She Ruled the 90s Charts – Now She's Ruling the Red Carpet with This New LookNew Foto - She Ruled the 90s Charts – Now She's Ruling the Red Carpet with This New Look

Get ready toPush It– right over toInstagram, becauseSandra "Pepa" Dentonis serving looks that have fans doing a serious double-take! The iconic member of the legendary hip-hop trioSalt-N-Pepahas always been a style trailblazer, but her recent red carpet appearances at the AMAS sparked a whole new level of buzz, with fans (and even bandmates!) declaring the star looks like she's "aging backwards." We all rememberthe '90s: the bold fashion, the groundbreaking music, and Salt-N-Pepa leading the charge. With hits like "Shoop" and "Whatta Man," they weren't just dominating the charts; they were defining culture. Pepa, with her instantly recognizable asymmetrical haircut, vibrant 8-Ball jackets, and fearless attitude, became a fashion icon for a generation. But the Pepa hitting red carpets today? She's embracing a new era of sophisticated glamour, and frankly, she looks absolutelyradiant. Swapping the streetwear for stunning silhouettes, Pepa turned heads at the AMAs in a black, shoulder-baring mini, with modern, elegant hair, and makeup that highlights her flawless complexion. After her recent show-stopping look surfaced online,her comments sectionexploded with love and admiration. "Gorgeous," commented one user simply, while another couldn't help but notice her youthful glow, writing, "Aging backwards." The praise kept pouring in, echoing her enduring appeal. "Still a fly girl," gushed one fan, with another adding, "She looks good!" Many highlighted how incredible she looks today: "Still looking good , yesss love to see it," commented one, while another enthusiastically posted, "She looks greeeeat." Even her longtime friend and bandmate, DJ Spinderella, had to show some love, posting, "Pep lookin good." She Ruled the 90s Charts – Now She's Ruling the Red Carpet with This New Lookfirst appeared on Parade on May 27, 2025

She Ruled the 90s Charts – Now She's Ruling the Red Carpet with This New Look

She Ruled the 90s Charts – Now She's Ruling the Red Carpet with This New Look Get ready toPush It– right over toInstagram, becauseSandra...
Gillian Flynn Is Proud to Be a Genre Writer. With Gillian Flynn Books, She's Publishing Page-Turning Thrillers Too (Exclusive)New Foto - Gillian Flynn Is Proud to Be a Genre Writer. With Gillian Flynn Books, She's Publishing Page-Turning Thrillers Too (Exclusive)

