Entertainment
Channing Tatum prepares to undergo surgery after severe injury
Channing Tatum offered his health update after severely injuring his shoulder.
Before going under the knife, the Magic Mike star took to his Instagram on Tuesday night, February 3.
He shared a black-and-white snapshot of himself wearing a hospital gown while laying on a bed in a medical office as he prepares to undergo surgery.
“Just another day. Another challenge,” the 45-year-old American actor and film producer captioned the single image.
“This one is gonna be hard,” he added before concluding, “But whatever. Let’s get it in.”
Moreover, giving more insights about his condition, the Blink Twice actor posted two images of his X-rays on his Instagram Stories.
“Separated shoulder,” he captioned one report, showing broken bones.
The Step Up actor wrote “Screwed shoulder. Yay,” on the following update, featuring a screw in his shoulder.
It is pertinent to note that back in September, Tatum revealed that he got injured while filming the new Avengers: Doomsday movie.
Given his history, it’s unclear if the new medical procedure has anything to do with his previous injury.
On the work front Tatum’s latest movies as of early 2026 include the critically acclaimed dark thriller Josephine, which premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, and the 2025 crime drama Roofman, where he stars as Jeffrey Manchester.
Entertainment
Ben Stiller slams congressman for ‘disgusting’ request against Bad Bunny
Ben Stiller has publicly pushed back against calls for federal action over Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show, mocking a Republican congressman’s demand for an investigation and defending the performance as a celebration of inclusion and talent.
The Severance executive producer and director weighed in after Florida representative Randy Fine said he was asking the Federal Communications Commission to investigate Bad Bunny’s halftime appearance, which aired during Sunday’s Super Bowl.
Fine described the show as “disgusting and por**graphic filth” and claimed it violated broadcast standards after the Puerto Rican superstar allegedly used profanity in Spanish.
Stiller responded directly to Fine on X with a sharply sarcastic post that quickly gained traction.
“Focus of investigation: how did Bad Bunny manage to kick ass at such a high level and deliver the most watched and well produced half time show about inclusion and love ever made….investigators plan to explore source of Bunny’s huge talent, off the charts charisma and even bigger heart,” he wrote.

Fine, a Republican representing Florida’s 6th congressional district, had earlier said he was sending a letter to FCC chairman Brendan Carr calling for what he described as “dramatic action”.
In posts and in the letter, Fine argued that language used during the performance crossed legal lines.

“You can’t say the f-word on live TV. ‘Bad Bunny’s disgusting halftime show was illegal,” he wrote on X.
He added that if similar lyrics had been performed in English, “the broadcast would have been pulled down and the fines would have been enormous.”
In the letter itself, Fine doubled down, writing, “It doesn’t matter if you say it in Spanish. Encouraging children to use cocaine in a live television broadcast is a crime. It doesn’t matter who is singing.”
He urged the FCC “to conduct a thorough investigation and to pursue the maximum penalties permitted by law,” warning that anything less would suggest indecency is acceptable if it is profitable.
Fine was not alone in his criticism.
Tennessee representative Andy Ogles and Missouri representative Mark Alford also called for the FCC to look into the halftime show.
Donald Trump joined the backlash, branding the performance “a slap in the face to our country”, despite Bad Bunny being an American citizen born in Puerto Rico.
Stiller’s comments, however, turned him into one of the most prominent Hollywood figures to publicly ridicule the campaign against the artist.
Stiller’s stance echoed similar online reactions from other entertainment figures, including Watch What Happens Live host Andy Cohen, who also spent time after the Super Bowl mocking critics of Bad Bunny’s performance on social media.
Despite the political uproar, the halftime show itself drew massive attention, and the controversy appears to have further highlighted its cultural reach, with Stiller’s defence underlining a broader pushback against efforts to police language, culture and identity on one of television’s biggest stages.
Entertainment
Senate panel declares PIFD meeting null and void for malafide intent, rule violations
- Matter referred to privilege and Senate finance committees for scrutiny.
- Provincial university visits and town halls announced to ensure compliance.
- Fake degree concerns addressed; permanent verification desk at HEC soon.
The Senate Standing Committee on Federal Education and Professional Training has declared the recent Pakistan Institute of Fashion and Design (PIFD) meeting null and void, calling it conducted with malicious intent, against prescribed rules, and without the President’s approval.
The committee, chaired by Senator Bushra Anjum Butt, took serious notice of the matter.
“The vice chancellor who is going above the rules is not bigger than the system,” Senator Butt said, questioning the continued functioning of a vice chancellor under inquiry for alleged rule violations.
She also raised concerns over reports of the vice chancellor attempting to treat her position as an inherited right and facilitating her sister’s appointment.
The committee has declared her retired and referred her absence from prior meetings to the Privilege Committee.
Senator Butt further questioned the opening of a hostel with only six months remaining in the vice chancellor’s tenure and referred the case to the Senate Standing Committee on Finance to examine whether the action exceeded lawful authority.
“These actions are not against any one particular person but against the norms of owning public institutions as private business,” she said, emphasising that the committee’s stance would set an example for future vice chancellors.
She announced provincial visits to universities to ensure institutions comply with rules and confirmed that town halls will be held to gain a broader understanding beyond the Chancellors’ reports.
Addressing fake degree concerns, she said, “Students will not pay for our negligence. We will collect exact data on unverified institutions and ensure students get their due rights.”
A permanent help desk at the Higher Education Commission will be established immediately.
The committee also reviewed the National Vocational and Technical Training Commission (NAVTTC), learning that 71,000 students were trained in 2025 with an annual budget of Rs7 billion.
Discrepancies raised by a student from South Punjab regarding training allocations prompted the chair to form a sub-committee, led by Senator Kamran Murtaza, to investigate potential embezzlement and hold responsible parties accountable.
Entertainment
James Van Der Beek, “Dawson’s Creek” star, dies at 48 after cancer diagnosis
James Van Der Beek, star of “Dawson’s Creek” and “Varsity Blues,” has died at age 48, according to his publicist and a post from his wife on social media.
Van Der Beek announced in November 2024 that he had been diagnosed with colorectal cancer. His cause of death was not shared.
“Our beloved James David Van Der Beek passed peacefully this morning,” his wife Kimberly wrote on Instagram. “He met his final days with courage, faith, and grace. There is much to share regarding his wishes, love for humanity and the sacredness of time. Those days will come. For now we ask for peaceful privacy as we grieve our loving husband, father, son, brother, and friend.”
Van Der Beek’s publicist Whitney Tancred confirmed his death to CBS News.
Van Der Beek told People magazine in 2024 that he was “feeling good” despite the diagnosis. He did not provide other details of the disease and said he was “taking steps to resolve it,” but did not specify what treatment he received. In November 2025, he said he was auctioning items from his career to help pay for treatment.
Van Der Beek rose to fame as the titular Dawson Leery on “Dawson’s Creek,” which ran from 1998 to 2003. In 1999, he landed the lead in the film “Varsity Blues.” He continued to appear regularly in movies and television, including playing a fictionalized version of himself in “Don’t Trust the B—- in Apartment 23” in 2012.
Van Der Beek was married to actress Heather McComb from 2003 to 2009. In 2010, he married business consultant Kimberly Brook. They share six children. Van Der Beek said his wife suffered multiple miscarriages.
Colorectal cancer has become a leading cause of cancer-related deaths for Americans under the age of 50, and cases have been rising in that age group in recent years. According to the American Cancer Society, symptoms may include blood in the stool, changes in bowel habits, abdominal pain, bloated stomach, unexplained weight loss, vomiting and fatigue.
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