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Charly Clive on ‘Rooster,’ Steve Carell and Newfound Fame

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Charly Clive isn’t quite saying goodbye to those London comedy gigs just yet.

“There’s no world in which Rooster, even though it’s like the biggest job I’ve had, guarantees anything for me,” the 33-year-old muses to The Hollywood Reporter. “But there is absolute stability in some grotty basement or attic above a pub and 40 people on a Wednesday night coming to have a laugh. Comedy is always going to be a sticking point,” she adds, “because everything else is so by chance.”

We’re catching up over smoothies in Clive’s native London, where she’s lived since 2016, after around five years spent at the whim of New York City’s vibrant comedy scene. It might surprise some audiences to know the magnificently charming Clive — currently starring as Katie Russo, daughter of Steve Carell‘s Greg, whose yo-yo relationship with her (kind of) husband Phil Dunster provides the HBO series with some irresistible chemistry — is a Brit.

Well, half a Brit. That impeccable U.S. accent is partly owing to her Mexican-American mother, a fact she believes has aided her seamless transition into an endearing East Coast college professor. It’s also been helped by a childhood spent worshipping American comedians — “Steve Martin is my North Star, but my compass is Steve Carell,” she’d later tell me — and fooling the conductors at her local Oxfordshire train station. “When I was a teenager, I would put on an American accent constantly to get out of buying a train ticket,” says Clive. She effortlessly slides into a twang not unlike Russo’s: “‘I’m so sorry. Oh my god, I literally don’t know how to do that!’” That knack for accents has come in very handy for lots of schemes, she adds.

The schemes that have brought her to the front and center of HBO are teeming with vim and variation. Toward the end of her stint in New York (she’d moved to attend the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and, thanks to that U.S. passport, was able to stay in the city), Clive fell unwell. She was diagnosed with a benign tumor on her pituitary gland and had to move back to England. “I was like, ‘Well, that’s it for me,’” she says. “‘I guess I’m just a girl that got sick, and that’s sort of the most defining thing about me now.’”

When her best friend, Ellen Robertson — who you might recognize from recent Netflix hit Vladimir — suggested she make a comedy show out of her diagnosis, off they went to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival with a routine called Britney in tow, named after Clive’s tumor, which in turn was named after pop icon Britney Spears. “My career started from there, and so did hers,” Clive says. They’d gig at comedy clubs around London and still do so once or twice a week if they’re both in the city.

Then came what Clive thought was to be her big break: Pure, a 2019 Channel 4 series in which she starred as 24-year-old OCD sufferer Marnie, who is plagued by some pretty disturbing, intrusive sexual thoughts. The role came after a long period of consecutive rejections. “My feedback was always like, ‘We’ve got five other people that look like you,’” Clive recalls. “I get it, I’ve got brown hair, but I also felt like I can do some cool stuff, actually, if someone would give me a chance. But I don’t feel like in those five-minute [or] half an hour meetings, anyone really gives you — particularly as a woman — a chance to be funny.”

While nanny-ing at the time for a family in Brooklyn, she was championed by a casting director she’d love THR to shout-out, Jane Ripley, and landed the lead part. But even with the witty, bold analysis of mental health and sexuality that Clive expertly executed in Pure — and another flawless accent, this time Scottish — it wasn’t picked up for a second season. “It was Channel 4 being complete cowards,” she says, reflecting on that call six years ago. “I think the reason was something quite bullshitty, like, ‘There’s just not really the space for it. We can’t deliver drama or comedy,’ and ‘Women’s mental health feels a bit difficult right now’ or something. It was something really, really crappy.” People still reach out to Clive to tell her how much the show helped them through their own OCD battles.

For the actress-writer-comedienne, it was a bit of a shock to the system. “I think people warn you a lot that you’re going to hear ‘No,’ but they don’t warn you that you’re going to hear ‘No’ after something that breakout of a role,” she says about Pure. “I do think it’s ultimately been a really good thing for me, because I’ve built a life that doesn’t rely on my acting career. And thank god, because it’d be a really weird life if I was just acting. These jobs come so few and far between. But after the second year of not really getting any work after Pure, people started asking me if I was still an actor. And I said, ‘No, I’m a writer.’”

The Rooster process started in October 2024. Clive was asked to submit a tape. “It was called Untitled Steve Carell project,” she remembers. “And then I read it was [created by] Bill Lawrence and Matt Tarses and I was like, ‘Fuck! I wish I didn’t know!’ Because you couldn’t plan a better list of people to work with. I’m a comedy person, so I was raised by these men, basically.”

Steve Carell, Charly Clive in ‘Rooster.’

Katrina Marcinowski/HBO

Up until this point, Clive had made peace with frequenting London’s comedy clubs and grotty basements. She dug deep and reminded herself of her comedy heroes. “Listen, it took a while for Steve Martin. It took a while for Steve Carell. If it takes a while for the Steves,” she tells THR, “maybe it takes a while for the Charlys. That’s okay with me.”

