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Moving On? Bhad Bhabie Sparks Breakup Speculation With Le Vaughn Following New Post (PHOTO)
Celebrity News

Bhad Bhabie Sparks Breakup Speculation With Le Vaughn

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Bhad Bhabie and her on-again, off-again boyfriend Le Vaughn have kept the internet tuned into their rollercoaster relationship. Publicly, the two have faced a tragic miscarriage, cheating scandals, and serious domestic abuse allegations. But after Bhad Bhabie’s recent post, it looks like she may finally be ready to move on.

RELATED: Whew! Social Media Reacts After Bhad Bhabie Posts Emotional Vlog of Her Crying & Pleading With Le Vaughn (WATCH)

Bhad Bhabie Shares Message In Announcement About Her New Home

Looks like Bhad Bhabie is leaving the drama in the past and stepping into a new era of upgrades. On Sunday, she shared a picture of herself standing proudly in front of a large house and three luxury cars with the caption, “Left that man, got a bigger house, signed a check, got sent another one. @iaaaaaaaaaaannnnnn dropppppp somebodyyyyyy ppppasssss me water.” In the slider, she also served a few selfies showing off her face card. 

Social Media Reacts

Social media users gathered across platforms to debate whether Bhad Bhabie was truly serious about apparently leaving Le Vaughn. While some still doubt that she’s officially done with him, others shared how proud they were to see her finally walk away and focus on herself.

Instagram user @eternalcornflake wrote, “I hope you are so serious when you say you left him. You and your little baby deserve so0000000 much better. You do not need him. You are cooler than he will ever be anyway”

Instagram user @aonysopretty added, “Happy for her, let’s hope this last tho”

While Instagram user @iamsassyeb wrote, “He’ll be living in that house and driving them cars by tomorrow morning”

Instagram user @ms_lalanicole wrote, “If she had to announce it, she didn’t mean it..😂”

Instagram user @theelandonly_darri added, “She must be telling us her aspirations and goals”

While Instagram user @okkrissi wrote, “u got 15.8 MILLION ppl telling u to leave this man alone”

Instagram user @ajhavinmotion wrote, “Something you should’ve been did boo. But I love this for you queen”

Instagram user @love4blitzz added, “I think maybe instead of telling her it’s not gonna last wish her well? i’ve been in her situation and part of the reason i kept going back was bc everytime i said i was done i had people in my ear telling me i couldn’t”

While Instagram user @chrismondscomedy wrote, “He already in there setting up his ps5”

New Her & New Music 

As Bhad Bhabie embarks on what appears to be a new beginning, on Tuesday, October 21, she took to her Instagram Story to share photos of herself getting tattoos with the caption, “Cover Ups.” But it doesn’t look like she’s stopping there; she’s also getting back into the music. That same day, she previewed a new track on her Instagram page while rapping and dancing in front of her luxury cars and house, amping up fans who are ready for some new heat. 

Click here to see the clip.

RELATED: Prayers Up! Bhad Bhabie Opens Up About Painful Miscarriage & Fallout With Le Vaughn (VIDEOS)

What Do You Think Roomies?

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Vince Vaughn in Nic Pizzolatto's Las Vegas Film
TV & Streaming

Vince Vaughn in Nic Pizzolatto’s Las Vegas Film

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Lou “Easy” Evans isn’t a particularly gifted singer, but he’s got swagger and pizzaz and panache, and a real gift for choosing the songs he croons on various little stages around the slightly scuzzier side of Las Vegas. Tiny bars and iffy lounges and downbeat casinos are his domain, and set lists full of upbeat jams (Whitney Houston and Stevie Nicks, Mike and the Mechanics and Pat Benatar, oh my!) turned into real heartbreakers are his currency.

Being the biggest star on The Strip has never been his goal, but he’d sure like the opportunity to not feel like such a loser all the time, not to have to scrape by for every penny. And in Vegas? That kind of optimism — “I’d like to have a paid off credit card bill!” — is a liability.

