Entertainment
Sydney Sweeney’s relationship with controversial Scooter Braun raises eyebrows
Sydney Sweeney’s new romance with controversial figure in the music world Scooter Braun is said to have raised concerns among her friends.
Radar Online reported that the 28-year-old American actress is getting romantically involved with the 44-year-old businessman, investor, and record executive after rejecting top-notch Hollywood stars such as Orlando Bloom, Tom Brady, and Ben Affleck.
Sweeney’s decision has stirred unease among her inner circle because Braun is one of the most hated personalities in the music world.
For those unaware, the Euphoria star and the founder of RBMG Records were first caught dating each other in Venice in June of this year. Some credible sources claimed that they have dated many times before and are completely immersed in their “casual” relationship.
The insider told the outlet, “Sydney’s saying it’s nobody’s concern, she’s having fun and people have got it wrong because Scooter’s a cool, chilled-out guy.”
“But friends say he’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing and you only have to look at his past to see that,” the source stated.
Notably, Braun purchased Big Machine Records in 2019, a former label of Taylor Swift that produced her first six albums, which eventually incurred her wrath. The pop sensation seethed with rage and called him an “incessant, manipulative” bully.
The insider urged, “Taylor and Justin and many more would swear he’s a scumbag and anyone interested in dating him should seriously rethink that because he’s not to be trusted.”
“They say he should be avoided with a ten-foot pole,” the source remarked.
However, Sweeney says she “has every right to see who she wants, and no one wants to deprive her of that, but this has all the earmarks of a disaster in the making. People think she’s making a huge mistake even associating with him.”
“Scooter has such a bad reputation, and the feeling is that Sydney could do much better,” the insider concluded.
Entertainment
The true, authentic Kenny Chesney
Just as the sun was going down in the heart of old Key West, Florida, a self-described pirate rode his rust-ravaged bike to the Blue Heaven restaurant to meet a friend – a friend we just happened to be in the middle of interviewing. “She said come in!” David Wegman laughed, as he joined Kenny Chesney.
But that’s the thing about Chesney – down here, he’s not really a country music superstar. He’s just another laid-back local. “We know a lot of the same people,” Chesney laughed.
He collects characters like seashells – he met Wegman at Ivan’s Stress-Free Bar down in the British Virgin Islands. “Above the bar was written in shells: ‘No Shirt, No Shoes, No Problem,'” Wegman recalled.
That 2002 song, “No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems,” helped make Chesney one of the biggest touring acts around. Almost every summer he turns stadiums into beach parties. Among his many accolades: the Academy of Country Music’s Entertainer of the Year Award, which he won four years in a row. And just last week, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame – a career-topping accomplishment that he credits to taking that tropical turn in his career.
“You know what’s crazy?” he said. “I had an 18-song Greatest Hits album, and nobody knew who I was. They knew the songs, but I wasn’t comfortable in my skin yet. I didn’t know who I was supposed to be as an artist yet. I would go do shows and they would go, ‘Oh yeah, that’s the guy that sings that song.’ And then, ‘That’s the guy that sings that song.’ When I started being my true, authentic self, that’s when everything changed.”
He could have taken us to some Tiki bar down in the Keys to keep up his tropical brand. But instead, he wanted to show us the room where Ernest Hemingway worked on “To Have and Have Not” and “Green Hills of Africa.”
I said, “The space, it’s almost like sacred place.”
“Yeah, do you feel it? I feel it,” Chesney said. “I spent so much, almost two weeks straight on the bow of my boat in the Virgin Islands reading those books.”
Which might explain why he came down here to work on his first book, out next month: “Heart Life Music.” “This book forced me to pause,” he said.
William Morrow
For all of his love of the islands, he writes it was his own mom who first realized that he may have drifted too far from his East Tennessee roots. “She wanted her 12-year-old boy back in ways, and he was gone. Gone gone gone,” he said.
“She had a hard time finding you, kind of had a hard time reaching you?” I asked.
“It hit me a little bit, but I was so already so addicted to seeking an adventure and all of it, and all these new things happening in my life that I dismissed it.”
He kept going, kept touring, kept writing, until a concert in Indianapolis back in 2009, which he describes as hitting a wall, and crying on stage. “In that moment I was so exhausted and numb to all of it, that it wasn’t making me happy,” he said. “I wasn’t creating the same way. I wasn’t connecting to the audience. It just hit me. It took sports to get me out of that funk.”
