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UCLA baseball crushes Fresno State in NCAA regional opener

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Michael Barnett flipped a weighted baseball into his hand and threw it against the side of the strength-training room next to UCLA’s clubhouse.

Jostling through folding tables, water coolers, television stands and a postgame news conference podium, he resumed his starting pitcher routine, as he would for any start, moving inside the weight room to stretch his right arm with resistance bands.

The junior right-hander’s pregame obstacle course — navigating university staffers, media and more — before trotting down to the bullpen, was outside of the ordinary. Friday afternoon at Jackie Robinson Stadium was different — from the energy on the concourse to the noise from the dugouts and ultimately, the power from the Bruins’ bats.

Hosting its first regional since 2019, national No. 15 seed UCLA posted season highs for hits and runs in a dominant, 19-4 victory over regional No. 4 seed Fresno State.

“It wasn’t the cleanest game — it didn’t feel like the cleanest game,” said UCLA coach John Savage, “but at the end of the day, at this time of the year, you win any way you can and certainly we did that today. So it was a good win.”

A six-run, seventh-inning sent the Bulldogs unknowingly waving a white flag. UCLA first baseman Mulivai Levu’s line drive off the left-field wall cleared the loaded bases to provide the Bruins with a 12-2 lead. Fresno State’s nine players dejectedly walked off the field, as if they’d been walked off in a mercy-rule defeat.

But the field crew reminded the Bulldogs that in the NCAA tournament, no matter how many runs you trail by, both teams play nine innings. The Bruins still had seven more runs to score in the eighth inning Friday.

It wasn’t Big Ten player of the year Roch Cholowsky — the 20-year-old who dreamed of Omaha when he chose the Bruins over entering the MLB draft — who led the offensive barrage that gave UCLA a 4-0 lead in the first inning. The middle of the UCLA lineup helped produce a rally as they had all year.

Los Angeles, CA - May 30: UCLA outfielder Dean West (36) hits into the outfield.

UCLA’s Dean West makes contact during the Bruins’ blowout win over Fresno State on Friday.

(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

Levu — who led the Bruins in regular-season RBI with 74 and led UCLA with five RBI against Fresno State — singled into left field to start the rally. Cleanup hitter Roman Martin brought home the first run of the game with a single into left. Payton Brennan and Blake Balsz (who tallied his third-career, three-hit game) connected for back-to-back RBI base hits, solidifying a lead as the Bulldogs awaited the walk back to the dugout for a mid-inning reprieve.

“The nice part about today is I was just trying to simplify everything and trust that my teammates are gonna pick me up,” Balsz said.

Before Fresno State starting pitcher Jack Anker knew it, UCLA strung together four runs in the blink of an eye, creating distance against the Mountain West champions they never made up.

Martin connected for a third-inning solo home run — his seventh of the year — while Balsz joined his teammate with multiple RBI after a run-scoring single a few batters later.

“One of the huge things we talked about, one of our offensive goals is to score first, and that’s really a huge momentum shift for us,” Martin said. “It definitely kind of took a little bit off, especially during our first playoff game, kind of eased us into it a little bit.”

UCLA tagged Anker for six earned runs and 10 hits across five innings, holding the Bulldogs junior who entered the game averaging 10.5 strikeouts-per-nine innings to just two punchouts. The two strikeouts were the second-fewest Anker forced against an opposing team this season.

UCLA pitcher Michael Barnett delivers during the first inning Friday.

UCLA pitcher Michael Barnett delivers during the first inning Friday.

(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

Barnett’s outing on the mound was an obstacle much like his routine before toeing the Jackie Robinson Stadium mound. The sinkerballer struggled with command against the Bulldogs, throwing just 40 strikes among 74 pitches, and lasted just 4⅓ innings before UCLA coach John Savage pulled Barnett with runners on the corners and one out in the fifth.

Southpaw Chris Grothues, a junior in his first season of high-leverage pitching opportunities, broke Barnett out of the inherited jam with a 3-6-1 double play to end the inning. Grothues then spun a scoreless sixth — placing the Bruins in cruise control for the rest of the contest, earning the victory.

