Entertainment
Kate Cassidy’s friends voice concern over her behavior post Payne’s death
Kate Cassidy’s friends are reportedly worried about her following the “concerning” behavior after her boyfriend Liam Payne’s death.
After the One Direction alum’s tragic death back in October 2024, Cassidy’s pals were concerned as they “literally didn’t see her smile” for straight “three months” after the fatal fall of Payne from a hotel balcony that took away his life, via Daily Mail.
A close pal reported to the outlet, “There were months where I literally didn’t see her smile, and I was seeing her every day.”
The influencer even limited her social meets up and were totally living in solitary.
The source went on to explain, “It was so concerning. She didn’t even seem like herself. She canceled a lot of hangouts and just was almost a recluse.”
However, the close friend noted Cassidy is doing much better and she has started “hanging out with friends.”
The source even shared that she is even “open to dating again,” though “she’s not quite there yet.”
“There was a point where she was definitely not OK, but she’s getting better now,” the tattler said.
“She’s moving forward now. She knows it’s what he would have wanted,” the bird chirped.
For the unversed, Cassidy had been dating Payne for two years before his death at 31. The pair even spent quality time together in Argentina but she left two days earlier for her home in the U.S. before his passing.
Entertainment
Coldplay kiss cam moment was a ‘bad decision’: Woman involved breaks silence
Kristin Cabot is finally speaking out months after her viral Coldplay kiss cam moment cost her job and ignited an internet firestorm.
In an interview with The New York Times published Thursday, December 18, the former Astronomer HR executive reflected on the night she and then-CEO Andy Byron were caught in an intimate embrace during the band’s Boston concert in July.
Cabot, 53, told the paper she agonised over whether to go public but ultimately felt compelled to explain what happened. She insisted she and Byron were not in a sexual relationship and said they had never kissed before that night.
“I made a bad decision and had a couple of High Noons and danced and acted inappropriately with my boss,” she said, adding that “it’s not nothing.”
Cabot said she has accepted the consequences, even if they were devastating. “That’s the price I chose to pay,” she explained, noting that she “gave up [her] career” over the incident. “I want my kids to know that you can make mistakes, and you can really screw up, but you don’t have to be threatened to be killed for them.”
She told the Times she and Byron “clicked, stylistically” when she interviewed for her role in 2024, bonding later over both “going through” separations. By the time she invited him as her plus-one to the Coldplay concert, she admitted she had a “crush,” though it was not meant to be a date.
On a dopamine high from tequila cocktails and dancing, the pair appeared on the jumbotron, prompting Chris Martin to quip, “Whoa, look at these two.” When Byron ducked away and Cabot hid her face, Martin joked, “Either they’re having an affair, or they’re just very shy.”
“I was so embarrassed and so horrified,” Cabot said. “I’m the head of HR, and he’s the CEO. It’s, like, so cliché and so bad.”
Both were placed on leave following a board investigation. Byron resigned the next day, and Cabot followed shortly after.
Entertainment
Gloria Gaynor says her hit “I Will Survive” became a personal anthem of strength during one of her darkest times
Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” has been a motivational anthem for nearly five decades – but it didn’t just serve as inspiration for millions of fans. Gaynor told “CBS Mornings” the song gave her hope during one of the most difficult periods of her life.
After a fall on stage in 1978 at New York’s Beacon Theatre, Gaynor suffered a serious spinal injury and spent months in recovery. Many thought her career was over, but during that painful healing, she recorded what would become a smash hit, “I Will Survive.”
“I was living that song”
The song won a Grammy for best disco recording in 1980 – the only time that category existed. In 2016, it was inducted into the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry for its cultural significance. Now, Gaynor is a 2025 Kennedy Center honoree for her lifetime artistic achievements.
The track was supposed to be a B-side, but Gaynor immediately knew it was a winner. When she was recording it, standing in a back brace, she felt a deep connection to the music
“[I was] hoping I’d survive, you know, this trauma that I was going through, hoping that I survived the fact that my mother had just passed away a few years prior. Yeah, I was living that song and I was certain that I wouldn’t be the only one,” she said.
The song became her anthem – and the world’s – with over 200 covers in more than 20 different languages. And, of course, it sparked several trends on social media.
Just a girl from Jersey
Before becoming the “queen of disco,” Gaynor was just a girl from Newark, New Jersey. Her talent went unnoticed until a neighbor heard her sing and she was called up to the stage at a club one night to perform.
She eventually worked the nightclub circuit. Her big break came from a meeting with legendary record executive Clive Davis, who helped propel her to the center of disco. Her 1975 debut album, “Never Can Say Goodbye,” was one of the first disco albums to top the charts, cracking the top 25 on the Billboard 200.
Early in her career, Gaynor said she was singing R&B but decided she really wanted to give people music to dance to.
“I remember that discotheques were very, very new. There were just a couple and what they were was cabaret clubs where they’d just taken away the chairs,” she recalled.
Her profile continued to grow as she toured the world. As disco faded in the 1980s, Gaynor kept performing around the world. Years later, she found a new purpose through faith and gospel music. Her 2019 album, “Testimony,” earned her a Grammy, proving her voice still inspires.
Lessons for new artists
Now, nearly 50 years after her rise to fame, Gaynor is honored with one of the nation’s highest distinctions: the Kennedy Center Honor.
“I got a phone call from my manager and I was ecstatic,” said Gaynor as she learned about the award. “It was incredible to even think about being accepted as one who deserved that.”
Gaynor is now parting her wisdom to new artists. Her top takeaway: Don’t set out to seek rewards.
” I would say to them, be about doing the best you can with what God gave you,” she said. “All of that stuff is extra. I didn’t strive to get a Grammy. I strive to do the best song I could do at that time. I strive to touch people’s hearts. I strive to uplift, encourage, and power people And so, be about that.”
Entertainment
KP CM announces inclusion of ethics as subject in curriculum
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi on Thursday announced the inclusion of ethics as a subject in the curriculum, stressing that education must go hand in hand with character-building.
The KP chief minister made the announcement during his visit to a government school in Peshawar. Speaking on the occasion, the CM said: “Training is essential alongside education. It develops responsible, principled and successful individuals.”
The chief minister directed the relevant authorities to install CCTV cameras in all public schools and provide all facilities on a priority basis. He instructed the officials to ensure the provision of free textbooks to all students at the beginning of the new academic session.
He said that the school administration and teaching staff should focus on quality education and assured that the shortcomings in government schools would be removed.
The KP CM, last month, had announced to establish two more universities in the province despite financial issues.
CM Afridi had directed the authorities to work on the proposal of establishing the Arshad Sharif University in the province as well as another varsity in his native Khyber tribal district.
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