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Tag: Alec Baldwin

  • Alec Baldwin’s Thanksgiving chaos to Martha Stewart’s burnt bird: Stars’ holiday disasters exposed

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    The holiday season has a way of humbling even the most prepared hosts — and celebrities are no exception.

    Between Martha Stewart, Guy Fieri and Chrissy Teigen’s kitchen mishaps, the Baldwin family’s photo chaos and a few emergency room visits, these celebrity Thanksgiving moments show that even the stars can’t escape holiday mayhem.

    Here’s a look at some famous feasts that didn’t exactly go as planned.

    Martha Stewart and Alec Baldwin are among the stars who’ve shared their own Thanksgiving mishaps over the years. (TheStewartofNY/ Getty Images; Daniele Venturelli/ Getty Images)

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    Guy Fieri

    Guy Fieri holds a squeeze bottle while standing in front of a crowd of onlookers and cameras.

    Guy Fieri’s deep-fried turkey mishap became one of his wildest Thanksgiving stories. (Bruce Glikas/Getty Images)

    Guy Fieri’s holiday didn’t go as planned one year when he tried to deep-fry a Thanksgiving turkey

    “One of my favorites was when the deep-fried turkey craze started,” the Santo Tequila co-owner told Fox News Digital.

    Fieri noted that he learned the technique from “a guy named Kim Gardner,” who showed him how to make his first deep-fried bird. It turned out so well he wanted to make one for his family. But instead of measuring the oil properly, everything spiraled.

    “Just like every video that you see on TikTok, it is a fireball of flames,” he said.

    WATCH: Guy Fieri recalls Thanksgiving deep-fried turkey disaster

    The pot spilled, and the burner tipped, sending flaming oil across his patio and into the yard. “

    My flip-flop is melted to the stand. So, I got one flip-flop on one flip-flop off,” he added.

    At that point, the turkey shot out of the pot and skidded across the lawn. Fieri ran after it.

    “Grabbed the turkey. Now it’s kind of coated in some leaves and such, and I grabbed the hose, and I’m hosing the turkey off. And I’m, it was about eight in the morning, so I’m hosing the turkey off.”

    The reaction from inside the house was immediate. 

    “There’s no way in hell I’m eating that turkey,” he recalled.

    Martha Stewart

    A photo of Martha Stewart

    Before she became a household name for flawless dinner parties, Martha Stewart admitted her first Thanksgiving as a newlywed was a total disaster. (Cindy Ord)

    Before she became a household name for flawless dinner parties, Martha Stewart admitted, her first Thanksgiving as a newlywed was a total disaster.

    In a 2017 interview with the Daily Mail, Stewart said she wanted to impress her new in-laws and volunteered to host. She woke up at 3 a.m. to stuff the turkey and put it in the oven, then went back to sleep.

    That’s when things went up in smoke. 

    “I preheated the oven to 500 degrees, then forgot to turn it down to 325,” she said. “I woke up to smoke and flames.”

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    Stewart rushed to a nearby farm, grabbed the last turkey they had, and even salvaged the stuffing from the burnt bird. Dinner was six hours late but saved.

    Stewart, of course, has come a long way, sharing a photo on Instagram on Dec. 2, 2023, showing the heritage turkey she roasted for a friend’s Thanksgiving buffet. 

    MARTHA STEWART CANCELS THANKSGIVING AFTER HOSTING AT LEAST 60 DINNERS OVER THE YEARS

    Chrissy Teigen

    Chrissy Teigen attends an event

    Chrissy Teigen shared a photo of her burnt sweet potato pie on Instagram in 2018, joking about her Thanksgiving kitchen mishap. (John Sciulli/Getty Images for go90)

    Chrissy Teigen shared a Thanksgiving kitchen misfire in 2018.

    The “Cravings” author and cookware mogul went viral after burning her sweet potato pie.

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    She posted a photo of the charred dessert on Instagram with the caption, “In case you are wondering why I didn’t put my finished pie on my Instastory.”