“They did a really good job against Barnett,” Savage said, adding that he felt lucky to be up 6-2 entering the seventh. “Our bullpen did a nice job. Grothues came in, got that double play. That was a big play — the 3-6-1 — that was a big momentum swing.”

Cholowsky, who also led the nation in wins-above-replacement with 6.36, according to D1Baseball, still collected two hits Friday.

Leadoff hitter Dean West was hit by a pitch three times by Bulldog pitchers, the last of which brought home a run to make it 9-2 in the bottom of the seventh.

Brennan hit a two-run home run in the eighth, while catcher Cashel Dugger also pulled a solo home run over the right-field wall for the Bruins’ 15th run.

UCLA advanced to the winner’s bracket and will face Arizona State on Saturday at 6 p.m. PDT. The Bruins split a midweek season series against the Sun Devils. Arizona State defeated UC Irvine 4-2 on Friday.



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Measles exposure risk for anyone who visited Mall of America evening of May 24

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Minnesota health officials are warning Mall of America visitors after they say a child recently diagnosed with measles visited the mall last month.

New measles cases in MN

What we know:

The warning came as health officials announced two new measles cases in the state. One case involves an adult in Washington County who was exposed during a domestic flight outside of Minnesota. The second case involves a child in Dakota County who has not traveled outside of Minnesota and has no known exposures.

The vaccination status of the adult is unknown while the child was not vaccinated. Both patients are recovering at home, state officials report.

Mall of America measles warning

Local perspective:

Health officials issued a warning connected to the second case, saying the infected child had recently visited a theme park at the Mall of America on Saturday, May 24.

The state says anyone who visited the mall on May 24 between 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. may have been exposed and should monitor themselves for symptoms that could develop from May 31 until June 14. Individuals who are not vaccinated and haven’t had measles before are the most at risk.

The state and local health departments are working to contact people with known exposures to the child and adult.

What they’re saying:

Along with the Mall of America visit, health officials are also concerned they don’t know the source of the child’s infection.

In a provided statement, Minnesota Department of Health Infectious Disease Division Director Jessica Hancock-Allen said: “Anytime we confirm a case of measles unrelated to travel that has no known source it is worrying. This is because it could be a sign that measles is spreading in the community undetected by public health and healthcare systems. It is uncertain where the child was exposed and whether others may have been exposed.”

Measles symptoms: What to watch for

Dig deeper:

Health officials say measles typically starts with a fever, cough, runny nose, and watery eyes followed by a rash that spreads from your head to the rest of your body. It generally takes between eight and 12 days from exposure to experience the first symptoms. The rash usually shows up two or three days after the fever begins.

If you notice any symptoms, you should call your health provider before going to a clinic, to prevent potentially exposing others to the illness.

As always, health officials urge parents to make sure their children get their MMR vaccine. The first shot is usually administered between 12 and 15 months and the second at ages four to six. However, if you are planning to travel to another country or a part of the United States with an outbreak, you should talk to your doctor. Children ages 6 months to 12 months can get an early dose of the vaccine, if their travels put them at a high risk, the state explains.

Last year, the state also changed its guidance, allowing for the booster to be administered as early as soon as a month after the first dose.

The MMR vaccine is safe and any risks of complications from the vaccine are greatly outweighed by the risks of contracting measles itself.

Nationwide measles outbreak

Big picture view:

The cases are the third and fourth measles cases in Minnesota, amid a national outbreak this year. Nationwide, nearly 1,100 measles cases have been reported in 2025, with most concentrated in a massive outbreak in Texas.

In Minnesota, only 87% of kindergartens have gotten the MMR vaccine, as of their 2023-24 school year. That is the fourth-worst percentage in the country, behind Wisconsin (84.8%), Alaska (84.3%), and Idaho (79.6%).

The Source: This story uses information provided by the Minnesota Department of Health, information from the U.S. Department of Health, and past reporting.

HealthMinnesotaMall of America



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Clayton Kershaw isn’t what he was — but the Dodgers need him all the same

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CLEVELAND — The flecks of gray in Clayton Kershaw’s beard matched the overcast Ohio sky as the 37-year-old lefty readied himself atop the mound.

