celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Reading
Tag:

Reading

Bhumika Chawla
Bollywood

Bhumika Chawla Believes Reading Is Therapeutic And Books Are Irreplaceable

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Bhumika Chawla, best known for her memorable performances in films like Tere Naam, Run, and Dil Ne Jise Apna Kaha, has always been admired for her grace and calm presence both on and off screen. Her last release was Salman Khan’s Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan, and she will soon be seen in Kesar alongside Arbaaz Khan and Dipshikha Nagpal.

Away from the arc lights, Bhumika finds peace in one of her oldest companions — books. A self-confessed reader, she believes that while technology has made stories more accessible, nothing can truly replace the charm of reading.

Bhumika Chawla: “Books can never be replaced — reading is therapeutic”

Talking about books and how they are irreplaceable, Bhumika Chawla said, “Books can never be replaced, though yes, people do find it easier to listen to audio versions.” She continued, “For me and many like me, reading is therapeutic — it’s a joy that can’t really be described in words. Ironically, books are words on paper, but only avid readers will understand that feeling.”

She adds that while some prefer the tactile feel of a physical book, others enjoy the convenience of a Kindle, especially when travelling. She said, “There’s a section of people who still love the feel of a proper book in hand, and some prefer Kindle since it’s easier to carry.”

For Bhumika, reading is also about cultivating focus — something that modern distractions often take away. She shared, “Reading brings in focus, while other things tend to make our concentration a little less. For instance, you can’t read a book while working, jogging, or cooking — but you can listen to an audiobook while doing those. That’s just my opinion. To each his own — whatever works for everyone is good, as long as the purpose of going through a book is served.”

Bhumika Shares Her Favourite Titles

Among Bhumika Chawla’s favorite reads are titles that mirror her thoughtful and introspective personality. The list include titles like Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom, Mr. God, This Is Anna by Fynn, Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts, The Stationery Shop of Tehran by Marjan Kamali, and Holy Cow by Sarah Macdonald.

Grounded, reflective, and eloquent — Bhumika Chawla continues to remind us that in an age of screens and speed, the simple joy of holding a book and immersing oneself in its world remains timeless.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Bhumika Chawla Reveals Being Replaced In Jab We Met And Munna Bhai MBBS

October 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Fall into Reading with These 4 Magical, Mysterious & Musical Children's Books!
Hollywood

Fall into Reading with These 4 Magical, Mysterious & Musical Children’s Books!

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Luella’s Library by Tara Lala

Luella loves to read books, but her best friend, Lino, doesn’t. When one of Luella’s books transports them to an enchanted land, they must face unexpected obstacles and help new friends. Cozy up with this imaginative read this fall and discover a story that sparks adventure and creativity in your child’s life. a.co/d/cMMMO4U

October 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
‘Reading Rainbow’ Returns Digitally With New Host Mychal Threets
Music

‘Reading Rainbow’ Returns Digitally With New Host Mychal Threets

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Reading Rainbow is officially back and stepping into the digital era with a fresh format for a new generation of curious minds.

The beloved children’s series, which inspired generations of kids to open a book and explore the world, is relaunching on KidZuko, Sony Kids’ YouTube channel, with weekly episodes running from Oct. 4-25. Hosting the reboot is Mychal Threets, widely known on social media as “Mychal the Librarian,” who brings his signature warmth, humor, and love of literature to kids across the nation.

From 1983 to 2006, actor LeVar Burton made the televised story time for kids something memorable and magical. But unfortunately, budget cuts and a cultural focus on the mechanics of literacy over the joy of reading led to the show’s cancellation. While Burton has attempted to reboot the series himself, past efforts were stalled by legal battles with Buffalo Toronto Public Media.

Now, decades later, Reading Rainbow is returning with Threets to help to deliver the same mission: “to motivate kids in grades K-3 to become avid readers; help all kids succeed as readers; encourage a strong home literacy environment; and enrich classroom literacy environments.”