    Teigen quickly baked a second pie and laughed it off.

    Alec and Hilaria Baldwin

    The Baldwin family sits together on a couch in a chaotic Thanksgiving 2022 photo, with several children crying, eating or climbing around the adults.

    The Baldwin family shared a chaotic Thanksgiving photo in 2022 as their children cried, snacked and looked away from the camera. (Hilaria Baldwin/ Instagram)

    Alec and Hilaria Baldwin’s Thanksgiving photo was anything but picture-perfect.

    In 2022, the couple tried to capture a family portrait with their seven kids. The result was pure chaos.

    “Happy gratitude day from our epic fail family photo to what is probably yours,” Hilaria joked in her caption.

    In the photo, the Baldwin children cried, ate and looked in every direction but at the camera. Fans praised the mom of seven for keeping things real.

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    Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Julie Bowen

    A person stands outside a hospital emergency room at night in a photo Julie Bowen shared during a Thanksgiving 2024 ER visit.

    Julie Bowen shared this late-night photo outside an emergency room on Thanksgiving 2024 after one of her children needed medical care. (Julie Bowen /Instagram)

    Thanksgiving 2024 took an unexpected turn for “Modern Family” stars Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Julie Bowen, who both ended up in the ER with their kids.

    Bowen, mom to Oliver, 18, and twins John and Gustav, 16, posted a photo from the hospital with the caption, “It’s not a holiday without a trip to the ER. (He’s fine, btw). HAPPY THANKSGIVING.”

    Jesse Tyler Ferguson lies in a hospital bed holding a child during a Thanksgiving 2024 ER visit, in a photo he shared on Instagram.

    Jesse Tyler Ferguson shared this photo from a Thanksgiving 2024 emergency room visit, where he said his child was ultimately fine. (Jesse Tyler Ferguson/Instagram)

    The next day, Ferguson shared a selfie from a hospital bed with his son asleep on his chest. “Seeing I wasn’t the only one with a kid in the ER on Thanksgiving was comforting,” he wrote. “He’s also fine.”

    GUY FIERI IS COOKING AND EATING THESE FOODS THIS FALL: ‘BIG, HEAVY AND HOT’

    Caroline Bryan

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    Caroline Bryan skipped the picture-perfect Thanksgiving and showed what hosting really looks like.

    In 2021, the wife of country star Luke Bryan shared a video of her cooking mishap. A bubbling rice dish overflowed and coated the bottom of her oven.

    Luke Bryan poses for a photo with wife Caroline Boyer

    In 2021, the wife of country star Luke Bryan shared a video of her cooking mishap.  (Gregg DeGuire/WireImage)

    “This is what happens when I say I’ll cook something on Thanksgiving,” she said while lifting the ruined pan. “The whole thing… I did that.”

    She captioned the clip, “I hate cooking. I give up. I spilled crap everywhere! And I think my turkey weighed five pounds.”

    Cardi B

    Cardi B stands on a staircase posing for a photo in a black outfit on Thanksgiving 2022, alongside a friend, in an image he shared on Instagram.

    Cardi B posed for a photo on Thanksgiving 2022 after realizing her dress was see-through and adding a bra just in time before family arrived. (Derrian “Phreshy” Perry/ Instagram)

    On the other end of the holiday chaos, there are the wardrobe malfunctions. Just ask Cardi B.

    In 2022, the Grammy winner wrote on Twitter, now X, “Notice my dress is super see-through before family start arriving… GOD IS GOOD!”

    Her friend and publicist Derrian “Phreshy” Perry later posted a photo of the two posing on a staircase. Cardi had added a bra under her black Chanel dress just in time to avoid a major wardrobe malfunction.

    MARTHA STEWART MAKES BAKING MISTAKE AHEAD OF THANKSGIVING DAY FEAST

    Camilla Luddington

    Camilla Luddington smiles while wearing a pink floral dress at the 30 Years of Bioderma celebration at Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles on April 29, 2025.