He grew up playing baseball and football – loving every inning, every down. So, when a song called “The Boys of Fall” crossed his path, he didn’t only record it; he began interviewing coaches and players about sports and life, and turned it into a documentary for ESPN, “Boys of Fall.” “I needed Joe Namath, I needed Bill Parcells,” he said. “I sat in Bobby Bowden’s living room and he talked to me like a deacon in a Baptist church! I woke up one day, and I went, I’m back.”
Now he’s the one doing pre-game pep talks backstage, like at Sphere in Las Vegas. Many on his team have been with him for decades. There’s confidence in familiarity. “If I had to sit on the bus and think about what I’m getting ready to go do, it would – yeah, I don’t do well with that,” he said.
He put on the kind of show his fans expect – a kaleidoscope of sand, sunsets and songs.
CBS News
When me met him the next morning, he was still buzzing about performing in Sphere. “The first couple of nights, I caught myself singing a song and I was like, Well, this is so cool! And then, I forgot the words to a song that I actually wrote!”
On stage with him this night was Grace Potter, the singer-songwriter he recruited for a duet, even though country really wasn’t her thing. The two are now lifelong friends.
“There’s people who have always seen him as just the iconic, you know, Statue of David of country music,” she said.
“I’m gonna go to Florence and stand beside it!” he laughed.
“But there’s just so much more underneath it that’s more interesting than the sculpture itself,” Potter added.
Indeed, the off-stage Kenny Chesney is a more complicated guy, a more thoughtful guy, even a little shy if you can believe it. That’s the East Tennessee part that will always remain even as he’s chasing sunsets.
Chesney said, “It takes a certain amount of ego to be up there on stage and to do what I do, right? But I try really hard to leave that person up there. I can’t live that person every day. And I don’t want that person in my life every day, but I’m really glad to meet him when I go back up there.”
READ AN EXCERPT: “Heart Life Music” by Kenny Chesney with Holly Gleason
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Extended interview – Kenny Chesney (Video)
For more info:
Story produced by Aria Shavelson. Editor: Remington Korper.
See also:
Kenny Chesney spreads the love to Boston bombing victims (“Sunday Morning”)
Entertainment
Here’s why Tom Cruise struggles to maintain lasting relationships
A well-placed insider has revealed why Tom Cruise has not yet married despite having a noticeable dating history.
The 63-year-old American actor and film producer is under tight public scrutiny as he struggles to maintain lasting relationships even though he is a heartthrob of Hollywood.
For those unaware, Cruise’s latest relationship was with Cuban-born actress Ana de Armas, which lasted for nine months and they parted ways mainly due to his controlling nature, per Radar Online.
The Mission Impossible star and Armas started dating earlier this year after their first meeting for their latest film project, Deeper, but Warner Bros. cancelled the production in August of this year.
Cruise and Armas “clicked right away, but when the film collapsed, so did the relationship. It follows a familiar pattern with Tom – he throws himself in completely, and soon everything starts to orbit around his work and his beliefs,” the insider told the outlet.
“At first it’s intoxicating, then it wears people down. Ana admired him deeply, but she realized she couldn’t live inside that intensity forever.”
“Tom can be incredibly charismatic, but he’s also meticulous to the point of control. He treats his relationships much like his work – structured, strategic, and tightly managed. At first that level of focus is intoxicating, but over time it starts to feel stifling,” another insider stated.
Entertainment
George Clooney makes shock confession about Hollywood
George Clooney just revealed that Hollywood stars are “not allowed to get old.”
The 64-year-old actor portrays the fictional big screen icon Jay Kelly in the upcoming Netflix movie of the same name, and he has reflected on the relationship between film fans and the stars they grow up watching.
He told Empire magazine: “You really do live your life through people’s actors and pictures.”
“And you’re not allowed to get old. I have people come [up to] me all the time saying, ‘You’re a lot older than I thought.’ Like, f*** off! I’m 64!” he hilariously added.
Clooney also recalled a scene from the film where his character is watching his life on screen, and the clips are all from the actor’s other real-life roles over the years.
He said: “There’s a weird thing where the older you get, the more you look at this stuff and go, ‘Wow, that was a long time ago.’ From my eyes, it was a minute ago.”
“That’s why I love that line in the movie when [a fan of Jay Kelly] says, ‘When I see you, I see my whole live,’” the Wolfs star added.
He continued, “I get it, man. I became friends with Gregory Peck and I felt like that.”
“I’d be sitting there with him, he’d be telling a story, and I’m just watching him thinking, ‘Dude, this guy’s in To Kill A Mockingbird!’ You know where you were when you saw The Omen the first time. Roman Holiday,” George Clooney concluded.
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