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  • Zayn Malik Cancels ‘Tonight Show’ Appearance as He Recovers From Undisclosed Medical Condition

    Zayn Malik Cancels ‘Tonight Show’ Appearance as He Recovers From Undisclosed Medical Condition

    Zayn Malik has canceled his upcoming appearances, including The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, as he recovers from an undisclosed medical condition.

    On Friday, the singer posted a photo on Instagram of himself lying in a hospital bed, wearing a hospital gown with tubes attached to his body.

    “To my fans – Thank you to all of you for your love & support now & always- been a long week and am still unexpectedly recovering,” he captioned the photo. “Heartbroken that I can’t see you all this week, I wouldn’t be in the place I am today without you guys and am so thankful for your understanding. Thank you to the incredible hospital staff of Drs, nurses, cardiologist, management, admin and everyone who has helped along the way and continue to. You are all legends! Big big love xx z.”

    On Monday, People reported that Malik had pulled out of upcoming promotional appearances surrounding his new album, Konnakol, as he continues to recover.

    Earlier this month, he was booked as a guest on Tuesday’s edition of The Tonight Show. But updated listings for Tuesday’s episode show that he’s no longer scheduled to appear.

    Tuesday’s guests were originally planned to include Malik as the night’s musical guest, along with Nikki Glaser and Ella Stiller. The updated listing now features Glaser, Stiller, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and comedian Isabel Hagen as the night’s scheduled guests.

    Sources also suggested to People that Malik will be pulling out of other planned promotional appearances, including fan meet-and-greets. 

    It’s still unclear what Malik is being treated for but People cited a source saying the former One Direction singer is seeking medical treatment from the “No. 1 cardiologist in the world.” 

    The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to a rep for Malik for comment.

  • Who Wants to Own a Piece of Wasserman?

    Who Wants to Own a Piece of Wasserman?

    It’s been over two months since Casey Wasserman made the surprise move under pressure to put his namesake company up for auction after facing an artist exodus when his decades-old emails with Ghislaine Maxwell surfaced in the Department of Justice’s Jeffrey Epstein documents.

    Since that time, potential suitors have been gaming out a few questions, namely: Is this a fire sale? Is Wasserman willing to break up his sprawling firm into pieces? Is there an appetite to buy the company whole — or just pick off clients in each division? And is Wasserman serious about a sale or is this the equivalent of a homeowner putting a beloved property on the market at way too high of a listing price in the hopes of chasing off all but the highest bidders?

    On Monday, the first round of bids were submitted to investment bank Moelis & Co, which is handling the auction process. (Ken Moelis, who runs the firm, sits on the Wasserman’s LA28 Olympics Committee board and had advised on the mogul’s major acquisition of Brillstein Entertainment Partners in 2023).

    Among suitors: Big 3 Hollywood talent giant United Talent Agency has submitted a non-binding bid to move along in the auction process. The agency, now run by David Kramer, has been in growth mode since a fund operated by the private equity firm EQT Partners became the largest outside investor in the Beverly Hills-based company in 2022. (One wrinkle with UTA’s bid, it likely couldn’t or wouldn’t acquire Brillstein from Wasserman due to a conflict of interest deal with the Writers Guild regarding agency ownership of production entities.)

    A perhaps dark horse suitor is WME mogul Patrick Whitesell’s upstart firm WTSL, which he founded along with ex-Endeavor exec Jason Lublin last year. That representation company had launched with a football talent agency titled WIN Sports Group. In his bid for Wasserman assets, Whitesell has not yet partnered with an additional financial backer but is in active talks regarding funding if WTSL chooses to proceed with its overture.

    The private equity crowd also seems eager for opportunities to jump in to the space. Goldman Sachs’ major deal in November 2025 for Excel Sports Management kickstarted interest given that the investment bank hadn’t backed a representation business previously.

    Among agencies that did not submit bids: WME Group and Creative Artists Agency, the two other major Hollywood representation giants. A Wasserman rep declined to comment on prospective suitors. The New York Times earlier reported that UTA and WTSL were planning to submit bids.

