Kentucky
Katy Perry escapes Hollywood ‘bubble’ by living in Kentucky: ‘Hollywood is not America’
Katy Perry is having an “superb expertise” residing exterior the Hollywood “bubble.”
Perry, 37, opened up about shifting to Kentucky for the final month throughout an look on Chelsea Handler’s podcast, “Pricey Chelsea.”
“I’m like, residing in Kentucky, and I’ve for nearly a month now. And that’s fairly an incredible expertise. As a result of it reminds you that Hollywood is just not America,” Perry defined.
The “Final Friday Evening” singer emphasised that residing exterior Hollywood permits celebrities to know individuals higher.
“That you must do not forget that,” Perry added. “As a result of I feel you’ll be able to perceive individuals higher.”
“Yeah, proper. It’s good to get exterior of what you realize to be regular and your actuality,” Handler responded.
“Yeah, I imply they’re residing in a bubble of types. We’re residing in a bubble. Our bubbles are utterly reverse. However they’re — it’s fascinating,” Perry stated.
Handler famous that Perry grew up in a “tremendous non secular” household.
“You’ve been in several bubbles trigger you grew up in a bubble,” Handler added. “You grew up tremendous non secular, yeah, and that’s one bubble. Then you definately got here into this business, that’s one other bubble. Proper?”
“It’s an anthropology research of people,” Perry acknowledged.
Perry went on to speak about motherhood, calling it the “finest determination [she’s] ever made in [her] whole life.”
The “American Idol” choose welcomed daughter Daisy with husband Orlando Bloom in August 2020.
Get updates on this story at FOXNews.com.
Kentucky
Mark Pope says Kentucky's story is still being written — with good and bad chapters to come
There hasn’t been much to complain about since Mark Pope took over at Kentucky back in April. He’s been a PR gold mine since day one while stacking up roster, staff and recruiting wins in the months since, then picked up statement on-court victories vs. Duke, Gonzaga and Louisville in the non-conference schedule before the turn of the new year. If you were to give him a grade on his early coaching report card, anything besides a big ‘A’ would be crazy.
The Clemson loss was his first misstep, but you could find positives there, specifically with the team’s second-half run to even the rebounding battle — and nearly the game overall, the Wildcats cutting it to two in the final seconds. Then came the real black eye: Kentucky folding like a lawn chair in New York City, falling to Ohio State by 20 points in a game the Buckeyes controlled from what felt like the opening tip.
Pope said it was a performance that would force him to ‘lose a lot of sleep’ in the coming days, promising to ‘find answers’ and ‘learn how to function at a better level when were under this particular type of duress.’ How is he feeling about his group after returning to Lexington ahead of the holidays after some time off?
He’s excited, but frustrated. Or is he frustrated, but excited? Either way, those are the emotions he’s feeling after laying an egg in the Big Apple.
“I’m really excited. What a bad night, just devastating. It was just the worst, the worst ever,” he said during his call-in radio show. “To do it in that venue wearing this jersey, it’s devastating. … There’s nothing you can do with it but help dig in and help it make you better, right? And in long conversations with our guys and our staff and digging into the numbers, the nuts and bolts, it’s also exciting to grow and get better, and to move forward.”
When you stumble in that fashion, an opportunity to regroup presents itself, learning from mistakes in a way you wouldn’t have felt without getting punched in the mouth. Even the best teams hit those walls over the course of a great season.
He hopes that’s the case with this one.
“There are always moments where there are just galvanizing moments, right? The championship teams have those moments, for sure, whether they show up in practice or in a game, or wherever they show up because you overcame something exceptional in a moment — or you failed to do it,” Pope said. “There’s just a series of galvanizing moments, and what championship teams do is whatever they have as they go along, the story is still being written, right? That’s what you do throughout the course of the season.”
It’s their season loss on the year, and almost certainly won’t be their last. It’s an all-time SEC schedule ahead with as many as 13 teams on pace to make the NCAA Tournament. The league is going to eat itself alive going into postseason play.
How will the Wildcats respond? That’s all that matters right now — and down the road when those moments come.
“You keep writing and keep writing and keep writing,” he said. “This won’t be our last difficult moment that we have this season, for sure. The question is where does it take us.”
Kentucky
Mark Pope calls Kentucky’s loss to Ohio State “devastating” and “worst ever”
The Kentucky Wildcats are 10-2 on the young season and are coming off their worst performance of the Mark Pope era thus far.
Playing in the annual CBS Sports Classic, the Cats faced off against the Ohio State Buckeyes in a game many viewed as a likely win for UK in New York City.
No one told the Buckeyes that as they came out and dominated the Cats from the tip in Madison Square Garden, scoring a 20-point win.
On his Monday radio show, Coach Pope talked about the loss, and you can really tell how much he wanted to win this game for the BBN.
“What a bad night. Just devastating. It was just the worst, the worst ever. To do it in that venue wearing this jersey, it’s devastating.” Pope said.
The hope is that this loss will help Kentucky will learn from this performance and use it as fuel to ensure it doesn’t happen again.
“There’s nothing you can do with it but help dig in and help it make you better, right?” Pope stated. “And in long conversations with our guys and our staff and digging into the numbers, the nuts and bolts, it’s also exciting to grow and get better and to move forward.”
Once again, this is a message that just shows that Coach Pope gets what this program means to the Bluegrass State.
Now, the Cats will turn their attention to a matchup with Brown on New Year’s Eve as they look to get back into the win column before the gauntlet of the SEC begins.
Who does conference play start with? None other than a top-10 team in the Florida Gators coming to Rupp Arena.
Going to be an interesting few weeks to see how Kentucky responds.
Kentucky
Kentucky's Collin Chandler proposes during Wildcats' trip to New York
Kentucky’s Collin Chandler made it an even more memorable weekend for himself for the holidays in New York.
While in The Big Apple for the Wildcats’ game in the CBS Sports Classic against Ohio State, Chandler got down on a knee in Central Park and proposed.
Chandler is a freshman on the roster this season at UK. He has appeared in 10 games off of the bench and, in eight minutes a contest, is averaging 2.0 points, 0.7 rebounds, 0.7 steaks, and 0.4 assists per game while shooting 41.2% from the field and 25% from three. That includes six minutes played with an assist, a steal, and a pair of fouls against the Buckeyes.
This comes after Chandler, who originally committed to Mark Pope at BYU, followed him to Lexington. However, as the No. 35 recruit in the country and a four-star in 2022, he did not immediately come to college as he went on a two-year mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Sierra Leone as well as London. That makes him a 21-year-old freshman for them to continue to develop over his career there.
However, this, along with the other off-court plans, was all that went well for Kentucky in NYC. The Wildcats, coming in ranked fourth in the nation, were upset by Ohio State by a final score of 85-65. That one really got away from the Wildcats in the end, especially in the second half, in the 20-point margin as they shot just 29.8% from the field and 18.2% from three while the Buckeyes shot 56.6% overall.
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