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'Most beautiful soul...' Victoria Beckham gushes over Jackie Apostel
Celebrity News

‘Most beautiful soul…’ Victoria Beckham gushes over Jackie Apostel

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

18 October 2025

Victoria Beckham declares Jackie Apostel as the “most beautiful soul”.

Victoria Beckham

The 51-year-old fashion designer-and-singer took to her Instagram Stories on Saturday (18.10.25) to post a series of gushing messages for her 20-year-old son Cruz Beckham’s girlfriend, on what is her 30th birthday.

Writing over a photo of her with the songwriter dressed in black gowns in the back of a car, Victoria wrote: “To the sweetest, kindest, most beautiful soul.

“We all love you soooooo much!!! (sic)”

In a second Instagram Story, the Spice Girls group member and Jackie can be seen riding in the back of a car while wearing matching gray suits.

She penned: “Happy birthday!!!!! Love you!!! (sic)”

And in Victoria’s third story, Jackie can be seen smiling, dressed in a baby blue dress, and her left leg kicked back while Cruz, who sported a black tuxedo, kissed her right cheek.

Victoria wrote: “Happy birthday.

“We hope you have an amazing day and can’t wait to celebrate you!!!

“We all love you @jackie.apostel. (sic)”

Cruz and Jackie have been romantically linked since they were spotted together at the Glastonbury Festival in Pilton, Somerset, South West England, in July 2024.

Since then, the singer has grown close to Victoria and his 50-year-old dad, former professional footballer David Beckham, and she joined the rest of the Beckhams – Romeo, 23, and 14 year old Harper – at the fashion designer’s eponymous Netflix documentary premiere in London on October 8.

Taking to Instagram after the event, held at Curzon Mayfair, Jackie penned: “@victoriabeckham, we are all so in awe of you.

“To me, it’s the little things such as the fact that you wake up every morning, positive and ready to be a bright light to everyone around you that might need it, no matter what is going on with yourself.

“You want every single person you love to succeed and do their best and will do anything you can to help them, and gladly.

“On top of the unbelievably smart business woman that no doubt you are, that is definitely what impresses me the most every day. your resilience and drive is inspiring.

“glad everyone gets to see a little glimpse of the hard working, intelligent and hilarious person you are in this doc. we love u! (sic)”

Victoria gushing over Jackie and their appearance at the premiere of her Netflix documentary comes as Victoria and David’s eldest son, Brooklyn Peltz Beckham, 26, is thought to be estranged from the rest of the family.

Victoria recently shared how she and David are “really close to the kids”, but did not say a word about Brooklyn – who married 30-year-old actress Nicola Peltz Beckham in 2022.

Victoria told the Sunday Times newspaper’s Culture magazine: “Harper’s still 14, so she’s living at home. So is Cruz, who is 20. I see both of them every day.

“Romeo doesn’t live at home, so I see a little less of him.”




October 19, 2025 0 comments
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How Much Money the Soul Singer Had Before Death – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

How Much Money the Soul Singer Had Before Death – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

The R&B world mourned the loss of D’Angelo (born Michael Eugene Archer) when he died in October 2025 from a private battle with cancer at the age of 51. Known for pioneering the Neo-soul movement, D’Angelo received critical acclaim for his albums Brown Sugar and Voodoo, the latter earning him the Grammy Award for Best R&B Album. Thanks to his success, D’Angelo established a legacy and a high net worth.

Below, learn more about D’Angelo’s music career, legacy and net worth.

How Did D’Angelo Die?

D’Angelo’s family confirmed in a statement that he died from cancer, per Variety.

“The shining star of our family has dimmed his light for us in this life,” the statement began. “After a prolonged and courageous battle with cancer, we are heartbroken to announce that Michael D’Angelo Archer, known to his fans around the world as D’Angelo, has been called home, departing this life today, October 14th, 2025.”

D’Angelo’s family added that they were “saddened that he can only leave dear memories with his family,” but added they were “eternally grateful for the legacy of extraordinarily moving music he leaves behind.”