    In addition to its core sports representation division — which has rolled up countless boutique shingles since the company was founded in 2002 — Wasserman comprises a notable music agency group built from its 2021 acquisition of Paradigm’s music division, a major production-management firm in Brillstein and a marketing services unit.

    One other question may be how easily his businesses may be untangled if the company is sold in pieces. When Wasserman made his blockbuster deal to acquire Brillstein in 2023 he told The Hollywood Reporter that the company wouldn’t continue operating as a standalone silo. “It will still operate in the public domain as Brillstein but we don’t operate our businesses separately,” Wasserman said at the time. “We’re one company and one culture working together on behalf of and for and with our clients.”

    While more than 20 performing artists peeled off from Wasserman during the February scandal — including Laufey, Chappell Roan, Best Coast and John Summit — only U.S. soccer star Abby Wambach from the sports unit publicly posted that she was parting ways with her reps. The company formally rebranded from Wasserman to distance itself from its founder, talking the name The Team in March.

    Wasserman’s sports unit is likely a crown jewel given it’s seen as the second-largest in the industry after market leader CAA. The division generated $266 million in revenue in 2024, 29 percent of the company’s total revenue, an S&P Global report from June of last year detailed. CAA’s sports division generated $578 million that year.

    At the table along with Wasserman to navigate the sale decision is Providence Equity Partners, which took a notable stake in Wasserman in November 2022 to fuel growth at the company. Providence was founded by Jonathan Nelson, who is also on the board of directors of the Chernin Group. The private equity firm took the place of two investors, RedBird Capital and Madrone Capital, which took ownership stakes in pro teams — football club AC Milan and the NFL’s Denver Broncos — and as such couldn’t own a stake in a sports talent representation firm like Wasserman. In February at the height of the artist exodus on social media, a rep for Providence said the firm was “fully committed” to investing and expanding the company’s “capabilities across sports, music, and entertainment.”

    Wasserman issued an apology for his correspondence on Jan. 31, shortly after the latest DoJ Epstein Files tranche was released, saying, “I am terribly sorry for having any association” with Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year sentence for her role in conspiring to sex trafficking minors with Epstein. In the files, Wasserman exchanged a serious of flirtatious messages with Maxwell in 2003. He also took a flight with Epstein, Bill Clinton and others to Africa in 2002.

    The mogul, who is chairman of the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Committee and has led the city’s bid since 2014, has been backed by the board of directors at LA 28 and has stated that he plans to keep overseeing the organization ahead of the Summer Games. LA 28 said it had enlisted outside law firm O’Melveny & Myers LLP to review Wasserman’s emails with Maxwell in 2003, three years before Epstein was first arrested in Florida on a count of soliciting prostitution. “We found Mr. Wasserman’s relationship with Epstein and Maxwell did not go beyond what has already been publicly documented,” it stated on Feb. 11.

    After a pause on social media and a teardown of its old website skin, The Team is going on about business as usual, publicly anyway, announcing signings, launching new initiatives like a leadership advisory and executive search practice led by former Bloomberg exec Amy Segal and listing open jobs, L.A.-based “Content Creator,” “People Coordinator” and “AI Engineer” roles among them.

  • Josh Hutcherson Says Backlash For Not Being a Taylor Swift Fan Reminded Him “Why I Don’t Want to Be Online”

    Josh Hutcherson is opening up about why he stays off social media, using the backlash he received for not being a Taylor Swift fan as an example.

    During a recent interview with GQ, the actor recalled almost being canceled last year for a comment he made about the global popstar during the press tour for I Love LA, in which he plays Dylan, opposite Rachel Sennott’s Maia.

    At the time, Hutcherson was playing a camera roll roulette game with his I Love LA co-star Jordan Firstman during a video interview with i-D Magazine. When The Hunger Games star pulled a photo of him and his mom in the VIP section at Swift’s Eras Tour show in New Orleans, he said, “My mom made me. … I’m not a Swiftie. Very much not. No shade, all respect, but definitely not.” The Swifties clearly weren’t happy, slamming the actor for accepting VIP tickets when he’s not a fan of the singer.