    “Grey’s Anatomy” star Camilla Luddington learned the hard way that cooking a turkey from scratch isn’t for everyone. (Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images)

    “Grey’s Anatomy” star Camilla Luddington learned the hard way that cooking a turkey from scratch isn’t for everyone.

    On her 2024 podcast “Call It What It Is” with co-host Jessica Capshaw, Luddington said she decided to skip her usual pre-cooked bird from Whole Foods and roast her own.

    “I didn’t grow up with it,” the British-born actress said. “So, I just inherited all the Friendsgiving traditions around me.”

    That year, the turkey took nearly 12 hours to cook, and things went downhill from there. “I gave food poisoning that year to everyone that had the turkey,” she admitted. “People were throwing up that night.”

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  • Ireland Baldwin Says She Had a “Lonely Childhood”

    Ahead of her 30th birthday, Ireland Baldwin is taking a look back at her childhood. The daughter of Alec Baldwin and Kim Basinger shared her thoughts about the trials and tribulations of growing up a Baldwin on her personal Substack page, revealing that she had a “lonely childhood” in a post titled “30, Flirty, and Surviving.”

    “I grew up without two parents in my home and no siblings to turn to. I had a lonely childhood at times, which is why I grew up feeling like I needed to win over certain people in my own family,” she wrote. “For whatever reason, their validation and praise was meaningful to me.”

    Alec Baldwin, 67, and Basinger, 71, got married in 1993 before separating in 2000 and finalizing their divorce in 2002. As she heads into her third decade, Ireland Baldwin shared that there’s a “lot less weight” on her shoulders, in part because she let go of “the need to continue to carry my narcissistic, unreliable, addict family members who I thought I needed in my life.”

    Baldwin did not specify which members of her famous extended family, which includes uncles Danny Baldwin, Billy Baldwin, and Stephen Baldwin, as well as cousin Hailey Bieber, she was referring to in the post. “Nothing was more freeing than finally realizing how poisonous these people are,” she continued. “So I inch into my thirties with an understanding that this is how you break these cycles. My daughter doesn’t have to know these people and I can protect her from them. I can do my very best to construct my own idea of a family, piece by piece. And show how a real family treats one another.”

    Baldwin is mother to two-year-old Holland, whom she shares with musician RAC (real name: André Allen Anjos). In recent months, she has posted positively about her immediate family. In April, Baldwin shared a photo of Alec and her daughter on Instagram for his birthday. “Happy birthday to Peepaw. I’m so glad you were born. Because of your born-ness, I was born-ed. I love you!” she captioned the photo. In September, she dedicated an Instagram post to Hilaria Baldwin, her stepmother, ahead of Hilaria’s appearance on Dancing With the Stars.

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  • Alec Baldwin’s head-on crash with tree caps year of scandal and controversy

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    Alec Baldwin was uninjured Monday after crashing his vehicle into a tree in an attempt to avoid a truck while driving in the Hamptons.

    Baldwin, 67, was traveling with his brother Stephen when the incident occurred shortly after noon on State Route 27 in New York.

    Monday’s collision is the latest incident for the Emmy Award-winning actor, who was not only entangled last year in a manslaughter trial for the 2021 on-set death of “Rust” cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, but also threatened to snap a comedian’s neck near his Manhattan home.

    ALEC BALDWIN AND BROTHER STEPHEN BALDWIN’S HAMPTONS CRASH: WHAT POLICE ARE SAYING NOW

    Alec Baldwin was pictured after crashing his Range Rover into a tree in the Hamptons on Monday. (Matt Agudo/INSTARimages)

    The incident on Oct. 13 occurred at approximately 12:01 p.m. on Pantigo Road near Cross Highway, according to the East Hampton Town Police Department.

    A white 2023 Range Rover, operated by Alec, with passenger Stephen, was found to have struck a tree on the Eastbound shoulder of the roadway while avoiding the turning action of a 2020 Mack commercial truck, registered to National Waste Services out of Bay Shore, NY, a spokesperson for EHTPD told Fox News Digital.  

