New Photo - George Clooney Says at 64 He Reflects on 'Everything' in His Life: 'Looking Forward Is Harder' (Exclusive)

George Clooney Says at 64 He Reflects on 'Everything' in His Life: 'Looking Forward Is Harder' (Exclusive)

<p>-

  • George Clooney Says at 64 He Reflects on 'Everything' in His Life: 'Looking Forward Is Harder' (Exclusive)</p>

<p>Jack Smart, Scott HuverOctober 25, 2025 at 2:39 AM</p>

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<p>Maya Dehlin Spach/WireImage</p>

<p>George Clooney at AFI Fest on Oct. 23 -</p>

<p>George Clooney leads Noah Baumbach's movie Jay Kelly, which premiered at Los Angeles' AFI Fest on Oct. 23</p>

<p>The actor tells PEOPLE that at age 64, he looks "back at everything, because the looking forward is harder"</p>

<p>Clooney's longtime friends ground him, he says: "They're always around when things and people are giving you too much credit"</p>

<p>George Clooney is in a reflective mood.</p>

<p>"I'm 64, so you look back at everything," says the actor-filmmaker at the Thursday, Oct. 23 AFI Fest premiere of his new movie Jay Kelly. "Because the looking forward," he adds, "is harder."</p>

<p>The year he's turned 64 has been a big one for Clooney, who made his Tony-nominated Broadway debut in hit play Good Night, and Good Luck in the spring, produced documentary Surviving Ohio State and celebrated his 11th wedding anniversary with wife Amal in September. He now leads Jay Kelly, from writer-director Noah Baumbach and co-writer Emily Mortimer, in theaters Nov. 14 and on Netflix Dec. 5.</p>

<p>Peter Mountain/Netflix</p>

<p>(Left-right:) Laura Dern, George Clooney and Adam Sandler in 'Jay Kelly'</p>

<p>"I'm in a pretty comfortable place in life," Clooney shares with PEOPLE at AFI Fest, where he appeared alongside costars Adam Sandler, Laura Dern and Riley Keough. "I like what I do for a living, I have great friends, I spend time with people that I love, and I've been able and lucky enough late in life to be able to spend time with my family."</p>

<p>He adds thoughtfully, "So, I'm not really looking back that much."</p>

<p>— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.</p>

<p>Rodin Eckenroth/Getty</p>

<p>(Left-right:) Noah Baumbach, George Clooney and Adam Sandler at AFI Fest on Oct. 23</p>

<p>In Jay Kelly's titular role, the Oscar winner does plenty of looking back during an impulsive train trip from France to Italy. The movie's tagline speaks to the character's soul-searching: "Everybody knows Jay Kelly, but Jay Kelly doesn't know himself."</p>

<p>For Clooney, it's his longtime friends that remind him who he is. "I slept on their couch when I was broke," he tells PEOPLE of his inner circle, some of which he's known for 40 years. "They're always around when things and people are giving you too much credit. They're the first people to remind you that they're full of crap."</p>

<p>He concludes, "It's helpful to have people that know you long before you were defined by something else, by movies you've done or work you've done and that kind of thing."</p>

<p>Jay Kelly is in theaters Nov. 14 and on Netflix Dec. 5.</p>

<p>on People</p>

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George Clooney Says at 64 He Reflects on 'Everything' in His Life: 'Looking Forward Is Harder' (Exclusive)

<p>- George Clooney Says at 64 He Reflects on 'Everything' in His Life: 'Looking Forward Is Harder...
New Photo - Review: 'Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere'

Review: 'Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere'

<p>-

  • Review: 'Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere'</p>

<p>Stephanie ZacharekOctober 25, 2025 at 2:40 AM</p>

<p>0</p>

<p>Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen Credit - Courtesy of 20th Century Studios</p>

<p>It can't be easy to make a movie about the creation of a whispery, shivery work of art like Bruce Springsteen's 1982 Nebraska, an album whose title track was inspired by the real-life late-1950s killing spree of 19-year-old Charlie Starkweather and his 14-year-old girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate. Nor can it be easy to make a movie about an artist suffering from depression, as Springsteen was when he made the album. How do you present overwhelming feelings of despair, or the sense of just feeling wholly lost, on a movie screen in a dynamic way? Maybe that's why Scott Cooper's Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere—starring Jeremy Allen White—feels a little ghostly itself, a movie half-inhabited by a strain of melancholy you can't quite find the word for.</p>