What Type of Cancer Did D’Angelo Have?

D’Angelo had pancreatic cancer, according to TMZ, which reported that the singer was in treatment for several months before he died.

According to Mayo Clinic, pancreatic cancer is rarely caught at the beginning when the chance of a cure is the highest. The disease often doesn’t cause symptoms until it spreads to other organs.

How Much Was D’Angelo Worth?

D’Angelo had a net worth of $1 million by 2025, according to Celebrity Net Worth.

Was D’Angelo Married?

No, D’Angelo was not married, but he was in a public relationship with his late ex-girlfriend Angie Stone, who died seven months before him in March 2025. She was 63.

Who Are D’Angelo’s Kids?

D’Angelo is survived by two sons and a daughter. One of his boys is Michael Archer Jr., a.k.a Swayvo Twain, whom he shared with Angie.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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D'Angelo Dead, Neo Soul Pioneer Was 51
Music

D’Angelo Dead, Neo Soul Pioneer Was 51

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

D’Angelo, the neo soul pioneer who revolutionized R&B music, has died at the age of 51 following a private battle with pancreatic cancer.

TMZ reports that the singer passed away Tuesday morning in New York City. His family confirmed the news in a statement issued to Variety. “The shining star of our family has dimmed his light for us in this life,” it reads. “After a prolonged and courageous battle with cancer, we are heartbroken to announce that Michael D’Angelo Archer, known to his fans around the world as D’Angelo, has been called home, departing this life today, October 14th, 2025.”

The statement continues, “We are saddened that he can only leave dear memories with his family, but we are eternally grateful for the legacy of extraordinarily moving music he leaves behind. We ask that you respect our privacy during this difficult time but invite you all join us in mourning his passing while also celebrating the gift of song that he has left for the world.”

Related Video

Born Michael Eugene Archer on February 11th, 1974, in South Richmond, Virginia, D’Angelo began playing the piano as a child. While in high school, he achieved local success as part of the trio Three of a Kind, which later won three Amateur Night contests at Harlem’s Apollo Theater.

After going solo, D’Angelo burst onto the scene with his 1995 debut album, Brown Sugar. It was at the forefront of the burgeoning neo soul movement, a term coined by his manager, Kedar Massenburg, which also featured artists such as Erykah Badu, Lauryn Hill, and Maxwell.

D’Angelo was scheduled to headline Roots Picnic this past summer, but canceled the appearance.

This is a developing story…

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Metro In Dino Review By A 90s
Bollywood

Anurag Basu’s Film Casually Discusses How Much Cheating Is Okay & My Old-School Soul Asks ‘Ye Ishq Hai Ya Tharak?’ [Opinion]

by jummy84 September 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Metro In Dino Review By A 90s 'Kid': Anurag Basu's Film Casually Discusses How Much Cheating Is Okay
Metro In Dino Review By A 90s ‘Kid’: My Old-School Soul Asks ‘Ye Ishq Hai Ya Tharak?’ ( Photo Credit – Instagram )

So recently, I got a chance to watch Metro In Dino on Netflix – one of the most talked films of the recent times. It worked in the theaters and I heart a lot of good things about the film. More so, I was in love with the music album as well, so I decided to dive in Anurag Basu‘s take on modern-day relationships and it has left me as confused as his characters were!

No, do not get me wrong, I am a die-hard Bollywood fan and an equally hopeless romantic when it comes to Hindi films. But over the years, the portrayal of romance on screen has changed for the worst to be honest! Now, not getting into the film’s mirror society or society gets impacted from films debate, I am surprised at the casual approach in relationships, to be honest!

For those who do not know, Metro In Dino is a relationship drama highlighting four couples, and all of them are on the verge of cheating on each other. Do they cheat or do they not is the only curiosity that keeps everyone on toes. And this is where my issue with this film started and never ended!

So, how do we define cheating here? Is it only the physical aspect of a relationship, or do we take emotional cheating into account at any point? These four couples decide to break boundaries of a relationship, and of course, I am no one to decide any boundary for any relationship, and it is totally between two people to set those boundaries, but I definitely need to address this casual conversation around cheating.

