Entertainment
Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon bring Hollywood magic to Nashville

Nicole Kidman said that she is planning to bring more TV and movie productions to Nashville.
At the Nashville Film Festival on September 21, the 58-year-old actress told the guests that she is teaming up with Reese Witherspoon to bring a little bit of the entertainment industry out east.
“I’ll be bringing more and more production here,” said the Babygirl star. “Reese Witherspoon lives here too, and she’s one of my best besties.”
“I can’t say that we will be bringing Big Little Lies here,” Nicole joked of her and Reese’ hit series. “That’s all got to go where it is.”
“But in terms of just, you know, there is so much room here for production,” she continued. “The crews are fantastic and the actors, and the people, all of … I feel that it’s taking off and will continue to take off, so off we go.”
“Come on, Tennessee, we’ve got this,” added Nicola.
For the unversed, The Perfect Couple alum has been living in Tennessee’s capital since 2008.
“I love the Nashville people because they embraced me two decades ago, and they keep making it possible for our family to have the most beautiful life here,” Nicole told audiences. “Incredibly grateful.”
Entertainment
Palace fears Prince Andrew could expose secrets worse than Harry’s memoir

Prince Andrew may be considering writing a tell-all memoir if tensions within the royal family continue to escalate, a royal expert has warned.
Amid ongoing scandal of his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson over the emails she sent to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, it is expected the Duke of York could release a memoir.
Andrew has been increasingly sidelined from public royal life and has been facing calls to be banned from major events.
More recently, the “disgraced” Duke was snubbed by Prince William at the Duchess of Kent’s funeral.
According to royal commentator Richard Kay, moments like these could push the Duke of York to a breaking point and he may follow in Prince Harry’s footsteps.
In a piece for Daily Mail, Kay claimed that Andrew knows secrets about the royal family which would be more damaging for the monarchy than Harry’s autobiography, Spare, if exposed.
“If he is pushed too far, how might Andrew react?” the expert wrote in the article.
“Would he follow his nephew’s lead and write a memoir which could, potentially, be even more devastating for the royals than Prince Harry’s book?”
Entertainment
Prince Harry puts the monarchy at risk: ‘He’s weakening it!’

Insiders believe King Charles holds a very different view of Prince Harry, and its not positive where the monarchy’s future is concerned.
The source shared everything during their interview with RadarOnline.
According to their findings, King Charles has a number of thoughts regarding Prince Harry, the biggest of them being that he will ‘weaken’ the monarchy, should he be allowed near it.
They were also quoted saying, “Charles is resolute – Harry will not be reinstated as a working royal.”
Reason being “the king feels his son represents the very opposite of the values he wants the crown to embody. Harry attracts constant controversy, and the monarchy cannot afford that.”
Also, “the notion of a part-time role has been ruled out entirely. The king has made his position crystal clear.”
However, that is not to say that “Charles still values his bond with Harry as a father, but when it comes to royal duties, it simply can’t happen. The monarchy has to come before personal emotions.”
An aide also came forward and admitted, that behind the scenes “The king made it plain – there’s no return. Harry and Meghan chose their path when they stepped away, and while they can keep living in America, there will be no half-measures or return to royal duties.”
A palace source also echoed similar sentiments and said, “This comes down to stability and fairness. The rest of the working royals take on a huge burden, and allowing Harry to drift in and out would undermine their work and betray public confidence.”
Entertainment
Mohsin Naqvi hits back at Indian PM Modi for ‘dragging war into sport’

- India refuse to collect Asia Cup trophy from ACC Chief Naqvi.
- Dragging war into sport disgraces spirit of game: Mohsin Naqvi
- Salman Agha slams India’s ‘disappointing’ conduct in Asia Cup.
Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman and Asian Cricket Council (ACC) Chief Mohsin Naqvi has strongly criticised Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for “dragging war into sport”, saying that such remarks undermine the spirit of the game.
Hitting back at Modi, Naqvi, who is also the country’s interior minister, said history has already recorded India’s humiliating defeats at Pakistan’s hands in the battlefield and cautioned that politicising sport with conflict reflected desperation rather than pride.
“If war was your measure of pride, history already records your humiliating defeats at Pakistan’s hands. No cricket match can rewrite that truth. Dragging war into sport only exposes desperation and disgraces the very spirit of the game,” Naqvi said in a post on X.
The statement came in response to Modi’s illogical tweet after India’s win over Pakistan in Sunday’s Asia Cup 2025 final, where the Indian premier had equated the cricket victory to “Operation Sindoor” to congratulate his players, only to invite widespread condemnation that the remark militarises a sporting event.
Taking a jibe at the Indian leader, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif also joined the criticism, saying that Modi was destroying the culture and spirit of cricket for political gain, thereby diminishing chances of peace and conflict resolution in the subcontinent.
“Modi is ending the possibilities of peace and solutions to issues in the subcontinent to save his politics by destroying the culture and spirit of cricket. Honour cannot be regained this way. The score of the Pak-India war, 6-0, has been engraved on stone. We are not saying anything but Modi has been humiliated in India and as well as in the entire world,” Asif wrote on X.
Modi faced criticism for his tweet not only by Pakistani leaders, but also by the people in his own country. Social media users and commentators, even from Indian, quickly condemned the comparison. Critics say equating a cricket match with a military operation risks politicising sport and undermining the game’s spirit.
Reacting to the move, a journalist wrote on X: “A prime minister declaring Cricket Match equal to war. Just because India lost the war to Pakistan, they need anything just anything to compensate for that loss.”
“Equating a cricket win with #OperationSindoor, where our soldiers laid down their lives, is deeply disrespectful,” wrote another user on X while taking a dig at Modi.
Asia Cup trophy debacle
Earlier, the closing ceremony of the ACC Men’s T20 Asia Cup 2025 ended in controversy on Sunday after the Indian cricket team declined to collect the winners’ trophy from Asian Cricket Council (ACC) chief Mohsin Naqvi, who also heads the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).
India had earlier defeated Pakistan by five wickets in a tense final at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium,
However, the post-match presentation was delayed after the Indian side refused to accept the trophy from Naqvi, damaging the gentleman’s game.
The ceremony concluded without the traditional handover, marking an unusual end to the tournament. No customary handshakes were exchanged between players, continuing a pattern from earlier matches where political undercurrents and heightened tensions were evident.
“I have been informed by the ACC that the Indian cricket team will not be collecting their awards tonight. So that does conclude the post-match presentation,” says presenter Simon Doull.
Pakistan skipper Salman Agha said India’s actions during the tournament had been “bad for cricket”.
“I think what has happened in this tournament is very disappointing,” Agha told reporters.
“If they think they disrespected us by not shaking hands, then I say they disrespected cricket.
“It’s been seen for the first time. I do not know where it will stop. What has happened in this tournament is bad for cricket.”
Agha further said that the team would donate their Asia Cup final match fees to families of civilians and children killed in the May Indian attacks.
The Asia Cup marked the first cricketing contest between the two sides since their military confrontation in May, with off-field politics repeatedly overshadowing on-field competition.
— With additional input from AFP
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