<p>The picture opens as Bruce is riding high, perhaps a little too high for a working-class Freehold, New Jersey kid who bought his first guitar after seeing the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. His 1975 album Born to Run had ignited a run of hits that made him a bigger star, faster, than he'd bargained for, and by 1981, as he was wrapping up his tour in support of 1980's double album The River, he'd become bewildered and worn down by his own fame, feeling isolated from the ordinary folk he'd grown up with and written songs about. He retreated to a small rental house in Colt's Neck, N.J., to figure out his next steps and write a few songs, which he laid down on a four-track recorder, a lo-fi experiment intended as a demo.</p>

<p>This is the territory Deliver Me from Nowhere covers, and if it sounds like lore—well, by this point, Springsteen's story feels more like lore than reality. (The movie's source material is Warren Zanes' 2023 book of the same name.) One of the picture's most admirable qualities is that we never really see Bruce falling apart. There's no major crackup, no rock-bottom reckoning. White simply plays Bruce as a man adrift, a rock'n'roll astronaut cut loose from his space module. He looks washed out, a little zonked, nothing like the guy we see in the movie's most exhilarating scene, an early one, giving his usual all to a massive concert audience, flanked by his usual compatriots the E Street Band.</p>

<p>Courtesy of 20th Century Studios" data-src=https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/St_Z.1VSF_FxSFZGUInC5A--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTEyNDI7aD03Mzk-/https://media.zenfs.com/en/aol_time_773/7df5646be5eaf976bd5fed34509b1139>Courtesy of 20th Century Studios" src=https://ift.tt/Vhfj9XE class=caas-img>Jeremy Allen White as Bruce SpringsteenCourtesy of 20th Century Studios</p>

<p>We see White showing up at that little Colt's Neck house, a way of retreating not just from his recent past, but maybe even from his future. He unwinds, and keeps his mojo working, by occasionally ducking into his old stomping ground, the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, trying to remain as anonymous impossible. He takes a fancy to a young single mom, Faye (Odessa Young), and begins courting her, though it seems that young Bruce is not at this point a particularly good bet in the boyfriend department. He charms Faye by using his executive privilege as a rock star to gain entrance to Asbury Park after-hours; he watches as she rides the merry-go-round. But just when she starts to believe he might stick around for a while, he's gotta be on his way. I love you, baby, but I just can't stay, and all that.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, he's first making and later defending that weird, unearthly demo. The songs arise from the all time he's spent alone, reading Flannery O'Connor and catching Terence Malick's Badlands (another imagining of the Starkweather-Fugate saga) on TV. We see him flopped in the bedroom of that rental house, dressed in his plaid-flannel-shirt uniform as he strums his guitar, the sunlight streaming in just so as it tries to bestow its usual blessing. Later, he'll record the songs with his band, at New York's legendary Power Station. But he's unhappy with what he hears. He wants the demo released as it is, which at first befuddles his manager and close friend Jon Landau (played, with turtleneck courtliness, by Jeremy Strong), while Columbia executive Al Teller (David Krumholtz, welcome wherever and whenever he shows up) sweats proverbial bullets. Landau understands and supports not just Bruce's vision but Bruce himself, which is how Nebraska, so bleak and bewitching, eventually emerges into the world.</p>

<p>Cooper intersperses black-and-white flashbacks throughout: we get glimpses of Bruce as a kid with sugar-bowl-handle ears (played, with plaintive charm, by Matthew Pellicano Jr.) being terrorized by his depressive father, Douglas (Stephen Graham), a recurring childhood trauma he'll have to reckon with. Cooper—director of pictures like Crazy Heart, Hostiles, and most recently The Pale Blue Eye—makes sure the proceedings are always restrained and respectful. You can believe this is really how it all went down, particularly in a scene where Bruce finally talks to Landau about the depth of his suffering: "I don't think I can outrun this anymore," he says, revealing in a blunt tumble of words everything he's not-so-successfully been trying to hide.</p>

<p>Courtesy of 20th Century Studios" data-src=https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/ZGE4ErW8knCYOInXLlkzZA--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTEyNDI7aD03MTQ-/https://media.zenfs.com/en/aol_time_773/450e8dea20ae5f4a5ea9f2bea019858c>Courtesy of 20th Century Studios" src=https://ift.tt/WAi6T3I class=caas-img>Jeremy Strong as Jon LandauCourtesy of 20th Century Studios</p>

