Entertainment
2025 Emmys bring first-time nominees, surprise moments and red carpet flair

The 2025 Emmy Awards delivered red carpet fashion, candid moments and first-time nominees alongside veteran stars. “CBS Mornings” co-host Gayle King caught up with some of the stars.
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Entertainment
Ava Raine fired over remarks about Charlie Kirk?

WWE star Ava Raine, the eldest daughter of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, is facing calls for her dismissal after a social media post she made in the wake of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
Kirk, 31, a right-wing commentator and close ally of Donald Trump, was fatally shot September 10 during a campus event at Utah Valley University.
Tributes poured in from politicians and celebrities, but Raine, 24, drew attention for her response on X.

Quoting a post that read, “If you want people to have kind words when you pass, you should say kind words when you’re alive,” Raine added: “and I’ll stand behind this. be kind, now more than ever.”
Her remark quickly divided audiences. “And you think standing behind this is KIND??” one user wrote.
Another said she was “literally disrespecting the dead.” Critics demanded she “do better” and some urged WWE to cut ties with her.
Supporters, however, praised her candor. “Much respect Ava,” one user commented, while another said, “If only more in the company were brave to share their thoughts too.”
Despite the uproar, Raine has not been fired, and WWE has taken no action against her.
Entertainment
Prince Harry sits down with King Charles after four years for one major reason

It is being reported that Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, known for stepping away from the royal family, staged a dramatic reunion because of his financial struggles.
An insider told Star that the hidden agenda behind Prince Harry’s recent visit to the United Kingdom was about finances.
For those unversed, the Duke of Sussex and his wife, Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex, lived apart from the monarchy for four years. The couple, who stepped down from their royal duties in 2020, relocated to Montecito, California, and after six months, they reportedly broke all ties with King Charles.
Their drastic measure cost them their estimated $20 million Spotify deal in 2023, as top executive Bill Simmons severely criticised them, calling the couple “f***ing grifters.”
Now, this reunion is seen as an important moment for their strained relationship; however, the insider claimed money might have been a primary reason behind Prince Harry’s 54-minute meeting with King Charles on September 10.
The source reported that his meeting with King Charles was his way of making sure he does not face more financial issues in the future.
Both Prince Harry and his wife Meghan have completely understood that they “need to somehow put an end to this war with the monarchy, if only to avoid the very real prospect of financial ruin,” the insider said.
This comes after Rob Shuter’s ShuterScoop report published on August 18 stated that the Duchess of Sussex’s business venture As Ever is “out of cash” and is struggling to even pay vendors.
It is pertinent to mention that Newsweek reported on September 5 that the sophomore season of Meghan’s Netflix show, With Love, Meghan, received an underwhelming response, which has not helped her situation.
Entertainment
Major U.S. comedians set to perform in Saudi Arabia urged not to help cover up “abuses of a repressive regime”

Some of the biggest American names in comedy have signed up to perform at a festival in Saudi Arabia, and they’re being urged to speak out against the country’s human rights abuses — and not to be “complicit in covering up the abuses of a repressive regime,” by the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch organization.
Saudi Arabia will host the Riyadh Comedy Festival, which organizers say will be the “world’s largest comedy festival,” from Sept. 26 to Oct. 9. Some of North America’s most popular comedians, along with comics from Europe and elsewhere, are featured on the bill, including Dave Chapelle, Kevin Hart and Bill Burr.
The festival will be the latest in a series of sports and cultural events hosted by Saudi Arabia’s government that critics say amount to an effort to obscure the country’s reputation for rampant human rights abuses.
“The Saudi government has invested billions into high profile entertainment events like these in a deliberate effort to whitewash the country’s human rights record and deflect from the egregious abuses that continue to happen inside of the country,” Human Rights Watch researcher Joey Shea told CBS News. “These investments are a part of the broader strategy to… have people thinking about a comedy event, for example, rather than the soaring number of executions that are happening inside of the country.”
HRW noted specifically the state execution of journalist Turki Al-Jasser, who was killed in June following seven years of detention after reportedly being identified as the author of several anonymous tweets criticizing the Saudi royal family.
Reporters Without Borders
Al-Jasser had been convicted of terrorism and high treason on the basis of posts he was accused of authoring, according to UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay. Reporters Without Borders, an organization that works to protect journalists, branded the charges against him as “false.”
“This execution of a journalist went forward to very little international criticism and this is clearly a result of these billions that had been invested in the country’s whitewashing strategy,” Shea said.
When asked whether they believed the comedians would be able to freely tell jokes at the festival, the HRW researcher predicted there would be clear red lines drawn by organizers to prevent any criticism of Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, who has already taken over as ruler of the highly conservative Islamic kingdom, as well as his policies and the broader royal family.
Win McNamee/Getty
Shea called on the high-profile entertainers attending the event — funding for which comes from the Saudi government’s General Entertainment Authority — to mitigate the positive effect that their presence might have on the country’s reputation for human rights abuses, including by “speaking out about the abuses.”
Tom Dillon, one of the comedians scheduled to perform at the Riyadh festival, claimed on his podcast that he’s being paid $315,000 for a single show, and that some of his more famous colleagues would receive around $1.6 million for their appearances.
CBS News has contacted the publicists representing billed attendees Bill Burr, Mark Normand, Kevin Hart, Sebastian Maniscalco, Dave Chapelle, Louis C.K., Whitney Cummings, Tom Segura, Andrew Schulz and Jim Jeffries, but has received no comment from any of them regarding their expected appearances in Saudi Arabia.
Riyadh Comedy Festival
CBS News asked Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment on HRW’s assertions, but has not received a response.
One of the highest-profile cases of the Saudis’ purported efforts to change their image came in 2021, with the launch of LIV Golf, a golf league that saw seasoned professionals defect from the famed PGA Tour in exchange for highly profitable contracts.
Critics accused the golfers of helping the Saudi government to “sportswash” its reputation, only three years after Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, an outspoken critic of the county’s leadership, was brutally murdered inside a Saudi diplomatic office in Istanbul, Turkey.
A CIA report concluded with a medium to high degree of confidence that the killing was likely carried out at bin Salman’s orders.
In a 2019 interview with CBS’ 60 Minutes, bin Salman denied ordering Khashoggi’s assassination, but said he took responsibility for it.
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