At home plate stood Guardians leadoff man Steven Kwan, who was just 8 years old when the Dodgers drafted Kershaw in June 2006. For the first time in the third start of his 18th MLB season, the future Hall of Famer launched into his trademark herky-jerky windup. The fastball clipped the top of the zone, but was called a ball. Then came the more sobering truth, displayed on the Progressive Field scoreboard beside a smiling headshot of Kershaw:

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89 miles per hour

Two decades ago, Kershaw was a can’t-miss prospect who regularly threw 95. The second strikeout of his career, for instance, came on a 97 mile-per-hour heater. But time, and the ailing it brings, has chipped away at Kershaw’s power. He has not touched 95 since Game 7 of the 2017 World Series. On Wednesday, in Los Angeles’ 7-4 defeat against Cleveland, he topped out at 90.6 and averaged 89.4.

Such humbling realities come for every hurler, every human. The aches of aging are a bittersweet blessing — the price and the gift of still being here. That Kershaw is even playing at 37 is an accomplishment. But even in this reduced state, he can still be a useful, competent starter.

A battered Dodgers rotation means L.A. needs quality innings out of 37-year-old Clayton Kershaw. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

(Elsa via Getty Images)

That was on display against the Guardians’ tame offense, as Kershaw covered five innings while surrendering just one run. It was an act of survival. He gave up six hits. He worked behind in counts. His command wavered. But he dodged disaster. If not for a Los Angeles bullpen implosion, Kershaw would have tallied career win No. 213 on Wednesday.

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And for a Dodgers team forced to overcome a thinned-out, injury-riddled staff, Kershaw’s small step forward was a welcomed development. In a twist few saw coming, this star-studded roster suddenly needs everything Kershaw can give them.

That would have seemed preposterous when Kershaw re-joined the team on Feb. 13 after waiting out a free agency that always pointed toward Chavez Ravine. Having added Blake Snell and Roki Sasaki to join a staff featuring Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow and a host of others, Los Angeles had accumulated an embarrassment of riches on the pitching side.

Kershaw, fresh off two winter surgeries and the worst statistical season of his career, was an afterthought. At least from an on-field perspective. The legendary lefty was a clubhouse fixture for the Dodgers as they stampeded through October, even though he did not appear in a game after Aug. 30. He spoke at the World Series parade, triumphantly proclaiming that he planned to remain a Dodger for life.

But it was no secret, given his statistical decline, that this comeback was more for Kershaw than it was for the Dodgers. Anything he could give them would be a nice bonus. The Cooperstown-bound hurler had earned his tenure, but the team was not planning to rely on Kershaw as it had year after year, October after October.

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“I think any baseball player would wanna go out on their own terms.” Kershaw said on MLB Network last week before his first start of the year. “For me, I just didn’t want an injury to be the reason that I stopped playing.”

Kershaw has always thirsted for control. His meticulous pregame routine is the stuff of legend. Baseball’s randomness forces its participants to learn to let go, to surrender agency. Kershaw has always resisted that. The hurler of a generation was never going to slink away quietly.

But a barrage of Dodgers pitching injuries has placed the spotlight on Kershaw once more. Los Angeles currently has 14 hurlers on its big league injured list. Yamamoto, the NL Cy Young favorite, and red-headed righty Dustin May are the only still-healthy starters from the club’s Opening Day roster. Kershaw has made three starts since his return from a pair of offseason surgeries. The first was a five-run stinker at home against the Angels, the second a rain-marred two-inning outing in Queens that offered no real insight into his progress.

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But on Wednesday against Cleveland, the Big Guy battled. It was a far cry from the dominance of his prime, but Kershaw navigated his way through with guts and savvy. Still, Kershaw didn’t seem encouraged afterward.

“I think I’ve created some bad habits, you know, just with not feeling my best,” Kershaw told reporters afterward. “I haven’t pitched in a while, you know, I haven’t pitched in a long time. So there’s just some growing pains, I think, with the first few. Physically, feel great. Just keep throwing and figuring it out.”

It’s possible that Kershaw, with more reps, rediscovers some form. Only two seasons ago, he led the 2023 Dodgers in innings, finishing with a 2.46 ERA. He achieved that mark despite a fastball that averaged 90.7. But he ended that campaign with a disastrous implosion in the NLDS against Arizona. That winter, he underwent shoulder surgery, the first surgery of his career.