The film is so entertaining that I am sure no one has a problem with this casual approach and conversation regarding cheating, something that is totally non-negotiable in a relationship. In fact, in the recent past, many movies have taken this casual approach to cheating in a relationship, and I am just confused. Am I too old school, or has the world progressed too rapidly?

The last I checked, cheating or being disloyal in a relationship was the deal breaker! But Metro In Dino presents it as a thought that needs a discussion. It definitely talks about second chances, but it never bothers to strike a conversation about the discussion that leads to the second chances! Of course, I agree about taking second chances, but only if we failed for the first time by mistake! But cheating is definitely a choice in a relationship.

In one of the songs, Metro In Dino discusses romance and says, “Koi kaise kare farak, ye ishq hai ya tharak?” Well, I think most of us know the answer! But the film definitely confuses my old soul. I think, the 90’s ‘kid’ in me needs to grow up!

For more opinion pieces from Bollywood, stay tuned to Koimoi.

Must Read: From Bhumi Pednekar To Arjun Kapoor: 10 Bollywood Celebrities Who Went Through Dramatic Weight Loss Transformations

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September 8, 2025 0 comments
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How 'Slap Shot' Cut to the Soul of the American Character
TV & Streaming

How ‘Slap Shot’ Cut to the Soul of the American Character

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

“The 1970s for those of you who missed them were a fabulous time to be young and brave…[Life] and what to make of it was up for grabs. And there was a tremendous feeling that all was new and beautiful if you had the nerve to make it so… The opposition to [the Vietnam War] had given an entire generation the will to break the rules. Our President, Nixon, had quit one step ahead of a prison term. One can always hope that might happen today.”— “Slap Shot” screenwriter Nancy Dowd, 2006.

Reggie Dunlop (Paul Newman) never received the memo that everything folds eventually. Or maybe he just refused to read it. The player-coach for perennial losers the Charlestown Chiefs, the minor-league hockey team in fictional factory town Charlestown, Pennsylvania, he can’t accept that he’s getting older and won’t be able to lace up his skates for much longer. Just like he can’t accept that his beloved team stinks so badly their few remaining fans show up to games only to jeer them, or that the Chiefs are on the chopping block once the local steel mill shutters and 10,000 workers go on waivers. 

SLY LIVES! (AKA THE BURDEN OF BLACK GENIUS), from left: director Ahmir Questlove' Thompson, producer Joseph Patel, on set, 2025. ph: Kelsey McNeal / © Hulu / Courtesy Everett Collection
Xala

“I was thinking about you the other day, tryin’ to imagine you when you’re through with hockey, and I couldn’t,” his estranged wife Francine (Jennifer Warren) gently tells him after the millionth failed attempt to reconcile with her. “There was nobody there,” she says with haunting finality, because Reggie and minor-league hockey are functionally synonymous. When she asks what he’s going to do when the Chiefs eventually go under, Reggie cheekily responds, “I’m gonna come back to you!” because he also can’t accept that their marriage is over.

Reggie’s resolve to fight against the rising tide inspires him to embark upon a harebrained scheme that involves con artistry and theatrical promotion. To fulfill the bloodlust of the Charlestown crowd, who enjoy watching players fight during games (possibly to vent their economic frustration), he unleashes the Hanson Brothers on the ice. The three childlike siblings, who all wear thick black-rimmed Coke-bottled glasses and often speak in cartoonish unison, were previously a cost-saving embarrassment for the Chiefs, but their penchant for brawling and immature antics quickly garner the team popularity as ruthless heels. As ticket sales skyrocket, Reggie manipulates the local media into talking up a fabricated story about a potential sale to Florida to motivate the players even more and hopefully generate real interest in the team.

Newman plays Reggie with a permanently mischievous glint in his eye and a schemer’s grin. By the late 1970s, the renowned American actor had become a member of the old guard, and yet he retained the boyish charm that propelled him to fame playing anti-authoritarian rebels and grifters in films like “The Hustler,” “Cool Hand Luke,” and “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.” Newman’s ingrained impish defiance combined with his salt-and-pepper good looks lends Reggie the perfect avatar for the reckless, anarchic tenacity that defines George Roy Hill’s cult comedy, a movie about self-destruction in the name of existential survival.