Threets has already cultivated a devoted following by promoting children’s literature and advocating for young viewers’ emotional well-being online. And throughout his dedication to literature, he has openly credited Burton and the original show as his inspiration.

“There have been two hosts in the history of Reading Rainbow. The Legend of Literacy, LeVar Burton! And… me, Mychal Threets, a librarian,” he announced on his social media accounts. “I was raised on Reading Rainbow, LeVar Burton is my hero. I am a reader, I am a librarian because LeVar Burton and Reading Rainbow so powerfully made us believe we belong in books, we belong everywhere.
lam so happy for all of us that Reading Rainbow is returning!”

He thanked all of his supporters, adding, “YOU all did this! We’re flying twice as high, butterflies in the sky! Stay tuned…”

The reboot kicked off on Saturday (Oct. 4) with the episode “No Cats In The Library,” by Lauren Emmons with narration by actress Jamie Chung (Lovecraft Country). The animal-themed episode also featured actor Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Bear) who joined kids at The ACC to learn how to care for creatures big and small.

On Oct. 11, the series continues with “Tiny Troubles” by Sophie Diao, an episode that focuses on self-discovery with narration by Chrissy Teigen and John Legend. Celebrity chef Candice Kumai will also help kids explore careers as chefs, stylists, and photographers.

The following episode “More Than Peach” by Bellen Woodard will be narrated by Gabrielle Union (Bring It On), who helps kids celebrate inclusivity and creativity in the “boardroom of imagination.” Author and kid CEO Bellen Woodard will also make an appearance.

Courtesy of Reading Rainbow

The season wraps on Oct. 25 with episode “Moo Hoo” by Audrey Perrott, narrated by Adam DeVine (Pitch Perfect), and featuring dancers Rylee Arnold and Ezra Sosa (Dancing With the Stars) as they explore emotions through a colorful paint-filled adventure at the Los Angeles Paint Splatter Room.

Episodes will premiere at 10 A.M. ET every Saturday on KidZuko’s YouTube and on the official Reading Rainbow website. This time, with Mychal the Librarian at the forefront, Reading Rainbow aims to bring the magic of reading and the joy that comes with it to a whole new generation.

See the trailer for the first episode above, and the all-new theme song below.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
All prose, no cons: These book groups will help you hit your reading goals
Lifestyle

All prose, no cons: These book groups will help you hit your reading goals

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Of course, you want to read more. Everybody does. It’s the most virtuous habit of our time. Online, Bookstagrammers are doing 30-second reviews of exciting titles that just dropped. On YouTube, there are endless streams of people acting out a novel’s intro, leaving off at the cliffhanger, urging viewers to “go read the rest”. There are online and offline book clubs, travelling libraries, silent-reading communities, swaps, challenges and all kinds of shortcuts.

Book communities make reading seem like a group project everyone wants to be a part of. (SHUTTERSTOCK)

Reading culture isn’t dying, says Manik Jaiswal, who runs one of India’s most active reading initiatives. It’s just taken a new shape, one that keeps up with screentime, scrolling, wishlists and travel goals. When people say they’re trying every trick in the book to get others to read, they’re not kidding. Take a look.

Meenal Sharma’s Bookchor organises Lock The Box events that are like a treasure hunt.
Meenal Sharma’s Bookchor organises Lock The Box events that are like a treasure hunt.

The book buffet

Some people believe reading is about quality, not quantity. Others head to Bookchor’s Lock The Box sales with glee. This is where customers pay a set price for an empty box, and then carry away as many pre-owned books as the box fits. For those who haven’t figured out their tastes yet, and can’t afford new books in every genre, this is a bonanza. For those who know what they like and want more of it, cheaply, it’s a bonanza too. “Our Lock The Box events turned books into a treasure hunt,” says founder Meenal Sharma.

The event travels nationwide. They’ve just wrapped up Indore and are on their way to Shimla. At every stop, readers find a surprise – a pre-owned title that’s been out of stock in their city, or a promising one they’d never heard about. And of course, Lock The Box also buys old books in each city, so the pickings are never the same.

