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Megan Fox has a blood drinking ritual with Machine Gun Kelly and thinks social media is ‘sinister’

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Megan Fox has a blood drinking ritual with Machine Gun Kelly and thinks social media is ‘sinister’

“So, I suppose to drink one another’s blood may mislead individuals or persons are imagining us with goblets and we’re like ‘Sport of Thrones,’ consuming one another’s blood,” she instructed Glamour UK. “It is only a few drops, however sure, we do eat one another’s blood from time to time for ritual functions solely.”

Fox is on the quilt of the April difficulty of the journal and stated she’s into astrology, metaphysical practices, meditations, in addition to new and full moon practices.

When she and Kelly do a blood ritual, she stated, for her “it is a passage or it’s used for a purpose.”

“And it’s managed the place it is like, ‘Let’s shed a couple of drops of blood and every drink it,’” Fox stated. “He is way more haphazard and hectic and chaotic, the place he is keen to only reduce his chest open with damaged glass and be like, ‘Take my soul.’”

The pair are associates with one other engaged couple, Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker, however Fox stated they do not hang around as a lot as individuals might consider.

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“They’re magnetic,” she stated concerning the pair. “So no person’s actually interacting with them an excessive amount of, as a result of they’re simply caught.”

Plus, between the 2 {couples} there are fairly a couple of youngsters. Fox joked that does not go away a lot time for double dates.

Fox bought emotional in the course of the interview speaking about her three sons and the way she talked to them about gender identification on condition that her oldest, Noah, began sporting clothes when he was two years outdated, she stated.

In response to Fox, she stated she “purchased a bunch of books that kind of addressed these items and addressed a full spectrum of what that is. A few of the books are written by transgender youngsters.”

“A few of the books are nearly how one can be a boy and put on a costume; you may specific your self by your clothes nonetheless you need. And that does not even should have something to do along with your sexuality,” she stated. “So from the time they have been very younger, I’ve integrated these issues into their every day lives in order that no person seems like they’re bizarre or unusual or totally different.”

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Fox stated she retains her youngsters off of social media, which she thinks is “sinister,” although she acknowledged she has accounts herself that somebody runs for her.

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Danny Trejo brawls at a Fourth of July parade in Sunland-Tujunga. Why? A water balloon

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Danny Trejo brawls at a Fourth of July parade in Sunland-Tujunga. Why? A water balloon

“Machete” star and Trejo’s Tacos entrepreneur Danny Trejo engaged in a brawl during a Fourth of July celebration in Sunland-Tujunga.

The fight broke out Thursday during a parade hosted by a local Rotary Club, where the 80-year-old action star was a guest. Trejo was riding in a white, convertible low-rider in the parade but stopped his vehicle after someone threw a water balloon at his car, according to video shared on social media.

The “From Dusk Till Dawn” actor stepped out of his vehicle and confronted a group of attendees on the sidewalk. After someone else threw another water balloon at the Latino icon‘s head, he exchanged punches with a person wearing black shorts, a sleeveless shirt and a hat. Trejo fell on his back off the sidewalk. The person also can be seen hitting Trejo’s friend Mario Castillo, who was left bloodied after the incident, according to video published by KTTV Fox 11.

Video showed Trejo getting back to his feet, grabbing a folding chair and throwing it into the brawling crowd. TMZ published video from another perspective, showing another person holding back Trejo from the crowd.

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“[Trejo] pushed women out of the way to get to those guys,” Sunland-Tujunga resident James Spishak told The Times. “There were kids there. It could’ve gotten really ugly. It would’ve never happened if he stayed in the car.”

Spishak said Trejo slapped him when he ran over to the crowd and tried to break up the fight. “I love Danny Trejo, I think he’s a cool dude, but he needs to know when to say ‘no,’” Spishak said.

Representatives for Trejo did not immediately respond to The Times’ request for comment. The Sunland/Tujunga/Shadow Hills Rotary Club, which hosted the Fourth of July celebration, also did not immediately respond.

“Everybody was holding him back,” said Sunland-Tujunga resident Arnie Abramyan, who shared parts of the brawl on Instagram. “There were a lot of people between him and the people who threw the water balloon. He was just upset. He was yelling, screaming, mad and was trying to get to the guy who threw the water balloon.”

