(3 of 7)
A Good Marriage. Shivers (rhymes with rivers) was born Oct. 5, 1907 at Lufkin, where his father, Robert A. Shivers, was clerking in a store. Later, the elder Shivers practiced law at Woodville, then became a district judge at Port Arthur. Young Allan, a studious boy, hung around the courthouse so much that he acquired a nickname: "Judge." Allan went off to study law at the University of Texas, but dropped out at the end of the first year because the family purse was nearly empty.
Warning: This post contains spoilers for Don’t Worry Darling
Early in Don’t Worry Darling, which drops on HBO Max Nov. 7, our hero Alice (Florence Pugh) begins to suspect that something is amiss. Alice and her handsome husband Jack (Harry Styles) are the picture-perfect protagonists of Olivia Wilde’s controversial and highly-anticipated follow-up to Booksmart, her directorial debut. They live in a 1950s-era Palm Springs-esque desert suburb dotted with tidy midcentury modern homes.
African music spans diverse genres like Afrobeats, Afro-soul, Afropop, Amapiano, and traditional folk melodies, captivating audiences worldwide with its richness. YouTube has played a pivotal role in revolutionizing how music is consumed, providing a platform for both established and independent African artists to gain international exposure and success without relying on major record labels. Here are some of the most viewed African songs on YouTube: Master KG - Jerusalema: With a remarkable 539 million views, Jerusalema holds the record as the most-viewed African music video on YouTube.
Warning: This post contains spoilers for Season 3, Episode 8 of The Bear.
There is a moment during Season 3 of The Bear in which it becomes clear that one of the episodes was written by someone who has either been through childbirth or at least been present at the labor and delivery of someone else. As a desperate Natalie labors, a stranger in scrubs named Dr. Levin gives her the most frustrating non-answer to the most urgent question she’s maybe ever asked in her life.
Don Winslow never intended to write a follow-up book to his 2005 novel The Power of the Dog. It was a brutal story about the war on drugs—one famous incident involved a man throwing two children off a bridge—and he didn’t want to revisit that subject matter. When people suggested he write a sequel, he says he would hang up the phone or storm out of the room. “I did not want to write this book,” Winslow says.