"Calle Malaga"

It’s “another magical day here in Las Vegas, Nevada” when Nic Pizzolatto’s surprisingly low-key feature directorial debut “Easy’s Waltz” opens, though you wouldn’t know it from the Evans brothers. Easy (Vince Vaughn) is gearing up for another throwaway show with his band, The Grifters, in a “budget-friendly” downtown Vegas joint. Sam (Simon Rex) has slinked off to a dim bar, rather than doing his actual job (managing Easy and other local acts), and his eyes light up when he spots a pretty gal (Kate Mara as Lucy) across the way.

And while, as Sam tells it, “the number one rule is to know when to leave the fucking casino,” that doesn’t seem to be happening for either of the Evans men. In a city of people always hoping for the next big score, they’re no different than anyone else, but time is running out, patience is wearing thin, and something has to change. Their luck, it seems, has to turn. Right? Talk about a gamble.

Despite the dire-sounding set-up of Pizzolatto’s film (he also wrote the film’s script), “Easy’s Waltz” isn’t nearly as downbeat as most might expect from the guy behind “True Detective,” but grinding it out in Vegas is never a walk in the park. Not nearly as dark — or deep-feeling — as last year’s “beloved star takes on a vibe shift in a Vegas-set drama,” what “Easy’s Waltz” has in common with that Pamela Anderson vehicle is obvious enough: a solid turn from its star. Vaughn pours himself into the role, but he also seems to understand that going big and broad for this one is a misstep. Easy isn’t a caricature, even if the people and events around him increasingly feel that way.

When Easy catches the eye of local manager (and much, much more) Mickey Albano (a well-cast Al Pacino), his star is suddenly on the rise. Mickey books him into a residency at the swanky Wynn Casino, passing the whole thing off as part of his newfound interest in giving back to the little people, not his bone-deep interest in looking out for himself. Entanglements abound: Mickey is also friendly with Lucy, whom Sam pretends not to know, if only because he’s got the good sense not to show Mickey all his cards. And when Sam cooks up a truly stupid scheme to make some quick cash, there’s little doubt a heavy like Mickey isn’t going to like it.

What Easy lacks up for in obvious vocal ability — though everyone around him, especially Sam, is always quick to remind him he’s the best singer in town — he more than makes up for with flash. But that sort of flash is not the most natural fit for Pizzolatto, whose own sensibility seems to be at odds with the story at hand. Tonal disparities are often on offer, with Pizzolatto going for darker stuff (someone is gonna break your legs, sucka!) and Vaughn infusing the whole thing with non-stop, hangdog charm. Easy is the kind of dude who sings “The Little Drummer Boy” like it’s the saddest song in the world, but that’s not good enough for Pizzolatto, who opts to shoot that performance in black and white, because why not.

Despite the various dramas that swirl around this group of Vegas locals and wannabes, “Easy’s Waltz” meanders toward the bulk of its real punch, with its plot only kicking in long past its halfway mark. By then, Easy has become a viral hit, Sam has dug himself in way too deep, and Mickey is itching to show his true colors. Audiences might almost be eager to hear a classic limb-breaking threat by then, because far too much of this has been, well, a bit too easy going down.

Grade: B-

“Easy’s Waltz” premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. It is currently seeking U.S. distribution.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 14, 2025 0 comments
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Vince Vaughn Reveals Hidden Talent for Crooning
TV & Streaming

Vince Vaughn Reveals Hidden Talent for Crooning

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Who knew Vince Vaughn could carry a tune? Turns out, the actor’s been singing right under our noses for years, from the ironic Alanis Morissette cover he delivered in “The Internship” to his cringy rendition of “All the Gold in California” in the movie “Arkansas,” but it wasn’t until “Easy’s Waltz” that it became clear Vaughn could’ve been a crooner in another life.

“Easy’s Waltz” is like a window into that life, and maybe a sigh of relief that the “Swingers” star took a different path — since he’s certainly had it easier than his character does trying to sustain his career as a cabaret act. Vaughn plays Lew Evans, whose friends call him “Easy.” He’s like a laidback Dean Martin who never got discovered, despite regular appearances at one of Las Vegas’ decaying older venues, where he sexily saunters his way through unconventional ’80s standards like “Against All Odds” and “I Wanna Dance With Somebody,” before blowing the roof off with his take on Ultravox’s “Vienna.”

