Entertainment
Trump promises ‘turnaround for the ages’ in State of the Union address
- Trump declares ‘Golden Age’ at start of his address.
- His approval ratings falls sharply ahead of midterms.
- Poll shows 60% of Americans view Trump as erratic.
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump declared that “this is the Golden Age of America” at the start of his State of the Union address on Tuesday, seeking to project an aura of success at a fraught moment for his presidency and his Republican Party.
“Our nation is back — bigger, better, richer and stronger than ever before,” he said after taking the stage to cheers of “USA, USA” from his party’s members of Congress.
The annual speech carried enormous stakes for the president, with his approval ratings slumping, anxieties rising over Iran and Americans struggling with the cost of living as the November midterm election nears.
The televised prime-time speech to Congress, his second in the 13 months since returning to the White House, offers Trump a chance to persuade voters to keep his fellow Republicans in power. But the president is facing stiff political headwinds at home and abroad.
Just days ago, the Supreme Court invalidated his signature global tariffs regime, and new data showed the economy slowed more than expected while inflation accelerated.
The Department of Homeland Security is mostly shut down due to a dispute between congressional Republicans and Democrats over the administration’s aggressive immigration tactics, following the fatal shootings of two US citizens in Minneapolis.
Meanwhile, Trump has struggled to turn the page on the scandal surrounding convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Opposition Democrats have invited several people who accuse Epstein of abusing them to the speech.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll showed six in 10 Americans, including 30% of Republicans, think Trump, 79, has become erratic as he ages. Only 40% of respondents approved of his job performance, compared with 58% who disapproved.
A public case against Iran
Trump, who has openly coveted the Nobel Peace Prize and set up his own “Board of Peace,” also appears to be inching closer to a military conflict with Iran over its nuclear programme.
Tuesday’s speech could offer Trump a chance to mount for the first time a public case for military intervention. Two White House officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Trump will discuss his plans but did not offer details.
He will also tout his record of brokering peace deals, they said. Tuesday marked the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a reminder that he has yet to resolve the war he once said he could end in 24 hours.
The president was expected to address the Supreme Court’s decision on tariffs, arguing that the court erred and outlining alternative laws he can use to reconstitute most of the levies.
Trump reacted with fury to the ruling last week, targeting several justices with personal attacks. A repeat performance on Tuesday could make for some awkward moments, with four of the court’s nine justices in attendance.
White House aides and Republican campaign advisers, eyeing a challenging congressional midterm election, have urged Trump to focus on Americans’ economic worries. Trump’s victory in the 2024 election was based in large part on his promises to ease the cost of living, but opinion polls show voters are unconvinced by his efforts so far.
Trump has struggled to stay on message, straying in public speeches from the economy to his long list of grievances while at other times declaring he has already solved the problem.
One of the White House officials said Trump will “claim victory on the economy,” a message Republican lawmakers running for re-election are unlikely to welcome. He will argue that he inherited a poor economy from Democratic predecessor Joe Biden and that Democrats have overstated affordability concerns, both officials said.
Trump will point to stock market gains, private-sector investments and his tax-cut legislation as evidence that he has helped the economy, the officials said. The president will also tout his tough border policies and his deportation campaign, despite polls showing most Americans believe his administration has gone too far in rounding up undocumented immigrants.
Lengthy speech expected
Trump, who has a propensity for ad-libbing, said on Monday his address would be lengthy. His 100-minute speech last March – technically not a State of the Union speech, but otherwise similar – was the longest presidential address to Congress in modern history.
The White House officials said this year’s edition was crafted with room for unscripted moments.
“We are planning around it,” one official said.
Last year, some Democrats interrupted Trump’s speech with jeers before walking out in protest. This time around, more than 20 Democrats in the House of Representatives and Senate skipped the speech altogether in favour of an outdoor rally on the National Mall.
Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger, whose decisive victory in November was seen as an early midterm warning sign for Republicans, will deliver the official Democratic response to the speech.
Entertainment
Michael Jackson’s important family members snubbed biopic’s LA premiere
Paris Jackson and Janet Jackson were absent from the Los Angeles premiere of the Michael biopic on Monday, 20 April, as the film’s complicated relationship with key members of the Jackson family played out on the red carpet.
Michael’s siblings Jermaine, La Toya, Marlon and Jackie Jackson were all present at the event, as was Paris’s brother Prince, 29.
The film, which hits cinemas on 24 April, charts the early career of the late King of Pop and stars Jermaine’s son Jaafar Jackson, 29, as Michael, who died in 2009 at the age of 50.
Paris, 28, has been open about her objections to the project since last year. She read an early draft of the script and shared her concerns about its accuracy, but when those weren’t addressed she walked away.
