Machine Gun Kelly Makes Rare Comment on His and Megan Fox's Baby: 'I'm Just So Elated'New Foto - Machine Gun Kelly Makes Rare Comment on His and Megan Fox's Baby: 'I'm Just So Elated'

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic Machine Gun Kelly and Megan Fox welcomed their first child together on March 27 The former couple have not publicly shared the name of their baby girl MGK and Fox both have kids from previous relationships Machine Gun Kellyis loving being in dad mode. While walking the red carpet at the2025 American Music Awardsin Las Vegas on Monday, May 26, the 35-year-old "Cliché" rapper (whose real name is Colson Baker) couldn't help but gush over his baby girl, whom he shares with exMegan Fox. "I'm just so elated," he toldAccess Onlineabout life with the newborn. "It's just awesome." Kelly, who is also dad toCasie Colson Baker, 15, shared one thing he adores about being a new father again. Brian Friedman/Penske Media via Getty "They smell so good," he said, motioning as if he were cradling a baby. "I was just meant to be a dad." In another red carpet interview, the "Wild Boy" rapper toldE! Newswhy he wouldn't be at Monday night's event for too long. "She has a little bit of a fever, so I'm gonna just walk the carpet and go back, you know what I mean, and handle my business,"he explained. "Give her my pheromones, and let her heal up." MGK and Fox, 39,welcomed their baby girlon March 27. TheTransformersactress also shares Noah Shannon Green, 12, Bodhi Ransom Green, 11, and Journey River Green, 8, with ex-husbandBrian Austin Green. Kevin Mazur/Getty "She's finally here!! our little celestial seed 🥹💓♈️♓️♊️," Kelly said of her arrival viaInstagram. However, less than a week later, theDirtactor made another announcement, clarifying thathis newborn's namewas not "Celestial Seed." His post was in response to a woman on TikTok doing a breakdown of his and Fox's baby announcement, confusing the warm welcome for sharing what the baby was named. "Wait guys… her name isn't 'Celestial Seed' 🤣," MGK wrote over a screenshot of the TikTok video, which also showed him and theJennifer's Bodyactress together. Arturo Holmes/WireImage "Her mom is gonna tell you the name when we're ready," he added. Fox and MGK gotengaged in January 2022. Theycalled it quitsin December 2024, just weeks after announcing thatthey were expecting a baby together. Earlier this month,a source told PEOPLEexclusively that despite their breakup, the rapper is "committed to being present for their daughter," which is why he's been staying at the house "part-time." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "Megan and Colson are not back together," the insider told PEOPLE. "Their relationship remains focused strictly on coparenting their baby girl. While Colson does occasionally stay at Megan's house, it's only part-time and solely to spend time with the baby." "They're committed to being present for their daughter, but they're not living together or romantically involved," the source said. Read the original article onPeople

Machine Gun Kelly Makes Rare Comment on His and Megan Fox’s Baby: ‘I’m Just So Elated’

Machine Gun Kelly Makes Rare Comment on His and Megan Fox's Baby: 'I'm Just So Elated' Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic Machin...
Freed from Hamas captivity, former hostage tells his story through his paintingsNew Foto - Freed from Hamas captivity, former hostage tells his story through his paintings