Bookstagrams generate hype around new releases. (SHUTTERSTOCK)
Bookstagrams generate hype around new releases. (SHUTTERSTOCK)

On Insta

Nashik resident Neelanjali uses only her first name and operates @BooksMakeMeWhole, a six-year-old account devoted to books she hopes more people would read. She knows she can’t force anyone into it, so her grid is laid out as a series of mini listicles: Books that live in my head rent free, Indian authors that are too good to miss, and so on. “Not everyone reads long reviews, but those who do are more likely to pick up the book that resonates with them.” And, like any other influencer, she drops tips on her reading routine and for getting out of a slump.

The account has 61K followers and, from the comments, they all seem to know each other and welcome new voices. “The best way to convince someone to pick up a book is by being honest and open about how it made me feel, how I connected with the story, or how it impacted me personally,” she says. She’ll also share a favourite quote or excerpt to get her followers hooked on to a story.

More like this: @SpoonfulOfPages, @Reader_Viddh, @BagFullOfBooks.

Online book clubs are connecting book lovers who don’t want to leave their couch. (SHUTTERSTOCK)
Online book clubs are connecting book lovers who don’t want to leave their couch. (SHUTTERSTOCK)

On the web

Online book clubs are starting to connect book lovers who don’t really want to leave their comfy couch. Divya Jain and Snigdha Gautam set up The Indian Book Club in the pandemic, and have continued with it long after the lockdowns were lifted. There are separate sections for young and grown up readers on their website, and more than 13K followers on Insta (@IndiaReadWithUs).

The club takes it slow – one book a month, and they set up read-alongs, virtual discussions and author Q&As. It’s not unusual to see GenZ and grandparents all bonding (or calmly disagreeing) over the same book. “A 19-year-old and a 60-year-old discussing Pachinko or Ikigai in the same meeting? That’s the magic,” Jain says. “It still blows our minds, sometimes.”

Narendra Singh and Manik Jaiswal, founders of Bookoholics, host reading trips in the mountains.
Narendra Singh and Manik Jaiswal, founders of Bookoholics, host reading trips in the mountains.

In the mountains

Manik Jaiswal and Narendra Singh started The Bookoholics on Facebook in 2011. They were barely 19 and 20 years old at the time. Now, almost a decade-and-a-half in, it might just be India’s busiest reading community. Their Insta alone (@TheBookoholics) has close to one million followers.

Jaiswal recalls how they started out, with “quotes from Khaled Hosseini, Haruki Murakami, messy book summaries, candid reviews, unfiltered bookish rants”. It was more heartfelt than curated. “Slowly, people started engaging with us.”

They do more than reviews, meetups and donation drives. The Bookoholics runs a Book Exchange, in which swappers include personal notes for recipients, often sparking friendships and new connections between strangers. From 100 books in Season 1 to more than 2,000 in Season 4, the exchange remains free.

Since 2017, they’ve also hosted four-day reading trips in the mountains for members. This is where participants get through a tome in a silent-reading session, join a book circle and discuss novels under the stars. Sign up early – they sell out fast.

Group reading clubs are a hit almost everywhere they’ve been initiated in India. (SHUTTERSTOCK)
Group reading clubs are a hit almost everywhere they’ve been initiated in India. (SHUTTERSTOCK)

In the park

Group reading clubs have been a hit almost everywhere they’ve been initiated in India. Mohammed Nusrath and Biswarupa Barik set up Hyderabad Reads as a way to get citizens to use public spaces as peaceful reading zones. “We began in Jubilee Hills and Banjara Hills because these hubs attract people from different states,” says Nusrath.

They’ve spread to other locations in the city, and each spot brings a mix of homegrown readers and those who’ve moved to Hyderabad to work but were seeking bookish company. “We don’t do anything extraordinary to push people to read; we simply show up,” Nusrath says. “When someone sees a group coming together every weekend to read, it acts as a reminder of that ‘one thing’ they’ve been meaning to do but keep postponing. People see it and think, ‘Why not join them?’” There’s probably one in your city already.