<p>White is quietly effective as Bruce, having perfected the singer's trademark honeycomb rasp. It's not just that White has figured out how to sing like Springsteen, or even that he's somehow able to channel his youthful, sweaty charisma. It's that he's clicked into Springsteen's ability to surprise and delight himself. He can be singing a song he's performed maybe 100 times, or even 1000—and suddenly he'll come to a line and laugh a little, with his eyes open wide, as if he's just unlocked a secret along with the audience.</p>

<p>Springsteen is one of the great live performers of the modern era, and White, in that early performance sequence, captures his electricity. But the rest of the time, his Bruce is just a reluctant rock'n'roll star trying desperately to be a regular guy, laying down a bunch of low-key tunes in his rented bedroom. In real life, Springsteen's insistence on scaling back—with Landau's support—may have saved his life, or at least his sanity. Deliver Me from Nowhere sketches out that idea without aggressively underlining it; for that reason, it often feels less than dynamic, perhaps a little inert. But then, sometimes it's what a movie doesn't show that matters. We all think we know the truth of Bruce Springsteen. Doesn't he belong to us, after all? Deliver Me from Nowhere shows us another truth, the sound of a ghost captured on a length of tape.</p>

<p>Contact us at [email protected].</p>

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Review: 'Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere'

<p>- Review: 'Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere'</p> <p>Stephanie ZacharekOctober ...
New Photo - This week on

This week on

<p>-

  • This week on "Sunday Morning" (Oct. 26)</p>

<p>David MorganOctober 25, 2025 at 3:54 AM</p>

<p>0</p>

<p>The Emmy Award-winning "CBS News Sunday Morning" is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. "Sunday Morning" also streams on the CBS News app beginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)</p>

<p>Hosted by Jane Pauley</p>

<p>COVER STORY: Phobias - How to overcome your worst misguided fearsAn estimated 33 million American adults will struggle at some point with a phobia – an intense fear of something that poses little or no threat, from flying to cockroaches to a trip to the dentist. Susan Spencer talks with experts about the lengths people will go to in order to overcome their fears.</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>Psychologist Luana Marques (Official site)Dr. Louis Siegelman (Official site)Jill Coleman, associate dean, College of Sciences and Humanities, Ball State University</p>

<p>ALMANAC: October 26"Sunday Morning" looks back at historical events on this date.</p>

<p>NATURE: Tarantulas: Why you shouldn't be afraidWe know very little about the brown tarantula (Aphonopelma hentzi), whose habitat stretches from Louisiana to Texas and Colorado. But the first question arachnid expert Cara Shillington asks is, why are we afraid of tarantulas? She talks with Jonathan Vigliotti, who also visits Colorado's La Junta Tarantula Fest, an annual celebration of the eight-legged creature that draws thousands to see thousands of brown tarantulas wandering the Comanche National Grassland in a haphazard, often halting hunt for a mate.</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>La Junta Tarantula Fest, La Junta, Colo. Cara Shillington, professor, Department of Biology, Eastern Michigan UniversityComanche National Grassland, Pueblo, Colo.</p>

<p>HALLOWEEN: By the Numbers</p>

<p>POLITICS: Gavin NewsomRobert Costa reports.</p>

<p>PREVIEW: Newsom on Trump's "laughable" National Guard suggestion: "Nothing happening" in San FranciscoIn a "CBS Sunday Morning" interview to air Oct. 26, the California governor dismisses the president's proposal to send National Guard troops to San Francisco, and says that he would sue to block any such attempt.</p>

<p>PASSAGE: In memoriam"Sunday Morning" remembers some of the notable figures who left us this week.</p>

<p>Ford Motor Company CEO Jim Farley. / Credit: CBS News</p>

<p>BUSINESS: CEO Jim Farley on steering Ford through Trump's tariffsDespite building more than 80 percent of its American-sold vehicles in the U.S. – the highest share of any Detroit automaker – Ford Motor Company still imports many parts, which have been hit hard by tariffs. Ford CEO Jim Farley discusses with Kris Van Cleave why he says President Trump's tariffs, which have cost Ford $2 billion, are jeopardizing the company's investments in America – and may give an advantage to their competitors. He also explains why he drives a Chinese-made electric vehicle.</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>ford.com</p>

<p>THESE UNITED STATES: The White HouseSince our second president, John Adams, inhabited the White House, it has been burned by British troops, reconstructed, expanded, and gut-renovated. Mo Rocca looks at the history of a cherished American landmark, which this past week was partly demolished by the White House's current occupant, President Trump, who is building a huge, privately-funded ballroom.</p>

