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A massive baby penguin named Pesto is inhaling fish and winning fans

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A massive baby penguin named Pesto is inhaling fish and winning fans

Pesto the king penguin chick, right, mingles in his enclosure at Sea Life Melbourne Aquarium on Friday.

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Rod McGuirk/AP

Pesto the baby penguin is huge — both online and literally speaking.

The nine-month-old king penguin, who lives at the Sea Life Melbourne Aquarium in Australia, weighs about 46 pounds.

That’s enormous, even by seabird standards. King penguins, the second-largest species of penguin, typically weigh 20 to 30 pounds when they’re fully grown.

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“He’s officially the largest chick SEA LIFE Melbourne has ever seen, making him a huge hit with guests and fans around the world,” the aquarium says.

It credits his “hearty appetite” of 25 fish per day, as well as good genes and parenting: His biological dad, Blake, is the aquarium’s biggest and oldest penguin (and also “a bit of a ladies man”).

Pesto also has the distinct honor of being the only king penguin chick to hatch at this particular aquarium in all of 2024, after none were born last year.

Jacinta Early, the aquarium’s education supervisor, told the Associated Press on Friday that Pesto ate 53 pounds of fish — more than his own body weight — in the past week alone.

As Pesto has grown in size, so too has his online fanbase.

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He first went on display in April, but his following exploded earlier this month after the aquarium threw him a gender reveal, officially certifying his big boy status.

As the aquarium explained in social media videos, a king penguin’s gender can’t be determined just by looking. Instead, staff had to send a blood sample off to a lab for testing.

“That was done a couple of weeks ago, and it’s finally come back to us to say he’s a boy,” says the voiceover on a video of the celebration, in which staff members can be seen cheering as someone cuts an undersea-themed cake filled with blue icing.

Viewers showed love in the comments, praising Pesto’s “peak male performance,” crowning him a “fluffy king” and asking for him to get an account or livestream feed of his own.

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Pesto has also gone viral in TikToks posted by aquarium visitors, which have racked up millions of views in recent weeks.

Whether he’s waddling around or just standing in his enclosure, Pesto’s round figure and fuzzy brown feathers set him apart from the other penguins, with their black feathers and sleeker builds.

Michaela Smale, a senior keeper at the aquarium, told 9News that Pesto has reached more than 1.9 billion people around the world.

“We have seen an increase in social traffic, web traffic and, of course, footfall,” she added.

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The aquarium even posted a TikTok this week of Pesto set to a Katy Perry song, urging the singer to come visit their VIP (very important penguin) in person.

King penguin chicks shed their fuzzy brown down in favor of sleek black, white and orange feathers at around 10-12 months, which is just around the corner for Pesto.

The aquarium says he is likely to slim down — probably closer to 33 pounds — once he develops his adult coat.

But he’ll always be a star.

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‘Hijack’ and ‘The Night Manager’ continue to thrill in their second seasons

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‘Hijack’ and ‘The Night Manager’ continue to thrill in their second seasons

Idris Elba returns as an extraordinarily unlucky traveler in the second season of Hijack. Plus Tom Hiddleston is back as hotel worker/intelligence agent in The Night Manager.

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When I first began reviewing television after years of doing film, I was struck by one huge difference between the way they tell stories. Movies work hard to end memorably: They want to stick the landing so we’ll leave the theater satisfied. TV series have no landing to stick. They want to leave us un-satisfied so we’ll tune into the next season.

Oddly enough, this week sees the arrival of sequels to two hit series — Apple TV’s Hijack and Prime Video’s The Night Manager — whose first seasons ended so definitively that I never dreamt there could be another. Goes to show how naïve I am.

The original Hijack, which came out in 2023, starred Idris Elba as Sam Nelson, a corporate negotiator who’s flying to see his ex when the plane is skyjacked by assorted baddies. The story was dopey good fun, with Elba — who’s nobody’s idea of an inconspicuous man — somehow able to move around a packed jetliner and thwart the hijackers. The show literally stuck the landing.