There’s reason to hope things get better. There’s also reason to doubt it ever will. The Dodgers have no choice but to give him the chance to find out.

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“Still trying to find his way, wasn’t his best stuff,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said after the game. “Willed himself through five innings.”

It is inspiring and sobering to watch this version of Kershaw. Nobody stays young forever. Father Time, undefeated, comes for us all. That feeling is universal. To watch him rage against the dying of the light is an admirable act of defiance. The golden glow of his Cooperstown-bound legacy casts this version of him in sepia tones — familiar, venerable, but unmistakably aged.

It’s strange to hear Roberts describe Clayton Kershaw as someone “finding his way.” For nearly two decades, Kershaw was the way — the standard, the pillar. It’s a reminder that the Dodgers skipper is talking about a completely different version of Kershaw.

The Dodgers will take whatever this version can give them.



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Pride celebrates LGBTQ+. Why we don’t have ‘straight pride’

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For the second year in a row, a bar in Ohio is offering deals for “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month,” and lawmakers from the state have proposed a “natural family month” that explicitly excludes LGBTQ+ families and celebrates only families led by straight men with children. Utah passed a bill to become the first state to ban Pride flags from flying on any government property, though Nazi flags were allowed, and Idaho passed a similar one.

More than 500 bills targeting the LGBTQ+ community have been proposed in 2025 alone, about 2 in 5 corporations are decreasing recognition of Pride Month out of fear of retaliation from the Trump administration and hate crimes against the LGBTQ+ community, especially transgender people, are on the rise.

In 2023, the Human Rights Campaign declared a National State of Emergency for LGBTQ+ Americans for the first time in its over 40-year history and the FBI reported its highest number of gender identity-based hate crimes to date. Several countries have begun warning their LGBTQ+ citizens about traveling to America and in March, the U.S. was added to the Global Human Rights Watchlist due to declining civil liberties, in part because of the treatment of the LGBTQ+ community.

Still, more conservative groups are pushing for a “straight pride” month as an answer to the traditional celebration of Pride Month.

The LGBTQ+ community celebrates Pride Month during June to commemorate the Stonewall uprising. But amidst a political and social environment that has become increasingly hostile towards queer people, events and promotions celebrating heterosexuality seem to push back on the celebration.

Heterosexuality is the norm, and experts say that creates the need to dedicate a month to LGBTQ+ visibility. Here is more about why America celebrates Pride as a month and why there isn’t a month to celebrate straight people.

Why don’t we have a month dedicated to straight people?

Imara Jones, a journalist and founder of non-profit news organization TransLash Media, said we have dedicated months, including Pride, Black History Month and others, because those communities have been historically marginalized.

“People have been systemically written out of history and excluded and made invisible,” she said. “One of the antidotes to that has been the idea that we will make people more visible and that there needs to be increased visibility in order to counteract that.”

She also pointed out that the majority of people in the U.S. identify as heterosexual. According to December 2023 data from the UCLA Williams Institute, 5.5% of adults, or 13.9 million people, in the U.S. identify as LGBT.

The norms of heterosexuality are widely reflected in mainstream media, she said, mentioning shows like “Bridgerton” and “The Bachelor.”

She said Pride is about declaring, “This is who I am.”

Pride Month commemorates Stonewall riots, celebrates community

Pride Month commemorates the 1969 Stonewall Uprising in New York and celebrates the LGBTQ+ community and the fight for equal rights. 

The Stonewall Uprising began on June 28, 1969, when police raided the Stonewall Inn, a prominent gay bar in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village. The protests that followed are credited with a shift in LGBTQ+ activism in the U.S.

The following year saw some of the first Pride parades in Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York. Despite the pivotal role transgender people and women of color played in the riots, including trans activist Marsha P. Johnson, they were largely excluded from early Pride celebrations. 

Today, Pride Month presents an opportunity for visibility and community. In addition to celebrating LGBTQ+ love and joy, it’s also a time to highlight important policy and resource issues the community faces.

Anti-LGBTQ+ hate, legislation on the rise

The last few years have seen waves of legislation targeting the LGBTQ+ community.