    There were no injuries reported or summons issued and the contributing factors to the accident were found to be a reaction to an uninvolved vehicle and the slippery and wet roadway conditions.

    HILARIA BALDWIN CALLS ‘DWTS’ DEBUT ‘SUCH A DREAM’ AS FANS POINT OUT ALEC’S REACTION TO STEAMY DANCE

    Dashcam footage obtained by Newsmax appeared to show Baldwin’s SUV careening into a tree after it passed by the garbage truck. The truck company claimed to TMZ that its driver was not at fault.

    Alec Baldwin's white Range Rover crashed into a tree

    Alec Baldwin’s white Range Rover was pictured after careening into a tree. (Matt Agudo/INSTARimages)

    Alec and Stephen Baldwin stand outside car crash

    Stephen Baldwin was pictured standing near Alec and the crashed SUV (Matt Agudo/INSTARimages)

    Alec Baldwin uses cell phone after car crash

    Alec Baldwin chatted on his cellphone after the car crash in the Hamptons. (Matt Agudo/INSTARimages)

    Alec took to Instagram to recap the crash and share that he’s “fine” following the “car accident” earlier in the day. The “30 Rock” star alleged that a garbage truck the “size of a whale” cut him off while he was driving his wife, Hilaria Baldwin’s, car. 

    “To avoid hitting him, I hit a big fat tree and crushed my wife’s car,” he explained. “I crushed my wife’s car – I feel bad about that.”

    Stephen’s rep shared a statement with Fox News Digital: “Stephen is doing fine and is grateful no one was injured. He appreciates the concern and he can confirm that he and Alec are both safe and well.”

    Hilaria addressed concerns after Alec’s car accident, and reassured fans that her husband and his brother were both “OK.”

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    “No one was hurt and that’s the most important thing,” Hilaria said. “So I love you and thank you, thank you, thank you for caring.” She also added a caption on social media: “Thank you for checking in. Alec is ok. Be safe to all of you.”

    Alec Baldwin talks on phone near Stephen Baldwin

    The 67-year-old actor was traveling with his brother Stephen when the incident occurred shortly after noon on State Route 27 in New York. (Matt Agudo/INSTARimages)

    Alec Baldwin surveys damage from car crash

    Alec Baldwin surveyed the scene of the crash on Monday afternoon. (Matt Agudo/INSTARimages)

    Baldwin recently played supportive husband to Hilaria, who competed on season 34 of “Dancing with the Stars.” Prior to her elimination from the reality competition show last week, Hilaria, 41, thanked her family for cheering her on.

    Her “incredible experience” was cut short, though, and she was voted off following her quickstep to a song from “Star Wars: A New Hope” for the show’s Disney night.

    Hilaria opened up about the “painful” moments during her journey, while calling out the “misinformation.”

    “One of the most heartwarming and painful things that I’ve experienced on this show has been people coming up to me and saying that their friends ask me what it’s like when they actually meet me, and they say ‘She’s so nice,’” she said. “And they’re telling them that they’re defending me and I think, how sad that there’s so much misinformation and I hope that with the rest of the days that I have I can help other people who feel misunderstood too.”

    She later credited “strategic bullying” for her exit from the dancing challenge during an Instagram Live session with followers.

    “As I feel the darkness that undoubtedly brings to me, I always want to remember that my life belongs to the whole community and I want to leave a lasting mark of courage to speak up against what is simply wrong,” Hilaria said.

    Earlier this year, it was Hilaria who supported her husband after he threatened to physically harm a comedian outside their home in the Big Apple.

    Jason Scoop exclusively told Fox News Digital that he had no idea his life was in danger before he attempted to speak to the “Beetlejuice” star. Baldwin appeared to be unloading luggage from a vehicle in New York City when Scoop, who was impersonating President Trump, noticed the “SNL” star. 

    After a vocal back-and-forth between the pair on the street, Baldwin physically threatened to snap the comedian’s “neck in half.”