It wasn’t long after that first tape that she was doing a chemistry read with one of those Steves. “He, funnily enough, reminds me a little bit of my dad, which does help,” she says. “He was so calm, kind and quieter than I thought he would be. He asked me a few questions, really engaged with me as a person before we started. He’s such an easy, generous laugher. And when you make Steve Carell laugh, it’s just an extraordinary high that I will chase for the rest of my life.”

She didn’t confess her adoration for him until far later in the Rooster timeline, when they were on set together. But it was at a Vampire Weekend concert, at Brixton’s O2 Academy at the end of 2024, when Clive found out she’d landed the role. “I ran in, sort of like an emperor in ancient Rome, my friends looked at me worried, and I was, like, ‘Thumbs up, baby!’” Clive remembers. “We all went fucking nuts and I got absolutely, joyfully hammered.”

Lawrence had been warning Clive that she was a slightly hard sell. “Because nobody knows who I am, it felt like a risk, maybe, considering how stacked the cast is.” But he kept telling her: “‘We’re gonna do it. We’re gonna get you across the board.’” Everyone, including Carell, was in her corner. Even though the caliber of people auditioning was really high, Clive adds. Does she know who else read for Katie? “No, I never want to, because I know it would be women I’m obsessed with,” she says. “My Katie’s different to anyone else’s, and I’m glad that I got to do it, but there’s a parallel universe where somebody else is doing it, and it’s still my favorite show.”

The campus-set comedy follows Carell, an author whose famous character-led Rooster books have made him a popular figure at the fictional Ludlow College. He takes on a small faculty role to keep an eye on Katie, whose tumultuous personal life is unfortunately pretty wrapped up in her professional one. Also boasting Danielle Deadwyler, Lauren Tsai, Annie Mumolo, Rory Sovel, Alan Ruck, Connie Britton, and John C. McGinley, the show’s already been renewed for a season two after having become the network’s most-watched comedy premiere in over 10 years.

When asked what Rooster is about, Clive says she thinks it’s a lesson that the college experience never really ends. “You’re always trying to prove yourself to somebody, and it turns out the person you need to prove yourself to — and the person that loves you most — is yourself. From a personal point of view, I think the father-daughter relationship, that being the beating heart, really resonates with me. I’m close with my father, Steve is really close with his daughter, Annie, who’s heavenly — a huge compliment that I get to be compared to her. I think we see some really amazing stories of father and daughter against the odds, battling great demons, or going through huge loss,” she says, citing The Last of Us as an example of all of those extremities. “I don’t really think we see two people having a laugh and being like, ‘That’s who you are.’ It’s nice to see a show where a daughter is realizing that her dad is a person and not just the guy responsible for her well-being.”

That chemistry with Carell was pretty immediate. Clive takes various moments over the course of our interview to gush over the comedy legend, evidently still in awe of his talent, generosity, and humility. She is still in disbelief that she was sharing scenes with him on the Warner Bros. lot, and that he was nervous on their first day: “We’re both a bit shy, I think, or more introverted than maybe people would expect comedy people to be.” That first month of shooting was admittedly an emotional experience for her — Clive was going up against a little bit of the age-old imposter syndrome — and one particular scene left her feeling frustrated.

Carell noticed. He quietly told her: “‘I know you already know this, but just so you know, this is your show. It’s my show. It’s Phil’s show. It’s everybody’s, but it’s your show too. And if there’s anything you ever want to try and you want me to sort of get on board with it, if you need to run lines a bit more, if you want to meet up before and talk through the scene…’” Clive remembers. “He was like, ‘The best thing we can do here is have as much fun as possible, because that’s what’s got to translate in the show. Everyone wants to do a great job, but just remember that this is your show.’ And I was like, wiping away the tears, like, ‘Thank you.’” The interaction provided Clive with a critical confidence boost.

And then, of course, there’s her scenes with fellow countryman Phil Dunster, alum of Lawrence’s Ted Lasso. Early on, we find out his character Archie, a Russian history professor at the liberal arts school, has left Katie for Tsai’s graduate student Sunny, who has also wound up pregnant with his child. But Archie and Katie, still very much in love, are sleeping together again. The season finale, airing Sunday, will give audiences some much-needed closure on the love triangle.

Thankfully, Clive could really let loose around Dunster. The Brits were bouncing off one another the whole shoot, tapping into what she described as a “bantery, brother-sister chemistry.” So much so that Clive worried Lawrence and Tarses were not “gonna find what they needed to” between them. (Spoiler: They found it in abundance.) “I’m so glad, because Phil has become a really good friend, and we live really near each other in London, and we’re already planning that we want to try and be neighbors for season two [when the cast are back in L.A.]. And I don’t drive, and he does. I need a ride to work!”

Charly Clive, Phil Dunster in ‘Rooster.’