As long as there’s an NHL and recreational hockey endures as sport, “Slap Shot” will have its place as a locker room classic. The film not only understands the sport in its bones, but its combination of gleefully vicious violence and slobs-over-snobs goofiness can still energize any testosterone-filled group. At the same time, the proud vulgarity that courses through the movie feels like slight misdirection, a way to keep people in their seats while giving them another slightly more sophisticated narrative about privilege and power, deindustrialization and imbalanced labor relations, and a determination to be free even if you still have to serve somebody. 

“Slap Shot” is funny and profane, one of the all-time great bad-taste comedies of any era, but its canny, sensitive screenwriter Nancy Dowd had more on her mind than one might expect from a film that features Paul Newman taunting a rival player about how his wife “sucks pussy.” She infused the screenplay with rhetorical realism — the verbal texture of life lived amongst snarky grinders — and palpable nonconformist yearning, both of which stem from her own experience with family rebellion. Dowd acutely understood the experience of bucking expectations and giving the middle finger to anyone who tells you to fall in line. 

***

‘Slap Shot’

Dowd wasn’t supposed to be writing the screenplay for a movie like “Slap Shot.” The daughter of a wealthy machine-tool plant operator from a General Motors factory town, she was supposed to become a respectable member of society, fulfilling the destiny of “an ever upward American trajectory” established by her family’s noble immigrant pedigree. Instead, per her own words, “the rocket veered off course.” According to her father, Nancy was looking “like a railroad worker in jeans and a blue work shirt” instead of a candidate for marriage. Meanwhile, her college-educated brother Ned had turned away from the family business to start playing for a losing minor-league hockey team in a two-bit town.

Ned’s experiences with the Johnstown Jets, based in the eponymous Pennsylvania mill town, shaped the core of “Slap Shot.” Minor-league hockey in the ‘70s was a notoriously brutal sport: The potential for violence at games was often a primary selling point, and players often leaned into the expectation for clashes on the ice. (Reg’s wrestling-like ploy to boost profits by feeding off the public’s bloodthirst isn’t too far off from reality.) Nancy admitted to being fascinated by the fighting stories her brother would relay to him over the phone, and in the eventual script she incorporated many anecdotes of outrageous skirmishes, many of which involved Jack, Steve, and Jeff Carlson, the real-life inspiration for the Hanson Brothers.

But it was when Ned drunkenly called up his sister in the wee hours of the morning to inform her that the Jets were either folding or being sold that Nancy set out to write the film in earnest. In particular, it was Ned’s ignorance regarding the Jets’ owners that galled his sister. “It was incredible to me that my brother did not know who owned his team,” she once remembered. “If you didn’t know who owned you, what did you know?” Nancy channeled that mystery into “Slap Shot” as Reggie struggles to determine who actually holds the purse strings in order to properly appeal to their pecuniary interests.

Nancy had plenty of reasons to want to control her destiny. A second-wave feminist who grew up around enough bored suburban housewives to last a lifetime, she was determined not to be stuck at home raising children and cooking for a husband. Instead, she attended Smith College and studied abroad at the Sarbonne where she spent much of her time at the Cinémathèque Française. She later enrolled in the UCLA film program for a more formal education and worked as a student assistant under King Vidor. She befriended prominent figures like Jane Fonda, who asked her to collaborate on the anti-war documentary “F.T.A.” and eventually commissioned her to write the screenplay for Hal Ashby’s “Coming Home.” “I refused to be a 1950s zombie,” she insisted.