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It was hard to see how you could bring back Sam for a second go. I mean, if a man’s hijacked once, that’s happenstance. If it happens twice, well, you’re not going on vacation with a guy like that. Still, Season 2 manages to make Sam’s second hijacking at least vaguely plausible by tying it to the first one. This time out Sam’s on a crowded Berlin subway train whose hijackers will slaughter everyone if their demands aren’t met.

From here, things follow the original formula. You’ve got your grab bag of fellow passengers, Sam’s endangered ex-wife, some untrustworthy bureaucrats, an empathetic woman traffic controller, and so forth. You’ve got your non-stop twists and episode-ending cliffhangers. And of course, you’ve got Elba, a charismatic actor who may be better here than in the original because this plot unleashes his capacity for going to dark, dangerous places.

While more ornately plotted than the original, the show still isn’t about anything more than unleashing adrenaline. I happily watched it for Elba and the shots of snow falling in Berlin. But for a show like this to be thrilling, it has to be as swift as a greyhound. At a drawn-out eight episodes — four hours more than movies like Die Hard and SpeedHijack 2 is closer to a well-fed basset hound.

Tom Hiddleston as Jonathan Pine in The Night Manager Season 2.

Tom Hiddleston plays MI6 agent Jonathan Pine in The Night Manager Season 2.

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Things move much faster in Season 2 of The Night Manager. The action starts nearly a decade after the 2016 original which starred Tom Hiddleston as Jonathan Pine, a night manager at a luxury Swiss hotel, who gets enlisted by a British intelligence agent — that’s Olivia Colman — to take down the posh arms dealer Richard Roper, played by Hugh Laurie. Equal parts James Bond and John le Carré, who wrote the source novel, the show raced among glossy locations and built to a pleasing conclusion.

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So pleasing that Hiddleston is back as Pine, who is now doing surveillance work for MI6 under the name of Alex Goodwin. He learns the existence of Teddy Dos Santos — that’s Diego Calva — a Colombian pretty boy who’s the arms-dealing protégé of Roper. So naturally, Pine defies orders and goes after him, heading to Colombia disguised as a rich, dodgy banker able to fund Teddy’s business.

While David Farr’s script doesn’t equal le Carré in sophistication, this labyrinthine six-episode sequel follows the master’s template. It’s positively bursting with stuff — private eyes and private armies, splashy location shooting in Medellín and Cartagena, jaded lords and honest Colombian judges, homoerotic kisses, duplicities within duplicities, a return from the dead, plus crackerjack performances by Hiddleston, Laurie, Colman, Calva and Hayley Squires as Pine’s sidekick in Colombia. Naturally, there’s a glamorous woman, played by Camila Morrone, who Pine will want to rescue.

As it builds to a teasing climax — yes, there will be a Season 3 — The Night Manager serves up a slew of classic le Carré themes. This is a show about fathers and sons, the corrupt British ruling class, resurgent nationalism and neo-imperialism. Driving the action is what one character dubs “the commercialization of chaos,” in which the powerful smash a society in order to buy up — and profit from — the pieces. If it had come out a year ago, Season 2 might’ve seemed like just another far-fetched thriller set in an exotic location. These days it feels closer to a news flash.

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Meghan Trainor Doubles Down On Distancing Herself From ‘Toxic Mom Group’

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Meghan Trainor Doubles Down On Distancing Herself From ‘Toxic Mom Group’

Meghan Trainor
I’m Not In The Toxic Mom Group, I Swear

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Video: Fashion Highlights From the 2026 Golden Globes

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Video: Fashion Highlights From the 2026 Golden Globes

new video loaded: Fashion Highlights From the 2026 Golden Globes

Vanessa Friedman, our fashion director and chief fashion critic, recaps what she saw on the red carpet for the 2026 Golden Globes.

By Vanessa Friedman, Chevaz Clarke, Gabby Bulgarelli and Jon Hazell

January 12, 2026

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