<p>FROM THE ARCHIVES: When the British burned the White House (Video)Mo Rocca goes back in time to one of the most devastating days in U.S. history.</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>White House Historical Association</p>

<p>Singer Kenny Chesney. / Credit: CBS News</p>

<p>BOOKS: The true, authentic Kenny ChesneyHe's earned country music's Entertainer of the Year Award eight times. But Kenny Chesney's latest work is a book, "Heart Life Music," in which he describes his life's journey, from Knoxville, Tenn., to No Shoes Nation and beyond. Chesney sits down with Lee Cowan in the Florida Keys, where the country superstar is just another laid-back local, to talk about family, touring, and how he recovered from a 2009 concert which he describes as "hitting a wall."</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>"Heart Life Music" by Kenny Chesney with Holly Gleason (‎William Morrow), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available Nov. 4 via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.orgkennychesney.com</p>

<p>Nicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, on the run. / Credit: CBS News</p>

<p>SPORTS: CEO Nicholas Thompson on how running helped him find his footingNicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, is known as a tech journalist, public speaker, author – and world-class competitive long-distance runner. He talks with Tony Dokoupil about how his father inspired him to take up running, how he faced a cancer diagnosis, and why he's passing on his athletic passion to his children. He also discusses his new book, "The Running Ground" – part memoir, part call to the runner in all of us.</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>"The Running Ground: A Father, a Son, and the Simplest of Sports" by Nicholas Thompson (Random House), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available October 28 via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.orgnickthompson.com</p>

<p>MOVIES: Guillermo del Toro on "Frankenstein" and remaking a monsterOscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro is adding his spin to one of the most-filmed horror stories – the mythic tale of a scientist creating a man from body parts – with his latest, "Frankenstein." He talks with Seth Doane about his lifelong fascination with horror, why Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was his first crush, and how "in reality we're all weird in some way." Doane also talks with Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi, who play Victor Frankenstein and his creature.</p>

<p>To watch a trailer for "Frankenstein" click on the video player below.</p>

<p>For more info:</p>

<p>"Frankenstein" is now playing in theaters, and streams on Netflix beginning November 7Guillermo del Toro on Instagram</p>

<p>HARTMAN: TBD</p>

<p>NATURE: TBD</p>

<p>WEB EXCLUSIVES:</p>

<p>FROM THE ARCHIVES: Ballet star Misty Copeland (YouTube Video)Ballerina Misty Copeland, who became the first Black female principal dancer in the history of the American Ballet Theatre in New York ten years ago, performed for the last time on the ballet stage on Wed., Oct. 22, 2025. In this Dec. 14, 2014 profile, Anthony Mason visited with the breakthrough star who'd joined ABT's corps de ballet in 2001, and she described how change is coming slowly to the world of classical dance.</p>

<p>WEB EXTRA: Historian Jill Lepore on the metaphor of America as a family (YouTube Video)Historian Jill Lepore, author of "We the People: A History of the U.S. Constitution," talks with Tony Dokoupil about competing histories of America; polarization; and dissent as an act of patriotism.</p>

<p>The Emmy Award-winning "CBS News Sunday Morning" is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Executive producer is Rand Morrison.</p>

<p>"Sunday Morning": About us</p>

<p>DVR Alert! Find out when "Sunday Morning" airs in your city</p>

<p>"Sunday Morning" also streams on the CBS News app beginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)</p>

<p>Full episodes of "Sunday Morning" are now available to watch on demand on CBSNews.com, CBS.com and Paramount+, including via Apple TV, Android TV, Roku, Chromecast, Amazon FireTV/FireTV stick and Xbox.</p>

<p>Follow us on Twitter/X; Facebook; Instagram; YouTube; TikTok; Bluesky; and at cbssundaymorning.com.</p>

<p>You can also download the free "Sunday Morning" audio podcast at iTunes and at Play.it. Now you'll never miss the trumpet!</p>

<p>Do you have sun art you wish to share with us? Email your suns to [email protected].</p>

<p>Dozens charged in connection with illegal betting cases, FBI and DOJ announces</p>

<p>White House takes questions about Trump's East Wing demolition for ballroom</p>

<p>Soybean farmer says aid announced by Trump falls short as losses mount from trade war</p>

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This week on "Sunday Morning" (Oct. 26)

