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Minka Kelly's X-Mas in France Romance 'Champagne Problems' Trailer
Hollywood

Minka Kelly’s X-Mas in France Romance ‘Champagne Problems’ Trailer

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Minka Kelly’s X-Mas in France Romance ‘Champagne Problems’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
October 15, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You think I’m flirting with you?” “Aren’t you?” “Absolutely.” Oooh la la! Netflix has revealed their official trailer for another new romantic comedy arriving this fall for streaming at home. Champagne Problems is the latest creation from the director of Love, Guaranteed and Love in the Villa. A driven American exec heads to Paris determined to acquire a champagne brand by Christmas — and accidentally falls for the heir to the bubbly empire. Starring Minka Kelly as the exec and Tom Wozniczka as the hunky French beau, Champagne Problems is this Holiday season’s reminder that one simple evening can turn into something special and that Christmas in France is always a good idea. Sydney is a determined American executive who travels to France to secure the acquisition of a world-renowned champagne brand before Christmas, but her plans are upended when she falls into a whirlwind romance – who turns out to be the founder’s son. Also starring Thibault de Montalemert, Sean Amsing, Flula Borg, Astrid Whettnall, Xavier Samuel, Mitchell Mullen, and Maeve Courtier-Lilley. This looks sweet & fun – though very weird Die Hard joke.

Here’s the first official trailer for Mark Steven Johnson’s film Champagne Problems, from YouTube:

Champagne Problems Trailer

Champagne Problems Trailer

Sydney Price (Minka Kelly) is a determined emerging executive who finally gets a chance to lead a major acquisition for Chateau Cassell, a beloved champagne house nestled in the heart of the Champagne region. When she hears she has been summoned to France around Christmas as part of the negotiations, she arrives in the city of lights with a hopeful heart & ready to close the deal. Taking one night off to soak in the magic of Paris over the holidays, she has an unexpectedly charming run-in with Henri Cassell (Tom Wozniczka), a stranger who turns one simple evening into something special. Her plans for a whirlwind romance are quickly upended when she discovers that this charming Parisian is the founder’s son of the very company she is hoping to acquire. Yet, even amidst gentle competition set by Hugo Cassell (Thibault de Montalemert) for all the potential buyers at the family vineyard, Sydney and Henri find themselves irresistibly drawn to each other, realizing that their burgeoning feelings might be hard to keep bottled up.

Champagne Problems is written and directed by the American writer / filmmaker Mark Steven Johnson, director of the movies Simon Birch, Daredevil, Ghost Rider, When In Rome, Killing Season, Finding Steve McQueen, Love Guaranteed, and Love in the Villa previously. It’s produced by Stephanie Slack, Margret H. Huddleston, Mark Steven Johnson. Netflix will debut Mark Steven Johnson’s Champagne Problems film streaming on Netflix worldwide starting November 19th, 2025 this fall. Look fun? Who wants to watch?

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October 16, 2025 0 comments
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R. Kelly’s ‘Chocolate Factory’ Mansion In Chicago Sells For $1.6M
Music

R. Kelly’s ‘Chocolate Factory’ Mansion In Chicago Sells For $1.6M

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

The suburban Chicago mansion, famously nicknamed R. Kelly’s “Chocolate Factory” after the album he recorded there, has officially sold for nearly $1.6 million — less than half of its original asking price.

Per The New York Post, the spacious 21,000-square-foot Olympia Fields estate was sold to an unknown buyer, but the history behind the home may have had much to do with its purchase. The property served as both recording hub and the center of disturbing allegations that have long shadowed Kelly’s career.

By the time the property went into foreclosure in 2013, its physical decline mirrored its troubled history. Reportedly, flooding had gutted the basement, mold had spread across the walls, and other structural issues were apparent.

The late Rudolph Isley of The Isley Brothers and his wife, Elaine, however, purchased the home out of foreclosure for $587,500 in 2013. They spent years restoring the mansion, reviving its interiors while preserving some of its original eccentric charm. Photos of the property showed a jungle-themed indoor pool, a bedroom modeled after a Chicago Bulls gym, and other unique features.

Following Isley’s death in 2023, Elaine listed the estate for $3.5 million. Despite the extensive renovations, it ultimately sold for less than half that amount.

Listing agent Alex Wolking of Keller Williams ONEChicago told The Post that high property taxes were a major factor in the lower sale price, with annual bills once exceeding $250,000. Even after a successful appeal, taxes remained in the six-figure range. Still, Wolking noted that the mansion’s notoriety helped attract buyers.

“The R. Kelly media attention was actually what helped sell it,” he said. “The Isley Brothers connection helped draw a lot of attention, too. Homes with this kind of celebrity lineage just don’t exist in the Midwest.”