There’s a version of this guy who could easily support another one of Vaughn’s brash bro comedies. Instead, as “True Detective” creator Nic Pizzolatto sees Easy in his beautifully written feature directing debut, he serves as more of a tragic figure: Grounded, loyal and honorable to a fault, the man’s got talent, as well as a tendency to self-sabotage. How else to describe the way he’s been dragging along his no-good younger sibling Sam (Simon Rex), who pawns Easy’s prized ring behind his back and siphons off his brother’s success?

A low-key cousin to ’80s movies like “Tender Mercies” and “The Fabulous Baker Boys,” in which pathetic middle-aged musicians circle the drain of their own existence, “Easy’s Waltz” is a character-driven indie drama of the kind that launched Vaughn’s acting career. Watching Vaughn embody Easy during a precarious late-career moment of opportunity, I was also reminded of “Bob le Flambeur,” in which the incorrigible French gambler stumbles home from the backroom poker games at dawn and drops a coin into the slot machine behind the door of his own apartment. In Easy’s case, he never risks enough to win big — but that also protects him from losing everything.

Movies like this don’t exactly light up the box office, but they stick with the folks fortunate enough to see them. Years earlier, Easy made that kind of impression on Al Pacino’s Mickey Albano, a louche local personality who books talent for the Wynn casino. Mickey has power, but more importantly, he has taste, and when he happens to catch one of Easy’s performances at a moment when the singer is pouring just a little too much of his soul into the show, he calls Easy over and offers his a chance the singer never thought would come: How would he like to play the Wynn?

By this point, we’ve already seen what bad news his brother Sam can be, via one of those smart Pizzolatto-classic scenes — this one set at a seedy pawn shop off the Strip — that reveal volumes about his characters’ personality and past relationships. Now Sam steps in as Easy’s manager, jeopardizing the deal even before it’s signed (in a weird coincidence, Sam had hit it off a few nights earlier with Lucy, the same young woman Mickey brought to his brother’s show, played by Kate Mara). Easy has secrets of his own, as when he runs the contract by an old acquaintance (Cobie Smulders), a lawyer who might have been his life partner had things turned out differently — though most of those details are nestled between the lines.

The arrangement between Mickey and Easy suits them both, and we sense that the older man is living out some kind of vicarious thrill opening doors for his grateful new act. Easy belongs to an earlier time (just don’t call him a Boomer) and honestly doesn’t realize what a viral moment he’s having when someone records his version of Mike and the Mechanics’ “Silent Running” and posts it online. Suddenly, Mickey is offering him a chance to play the main stage, which sets Sam’s greedier instincts into overdrive. Not only is he playing with fire by seeing Lucy behind Mickey’s back, but he hatches a scheme to steal and resell the QR codes off casino vouchers.

The pieces of Pizzolatto’s script don’t quite fit together, but the overall shape is clear. He has mapped a Faustian dilemma on top of a modern-day Greek tragedy, in which Easy must choose between the two things he wants most: a singing career and saving his brother, the latter being a responsibility no one ever asked him to shoulder. Pizzolatto turns out to be strong with actors, getting great performances from everybody, even Rex, a loose cannon whose role in “Red Rocket” created opportunities far beyond his abilities. Pacino hasn’t been this good since “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.”

As the film winds down, Pizzolatto reveals some tough existential insights personal enough to cut past the hard-boiled shorthand such movies so often serve up. It feels like an indulgence to give Easy a climactic concert in which nearly every significant person in his life is present — all but his mother, who makes an earlier appearance in a devastating single-scene cameo by Mary Steenburgen. Still, there’s something touching in the man’s belief that music can bring people together.