In 2024, more than 500 bills were introduced in state legislatures and 49 of those were signed into law, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). This year, at least 588 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced and 57 have been signed into law as of May 30.

In 2024, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) saw a 13% increase in the number of anti-LGBTQ+ groups from the previous year and in 2023, it identified an approximately 30% increase in anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups, more than they had ever listed.

FBI crime data from 2022 and 2023 showed that anti-LGBTQ+ hate crimes were also on the rise, with 2023 data showing that 2,800 incidents reported by the FBI were classified as bias against the victims’ sexual orientation or gender identity, accounting for nearly one in four (22.8%) of total hate crimes committed that year. In 2022, the Human Rights Campaign “sounded the alarm” when FBI data showed a 13.8% increase in reports based on sexual orientation and a 32.9% jump in reported hate crimes based on gender identity.

And in 2024, GLAAD documented 110 anti-LGBTQ+ incidents in June 2024 alone, while the SPLC recorded at least 74 bomb threats targeting LGBTQ people and events in the same month.

Anti-trans bills have specifically been on the rise as the Trump administration has relied on that small population as a major scapegoat in his presidential campaign and, said SPLC, with Texas alone having filed 32 anti-trans bills for the 2025 legislative session.

Jones said the political pushback against diversity, equity and inclusion trickles down into Pride celebrations. She has seen intense anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric online seep into real life with real consequences for the community.

“We can’t ignore… the role of intimidation in all of this, to be quite frank about it,” she said.

Contributing: Ahjané Forbes, USA TODAY



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Klay Thompson Pays Tribute to Dog Rocco After Pet’s Death, ’13 Glorious Years’

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Klay Thompson has officially shared a tribute for his pet Rocco.

The Dallas Mavericks forward took to Instagram to share a slideshow tribute for his dog, who passed away earlier this week at 13.

Thompson referred to Rocco as a “dynasty dog” and said that he appreciated the “13 glorious years” he had with him.

Thompson has had Rocco throughout his NBA career and his furry friend experienced many high’s alongside his owner. Thompson was a five-time All-Star and won four NBA Championships during Rocco’s lifetime.

Thompson’s father, Mychal, was the first to share the news of Rocco’s passing on Wednesday. Klay Thompson’s tribute showed fans some experiences he had alongside Rocco and even noted that he had a habit of popping some basketballs.

The tribute also showed some shoes that pay tribute to Rocco, which should be able to help keep the bulldog’s spirit alive.





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How ‘The Trainer’ assembled Paris Hilton, Julia Fox, Lenny Kravitz, and more — See a first look (exclusive)

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Julia Fox, Lenny Kravitz, Paris Hilton, Bella Thorne, Gina Gershon, Beverly D’Angelo, Gayle King, Finneas O’Connell, Taylour Paige, and John McEnroe are all costarring in a new project together.

Ensembles this sizable and wide-ranging are typically reserved for Avengers movies and Wes Anderson projects (and, now, episodes of The Studio). So it’s surprising to discover that this all-star cast was assembled for an indie movie by two relative Hollywood outsiders: English director Tony Kaye, who has only released a handful of projects since his controversial 1998 feature debut American History X, and co-writer/star Vito Schnabel, who has primarily worked as an art curator and is the son of painter/filmmaker Julian Schnabel.

Their film, The Trainer, seen in Entertainment Weekly‘s exclusive first-look photos, is a tense satirical dramedy that follows personal trainer Jack Flex (Schnabel) as he attempts to convince famed Los Angeles figures — both real and fictional — to invest in his absurd fitness invention, a weighted helmet he dubs “the Heavy Hat.” Jack is ruthlessly determined to share his vision with the world, even if he lacks a coherent plan to ensure its execution, and he spends most of the movie bouncing between chance encounters and ambush meetings with potential investors.

Vito Schnabel in ‘The Trainer’.

Tony Kaye


Schnabel tells EW that he conceived of The Trainer over a decade ago, but envisioned himself as the director, not the star. “Then Tony Kaye showed up on my doorstep through a mutual friend,” the actor/screenwriter says. “He was like, ‘I know you want to direct this movie, but I want to direct it, but the only way I’ll do it is if you play Jack.’ I laughed and I said, ‘You’re out of your mind.'”