    “I got some heat because I did a photo shoot with Jordan, and Jordan asked me something about being a [Taylor Swift fan], and I was like, ‘Oh no, I’m definitely not a Swiftie,’” Hutcherson recounted to GQ. “All of a sudden it garnered this, ‘Fuck him! He’s a monster! Destroy him! He’s short! He hates her because he’s short!’ [He’s 5ft, 5in.] It’s just like, whoa! I think she’s great. Her music is not my kind of music. That is why I don’t want to be online.”

    So when Hutcherson isn’t actively promoting one of his projects, he’s more than happy to be offline and focused on being present in real life.

    “I don’t need that energy,” he said, adding that being a social media star is “counterintuitive to my job, because if people know you more, you can’t disappear into characters. They see you as, ‘Oh, that’s Josh.’ You know what I mean? So, if you’re a fucking meme, people know you for the meme.”

    However, he knows he can’t escape social media forever. Whether it be the many memes he’s found himself at the center of throughout his career or being subjected to TikTok dances by his Gen Z co-stars in I Love LA.

    “Being thrust out again in the world and online in such a big way, doing a bunch of press and being on TikTok, all those things made me feel very exposed,” Hutcherson admitted. “I started to get a lot of anxiety about it.”

    It also resurfaced the Five Nights at Freddy’s actor’s own insecurities, but thanks to therapy and a mindset shift, he’s learned “to cope and accept that these are my genetics.” He no longer looks at his insecurities “as negatives or as beauty faults, but part of your whole character, your whole existence.”

    Hutcherson added, “I feel like it has led to me being able to handle it in a much more healthy, sane way, and not spiral out and feel like a piece of shit.”

  • Outcry grows over Israeli soldier smashing Jesus statue in Lebanon

    A photo of an Israeli soldier smashing a statue of Jesus Christ in Lebanon has sparked outrage in the United States, adding to the anger Israel is facing, including from parts of US President Donald Trump’s base.

    Although the incident is only one among a broad range of atrocities that Israel is accused of committing in the region in recent years, it garnered condemnations across the world and prompted a response from Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    In the US, where support for Israel was once unchallenged – especially in right-wing circles that purport to espouse Christian values – the desecration of the Christian religious symbol added fuel to the criticism that the Israeli government is facing from some Republicans.

    “You would never know it by consuming American corporate media, but this kind of incident is not rare,” said right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson, a former Trump ally.

    “The Israeli government has permitted its soldiers to behave like barbarians for decades, all while sucking up generous funding from the United States. The only difference between now and the past is that social media has exposed Israel’s behavior for the world to see,” Carlson wrote in his newsletter on Monday.

    ‘Horrific’

    Former Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene – who fell out with Trump over his hawkish foreign policy – highlighted that Israel receives billions of dollars in US military aid annually.

    “‘Our greatest ally’ that takes billions of our tax dollars and weapons every year,” she wrote in a comment on X in response to the photo showing an Israeli soldier taking a sledgehammer to the head of the statue of Jesus.

    Matt Gaetz, another former Republican congressman and Trump ally, said, “Horrific”.

    For his part, independent journalist Glenn Greenwald mocked how Christian Zionists may defend Israel over smashing the statue.

    “Christian Zionists: This Israeli soldier was absolutely justified in smashing the head of the Jesus Christ statue because Hezbollah and Hamas were hiding inside. We owe him our gratitude,” Greenwald wrote on X.

    The anger echoed growing scepticism of the close alliance with Israel in Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) constituency.

    Trump is already facing pressure over joining Israel in starting a war against Iran, which sent oil prices soaring. Earlier on Monday, the US president addressed and denied claims that Netanyahu dragged the US into the conflict.

    Support for Israel in the US is at a historic low, recent public opinion polls show.

    While Israel still enjoys near-unanimous Republican support in Congress, that consensus is starting to fray, with dissent being expressed by the likes of Carlson, in part due to prolonged wars in the Middle East and attacks on Christians.

    Israel says it will investigate

    The desecration of the statue, which took place near the town of Debl in south Lebanon, according to local reports, prompted an unusually swift response from the highest level of the Israeli government.

    “I condemn the act in the strongest terms. Military authorities are conducting a criminal probe of the matter and will take appropriately harsh disciplinary action against the offender,” Netanyahu said in a statement on Sunday.

