Lifestyle
'Gladiator II': Are you not entertained? Still? Again? Some more? : Pop Culture Happy Hour
Aidan Monaghan/Paramount Pictures
The new film Gladiator II is a sequel to Gladiator, Oscar-winning swords-and-sandals blockbuster that starred Russell Crowe. It tells a similar tale — a soldier, sold into slavery, becomes a gladiator in the Roman arena. This time out, it’s Paul Mescal whose prowess in the coliseum earns him fame that threatens Rome’s tyrannical rulers. Directed by Ridley Scott, the film also stars Pedro Pascal and Denzel Washington.
Subscribe to Pop Culture Happy Hour Plus at plus.npr.org/happyhour
Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopculture.
Lifestyle
Killer Mom Susan Smith's Parole Board Tears Were Fake, Fired Ex-Guard Says
Convicted child killer Susan Smith‘s tears at her parole hearing were all BS, totally fabricated to sway the board … this, according to a former guard who was fired and prosecuted for having sex with her in prison years ago.
Alfred Rowe — a disgraced prison guard formerly employed at Camille Graham Correctional Center in South Carolina, where Smith served until 2000 — tells TMZ … the parole board made the right choice by keeping her in prison.
Court TV
Rowe says he doesn’t think Smith has changed … and getting emotional at the hearing was all for show — with AR saying someone must’ve bottled some tears and brought them in for her to use, ’cause she’s not capable of that level of emotion on her own.
Rowe says it’s possible she feels a little remorse … but, her getting worked up like she did was a total fabrication.
The ex-guard previously admitted to us sex with Smith wasn’t worth losing his job or his reputation — he told TMZ he “allowed” Smith to give him oral sex 2 to 3 times, but said she asked for nothing in return. Prison authorities caught wind of their interactions and fired Rowe and another guard. Rowe pleaded guilty in 2001 to sex with an inmate and was sentenced to 5 years’ probation. He said his negative opinion of Susan has nothing to do with their past.
As we told you … Smith’s appeal to the parole board was shot down unanimously this morning — with five voting to deny and one recusing herself from the vote.
Smith claimed she’d learned a lot and changed since murdering her 3-year-old and 14-month-old sons back in 1994. The boys’ father came to the hearing and advocated on their behalf — saying this was a horrible decision, not an accident or mistake.
The parole board cited the seriousness of Smith’s crime and her unfavorable discipline record as why they turned down her request. Rowe previously referred us to her disciplinary infractions over the years — many for drug-related offenses. He noted her infraction record was among the worst he had ever seen.
Rowe says he’s sure the parole board made the right choice.
Lifestyle
How a Sabrina Carpenter song led to a priest's demotion for mishandling church funds
The New York City priest who was disciplined last year for letting pop star Sabrina Carpenter film a racy music video inside his church is now being accused of mishandling nearly $2 million in parish funds.
Church officials announced this week that Monsignor Jamie Gigantiello has been stripped of more of his duties after an investigation uncovered a “pattern of serious violations of Diocesan policies and protocols” — including making unauthorized financial transfers to a former aide in Mayor Eric Adams’ administration, which is now under a federal corruption probe.
Gigantiello has been relieved of “any pastoral oversight or governance role” at the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Williamsburg, Bishop Robert Brennan said in a statement issued by the Roman Catholic diocese of Brooklyn and shared with NPR.
Brennan said Gigantiello had “mishandled substantial church funds and interfered with the administration of the Parish after being directed not to do so.” NPR has reached out to Gigantiello’s attorney for comment.
Brennan said he also relieved Deacon Dean Dobbins — who had served as the parish’s temporary administrator during the investigation — citing his use of “racist and other offensive language” during private conversations held in the church office. Those conversations were “apparently recorded at Monsignor Gigantiello’s direction” without the deacon’s consent, he added.
“It was wrong to secretly record Deacon Dobbins, but the use of such language by any church employee is unacceptable and will not be tolerated,” he added.
