“Deadpool & Wolverine” is the newest member of the billion-dollar club.
Disney’s Marvel sequel, starring Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman as their comic book alter egos, has grossed $494.3 million in North America and $535.1 million internationally for a grand total of $1.029 billion at the global box office. It’s the second release of 2024, following Disney’s Pixar smash “Inside Out 2” with $1.558 billion, to surpass the billion-dollar mark.
Beyonce’s pregnancy photoshoot in 2017 had about 11 million likes on Instagram, and Rihanna’s baby bump this made a lot of rounds around the internet. Every year pregnancy photoshoots are done. Here are some of the best our Nigerian celebrities have come up with so far. ADVERTISEMENT
Adesua Etomi Adesua posted beautiful pictures of herself glowing and pregnant. The picture was taken in a pink gown by Toju Foyeh.
Andrew Callaghan, the 27-year-old director and journalist known for his popular Channel 5 YouTube videos, is back with his most intimate project yet: “Dear Kelly.”
The documentary is Callaghan’s first major project since his directorial debut“This Place Rules,” which premiered on HBO in 2022.
February 1, 2017 12:50 PM EST
In an Instagram post that has accumulated nearly 80,000 likes, body positivity advocate and anorexia survivor Megan Jayne Crabbe shares how her life has changed for the better since she gained weight. The post shows two photos side-by-side, one taken two and a half years ago, when Crabbe was suffering from anorexia, and one taken recently. “I’ve gained my life back after so many years of believing that I wasn’t worthy of living it because of how my body looked,” she writes.
“The underlying sense of form in my work has been the system of the Universe, or part thereof.” On reading this pompous remark by Alexander Calder, the most internationally celebrated of all living American sculptors, one’s hopes rise. Make way for the cosmic perspective! In fact, as the Whitney Museum’s new retrospective of the work of this venerable figure testifies, his achievement is more modest and realistic. In the 200-odd works that make up “Calder’s Universe,” as the show is called, there is little of the real universe, but a pervasive flavor of its metaphors: orreries, planetary clockwork, automata.