    Israel rarely holds its soldiers accountable for well-documented abuses in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and Lebanon, including sexual violence.

    Netanyahu, who has been evading an arrest warrant by the International Criminal Court (ICC) over war crimes charges in Gaza since 2024, went on to argue that Israel treats Christians better than any other country in the region.

    “While Christians are being slaughtered in Syria and Lebanon by Muslims, the Christian population in Israel thrives unlike elsewhere in the Middle East,” the Israeli prime minister claimed.

    “Israel is the only country in the region that the Christian population and standard of living is growing.”

    Lebanon has the largest per capita Christian population in the Middle East, and its president is a Maronite Catholic.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar joined Netanyahu in denouncing the desecration of the statue, saying that it is “entirely contrary” to Israeli values.

    But while Israel’s supporters tried to portray smashing the statue as an isolated mistake by one soldier, the incident reflects a pattern of Israeli attacks against houses of worship, including churches.

    In 2024, Israeli troops filmed a mock wedding between two soldiers at a church in Deir Mimas in Lebanon and vandalised the building.

    An Israeli tank demolished a statue of Saint George in the southern Lebanese village of Yaroun last year, as well.

    Israel has bombed Palestinian churches several times in Gaza since the start of its genocidal war in the enclave, including an attack that killed at least 18 people in 2023.

    Israel destroyed more than 1,000 mosques and three churches in Gaza during the war, according to local officials.

    Catholic leaders respond

    The Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land denounced the attack on the statue on Monday.

    “This act constitutes a grave affront to the Christian faith and adds to other reported incidents of desecration of Christian symbols by [Israeli] soldiers in southern Lebanon,” it said in a statement.

    “It further reveals a disturbing failure in moral and human formation, wherein even the most elementary reverence for the sacred and for the dignity of others has been gravely compromised.”

    The incident came as Israeli soldiers pushed to completely destroy homes and civilian infrastructure in dozens of Lebanese villages in order to prevent residents from returning to them.

    “The outrage shouldn’t be about a destroyed statue of Jesus – abhorrent as that is,” Palestinian pastor Munther Isaac wrote in a social media post on Monday.

    “The real outrage is the targeting of civilians, the assault on human dignity, the devastation in Gaza and Lebanon. War is evil. We need Accountability.”

    The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) called on Trump and Congress to intervene and end Israeli violations after the destruction of the statue.

    “For years, our government has ignored and enabled persistent Israeli attacks on churches and Christians in Lebanon, Gaza, and elsewhere,” CAIR said.

    “Our message to American public officials is simple: If you continue sending more weapons and provide political cover for Israel’s rogue actions, you own what you see in this picture.”

  • D4vd charged with murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez

    Singer faces first-degree murder and additional charges that could lead to life without parole or the death penalty.

    Singer D4vd has been charged in the United States with murder in the death of Celeste Rivas Hernandez, a 14-year-old girl who was last seen alive nearly a year ago.

    The 21-year-old musician, whose legal name is David Burke, ⁠faces first-degree murder and additional charges, including lewd acts with a minor and mutilation of a body. D4vd pleaded not guilty on Monday.

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    The prosecutor said Rivas Hernandez’s dismembered and decomposed body was discovered in September inside an apparently abandoned Tesla linked to the singer.

    Authorities said the case includes special circumstances – lying in wait, committing crime for financial gain and the alleged killing of the witness in an investigation – making Burke eligible for life without parole or the death penalty.

    Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman said prosecutors would decide later whether to seek the ‌death penalty.

    Burke was arrested at a home in Hollywood on Thursday and was being held without bail.

    The witness he is alleged to have killed is Rivas Hernandez, who could have given testimony about the sex crime allegations.

    Rivas Hernandez had disappeared in 2024, when she was 13. That was her age when, according to an allegation in a criminal complaint, the singer engaged in continuous sexual abuse of her for at least a year from September 2023 to September 2024.

    Hochman said authorities believed the girl went to D4vd’s Hollywood Hills home on April 23, 2025, and “was never heard from again”.

    Burke’s lawyers said on Monday that the evidence would show he is innocent.

    “The actual evidence in this case will show that David Burke did not murder Celeste Rivas Hernandez and he was not the cause of her death,” they said. “We will vigorously defend David’s innocence.”