Abramyan, president of the Sunland-Tujunga Chamber of Commerce, told The Times that Trejo was participating in the neighborhood’s annual Fourth of July parade for the first time. Abramyan, whose company Arnieville is one of the sponsors of the event, said there was a designated area on the parade route where people could use Super Soakers and water balloons, but Trejo wasn’t at that part of the route when he was hit with a water balloon.

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Los Angeles police were responding to a different incident nearby and came to the site of the brawl after it happened, Abramyan said. He added that officers told him Trejo did not want to press any charges. Abramyan said he and the rest of the Chamber of Commerce had an emergency meeting after the parade to figure out how to apologize to Trejo.

“I doubt he’ll participate [in the parade] again, but we definitely want to make amends and show him love and respect,” Abramyan said.

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Short Film Review: One More Pumpkin (2023) by Kwon Han-si

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Short Film Review: One More Pumpkin (2023) by Kwon Han-si

One More Pumpkin is the first AI film we review in Asian Movie Pulse

Kwon Han-si was born in 1993 in South Korea, he graduated from Chung-Ang University with a film studies degree. His short films such as Man of Na Manza (2021) and The Bystander (2020) were awarded for the best short film at Chungmuro Short Film Fesitval. Awarded at various film festivals, he is the CEO of a production company ‘STUDIO FREEWILLUSION Inc’ in AI-generated video content. Considering this is the first time I watch and review an AI-generated movie (“One More Pumkin” utilizes AI technologies such as T2I (Text-to-Image), I2V (Image-to-Video), and AI Super-Resolution) I was really curious to see something that could be a significant part of the future.

The short begins in a rather fast pace, showing an elderly couple amidst a film with huge pumpkins, while narration states that they have lived over 200 years, despite the fact that the Messengers of Death would not have missed this news. It turns out, however, that one Messenger of Death did come to the couple’s house, but the treatment he received essentially turned him into the victim, through the help of soup.

As the couple are revealed as something completely sinister, their whole life story takes a completely different turn, which actually affects everything around them, pumpkins, crows and Messengers of Death included. Lastly, the English the voice that we heard narrating, turns out it belongs to a mother of two children who is trying to teach a lesson about the blights of greed.

Kwon Han-si and his associates have come up with a series of impressive images, that truly fit the supernatural horror aesthetics of the 3-minute short. If the humans do look somewhat artificial (pun intended) and video-game like, the SFX that lead to death, scary faces inside soups, diabolical pumpkins and a number of other horrific ‘apparitions’ look exceptionally well.One could say that, at least for now, AI is more suited to be implemented in the technical aspect of a film than in the acting, although this is definitely just the beginning.

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On the other hand, the rapid pace does not allow the viewer to truly distinguish the quality of the imagery, as the frames interchange with thunderous speed. This gives an appealing sense of speed to the short, but still makes it a bit difficult to follow. The story also seems rather intriguing, and it would be interesting to see it unfolding in a bigger duration. Lastly, the narration voice is appealing, although the word pumpkin is thrown around too many times.

As a first glimpse at AI movies, “One More Pumpkin” was definitely an intriguing experience, and the ‘taste’ that the film leaves is definitely a positive one. However, there are still a lot of issues to overcome, and we will see where this new approach will lead, perhaps in its competition with 3D and CGI filmmaking.

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See Edinburgh Fringe without leaving L.A.: Where local comics are testing their festival acts

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See Edinburgh Fringe without leaving L.A.: Where local comics are testing their festival acts

Around 11 a.m. on a recent Saturday, the first of five work-in-progress comedy shows began to unfold onstage at the Elysian Theater. The audience was encouraged to provide feedback. And between the five hourlong productions, bagpipe music filled the Echo Park space.

For performers Sarina Freda, Natasha Mercado, Charlie James, Miles Woods and Griffin Kelly, this “Edinburgh Fringe Percolator” was a chance to test material before they journey to the famed Fringe festival in August. For Los Angeles audiences, it’s an opportunity to experience the Fringe without actually traveling to Scotland.