NEW YORK (AP) — You'd be forgiven for looking around Andrei Kozlov's studio, dotted with paintings inspired by his eight months as a hostage of Hamas, and seeing only darkness — canvases splashed with gray and ocher, guns tucked into waistbands or resting against a wall, moments of angst and disbelief and pain. He is afree man now, who often lets a wide smile spread across his face, who can't believe his luck of surviving it all, and who urges you to look further. A painting of a blackened street his captors led him down is drowned in darkness, but in the distance is a sliver of cerulean sky. A screaming man's reflection is caught, but it's in a mirror on a bubblegum-pink wall. A house beside barren trees is seen in the desolation of night, but its windows glow with lamplight. "When you're surrounded by something dark," the 28-year-old Kozlov says, standing in a shared art studio he works at in the Hudson Yards neighborhood of New York, "there always can be light inside." Nearly a year after his release from captivity, Kozlov is familiar with juxtapositions. He is mostly happy and well-adjusted, able to matter-of-factly describe his ordeal, but sometimes returns in his mind to what he went through. He is alive and filled with gratitude but feelsthe weight of those not yet free. He is no longer a hostage but knows the world may always see him as one. "I will be a former hostage forever," he says. "It will forever be a part of my life." Captured while working at music festival Kozlov grew up in St. Petersburg, Russia, but had long felt a sense of wanderlust. After serving a mandatory year in the military, he decided he wanted to live in Israel, arriving in August 2022 and taking part in Masa, a gap-year program that included an internship in motion design at a Tel Aviv company. His life was carefree,reflected in Instagram postsof beaches, biking, surfing, road-tripping and otherwise enjoying the days of a relaxed, unemployed 20-something. That ended on Oct. 7, 2023,the deadliest day in Israel's history. Kozlov had picked up a job working security at the Tribe of Nova music festival in southern Israel close to the Gaza border, barely sleeping in two nights keeping watch for ticketless intruders. On his third morning, daybreakunleashed hours of chaos and confusion, the sound of gunfire, mad dashes for escape, scaling down a cliff and ultimately being led to a vehicle that Kozlov believed would bring him to safety. He hadn't been killed, he rationalized, so he would be rescued. He never considered kidnapping. He sent no messages to his family. He was sure he would survive. He'd be home by night, he thought. Soon, though, Kozlov was in Gaza, tied with rope. Reality set in. Guns were aimed and blows were delivered. He was certain he knew what would come next. "You are sure that you will spend the last moments of your life like that," he says, "and maybe tomorrow they will kill you." Those first days of Kozlov's captivity were a "disgusting, terrible hell." Over eight months, he says he was held in eight different houses, guarded by a rotating cast of two dozen militants who lived beside him. Some, he said, feigned compassion; others treated their captives as animals. In some holding sites, he slept on a wet, sticky mattress that stunk of mold; others had far better conditions. Ropes were replaced by chains until restraints were removed altogether. He knows it could have been far worse. "They didn't pull out my nails," he says. "They didn't torture me with electroshock." Card games, prayers and drawings In time, a weird normalcy set in. He spent time picking up Arabic from his captors and Hebrew from fellow hostages. They'd talk of music and women and life before. Days passed in endless hands of cards or invented games like listing 10 Will Smith movies or 100 songs with the word 'love' in the title. He'd muse about escaping, but knew he'd never make it out alive. Sometimes, he wondered if he could telekinetically send a message to his parents. At others, this agnostic found himself trying to talk to God. After a few months, his captors provided a small mercy: A pencil and a thin notebook. Kozlov knew he had artistic talent from childhood, but it was a pastime that came and went. Sometimes, years went by without drawing. Now, with nothing but time, he drew daily — cartoonish aliens and Don Corleone of "The Godfather" and the summer home in Russia where he spent his happiest days of youth. He wrote out goals, too. To go home the same person, or maybe better. To use his skills. To be free. And, on the 247th day, it came.Israeli Defense Forces burst into the housein the Nuseirat refugee camp where Kozlov was held — a dramatic operation thatrescued him and three other hostages, and killed at least 274 Palestinians caught in the cross-fire and an Israeli commando. In a moment, he was outside, feeling sun on his face for the first time in months, a Coke in his hand and a cigarette at his lips. A helicopter whirred him to safety. "Euphoria," he says. "You're able to feel fresh air, to see a sea, beach, sand, sky without any clouds." He calls it the best day of his life. With freedom, scars and hope In the days that followed, he'd be reunited with his family, crumpling and bawling at his mother's feet at a hospital outside Tel Aviv, and recognized by passersby as that hostage on the news. Some nights, he'd wake up thinking he was back on that sticky mattress. Some days he had to pinch himself to believe he was truly free. "Sometimes I feel what it means to have a war and sometimes I feel the pain of every hostage," he says. "I feel pain of families who don't know where their loved ones are right now. ... I feel pain of people who left their houses in the south. I feel the pain of all the people who lost their houses. I feel pain." He says the vast majority of the time, he feels fine, but a day or so a month, the darkness returns. He spent his first few months of freedom in Israel, then traveling in the U.S. He was back in Israel for a time earlier this year, but found too many triggers, so he returned to the U.S. Along the way, he's made good on his goal, working on his art. In his studio space a block from the Hudson River, he's finalizing a planned exhibition of his work — a series of mostly acrylic paintings showing his capture, captivity and release. He wants to finish a few more pieces influenced by his time as a hostage before pivoting to new inspirations. Maybe he'll flit off to New Zealand, he says. Maybe he'll write a book. So many doors are open to him. Maybe art will become his life and his work will be filled with color and happiness. He sees that joy even in the paintings others might insist are dark. "It's not dark," he says. "It's about hope." ___ Matt Sedensky can be reached at msedensky@ap.org andhttps://x.com/sedensky ___ Follow AP's war coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Freed from Hamas captivity, former hostage tells his story through his paintings

