing figures from across the franchise’s broader lore.
Players will battle enemies including Hordak — the former mentor of Skeletor — across a range of environments, using character-specific abilities and collectible cards to progress through evolving challenges. Each playthrough is designed to vary, with competitive and cooperative elements shaping gameplay.
The title is part of Amazon Luna’s GameNight lineup, which emphasizes accessible, social gaming experiences. Players can use smartphones as controllers, allowing groups to join without dedicated gaming hardware.
The “Masters of the Universe” franchise, which spans more than four decades across toys, television and film, continues to be a key focus for Mattel’s digital expansion strategy as it looks to extend its IP into interactive formats.
“Masters of the Universe: Legends Unite” will be available to Prime members at no additional cost in multiple international markets.
Watch the trailer for the new game in the video below.
See more gaming news from this week in the roundup below.
PARTNERSHIPS
Warner Bros. Discovery is bringing Bugs Bunny into “Fortnite” for the first time as part of its month-long “Rabbit Season” spring campaign, a cross-platform push spanning gaming, streaming, retail and live events.
Timed to April Fools’ Day, the initiative centers on the Looney Tunes brand and its core characters, including Daffy Duck and Lola Bunny, who are also featured in the “Fortnite” Item Shop with themed outfits and accessories. Bugs’ debut includes in-game cosmetics such as pickaxes, back bling and his signature “What’s Up, Doc?” emote, alongside a new teaser spotlighting Looney Tunes-style chaos.
Beyond gaming, Warner Bros. Discovery is leveraging its streaming ecosystem, with Looney Tunes titles available across platforms. Viewers can stream newer series like “Looney Tunes Cartoons,” “Bugs Bunny Builders” and “Tiny Toons Looniversity” on HBO Max, while more than 700 classic animated shorts are being offered free on Tubi. A dedicated Looney Tunes livestream is also running throughout the month on WB Kids’ YouTube channels.
The campaign extends into consumer products and promotions, including a new LEGO Bugs Bunny set and apparel collaborations, alongside live appearances tied to events like the NCAA Final Four.
“Rabbit Season” reflects Warner Bros. Discovery’s broader strategy of activating legacy IP across interactive, retail and digital platforms, using gaming integrations like “Fortnite” to reach younger audiences while reinforcing the franchise’s cross-generational appeal.
NEW RELEASES
Independent developer MyACG Studio has released its dark fantasy rogue-lite, “Cinderia,” into Early Access on Steam for $17.99, inviting players to explore a world set ablaze by black magic. The launch comes with a trailer highlighting the game’s high-speed combat and customizable playstyles.
Set in a smoldering, post-apocalyptic realm, “Cinderia” challenges players to survive as one of the few who can harness corrupted embers without losing their will. “On the night the witch ignited the world, only drifting ash remained,” the game’s lore explains.
“Cinderia” emphasizes combat flexibility and player agency. Adventurers can mix melee, ranged and elemental skills, reshaping abilities with over 180 skills and 130+ pieces of equipment per character. “Every run is a new, unrepeatable path,” the studio notes, with fusion mechanics letting players bend black magic into weapons, spells and combos that suit their preferred fighting style. Four playable heroes, random events and dynamic room layouts ensure each session offers fresh challenges.
The Early Access period will see ongoing updates, including balancing tweaks, new content and expanded features driven by player feedback. “Falling and failing are simply part of the road; a warm flame always waits for those brave enough to rise again,” MyACG Studio writes in its launch notes.
“Cinderia” is available now on Steam Early Access, with wishlists, trailers and game assets accessible on the official Steam page.
AWARDS
Internet star and broadcaster Elz will host the 2026 BAFTA Games Award, taking place on April 17.
The BAFTA Games ceremony aims to celebrate “the extraordinary talent and innovation within the global games community.”
Elz’s broadcast credits include BBC’s MOTDx, KISS XTRAandSky Sports, as well as hosting major international events for the Premier League, Wimbledon eChampsand theFIFA eWorld Cup.
Emma Baehr, executive director, Awards & Content at BAFTA, said, “We are delighted to welcome Elz as our host for the 22nd BAFTA Games Awards. Elz is a formidable talent with an infectious passion for games, she brings together the worlds of games and entertainment, so is perfectly placed to lead our celebration of the year’s very best games.”