The annual Edinburgh Festival Fringe is billed as the largest performing arts gathering on Earth, with tens of thousands of performances held in about 250 venues across the entire month. Before the talent arrives for the spotlights, they’re often refining their work — in L.A., that’s in places such as the Comedy Store in Hollywood, the nearby Kookaburra Lounge in the Ovation complex or the Lyric Hyperion in Silver Lake.

Griffin Kelly workshops the production of “Two Cats on a Date” at Elysian Theater.

(Chris Ungco)

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The 2-year-old Elysian Theater is trying to establish itself as an Edinburgh artists community, a spot to share ideas, via its Frogtown home and its Facebook group. The nonprofit is hosting Edinburgh run-throughs of Rachel Kaly’s mental-illness-minded “Hospital Hour” on July 15 and “Demi Adejuyigbe Is Going to Do One (1) Backflip” on July 14 and 16. Natalie Palamides is scheduled to perform her Edinburgh-bound “Weer” five times this month. “Avital Ash Workshops Her Suicide Note,” part of the 2023 Fringe, gets revived by Ash on Tuesday.

Toni Nagy presented “Grape Culture” with Sarah Buckner five times at the unrelated Hollywood Fringe Festival in June in preparation for her Edinburgh debut. Nagy will have a second title in next month’s festival, the cathartic parenting journey “Go to Your Womb,” in which she stars with her daughter, Adelia Aldrich.

“I’ve had to take an unconventional approach to my career because everything I make tends to push against the status quo,” Nagy said. “Bringing two shows to my virgin Edinburgh Fringe may seem like a bold move, but … they complement each other thematically, and if I can get through rehearsing and performing with my 13-year-old daughter, I can do anything.”

Two performers in wigs in a funny position

Toni Nagy’s “Grape Culture” performed during the Hollywood Fringe Festival in preparation for Edinburgh.

(Aletheia Lane)

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Jay Light’s vagabond “Wrong! A Dark Comedy Game Show” started at Alamo Drafthouse in Los Angeles and went on to tour in New York, Chicago and Austin, Texas, before settling in the Comedy Store in October. Three comics compete in committing “cancel-able offenses” and making “questionable decisions” in the show, which plays July 22 in the Comedy Store’s Belly Room before it moves to Edinburgh.

At the Ovation complex, formerly known as Hollywood & Highland, Fielding Edlow’s “Gaslighting Is My Love Language” promises “a brutally honest, unapologetically explicit, and immensely entertaining hour of comedy” July 25 in the Kookaburra Lounge.

A crop of Edinburgh shows also in previewing at the Lyric Hyperion, including Natasha Mercado’s “#1 Son” on Saturday, Milanka Brooks’ “Mum and I Don’t Talk Anymore” on Monday, Kym Priess’ “Loser Lion Party Bus” and Jackie Skinner’s “Beautiful Night” on Tuesday, Catherine McCafferty’s “(Not) That Bad” on Wednesday and Alex Kern’s “Thank You So Much for Coming” July 13.

Kyle Ayers brings his “Hard to Say” back to the Lyric Hyperion on July 22. The show centers on Ayers’ trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic pain disorder, so the comedian’s goals in Edinburgh feel as personal as they are professional.

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“I’m most looking forward to just the supreme chaos of it all,” Ayers said. “I will be well outside of my comfort zone. It’s unlike anything I’ve ever done before, and I am trying to embrace that aspect. I want to see shows I never thought I’d see, meet people I never figured I’d meet, and perform for people who otherwise may never see my show.”

The Elysian runs workshops and discussions for confirmed Edinburgh talent and the “Fringe-curious” alike. “Opening night is important,” Kelly cautioned at one Saturday session, noting that early reviews carry weight. But the pressure persists, as comedy gatekeepers and tastemakers can pop up at any point in the marathon of nightly sets.

Naked Comedy producer Sam Varela said one trend is crowdfunding. “This year everyone is just more broke,” she says, citing the Hollywood labor strikes and dearth of jobs.

So much time and effort goes into making an Edinburgh show a success. For L.A. audiences, previewing the work provides a glimpse of that process.

“The first time I did Fringe, it really made me appreciate and understand the DIY comedy approach that has exploded in the last few years,” Light says, noting the collective development that was required to get his show to the stage, “It took two years to make it good enough in front of a crowd as it was on paper.”

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