Heidi Jo Brady Gillian Flynn, author of bestsellers likeGone GirlandSharp Objectsalso publishes propulsive page-turners with her new imprint Gillian Flynn Books The imprint seeks to uplift fresh, unique voices that have something new to add to the market Two of those new books areGlass Girlsby Danie Shokoohi andThe Killing Fields of East New Yorkby Stacy Horn Gillian Flynn doesn't know if her smash hitGone Girlwould have gotten published in today's market. "Gone Girlis a weird book, when you think about it," the author and founder of the Zando imprintGillian Flynn Bookstells PEOPLE. "It's a whoddunit, and you find out who done it in the middle, [with] two main characters who aren't very likable." But we liked it — we really liked it. To date,Gone Girlhas sold more than 20 million copies after debuting at No. 2 onTheNew York Timesbestseller list in 2012 and later became a hit 2014 movie, for which Flynn also wrote the screenplay. She also served as a co-writer when her 2006 bookSharp Objectswas adapted into a2018 HBO series starring Amy Adamsand is currently working on an HBO limited series based on her bookDark Places, which also became a2015 filmstarringCharlize Theron. But in between writing her own twisty thrillers and turning them into movies and TV series as gripping as her books, Flynn is doing her best to uplift the kinds of page-turners she wants to read. Casey Kelbaugh/CKA "I was thrilled about the idea of helping unique voices get to the market," she says of her reaction when Zando publisher Molly Stern approached her about running an imprint. "The way publishing is, it's very much what sold last, or [giving book deals to] people who have platforms. That's diabolical, because you have to get published to get a platform and it's a horrible, terrible Catch-22." The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Flynn's imprint looks for "different, quirky mindsets and different types of characters that you don't always read about," including the kinds of stories that people can't stop reading or talking about with their friends. In her words, the stories that "make people actually sit up and and go, 'Holy smokes! What the hell was that? I need more!'" This season, those includeGlass Girlsby Danie Shokoohi, which features a woman with witchy abilities who's escaped from an abusive family that comes back to haunt her andThe Killing Fields of East New Yorkby Stacy Horn, a propulsive nonfiction that uncovers how white collar crime decimated a New York City neighborhood. They're the kind of books that "you immediately want to talk to your friend about," Flynn explains. "Like, oh, this is so much fun." Flynn, who grew up obsessed withBrothers Grimm fairytales("the ones where children are eaten or locked into trunks to die") andAgatha Christie mystery novels, has always been fascinated by darkness. "I think you're either one of those people who wants to look under the rock, or doesn't want to look under the rock," she explains. "I've always wanted to look under the rock." Casey Kelbaugh/CKA But more than that, she also believes strongly in the power of mysteries and thrillers to get people talking about larger issues. That's what happened withSharp Objects,which was originally supposed to be a very different kind of book. I originally wasn't trying to write a mystery," she recalls. "I wanted to write a novel about female violence." But then she stayed up all night readingMystic Riverby Dennis Lehane, and realized the mystery element is what the book needed to get into readers' heads and stay there. "I get to talk about all these things, but I do it in this like sugarcoating of a mystery so it goes down easy," Flynn explains. "I was able to change the whole thing, and have been doing that ever since." Casey Kelbaugh/CKA "I want people to read my books, I will be honest," she adds. "I don't want to be the respectable book that sits on people's bedside tables that they never read. I want people to read my books and be able to use them as a vocabulary to talk about other things." The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! And so far, mission accomplished. Both readers and viewers of shows likeSharp Objectshave told Flynn her work has "given them a vocabulary" to talk about self-harm and other difficult real-life issues. "I think the genre is still looked down on," she adds. "But the best psychological thrillers and the best writers are talking about more interesting things than a lot of literary writers right now ... some serious, interesting, dark stuff, but it's so much fun, too, and that's a hard, balancing act." As Flynn continues her own balancing act — working on her next novel, her new series and acquiring books for Gillian Flynn Books — she's excited for the stories she's going to put in your heads next, whether from her own pen or those she brings to a bookstore near you. "People look down on page-turners, and I'm so honored and happy and gleeful that I'm a page-turner," she says. "Because what are people reading? It's genre." Read the original article onPeople

Gillian Flynn Is Proud to Be a Genre Writer. With Gillian Flynn Books, She's Publishing Page-Turning Thrillers Too (Exclusive)

Gillian Flynn Is Proud to Be a Genre Writer. With Gillian Flynn Books, She's Publishing Page-Turning Thrillers Too (Exclusive) Heidi Jo ...
Zachary Levi claims supporting Trump made him a Hollywood outsiderNew Foto - Zachary Levi claims supporting Trump made him a Hollywood outsider