Nancy beautifully filters her own privileged background into “Slap Shot” through top-scorer Ned Braden (Michael Ontkean, who actually played Division I hockey) and his wife Lily (Lindsay Crouse). Both college graduates who could land well-paying jobs through their families just like the Dowds, they insead followed their bliss right up until it made them depressed. A stubborn idealist, Ned despises Reggie’s carnival-barking tactics and prefers to lose clean than win dirty. He takes out his frustrations with the Chiefs on Lily by treating her with unconscionable coldness when he’s not philandering around town. Meanwhile, Lily descends into acerbic alcoholism; she hates minor-league culture, the one-note wives she’s expected to pal around with, but mostly she hates herself for putting up with it all.

“It’s ridiculous for us to be here,” Lily sneers to Ned at one point. “We stick out like a couple of sore thumbs.” She might be right, but Dowd’s script emphasizes the ridiculousness of their entire environment. Victor Kemper’s grimy photography accentuates the depressed environment of a steel town corroded by economic stagnation, yet it exists in productive tension with George Roy Hill’s wide comic framing, which captures the absurdity of literally trying to fist fight despair. As the Hanson Brothers become borderline-criminalistic folk heroes and Reggie does everything to goose up excitement including calling for a bounty on a rival player’s head to boost on the radio, the Chiefs devolve into a crew of “actors and punks” rather than genuine athletes. All the while the public and the media eat it up seemingly because there’s nothing else to root for.

It’s only when Reggie finally meets owner Anita McCambridge (Kathryn Walker), the supercilious woman who holds the purse strings, that he realizes his soul-selling approach was for naught. Though she could probably sell the team for a decent amount, she would make more profit if she folded the team as a tax write-off. “We’re human beings, you know?” Reggie mutters pathetically, but what Dowd’s script acutely understands that anyone with authority over them — from their penny-pinching manager to the fans whose loyalty heavily depends on either the Chiefs record or their entertainment value — sees them as nothing more than cattle. Just like the mill turned its back on their workers, Anita cares about her bottom line infinitely more than whether the Chiefs’ players go hungry. It’s always been every sucker for himself.

***

‘Slap Shot’

American institutions have always been less sturdy than we were led to believe, and they’re eager to abandon individuals the second they stop being useful. Societal neglect will inevitably breed a coarseness in manner and language, exhibited by the uncouth nature of the Chiefs’ players as well as the public watching them. “Slap Shot” garnered quite a bit of notoriety upon release for its profanity, particularly because it was written by a woman. Vincent Canby of “The New York Times” described Dowd as “a young woman who appears to know more about the content and rhythm of locker room talk than most men,” while Frank Rich of “The New York Post” remarked that she “has an ear for American vernacular that even Ring Lardner might have appreciated; she realizes that cussing can be an exhilarating folk art.”

Dowd spent a month with her brother’s team as research and worked from tape recordings sent by Ned and his teammates to craft the dialogue in her slice-of-life screenplay. (In fact, Ned alongside many of his fellow players appear in the film in roles big and small.) “I used the exact language that the players did,” she said in an interview upon the film’s release and scoffed at the rumor that her name was a pseudonym for a man. “The world has a weird view of women,” she argues. “People seem to believe that we have to write about divorce or suicide or children…But we’ve been around. Women aren’t sequestered anymore.”

She similarly bristled at the accusations of sexism leveraged against the film, given her feminist bona fides. The boys in “Slap Shot” might look like they have all the fun, but it’s at the obvious expense of their brains and bodies. Meanwhile, the most perceptive characters are the women: despite her self-destructive behavior, Lily is hardly naïve about her choices in life or men. Francine knows enough about Reggie’s loopy charm that it’s bad news in the long run and leaves him for good even if he still holds out hope she’ll come back to him. Even Anita, the closest figure the film has to a villain, is merely playing the capitalist game just as well as her hypothetical male counterpart.

Unlike the profanity in “Slap Shot,” which now keeps pace with a world that becomes cruder by the minute, its homophobic language stands out as the film’s real obscenity to contemporary ears. It goes without saying that certain slurs and accusations were unfortunately part and parcel with the hyper-masculine milieu of the era. Sometimes it’s funny, like when Reggie, after being accused of sucking cock, says with a smile, “It’s all I can get!” Other times, it can leave an unproductively sour taste, like when Reggie antagonizes Anita on his way out the door by insinuating her young son “looks like a fag” who will “have somebody’s cock in his mouth” unless she gets married again. 