Brennan said he has appointed a new administrator “in order to safeguard the public trust, and to protect church funds.”
Here’s a look at the allegations against Gigantiello — and what any of this has to do with one of pop’s biggest hitmakers.
What triggered the investigation?
Like a lot of lore, it all started on Halloween. On Oct. 31, 2023, Carpenter released the music video for her song “Feather,” which takes place partially in a Brooklyn church.
To the tune of the upbeat song, it shows a series of incidents in which she either kills or witnesses the deaths of several men who behaved badly toward her. Carpenter drives a pink hearse to the church and, once inside, dances — wearing a short black tutu and veil — around the altar in front of several pastel-colored coffins.
The video certainly has its fans; It’s been viewed over 100 million times on YouTube. But it also ruffled many feathers (no pun intended).
Brennan, the Brooklyn bishop, told the Catholic News Agency at the time that he was “appalled” at what had been filmed at the church.
“The parish did not follow diocesan policy regarding the filming on Church property, which includes a review of the scenes and script,” the diocese said in a statement.
Days later, Gigantiello — who has served as the church’s pastor for nearly a decade — published a letter to parishioners apologizing for his role in “this shameful representation, which I whole-heatedly renounce.”
In it, he said the parish had been approached by a local film crew scouting locations for “what was presented as ‘a production featuring Sabrina Carpenter,’ ” and that he agreed to the filming “after a general search of the artists involved did not reveal anything questionable.” He said he was not present during the shoot.
“The parish staff and I were not aware that anything provocative was occurring in the church nor were we aware that faux coffins and other funeral items would be placed in the sanctuary,” Gigantiello wrote. “Most of the video was supposed to be filmed outside, near the church, which it was.”
Carpenter, for her part, said at the time that her team had gotten approval in advance, and quipped, “Jesus was a carpenter.” She wore a shirt with that phrase on it during her Coachella performance earlier this year.
As a result of the incident, Brennan removed Gigantiello as the diocese’s vicar for development — a fundraising position he had held for years — and relieved him from “all administrative and financial oversight.”
Brennan also initiated what he called “a broader administrative review of compliance with Diocesan policies and procedures.”
What did investigators find?
The review was conducted by a management consulting firm, Alvarez & Marsal, and a law firm, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP. Church officials say it revealed a pattern of wrongdoing, including financial mismanagement, by Gigantiello.
Most concerningly to officials, between 2019 and 2021 Gigantiello transferred a total of $1.9 million in parish funds to bank accounts and two companies affiliated with the law firm of Frank Carone — a close advisor to Mayor Eric Adams who served as his first chief of staff in 2022 (and now runs a lobbying firm and has previously said he will chair Adams’ reelection campaign).
“These transfers took the form of three apparent loans made by the Parish to those Carone-affiliated entities,” Brennan said.
He said Gigantiello did not inform Diocesan officials or seek the required approval for the transfers, nor did he properly document the transfers or “obtain necessary details from Mr. Carone about the use of these funds.”
NPR has reached out to a spokesperson for Carone.
Brennan said Gigantiello first transferred $1 million to Carone’s law firm in 2019, and that the firm repaid that amount along with approximately 9% interest between June 2020 and June 2021. Gigantiello made two more transfers worth $900,000 in August and November 2021 to companies affiliated with Carone, apparently “pursuant to notes providing one-year repayment terms at agreed interest rates.”
But he requested early repayment of the principal amounts in February 2022 “without requiring the payment to the Parish of the substantial interest provided for under the notes.”
Gigantiello told The City that he had approached Carone to see “if there were any investments I could make” for the parish, adding that “the investments were made legally and the investments came back.”
Brennan said the unauthorized loans weren’t the only issue uncovered.
“In addition, the Diocese’s review has identified other instances in which Monsignor Gigantiello used and transferred Parish funds in violation of Diocesan policies and protocols,” he said. “He also used a church credit card for substantial personal expenses. Those transactions remain under investigation.”
