Lifestyle
Lady Gaga Found Out About Alleged Bomb Plot From Media

Lady Gaga
Cops Didn’t Tell Me About Alleged Bomb Plot …
Found Out on News
Published
Lady Gaga knew nothing about the alleged bomb plot at her concert or even in the immediate aftermath … ’cause TMZ has learned cops didn’t say anything to her — she found out from the media!
A rep for the singer-songwriter tells TMZ … the whole team learned of the alleged threat from news reports that surfaced this morning — prior to and during the show, they didn’t hear anything from the police or other authorities regarding potential risks.
So, Gaga didn’t get the chance to choose not to perform — ’cause she was sent out there without any knowledge of what might happen.
Her team does acknowledge they worked closely with law enforcement during the planning and execution of the concert … and, they were always confident about the safety measures in place. Still, it’s pretty surprising police didn’t think to notify the star in charge of the whole shindig.
As we told you … Gaga’s record-breaking free concert in Rio de Janeiro drew more than 2 million people — and, cops say they disrupted a violent plot to detonate explosives at the show.
According to state police, two people — reportedly part of a radicalized group that promotes hate speech toward the LGBTQ+ community — were arrested on Sunday in connection to the alleged plan.
These people are accused of trying to encourage teenagers online to participate in violent acts using Molotov cocktails and homemade explosives. The suspects were arrested on charges of illegal weapons possession — and, cops say they kept their raids quiet in order to avoid a mass panic.

Lifestyle
DDG Reacts to Halle Bailey TRO … As Soulja Boy Threatens to Beat Him Down

DDG
Not Stressing About Halle Bailey Restraining Order
… But Soulja Boy Wants His Head!!!
Published
Halle Bailey was granted a restraining order against DDG after filing a laundry list of abusive allegations on Monday … but let the rapper/streamer tell it, he doesn’t have a care in the world!!!
i’m chillin btw.. i have no worries 😉 streaming later on, no days off!
— DDG (@PontiacMadeDDG) May 14, 2025
@PontiacMadeDDG
On Tuesday, DDG said he was “chilling” and vowed to still hop on his daily Twitch channel amid “The Little Mermaid” actress’ emergency filing.
We broke the story … Halle accused DDG of physically abusing her by chipping her tooth on a steering wheel during an altercation, breaking her Ring camera and even breaking into her phone and accusing her of cheating.
According to the suit, DDG also sent Halle antagonizing texts on Mother’s Day after social media posts implied she had jetted off with their son Halo for an island vacation with R&B star Brent Faiyaz.
DDG and Adin Ross’ reaction to finding out TMZ released information about Halle Bailey filing a restraining order against DDG pic.twitter.com/88DZ8dx7zR
— ryan 🤿 (@scubaryan_) May 13, 2025
@scubaryan_
After the news spread, DDG got plenty of support from online contemporaries such as DJ Akademiks, Adin Ross, Deshae Frost, and even DDG’s admitted foe Myron Gaines — but not Soulja Boy!!!
The “Crank Dat” rapper inexplicably threatened to beat down DDG when he catches him out in public for allegedly harming Halle.
Soulja Boy’s comments left the internet confused … considering he was just ordered to pay $4 million in damages for sexual battery and assault of his former assistant!!!
Lifestyle
How Pandora Is Surviving Trump’s Trade War

Pandora, the world’s largest jewelry company, is based in Denmark and has nearly 500 stores in the United States, more than in any of its other key markets. But in some ways, its real home is Thailand, where the company has been making its products for nearly four decades.
Like many global corporations, Pandora has used a continent-crossing supply chain to sell its goods worldwide at a low cost. But last month, that supply chain became a grave weakness when President Trump said he would impose 36 percent tariffs on goods entering the United States from Thailand, alongside steep tariffs on dozens of other countries.
After Mr. Trump unveiled his “reciprocal” tariffs, Pandora’s shares were among the worst performing in Europe. A week later, Mr. Trump postponed those tariffs until early July, offering a reprieve.
But the threat looms, and Alexander Lacik, the chief executive of Pandora, is not expecting the uncertainty that is paralyzing businesses to end. Unless tariffs return to previous levels, the next year will be turbulent, he said in an interview. For now, he added, there is little to do but wait to see how investors, customers and competitors react.
“With the information at hand today, I would be crazy to make big strategic decisions,” Mr. Lacik said.
Alongside business leaders all over the world, Mr. Lacik is grappling with how to respond to Mr. Trump’s unpredictable policies, which have generated almost maddening uncertainty. The Trump administration has started to show a willingness to lower tariffs, but his first agreements, with Britain and China, have posed more questions than answers, and tariffs are still higher than they were a couple of months ago.
Although some aspects of the trade war have been suspended, Pandora and other multinationals are in limbo, waiting for more agreements to be completed.
Pandora, best known for its silver charm bracelets, has been making jewelry in Thailand since 1989. Across three factories, thousands of people handcraft the products. The company is building a fourth plant in Vietnam, but Mr. Trump has threatened tariffs of 46 percent on Vietnamese goods.
Last year, the company sold 113 million pieces of jewelry, about three items every second, making it the largest jewelry brand by volume, with stores in more than 100 countries. A third of its sales, 9.7 billion Danish kroner, or $1.4 billion, were generated in the United States, and Mr. Lacik said he had no intention of moving away from the company’s most profitable market.
But prices will rise, he said, and who will bear the brunt of that is unclear.
“The big question is, am I going to pass on everything to the U.S. consumer, or am I going to peanut butter it out and raise the whole Pandora pricing globally?” Mr. Lacik said.
But Pandora keeps several months’ worth of stock, giving him time to see how other jewelers change their pricing and then decide.
A few things can be done immediately, such as streamlining parts of the supply chain. The day after the reciprocal tariffs were announced, Pandora said it would change its distribution so that products sold in Canada and Latin America would no longer move through the company’s distribution hub in Baltimore, a process that would take six to nine months to complete.
Moving production into the United States is not being considered, in part because of higher labor costs. Pandora employs nearly 15,000 craftspeople in Thailand and expects to hire 7,000 more in Vietnam.
In an earnings report last week, the company estimated the cost of the trade war. If higher tariffs on Thai imports, 36 percent, and Chinese imports, 145 percent, go back into effect, they will cost Pandora 500 million Danish kroner, or $74 million, this year, and then 900 million Danish kroner, $135 million, annually after that.
But the jeweler is not panicking. In fact, the economic curveballs are starting to feel normal, Mr. Lacik said. “We are battle ready,” he added.
When he joined the company as the chief executive in 2019, Pandora was struggling. Its share price had dropped more than 70 percent from its peak three years earlier. Mr. Lacik instituted a “complete overhaul,” he said, with new branding and store designs, an emphasis on its “affordable luxury” label, and a showcase of its complete jewelry line, not just charms.
That prepared the company for the trials that hit the global economy next. First, the Covid-19 pandemic, when 15,000 store employees were sent home and some factory workers slept on cots to keep production going. Then a surge in inflation risked customers pulling back.
Mr. Lacik’s strategy appeared to be working. In January, Pandora’s share price reached a record high. Since then, however, it has dropped more than 20 percent.
The company has managed to shield itself from some of the trade turmoil. After Mr. Trump raised tariffs on China during his first term, Pandora stopped sourcing all of its showroom furniture and display materials for its 3,000 stores from China.
“We had some readiness,” Mr. Lacik said, so they were not “caught completely with our pants down.”
Lifestyle
Dance with a K-pop star? Wrestle a luchador? Airbnb to offer 22,000 experiences