    Court documents outline secret probe

    The singer had been under investigation by a Los Angeles County grand jury looking into the death.

    The probe was officially secret, but its existence, and his designation as its target, was revealed in February when his mother, father and brother objected in a Texas court to subpoenas demanding they testify.

    The 2023 Tesla Model Y was registered in the singer’s name at their address, according to court filings. Authorities did not publicly acknowledge him as a suspect until his arrest.

    Police investigators searching the Tesla in a tow yard found a cadaver bag “covered with insects and a strong odor of decay”, court documents said.

    Detectives partially unzipped a bag and found a head and torso.

    Investigators from the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office removed the bag and “discovered the arms and legs had been severed from the body”, according to court documents.

    A second black bag was found under the first, and dismembered body parts were inside it. No cause of death has been publicly revealed, and police got a judge to block the release of details of the autopsy.

    The court order was expected to be lifted after the charges.

    LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell walks past an image of Celeste Rivas Hernandez Monday
    Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonnell walks past an image of Celeste Rivas Hernandez [Damian Dovarganes/AP]

    Rising to fame

    D4vd gained popularity among Gen Z for his blend of indie rock, R&B and lo-fi pop. He went viral on TikTok in 2022 with the hit Romantic Homicide, which peaked at number 4 on Billboard’s Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart.

    He then signed with Darkroom and Interscope Records, and released his debut EP, Petals to Thorns and a follow-up, The Lost Petals, in 2023.

    When the body was discovered, the singer continued his North American tour, but when reports of his possible involvement spread widely, he cancelled the final two shows and a European tour that was to follow.

  • ‘Everyone Is Lying to You for Money’ Review: Ben McKenzie’s Knife-Sharp Documentary Takedown of Cryptocurrency

    ‘Everyone Is Lying to You for Money’ Review: Ben McKenzie’s Knife-Sharp Documentary Takedown of Cryptocurrency

    I’ll read a news story about more or less anything, but I glaze over at the prospect of consuming any article about cryptocurrency. That’s because even when I do read one, I never totally get it — what cryptocurrency is, how it works, why it’s treated as the second coming by some while others roll their eyes. The future of many things, including money, will surely be digital. So is cryptocurrency just an early-adapter version of the digital monetary future? Yet if that’s so, why does it always feel like crypto is the sort of thing that used to be advertised on late-night TV along with K-Tel pop-hit collections? And why does the very concept of crypto leave me so confused?

    If, like me, you suffer from perpetual half-submerged crypto angst, the movie to see is “Everyone Is Lying to You for Money,” a lively, knife-sharp, impeccably researched and reported documentary that answers every conceivable question you’ve ever had about crypto, and does so in a way that’s brisk and funny and illuminating rather than intimidating. Above all, it explains the hidden reason why crypto, after all the media bloviating we’ve been subjected to about it, remains such a weirdly obtuse and intimidating topic.

    The reason? Because it’s all designed to sell an illusion. The nature of cryptocurrency is that it’s meant to seem like a shiny new object, one that’s heady and elusive enough to feel just out of reach. That’s the secret appeal of crypto, and what makes its true believers into something of a cult. (Cults are built around magical thinking.) And it’s what lends crypto a mystique that has allowed its marketers to inflate a viral junk-cash phenomenon into irresistible digital snake oil.

    “Everyone Is Lying to You for Money” is the unlikely brainchild of a Hollywood actor: Ben McKenzie, who wrote, produced, and directed it. (It was made in conjunction with his 2023 book “Easy Money: Cryptocurrency, Casino Capitalism, and the Golden Age of Fraud,” written with Jacob Silverman.) McKenzie is someone who many remember as the heartthrob costar of “The O.C.,” where he played the glam rebel outcast Ryan Atwood. He had a few TV roles after that, costarring on “Southland” and “Gotham,” but in “Everyone Is Lying to You for Money” McKenzie, now 47, makes winning sport of the fact that he’ll never outrun his slightly schlocky youth-TV past — and that’s okay with him. He still works as an actor (occasionally), he’s married to the Brazilian-American actor Morena Baccarin (as we see in the movie, they have two sons and live in a beautifully renovated SoHo townhouse), and he’s a very serious dude with a degree in economics.