“Not my monkeys not my circus. God bless and god speed,” she wrote on Instagram Stories in September 2025.
She described the finished film as “sugarcoated” and accused it of containing “a lot of inaccuracy and there’s a lot of just full-blown lies,” while acknowledging that a certain section of her father’s fanbase would likely be happy with it.
“Go enjoy it. Do whatever. Leave me out of it,” she wrote.
Janet, 59, has not publicly commented on the film and is not a character in it.
According to a Page Six report from last month, she clashed with her family after Jermaine privately screened the film for them, expressing reservations about nearly every aspect of the production.
Jermaine reportedly told his sister she would “miss the wave” if she didn’t get on board.
Those close to Janet have since disputed the feud reports, with her nephew Austin Brown and her longtime creative director Gil Dudulao claiming the accounts were untrue.
Page Six has reported that Jermaine sees the biopic as an opportunity to restore the Jackson family’s reputation following the multiple allegations of child sexual abuse made against Michael both before and after his death, allegations Michael denied throughout his life and that his family continues to reject.
“This isn’t just about Michael. It’s about us. It’s about our legacy. It’s about the comeback in store for all of us,” one relative reportedly said after the private screening.
Michael’s youngest son Bigi, 24, was not at the LA premiere, though he had attended the film’s Berlin premiere earlier this month alongside Prince and several of their uncles.
Entertainment
Blake Lively reveals what she lost due to Justin Baldoni’s smear campaign
Blake Lively is seeking over $290 million in damages from Justin Baldoni and Wayfarer Productions, claiming their alleged smear campaign has devastated her career, her companies and her personal wellbeing, a significant increase from the $161 million she cited in November 2025.
Court documents filed on 17 April reveal the full scale of Lively’s financial claims ahead of the pair’s trial, scheduled for 18 May.
The Gossip Girl actress alleges that Baldoni’s alleged use of terms like “tone deaf,” “bully” and “mean girl” to damage her reputation cost her between $36.5 and $40.5 million.
Statements made by Baldoni’s attorney Bryan Freedman during the course of the dispute are claimed to have caused a further $24.3 million in losses, calculated by quantifying the online reach of those statements and their impact.
Her experts estimate lost income, spanning studio films, independent projects and a limited TV series, at between $34.3 million and $87.8 million, with the majority of those losses attributed to missed opportunities between August 2024 and August 2029.
Her companies Betty Booze and Blake Brown are said to have suffered between $39.6 million and $143.5 million in profit losses as a direct result of the legal battle.
She is also seeking between $250,000 and $400,000 for the “pain and suffering, physical pain, and humiliation” she allegedly endured.
Baldoni’s legal team pushed back in their own April 17 filing, arguing that descriptions of Lively as a “mean girl” or “difficult to work with” had been circulating long before she began working with Baldoni and Wayfarer, and therefore did not cause additional harm to a reputation that was already under scrutiny.
The case has already seen a federal judge dismiss ten of Lively’s original thirteen claims, including her sexual harassment allegations, on legal and technical grounds.
The three remaining claims, breach of contract, retaliation and aiding and abetting in retaliation, will go before a jury next month.
Entertainment
Reese Witherspoon breaks silence after AI support controversy
Reese Witherspoon has broken her silence following a wave of criticism over her support for artificial intelligence, insisting that she is not being paid to promote the technology.
Taking to Instagram on Tuesday, the Morning Show star addressed the backlash that followed her recent “AI revolution” post, clarifying that her interest stems from being a “curious human” rather than a corporate spokesperson.
While acknowledging that her original comments certainly got people talking, she noted that her children are already learning about these tools and that she is seeing AI impact every sector of business, from “vibe coding” founders to traditional industries.
The Oscar-winning actress had previously sparked controversy by warning that women were 25 percent less likely to use AI than men, despite their jobs being three times more likely to be automated.
This prompted a fierce reaction from followers who raised concerns about intellectual property theft, the environmental impact of data centres, and the potential for computers to replace human creativity.
In her latest response, Witherspoon admitted these concerns are valid, stating she understands the worries regarding job security and the environment.
She also expressed her own reservations about the rise of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), making it clear she does not believe computers should ever replace humanity.
Despite the pushback, Witherspoon remains committed to her “learn along with me” approach, viewing the technological shift as an inevitability for the future of filmmaking.
She previously told Glamour that while people can lament the change, it is already here, though she believes physical manual building and human ingenuity will always remain the highest forms of art.
The actress even shared a few of the specific tools she currently uses, including AI Assistant, the search platform Perplexity, and the shopping agent Vetted AI, as part of her effort to stay educated.
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