Singer R. Kelly appears during a hearing at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse on September 17, 2019 in Chicago, Illinois. Kelly is facing multiple sexual assault charges and is being held without bail.

Antonio Perez – Pool via Getty Images

The home’s history was unearthed during Kelly’s 2021 federal sex crimes and racketeering trial when his former assistant, Anthony Navarro, testified. During his testimony, Navarro claimed that women were restricted to certain rooms in the home and forbidden from moving freely. Surveillance footage reportedly showed young girls hopping fences in what appeared to be attempts to escape.

“The things you had to do was just a bit uncomfortable…it was almost like the ‘Twilight Zone,’ you went into the gate and it was like a different world, just a strange place,” Navarro stated on the third day of the 54-year-old singer’s federal trial.

The “Step In the Name of Love” singer was arrested in July 2019 and sentenced to 31 years on Sept. 27, 2021, after a six-week trial. He was found guilty on charges of federal racketeering, sex trafficking, and child pornography charges stemming from cases in New York and Chicago.

Take a look at photos of the Chicago home below captured by The Root.

The Foyer

Athletic Court

Court Themed Bedroom

Dining Area

Kitchen

Car Showroom

Theater

Library/Office

Kitchenette

Living Room

Jungle-Themed Pool House

Jungle-Themed Pool House

Gym

Guest Suite

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Ruston Kelly. (Credit: Alexa King Stone)
Music

Ruston Kelly’s Out-of-Body Experience – SPIN

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Ruston Kelly was in the middle of a years-long existential crisis when he left his own body and watched himself sitting at his piano. 

An astral projection. 

He was sober, clean from drugs for a few years. 

An apparition approached him while he floated. It was Jesus. As the figure came closer to Kelly, the musician felt a sense of calm wash over him. 

“I understood a sense of, it wasn’t bliss, and it wasn’t even joy, it was complete equanimity,” he says during a video call from his home in Nashville. “There was a oneness to what had been, what is now, what would come.”

Then, when Kelly came to, he realized he had been crying, his hands raised while he sat on the piano bench. And he knew he wasn’t alone anymore, that whatever he was going through was over.  

Doja Cat. (Credit: Greg Swale)

“There wasn’t really a call to be anything other than a student again, but a student of my own spirit in relation to knowing that I belong to someone,” he says. “I mean, that changed everything.”

(Credit: Alexa King Stone)(Credit: Alexa King Stone)
(Credit: Alexa King Stone)

Kelly swears to me he isn’t a religious man, at least not in the traditional sense. He’s not a member of any branch of Christianity, nor does he necessarily want to be. “When we start talking about these things—especially when it comes to public-facing lines of work—speaking about God and speaking about religion seem to be synonymous, but I didn’t have a religious experience,” he says. “I had an experience that was just my experience. That’s the only way I can put it.”

Over a multiyear period, Kelly, despite releasing three albums—Dying Star (2018), Shape & Destroy (2020), and The Weakness (2023)—felt like he had lost his voice. You’d never know it by listening to him sing during that time. But to him,  he experienced an immense loss between the physical and spiritual link that comes with singing, a sort of voice dissociation. “I did not feel a connection to my main form of artistic expression,” he says. “I couldn’t sing with a fluency that seemed to have always come from a natural ability to express my soul.”

He couldn’t sleep. He broke down in tears. He begged and prayed to whatever higher power there was to get his musical gifts back. “I felt that I was being punished for all the ways that I had abused something that was important and freely given,” he says, referring to earlier days of drug addiction. 

His new album, Pale, Through the Window, is about that experience.

Kelly approached writing this album, released September 12, differently than his previous records. 

“I was really getting frustrated with having this incredible experience, and not being able to funnel it into a creative conjecture about what it was,” he says. “I wasn’t able to pull from that thread that I always pulled from. I kept trying, and it just seemed like everything came out trite, and this was anything but a trite situation. I knew I was going to have to write from a different muscle.”

Kelly says that his songwriting technique for Pale, Through the Window became less about the discipline and craft of songwriting, less about metaphors and abstraction, and more about telling a simple, straightforward story. He didn’t start writing until two weeks prior to pre-production. He had faith that the words would come. And they did, more easily than they ever had before.

“I was assaulted by the inspiration for what the album was and knew that it was going to be very simply about this spiritual experience and about falling in love on the heels of that.”

Kelly’s referring to his current girlfriend, Tia Cubelic, whom he met while on vacation to Pawleys Island, South Carolina, in 2024, where their first date was a game of pickleball, inspiring the album’s track of the same name. 

But the 37-year-old wasn’t always destined to be a singer-songwriter.

Before becoming an Americana, or “emo-dirt” musician, as he describes his genre of music, Kelly was a junior Olympian and seven-time state champion figure skater. 