Elz added, “I am beyond excited to be hosting this year’s BAFTA Games Awards. Gaming has been a part of my life since I first picked up a controller at eight years old, and to now stand on that stage and honour the people who create the magic is a dream come true. This industry is about creativity, community and breaking boundaries, things I strive for every day in my own work. I can’t wait to celebrate the incredible nominees and share this unforgettable night with players all over the world.”
RELEASE DATES
Gameplay Group International and PM Studios, in collaboration with Paramount, Skydance and Avatar Studios, have announced a global publishing partnership for “Avatar Legends: The Fighting Game,” set to release on July 2.
Developed together with Nickelodeon Animation Studios, the 1v1 fighter features an original and canon story mode and will be available for $29.99 on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch 2, Nintendo Switch and PC via Steam, with full cross-play support available at launch.
Set within the “Avatar” universe, the hand-drawn 2D game is designed to engage both seasoned fighting game players and newcomers alike. Players are challenged to master the elements across a roster of fan-favorite characters, “combining strategic depth with fast-paced, accessible action.”
“For us, this is about delivering a fighting game that feels right in the hands of players from day one,” said Victor Lugo, Founder & CCO, Gameplay Group International. “’Avatar’ is a perfect fit for the genre – movement, mastery and expression are at its core. We’ve built a system focused on responsiveness, depth, and competitive play. With PM Studios as our partner, we’re excited to bring that experience to the fighting game community and fans around the world.”
Players can pre-order the game on Steam and wishlist the game on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S today.
EVENTS
Xbox has announced that its “Xbox Games Showcase 2026” will air on Sunday, June 7 at 10:00 a.m. PT, immediately followed by a dedicated “Gears of War: E-Day Direct”, offering fans a deep dive into the legendary franchise’s return.
The showcase will feature first gameplay reveals and major news updates from Xbox Game Studios and partners worldwide. The “Gears of War” segment, produced by The Coalition Studio, promises to take viewers straight into Emergence Day, highlighting new story details and gameplay mechanics.
As part of Xbox’s 25th anniversary celebration, the event will also feature FanFest, which looks back on 25 years of Xbox history while teasing what’s next for the platform. Fans can enter to win tickets to the live event; full details and official rules are available via Xbox Wire.
The double feature will be accessible in over 40 languages, including American Sign Language, British Sign Language and English Audio Descriptions. The full broadcast will stream across Xbox’s YouTube, Twitch, ASL Twitch and Facebook channels, with local air times around the world.
Fans can expect a blend of big reveals, gameplay showcases and anniversary retrospectives, making the 2026 showcase a major highlight of the gaming calendar.
Few stories in NBA history are as dramatic, painful or as improbable as that of Lamar Odom. He was a two-time NBA champion, sixth man of the year, and one of the most naturally gifted players of his generation. He was also, for much of his adult life, fighting a battle with addiction that most people around him either didn’t know about or were working hard to conceal. It cost him his career, nearly cost him his life and played out, in many ways, in front of the entire world.
Netflix’s latest installment of its “Untold” docuseries digs deep into the full arc of Odom’s life — from his whirlwind marriage to Khloé Kardashian and the reality TV empire that came with it, to the trade that sent his drug use into a tailspin and his near-fatal overdose at a Nevada brothel in October 2015. Odom, Kardashian and those closest to them speak with a candor that is, at times, startling — about the drugs, the lies, the enabling, the media circus that descended on a Las Vegas hospital, and the unlikely moments of grace that somehow brought him back.
It is, above all else, a story about survival. Below is everything we learned from “Untold: The Death & Life of Lamar Odom.”
Lamar and Khloé Kardashian fell hard – and fast – for one another
Image Credit: Courtesy of Hulu
In 2009, Odom met Kardashian, his future (though now ex) wife, at a “Welcome to LA” party thrown by fellow NBA player Ron Artest (formerly known as Metta World Peace). She’d been hired to host the party alongside Artest, who paid her just $5,000 for the appearance (he jokes that her rate is much higher now, while she says she only agreed to take the gig because her brother, Rob Kardashian, loved the Lakers). Both Odom and Kardashian maintain they had no idea who the other was at the time. “You know, the first night, I’ll be honest, I was trying to fuck her,” said Odom in an NSFW confession. “[I] got with her the next day, and then the next day turned into the next day.”
Thirty days later, the couple was engaged. As Kardashian explains, a tabloid wanted to run the exclusive on the wedding — but only if they could also get the exclusive on the divorce, she recounted. “Falling in love the way we fell in love, as quickly as we did, is so not my personality,” she says. “But he’s so charismatic. He’s fun and silly. And then he also is a very vulnerable person. He’s very honest about his life.” The reality star admitted that Odom was her first love — and that this was one of the reasons she rationalized so much of his behavior throughout their relationship. “I was fighting every single day to either project him or not let him get caught.”