Separately, he said, the diocese received evidence earlier this month from Gigantiello’s lawyers of “racist and other offensive comments” made by Dobbins, the deacon who had been serving as temporary administrator since Gigantiello’s demotion.
The evidence included recordings of conversations in the parish office at Gigantiello’s direction, without the deacon’s “knowledge or consent and, in some instances, without the knowledge or consent of the other party to the conversation.”
What does this have to do with the Adams indictment?
Adams was indicted on federal charges of bribery, fraud and soliciting a political contribution from a foreign national in late September, becoming the first sitting New York City mayor to be charged with a federal crime.
Despite the resignation of many top administration officials — and calls for Adams to do the same — the mayor, who has pleaded not guilty, said he doesn’t plan to step down.
Several media outlets — including NBC 4 New York,The City, the New York Daily News and the National Catholic Reporter — reported that Gigantiello’s church received a subpoena from federal investigators earlier this year requesting information about business dealings between Gigantiello and Carone, describing them as longtime friends.
The two accompanied Adams on his visit to Rome earlier this year, where he met the Pope, according to those outlets.
The diocese says it “is fully committed to cooperating with law enforcement in all investigations.” It did not respond to NPR’s question about the subpoena.
It’s not clear to what extent the “Feather” music video debacle may have put Gigantiello’s church on investigators’ radar.
But Carpenter joked about her alleged role in Adams’ indictment days after it happened, while her Short n’ Sweet tour was playing New York City’s Madison Square Garden.
“Damn, what now?” the singer said onstage. “Should we talk about how I got the mayor indicted, or … ?
Lifestyle
The L.A. Flower District is full of surprises. Here’s a DIY guide for newbies
• The Los Angeles Flower District features more than 70 vendors in two neighboring markets downtown — the Original Los Angeles Flower Market and the Southern California Flower Market.
• Combined, the two markets are a vast kaleidoscope of natural and unnatural (i.e. human-altered) blooms, such as perfect roses dyed black and Dodger blue.
• The savings can be significant over retail bouquets, but whether it’s a DIYer’s dream or nightmare depends on planning ahead — and being bold.
Flowers are ubiquitous in Southern California and so easy to procure, from the buckets of seasonal blooms at your local supermarket to the gaudy $5 bouquets hawked at many freeway off-ramps.
But there are times when off-the-rack arrangements just won’t cut it. You need serious flowers — distinctive, unusual and befitting a special occasion.
You could go to a florist or floral designer and pay them to do the honors. Or, like many enterprising DIYers, you could go to L.A.’s downtown Flower District, save some money and — gulp — do your flowers yourself.
That’s what Stanley Hudson was up to the morning before a dinner party he was hosting for 15 friends. At 9:30 a.m at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market, his arms were full of cone-shaped paper bundles, and he was making a final purchase of greenery to finish off his distinctive display.
Hudson is a costume designer — an “Emmy-nominated costume designer,” he noted gravely, with a twinkle in his eye, so he’s not one to do things halfway. This was a special dinner party with dear friends, and a supermarket bouquet wasn’t going to cut it.
So he made a quick, early-morning trip to the flower district and visited his favorite vendors at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market and across Wall Street at the Southern California Flower Market.
“I usually go with the smaller vendors who buy from the smaller farms, because they give you the better deal,” he said, browsing for filler greens at one of his favorites — Eliseo Valle’s stall #15 at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market — which specializes in locally grown greens and fillers, such as stems of dried, almost translucent pink bougainvillea flowers.
People whisked around Hudson pulling wagons piled high with blooms or balancing large bundles of bouquets on their shoulders. Several were making video calls, discussing the flowers available that day. In between the customers, vendors were constantly on the move, expertly moving buckets of flowers from nearby coolers onto the floor or stripping faded petals and leaves from new bunches of flowers.
The markets open around 4 a.m. for wholesale buyers and to the general public at 8 a.m. By 9 a.m., most shoppers are non-trade people, sporting the narrow stickers indicating they’ve paid their $2 admission fee (which allows access into both markets) to browse and buy.