<p>- This week on "Sunday Morning" (Oct. 26)</p> <p>David MorganOctober 25, 2025 at...
New Photo - Cara Delevingne Avoids Major Wardrobe Malfunction at the Academy Gala After Ripping the Back of Her Couture Dress

Cara Delevingne Avoids Major Wardrobe Malfunction at the Academy Gala After Ripping the Back of Her Couture Dress

<p>-

  • Cara Delevingne Avoids Major Wardrobe Malfunction at the Academy Gala After Ripping the Back of Her Couture Dress</p>

<p>Michelle LeeOctober 25, 2025 at 2:40 AM</p>

<p>0</p>

<p>Emma McIntyre/Oscars/Getty; Cara Delevingne/Instagram</p>

<p>Cara Delevingne at the 2025 Academy Museum Gala on Oct. 18, 2025 -</p>

<p>Cara Delevingne revealed she had a major wardrobe malfunction with her Academy Museum Gala look before walking the red carpet</p>

<p>The model shared a video of her stylist addressing a tear in her Tamara Ralph Couture gown</p>

<p>Delevingne recently appeared in Paris Fashion Week and made style statements at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival and Golden Globes earlier this year</p>

<p>Cara Delevingne had a haute conundrum with her haute couture ahead of the 2025 Academy Museum Gala.</p>

<p>On Saturday, Oct. 18, the British model and actress made a dazzling appearance at the starry event dressed in a Tamara Ralph Couture gown, which she just revealed was saved from a major wardrobe malfunction in the nick of time.</p>

<p>In an Instagram carousel posted on Thursday, Oct. 23, the American Horror Story: Delicate star, 33, shared a candid video of stylist John Mumblo assessing the large rip along the back of her fancy bejeweled gown near her butt cheek.</p>

<p>Cara Delevingne/Instagram</p>

<p>The tear in Cara Delevingne's dress</p>

<p>In the clip, Delevingne also stood barefoot on the street while the polish on her toenails dried. "Gala dump! Scroll through to reveal the truth behind the glitz and glamour" she captioned the post which also featured red carpet shots of her floral-inspired look in all its glory.</p>

<p>Although the tear was remedied, the fix-up can be seen in professional photos taken of Delevingne at the event.</p>

<p>Delevingne seemingly got over the blunder pretty quickly and mingled inside with Jenna Ortega, Mikey Madison, Joey King and Kaia Gerber, Tessa Thompson, Rachel Senott and Charli xcx.</p>

<p>Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty</p>

<p>The back of Cara Delevingne's dress showing the mended tear</p>

<p>— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.</p>

<p>Recently, the L'Oréal Paris spokesperson has been jet-setting around the world fulfilling her stylish obligations.</p>

<p>In May, she made multiple outfit changes at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival and commented on the event's dress code banning "voluminous outfits" and "nudity" in an exclusive interview with PEOPLE. "I did hear about [the new dress code], but I don't even think I understand it," she joked.</p>

<p>Earlier this year, Delevingne also made quite the splash at the Golden Globes, where she and her date, Anya Taylor-Joy, accidentally served Mira Sorvino and Lisa Kudrow in Romy and Michele's High School Reunion with their coordinating gowns. "It was a lucky mistake," she told Variety on the red carpet.</p>

<p>on People</p>

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Cara Delevingne Avoids Major Wardrobe Malfunction at the Academy Gala After Ripping the Back of Her Couture Dress

<p>- Cara Delevingne Avoids Major Wardrobe Malfunction at the Academy Gala After Ripping the Back of Her Coutur...

Keith Urban Didn't Reveal Nicole Kidman Split on

<p>-

  • Keith Urban Didn't Reveal Nicole Kidman Split on "The Road "Set, Says Contestant: He 'Pushed Personal Stuff Aside'</p>

<p>Ilana KaplanOctober 25, 2025 at 2:42 AM</p>

<p>0</p>

<p>Taylor Hill/WireImage</p>

<p>Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban attend the CMA Awards in November 2023 in Nashville -</p>

<p>A contestant on The Road has spoken out about working with Keith Urban on the show</p>

<p>Billie Jo Jones told the Daily Mail that the "Someone Like You" hitmaker didn't reveal his split from Nicole Kidman</p>

<p>Kidman and Urban separated in September after 19 years of marriage</p>

<p>A contestant from The Road has spoken out about working with Keith Urban amid his split from Nicole Kidman.</p>