Kaye explains that he immediately saw Schnabel’s potential. “He had a character in his mind, and he just played straight into my sensibilities. I hijacked the movie and I said, ‘Look, you have to be an actor,'” the filmmaker tells EW. “I could just see that I could get a movie from this fellow.”

Schnabel was apprehensive about carrying the movie, as his only onscreen experience came in a handful of small supporting roles (Feud: Capote vs. The Swans, Miral, Before Night Falls). “I felt like I had no business even trying to do it, to be honest. I was scared,” he says. “But I wanted to do it. And I felt like maybe I could with Tony.”

Schnabel’s lack of acting experience and his artistic-mindedness from his curatorial career were both valuable assets in Kaye’s mind. “He has this honest ascension to a higher language,” the director explains. “There’s a godlike focus that comes over him, and he goes into a zone, for example, when he looks at a painting or a sculpture, and it’s from another world. He has the gift to transfer that focus onto a written character or an unscripted character, or into a moment with another actor.”

Julia Fox in ‘The Trainer’.

Tony Kaye


Fox plays the film’s second lead, Bee, a receptionist for RVCA who assists Jack in his quest and eventually becomes his love interest. Schnabel has known the Uncut Gems actress since they were teenagers in New York, and her casting came together in a hilariously swift fashion.

As Kaye remembers it, “One day I was doing my old man run around my block. I was running out the driveway of my house, and I called Vito and I said, ‘We’ve got to have Julia Fox.’ I’d literally got 150 yards out of my gate when he called me back and says, ‘Okay, we’ve got Julia Fox. So how are we going to make that movie?'”

To Kaye, Fox possessed an appealing combination of precision and naturalism. “Julia was so professional, so machine-like, so trained and untrained,” he adds. “She and Vito together — they were right for each other and not right for each other. And that was the perfect thing.”

Kravitz, playing a version of himself who’s understandably deterred by Jack’s aggressive persistence, was less easy to pin down. “That almost didn’t happen, but then once he decided to do it, he went all in,” Schnabel says. “We wrote it for him. Since we made this movie during COVID, all of Lenny’s stuff was shot at his house in Eleuthera, because he was getting ready to potentially go on tour, and obviously he didn’t want to get sick.”

Tony Kaye in ‘The Trainer’.

Tony Kaye


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Perhaps the most fitting cameo comes from Hilton, who perfectly embodies the film’s primary thematic fixations: celebrity, entrepreneurship, and the power of the internet. Schnabel says that Hilton was one of the final pieces of the puzzle to click into place, ultimately joining the cast at the last minute. “She is such an incredible phenomenon — what she created and what her personality represents,” he says. “It made total sense that she would be the perfect person to help Jack sell this thing.”

O’Connell, best known for writing and producing music with his sister Billie Eilish, was a particular treat to work with for Kaye. “I’m a student of Finneas and Billie,” the filmmaker says. “I’ve studied their sound and their lyrics, and so to have Finneas as a part of our team was amazing.”

Bella Thorne in ‘The Trainer’.

Tony Kaye


Kaye says that the whole cast gave their all despite short windows of availability. “We got these people in the blinks of an eye, and we had to work very quickly with them,” he says.

Schnabel agrees, expressing his gratitude for the cast accommodating the production’s limited resources. “Nobody got paid a lot of money to be there,” he says. “People came together, and people want to work with Tony. It was such an incredible experience for me, and working with him — it changed my life.”

The Trainer will have its North American premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on June 7.



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Gary Oldman’s greatest death scene, according to Gary Oldman

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In the 1990s, Gary Oldman became Hollywood’s premier go-to bad guy. He played the Prince of Darkness, Dracula; menaced Harrison Ford’s ass-kicking president in Air Force One; chewed the scenery as an unhinged DEA agent in Léon: The Professional; and adopted a truly bizarre hairdo as an industrialist/weapons designer who leads a team of alien mercenaries in The Fifth Element.

Naturally, as a consequence of playing so many despicable ne’er-do-wells, Oldman became no stranger to his characters’ biting the dust. Every action movie fan remembers Ford growling, “Get off my plane!” as he kicks Oldman out of the presidential plane’s cargo hold, breaking his neck in the process. Similarly, the image of DEA agent Norman Stansfield being blown up by a string of grenades lives long in the memory.