Katrina Marcinowski/HBO

On the status of their relationship, THR ponders how much Archie gets away with when it comes to Katie because he’s so handsome. Should she not just leave him in the dust? “He’s gorgeous,” Clive agrees, “and because he’s English in America, and that accent — let me tell you— it goes a long-ass way. Particularly in men because of Hugh Grant. He started it, he ruined it,” she jokes.

“I think you must make a bunch of really clever decisions to find the person that you’re supposed to be with,” she adds about Katie and Archie. “I think falling in love is deeply problematic. We should absolutely outlaw that phrase. But Katie fell in love with Archie. And so she’s recovering from a fall. You are going to backslide sometimes. And I think that my hope is that in season two, we get to see what that recovery looks a bit more like.” She hopes to develop Sunny and Katie’s relationship further, too, — “I would love there to be a caretaking or some sort of support [there]. Selfishly, because I love Lauren and I’d love to hang out with her more.”

“She has always seen herself as a girl next door, plain Jane, desperate to get out of her mother’s shadow,” continues Clive about Katie Russo. “And this man shining a light on her is huge. And we’re not taught as women, particularly, to prioritize the women in your life enough. If she’d gone and found a great group of girlfriends, they would have had sex a couple times, and then she would have been like, ‘That was fun, but he sucks.’ She wouldn’t have married him!”

And so it was with great relief that Clive learned Rooster is returning for a second season. She also has plans for total world domination alongside her bestie of 20 years, Robertson (the pair have just signed with WME), and will next be seen opposite Taron Egerton in Jonathan Schey’s Everybody Wants to Fuck Me, but was still swiftly humbled when she received the news. “On the Thursday, we got the news about the second season and I was like, ‘Here we go, baby, business class flights to Hollywood!’ And then on the Friday,” she adds, “I performed comedy to nine people.”

“I’ll never stop,” she says. She and Robertson are due back at the Fringe this August, and Clive hopes to wrangle her Rooster season two schedule around it. The specifics of Lawrence and Tarses’s next Rooster script remain unknown, but one thing’s for sure: Charly Clive — whether she knows it or not — has finally emerged a fully-fledged star.

Rooster is available to stream on HBO Max.

Bitcoin Due One More Dip Before BTC Price Uptrend Continues, Traders Agree

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Bitcoin Due One More Dip Before BTC Price Uptrend Continues, Traders Agree


Bitcoin (BTC) eyed $81,000 into Sunday’s weekly close as traders saw a fresh support retest next.

Key points:

  • Bitcoin preserves $80,000 over the weekend, but traders are waiting for a dip to retest a familiar chart feature.
  • Continuation higher remains the overall consensus for what happens afterward.
  • US CPI data is due out, with Bitcoin already “pricing in” the result.

Bitcoin traders: Sub-$80,000 retest next

Data from TradingView showed BTC price action trending higher after a mostly flat weekend, avoiding a return below $80,000.

BTC/USD one-hour chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

After a midweek trip to near $83,000 failed to hold, however, traders saw the need for BTC/USD to retest support — something that they now reiterated.

Of particular interest was the bull market support band — two moving averages just below the $80,000 mark.

“On the low-timeframes, after rejecting at the high-timeframe resistance range marked in purple, I believe the most likely outcome is a short-term pullback toward the 2D Bull Market Support Band, which has been a strong reversal zone over the last couple of months,” analytics account Cryptic Trades wrote alongside a chart in its latest post on X.

“As long as price continues to hold above the support band and the broader high-timeframe support range marked in blue around $75K, which aligns with the April 2025 bottoming formation, I believe the most likely outcome remains further upside.”

BTC/USD one-day chart. Source: Cryptic Trades/X

Trader Daan Crypto Trades agreed, calling the initial move above the support band “not a clean break.”

“Would want to see a move to at least clear that sticky area around the low $80Ks and hold there for a week or two,” he told X followers.

BTC/USD one-week chart. Source: Daan Crypto Trades/X

CPI already “priced in” to BTC

Ahead of fresh US inflation data next week, trader Killa warned of headwinds returning for BTC price strength.

Related: Bitcoin Bollinger Bands push key breakout as creator acts on positive signal

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for April, due out on Tuesday, was set to show the ongoing impact of the US-Iran war and oil-price rises on the economy.

“Its priced in,” Killa wrote on X.

“BTC has rallied after the last two CPI releases. However,  if we follow 2025 CPI price action, we may see bigger players start de-risking into the event counter narrative.”

BTC/USD chart with CPI releases. Source: Killa/X

Support levels to watch also included the area around the bull market support band, with $74,000 on the radar, should it fail.

“I would watch for liquidity sweeps around this pivot to signal the next move,” Killa added.

‘Degree of complacency’: are supply chains prepared for impact of ongoing Iran war? | Supply chain crisis

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The biggest energy shock in modern history, fuel shortages “within weeks”, a global recession – economic warnings have become increasingly dire since Iran throttled shipping flows through the Strait of Hormuz in late February.

