Entertainment
Sabrina Carpenter on ‘Man’s Best Friend’ making cause
Man’s Best Friend is the latest album by Sabrina Carpenter, who said it was born out of her emotional experiences that she wants to share with her fans.
In a chat with Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1, the Nonsense hitmaker further described that feeling, saying she had a “newer heartbreak experience.”
This inspired the 26-year-old to make her seventh studio album. “I think I came out of a sad situation, a lot less bitter than I intended or expected to.”
“With a little bit more of the like, you know what? There’s two people involved, and this is part of growing up,” Sabrina continued, adding that she doesn’t “want to be enemies with people that I loved.”
“I think obviously it depends on what happens and what goes down and how much you feel like you can truly trust that person,” the Please Please Please singer noted.
Despite the breakup, Sabrina said she did not let it affect her so much, noting that the Feather hitmaker had changed her mindset.
The music “feels very reflective of this time in my life where you don’t really have a lot of time to sort of mope and weep.”
She continued, “You kind of just got to get back out there, and not even in a dating way, not even in a romantic way.”
“But just get back out there in terms of if you’re staying inside and you’re thinking about how everything’s going wrong, everything’s going to go wrong and you’re going to be inside,” the Work It star noted.
It’s unclear with whom Sabrina recently broke up, although she had dating rumours with Barry Keoghan.
However, an insider previously told People in December 2024 that they had “taken a break” from their romance.
Entertainment
Michael Jordan on NASCAR, life after basketball and the one title he won’t claim
Michael Jordan is bringing his championship mindset to NASCAR, saying he’s “cursed with this competitive gene” that keeps him chasing victories — and change.
Jordan, co-founder of the NASCAR team 23XI Racing, told Gayle King that his passion for the sport traces back to his late father, James, a “diehard mechanic.”
“He used to work on all the neighborhood cars… he would fix our cars. We would never send our car to the service. He would figure out a way to fix it. So I think it gravitated into his love for cars. And he likes driving fast. My mom likes driving fast,” Jordan told King after the pair met up at the Phoenix Raceway for a “CBS Sunday Morning” interview.
From rumor to reality
Jordan founded 23XI Racing in 2020 with legendary driver and three-time Daytona 500 champion Denny Hamlin — a partnership Hamlin says began with a rumor that unexpectedly turned into reality.
“I’ll never forget. I saw an article that wasn’t true. Says, ‘Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan are lookin’ to purchase a NASCAR team,'” he recalled. “I saw the article, sent it to him. He says, ‘Not real, but if you want to make it real let me know.'”
And from there, a partnership was born.
The Hall of Fame basketball player changed one sport. Now, he’s changing another.
NASCAR has been privately owned and operated since 1948 by the France family. In 2016, NASCAR introduced a charter system, a franchise-like model that guaranteed 36 teams entry into each Cup Series race and promised them “new revenue opportunities.”
Jordan called the system “lopsided” and “wrong,” filing an antitrust lawsuit in October 2024 with 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports. He alleged NASCAR was being run like a monopoly, controlling which tracks were used, what car supplies were allowed, and giving teams restricted, limited charters to compete in races.
Landmark settlement
In December 2025, NASCAR reached a landmark settlement in the antitrust case, giving all teams evergreen charters with improved terms. Jordan called it a gamechanger.
“This outcome gives all parties the flexibility and confidence to continue delivering unforgettable racing moments for our fans, which has always been our highest priority since the sport was founded in 1948. We worked closely with race teams and tracks to create the NASCAR charter system in 2016, and it has proven invaluable to their operations and to the quality of racing across the Cup Series. Today’s agreement reaffirms our commitment to preserving and enhancing that value, ensuring our fans continue to enjoy the very best of stock car racing for generations to come,” NASCAR chairman and CEO Jim France said in a statement at the time.
“This fight was needed, you know? And I was going to fight even harder. And if I got kicked out, at least I made people aware that change needs to happen in the sport, you know? And I think it’s lopsided. And, you know, so I went in with the idea that I don’t care — even if I lost, I won,” Jordan said.
He didn’t lose. Still, winning doesn’t come easy.
“It comes with sacrifice,” Hamlin said.
“Yes. It’s infectious. You know, you win, everybody’s– you got an unbelievable building. Everybody’s happy. When you lose, there’s a sadness within the building. Which is necessary because when you lose you want to be sad,” Jordan added.
F23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick, who began the season with three wins in a row, says having Jordan as a boss “[motivates] the hell out of us.”
“I mean, you’re ready to run through a wall, first off,” Reddick joked. “But then two, you know, hearing a champion, a winner, a legend tell you these things, and it’s like, ‘Oh wow, you know, we’re not that far off. A few adjustments and we’re right there.'”
