Entertainment
Rex Reed: A bold-faced-name life
Won’t be long before it’s time for “THE ENVELOPE, PLEASE…” The Oscars are one month from tonight. And to hear critic Rex Reed tell it, Gary Oldman could very well be a winner for his performance in “Darkest Hour.” There’s plenty more where that came from, as our Mo Rocca found out:
Movie critic Rex Reed has some opinions about this year’s Best Picture Oscar-nominees…
“Call Me By Your Name”? “Terrific movie,” he said.
“Dunkirk”? “Hated it!”
“Get Out”? “Truly one of the worst movies I’ve ever seen, a complete fraud, that picture. I didn’t care if all the black men are turned into robots.” [For the record, there are NO robots in “Get Out.”]
And “The Post”? “‘The Post’ is my favorite movie of the year. I think it’s a great movie. You have all these kids making movies today, but they can’t compare to a real pro like Spielberg.”
Rocca asked, “Are you going to watch the Oscars?”
“Oh, I always do. I love to watch the Oscars with a club sandwich in bed.”
…While fondly remembering the A-List Oscar parties of yesteryear, thrown by his friend, the actress Polly Bergen.
“And everybody was there,” said Reed. “One year I watched the Oscars in Polly’s bed with Lucille Ball on one side and Paul Newman on the other.”
Reed was sandwiched between those two stars because there was a time when he was an A-Lister himself. And in the late 1960s and ’70s, his clever opinions made him a fixture on television.
“That’s why I got called back again and again,” he laughed. “That’s why all of these shows asked me back, because people weren’t saying anything. We’re right back in that place right now. Nobody has an opinion.”
But his true love was the movies. “I grew up watching movies because I was studying them. I was losing myself in these movies.”
His father was a supervisor on oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, so Reed went to 13 different schools around the South before high school.
“You were constantly having to make new friends?” asked Rocca.
“Constantly. And when they’re sitting there and the teacher is saying, ‘This is little Rex Reed. He’s the new student. We all want to be nice to him!’ And they would take out their slingshots and finger their slingshots, waiting for recess. No, that doesn’t exactly feed security.”
He got a degree in journalism from Louisiana State University, and dreamed of a life in the big city. “I wanted to go somewhere where people knew things and they served drinks with umbrellas in them, like I saw in Jane Powell movies.”
… So he headed to New York City, where he made a name for himself profiling some very big names: Warren Beatty, playwright Tennessee Williams, and a much-lauded portrait of faded screen siren Ava Gardner. “After it came out, she was quoted as saying, ‘That sonofabitch knows more about me than I do!'”
In Rex Reed’s life, the past is always present, with photographs of celebrities like Natalie Wood. “I really loved Natalie and stayed with her many times,” he said.
Rocca asked, “I was just wondering, do you think Robert Wagner killed her?”
“No!” Reed laughed. “There is no truth to that whatsoever!”
And there’s Angela Lansbury! (“We’ve been everywhere together”). And here’s Liza Minnelli! (We’ve been through a lot together.)
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Reed was enough of a celebrity himself to be cast in a few movies, including a notorious 1970 sex comedy, “Myra Breckinridge,” starring Raquel Welch.
Rocca said, “If I were really doing my job, I would have watched ‘Myra Breckinridge’ before this interview.”
“No, you’re doing yourself a great favor by supporting your IQ, by not watching ‘Myra Breckinridge,'” Reed replied.
His own review of the experience? “Oh, it was horrible.”
And the film flopped. But it did pay for a 1780 house in Litchfield County, Connecticut — near the road where Marilyn Monroe took walks in hot pants, and not far from artist Alexander Calder, who painted a bathtub for a former owner of Reed’s home.
Titled “Heaven, Earth and Hell,” it features a serpent wearing red sunglasses.
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Reed, by the way, has never taken a bath in it. “I’m afraid of damaging it. It’s priceless.”
Rocca asked, “How much is this bathtub worth?”