Top left, Scabiosa stellata display their unique look. Top right, colorful gerberas on display. Lower, imported tulips burst with color at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market in Los Angeles.
Long Beach Realtors Loree Scarborough and Tessa Owen were holding several fat bundles of blue hydrangeas around 8:30 a.m. while considering long stems of orange ranunculus for a client appreciation event later that day. The bouquets they made would be gifts for their clients, Owen said. Her trick to making the arrangements was having a base centered on hydrangeas but being open to any special accent flowers that caught her eye.
“You have to be adventurous,” said Levi Snyder, a florist who dashed into the market around 9 a.m. to pick up more flowers for a last-minute order. As a professional flower seller, he appreciates his customers, “but our typical client is not adventurous,” he said. DIYers have an advantage if they want unique floral displays “because the big guys aren’t necessarily doing those kinds of arrangements … if you want to stand out and be an individual, don’t be afraid to be bold.”
Nearby, bride-to-be Emily Marriott was intent on saving money. She had four people in tow — her fiancé, David Cohen, along with her mom, sister and future sister-in-law — to help carry all the flowers she was purchasing for their small wedding at Pasadena City Hall the next day. Everyone in her group was laden with two or three cone-shaped bundles — a couple dozen each of ranunculus, sweet peas, lisianthus, Queen Anne’s lace, spray roses and large roses in ivory and white.
Marriott is a commercial interior designer who now lives in Portland, Ore., but grew up in Arcadia. As her group stood by juggling their parcels, I asked if she had any tips for people doing their own wedding flowers.
“Don’t,” blurted her mother, Rebecca Marriott, who laughed along with everyone else, but kept sneaking anxious peeks at her watch. The big event, after all, was less than 24 hours away.
But Emily had a plan. She’s been visiting the flower market for years, and had previously made arrangements for family events and bridal showers. She knew she wanted all-white bouquets. She’d already ordered her vases online, and she wasn’t willing to spend the thousands of dollars she’d been quoted to have someone else prepare all the flowers for the wedding and reception with 28 guests.
She did have someone else make her bridal bouquet, but despite the last-minute pressure, doing the other flowers herself “is just astronomically less [money],” she said. “You have to have a vision, at least, when you get here, but there’s a lot of inspiration on Pinterest that’s amazing. If you know how many bouquets or centerpieces you need, you just have to find enough blooms for each arrangement.”
They ended up spending about $550 to create the six large arrangements that would line the wedding aisle and were later moved to the reception dinner table, “but they only used about $350 worth of the flowers,” Sarah Marriott, Emily’s sister and maid of honor, reported the following week, after the wedding couple had left for their honeymoon. “We also made a flower crown and had a basket of petals for the flower girl, and we still had enough flowers left over that I was able to make four or five large arrangements” for friends and family.
Even though they bought more flowers than they used for the wedding, Sarah said the savings were considerable. “Emily was quoted $250 per arrangement [if a florist did the work]. She also said most florists had a $7,000 to $15,000 minimum, so it was challenging to even find a florist to take on a smaller wedding.”
Are you inspired yet? Maybe you’re planning a wedding, a large family gathering or just want to go all-out for the holidays. The Los Angeles Flower District is a great place to explore and get inspired, but advance footwork is crucial for success.
Visit at least twice
The six large floral arrangements that Emily Marriott made for her small wedding after shopping at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market the day before. She used the arrangements to line the aisle during the actual wedding and then decorate the table during the reception dinner that night. Marriott was quoted a price of $250 each for six arrangements from a florist; instead, she spent $550 on several dozen white ranunculus, sweet peas, lisianthus, Queen Anne’s lace, spray roses and large roses. (Sarah Mleynek Photography)
Here are some tips for navigating L.A.’s flower markets.
Consider the first visit an inspirational scouting trip. Marriott visited the market a month before her wedding to get ideas and find out what flowers would be available the day before her wedding. You don’t have to go that far in advance, but unless you’re a regular market visitor, make sure to tour both markets at least a day before you’re ready to buy, to discuss prices and availability with the vendors.