Lamar’s wedding to Kardashian was to ‘try to better his future’
Odom’s fast engagement to Kardashian didn’t just come as a surprise to the press, but to his family, too. In fact, the news was so shocking that his previous partner, Liza Morales, didn’t let their two children attend (the pair had been high school sweethearts before breaking up in 2006). “I never even met her. I don’t think he told me he was marrying her,” said LJ, Odom’s son. Because the wedding was a star-studded, televised event, Destiny, Odom’s daughter, remembers not wanting to be a “show pony, or anything like that.”
During the wedding, Odom spoke to his childhood friend Anthony “Pumpkin” Booker for two hours, explaining that “the moves he was doing, he was doing it to try to better his future.” At the time, “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” was one of the hottest shows on television, while Los Angeles practically revolved around the Lakers. “I’m just watching how she lived and their lifestyle, and I’m like, ‘I know this is where I want to be. This is how I want to live,’” reflects Odom. “I think that was like a power trip for me. Because you took the power that I had, and then the Kardashian power… I wasn’t really ready for all that power.”
‘Khloé & Lamar’ was his idea
While Kardashian was a reality TV superstar by the time the couple tied the knot, it was actually Odom who championed their short-lived show, “Khloé & Lamar.” The show debuted in 2011, giving audiences an inside look into their lives, home and relationship. For Odom, it was a chance to do something outside of basketball — and he loved the cameras, says Kardashian, who was more nervous given the intimate nature of the show. It was filmed almost entirely in their own home, as opposed to a rotation of locations like on “Keeping Up.”
“He did love Khloé, but he’d wanted to be on reality TV for a long time,” says Destiny. When discussing the show, Odom admits that “part of the deal was that, If I’m gonna marry you, fuck it. I want in too.’” Still, Kardashian reflects on it as “the coolest, coolest time of my life.”
Lamar would disappear for days at a time while using, leaving Khloé to ‘cover this up’
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When Odom first began using cocaine and other drugs, it “seemed responsibly done,” says Kardashian. That quickly ceased to be the case, though, as Odom began to “disappear” for hours, then days at a time while using — unfindable and unreachable by phone. One of the first instances of this came in June, around the anniversary of his youngest son, Jayden’s death. (Jayden passed away from SIDS at just six months.) He’d “escape rehab and go on a drug bender and nobody could find him,” says Kardashian. “I was either looking for him in alleys, looking for him in motels. He would have tinfoil cutouts or spoons and freebasing things, and leaving things everywhere. I remember needing to go to hotel rooms to clean up after him so that housekeeping didn’t sell a story. I was such an enabler without knowing I was an enabler. But I just felt such a responsibility to cover this up.”
One night, Odom remembers getting high in Big Bear. A woman he was cheating on Kardashian with took his phone and called her and Kris Jenner, explaining that “he just keeps wanting money and drugs.” That’s when Kardashian learned he was being unfaithful, she remembers. “I never knew for sure that he was sleeping with other people. Of course, I had suspicions. But I never had anything tangible.” From there, word began to get out about Odom’s drug use.
Lamar’s trade from the Lakers to the Mavericks was an inflection point
Odom was driving to the Lakers’ practice facility when he found out he was being traded to the Dallas Mavericks on the radio. “I’ve given you guys so much, and I’m finding out this way that I’m being traded somewhere else,” reflects Odom. The drug use that transpired from that trade was “monstrous,” says Kardashian.
“I’ve just never seen so many drugs,” she adds. “[There was] just such a dark aura around us. They weren’t testing for certain painkillers, and he knew which ones they weren’t, and he was freebasing painkillers.” Right before Christmas, Kardashian says, Odom locked himself in their hotel bathroom for four days, doing drugs. “He was horrible at practice, because he was so fucked up and high,” she says. But the move didn’t last long; Odom was cut from the team after only a few months.
Khloé had to pump Lamar’s stomach at home
Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix
Kardashian says he got “kicked off” the Mavericks and joined the Clippers in 2012. He was overweight from all of the drug use, so much so he had to check himself into a rehab. “Whenever the Clippers’ season ended, he spiraled again and did crazy drugs,” she says. “He overdosed a few times. I had to pump his stomach,” she says. “We had at-home detox centers. We did everything we could.”