<p>On Friday, Oct. 24, Billie Jo Jones told the Daily Mail that while appearing on the reality show, which follows 12 country musicians as they hit the road with Urban, 57, she had no idea what was going on in his personal life.</p>

<p>"You wouldn't even know that he was going through anything because he definitely pushed personal stuff aside and was business professional the entire time, which is what a true artist should be and should be doing," she told the outlet.</p>

<p>Taylor Hill/WireImage</p>

<p>Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman at the CMA Awards in May 2025 in Frisco, Texas</p>

<p>While Jones, 34, didn't comment further on his split from the Big Little Lies actress, 58, she called working with the New Zealand-born musician "a dream come true."</p>

<p>"He is one of those people that really wants the best for you and really pushes you to be your best self," she told the Daily Mail.</p>

<p>Urban opened up about what it was like being away from his family, which includes two daughters he shares with Kidman, Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret, who are now 17 and 14, during the series premiere of The Road on Sunday, Oct. 19.</p>

<p>Urban said it was "a calling" for him to be on tour.</p>

<p>"You're going to do it or you're not going to make it," he said.</p>

<p>Urban added: "When you wake up on a tour bus at 3:30 a.m. and you're sick as a dog, you're in the middle of nowhere and you've got to play your fifth show later that night, and you haven't slept, and you miss your friends, and you're missing your family, and you're completely lonely and miserable and sick — and you say to yourself, 'Why am I doing this?' The only answer can be: Because this is what I'm born to do."</p>

<p>Jones told Urban she had a similar experience of being away from her family for "around 125 to 140 shows a year."</p>

<p>"It's something that you've got to want it more than anything in the world to put yourself through it because it is hard," she said, adding: "It's time away from home, away from my kiddos, but it's definitely worth it in the end because I know God didn't give me this voice to just sit at home with — he gave it to me to go and share with others."</p>

<p>"It's definitely a lot of hard work, a lot of determination, but it is so rewarding in the end," Jones concluded.</p>

<p>PEOPLE confirmed on Sept. 29 that Urban and Kidman separated over the summer.</p>

<p>The Babygirl star filed for divorce on Sept. 30 after 19 years of marriage and cited irreconcilable differences and listed the former couple's date of separation as the time of filing.</p>

<p>As a part of the divorce filing, Kidman requested that she be primary residential parent in the custody agreement.</p>

<p>A source told PEOPLE that the Practical Magic 2 star "has a great attitude and feels very grateful for her life."</p>

<p>on People</p>

<a href="https://data852.click/5a32cd58501e613bf372/ee0a75caf0/?placementName=default" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

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Keith Urban Didn't Reveal Nicole Kidman Split on “The Road ”Set, Says Contestant: He 'Pushed Personal Stuff Aside'

<p>- Keith Urban Didn't Reveal Nicole Kidman Split on "The Road "Set, Says Contestant: He 'Pu...
New Photo - Google's Fancy NYC Office Is Crawling With Bedbugs Right Now (Yikes!)

Google's Fancy NYC Office Is Crawling With Bedbugs Right Now (Yikes!)

<p>-

  • Google's Fancy NYC Office Is Crawling With Bedbugs Right Now (Yikes!)</p>

<p>Edward ClarkOctober 25, 2025 at 12:49 AM</p>

<p>0</p>

<p>At Google's $2.1 billion Chelsea campus in New York City, employees showed up to find their offices temporarily closed. The reason wasn't a tech glitch or security scare—it was bedbugs. The infestation forced the company to pause work at one of its most high-profile buildings and drew plenty of attention for all the wrong reasons.</p>

<p>How It All Started</p>

<p>Image via Getty Images/Group4 Studio</p>

<p>On Sunday, October 19, 2025, employees got an email. The company's environmental, health, and safety team had hired exterminators and a sniffer dog that found "credible evidence" of bedbugs in the Chelsea campus buildings. Employees were ordered to stay home while the treatment went on. Google also inspected its other New York sites to ensure they were safe. Surprisingly, this is not Google's first run-in with bedbugs in Manhattan. In 2010, their 9th Avenue offices were part of a bigger city-wide outbreak.</p>

<p>Bedbugs don't care about glass walls or chic furniture. They hitch rides on luggage, clothes, or even through walls. This is also happening at an awkward moment: Many companies are bringing people back into offices more post-2020 pandemic, including Google, which scaled back its "Work From Anywhere" policy in 2025. So, this bedbug scare hits at a tricky moment.</p>