But ten weeks after the first American-Israeli attacks, stock indices, companies and governments were surprisingly optimistic. With each passing day, the divergence between the eerie silence in the markets and the alarming warnings of an impending supply chain crisis grows.

It is true that some countries have taken significant steps to curb rising fossil fuel prices. Many in Asia, dependent on Gulf oil, are urging citizens to take energy conservation measures – or in some cases even resorting to outright rationing.

But in Europe the reaction has been more muted: motorists are feeling the strain of higher petrol and diesel costs and central banks have warned they could raise interest rates to curb inflation, but broader supply chains appear to be holding up.

Investors seized on any positive news: US stocks in particular were buoyed by the AI ​​boom, even as the conflict raged. European markets were less exuberant – but not crashing.

Stockpiles have cushioned the economic impact on businesses and people around the world, but the stranglehold on Hormuz remains, even as the latest back-and-forth between Donald Trump and Tehran this week renewed hopes of a breakthrough.

The longer the waterway remains closed, the more emergency supplies of oil and other essential goods will be depleted, negatively impacting the entire economy. Even if the canal were to fully reopen tomorrow, it could take months for supply chains to return to normal.

More and more companies have to reckon with the fact that vital inputs will become scarce. Some executives and analysts worry that such reports of disruption and shortages could be just a taste of what’s to come.

‘complacency’

Just over a week after the war began, U.S.-listed automaker Lucid Motors was confident that its plans to make electric vehicles in Saudi Arabia would not be affected. Last week it warned that the conflict had “disrupted the supply of materials critical to our manufacturing processes” and that “significant price increases for our raw materials or components” were expected.

U.S. automaker Lucid Motors said the conflict had “interrupted the supply of materials critical to our manufacturing process.” Photo: Around the World Photos/Alamy

Lucid is doing particularly badly because of its operations in Saudi Arabia, but other automakers are “playing with fire” and hoping the situation resolves itself, an industry executive said, adding: “There is a certain level of complacency. How long this will last is unclear.”

Others are more optimistic. Walter Mertl, chief financial officer of German automaker BMW, said on Wednesday that the Iran war had had only a “limited” impact. “We believe it is temporary and we will find a solution soon,” he told investors.

Shock absorber

Based on the experience of the coronavirus pandemic, which has caused a temporary halt in global trade, companies may be better prepared than they were a decade ago.

Since then, many companies have tried to map different levels of their supply chains. But the question of when shortages will occur is incredibly complicated – to the point that many of the world’s largest companies may still not know where they are most at risk.

“Many companies don’t have good enough supply chain visibility at Tier 3 or Tier 4 levels, and that could lead to complacency,” said a person involved in mapping key mineral dependencies for major manufacturers.

At some point supplies of materials, parts and fuel must run out.

JP Morgan commodities analyst Natasha Kaneva warned in a note last week that oil inventories had acted as a “shock absorber” for the global economy. However, it could reach “operational stress levels” across the OECD group of developed countries as early as next month.

In addition to oil and gas, experts also warn of rising prices and supply shortages of fertilizers, metals like aluminum and several chemicals crucial to modern manufacturing.

Aluminum is one of the materials that could be negatively affected by rising prices and supply shortages. Photo: Angelika Warmuth/Reuters

Material supply problems could become “really serious” towards the end of May, when shortages of some parts begin and lead to production halts, the automotive industry’s chief executive said. “Nobody has pressed the panic button yet,” but “people are fleeing wherever they can.”

Inflation on the rise

Tim Figures, a trade expert at Boston Consulting Group, said European consumers are likely to face higher prices even if they don’t face outright shortages.

“All of these things are global commodities and as supply decreases, the price increases. So while we are not seeing supply disruptions in Europe in the same way that we might have seen in Asia, we have of course seen price impacts because you have to pay more to secure scarce supplies from elsewhere,” he said.

According to the figures, the decline in some commodities could long outlast the reopening of Hormuz. “For chemicals broadly, it will take months for things to get back to normal, but that is mostly about shipping.

“For metals such as aluminum where there has been infrastructure damage, it will take longer to restore full capacity as this damage will need to be repaired.”

Steve Elliott, chief executive of the Chemical Industries Association, said the British lobby group’s members were not yet reporting product shortages because Asian rivals were hit hardest. But there is a “slow rise” in higher prices for solvents, caustic soda, ammonia, methanol and ethylene – chemicals whose uses range from metal treatment to the production of plastic packaging.

“Ultimately this just leads to inflation,” Elliott said. “If this continues, it will lead to a decline in demand and a recession” for the sector.

Economists stress that the impact of higher prices and potential shortages will be much greater in some countries than others, depending on how heavily they rely on oil and gas imports and how weak their economies were in the run-up to the war.

