Entertainment
Find out lip reader’s court findings here
The alleged killer of 31-year-old conservative Charlie Kirk, Tyler Robinson, has made chilling remarks during his first in-person court appearance, according to a lip-reading analysis.
Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed in front of a crowd of 3,000 people at the first stop during his Turning Point USA “American Comeback Tour,” on September 10 at Utah Valley University.
In a chilling courtroom moment caught by lip-readers, Charlie Kirk’s alleged shooter, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, said he thinks about the shooting “every day”—and mentioned the widow Erika Kirk during a court exchange with his attorney, reported by the New York Post.
The alleged shooter, Tyler Robinson, appeared before the court in calm and even shared a laugh with his attorney on Thursday, December 11, 2025, three months after Charlie Kirk was shot dead at Utah Valley University.
What did Tyler Robinson discuss with his attorney in courtroom?
“I think about the shooting daily,” Robinson, who has been behind bars since his arrest days after the assassination, appears to tell his lawyer in an off-mic moment before the hearing began, according to an analysis by Lip Reader Ltd. (a recognized platform for lip-reading services).
The analysis by the lip reader further adds to the alleged assassin in Charlie Kirk’s murder, Tyler Robinson’s exchange with his attorney.
“Every morning… all the time,” he continues.
He then appears to mention Erika Kirk, who was left with the couple’s two small daughters, in the unsettling exchange.
“So, he had a wife…,” the lip reader caught at one point.
At another point, he turned to his own condition, confessing he’d been “smoking a lot,” unable to sleep at night, and that it was “driving me mental.”
“Unfortunately, it’s doing my head in. I’m not good for anything,” he adds, according to the analysis.
Robinson was wearing a simple blue button-down shirt with a tartan tie.
Tyler Robinson, the alleged shooter in Charlie Kirk’s murder, is facing charges of aggravated murder, felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury, obstruction of justice, two counts of witness tampering, and commission of a violent offense in the presence of a child.
The next hearing is scheduled for December 29, 2025.
Entertainment
Anne Hathaway shares major news about ‘Princess Diaries 3’
Anne Hathaway is ready to wear her crown again as Queen Mia of Genovia.
The Oscar-winning actress has given a major update on Princess Diaries 3 in a new interview with Entertainment Weekly, confirming that a new installment is actively in the works 22 years after Princess Diaries 2.
“One hundred percent, we’re constantly working on it,” she said, revealing that development briefly took a backseat while filming The Devil Wears Prada 2 — another of Hathaway’s highly-anticipated sequels, which hits theatres on May 1.
“[Devil Wears Prada 2] cropped up unexpectedly and took over the space,” Hathaway explained, adding that it became impossible to focus on both projects at once. But now, the plan is clearer.
“The intention is to make Princess Diaries hopefully next,” she declared, noting that the film “is not greenlit or confirmed yet.”
Still, the demand is undeniable. But Hathaway acknowledged that “everybody wants it,” she and her TDWP costar Meryl Streep emphasised that “you’ve got to wait for the right script.”
The original Princess Diaries released in 2001 introduces Mia Thermopolis, a regular teenager who discovers she’s heir to a kingdom — a role that turned Hathaway into a household name.
Looking back at the film, Hathaway tearfully told People magazine, “This is the role that changed my life. And I’m standing with Julie Andrews, which is just insane.”
Entertainment
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Entertainment
Nasa unveils new space telescope to probe mysteries of ‘dark energy’
Nasa unveiled a new telescope on Tuesday to scan vast swathes of the universe for planets outside our solar system and probe the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy.
The Roman space telescope is expected to discover tens of thousands of planets, possibly offering clarity about how many could be out there.
“Roman will give the Earth a new atlas of the universe,” Nasa administrator Jared Isaacman told a news conference at the Goddard Space Flight Centre in Maryland, where the telescope went on display.
The 12-metre (39-feet), silvery contraption with massive solar panels will be transported to Florida ahead of a launch into space aboard a SpaceX rocket planned for September at the earliest.
Roman, which took more than $4 billion and over a decade to build, is named after astronomer Nancy Grace Roman, nicknamed the “Mother of Hubble” for her role in developing the landmark space telescope.
Thirty-six years after Hubble launched into space, revolutionising astronomical observations, Nasa hopes Roman will help to shed light on questions that remain unresolved.
Boasting a field of view at least 100 times larger than Hubble’s, the telescope will sweep across vast regions of space from its position 1.5 million kilometres (930,000 miles) from Earth.
The telescope will send 11 terabytes of data a day down to Earth, said Mark Melton, a systems engineer at Goddard Space Flight Centre.
“In the first year, we’ll have sent down more data than Hubble will have for its entire life,” he told AFP.
The telescope’s wide-angle lens will allow Nasa to conduct a census of the objects that make up our universe, said Nicky Fox, associate administrator for Nasa’s Science Mission Directorate.
“Roman will discover tens of thousands of new planets outside our solar system. It will reveal billions of galaxies, thousands of supernovae and tens of billions of stars,” she said.
This wealth of information will enable Nasa to tease out areas of interest that can then be investigated by complementary telescopes, such as the James Webb Space Telescope.
Study the invisible
But Roman will also study the invisible — dark matter and dark energy, whose origins remain unknown but which are thought to constitute 95% of our universe.
Dark matter is believed to be the glue that holds galaxies together, while dark energy pulls them apart by making the universe expand faster and faster over time.
Thanks to its infrared vision, the telescope will be able to observe light emitted by celestial bodies billions of years ago, effectively looking back in time to hopefully discover more about the two phenomena.
Complementing the work of Europe’s Euclid space telescope and the Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile, Roman will probe “how the dark matter structures itself throughout cosmic time” and “calculate how fast galaxies are moving away from us,” Darryl Seligman, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Michigan State University, told AFP.
These discoveries could fundamentally change our understanding of the structure of our universe, said astrophysicist Julie McEnery, who led the Roman project.
“If Roman wins a Nobel Prize at some point, it’s probably for something we haven’t even thought about or questioned yet,” said Melton.
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