Airbnb wants to do your hair, cook your dinner, massage your back and possibly photograph your honeymoon. All these services, and several more, are part of a new bid by the company to further expand beyond its roots as a lodging broker.
The company unveiled Airbnb Services — which includes 10 initial categories — while relaunching its experiences program and introducing a new app design at a media event in Los Angeles on Tuesday. Rather than heavily emphasizing lodging, the redesigned app more strongly integrates all of its offerings and encourages more interaction among guests and hosts.
This new approach opens new possibilities for the company and its customers, who could order services and experiences from home or on the road. But this step depends on a lot of behind-the-scenes work. The new services menu — which went live Tuesday with 10,500 offerings — will be offered in 260 cities, and Airbnb vows to protect consumers by carefully vetting those legions of service providers.
Airbnb, born in 2007, grew to challenge the hotel industry and became a giant in the world of hospitality. It first launched its Airbnb Experiences program in 2016, serving as a matchmaker between travelers and people offering their services as specialized tour guides and teachers. But that effort sputtered.
By 2022, many critics on Reddit and elsewhere were complaining that Airbnb experiences were unreliable, and industry website Skift reported that Airbnb had stopped adding new experiences and reduced emphasis on them on its homepage. With this relaunch, company representatives said, Airbnb is aiming to focus more narrowly on distinctive experiences that have been more closely vetted. The company also said it would include more experiences focused on meeting or spending time with celebrities.
To start, Airbnb would offer about 22,000 experiences in 650 cities in 19 categories. To announce the new moves, Airbnb co-founder and Chief Executive Brian Chesky convened hundreds of influencers, podcasters and media in a special-event space in Boyle Heights.
“What if you could Airbnb more than a place to stay?” Chesky asked the audience. “Today we are changing travel again.”
For instance, Chesky said, “Now you can book a professional chef to come right to your home.” The same goes for photographers, personal trainers, massage and spa treatments, hair-styling, makeup and nails. Moreover, “you don’t need to stay at an Airbnb to book these services. You can book them in your own city.”
Chesky said he expects to add thousands of more services over the course of 2025.
In the case of Airbnb Experiences, “we’ve learned a lot about how to make them better,” said Chesky, tacitly acknowledging the feature’s uneven history. As before, the goal is to give travelers an experience that reaches beyond the usual photo-op spots and bus-tour stops.
Stressing small groups, specific themes, Chesky said the new experiences will fall into five categories: history and culture; food and drink; nature and outdoors; art and design; and fitness and wellness. He encouraged anyone who is an expert in their city and has something to share to apply to be a host. Airbnb representatives said the vetting process, which can take up to two weeks, includes online scrutiny of a host’s work history, licensing, education and any awards — along with ongoing attention to guest reviews.
The renewed program also includes about 1,000 Airbnb Originals — adventures in the company of “the world’s most interesting people.” As examples, Chesky cited a mezcal-tasting session in Mexico City with an expert, a class with a ramen master in Tokyo, a dance with a K-pop performer in Seoul and a visit to Notre Dame with an architect who worked on the cathedral’s restoration.
Those offerings feature at least a few celebrity options, which include spending a Sunday with Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, “learning to throw the perfect spiral” or an anime-intensive encounter called “Become an Otaku Hottie with Megan Thee Stallion.” Airbnb said those initial celebrity experiences are free, offered as a promotion, with guests chosen from applicants.
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