“The impact will be inflationary across the global economy, but the knock-on effects on growth will vary significantly across countries,” said Dhaval Joshi, chief strategist at consultancy BCA Research. “Right now the U.S. is doing well, so it’s pretty difficult to see a global recession.” However, he added: “Even in the US there are winners and losers: the less affluent consumers are being hurt, while shale is obvious.” [oil and gas] The producers are doing very well.”

Political consequences

Given the uncertainty about possible outcomes, communicating the extent of the looming crisis represents a daunting challenge for politicians wary of encouraging consumers to panic buy.

In the UK, the government’s message focused on placing blame squarely on the Trump administration for starting the conflict without an exit strategy, rather than warning consumers of the consequences to come.

But the Prime Minister’s chief secretary Darren Jones recently suggested the price effects would still be felt eight months from now – while Keir Starmer warned fuel shortages could force holidaymakers to change their summer plans.

Keir Starmer warned that fuel shortages could force British holidaymakers to adjust their summer plans. Photo: Yui Mok/PA

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to say more about how she plans to protect some households from rising electricity bills ahead of winter, around the time the next quarterly cap on domestic energy bills is announced at the end of May, due to come into force in July.

Still, governments will not be able to prevent consumers from feeling the effects of war. Neil Shearing, chief economist at consultancy Capital Economics, said that if the strait reopens soon in Europe, “we can expect a period of stagnation this year and then a recovery.” “It will feel pretty bleak, but it won’t be a recession,” he added.

But if the conflict proves to be prolonged, Shearing warns, “we’ll get to the point where things start to become non-linear” – to the point where factories are no longer able to continue operating and there are shortages.

Charles Melton, Billie Eilish, Beyoncé

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May started off hot as all the stars headed south to enjoy what Miami had to offer while the F1 Grand Prix was in town. Attention quickly turned to New York City, where the Met Gala took place on the first Monday in May. Co-chaired by Beyoncé, Nicole Kidman, Venus Williams and Anna Wintour, the night served up some of the year’s most iconic moments in fashion thus far — as expected.

From the Cannes Film Festival to AAPI celebrations in honor of the heritage month and a slew of FYC Emmy events, Variety is your one-stop shop for May 2026’s best celeb photos.

Which Pulled the Most Money Last Week?

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Spot Bitcoin ETFs Net Flows. Source: SoSoValue



The leader was quite obvious but let’s break down the numbers.

Crypto prices marked gains over the past week, including a multi-month high for the market leader, and some of the reasons are the return of demand for spot ETFs tracking their performance.

Here are the precise numbers from last week: the big gainers and those who didn’t see any action.

BTC ETFs: The Winner

The first and largest crypto ETFs were the undisputed leaders in terms of attracting funds last week, despite the rough ending. The financial vehicles saw net inflows of $532 million on Monday, $467 million on Tuesday, and $46 million on Wednesday when the asset peaked at almost $83,000.

Its price momentum began to fade at the end of the business week, coinciding with substantial net outflows of $277 million on Thursday and $146 million on Friday. Nevertheless, the total weekly inflow stood at an impressive $622.75 million, up from the previous week’s $154 million.

The cumulative total net inflows have risen to well over $59 billion as of Friday’s market close.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs Net Flows. Source: SoSoValue
Spot Bitcoin ETFs Net Flows. Source: SoSoValue

ETH ETFs Follow Suit

The spot Ethereum ETFs, on the other hand, had only one day in the red, but it was painful. After pulling $61 million on Monday, $97.6 million on Tuesday, $11.6 million on Wednesday, and a more modest $3.6 million on Friday, the funds saw a significant withdrawal of over $103.5 million on Thursday, according to SoSoValue data.

Nevertheless, the week ended well in the green, with net inflows of over $70 million. However, it still couldn’t offset the losses seen from the previous week, which ended on May 1, when investors pulled out over $82 million from the funds.

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The cumulative net inflows into the spot ETH ETFs remain above $12 billion since their inception in mid-2024.

Spot Ethereum ETF Flows. Source: SoSoValue
Spot Ethereum ETF Flows. Source: SoSoValue

XRP ETFs and Some Honorable Mentions

The funds tracking Ripple’s cross-border token didn’t have a single day in the red last week, but Thursday was a no-action day with $0.00 reportable flows. Investors inserted nearly $4 million on Monday, over $11 million on Tuesday, $13 million on Wednesday, and $6 million on Friday.

The week ended with more than $34 million in net inflows, which is significantly more impressive than the minor $35K in net outflows during the previous week. The total net flows are up to another all-time high of $1.32 billion.

Spot XRP ETF Inflows. Source: SoSoValue
Spot XRP ETF Inflows. Source: SoSoValue

The honorable mentions are the SOL ETFs, which saw almost $40 million in net inflows last week, while the LINK and DOGE ETFs gained somewhere around $1 million each.