Freed from Hamas captivity, former hostage tells his story through his paintings NEW YORK (AP) — You'd be forgiven for looking around An...
Zak Starkey, Ringo Starr's Son, Says The Who's Roger Daltrey Clarified That He'd Been 'Retired' Rather Than 'Fired'New Foto - Zak Starkey, Ringo Starr's Son, Says The Who's Roger Daltrey Clarified That He'd Been 'Retired' Rather Than 'Fired'

David M. Benett/Dave Benett/WireImage; Arturo Holmes/Getty Zak Starkey addressed his status with The Who on Monday, May 26 The update came a month after he announced that he was leaving the band only for Pete Townshend to shut that down days later "Rog said I hadn't been 'fired'…I had been 'retired' to work n my own projects," said Starkey Zak Starkeyis shutting down the "noise and confusion." A month after announcing thathe was parting ways with The Who after 29 years, only forPete Townshendto say thathe was not leaving the band days later, Starkey is giving insight into what really happened. "NOISE&CONFUSION!!!! I had a great phone chat withRoger [Daltrey]at the end of last week which truly confused both of us!!!" began Starkey, the son ofThe BeatlesdrummerRingo Starrand his first wife Maureen Starkey, in a Monday, May 26Instagramstatement. Zak Starkey/Instagram "Rog said I hadn't been 'fired'…I had been 'retired' to work n my own projects. I explained to Rog that I have just spent nearly 8 weeks at my studio in Jamaica completing these projects, that my group Mantra Of The Cosmos was releasing one single at the beginning of June and after that had run its course ( usually 5/6 weeks )," his statement continued. "I was completely available for the foreseeable future….Rog said 'Oh!' and we kind of left it there- On good terms and great friends as we have always been," said Starkey. "Gotta love these guys. As my mum used to say 'The mind boggles!!!' XXX.' Starkey posted his statement next to a photo with text: "Drummers: From Keith Moon to Zak Starkey and Beyonce." It was an edited version of aRolling Stoneheadline that read, "All of the Who's Drummers: From Keith Moon to Zak Starkey and Beyond." Rick Kern/Getty Fans noted in the comment section that they were happy to get an update, even if they were still confused about what happened. "Very confusing. As long as you're ok, that's all that matters. We got you," one comment read. Another person wrote, "I'm so glad to know that you are still on good terms with Roger and Pete after this confusing mess." The confusion began after Starkey confirmed to PEOPLE in a statement on Wednesday, April 16, thathe had parted ways with The Who, and said he was going to focus on his family, autobiography, and own music. He also referencedthe blood clot on his right kneethat he suffered in January, noting that it was not affecting his drumming. His statement came weeks after aMetro reportwas published, alleging that Daltrey had repeatedly said he was struggling to hear over the drums duringThe Who's Royal Albert Hall show in March. Carsten Koall/picture alliance via Getty Townshend would go on to address Starkey's statement in anInstagram poston Saturday, April 19, expressing that there had "been some communication issues, personal and private on all sides, that needed to be dealt with, and these have been aired happily." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. He further added, "Roger and I would like Zak to tighten up his latest evolved drumming style to accommodate our non-orchestral line up and he has readily agreed. I take responsibility for some of the confusion." Read the original article onPeople

Zak Starkey, Ringo Starr’s Son, Says The Who’s Roger Daltrey Clarified That He'd Been 'Retired' Rather Than 'Fired'