Anup Nair, founder of Fictionary, has a Whatsapp group where people share book recommendations.
Anup Nair, founder of Fictionary, has a Whatsapp group where people share book recommendations.

The book café

Where many cafes now have a shelf of books, Fictionary in Mumbai has walls and walls of them. The part-library, part-coffee-shop, part-cosy-hangout, part-bookfest-venue is dedicated to fiction. Founder Anup Nair chose it because he discovered its restorative power after years of picking up only non-fiction titles as a corporate worker. “Fiction became an escape from the routine, the stresses of life, and from the constant need to self-improve while reading,” he says.

Fictionary is a year old and has a mix of buzzing and quiet nooks. It hosts reading mixers and book-club events. There’s a WhatsApp group, where members exchange recommendations. And their Insta (@FictionaryBooks) keeps their 76K followers updated about what’s happening at the store and which collabs are in the works. “Being surrounded by other readers has motivated a lot of people to go back to reading,” Nair says.

From HT Brunch, August 30, 2025

Follow us on www.instagram.com/htbrunch

August 29, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Bring Me The Horizon cover Oasis' 'Wonderwall' in thunderous Reading 2025 headline set
Music

Bring Me The Horizon cover Oasis’ ‘Wonderwall’ in thunderous Reading 2025 headline set

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Bring Me The Horizon covered Oasis‘ ‘Wonderwall’ and brought a fan on stage during a towering headline set at Reading Festival on Saturday night.

  • READ MORE: Reading & Leeds 2025 liveblog: all the action as it happens

The Sheffield metal band first played at the festival in 2008 and co-headlined alongside Arctic Monkeys in 2022, but they stepped out on their own this time around on Saturday night (August 23).

“Reading, how the fuck are we feeling tonight,” frontman Oli Sykes asked the crowd during opener ‘DArkSide’. “We are Bring Me The Horizon and we’re gonna rock your fucking world,” he added, before the band erupted into the industrial, metallic riffage of ‘MANTRA’.

Midway through the set, they played the rocket-speed version of ‘Wonderwall’ that they released in January – a cover that prompted Liam Gallagher to say: “I fucking LOVE it”.

When NME caught up with BMTH at the BRITs this year, Sykes said he was surprised that Liam “didn’t slag it off to the high heavens”. Drummer Mat Nicholls added: “We were expecting [Liam] to absolutely rinse us, but he said some actually nice things! It was cool and I think it went down as good as we wished it could.”

Anyway, here’s ‘Wonderwall’@bmthofficial x @oasis pic.twitter.com/1n0DQRxT63

— Andrew Trendell (@AndrewTrendell) August 23, 2025

BMTH headlining at the Reading Festival 2025 pic.twitter.com/ddkohd3pRT

— bmthstanforlyfe.2 (@bmthstanforlife) August 23, 2025

Bring Me the horizon performing Wonderwall is wild #Reading

— Ian G (@nuthall1862) August 23, 2025

Bring me the horizon covering wonderwall just when i thought their performance couldn’t get better

— PUSB 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (@ccfc_07) August 23, 2025

BMTH smashing it at Reading. MGS throwback was glorious. Even the cover of Wonderwall was genius. Love it!

— Pablo (@pabloscouse) August 23, 2025

Bring me the horizon showing how a headliner performance is done at Reading fest 😍😍

— hollie (@hollieteaches) August 23, 2025

Damn, Bring Me The Horizon are such a good live band.

🔥 🔥 🔥 #ReadingandLeedsFestival

— Stefan (@steftweetshere) August 23, 2025

I’m Sorry, but how fucking good are Bring Me The Horizon?!