All the film stars and fashionistas who stole the show at Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards

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Celebrities, filmmakers and creators arrived at the 12th edition of the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) in Nigeria with dramatic trains, sculptural gowns, shimmering fabrics and heavily theatrical designs that once again transformed the event from an awards show into a spectacle of style.

Sola Media Boards Animated Feature ‘Felix the Brave’

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Sola Media has boarded as the sales agent for animated feature “Felix the Brave,” and will be unveiling an exclusive teaser at the Cannes Film Market.

The film, which follows the adventures of a flea, is produced by Little Dream Entertainment and Amour Fou together with animation studio Red Parrot Studios. It is directed by Ali Samadi Ahadi, known for his animated adventure “Moonbound.”

Delivery of the film is scheduled for the third quarter of 2027, followed by the theatrical release in Germany by Little Dream Pictures.

The film tells the story of Felix, a flea raised by a family of rhinoceros beetles who believes he is one of them. When a feared stag beetle army threatens his village, Felix embarks on a dangerous journey to find the mythical Beetle Queen, who is said to bring peace.

Alongside Missy, a sharp-tongued dung beetle, and Toni, a quirky bombardier beetle veteran, Felix faces challenges that force him to question his identity, loyalty and courage. As the trio quarrels, bonds and ventures through the wild unknown, Felix discovers that true bravery may change not only his own destiny, but also the future of his home.

The production brings together an experienced creative team, led by animation director Timo Berg, whose credits include “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” “Despicable Me 3,” “The Grinch,” “Sing” and “Pets,” and character designer Peter Oedekoven, known for his work on “Stitch Head,” “Chickenhare and the Secret of the Groundhog,” “Grand Prix of Europe” and “The Amazing Maurice.”

“The film invites children and families into a richly imagined miniature world of beetles, fleas and wild forest creatures – in the tradition of the beloved animated classic ‘A Bug’s Life,’” said Solveig Langeland, managing director of Sola.

“For us, ‘Felix the Brave’ is a real passion project. While making it, our team was falling in love with each of our adorable characters, giving us great hope that our valued audiences, children and their families all around the world will feel the same,” said Samadi Ahadi and Frank Geiger from Little Dream Entertainment.

Where Is BTC Headed Next Week? Key Levels to Watch

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Where Is BTC Headed Next Week? Key Levels to Watch


Bitcoin continues to trade within a broader recovery structure following the strong rebound from the $60K region. However, despite the recent bullish momentum, the market has been struggling to reclaim a decisive resistance zone at the $80K region, where the next major directional move is likely to emerge.

Bitcoin Price Analysis: The Daily Chart

On the daily timeframe, BTC has been recently experiencing choppy price action near the crucial $80K resistance region, while lacking sufficient bullish momentum for a confirmed breakout. This area carries substantial technical importance as it aligns with the 100-day moving average, strengthening seller presence around current levels.

Recent candles reflect increasing hesitation and fading momentum as the market struggles to establish acceptance above this threshold. Based on the current structure and the repeated rejection attempts around the $80K-$82K range, the probability of a bearish reversal appears slightly higher in the short term.

Nevertheless, if buyers unexpectedly manage to push the price above both the 100-day MA and the upper boundary of the price channel, a fresh short-squeeze scenario could unfold, potentially driving BTC toward the major $90K resistance region.

BTC/USDT 4-Hour Chart

On the 4-hour chart, Bitcoin remains trapped within a tight consolidation range bounded by the ascending dynamic trendline from below and the static $80K-$83K resistance zone overhead. This structure reflects a temporary equilibrium between buyers and sellers following the recent impulsive rally.

As long as the price remains confined within this range, further sideways consolidation is likely. However, the ascending trendline near the $78K level currently acts as the key short-term support for buyers. A bearish rejection and breakdown below this trendline could trigger a corrective decline toward the lower order block regions around the $75K-$76K and potentially the $70K-$71K support area.

Onchain Analysis

From an on-chain perspective, the realized price of long-term holder cohorts continues to act as one of the market’s most important macro support and resistance indicators. These realized price levels are crucial because they determine whether specific holder cohorts remain in overall profit or loss, significantly influencing their market behavior.

Currently, Bitcoin is trading between the realized price bands of the 12-month to 2-year cohorts, positioned approximately between $62K and $92K. Historically, remaining above these realized price levels reflects stronger holder confidence and reduced sell-side pressure, while losing them often leads to broader market weakness. As a result, this range remains highly significant for determining Bitcoin’s next macro trend direction.

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Cricut’s $99 craft cutting machine helped me feel creative again

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I’ve always been skeptical of products that claim to help you lead a more creative life. But one recently won me over. I’ve spent three weeks with the Cricut Joy 2, a smart cutting and drawing machine that made it easy for me to get back into making stickers, cards, bookmarks, and more.