Zak Starkey, Ringo Starr's Son, Says The Who's Roger Daltrey Clarified That He'd Been 'Retired' Rather Than 'Fired...
King Charles to outline Mark Carney's priorities in Canada's Parliament amid Trump annexation threatNew Foto - King Charles to outline Mark Carney's priorities in Canada's Parliament amid Trump annexation threat

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) —King Charles IIIwill outline new Prime Minister Mark Carney's government priorities in a speech in the Canadian Parliament on Tuesday. It's widely viewed as a show of support in the face of annexation threats by U.S. PresidentDonald Trump. Trump's repeated suggestion that the U.S.annex Canadaprompted Prime Minister Carney to invite Charles to give the speech from the throne. The king is thehead of state in Canada, which is a member of the British Commonwealth of former colonies. Carney said in a statement the visit speaks to the "vitality of our constitutional monarchy and our distinct identity." It is rare for the monarch to deliver what's called the speech from the throne in Canada. Charles' mother, Queen Elizabeth II, did it twice in her 70-year reign, the last time in 1977. The speech is not written by the king or his U.K. advisers as Charles serves as a nonpartisan head of state. He will read what is put before him by Canada's government. Carney, the new prime ministerand aformer head of the Bank of England, and Canada's first Indigenous governor general, Mary Simon, the king's representative in Canada, met with the king on Monday. Canadians are largely indifferent to the monarchy, but Carney has been eager to show the differences between Canada and the United States. The king's visit clearly underscores Canada's sovereignty, he said. Carney won the job of prime minister by promising to confront the increased aggression shown by Trump. The new U.S. ambassador to Canada, Pete Hoekstra, said sending messages to the U.S. isn't necessary and Canadians should move on from the 51st state talk, telling the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that if there's a message to be sent there are easier ways to do that, such as calling him or calling the president. A horse-drawn carriage will take the king and queen to the Senate of Canada Building for the speech. It will accompanied by 28 horses — 14 before and 14 after. He will receive the Royal Salute from the 100-person guard of honor from the 3rd Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment before entering the chamber for his speech. The king will return to the U.K. after the speech and a visit to Canada's National War Memorial.

King Charles to outline Mark Carney's priorities in Canada's Parliament amid Trump annexation threat

King Charles to outline Mark Carney's priorities in Canada's Parliament amid Trump annexation threat OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) —King Char...
'Modern Family' Star is Nearly Unrecognizable in 'Stunning' Transformation at the AMAsNew Foto - 'Modern Family' Star is Nearly Unrecognizable in 'Stunning' Transformation at the AMAs

Aubrey Anderson-Emmons, who played the fan-favorite character Lily onModern Family, stunned fans on May 26 when she showed up at the American Music Awards looking stunning in a colorful dress. The 17-year-old actress arrived on the red carpet for the AMAs wearing a black dress with thin straps and a many-layered skirt covered in a sequined floral pattern in various colors. 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 Anderson-Emmons completed the look with glamorous makeup, including bold eyeliner, and an elegant updo that left a couple of hair pieces hanging around her face. Many fans were shocked to see Anderson-Emmons at the music event, unsure if they were really looking at the same actress from the popular sitcom, withcomments on Xlike, "lily what you doing here," "lily?????" and "Oh I'm getting old cause not this Lily??? 😭😭😭." Another stunned fan quipped, "hold on… she used to be a kid like 5 seconds ago? damn im getting old." But they quickly praised her chic ensemble, such as one person who wrote, "Loved her dress, she looks absolutely gorgeous and stylish." "She's all grown up and shining bright…! Excited to see what's next for her," said another, while more fans replied, "Aubrey's killing it, love to see it 🔥," and "OMG QUEEN LILY." Anderson-Emmons recently opened up abouther renewed interest in actingafter taking a break for years, while she is also exploring a career in music, with her first original song, "Telephones and Traffic," released on May 23. Related: 'Modern Family' Star Announces Surprising Career Pivot and Fans Are Already in Love With the 'Dreamy' New Project 'Modern Family' Star is Nearly Unrecognizable in 'Stunning' Transformation at the AMAsfirst appeared on Parade on May 26, 2025

'Modern Family' Star is Nearly Unrecognizable in 'Stunning' Transformation at the AMAs

'Modern Family' Star is Nearly Unrecognizable in 'Stunning' Transformation at the AMAs Aubrey Anderson-Emmons, who played th...

 

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