“Well, I was offered a million dollars for it.”
CBS News
Reed lives here — and in New York’s famed Dakota Apartments — solo.
“I don’t have a wife. I don’t have a boyfriend. I don’t have a girlfriend. I’m not comfortable with all the things that go with it,” he said.
Like? “Well, like telling somebody where you are all the time. I don’t want anybody to ask me, ‘Where were you last night? I tried to reach you with my phone and you didn’t answer.'”
The 79-year-old’s opinions are now published online in the Observer, formerly the New York Observer newspaper, where some of his criticism has come in for plenty of, well, criticism.
“Oh, I don’t apologize for anything,” he said.
Not even his blistering review of Best Picture nominee “The Shape of Water” [“A loopy, lunkheaded load of drivel”], which confused director Guillermo del Toro with actor Benicio del Toro; and got his country of origin wrong.
“And you referred to Sally Hawkins‘ character, who is mute, as mentally handicapped,” said Rocca.
“I thought she was mentally handicapped,” Reed laughed. “I still think her character was mentally handicapped. She wasn’t cooking with four burners when she was crawling through the toilets.”
Of course, today everyone’s a critic, quite literally, in the age of social media.
Rocca asked, “How long are you gonna keep doing this?”
“Well, I say ‘It’s over’ almost always. I don’t want to be discovered dead in a chair in a dark screening room and have the headlines read, ‘Film critic Rex Reed found dead in ‘Star Wars LXXX.'”
But while Rex Reed’s still got life in him, he’s got lots of opinions. Here are a few:
“He was drunk all the time.”
“She was terrible and sold millions of records.”
“He was incredibly difficult.”
“She’s a dreadful actress.”
He added, “I should really learn to speak up.”
“Yeah, you really gotta come out of your shell,” Rocca suggested.
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Entertainment
Muslim American groups say Republicans are weaponising congressional hearings
- Republicans organise hearings they cast as being opposed to sharia.
- Muslim groups say such hearings cast Muslims as outsiders.
- Democrats say such hearings are a distraction used by Republicans.
WASHINGTON: Muslim American groups said congressional hearings that Republican lawmakers cast as aimed at making the US “sharia-free” are being weaponised against Muslim minorities in the United States by stoking fear against them.
Republicans, who hold a majority in both chambers of Congress, titled a Wednesday hearing by a House Judiciary Subcommittee as “Sharia-Free America: Why Political Islam and Sharia Law are Incompatible with the US Constitution.” A similar hearing was also held in February.
“The radicals pushing political Islam do not want to coexist with America’s culture and political order. They want to replace it,” Republican US Representative Chip Roy said in the hearing.
Critics have said such hearings single out Muslims for ridicule, revive tropes and conspiracy theories against them, and are unnecessary because American laws prevail on US soil.
There is no evidence that any mainstream US Muslim group has advocated for imposing sharia on the United States.
The US Council of Muslim Organisations, which represents over 50 Muslim groups, condemned what it called the “weaponisation of government against American Muslims” and said the hearings engaged in “the politics of fear.”
“Anti-Sharia hearings are not about protecting the Constitution. They are about demonising Islam and portraying Muslim Americans as perpetual outsiders,” the Council on American Islamic Relations’ Maryland director, Zainab Chaudry, said.
Democratic US Representative Jamie Raskin, a ranking member of the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee, said the hearings were a distraction and attacked religious liberty.
US rights advocates have over the years noted rising Islamophobia, attributing it to the September 11, 2001 attacks; and more recently to anti-immigration policies, white supremacy and the fallout of Israel’s war in Gaza.
CAIR says it recorded 8,683 anti-Muslim and anti-Arab complaints in the US in 2025, the highest since it began publishing data in 1996.
A study in April by the Centre for the Study of Organised Hate think tank says anti-Muslim bigotry by Republican elected officials has surged since early 2025, citing over 1,100 online posts by Republican members of Congress and governors.