The small $99 gadget isn’t perfect, but its capabilities and app-provided templates were just what I was looking for. Caregiving, self-criticism, and mental health struggles have made it tough to tinker and doodle like I used to, and yet the Joy 2 clicked with me. It doles out quick wins when you’re in the mood to create.

I made both personalized stickers and bookmarks and eventually got back into a creative flow. I even painted the canvases underneath.
Photo by Sheena Vasani / The Verge

I’ve been testing the Cricut Joy 2 and Ultimate Plus Bundle, which normally costs $229 and comes with a bunch of extras, including smart vinyl and iron-on sheets, as well as tools like a fine-point blade. Getting started didn’t take much time. I connected the machine, installed Cricut’s Design Space software on my laptop (also available on iOS and Android), and ran my first test cut in well under 30 minutes. Watching the machine cut that first design made me clap in excitement.

That part was easy, but the app’s onboarding needs some work. For something marketed as beginner-friendly, it’s not obvious what to do next or how to fully take advantage of the hardware. None of it is difficult — figuring out placement on the mat or aligning materials correctly — but none of it is exactly obvious either, especially if you’re new to these concepts. Early on, I tried unsuccessfully to print something from scratch and grew discouraged after wasting some materials.

Design Space’s interface is partially to blame. It buries helpful tutorials and project checklists at the bottom of its landing page, and visual learners should know that a lot of the instructions are written out. That’s strange, given that Cricut offers a trove of clear, digestible YouTube tutorials online that seem perfect for the app.

To Cricut’s credit, it offers a free 30-day trial of Cricut Access, which costs $9.99 a month once it expires. It contains many templates, tips, and guided projects created by Cricut as well as other users who share their designs in the app’s community library. It’s useful if you appreciate some structure with your creative pursuits. More crucially, it teaches you how to use the materials and tools included with the Joy 2. That’s when the real fun started. Projects came together more quickly, and I once again felt the satisfaction of watching a design go from screen to finished product in minutes.

Cricut’s robust community library offers a bunch of projects to play with.

Cricut’s robust community library offers a bunch of projects to play with.

Simple projects are where the Joy 2 works best, but it can handle some more complex ones if you’re willing to step in. Multicolor designs, for instance, have to be cut in separate layers and assembled by hand, which takes time and focus. That’s not necessarily a flaw, but more just something to keep in mind before you take on new projects.

Trying to print stickers for my baby nephew. Cricut adds cutting lines before you’re guided to print.

Trying to print stickers for my baby nephew. Cricut adds cutting lines before you’re guided to print.

If you’re trying to make stickers or other printed designs, like iron-on transfers for shirts, Cricut’s “print then cut” feature comes in handy. It lets you print a full-color design with an inkjet or laser printer you already own, then precisely cut it out with the Joy 2. I was happy with the results, and the process is simple: The Design Space app adds cut lines around your uploaded design for the machine to follow. You then feed the printed sheet into the Joy 2, and voilà! It scans and makes the cuts.

Technically, the Joy 2 can handle larger projects, such as large wall decals and full-shirt graphics, but the machine can only cut about 4 to 4.5 inches at a time. You could split the design into multiple sections, manually cut each piece, then align and assemble them by hand. Then again, if you imagine yourself wanting to make larger designs more often, I suggest springing for the $199 Cricut Explore 5. The $349 Cricut Maker 4, meanwhile, can handle thicker materials, like fabric or leather, and can engrave, deboss, or perforate materials.

Starting to feel confident making my own basic designs.

Starting to feel confident making my own basic designs.

While my idea of how a “beginner-friendly” cutting machine should onboard users differs from Cricut’s, the Joy 2 is a fun, relatively inexpensive gadget that’s easy to recommend. I’m not about to reopen an Etsy store anytime soon, but for the first time in a while, I want to keep creating.

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Simu Liu Honored at Gold House Gala and Speaks to the Power of Community

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Simu Liu was honored with the Gold Mogul award at the fifth annual Gold House Gold Gala on Saturday in Los Angeles.

Filmmakers Destin Daniel Cretton and James Wan presented Liu with the award as they honored his multi-hyphenate success as an actor, author, producer, and advocate who has established himself as a defining Asian Pacific voice in mainstream Hollywood and a tireless champion for representation on and off screen.During his speech, the actor who recently completed a stint on Broadway in “Oh Mary!” talked to the power of the Asian community.

He said, “The only reason that I’m here is 10% being too stubborn to give up, and 90%, the most amazing support system. I’ve been thinking a lot about what community means to me.”

Liu shared how he first came to Canada 32 years ago and lived in a “ramshackle apartment building in Ontario with a lot of other Chinese grad students.” The actor talked about how the families had formed tight bonds and helped one another out. Eventually, they would become lifelong friends. Liu said, “I learned from a very young age that a community stands together. A community supports one another. It does not collapse in on itself. It does not tear itself down. I look out at this room and I just struck by how much power there is power in our storytellers, our champions, our leaders, our taste makers, but only together can we fully unleash the potential of that power.” He added, “In order to reach that potential, we must learn what it means to be a true community, not just as a catch phrase that we throw around at fancy events, but to really fully feel the weight and importance of that word and to act on it. So I see us all now in this little apartment building that we call ‘America,’ all trying to survive, but if we could just learn from my parents and learn what it means to truly come together, we’ll do more than simply survive. We will all be moguls.”