— Brett Hayter (@BrettHayter93) August 23, 2025

 

Elsewhere, Sykes goaded the crowd into forming an enormous moshpit during ‘Happy Song’, while during ‘AmEN!’, the big screen augmented reality effects showed Sykes transforming his way through a rogue’s gallery of characters.

The familiar faces from the band’s Nex Gen saga populated the show, and later on the band picked out an enthusiastic fan named Lily from the front of the crowd to sing lead vocals on ‘Antivist’.

As they left the stage after an encore featuring ‘Drown’ and ‘Throne’, the band bid farewell to the crowd while waving Palestinian flags.

Bring Me The Horizon wave Palestinian flags during performance at Reading & Leeds Festival.

Image credit to @sophiiieporter pic.twitter.com/XhONI8etLF

— State of the Scene (@SOTSPodcast) August 23, 2025

These headline shows are the only dates that the band will play in the UK in 2025, and Sykes suggested that it might be the last time fans see the band before they “go away for maybe quite some time”.

UK readers can find the full set on the BBC iPlayer here.

Bring Me The Horizon played:

‘DArkSide’
‘MANTRA’
‘Happy Song’
‘Teardrops’
‘AmEN!’
‘Kool-Aid’
‘Shadow Moses’
‘Wonderwall’
‘Kingslayer’
‘Antivist’
‘Follow You’
‘LosT’
‘Can You Feel My Heart’
‘Doomed’
‘Drown’
‘Throne’

Other headliners at Reading & Leeds 2025 include Hozier, who made an impassioned and lengthy speech in Reading on Friday in which he spoke out in support of Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality.

Chappell Roan also played a energetic, hits-packed set on Friday in Reading. In a five-star review, NME wrote: “Throughout the performance, there’s a feeling of camaraderie and community in the crowd. Strangers become new acquaintances, the ‘Hot To Go’ dance unites everyone in clumsily trying to remember the moves and in the right order, and before ‘Red Wine Supernova’, everyone raises pink cowboy hats and pink bandanas aloft. It feels like tens of thousands of like-minded people who’ve all got the same memo and have been brought together with the same intentions.”

Festival organiser Melvin Benn also told NME on site that he has already booked two of the three nights for next year’s instalment of Reading & Leeds.

Fans watching Reading & Leeds from home can follow the NME’s liveblog here. Also find out how to watch and listen on TV and radio here.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Hozier speaks out for Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality during Reading 2025 headline set
Music

Hozier speaks out for Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality during Reading 2025 headline set

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Hozier used his set at Reading Festival 2025 to speak out in support of Palestine Action, Kneecap, free speech and equality.

  • READ MORE: Reading & Leeds 2025 liveblog: Check out the action as it happens

The Irish musician performed on the main stage last night (August 22), and gave an impassioned speech, which began by referencing artists with an “instinct to tell the truth in their music”, listing Nina Simone, Woody Guthrie, Joan Baez and Ewan MacColl.

He then spotlighted Mavis Staples and her family, The Staples Singers, who “used to sing before speeches during the American Civil Rights movement that took place in the 1960s.”

Hozier went on to say that he was particularly interested in the civil rights movement “as an Irishman coming from Ireland”, as it directly inspired the Northern Irish civil rights movement, which challenged the inequality and discrimination against ethnic Irish Catholics, many of whom were unable to vote.

“That right to vote, that we have, that democratic voice, that we have, like so many rights that we enjoy every single day, without even thinking about – rights of free Speech, workers rights, union rights, gay rights, women’s reproductive rights – it’s so easy to take these things for granted,” Hozier continued. “And it’s so easy to forget how much work had to go into these things existing for everybody, how they had to be fought for, how they had to be worked for.”