September 13, 2025 0 comments
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Vince Vaughn, Al Pacino In Vegas drama
TV & Streaming

Vince Vaughn, Al Pacino In Vegas drama

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Looking like it was a script plucked straight out of the 1970s, maybe even the ’50s, the richly entertaining midrange drama Easy’s Waltz goes down easy. It’s an engrossing character study of the kind of Vegas lounge singer that ought to be in that museum on the Strip that is full of salvaged signs of the Las Vegas that has been torn down and replaced by much glitzier new-age models. That probably is an apt description of Easy (Vince Vaughn) himself, a guy just trying to make ends meet by running a restaurant on the outskirts and performing nightly. He’s a Vic Damone-ish singer, really talented with the phrasing of a lyric and dedicated to delivering for the few faithfuls who actually come to see him perform.

It is his night job, as he also has to look out for the staff and make sure ends meet. Into his life comes mover and shaker Mickey Albano (Al Pacino), who sees something in Easy that he can exploit and convinces him that he belongs at the Wynn Hotel on the Strip instead and he can make it happen. He becomes a mentor, and soon Easy is getting the bigger break he never thought would happen. Easy is the kind of Vegas fixture who could see the big time happening just “over there” in the glitzy distance of the world’s most famous gambling town. But the Sinatra era is dead; this now is a place where stars do “residencies.” There are still lounges, though, and Easy fits right in.

The complication for him is devotion to his troubled younger brother Sam (Simon Rex), who acts as his “manager” but is generally a screw-up. It doesn’t change, and Sam’s stupid moves affect his relationship with Mickey, landing him in increasing trouble. Mickey is an old-style smooth operator — but don’t cross him, or he will show up with his goon squad for some beating-up time. Easy also has to deal with his mother (Mary Steenburgen), a tough cookie he is paying to keep above water. His visit to her is the kind of single scene where an Oscar winner like Steenburgen knocks it out of the park. We instantly know this woman, and it isn’t pretty.

That title — Easy’s Waltz — is one that instantly suggests this is going to be the kind of character-based movie Hollywood studios used to thrive on but now barely touch. This indie film ,which had its world premiere Thursday as a Special Presentation at the Toronto Film Festival, marks the feature writing-directing debut of Nic Pizzolatto, who proved in the first season of HBO’s True Detective he has the chops for this sort of thing. He proves it again here with a richly entertaining Vegas-y movie that feels decades older that the era of The Hangover and Leaving Las Vegas.

It is an actor’s dream. Vaughn has one of his best roles here, a guy who can interpret everything from “The Little Drummer Boy” to rock classics like “Edge of Seventeen” to Darin and Anka in their prime and get to their essence. But for is own good, perhaps he shouldn’t drift from his longtime comfort zone by playing a game he doesn’t know so well. And it is nice to see Pacino get a decent part here; I have seen him in basically throwaway or smallish role in other films this fall season including Julian Schnabel’s In the Hand of Dante and Gus Van Sant’s Dead Man’s Wire. His Mickey Albano may be Michael Corleone-lite but nonetheless lethal when he has to turn on a dime. At 85, he still has it. However, in a sadly poignant role as the down-on-his-luck Sam, Rex really shows he has the dramatic chops to nearly steal the picture from a couple of ol’ pros like Vaughn and Pacino. He is terrific.

Most of the female parts, other than Steenburgen’s memorable if brief turn — including Kate Mara, Cobie Smulders and Vegas veteran singer Shania Twain — don’t have as much to do to make an impression, a distinctive problem the 1960 Ocean’s 11 also felt. This waltz is for the boys.

Producers are Christopher Lemole, Tim Zajaros, Margot Hand and Pizzolatto. Easy’s Waltz is looking for distribution.

Title: Easy’s Waltz
Festival: Toronto (Special Presentations)
Sales agent: CAA
Director-screenwriter: Nic Pizzolatto
Cast: Vince Vaughn, Simon Rex, Kate Mara, Cobie Smulders, Shania Twain, Tim Simons, Fred Melamed, Sophia Ali, Mary Steenburgen, Al Pacino
Running time: 1 hr 43 mins

September 12, 2025 0 comments
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