<p>Big City, Big Problem</p>

<p>Image via Getty Images/roman_slavik</p>

<p>New York City is no stranger to bedbugs. In fact, the city once ranked near the top in the United States cities for infestations. That being said, there's some good news: a recent report by pest control company Orkin shows NYC dropped from second worst to 15th worst for bedbug problems. Still, it doesn't make corporate campuses immune. Facing these critters in an office environment creates business headaches. Thankfully, Google's swift campus lockdown shows they take that seriously.</p>

<p>It Can Happen to Any Organization</p>

<p>Even gold-plated corporate campuses are vulnerable. For companies bringing staff back, this case is a reminder: you've got the design, the perks, the bean-bags, but you must also ensure that basics like pest-control protocols are up to date. If you skip them, the story goes viral. In this case, it's the tech giant's turn to deal with bugs.</p>

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New Photo - White House says October inflation data unlikely to be released next month

White House says October inflation data unlikely to be released next month

<p>-

  • White House says October inflation data unlikely to be released next month</p>

<p>By Doina Chiacu and Lucia MutikaniOctober 25, 2025 at 1:00 AM</p>

<p>0</p>

<p>A woman shops for fruit in a store in New York City, U.S., February 12, 2025. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid</p>

<p>By Doina Chiacu and Lucia Mutikani</p>

<p>WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The White House said on Friday it had learned there likely will not be a release of inflation data next month due to the U.S. government shutdown, which could leave a gap in a data series stretching back more than a century.</p>

<p>An impasse between Republicans and Democrats in Congress has resulted in a widespread federal government shutdown, now in its 24th day, and has halted the publication of most data about the U.S. economy.</p>

<p>"Because surveyors cannot deploy to the field, the White House has learned there will likely NOT be an inflation release next month for the first time in history," the White House said in a statement.</p>

<p>The White House did not elaborate. The Bureau of Labor Statistics repeated earlier statements that apart from the recall of some staff to generate the Consumer Price Index for September, which was released earlier on Friday, all data collection and publishing activities have ceased for as long as the shutdown lasts.</p>

<p>About 700,000 federal workers have been furloughed while nearly as many are working without pay, which could force households to defer spending. Many are set to miss their first full paycheck on Friday.</p>

<p>The government's CPI report for September was published on Friday in order to help the Social Security Administration calculate its 2026 cost-of-living adjustment for millions of retirees and other benefits recipients. It was initially due on October 15.</p>

<p>During the December 2018-January 2019 government shutdown, the longest on record, the BLS remained functional, allowing many key reports to still be generated. Some economic data from other agencies, such as the Commerce Department, was delayed.</p>

<p>Analysts and former policymakers have become increasingly worried that the wider nature of the current shutdown will result in a bigger impact on surveillance of the economy. While some had suggested an imputed report could be published based on limited data arriving at BLS even with no staff, others conceded it was likely that the report for October would be missed altogether.</p>

<p>"I think it's almost inevitable now ... ordinarily BLS would have been out there collecting the data for October since the first of October," said Erica Groshen, a former BLS commissioner. "It's possible they'll be able to scrape something together, but that would be difficult, particularly when they're understaffed, and they would have to redesign a lot of their systems to accommodate the lack of data."</p>

<p>"Maybe they'll figure out a way, but I think it's very unlikely that we will get any inflation data for October," Groshen said.</p>

<p>Some economists would prefer that BLS accept a lapse in the series than try to produce one with an even greater share of imputed data than seen recently.</p>

<p>Because the data is typically collected on a rolling basis throughout the month, "it would be a very imperfect CPI if they put it out," said Steven Englander, global head of G10 FX research at Standard Chartered, who has been critical of the quality of BLS data for some time. "In some ways it might be better if they didn't."</p>

<p>"Yes we'll miss a month's CPI data and November might be messed up too, at least partially," he said, depending on when the government shutdown ends and regular data collection can be restarted. But Englander added that U.S. economic data - though widely seen as the gold standard - actually has plenty of flaws already. A delay or gap in the data, particularly when there is no financial or economic crisis underway, is not catastrophic, he said. "It's inconvenient, but it's not the end of the world."</p>

<p>(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Lucia Mutikani in Washington; additional reportiong by Ann Saphir in San Francisco; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Paul Simao)</p>

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White House says October inflation data unlikely to be released next month

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