He went on to say: “As we’ve been traveling over these last nearly two years, I’ve been inviting people to use their rights of free speech, use their democratic voices, use their purchasing power, whatever it is that they can do, to support a meaningful political solution for the kind of violence we’ve been seeing on our TV screens over the last two years, and not lip service, but a meaningful peace process, a meaningful political investment that would bring about peace and safety and security for everybody in that region.”

hozier’s beautiful speech on palestine, lgbt+ rights and standing up for what you believe in that was cut by the bbc pic.twitter.com/CUEiP9XbDx

— ִֶָ (@saintscain) August 23, 2025

“Reading, at the core of it, I don’t think it’s complicated,” he continued. “I think people want to see human beings live in peace and safety, and security. I think that people would want to see that for their neighbours. They would want to see that for members of their community. I believe that people would want to see people they don’t know live with peace and safety, and security. Am I right?

“They wouldn’t want to see their neighbours live in fear of hatred or racism,” he added. “Wouldn’t want to see their Jewish friends live in the fear of anti-Semitism, and Muslim brothers and sisters live in the fear of Islamophobia. They want to see their members of the LGBTQ community treated with respect and dignity, and peace.”

The musician continued: “Safety and security for everybody in the Middle East means seeing a Palestine that’s free from occupation, that’s free from these cycles of genocide and violence, and it means seeing a Palestine that’s free to move towards meaningful self-determination and statehood.”

His comments come amid yesterday’s news (August 22) that famine is taking place in Gaza, which was confirmed in a report by The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), backed by the United Nations. The report acknowledged that the situation is “entirely man-made”, and aid organisations are also accusing Israel of the “systematic obstruction” of food entering the Gaza Strip.

Since Hamas’ attack on Israeli citizens on October 7, 2023 that killed over 1100 people and saw 250 taken as hostages, multiple UN human-rights experts and UN bodies have stated that Israel’s military actions in Gaza may amount to genocide, and the International Court of Justice has found claims of genocide plausible.

According to the Gaza Health Ministry, at least 62,000 Palestinians have been killed since October 2023. Israel rejects the genocide accusations and denies committing any war crimes, maintaining that its operations are lawful acts of self-defence.

“I know I don’t need to tell you that spray painting an aeroplane does not constitute an act of terrorism, or supporting the people who do does not constitute an act of terrorism. I know you know that,” Hozier continued.

His comments are in reference to Palestine Action, a direct action organisation that has been proscribed as a terrorist group by the UK government.

The group’s proscription under the Terrorism Act 2000 means membership or public support for the group is classified as a criminal offence and could result in up to 14 years in jail. Earlier this month, over 500 people were arrested at a huge protest in central London that featured widespread support of the group, per The Guardian.

O MAIOR QUE TEMOS! Sendo o único headliner do Reading Festival que não teve seu set transmitido pela BBC, Hozier falou por vários minutos sobre a Palestina, direitos LGBTQIA+, direitos reprodutivos das mulheres e etc 🇵🇸✊ pic.twitter.com/REljKP6Pze

— Portal Hozier Brasil (@PortalHozierBr) August 22, 2025

“Or indeed,” he continued, “Irish musicians rapping or supporting the people of Palestine is not an act of terrorism either,” specifically shouting out Kneecap’s and member DJ Próvai.

It comes as the group’s Mo Chara is currently facing terrorism charges levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag onstage at a London show last November. Chara appeared in court on Wednesday (August 20), where the case was adjourned until next month.

Kneecap have consistently denied supporting either Hamas or Hezbollah, and said that they do not incite or condone violence. They have also argued that the footage at the UK shows had been taken out of context, and described the legal action as a “carnival of distraction”.

Hozier concluded, saying: “Use your voice, use your kind power, use your vote in any way from that place of empathy and compassion to support peace and safety and security and free policy.”

Fans have criticised the fact that his performance was not livestreamed on BBC iPlayer and, at time of writing, has not yet been uploaded to the website.

It follows the BBC saying that it will no longer be broadcasting any performances it thinks may be “high risk” in the future, after they were criticised for livestreaming Bob Vylan’s set at Glastonbury 2025, which saw them lead chants of “Death to the IDF”.

Fans watching Reading & Leeds from home can follow the NME’s liveblog here. Also find out how to watch and listen on TV and radio here.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming