Entertainment
John O’Hurley reveals ‘historical’ family Thanksgiving tradition
John O’Hurley recently got candid and opened up about his family’s special Thanksgiving traditions.
The 71-year-old American actor and game show host, who has been hosting The National Dog Show since 2002, which is aired every Thanksgiving day on NBC, conversed with PEOPLE magazine and revealed how the special occasion is celebrated in his family.
O’Hurley said that Thanksgiving day is filled with family meetups, delish food, and, on top of everything, dogs. The O’Hurley family has its own personal traditions, separate from the competition that is taped ahead of the big day.
He said, “I have spent every single Thanksgiving in New York City, and I go to a specific Italian restaurant. We have a wonderful — either traditional or Italian — Thanksgiving dinner.”
The Seinfeld star went on to share that his family makes sure to be part of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade that airs before the National Dog Show each year.
He explained, “We’re always at the beginning of the Macy’s parade. It’s been historically in our family and a tradition ever since my son was born. He’s turning 19 this year.”
“There were several years where we didn’t have him. He grew up on the show. He grew up at the beginning of the parade every year. It’s always been a wonderful tradition,” John O’Hurley noted.
Entertainment
Passengers appreciate recently-launched electric bus service in Jhelum: minister
Minister of State for Finance Bilal Azhar Kayani said on Sunday that passengers appreciated the electric bus service launched by the Punjab government, ensuring safe, affordable and convenient transport facility.
While visiting his Jhelum constituency, the state minister travelled on the electric bus to inspect the public transport service that was inaugurated in Jhelum two weeks ago.
The Punjab government launched the electric bus service in Jhelum last month with a fleet of 15 vehicles, aiming to provide residents with modern, environmentally friendly transport facilities in line with services available in other parts of the province.
He said in an X post that he spoke to passengers at the bus stop and during the journey to get their feedback.
“All passengers appreciated the service launched by CM Punjab, which has ensured safe, affordable and convenient transport for the citizens. I was delighted to see a number of women and elderly benefitting from the service.”
Kayani added that he also visited the Cath Lab in District Headquarters (DHQ) Hospital Jhelum, inaugurated last Monday for the provision of cardiac treatment, to review the facility and check progress.
“Nine angiographies and three angioplasties have been successfully done so far, all free of cost for the patients.”
“This is the first Cath Lab in any DHQ Hospital in Punjab. Citizens of Jhelum no longer have to travel to Islamabad or Lahore for affordable and quality cardiac care,” he added.
Kayani also met local party colleagues to discuss local issues, and offered fateha and condolences to constituents whose loved ones have recently passed away.
Entertainment
Carrie Coon and Tracy Letts on their joint love for, and beyond, the theater
Safe to say, after recent star turns in “The Gilded Age” and the monologue of the year about friendship in “The White Lotus,” Carrie Coon is having a moment.
I asked her, “Would you agree with me that where you used to say you’re at the bottom of the A-List …”
“I think I used to say, ‘The bottom of the B-List,’ but yeah,” she corrected.
“But don’t we need to revise our assessment as where you are?”
“Maybe,” said Coon. “But the thing that’s changed for me is that I was on ‘The White Lotus,’ and now I can be in a Broadway play. That wasn’t true for me five years ago.”
The play is “Bug,” which opened just this past week. Coon is leveraging her newfound star power to play the demanding, harrowing lead role in this examination of paranoia, conspiracy, and loneliness. And she is adamant that her success should not obscure a larger, sadder reality of the theater these days: “We live in a country that is fundamentally unsupportive of the arts. So now, in order to do a play on Broadway, you have to do ‘The White Lotus,’ or else you’re not allowed. They have to replace you with somebody more famous.”
“Hang on, if you hadn’t done ‘White Lotus’ and ‘Gilded Age’ and hadn’t sort of blown up as a star …”
“Yeah. We wouldn’t be sitting here, absolutely not,” Coon said.
“Your acting ability, what you do on stage, not enough?” I asked.
“No, that’s not how we make those decisions anymore,” she said. “And you can ask all these extraordinary theater actors who don’t do plays anymore because celebrities are doing plays. It’s just a different world that we’re living in now.”
Tracy Letts is the playwright of “Bug.” He’s in love with Coon’s fearlessness. “She has ice water in her veins,” he said. “In another life, she’d make a great assassin.”
CBS News
He’s in love with her acting chops. “She’s a great stage actress,” he said. “For the people who’ve only seen her do ‘Gilded Age’ or ‘White Lotus,’ they just don’t know what a stage animal she is.”
Letts is in love with her. He and Coon have been married for the last dozen years.
I asked, “Your partners, your life partners, they had to be theatre people, right? Because it’s such a consuming world?”
“I came to that conclusion a long time ago that, whoever my partner was had to be in the profession; civilians just don’t get it,” Letts laughed. “They just don’t get it. It’s a hard life.”
CBS News
A couple of Midwesterners (Coon is from Ohio, Letts from Oklahoma), they met in 2010 doing “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago. Letts said, “We had a palpable attraction to each other. We just wanted to be with each other.”
Coon said, “When we confessed to our director and our castmates that we were officially together, they were like, ‘Yeah. Of course.’ We thought it was shocking, this shocking revel – [and they’re] like, ‘Yeah, hello! We’ve been here the whole time.'”
When the show got to Broadway in 2013, Letts won a best actor Tony. That’s some impressive artistic range, considering his Pulitzer Prize for writing the play “August: Osage County” in 2008, and his steady presence in film and TV for the last several decades, from “Seinfeld” and “The Big Short” to “A House of Dynamite.”
He’s been around a while. Coon noted, “Tracy’s entering into sort of this …”
“Oldness?” Letts offered.
Letts is now 60; Coon is 44.
“He always gave me room to grow, because I was not in the same place in my life as him,” Coon said. “Like, what you’re sitting in contemplation of at this stage in your life is different than where I am in mine.”
So, how does that meld? “Oh, a lotta jokes,” said Coon. “Like, ‘Your second husband’s gonna love this couch.'”
Whether playwright and actor, or husband and wife, what makes this partnership work, they told us, is honest feedback and mutual respect. Letts said, “She knows I’m gonna tell her the truth. She’ll put on a dress and say, ‘How does this look?’ And I’ll say, ‘It doesn’t look good.'”
“No, no, no, no….” I said.
“It’s true!” Letts reiterated. “And she appreciates it, because she knows I’m not lying to her.”
“Isn’t rule number one of husbanding, Not bad? Which we all know means… “
“No. We don’t do that,” Letts said. “So when she puts on something and I go, ‘You look fantastic,’ or when she’s in this play and I say, ‘My God, you’re a great actress,’ she knows I’m not bulls****ing her.”
Later, I asked Coon, “If you have something to say, whether it’s praise or criticism, you know it’s the truth?”
“Yes,” she replied. “Even with things I wear.”
Letts smiled. “See?!”
While any couple might recognize that trust required to navigate life’s challenges, Letts and Coon’s “moment” is providing some uncommon tests. Take Coon landing the “White Lotus” role: “I turned to Tracy and I said, ‘There’s no way I can go away to Thailand for six months.’ We had a three-year-old and a six-year-old. And Tracy was the one who turned to me and he said, ‘We’re gonna figure this out.’
“Tracy was doing every morning. He was doing dinner and bedtime every night, and bath time by himself. So that was a really hard six months.”
“I wasn’t doing anything extraordinary; I was taking care of the kids while she was gone doing a job,” he said.
“We know when the undeniable thing comes along, and we’ll both make room for that to happen,” Coon said.
Which is why this chance to collaborate on Broadway is so important for them. The best way to handle a whirlwind is to find a place to anchor. For these two, that’s always been the theater.
“This is where we’re most comfortable,” Letts said, “in a rehearsal room preparing this on a stage, doing this in a theater. This is what we know. You just have a sense of accomplishment and gratification in the theater. You’ve told a story over the course of the night. You don’t get to do that when you make a film or TV show.”
Carrie Coon and Tracy Letts are a couple now living in some of the culture’s brightest lights. But they’re theater people – bright lights don’t faze them. “I got my first credit card at 43,” Letts laughed. “It’s a tough gig!”
Besides, they have work to do, the kind that’s most affirming for them: Work they can do together.
Letts said, “I needed somebody who understood what it means to be an artist in America.”
“And I needed somebody who reminded me that it was important to be an artist,” Coon said, “and that it was powerful, and necessary.”
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Extended interview – Tracy Letts and Carrie Coon (Video)
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Extended interview – Carrie Coon (Video)
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Story produced by Gabriel Falcon. Editor: Carol Ross.
Entertainment
Nick Reiner’s new documentary drops unheard clues about Rob, Michele murder
Nick Reiner has not yet directly addressed the charges against him for the murder of his parents, Rob and Michele Reiner, but a newly released documentary looks at some clues leading up to the tragedy.
The documentary, The Reiner Murders: What Really Happened, analyses the 32-year-old filmmaker’s life before the tragedy struck their family.
It explores Nick’s 2020 diagnosis of schizophrenia and a recent change in his medication, which arguably contributed to the erratic behaviour and subsequent murders.
The medication made him “erratic and dangerous,” according to TMZ, and his behaviour got increasingly alarming a month before the murders.
The Being Charlie writer had reportedly been in a Los Angeles rehabilitation centre a few weeks before Rob and Michele were found stabbed to death in their home.
The outlet reported that due to the weight gain as a side effect of his medications, the psychiatric facility changed the prescription and that made him even more erratic.
The now-deceased parents were allegedly aware of the mental health crisis but helpless regarding a course of action to take.
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