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Regarding Her Friends’ Lack Of Representation, Lisa Kudrow Highlights Improvements That Creators Might Have Made

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Regarding Her Friends’ Lack Of Representation, Lisa Kudrow Highlights Improvements That Creators Might Have Made

The 59-year-old Emmy winner, who was chatting with The Every day Beast on what it will take to carry again the hit NBC sitcom, which aired for ten seasons from 1994 to 2004, lamented the absence of variety and inclusiveness on this system.

She asserted that if such a venture had been to ever be authorized by its authors, Marta Kauffman and David Crane, it will require a unique solid for actors of that age. “I imagine it must be extra up-to-date, and extra participation from different backgrounds isn’t a horrible concept,

The six lead casts of the present, who had been portrayed by Jennifer Aniston , Courteney Cox, David Schwimmer, Matthew Perry, and Matt LeBlanc, had been additionally all white, in accordance with Kudrow, who additionally supplied a cause for this.

She stated, “Properly, I felt prefer it was a program made by two Brandeis alumni who wrote about their lives after commencement. “And for packages particularly, you write what you already know when it may be a comedy that is character-driven.”

Kudrow continued, “They don’t have any proper to jot down tales about what it is wish to be an individual of coloration. The place was the coaching, I imagine, the key problem on the time?”

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The 65-year-old Kauffman has already acknowledged her worries concerning the shortage of variety on this system, saying on the 2020 ATX TV pageant that she “would’ve made very totally different judgments” if she had been creating the present now. She claimed that the all-white casting alternative “was positively not intentional” the earlier yr.

She most notably promised $4 million to Brandeis College’s African and African American Research division in June to handle the present’s lack of variety.

Within the final 20 years, I’ve discovered quite a bit, Kauffman informed the Los Angeles Instances. “Recognizing and acknowledging your duty is troublesome. Wanting within the mirror at oneself hurts. I remorse not having identified higher 25 years in the past.”

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‘Modern Love’ Podcast: Hank Azaria’s Advice for Overcoming Codependency

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‘Modern Love’ Podcast: Hank Azaria’s Advice for Overcoming Codependency

Hank Azaria is used to putting on other personalities. You probably know him best from his work as a voice actor on “The Simpsons,” where he plays Moe the bartender, Professor Frink, Chief Wiggum and Snake Jailbird, among many others. His list of credits in stage plays, movies and TV shows is prolific, including roles like his Tony-nominated performance in “Spamalot,” Phoebe’s boyfriend on “Friends” and the dog walker on “Mad About You.” But at a certain point in his life, Azaria realized that he was using humor and acting to be anyone but himself, and that it was affecting his real-life relationships. After five devastating heartbreaks, he resolved to look inward, address his codependency issues and become his most authentic self.

In this episode, Azaria tells us how he found authenticity and reads the Modern Love essay “In Defense of My Emu Tattoo,” about an author who masks his true self by using humor but eventually finds love by learning to be himself.

How to submit a Modern Love Essay to The New York Times

How to submit a Tiny Love Story

Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

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Links to transcripts of episodes generally appear on these pages within a week.


Modern Love is hosted by Anna Martin and produced by Reva Goldberg, Emily Lang, Davis Land and Amy Pearl. The show is edited by Jen Poyant, our executive producer. Production management is by Christina Djossa. The show is mixed by Sophia Lanman and recorded by Maddy Masiello and Nick Pitman. It features original music by Pat McCusker, Dan Powell, Aman Sahota, Rowan Niemisto and Diane Wong. Our theme music is by Dan Powell.

Special thanks to Larissa Anderson, Dahlia Haddad, Lisa Tobin, Brooke Minters, Daniel Jones, Miya Lee, Mahima Chablani, Nell Gallogly, Jeffrey Miranda, Isabella Anderson, Christine Nguyen, Reyna Desai, Jordan Cohen, Victoria Kim, Nina Lassam and Julia Simon.

Thoughts? Email us at modernlovepodcast@nytimes.com.