Browse the several shops at the market that sell everything you need for floral arrangements, from wreath frames to flower food (important for pre-soaking, see below) to vases, ribbons and bows. You may end up buying your vases at a thrift store or online, but wholesale accessory stores like Moskatels at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market and GM Floral Co., which covers the second floor of the Southern California Flower Market as well as a much smaller space at the original market, can provide inspiration too.
Vendor talk is vital
Don’t just assume the flowers that are there today will be available next week. If you see something you love, talk to the vendor to make sure they’ll have more the day you’re ready to purchase.
Make a plan
Armed with what you’ve learned, decide how many arrangements your event will need, create a budget and then decide on a color scheme and your main anchor flowers, such as giant mauve proteas, fluffy balls of hydrangeas or dependably lovely roses, which come fresh, dried or preserved — a process that keeps them pliable and long lasting — in a stunning array of colors.
Left, sliced log slabs make decorative plates and platters. Right, colorful displays at the Original Los Angeles Flower Market.
Figure out how many anchor flowers you’ll need, and roughly how many filler stems — such as greens, draping clusters of amaranth or smaller flowers like baby’s breath — are required to make each arrangement. Just be sure to leave a little room in your budget for magic; a bold flower you might have missed the first time can make your arrangement pop.
Go early
Admission is $2 for the general public (a.k.a. “non-trade” people), which gives you a sticker that provides entry into both markets. The hours are a little trickier.
Technically, trade people with wholesale badges can shop between 4 and 8 a.m. Monday through Saturday; the markets are open to the public from 8 a.m. to noon (except Saturdays when public entry starts at 6 a.m.), but even the vendors and ticket takers can’t seem to agree on whether you have to be a wholesaler with a badge to buy before 8 a.m.
Sonja Rei Strand, marketing director for the Original Los Angeles Flower Market, said it’s safest to follow the admission times on the website (which are different than the signs posted over the entrance). But one vendor told me, “If they pay their $2 to get in, they can buy whenever they want.” You have been warned.
Either way, make sure you get there at least by 8 a.m. because some vendors start loading up to close as early as 11 a.m., and time passes quickly when you’re in the thrall of flowers.
Bring help — and water
Both markets have their own parking structures and there are other parking lots around them, charging about $10 to $12, depending on the day. (Most only accept cash.) You’ll definitely get your steps in visiting these markets, so if you have to go alone, bring a wagon or cart to carry all your flowers, because even a couple of those paper-wrapped flower cones quickly get unwieldy as you’re walking around. And try to keep them upright, so they don’t get smooshed by the other bundles while you‘re making your rounds.
Also, bring buckets half full of water in your car, to keep the flowers hydrated during your drive home. And be sure to get those flowers home or into a cool place as soon as possible. Marriott had a bucket station in her sister’s basement, where she immediately put her flowers after getting home from the market.
Flower-arranging expert Linda Prendergast recommends pre-soaking by putting your freshly cut stems in warm (not hot) water for 12 to 24 hours before you start your arrangements, with Floral Life Crystal Clear flower food added to the water to keep them well hydrated and looking fresh. (You can also find Floral Life products at the wholesale accessory stores.)
Bring cash
Some vendors add an extra fee for credit card charges under $50; if you plan to spend many hundreds of dollars, a debit or credit card should be fine, but if you just want a smaller display for a dinner party, you can save yourself some dough by paying in cash. Ask your vendors about this when you’re scouting.
-
News1 week ago
Herbert Smith Freehills to merge with US-based law firm Kramer Levin
-
Business1 week ago
Column: OpenAI just scored a huge victory in a copyright case … or did it?
-
Health1 week ago
Bird flu leaves teen in critical condition after country's first reported case
-
Business4 days ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
World1 week ago
Sarah Palin, NY Times Have Explored Settlement, as Judge Sets Defamation Retrial
-
Politics3 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Science1 day ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Technology3 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI