Lifestyle
'Hot Ones' Sean Evans' Ex Melissa Stratton's Pornhub Searches Surge After Split
Sean Evans‘ “Hot Ones” crown has been handed over to his ex-girlfriend Melissa Stratton … ’cause searches for the porn star have spiked like crazy following their short-lived romance.
Pornhub tells TMZ that while Melissa was dumped on Valentine’s Day, her popularity surged online … with those looking for some X-rated entertainment flocking to the adult entertainment site to check out her work.
In fact, the PH demand for Melissa was so high on Wednesday, her searches went up a staggering 1,217% compared to her daily average.
While Pornhub didn’t have final data for Melissa’s searches on Thursday, they’re predicting she did even better than V-Day … estimating a 1,350% increase compared to her daily average. Yup, that’s a helluva lot of views!!
TMZ broke the story … Melissa and Sean were dating and split less than 24 hours after their relationship hit headlines.
We’re told Sean wasn’t happy with all the media attention they were getting after going public … which shocked Melissa because he was fully aware of what she did for a living. It’s the kinda thing that comes up over dinner.
TMZ Studios
He also invited her to loads of Vegas events ahead of the Super Bowl and snapped many photos with her. Sources added that Melissa wasn’t happy with how things panned out because she thought they had a genuine spark.
We’re told Melissa’s sad about the split, and on Thursday she jabbed at Sean by sharing a clip of herself dancing alongside fellow porn star Johnny Sins … with the caption, “It’s ok. I’ve got a better bald man to get spicy with.”
Savage.
Lifestyle
Malala Yousafzai on ignoring advice and being willing to change her mind : Wild Card with Rachel Martin
A note from Wild Card host Rachel Martin: You know how famous actors or musicians will sometimes talk about how hard it is to lose their anonymity? They talk about how every detail of their lives is dissected and interpreted to fit someone else’s narrative. It’s the trade off for getting to do that kind of work, and they understand that devil’s bargain. But Malala Yousafzai never agreed to this deal.
Fame and notoriety was forced on Yousafzai after the Taliban shot her for talking publicly about why girls should be allowed at school. After the attack, she was put on a pedestal in front of the entire world.
Yousafzai was awarded the Nobel peace prize when she was just 17. She wasn’t just a survivor, she was a hero on the global stage. But when does a hero just get to be a human? Malala Yousafzai spoke with me about how she’s figuring that out. Her new memoir is called “Finding My Way.”
Lifestyle
Kendrick Perkins Defends Nico Harrison After Firing, Mavericks Were Never Healthy!
Kendrick Perkins
Defends Nico Harrison
Mavs Weren’t Healthy!!!
Published
TMZSports.com
Mavericks fans couldn’t wait for Nico Harrison to get kicked to the curb after he traded Luka Doncic to the Lakers … but NBA champ Kendrick Perkins still believes both sides won the infamous deal — telling TMZ Sports we’ll find out if/when Dallas gets healthy!!
Harrison was handed his pink slip on Tuesday … an inevitable move nine months after the franchise player was shipped to L.A. in exchange for Anthony Davis.
At the time, Perk said he loved the transaction for both sides … but Mavs backers weren’t buying it — and wanted Harrison gone ASAP.
Now that they got their wish, we checked in on Perk’s previous take while at LAX on Wednesday … and he’s not ready to admit defeat just yet.
“In fairness to Nico, he lost his job — he didn’t get a chance to see that team on the floor fully healthy. We still haven’t seen Kyrie Irving and AD touch the floor together in a Dallas Maverick uniform, which is unfortunate, but when you trade an international superstar, your room for error is very, very small. And that’s what ended up happening.”
Pair the Luka trade with the 3-8 start … and ownership was ready to pull the plug.
So when we asked if Harrison got the short end of the stick, Perkins made a hilarious comparison — watch the clip for that, ’cause words can’t do it justice.
As for what’s next for the now-former GM, Perk suggests Harrison take a bit of a break to get his peace of mind back … which isn’t a bad idea since “Fire Nico” chants are still probably ringing in his ears.
Lifestyle
Ken Burns’ ‘American Revolution’ will make you think differently about U.S. history
The Death of General Mercer at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777, by John Trumbull, ca. 1789-1831
Alamy Stock Photo/PBS
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Alamy Stock Photo/PBS
Documentary producer and director Ken Burns came to prominence 35 years ago with The Civil War, a massively popular multi-part nonfiction series on PBS. His latest effort is a six-part series called The American Revolution.
By focusing on the Revolutionary War, Burns is revisiting some very familiar territory. His long and impressive filmography includes a history of Congress, and biographies of Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin. He’s done deep dives into American military conflicts, including World War II and the Vietnam War.
Throughout his career, Burns has developed and perfected the tricks of his particular trade: the evocative use of music and quotations from speeches and correspondence; the use of actors to read the words of historical participants; the zooming in and out to reveal key details in period photos; and the painstaking attention to sound effects, from birds to bullets, to help bring those images to life.

All of that knowledge, and all of those gimmicks, are utilized in The American Revolution, an exceptional work about the founding of our country. It’s written by Geoffrey C. Ward, who wrote The Civil War and many other Burns documentaries, including the ones on Congress and Thomas Jefferson. And it’s co-directed by Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt, both of whom have worked with Burns for years.
But The American Revolution presents a challenge that even The Civil War did not. No photographs, period. To compensate, Burns and company use war re-enactors and place them in the actual historical locations.

On many — let’s say most — documentaries using a similar technique, the effect can be cheesy. But in The American Revolution, the directors avoid showing the faces of the actors re-enacting battle movements. Instead, parts of their bodies are shown in intense close-up: a bandaged hand here, a muddy boot there. Elsewhere, in an approach that borders on pure art, the directors use drones to capture the action from high, high above. It’s unusual — and beautiful.
Battles are the surprisingly dominant ingredient of this series. The American Revolution goes into more detail about individual battles than I ever learned in my own American history classes — but new and vintage maps, animated to show troop positions and movements, make it all very clear, and very vibrant. The actors quoting from the historical participants, and the historians interviewed to comment on the action, do the rest. Peter Coyote, the actor who has narrated many Burns documentaries, does so again here. He’s got a great voice for it, and leans into all the difficult place names, and people’s names, with confident authority.

In their various war documentaries, Burns and his team always have focused as much on the ground troops as on the generals — often much more so, telling their story from the bottom up, rather than the top down. The American Revolution does both: We hear important observations from George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, but also from Native Americans, revolutionary women, enslaved people and others not always given voice in such narratives.
In addition, the program’s historians make us think differently about the history we’re witnessing. In the colonies, those who were faithful to the crown were called Loyalists, and those against them called themselves Patriots. This series humanizes both sides, and also explains why some Native tribes, including the Shawnees, sided with the British in hopes of protecting their own lands.
The sheer number of the battles, and the details about them, attest to how hard our ancestors fought for the notion of a Federalist society. At the end, The American Revolution reminds us that the quest to maintain that society, and to strive to achieve a more perfect union, is far from over.
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