From the time he was 8 years old until he was 15, Kelly was steeped in the deeply competitive, and in his words, toxic world of figure skating. With his parents’ permission, he moved from his home in Georgetown, South Carolina, to Ann Arbor, Michigan, to live and train with a husband-and-wife coaching team. While his gift for the sport was apparent to everyone who watched him skate, the dysfunction that was happening behind the scenes wasn’t. 

Kelly’s coaches, who had taken legal guardianship of him, forced him to train intensely for eight hours a day to pursue his figure skating dreams. After practice each day, however, they seemed to want nothing to do with him. 

“They never really provided any legal guardianship in the way of food or picking me up from school,” he says. “So I had to kind of toughen up.” 

As an escape from the instability of his situation, Kelly began learning Blink-182 and Nirvana songs with the guitar his father had given him for Christmas. He eventually began writing his own songs as a way to deal with his stress and conflicting feelings. 

“I would shut myself in the room and start expressing my own feelings musically,” he says. “I found a way to have relief from something that’s difficult for me to articulate to anyone, even myself, but then to also make some sort of sense of it.”

It was self-preservation through self-expression, he says.

Kelly knew he would have to make a decision about his future: either tough it out and figure out how to take care of himself so he could keep skating, or tell his parents about the abuse. 

He eventually told his parents and walked away from the sport for good. 

Because of his father’s work, Kelly’s family moved a lot. During high school, they had relocated to the small town of Wyoming, Ohio, where Kelly became known as the “guitar guy.” Music, he tells me, was in the fabric of the friendships he formed there; not just listening to it, but performing it. Together with the group of friends he jammed with, he attended a Dave Matthews Band show, Kelly’s first concert, describing it as the “ultimate extension of what we do in our parents’ basements and garages.”

But it wasn’t until the Dave Matthews Band came back to Wyoming the next year that Kelly began to think about pursuing music professionally. Attending the show with his older brother, Kelly remembers his sibling leaning toward him, pointing to Matthews onstage and saying, “You’re going to do that someday.” 

After a brief stint in Belgium, where his family had moved later, Kelly went to Nashville with his sister at 17 and began playing with a local jam band called Elmwood. Some music executives noticed them while playing at a bar, and within a week, they were signed to Paradigm Records and began touring. 

It was while Elmwood was touring with alt-rock group O.A.R. that he got hooked on drugs. A fellow band member introduced him to amphetamines to help with Kelly’s ADHD. 

“On the onset of that chemical hitting my bloodstream, I felt two things: One was that I felt normal for the first time in my life,” he says. “And the second was, I never want to stop taking this.”

When he got home from the tour, Kelly got a prescription, and the bottle was gone in two days. He felt like he could do anything, until the amphetamines wore off. Then, he says, he would feel worse than he did before, with new feelings of depression, hyper-anxiety, and lack of self-worth.

“It got to where I was taking handfuls of it,” he says. “I had to take multiple pills to even function.”

By the time Kelly was 22, he began to feel restless with the direction his career was going. “I liked playing jam band music, but it just wasn’t part of that initial expression of making sense of the world,” he says. “And I wanted to do something that had value other than attempting to tap your foot.”

Kelly quit the band and took with him the songs he had written that would become, as he describes it, the early steps toward making his own records. 

(Credit: Alexa King Stone)(Credit: Alexa King Stone)
(Credit: Alexa King Stone)

In 2013, “Nashville Without You,” a song he co-wrote with Kyle Jacobs and Joe Leathers, appeared on Tim McGraw’s Two Lanes of Freedom album. 

As he pursued his solo career, Kelly’s drug addiction worsened. When amphetamines stopped working, he moved on to cocaine. While he says he partied a lot with friends, it was when he was alone in his home writing songs that his drug abuse really got bad. 

“I think at the time I felt such a calling to do what I’m doing now, but when I was on all of those pills, I could never stop doing it,” he says. “And I think I had associated creativity with something that was broken, and that I could at least impart something of beauty and meaning into a broken situation. But you end up drinking your own bathwater because you’re trying to heal something while also breaking it at the same time. I wish I’d never taken that pill. But that’s the choice I made.”

He knew his addiction was taking a toll on him and his family. As much as he wanted to get clean, he found it nearly impossible. “That chemical had such a vicious hold on me that it almost, in a demonic way, reared its head,” he says. “And I attempted to shun my entire family, and I’m so close with them. I saw it break my mom and my dad’s hearts in front of me. The things that I was saying that I would never say in a million years, in the way that I was saying them, and the destruction that was coming out of my spirit, seeing that land on people who have done nothing but love you in their best efforts.”

Kelly overdosed in 2015, which put him in the hospital. He then went to rehab, and he was able to stay sober for a period of time. He then began dating country artist Kacey Musgraves in 2016, and the couple married in 2017. 