Republican governors in Florida and Texas have cast CAIR, which has opposed Republican President Donald Trump’s crackdown on immigration and pro-Palestinian protests, as a “terrorist” group. CAIR and other civil rights groups have denounced the claims.
Entertainment
Emilia Clarke recalls near-death incident while filming ‘Game of Thrones’
Emilia Clarke has opened up about the terrifying moment she believed she had “cheated death” after suffering two brain haemorrhages during her time on Game of Thrones.
Speaking on the How To Fail with Elizabeth Day podcast, the 39-year-old actress revealed that the medical emergencies left her emotionally shut down and convinced, at one stage, that she was “meant to die.”
Clarke, who rose to fame playing Daenerys Targaryen, admitted that the constant fear of her own mortality consumed her every thought following the second incident.
The first haemorrhage struck just after the first season of the hit HBO show had wrapped.
Clarke recalled collapsing during a workout at a gym in London, describing the sensation as if an elastic band had snapped inside her head.
As she waited for medical help, she repeatedly told herself she was “an actor” in a desperate attempt to stay conscious and protect the dream job she had only just started.
However, the recovery was marred by a deep sense of shame, as she feared her employers would view her as “weak” or “broken” if they knew the extent of her condition.
While Clarke told showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss about her health, she kept the ordeal private from the public for years.
Her health took another turn for the worse while she was performing on Broadway in New York, where a second aneurysm required emergency surgery that nearly claimed her life.
She recalled the harrowing moment her parents were told by doctors every half hour that they believed she was going to die.
This second ordeal was even more taxing, causing her to disconnect from the world as she felt her body and brain had failed her in a way no one else could perceive.
The actress admitted she gave herself very little grace during her recovery, instead viewing the illness as a personal failure.
At one point, while promoting the show at San Diego Comic-Con shortly after surgery, she remembered thinking that if she were going to die, she would “do it on live TV.”
Despite the trauma, Clarke credited her career for helping her survive the emotional fallout, stating that she doesn’t know what she would have done without her work to focus on.
Today, Clarke uses her experience to help others through her charity, SameYou, which she founded in 2019 to support brain injury survivors.
She has been candid about the profound sense of loneliness that often follows such an injury and aims to help others overcome that isolation.
Looking back on her decade-long stint on Game of Thrones, she now views the series as “lightning in a bottle” and a defining chapter of her youth.
Entertainment
Pete Davidson, Elsie Hewitt break up 5 months after welcoming baby girl
Pete Davidson and Elsie Hewitt have split, just five months after welcoming their daughter Scottie Rose.
According to The Sun, the relationship broke down under the strain of Davidson’s demanding work schedule following baby Scottie’s arrival on 12 December 2025.
“Pete has been traveling so much for work, but Elsie was craving more support from him at home after their daughter was born,” an insider told the outlet.
“It was very hard for him because, obviously, he has to work to make money.”
A separate source confirmed the split happened recently, adding that both Davidson, 32, and Hewitt, 30, are now firmly focused on co-parenting.
“They are just focusing 100% on Scottie,” the insider said. “Working out the best co-parenting solution is their top priority.”
The news, while not entirely unexpected, still marks a swift and sad end to a relationship that had moved quickly from the start.
Page Six first reported the pair were dating in March 2025, with sources saying the Saturday Night Live alum was “very happy” to be with someone “very different from” his previous girlfriends.
The couple went public shortly after, making their debut during a PDA-filled holiday in Palm Beach.
Things moved fast from there.
Hewitt announced her pregnancy in July 2025 with a typically candid Instagram post, “welp now everyone knows we had s–“, accompanied by ultrasound footage and couple photos.
A bunny-themed baby shower followed, complete with a very public kiss, before Scottie Rose Hewitt Davidson arrived that December.
Earlier this month, sources had already hinted to Page Six that the pair were “navigating relationship struggles” and that it was “unclear” where things were heading.
Now there’s an answer, even if it isn’t the one either of them would have hoped for.
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