Want more from Modern Love? Read past stories. Watch the TV series and sign up for the newsletter. We also have swag at the NYT Store and two books, “Modern Love: True Stories of Love, Loss and Redemption” and “Tiny Love Stories: True Tales of Love in 100 Words or Less.”

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Nuccio’s Nurseries' famous camellias survived the Eaton fire. But with no water, what now?

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Nuccio’s Nurseries' famous camellias survived the Eaton fire. But with no water, what now?

After 90 years of breeding and selling rare camellias and azaleas to customers all over the world, Nuccio’s Nurseries in Altadena is expected to close by the end of 2025. But the ongoing Eaton fire and its ashy aftermath don’t appear to be offering the ending the nursery’s owners had in mind.

The Eaton fire swept into the Chaney Trail Road neighborhood sometime early on Jan. 8, leap-frogging some homes and gutting others. The nursery’s old family home burned to the ground, as did several wooden outbuildings. The small house was where Tom Nuccio, 77, who co-owns the nursery with his brother Jim, 75, lived.

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Tom Nuccio was in the hospital for non-life-threatening issues when the fire erupted. Their 92-year-old cousin Vicky, who also lived in the house, was safely evacuated.

Miraculously, the fire barely touched the area of the nursery where thousands of potted camellias and azaleas were ready for sale under a breezy wood-lathe framework covered by shade cloth.

A few of the plants near the burned structures were singed, and many in the nursery’s shade area were pushed over by wind gusts reportedly approaching 100 mph. But the nursery’s massive oak tree and many of its tall camellia trees appeared unscathed.

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Jim, left, and Tom Nuccio stand in front of ramshackle wood building and a profusely blooming camellia known as Dazzler.

In a December 2024, photo, Jim, left, and Tom Nuccio stand in front of one of the nursery’s ramshackle wood storage buildings and a profusely blooming deep pink camellia known as Dazzler, a variety developed by the Nuccio family. Neither the building nor the plant survived the fire.

(Jeanette Marantos / Los Angeles Times)

The problem now is water. The camellias and azaleas were last watered Jan. 7, and the hot dry Santa Ana winds suck moisture from even well-hydrated potted plants. Jim Nuccio figures that their plants, which are easily worth at least tens of thousands of dollars, can survive perhaps another week without water.

He’s been able to visit the nursery only twice since the fire began, once by sneaking along back roads Jan. 8 before officials curtailed access to the burned areas, and again for a short visit over the weekend.

During the latter visit, he was able to grab about 125 of the rarest varieties for two botanical gardens, Descanso Gardens in La Cañada Flintridge, which has one of the world’s most famous camellia collections, and the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in San Marino.

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“We wanted to do this anyway [donate their rarest camellias] because those gardens have been customers for years, and we thought, ‘There’s no better time then now while the plants are still alive.’ People won’t be able to buy them, but at least they’ll be able to see them.”

Donating the plants isn’t a big deal, he said, laughing: “We haven’t made money in 90 years, so why start now?”

Trees, shrubs and potted camellias and azaleas survived the Eaton fire unscathed.

Two days after the Eaton fire raged through Nuccio’s Nurseries in Altadena, the area is still smoking. Many trees, shrubs and almost all its potted camellias and azaleas survived unscathed.

(Jeanette Marantos / Los Angeles Times)

The nursery went up for sale in 2023, and it had a prospective buyer, Pasadena’s Polytechnic School. However, the school pulled out after months of community opposition to its plan to create an athletic complex on part of the property. The Nuccio family began talks in December with the Trust for Public Land, but the Eaton fire has put negotiations on hold.

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Jim Nuccio said he’s been inundated with calls from people wanting to help. A longtime customer in San Diego, Kathy Liu of Joey’s Wings Foundation, started a GoFundMe page for the nursery with a goal of $18,000 to help cover expenses.

The Nuccio brothers “are the kindest people I know of,” Liu wrote on the GoFundMe page, adding that her foundation has been working with the nursery for six years to sell camellias as a fundraiser in the Bay Area and in San Deigo.

“The last fundraiser with the nursery was just last month in December, 2024,” Liu wrote. “We sold over 1,000 pots of camellias in [the] Bay Area and San Diego. The brothers drove two trucks of camellias all the way from Altadena to the San Francisco Bay Area and they refused to let us pay for any cost, including the camellias.”

Tom Nuccio walks under a towering oak tree and a row of tall planted camellias.

Tom Nuccio walks under a towering oak tree and a row of tall planted camellias in 2023. The nursery’s trees and potted plants around them escaped damage in the Eaton fire.

(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

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Jim Nuccio brushed that praise aside. He and his brother are grateful for the fundraising, he said, but there are others in Altadena with far greater needs. (Jim Nuccio’s home in Altadena was spared; he and his wife, Judith, have been evacuated since the fire began.)

For now, the Nuccio brothers are hoping that they’ll get a chance to wind down the nursery on their own terms, but that will require getting water to their thirsty plants very soon.

“A few of our azaleas are already starting to wilt, but most of the camellias are fine under the shade cloth, at least for now,” Jim Nuccio said. “I’m cautiously optimistic we’ll get a chance to reopen. Hopefully, they’ll get our reservoirs replenished.” And, he said, he’d heard reports of possible rain later in the month.

Then he trailed off suddenly and sighed. “But I’m not banking on any of that.”

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Neil Gaiman has responded to sexual misconduct allegations

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Neil Gaiman has responded to sexual misconduct allegations

Neil Gaiman attends the 73rd National Book Awards in November 2022 in New York City.

Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images


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Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

Neil Gaiman, one of today’s most influential and commercially successful novelists, has been accused by multiple women of sexual misconduct. The author has denied the allegations. This is what you should know.

  • Gaiman’s books include the graphic novel The Sandman, the children’s novella Coraline and a novel he co-wrote with Terry Pratchett, Good Omens. The British author has won prestigious literary honors, including multiple Hugo, Locus and Nebula awards and the John Newbery Medal. His works have inspired movie and TV adaptations. Time magazine included him in its list of the 100 Most Influential People of 2023.
  • The sexual misconduct accusations, stretching back decades, first became public in the summer of 2024 in a six-episode series from Tortoise Media called The Master: The Allegations Against Neil Gaiman. In the podcast, five women accused the writer of unwanted sexual behavior, some of it alleged to be violent in nature. Gaiman denied the accusations. No charges have been filed. The podcast included interviews with the women, plus what it said were WhatsApp messages and phone call recordings between Gaiman and two of his accusers. In one conversation, Gaiman allegedly says he “obviously f*** up” and offers to pay an accuser, who goes by the name “Claire,” $60,000 to cover the cost of her therapy. NPR has not been able to independently verify the recordings because “Claire’s” identity is not public.
  • More women have now accused Gaiman of sexual misconduct in a New York Magazine cover story published Monday. Some of the alleged behaviors include violent sexual assault and sexual misconduct that occurred while his young son was in the room. Gaiman has denied this. Gaiman’s accusers are adults, but much younger than the author, 64, including one who is nearly 40 years his junior.
  • Gaiman responded to the allegations on Tuesday in a lengthy post on his website. Gaiman wrote that he watched the news of the allegations “with horror and dismay”: “As I read through this latest collection of accounts, there are moments I half-recognise and moments I don’t, descriptions of things that happened sitting beside things that emphatically did not happen. I’m far from a perfect person, but I have never engaged in non-consensual sexual activity with anyone. Ever.” He also denied “there was any abuse.”
  • Recent fallout has included the suspension of screen adaptations of Gaiman’s works. Deadline reported that Amazon will end production of Good Omens with a 90-minute final episode to be produced this year, instead of a full third season. “Gaiman contributed to the writing of the series finale but will not be working on the production and his production company the Blank Corporation is no longer involved,” Deadline said. Disney paused an adaptation of The Graveyard Book.
  • Trade magazine The Bookseller reported that Gaiman hired the crisis management firm Edendale Strategies and lawyer Andrew Brettler, who has represented Danny Masterson and Prince Andrew. Neither party has responded to NPR’s request for comment.

Jennifer Vanasco edited this story. Beth Novey produced the web build.

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