    In “Everyone Is Lying to You for Money,” McKenzie cuts through reams of misinformation and conducts unshowy but confrontational interviews with finance players who are famous and powerful (he also talks to a lot of people who are not). He chases the story of cryptocurrency and gets to the bottom of it with such muckraking zeal that by the end of the film, I was convinced he should become a politician. (I’m not kidding: He’s as photogenic but combative as Gavin Newsom, though closer in spirit to Pete Buttegieg.)

    McKenzie starts off by plumbing the mysteries of bitcoin, which was the first decentralized cryptocurrency. Bitcoin marketed itself with a savvy hook: the declaration that there would only ever be 21 million bitcoins issued. The implication: Since the number of bitcoins wasn’t going to multiply, it was the value of an individual bitcoin that would go up. But here’s how bitcoin really become the prototype for all the crypto delusion that followed. The new currency would operate kind of like a stock (people would trade it; the value would fluctuate)…except it wasn’t tethered to a company that made actual goods. It presented itself as a kind of bank…except it wasn’t a bank.

    And here was the insidious part, the very 21st-century part: It made you feel like you were joining a rebel movement. The 2008 financial meltdown and its corrupt aftermath (i.e., the Obama administration’s spineless bailing out of the banks and no one else, with no heads rolling) had set the stage for a world in which ordinary citizens no longer trusted our financial institutions. At the same time, the launch of Napster had heralded an era when we were all going to be rebel disrupters. So while bitcoin offered none of the protections of a traditional bank, that very fact made it seem an insurrectionary currency. It was operating outside the laws of the financial world (which was now seen as the enemy). That made it cool. And that was the neo-1960s snake oil, all built around the idea of flattering the potential marks who wanted to think that they — like bitcoin itself — were going to be joining in some sort of transgressive undermining of The System.

    Ben McKenzie elucidates all this, and he tracks down some of the reigning hucksters who have led the crypto revolution. He goes to El Salvador, the first country to use bitcoin as legal tender, and where the president, Nayib Bukele (who has been in office since 2019), is like a grinning Marcello Hernández character. He has promised to build a place called Bitcoin City, which will be a utopian metropolis of gold. (When McKenzie gets to the location, it’s just a sleepy fishing village whose residents are being squeezed out.)

    McKenzie then stakes out Alex Mashinsky, the Israeli-American co-founder and CEO of Celsius, a now-bankrupt cryptocurrency lending platform. Mashinsky is a vintage hustler, selling the idea that crypto can make you rich, but here’s where the old-fashioned underpinnings of the scam are revealed. Celsius turns out to be a Ponzi scheme. The price of Celsius crypto would go up, but it was being manipulated by those in charge, all as a way to get ordinary citizens to invest. And millions upon millions did, which kept the charade afloat (and funneled the “profits” to the top).

    Celsius ultimately declared bankruptcy, but that’s small potatoes compared to what happened to FTX, the cryptocurrency exchange founded by Sam Bankman-Fried, who was famously convicted of seven counts of fraud and is now serving 25 years in prison. McKenzie got an interview with Bankman-Fried before he imploded, and this sequence alone is worth the price of admission, because of how nakedly it reveals the particular sort of weasel Sam Bankman-Fried is.

    Many have likened him to Bernie Madoff, because of the scale of his operation (the sheer amount of money lost by those who invested with him). But what’s very particular about Bankman-Fried is his youth and his generational vibe. Under his dark mop of saintly tech-geek curls, he’s got that teasingly awkward, fake-tentative passive aggression descended from the style of Steve Jobs in his seminars, which Bankman-Fried mixes with his own mode of “Look at what a sensitively evolved Zoomer bro I am!” When McKenzie asks him how much he’s contributed to the coffers of politicians, his dodging of the question is pure dissembling theater. He’s a truly shameless poster boy for how to rip people off in an “enlightened” way.