At the same time, however, the fragile masculinity neatly dovetails with the numerous ironies and contradictions that course through the film. The recurring motif on the soundtrack for a film populated by hotheaded, hyper-masculine athletes is Maxine Nightingale’s disco hit “Right Back Where We Started From.” Despite hailing from money, Ned and Lily are angrier and more depressed than any of the near poverty-stricken players with whom they hang around. One minute, Reggie will espouse progressive views when he’s in bed with a rival player’s ex-wife who has recently started sleeping with women by claiming that “women’s bodies are beautiful”; in the next, he will gleefully rattle that player during by taunting him about his wife’s sexuality.

But it all comes to a head in the film’s climactic scene, which throws the social hypocrisy inherent in the environment into sharp relief. After pledging to play a clean game for their last hurrah, the Chiefs get physically pummeled by the opposing team, who deliberately packed their lineup with vicious goons, during the first period; after learning that NHL scouts are in the audience, the team immediately reverts back to their violent ways. But upon seeing Lily in the stands, made over by Francine and cheering on the Chiefs, Ned decides to subvert the aggression by performing an elaborate striptease on the ice in a public display to woo his wife back.

“I don’t want any youngsters to get the idea that this is the way to play hockey!” exclaims the announcer, who was previously salivating at the chaotic bloodshed that occurred minutes prior. The rival player coach decries Ned’s perversion and demands the referee put a stop to his behavior. Ned views the team’s evolution from old-fashioned fundamentals to sideshow exploits as an existential threat rather than an enterprising venture because he’s innately someone who “don’t run with the traffic,” per Reggie. In the last game however, he joins the circus on his own terms and weaponizes the opposition’s gay panic to the point of them forfeiting the game. Dowd’s script stresses an obvious, potent takeaway: Violence might be socially acceptable, but public erotic displays, especially ones aimed at women, are obscene.

Dowd never again worked on a film without serious complications. Her original script for “Coming Home” was radically reshaped by multiple writers and personalities and publicly decried the revised version as “terrible” before the film even came out. (However, she still retained a “Story by” credit on the film and subsequently shared an Oscar for Best Screenplay.) Dowd walked off the set of “Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains,” a proto-riot grrl teen musical drama, after clashing with director Lou Adler on the ending and being groped by a camera operator; she ultimately took her name off the film and used the pseudonym “Rob Morton.” She used that same alias once again after Warner Bros. drastically recut the film “Swing Shift”  against the wishes of her and director Jonathan Demme. Dowd’s resumé is subsequently littered with pseudonymous credits and uncredited contributions on acclaimed films like “Straight Time,” “North Dallas Forty,” and “Ordinary People.”

Dowd’s commitment to uncompromising work within a business so indifferent to the value creative integrity likely pushed her out of Hollywood. But her righteous, empathetic voice still rings out in a film about people desperate to live on their own terms within a society so committed to capital they’re willing to squeeze out every ounce of beautiful, ugly humanity from the world. Her desire to be free, her abject refusal to “to stumble around in the darkness and waste my precious life,” into Reggie Dunlop, a man so determined never to work a bullshit nine-to-five job that he would put his body at risk to continue skating with his fellow tainted angels. Nancy Dowd, like Like M. Emmet Walsh’s sports writer Dickie Dunn, merely “tried to capture the spirit of the thing” with “Slap Shot.” Only the “thing” in question was the American character.

IndieWire’s ‘70s Week is presented by Bleecker Street’s “RELAY.” Riz Ahmed plays a world class “fixer” who specializes in brokering lucrative payoffs between corrupt corporations and the individuals who threaten their ruin. IndieWire calls “RELAY” “sharp, fun, and smartly entertaining from its first scene to its final twist, ‘RELAY’ is a modern paranoid thriller that harkens back to the genre’s ’70s heyday.” From director David Mackenzie (“Hell or High Water”) and also starring Lily James, in theaters August 22.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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