Life after basketball
While Jordan once said he wanted a quieter life after retiring from basketball, he acknowledges NASCAR hasn’t exactly kept him out of the spotlight.
“It’s a quieter life where I’m not really the show, even though as of late, you know, I’ve been in the forefront … a lot more than I probably anticipated. But I think the sport needs it to some degree, and my team needs it, and I want them to see the passion that I have for winning and for the– you know, being a part of the team,” he said.
While he’s been making headlines for his role in NASCAR, Jordan said it’s still not the same as when he was playing basketball in Chicago.
“But it’s something that I think keeps me alive,” he added.
During his time with the Chicago Bulls, Jordan said the weight of his fame often felt like a burden, as he worked to live up to the expectations that came with being the face of the sport.
“The burden of living a certain way, you know? Living up to– trying to maintain whatever everybody’s perspectives is for you or was for you. That is a burden, you know? And it’s a lot of people that has to endure it. And there’s a certain period of time that you can go through that, and then at some point in time you say, ‘I’m tired of…doing that'” Jordan said.
However, Jordan admits there’s still a “huge piece” of him that wants to pick a basketball up.
“But I’ve compensated that– that feeling through NASCAR or through fishing … But that urge to dream, that if I wish I can still pick up a basketball and … I would love to do that. Believe me,” he said.
Jordan is now 63 and wears many titles, though there’s one he would prefer not to hold: G.O.A.T.
“There’s no such thing as G.O.A.T., you know, to me,” Jordan said. “It’s not to me. You know, it’s only because I think, you know, we are transcended from other people, other athletes. We learn from other athletes. We progress the game as we move further. To say that one is better than the other is not really right.”
Jordan said he wouldn’t change a thing about his life or career, embracing both his mistakes and the lessons they brought, and crediting the relationships he’s built along the way as part of what shaped who he is today.
“If it ends today, you know, I will have a smile on my face, 100%,” Jordan said.
Watch more of Gayle King’s interview with Michael Jordan, Denny Hamlin and driver Tyler Reddick Monday and Tuesday on “CBS Mornings.”
Entertainment
Ariana Grande shares unseen ‘Brighter Days Ahead’ footage on 1st anniversary
Ariana Grande is marking the first anniversary of Eternal Sunshine Deluxe: Brighter Days Ahead.
To celebrate one year of the final deluxe reissue of her seventh studio album, Eternal Sunshine, the Wicked star shared unseen footage from the Brighter Days Ahead short film making on social media.
Taking to Instagram on March 28, the 7 Rings hitmaker shared a one-minute and eight-second video, featuring a montage of scenes from the Brighter Days Ahead short film and behind-the-scenes clips.
She captioned it, writing, “happy one year anniversary, brighter days ahead“, expressing gratitude to her fans for their support of the project.
The first anniversary of the deluxe edition served as a final milestone before her return to the stage with The Eternal Sunshine World Tour, scheduled to kick off on June 6 at the Oakland Arena in California.
It will be her first tour in seven years, celebrating both the original Eternal Sunshine and the Brighter Days Ahead expansion.
Released on March 28, 2025, Brighter Days Ahead came exactly one year after the original.
It includes six additional tracks and an accompanying short film that serves as a sequel to her we can’t be friends (wait for your love) music video.
The project is described as the official “conclusion” to the Eternal Sunshine era.
Entertainment
Great decision or a big mistake?
Princess Beatrice and her husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi are currently struggling through a tough phase as reports about their marriage cause major concerns.
While there are many royal reporters who have claimed that the couple is having a rocky marriage in the wake of the Epstein scandal, other reports have cited close friends that there is no trouble in paradise.
In one of The Mail reports, Edo was reached out where he denied the claims of marital woes. Although that did not do much to settle the discourse surrounding Beatrice’s marriage.
Now, in a new Daily Mail report, it was revealed that the couple are planning to move to the US in a bid to avoid all the drama that has caused them a massive headache. Sources have said that Beatrice is “mortified” and unable to sleep and eat due to the scandal.
Even though there is no wrongdoing associated to their names, her father Andrew and mum Fergie’s involvement with paedophile Jeffery Epstein has cause enough issues.
In a discussion on the Royalist podcast, journalist Paula Froelich believes that it could be a good idea to move to Florida where the couple can stay under radar since many of the people associated with Epstein live there. Hence, they would prefer not to bring it up got their own sake.
Meanwhile, Daily Beast editor Tom Sykes, Beatrice appears to be more “emotionally dependant” on her mother and she is “very British” to adjust in the US.
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