Bowen Yang kicked off the evening with a monologue on culture, setting the tone for an evening celebrating A New Gold World.

Other honorees included Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Charles Melton and Jet Li and Eileen Gu who were recognized for their contributions to culture.

Chopra Jonas who was honored with the inaugural global Vanguard Award echoed Liu’s words about the importance of community, and thanked Gold House co-founder Bing Chen. She said, “Thank you to Gold House, to Bing, who’s backstage, doing what he does best, bringing us all together every year and working tirelessly to make sure as a community, we support each other, we stand up for each other, and we also show up for each other.”

Chopra Jonas also took a moment to honor her mother, Madhu Chopra. Chopra Jonas called her “the kind of mother who is here taking care of my child while I go filming for three weeks, the kind of grandmother that my grandmother was.” She went on to say, “I was raised with a lineage of very strong women that stood for each other and their achievements. I heard many people shout out, like Revathi Advaithi, you shouted out your mom talking about the power of education and stressing on having a skill set. Well, I had that mother, and so did my mother. So thank you for being the foundation of who I am for always being a student of life, and I love you, and you’re beautiful. Happy Mother’s Day.”

The power of community was a theme of the evening as “Beef” star Charles Melton echoed the sentiments. The actor received the inaugural Gold Artistic Achievement Honor and talking about identifying with his character Austin on the show. “Austin wrestles with his own identity. He is so misguided. Yes, he is something of a Korean ‘himbo’, which I’m fine with. It’s cool. I like that. Koreans can be sex symbols. We’re hot. Look at this room. It’s full of Asian smoke shows like us.”

Melton called Austin funny and someone who makes mistakes, yet there was more to him. “I connected to him profoundly and felt so much empathy for him. I’ve been like Austin at times, many of us have he’s lost, looking for purpose. He hides his Koreanness. He hides behind his own masks because he thinks that’s the best way to survive. He’s described as Arizonian, more than Korean. Austin eventually learns that he can’t hide his Koreanness very long. You are who you are. Your culture finds you that resonates deeply with me.”

As the son of someone who was in the military, Melton said he never felt whole. Until he filmed the show in Seoul, the city where he grew up. Filming there, he said, gave him the opportunity to “return as an artist, doing work that mattered in a place where my story began. It felt like coming home, not just to Korea, but to myself.”

He added, “I wouldn’t be where I am without our community. There are the artists who loudly celebrate their faith and culture, artists who return to their own language, only to come back more powerful, artists literally that changed the way the world saw martial arts artists who have seamlessly moved between cinematic cultures. These are the transcendent artists that I have found inspiration in, which is everyone in this room.” He concluded by saying, “My hope is that young Korean actors, young Asian Pacific actors, find inspiration in my work and my story and pursue their heights whilst finding purpose and belonging amongst us. There is strength in numbers. One person’s success can open a thousand doors.”

Gold House co-founder Bing Chen wrapped the evening with closing remarks. Chen said, “This is why we gather. This is why we build houses when there are not doors. This is why you look. This is why you move first, because closeness is not a rhetorical principle. It is a practical and consistent practice. It is 1000 tiny decisions that say, ‘I saw you when no one else would and I will stay till no one else will.’ Maybe that’s how we actually get further, by actually getting closer first, maybe that’s why we’re here.”

Known as the “Asian Met Gala,” attendees included Adele Lim, Ally Maki, “KPop Demon Hunters” stars Arden Cho, EJAE, Ji-young Yoo and director Maggie Kang, Abhijay Prakash (President, Blumhouse), Ken Wee (Chief Strategy Officer, Mattel), Mike Van (CEO, Billboard), Phil Sun (CEO, 1v1 Entertainment) and Sam Wu (CEO, Rakuten Viki).

Throughout the cocktail reception, guests were treated to custom portrait moments presented by Chase Sapphire Reserve for Business.

Backstage, honorees experienced specialty portrait moments shot by Kanya Iwana, hair and makeup touch-ups featuring brands from across the L’Oréal Groupe portfolio, and a content studio presented by The Walter and Shirley Wang Foundation. 

Guests were also entertained throughout the evening with the latest hits from the “K-POP NOW” playlist on Amazon Music.

The Gold Gala was immediately followed by the Billboard x Gold House Founders Party. The celebration featured a performance by “RuPaul’s Drag Race” stars Nymphia Wind and Plastique Tiara.

James Beard Award-winning executive chef Justin Pichetrungsi and the team behind Anajak Thai in Sherman Oaks curated the menu, presented by OpenTable.

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