However, according to Oldman, neither of these deaths is his favourite on-screen demise. Instead, that honour goes to Drexl Spivey’s wince-inducing termination in Tony Scott’s crime classic True Romance. In that movie, famously written by a young Quentin Tarantino, Oldman gave one of his most beloved, and most demented, performances as a white drug dealer with gold teeth, a milky eye, and dreadlocks. Drexl had a problematic habit of speaking with a faux-Black patois and was downright malevolent from almost the second he appeared on-screen.

Amusingly, Tarantino admitted that he wrote Drexl for himself to play, which is an insane thing to picture. However, when Oldman was hired, he took the biggest of big swings to play the off-the-wall character, and stood the chance of falling flat on his face. His commitment to the bit was undeniably entertaining, though, and for the brief period he’s in the film, Drexl adds a real frisson of unpredictability and danger. Then, he gets killed off in truly spectacular fashion.

Amusingly, Scott and Oldman admitted in a 2008 Maxim retrospective that Oldman’s mother was on-set to watch her son’s number one screen death. “Gary would bring his 70-year-old mum to the set,” Scott chuckled. “After a take, he’d go, ‘Mum, what do you think?’ She’d say, ‘It’s good,’ and he’d go, ‘What the fuck do you know? It’s terrible.’”

Oldman added with a mischievous glint in his eye, “She’s seen it all. God bless her.”

Still, it’s likely that even the “been there, done that” Mrs Oldman was taken aback by the sheer brutality of her son’s death in True Romance. However, if she did feel shocked or horrified by witnessing him getting a shotgun blast to the groin, followed by one straight to the dome, she refused to let it show. “His mum was also there for the scene where Drexl’s dick gets blown off,” Scott matter-of-factly remembered. “She said, ‘Yeah, I thought that was really good.’”

As for Oldman, he loved Drexl’s bloody send-off precisely because it was so outlandish and violent. In fact, it was even more explicit in the movie’s initial edit, but Scott was forced to tone it down for the theatrical cut. “The gun fired blanks, but there was still a flare and powder coming out of the barrel,” Oldman reminisced. “I wore a metal cup.”

After pondering his extensive list of deaths, though, including his iconic execution in Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Oldman concluded that Drexl was a cut above the rest. “I’ve died in a lot of movies, but to have my dick blown off and then get shot in the face with my eyes open, that’s up there,” he grinned. “That beats a stake through the heart!”

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Klay Thompson suffers heartbreaking tragedy as first Mavericks offseason begins

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Dallas Mavericks’ newcomer Klay Thompson has enjoyed a long NBA career as one of the league’s most beloved stars. As a quiet member of Golden State’s 2010s dynasty, fans were drawn to Thompson’s personable attitude and electric playstyle. Thompson often shied away from the spotlight, instead earning the respect of fans with his laid-back attitude and hobbies of boating and spending time with his dog, Rocco.

Thompson’s heart is heavy this week, as Rocco passed away last week at the age of 13. Rocco, an English Bulldog, was adopted by Thompson during his rookie season. Rocco, who has over 60k Instagram followers, became an NBA sensation alongside Thompson, as the Warriors legend often included Rocco in press conferences, promotional content, and social media posts.

The duo was inseparable, and Mavericks fans and NBA fans alike have heavy hearts as Thompson goes through this hard time. Mavericks fans fell in love with Thompson’s game last season due to his electric 3-point shooting and ability to get hot within minutes, and his first full offseason as a Maverick is beginning with a challenge he must overcome.

Klay Thompson faces pivotal offseason without Rocco by his side

To many, Rocco wasn’t just a pet but a reflection of Thompson himself.

In a heartwarming moment, Thompson told GQ that Rocco, whose full name is Sir Rocco Von Thompson, was his “number one essential.” Thompson explains further that Rocco was his first pet and accompanied Thompson on his frequent outdoor activities. Thompson even carved out time in his pregame routine to play with Rocco.

On ESPN’s “Mason and Ireland” show, Klay’s father Mychal Thompson revealed that the younger Thompson put Rocco down. Mychal said that Rocco led a “great, long life,” but added that, while they are devastated, “it was time.”