During his three-year marriage, Kelly relapsed. “It was a single night,” he says. “I woke up with a sock full of pills and was like, all right, never again. And it’s been that way since.”

It was around this time that Kelly lost the spiritual connection to his voice, spiraling him into his long, emotional crisis. 

Thanks to his out-of-body experience, Kelly not only got his voice back, but he learned to let go of his painful past and gain a new perspective on life and his songwriting. 

“Letting go of the past, letting go of the tropes that I’d written into my own script, you know?” he says. “Maybe I’m not that great a scriptwriter for myself. There is a plan above, around, and beyond what I could imagine for myself. There’s more breadth to the way I’m experiencing my own reality. And surrendering to that is the most freeing experience I’ve ever had to date.”

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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THE RAINMAKER -- Episode 107 -- Pictured: (l-r) Robyn Cara as Kelly Riker, Milo Callaghan as Rudy Baylor -- (Photo by: Chistopher Barr/USA Network)
TV & Streaming

Milo Callaghan and Robyn Cara on Rudy and Kelly’s Relationship

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for The Rainmaker Episode 7.]

Rudy Baylor (Milo Callaghan) had to go to court for a different reason than usual in Friday’s (September 26) new episode of The Rainmaker. Rather than heading in for another hearing to prosecute the Donny Ray Black civil case, Rudy came in as a defendant … in a criminal proceeding.

Cliff (Fionn Ó Loingsigh), the abusive husband of Kelly Riker (Robyn Cara), tracked her down to Dot’s (Karen Bryson) house and attacked her in the bathroom. After she ran out into the living room, Cliff was shot and killed, and Rudy took the blame for it to protect Kelly. Bruiser (Lana Parrilla) rushed to Rudy’s bond defense and even put up his bail money and, after discovering the truth of the encounter by visiting the scene, negotiated an end to the case, leaving Rudy free of charges and Kelly bound for a new life all her own.

The culmination of Rudy’s relationship with Kelly hits quite differently in this version, since, unlike the book and movie iterations, there’s not a romantic element for the two — a decision that came at the very last minute.

Series creator Michael Seitzman remembered, “It was a big discussion on set and on the page about what that moment was going to be like when they lay down in bed together… I had a thought overnight, the night before we shot, that it felt wrong to me, that it felt like the reward for all of this shouldn’t be sexual, and it shouldn’t be. It shouldn’t be.”

“It was originally going to be a love scene, that scene when she says, ‘Can you hold me?’ and then they lay down in bed together,” Seitzman continued. “Then I killed it the night before we were shooting, and thought it just didn’t feel right. It didn’t feel like the right emotion coming out of this episode… I didn’t want the audience to be turned on by the moment or to be confused by the moment.” Another reason it was changed? “I really wanted Rudy to be somebody who really meant it when he said, ‘Of course, I’ll hold you.’ … Anything more would have felt it just would have felt wrong to me.”

The stars involved in the scene completely agreed. For Milo Callaghan, it was also a character issue for Rudy. “It was a conversation we had with Robyn Cara, who plays Kelly, is fantastic and so beautifully vulnerable and sweet in the show. And I think in our version of this, in our take on this story, there’s a curiosity that he feels — that you see in the book and in the film — but something curbs the follow-through on that because this is, again, somebody who’s really vulnerable in an abusive relationship, and he has a value system that doesn’t allow him to take advantage of that, which I think is one of the things that drives the plot, in lots of ways, is that Rudy Baylor refuses to take advantage of the vulnerable.”

Robyn Cara also thought it was the right move for her character’s mindset, explaining, “I like the way it kind of played out in this version because she’s just been through such a horrible thing… She killed her husband, so her brain must just be everywhere. She’s just gone through a huge amount of trauma. So I think going through for a more platonic ending with the characters with them, it feels like the right way to go for us in this version.”

Christopher Barr / USA Network

As for the changes to the criminal proceeding itself — in the book and film, it’s Kelly who’s arrested after Rudy killed Cliff in self-defense — Seitzman said those tweaks were meant to keep fans on their toes.

“I really liked the storyline a lot because it lives outside of the spine of the story, but it’s still a part of Rudy’s growth arc, his maturation and matriculation throughout the season,” he explained. “I wanted to upend the audience’s expectations a little bit about what was going to happen. If they were familiar with the book or they were familiar with the movie, they kind of knew how this played out in those original versions. I wanted a different version, and I wanted one that allowed Bruiser to be a very smart investigator and a smart litigator and to figure it out. I also felt that we should play on Rudy’s sometimes view of the truth as something that might be malleable… This is another example of Rudy being dishonest because he thinks he’s doing the right thing.”

The Rainmaker, Fridays, 10/9c, USA Network

If you or someone you know is the victim of domestic abuse, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1−800−799−7233. 

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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