Zachary Leviconsiders himself a Hollywood outsider because of his political beliefs. The "Shazam!" star says there are people who don't want to work with him, after hepublicly endorsed President Donald Trump. "I know that there are people that would prefer not to work with me now because of my opinions. My team has let me know," he said during an interview withVariety. Actor Zachary Levi Encourages 'Closeted Conservatives' In Hollywood To Speak Out: 'It's Now Or Never' "They haven't given me any specific names, but there are people who prefer not to work with me at this time. And it's unfortunate. I knew that was probably going to happen. I didn't make this decision blindly or casually." Prior to the 2024 presidential election, Levi faced backlash for publicly endorsingPresident Trump.He explained that he does, however, still have allies in the industry. Read On The Fox News App "While there are some people who might prefer not to work with me anymore, there's a lot of people on that side of the political spectrum who are even more inclined to hire me and to want to do business with me because 'I need some people who voted another way.' "They see that what I did was at great risk. And they were like, 'You know what? I give you a lot of props for that because that's not an easy thing to do.' And I go, 'I appreciate that,'" he said. "I was not a fan of Trump's Trumpiness. I didn't like a lot of these personal things, the ways that he carries himself a lot of the time. I understand people's aversion," he told the outlet. "Do I think the whole package is somehow perfect? No. In fact, most people who voted for Donald Trump recognize a lot of the imperfections in all of it. Nobody was saying, 'This is the Orange Messiah.'" Like What You're Reading? Click Here For More Entertainment News Levi dished to Variety that a lot of people in Hollywood "secretly" voted for Trump in his last presidential run. "I know it to be true because I've gotten messages from lots of people who I won't name but who were very grateful to me for taking the stand that I took. And also they would tell me, 'I want to do that, but I'm so afraid.' "And I would tell them, 'Listen, you're on your journey. I'm on my journey. You've got to keep trusting God. And if you feel compelled to step out in that way, then do it boldly and know that you're going to be OK. And if you don't feel that conviction yet, then don't. It's all good,'" he said. In a video uploaded to Instagram in October, Levi addressed "The View"co-host Whoopi Goldberg's claim that Hollywood was a "right-leaning town" where "very few people seem to bite it because they're Republican." Levi disagreed with her comments, pointing out that she was only able to name actors Jon Voight and Dennis Quaid as examples of the thousands working in Hollywood today. He added actors like them seem to only come out as Republican "at a certain level of your career to get away with it." "And what that means is there's plenty — and by the way, they have sent me lots of messages — plenty of people in my industry in Hollywood that are terrified to publicly say that they would vote for Donald Trump or be conservative in any way,"Levi said at the time. "That's why you don't see them. That's why they're not very prevalent or prominent because they know that there's ramifications for this kind of s---." Levi pushed back against fears of industry backlash by arguing it has been "eroded" after pandemic lockdowns and the recent writers and actors' strikes, predicting it will soon be "f--- gonzo." "So anyway, my cry to all of you out there, you closeted conservatives, closeted Trump voters, y'all, it's now or never, you know what I mean?" Levi said. "Do whatever you feel like you need to do. If you need to come out publicly and say it, if you feel like you still can't, then don't. I would never pressure you to do that, but know that if what you're afraid of is somehow the backlash of an industry that's not going to exist very soon, then don't let that hold you back." Click Here To Sign Up For The Entertainment Newsletter In September, Levi endorsed Trump during an event for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Tulsi Gabbard. "In a perfect world, in whatever that would look like, perhaps I would have voted for Bobby," Levi said. "But we don't live in a perfect world. In fact, we live in a very broken one. We live in a country that has been hijacked by a lot of people who want to take this place way off the cliff, and we're here to stop that." Fox News Digital's Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report. Original article source:Zachary Levi claims supporting Trump made him a Hollywood outsider

Zachary Levi claims supporting Trump made him a Hollywood outsider

Zachary Levi claims supporting Trump made him a Hollywood outsider Zachary Leviconsiders himself a Hollywood outsider because of his politic...
Credibility crisis: White House reporters speak out on whether Biden's mental decline was deliberately hiddenNew Foto - Credibility crisis: White House reporters speak out on whether Biden's mental decline was deliberately hidden