In many ways, Rocco embodied what NBA fans loved about Thompson.

Rocco and Klay are both often described as chill, loyal, and most frequently found hanging out on a boat. Rocco adopted Klay’s effortlessly cool vibe in a modern NBA and dog owner culture where everyone appears to be obsessed with “aura” and perfectly choreographed social media feeds. There were no publicity stunts from either Thompson; they both won over the NBA community’s hearts with their authenticity.

There are few things as heart-wrenching as making the decision to put down a dog, particularly for Thompson, who had such a special relationship with his dog. Rocco was Thompson’s “loyal steed” for his entire NBA career and was Thompson’s rock when he missed two seasons with back-to-back season-ending injuries. Rocco was Klay’s best friend, and he sadly won’t have him by his side anymore.

Thompson will have to grapple with his recent loss this offseason. The five-time All-Star has faced many challenges in his career, but perhaps none as difficult to manage as losing Rocco. In the aforementioned GQ interview, Thompson said to Rocco, “You’ll always hold a special place in my heart, buddy.”





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French Open 2025: Jessica Pegula suffers massive upset loss to unseeded Lois Boisson in fourth round

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American Jessica Pegula, the world No. 3-ranked woman, lost to world No. 361 Lois Boisson in a shock French Open upset Monday. Boisson electrified the local crowd as she advanced to the quarterfinals, the only man or woman to reach the round this year.

Pegula took the first set 6-3, and it felt as though she would roll through Boisson. In that opening set, Boisson appeared to have trouble keeping up with Pegula’s pace and was scrambling as Pegula determined the shape of the match.

Boisson made a big change in the second set, mixing up drop shots and lobs to turn the tables and leave Pegula as the one who had to hesitate in her attack. As Boisson picked up momentum, Pegula began to miss shots and make uncharacteristic unforced errors. Boisson would take the second set 6-4.

2025 French Open: Results, schedule, draw, bracket for the quarterfinal round at Roland Garros

Austin Nivison

2025 French Open: Results, schedule, draw, bracket for the quarterfinal round at Roland Garros

Court Philippe-Chatrier went from largely empty to packed and rocking by the third set as it began to feel that an upset might be brewing. Boisson continued to befuddle Pegula with her shot selection.

Pegula managed to battle to 4-4 in the third set, but Boisson took the final two games to score the biggest upset of the 2025 tournament to date.

Pegula is the highest seed to lose thus far at Roland Garros, while Boisson is the lowest-ranked woman to reach a major quarterfinal since No. 418 Kaia Kanepi in 2017 and the first French wild card to reach French Open quarterfinals since Mary Pierce in 2002.

Boisson was given a wild-card spot in the 2024 French Open by the French Tennis Federation, only to suffer a torn ACL one week prior to the tournament. After sitting out for nine months, Boisson got back on the court and has made good on her second chance to play in a Grand Slam event.





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Klay Thompson mourns beloved bulldog Rocco on social media

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Klay Thompson’s beloved English bulldog, Rocco, has died after 13 years alongside the Dallas Mavericks guard.

Thompson mourned Rocco in an Instagram post Friday, memorializing their time together and wishing him well in the afterlife.

“I’m gonna miss Rocco a lot, 13 glorious years with my boy,” Thompson wrote. “I know he’s in doggy heaven poppin somebody’s ball. A great dynasty dog he was. Thank you for all the sweet messages! All dogs go to Heaven!”

Rocco rose to prominence during Thompson’s run as part of the Golden State Warriors’ dynastic Splash Brothers duo, endearing himself to fans as the All-Star guard’s close companion.

Thompson referenced the bulldog as his No. 1 essential in a 2019 interview with GQ Sports.

“He’s a loyal steed,” Thompson said. “And he’s the first pet I’ve ever owned, so Rocco you’ll forever hold a special place in my heart buddy.”

Rocco even had his own Instagram page that featured photos of himself and Thompson, with over 60,000 followers.

Mavericks center Dereck Lively II, Los Angeles Dodgers first basemen Enrique Hernandez and rapper G-Eazy were among those to pay tribute to Rocco in the comments of Thompson’s post. The Warriors also eulogized Rocco with a post.





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