    And yet, the most astonishing comments in “Everyone is Lying to You for Money” occur in the interviews McKenzie conducted with a set of ordinary folks who lost their money in crypto. They were left shell-shocked and betrayed. But near the end of the film, McKenzie returns to them to ask if they still believe in crypto. And every one of them says yes. They may have gotten sucked into fraudulent dealings, but their faith in the crypto dream remains undiminished. “Everyone Is Lying to You for Money” captures a brave new world where the snake-oil salesmen believe their own hype, and where no one lies to the victims as much as they lie to themselves.

  • Ron Frierson Named President and CEO of Hollywood Chamber of Commerce

    Ron Frierson Named President and CEO of Hollywood Chamber of Commerce

    The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce has installed new leadership with veteran business and policy executive Ron Frierson signing on as president and CEO.

    The chamber has also tapped Dan Halden to serve as chief operating officer and legislative director for the organization that advocates for the Hollywood area of Los Angeles and administers the world renowned Hollywood Walk of Fame.

    Dan Halden

    “Hollywood is a globally recognized brand synonymous with creativity, influence and cultural impact. It is also a community of families, small businesses, and neighborhoods,” Frierson said. “I’m honored to lead the Chamber and to work alongside Dan, our Board, staff and our incredible members to advance a bold agenda that expands opportunity, strengthens our economy, and delivers lasting value for businesses, the community and visitors alike.”

    Frierson succeeds Steven Nissen, who spent the past three years as CEO of the chamber. Frierson has spent the past few years working for Amazon as director of West Coast economic development. He also worked at Los Angeles City Hall as director of economic policy during Eric Garcetti’s tenure as mayor.

    Halden has spent the past 13 years in various roles working for the city of Los Angeles and for former L.A. City Council members Tom LaBonge and Mitch O’Farrell.

    “I’m thrilled to partner with Ron and the Chamber team to deliver impactful programs, provide exceptional value to our members, and enhance the Hollywood experience for all,” Halden said. “The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce plays a vital role in supporting local businesses, advocating for economic development and maintaining Hollywood’s status as a premier destination for entertainment, tourism, commerce and beyond.”

    Jerry Neuman, chair of the chamber’s board of directors, hailed the appointments of two seasoned civic veterans.

    “I could not be more excited to have Ron as the face of the Chamber and ambassador to the community and industry as he will bring the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce to a level never before seen. Dan represents a powerful combination of vision and operational excellence,” Neuman said. “Together with Dan their leadership will not only build on the work we have accomplished so far but will drive innovation and growth for our members and broader Hollywood community.”

  • Google brings Gemini in Chrome to users in Australia, Japan, Singapore and South Korea

    After debuting in the US, Gemini in Chrome is making its way to more markets. Starting today, Google is rolling out Chrome’s built-in chatbot to users in countries in East Asia and the Pacific, including Australia, Indonesia, Japan, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea and Vietnam. The expansion comes after Google earlier this year made Gemini in Chrome available to people in Canada, India and New Zealand.

    With the exception of Japan, where Google isn’t making the new suite available on iOS just yet, everyone else in the countries mentioned above can access Gemini in Chrome through Chrome’s desktop browser, and the app on their iPhone or iPad. To get started, just tap the “Ask Gemini” icon at the top right of the screen. It will open a new sidebar Google introduced at the start of the year where you can chat with Gemini across every open tab. From there, you can also access Google’s in-house image generator, Nano Banana 2. As you would expect, the suite offers integrations with Google’s other apps, allowing you, for instance, to add events to Calendar without leaving the interface.

    If you don’t want to use Gemini, you can right click on the shortcut to unpin it from the top of the interface.  

  • Last Week Tonight‘s John Oliver says he won‘t placate prediction markets users

    John Oliver, host of HBO’s Last Week Tonight, targeted prediction market platforms on his show’s latest weekly deep dive.

    In Sunday’s airing of the HBO show, Oliver discussed some of the trivial event contracts on platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, including betting whether members of the Trump administration would use certain words in public addresses, to the companies’ controversial partnering with news organizations.

    Specifically, the host questioned Donald Trump Jr.’s relationship with both platforms — an adviser to Kalshi and Polymarket — and how the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) “doesn’t even seem to be trying” to block event contracts on terrorism, assassination and war under Chair Michael Selig.