White House reporters who covered the Biden administration are speaking out about whether they were duped into thinking the president was mentally fit for office and if West Wing staffers attempted to hide the truth from Americans. CNN's Jake Tapperand Axios reporter Alex Thompson's "Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again," was released on Tuesday and has created plenty of chatter among the White House press corps while putting the issue back at the forefront. The book detailsJoe Biden's mental acuity concerns while in office, accusing the Biden White House of lying to reporters and voters. Fox News senior White House correspondent Peter Doocy responded by posting multiple videos to X showing him questioning Biden and the White House about the then-president's cognitive decline, only to be quickly dismissed. Other White House reporters found it odd that CNN is tied to the book, while some had strong feelings about whether there was truly a "cover-up." Fox News' Peter Doocy Reveals History Of Questioning Biden's Mental Fitness One White House reporter truly believes the White House clearly tried to hide the truth from everyone. "This was a cover-up by any definition, but a quixotic one for the Biden team to have undertaken, for at the end of the day, there is only so much a White House staff can do to shield the President of the United States from exposure to the press and public. The cover-up had both private and public-facing dimensions," the second White House reporter toldFox News Digital. Read On The Fox News App The reporter said the private dimensions included "secretive strategizing and decision-making," while the public strategy featured "brazen lies" such as video of Biden appearing confused being chalked up as "cheapfakes" and "the silencing of reporters who pressed the issue early on." Doocy, and a handful of other bold reporters, were regularly shut down by press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre if they dared to ask about the president's fitness for office. "The subject that was denounced as so rude and fringe-y to ask about back then eventually emerged as the defining issue of the Biden presidency," the White House reporter said. Washington Post Urges Congress To Act To Prevent Another Cover-up Of President's Health Amid Biden Revelations A second White House reporter echoed the thoughts of "The Daily Show" host Jon Stewart, who on Mondayblasted CNNfor relentlessly promoting "a book about news they should've told you was news a year ago for free." "Sources are always more eager to talk after the fact, but it's not a good look that CNN -- a heavy hitter with plenty of weight to challenge the White House as the decline happened -- barely scratched the surface of the story that Tapper now reports," the second White House reporter told Fox News Digital. "Late work still deserves half credit though," they added. A third White House reporter initially believed the 82-year-old Biden was merely aging, or perhaps suffering from COVID side effects, and doesn't think the press is culpable. "You know, it's one of those things; the guy is old. He speaks like an old person, and it's getting more pronounced as time goes by," the third White House reporter said of Biden. "I noticed, personally, a dramatic difference between when he took office and the start of the second year. I suspected, and wondered, if it might be because of COVID and the aftereffects of COVID. He had it twice, I think… I know it's been reported that a brain fog kind of thing can happen after you've had it. I left it at that," they continued. "I remember a very different Joe Biden in 2014, 2015. He was a decade younger, so that makes sense." Cbs News Reporter Says Wsj's 'Courageous' 2024 Report On Biden's Decline Should Have Won The Pulitzer The third White House reporter "doesn't get" the notion that journalists should have been able to uncover the truth about his declining health at the moment. "How? How exactly do you report that? If you're a White House reporter, you have responsibilities to explain what happened that day. Like in any White House, there is usually something happening every single day," they said, noting that reporting on Biden's mental acuity concerns would be a major enterprise story. "People are not going to confirm medical stuff at all, not likely going to tell you what he's like in private… or in Wilmington, because it makes him look bad," they said. "Now, the Biden White House didn't leak. It just didn't, so if you want to go after that story, you're going to spend weeks on it, and you may not get anything. In the meantime, you're not doing other things." That same White House reporter is "puzzled" that Jean-Pierre has taken so much heat for regularly insisting Biden was fit for office. "To the extent that she says, 'He's more energetic than I am,' that's just silly, and she probably shouldn't have said that. On the other hand, to have her come out and say, 'Oh, no, no he's actually incapable of doing the job and ought to resign,' that's not realistic," the White House reporter said, adding that Jean-Pierre and other top Biden staffers had skin in the game. "I mean, come on, you cannot expect the chief of staff to say, 'This guy cannot do the job,'" they said. Former Biden Spokesperson Helping Lead Pr For Tapper-thompson Book On Biden's Decline The third White House reporter isn't sure Biden's age impacted his job performance and believes a lot of his shortcomings were simply "policy issues." "What would he have done much differently if he was younger? I don't know," they said. "Until you can show me that he did bad things because he wasn't up to the job at that moment, you know, I take it with a grain of salt." Margaret Chadbourn covers the White House as a Cheddar correspondent, with a seat in the briefing room, and is a WHCA member. She believes the entire Biden saga has hurt trust in the media because Americans are asking what was missed, and why it was missed. "Reporters need to do some soul-searching, maybe, perhaps, and question did they cover Biden the way they should have, through the lens they should have, asking the questions they should have, taking the facts and putting them together, or should they have looked for more facts," Chadbourn told Fox News Digital. "Should they have done more research?," Chadbourn continued. "I just think there is a whole timeline that the media and reporters need to look through, not just Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson writing a book." Chadbourn, who has been covering Biden on and off since 2005, said he was always affable and always "came alive interacting with voters."  But as his legacy is defined, she believes there is anger among Americans over what people perceive as "misinformation about his health." "Not as a media critic, but as a journalist, a political reporter, we need to see what was there that we perhaps missed," Chadbourn said. The firstWhite Housereporter who spoke anonymously believes the truth will eventually come out. "We will learn more about all this as time goes by: first, in aides' memoirs, where they will, for money, traffic the pitiable incidents and sad details they knew about at the time, and helped conceal; and secondly, through archival disclosure, as we get our hands on the White House memoranda, emails, and texts that will show the day-to-day mechanics of the cover-up—and maybe answer the question of who was running the country," the reporter told Fox News Digital. Original article source:Credibility crisis: White House reporters speak out on whether Biden's mental decline was deliberately hidden

Credibility crisis: White House reporters speak out on whether Biden's mental decline was deliberately hidden

Credibility crisis: White House reporters speak out on whether Biden's mental decline was deliberately hidden White House reporters who ...
With 'Never Flinch', Stephen King proves (again) he's scary good at mystery tooNew Foto - With 'Never Flinch', Stephen King proves (again) he's scary good at mystery too

