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Despite controversy over their inclusion, Israel takes second with Noam Bittan's "Michelle" at 70th annual Song Contest
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In "The Wonderful World That Almost Was," Andrew Durbin reconstructs the coterie that surrounded the artist-lovers Peter Hujar and Paul Thek.
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The former Beatle also plays a surprise encore to close out the season finale
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With the main slate making few waves, the biggest moments at the festival so far involve a new horror comedy and a restored horror provocation.
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Peter Gelb, the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera, said he is not going anywhere as he struggles with financial crises and opera's place in a changing arts landscape.
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The writer and illustrator William Steig lived several lives before his book about a surly ogre became a Hollywood hit.
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Peter Phillips was key to the pop art movement but his home city of Birmingham hardly noticed.
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The president's brief time in China "could have been an email," Colin Jost jokes
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"I got older and the stage got bigger," singer says as his Together, Together Tour kicks off in Amsterdam
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Derek Klena was a successful actor with a Tony nomination to his name. But he's found a bigger audience with the barnstorming baseball sensation.
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Bulgarian singer Dara is a surprise winner beating Israel in second place, while the UK's Look Mum No Computer gets just one point.
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After four years of marriage and joining the Love Is Blind casting team.
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Alissa Wilkinson, a New York Times film critic, reviews "Faces of Death" (2026).
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Representing Israel, which has won Eurovision four times, Bettan performed an upbeat pop track largely in French.
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The stage for the Together Together looks like the best way to get the zoomies out.
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Writer-director Aleshea Harris talks adapting her Black Southern Gothic play into a star-studded thriller — and getting Beyoncé's support
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Three years after King Charles III was crowned, the Royal Opera House in London hung plush new stage curtains bearing the monarch's insignia — but only after the old ones gave up the ghost.
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Jimmy Fallon joked that President Trump's idea of a Temple of Heaven is very different from the one he toured in Beijing with China's leader.
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Fonda Lee's "cyberpunk samurai in space" novel follows a sword-wielding warrior trying to finish one last job.
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Two new biographies of the Supreme Court justice show how his career was propelled by a legal movement that coalesced to take down Roe v. Wade.
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In a new book, the journalist Suzy Hansen plumbs an Istanbul community for insights into Turkey's hard-right turn.
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In her engaging, lyrical "Homesick for a World Unknown," Miriam Horn tells the story of the famed naturalist George Schaller.
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One of the three woman who survived being raped and held captive for more than a decade in a Cleveland home announced on Tuesday that she is married.
Michelle Knight made the announcement to Dr. Phil McGraw on an episode of Dr. Phil schedule to air on April 24.
"I've got really good news for you," she told the talk-show host while smiling broadly. "I'm married!"
Knight — who has since changed her name to Lillian Rose Lee — was kidnapped by Ariel Castro in August 2002, when she was 20, along with Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus.
The trio escaped from Castro's home on May 6, 2013. Since then, the women have gone their separate ways while they heal and get reacquainted with the lives they once led.
Knight's appearance on Dr. Phil will run before the May 1 release of her new memoir, Life After Darkness: Finding Healing and Happiness After the Cleveland Kidnappings.
Michelle Knight
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In her second book, she will discuss her battle with addiction, the truth about her relationship with Berry and DeJesus, and how she has adjusted to life after escaping Castro's house of horrors.
"Michelle shares how she dared to emerge into life again, rebuilding and re-creating her true self," says Mauro DiPreta, vice president and publisher of Hachette Books told PEOPLE exclusively in January. "And offers her thoughts on how anyone who has
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