    For much of the show, Oliver discussed how it is “incredibly easy for individuals to manipulate the outcomes,” citing Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong rattling off a list of crypto-related words in his third-quarter 2025 earnings call to cause many Kalshi and Polymarket users to win their bets.

    “I’m going to make you a promise tonight,” said Oliver, echoing Armstrong’s statement. “I will never do anything because someone online placed a bet on it. So you can be confident that if I ever say Bitcoin, Ethereum, blockchain, staking and Web3, it won’t be because I’m trying to move markets — it will be because I’m having a stroke.”

    Source: HBO Last Week Tonight

    While user activity and trading volume on prediction markets have increased exponentially in recent months — expected to reach $1 trillion by 2030 — the platforms’ controversial bets and legal status in US states have raised eyebrows for some experts. Gaming authorities in several states are suing companies like Kalshi over alleged illegal sports betting, with Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal and others expecting the legal fight to end up before the US Supreme Court.

    Related: Senate bill to target sports betting ban on prediction markets: WSJ

    Financial giants looking to expand into prediction markets?

    In addition to previously announced partnerships with media giants like CNN, CNBC, Fox News and Dow Jones, traditional financial companies including Charles Schwab and Citadel Securities recently signaled plans to consider prediction markets.

    Charles Schwab CEO Rick Wurster said on a Thursday investors call that the company would “take a hard look at” prediction markets. In a separate event the same day, Citadel Securities President Jim Esposito said that the company was “absolutely keeping an eye on developments” as part of a potential move into the market.

    Magazine: Adam Back says current demand is ‘almost’ enough to send Bitcoin to $1M

  • Bitcoin Rebounds Strongly — Can Bulls Drive Price Toward $79,000

    Bitcoin Rebounds Strongly — Can Bulls Drive Price Toward $79,000

    Bitcoin is showing renewed strength after a sharp rebound, signaling that buyers are stepping back in at key levels. With momentum building and price pushing higher, attention is now shifting toward the $79,000 resistance zone, where a breakout could confirm continued upside and open the door for a stronger rally.

    Selling Pressure After Initial Reaction

    Bitcoin saw an immediate response to yesterday’s developments, facing notable selling pressure as the market processed the news. Analyst Kamile Uray highlights that while the initial reaction was bearish, the possibility for a continued rally remains on the table, provided the immediate low of $73,371 is successfully defended.

    However, a 4-hour candle close below this mark would likely trigger a deeper correction toward the $68,720 level, which represents the critical 0.618 Fibonacci retracement of the most recent upward wave. Holding this support provides the foundation for a fresh leg up.

    Source: Chart from Kamile Uray on X

    On the bullish side, a decisive close above $79,000 would signal a continuation of the broader uptrend toward much higher targets. Uray identifies a major resistance cluster between $98,000 and $107,000–$109,000. Should the price face a rejection at these elevated levels, traders should expect a return to the previous support zones, ranging from $73,371 to the $66,000 region.

    Examining the daily timeframe, the $65,666 level serves as a pivot point. As long as Bitcoin maintains its position above this threshold, the overall structure remains skewed toward a potential rise.

    A failure to hold the $65,666 level would shift the focus to lower support levels at $63,823, $62,433, and $60,000. The most critical warning comes at the $60,000 mark; a daily close below this psychological and technical barrier would likely extend the corrective phase significantly.

    Bitcoin Bounces Strongly As Week Kicks Off

    In his most recent update, analyst Michaël van de Poppe noted a relatively strong upward bounce for Bitcoin on Monday. This movement is particularly significant as it occurs during a period where markets typically trend toward a risk-off stance ahead of the weekly opening. The ability of Bitcoin to push higher against this cautious backdrop suggests underlying strength in current demand.

    A key factor in this analysis is the recent decoupling from traditional safe-haven assets. While Bitcoin has shown resilience and upward momentum, gold has trended downward. Looking at the weekly outlook, the presence of a price gap at the $77,300 level remains a primary focal point for traders. Given the strength of the recent bounce and the existing technical vacuum toward that higher level, Bitcoin is expected to fill this gap and achieve new highs before the current week concludes.

    $BTC trading at $75,130 on the 1D chart | Source: BTCUSDT on Tradingview.com