Imagine Jimi Hendrix also being a tuba virtuoso, or Andy Warhol also excelling on an Etch-A-Sketch. The artistic greats, the geniuses, are often really,reallygood at one thing. Then there'sStephen King. For decades, hishorror stories– on the page and on the screen – have scared the bejeezus out of generations of people. (One of the things that defines Gen X is the fact many of us read his stuff earlier in our pop-culture lives than our parents would have preferred.) From"It"and "The Stand" to "Carrie" and "The Shining," he's influenced an entire genre of entertainment more than anybody. Then, somewhat unexpectedly, King wrote a hard-boiled detective novel – entering the sleuthing space of Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and more recently Michael Connelly. Over the past decade, from 2014's"Mr. Mercedes"to his latest riveting novel"Never Flinch"(★★★½ stars; Scribner; 448 pages), the master of horror has proven to be scarily good at the mystery thriller, too. So much so it's kind of unfair, honestly. King hasn't done it alone. He's found an inspirational muse in Holly Gibney. First a supporting player in the "Mr. Mercedes" trilogy, Holly has become King's go-to recurring character and, in a bibliography filled mostly with iconic villains, one of his greatest heroes. Mixing lovable quirks – she calls things she doesn't like "poopy" – with a relatable cadre of issues, she's a private investigator with a crowd-pleasing nature and a nose uncannily adept for sussing out a bad guy. Sometimes, like in "Never Flinch," multiple culprits. In the new book, Holly is hired as a bodyguard by rabble-rousing celebrity women's rights activist Kate McKay when her lecture tour is threatened by an increasingly violent mystery assailant. Holly's on that case and also is helping her police detective pal Izzy Jaynes with a serial killer on a revenge mission, who, after the death of a wrongfully convicted man, promises to "kill 13 innocents and one guilty." With two absorbing criminal plot lines, King juggles one whodunit and a pair of character studies while deftly and delightfully getting into the heads of the sinners and saints populating the book. The author also successfully continues to build out the world of fictional Buckeye City, Holly's Midwestern town that's getting to be as infamous as Castle Rock or Derry. Holly herself debuted as a side character in "Mr. Mercedes," which pitted aging cop Bill Hodges against homicidal ice cream man Brady Hartsfield (aka the Mercedes Killer), and she inherited their Finders Keepers detective agency after Bill's death in trilogy closer "End of Watch." From those books sprang Jerome and Barbara Robinson, the young sibling duo who continue to be Holly's closest allies in "Never Flinch." Bill's old partner Pete Huntley stops in for a spell every so often – not to mention Bill's presence that still haunts these stories – and Izzy takes a more central role in King's growing crime-solving universe after appearing in 2023's "Holly." Jerome even puts their relationship in a meta literary context: "Holly's Sherlock Holmes and Izzy's Inspector Lestrade!" (For the record, Izzy's probably got a better fastball than that old Scotland Yarder.) King clearly loves writing Holly and her entourage – it's apparent not only from the ink spilled on her adventures but the way she's grown over each case and every book. Why she deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as the writer's other memorable protagonists, like Roland Deschain of the "Dark Tower" books or the Losers' Club in "It," is because Holly continues to blossom as a human being. She suffers from low confidence and constantly wrestles with the anxiety caused by her late mom, yet every mystery works to build up her fortitude and spirit, from that face-changing Chet Ondowsky in the title novella of the 2020 collection"If It Bleeds"to the two elderly married psychos of "Holly." But as Holly improves herself, so does King himself. A large swatch of his Constant Readers would probably rather him just get back to the scary stuff already. The man still does a horror tale like no other – he's not the king for nothing. What's different and so enjoyable about reading his Holly stories, other than how he weaves his signature folksiness and macabre sensibilities with modern themes like abortion rights and evangelical extremism, is that King seems to be having fun testing his own imagination and experimenting with different ways to tell a detective yarn. That landscape is rife with so many colorful personalities – Sherlock, Miss Marple and Sam Spade of an old-school persuasion, Jack Reacher, Harry Bosch and Harry Hole from a more modern place. To not consider Holly Gibney a vital part of that crew at this point would be pretty poopy. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Stephen King's 'Never Flinch' grows the legend of Holly Gibney

With 'Never Flinch', Stephen King proves (again) he's scary good at mystery too

With 'Never Flinch', Stephen King proves (again) he's scary good at mystery too Imagine Jimi Hendrix also being a tuba virtuoso,...

 

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