This led to an intervention. Kardashian was advised to give him an ultimatum: go to rehab for a three-month program, or you’re getting a divorce. “He was like, ‘Ok, all I want Is my passport and let’s get the fucking divorce,’” she says, “I was looking around like, ‘Wait. I don’t want the divorce.’ Lamar left immediately.”
Their divorce was awaiting final legal approval in October when she found out he’d overdosed in Nevada. he suffered brain damage, had 12 strokes and six heart attacks.
Lamar’s overdose triggered a media circus and bidding war
Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix
Richard Hunter, the former manager of the Love Ranch and one of the men who helped drag Odom’s unconscious body out of the brothel, says that as a professional athlete, “there are a lot easier ways to do this” when reflecting on how Odom had been contacting the ranch’s girls on Instagram. That cynicism proved warranted.
Dennis Hof, the Love Ranch’s owner, created a bidding war on details of the overdose and sold exclusive footage and signed receipts to the “Today Show,” using the entire situation as publicity for his book “The Art of the Pimp.” “If I didn’t know it before, I knew after that — in terms of what we were gonna do or willing to do for publicity, there wasn’t a limit,” Hunter says upon reflection.
Meanwhile, drug dealers were showing up the hospital and rummaging through Odom’s bags for money. Kardashian put the entire floor on lockdown, funneled who was allowed in and made everyone sign NDAs before they could enter. That also meant Odom’s children and their mother were stopped and checked every single time they tried to come see him. Morales notes how an already devastating situation was made even more painful by the circus and security surrounding it.
Kobe Bryant flew to Vegas to help Khloé make life-or-death decisions
Image Credit: Harry How/Getty Images
With Odom unconscious and his body failing, Bryant got on a plane and flew to Las Vegas to sit with Kardashian and help her work through one of the hardest decisions of her life — whether to risk surgery on Odom’s collapsed lung. They decided to move forward and the surgery worked, but Odom remained in a coma for three to four days. When he woke up, he reached up, ripped the tubes out of his own neck (which he still has the scars from), looked at Kardashian and said, “Hey baby,” then passed back out. Kardashian recalls never leaving the hospital, making sure she was there through every step of his recovery. “We were determined to get him walking and moving again.”
Lamar faked how bad his condition was so Khloé would keep taking care of him
Image Credit: Buchan/Variety/REX/Shutterstock
When Odom came home from the hospital, Kardashian rented him a house in her neighborhood, hired a full-time caretaker, a private chef and nurses to manage his around-the-clock care. However, it didn’t last because Kardashian soon discovered he was still using drugs. “I’ve just put my life on hold to fucking take care of you,” she said. “How did you get this? You don’t have a fucking phone. You can’t talk.”
In reality, Odom did have a phone and was far more functional than he had ever let on. “He was better than I knew,” Kardashian says. “He was playing me so I could continue this lifestyle for him.” Kardashian recalls walking in on him while using, punching him and telling him to pack his bags and leave the house by Monday, adding that she would “never speak to him again.” She filed for divorce a second time shortly after.
A dream about Kobe Bryant is what finally made him want to get better
Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix
It wasn’t an intervention, a brush with death or a stint in rehab that pushed Lamar to actually change; it was a dream about his former teammate and friend. Kobe ryant appeared to him and said, “L-O, the afterlife is not what people make it out to be,” Odom shares. For a man who had just nearly died and spent years destroying himself, those words from his friend landed differently. That was the turning point. “Right now is go mode,” Lamar says, reflecting on where his head is today. He wants to go back to school. He wants to coach basketball. And after everything — the addiction, the overdose, the lost years — he’s still standing. “Lamar’s had an extraordinary life,” says Kardashian. “Yes, bad and good. But fuck, it’s extraordinary.”
As of April 1, Gmail will have been around for 22 years. Many of us have a poorly chosen email address that’s laced with regret, but we’re now stuck with it. We’ve perhaps had it for longer than most college students have been alive and that’s how others get in touch with us. Google is now giving us a chance to move on and change our Gmail address to something more appropriate.
To change your Google Account username, go to the email settings page. From there, click or tap on Personal info > Email > Google Account email. If the ability to alter your username has been enabled on your account, you’ll see a Change Google Account email option. Click on this to start modifying your username.
You’ll only be able to change your username once every 12 months. If you do change the address, Gmail will retain all of your previous emails. Handily, your former Gmail name will remain as an alternate email address. As such, people will be able to get in touch with you via either address. You can also sign into Google services using both email addresses.