    “Now, now, now, let me ask you a question. Now you realize, by the way, no, no, look at me. I want you to look at me. What, you got a camera on me?” Baldwin asked Scoop, referring to a green light beaming from his finger. 

    WATCH: Comedian recalls Alec Baldwin’s wife Hilaria running to actor’s defense after curbside incident

    “Do you realize my kids live in this building? I want you to know something. If this camera wasn’t here, I’d snap your f—–g neck in half and break your f—–g neck right now. You know that, don’t you?”

    Baldwin added, “I’ll take that camera, and I’ll shove it up your a–.”

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    Scoop said he walked away from the incident and put his camera down, but that’s when things took a different turn. As Scoop was reviewing footage seconds after the encounter, he heard a woman “screaming” behind him. 

    “I turn around and … I immediately recognized – I’m like, ‘That’s the cucumber chick. That’s the chick who pretended on the ‘Today’ show, chopping cucumbers. ‘How do you say cucumber?’ And I’m like, ‘Oh my goodness, that’s his wife.’”

    Scoop couldn’t remember exactly what Hilaria was saying as she came toward him, but remembered her “screaming” at him.

    Hilaria stood by Alec’s side throughout the “Rust” investigation and was even seen wielding her iPhone as Baldwin spoke to reporters for the first time after the cinematographer’s death.

    Hilaria Baldwin cries while hugging Alec Baldwin after Rust trial dismissed.

    Alec Baldwin embraces wife Hilaria Baldwin after Judge Sommer dismisses his involuntary manslaughter case. (Getty Images)

    Baldwin discharged a gun on the set of “Rust” in New Mexico on Oct. 21, 2021, killing cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injuring director Joel Souza

    In July 2024, Hilaria wept alongside her husband when a Santa Fe judge dismissed the involuntary manslaughter case against Alec after ruling that the prosecution concealed evidence from his legal team.

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  • Hilaria Baldwin’s ‘Dancing with the Stars’ journey comes to an end

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    Hilaria Baldwin has taken her final bow in the “Dancing with the Stars” ballroom. 

    During Tuesday’s episode of the dancing competition show, Baldwin and her partner Gleb Savchenko danced the quickstep to a song from “Star Wars: A New Hope” for the show’s Disney night. She portrayed Princess Leia. 

    After her dance, she got rave reviews from the judges, including Bruno Tonioli, who told her, “I was looking for something wrong, I didn’t see it.”

    Baldwin received a higher score from the judges than fan favorite comedian Andy Richter, but she didn’t receive enough votes from the viewers to keep her in the competition. 

    HILARIA BALDWIN SCORES ‘DANCING WITH THE STARS’ AFTER BUMPY JOURNEY TO REALITY TV FAME

    Hilaria Baldwin said it was a “dream come true” to be a part of “Dancing with the Stars.” (Getty Images)

    “This has been an incredible experience,” she said after she was voted off, adding that she said she was grateful to her children and her family and she was cheering on everyone in the cast. 

    Some of her children could be seen in the audience cheering her on, but her husband Alec Baldwin wasn’t. He was seen rooting for the 41-yearold last week. 

    The mom of seven gave a stellar performance with Savchenko during the show’s premiere as Alec and other members of her family in the audience cheered her on earlier this month.

    “It’s such a dream to have my family here,” she told Fox News Digital after the show’s premiere.

    Ahead of her debut dance to Jennifer Lopez’s “Let’s Get Loud,” Hilaria took her rehearsals with Savchenko from Los Angeles to New York, where she lives with Alec and their seven children.

    “With one week to go, I’m taking Gleb to New York, where I live. I’m so excited to share this experience with my family,” she said in the “DWTS” package before her live performance.

    “She’s a hard worker,” Alec told the “DWTS” camera while sitting in on Hilaria’s rehearsal. “This was her life until she got injured, so she’s just going to give it everything she has. I’m proud of her, very proud of her.”

    IRELAND BALDWIN CALLS HILARIA ‘BAT S— CRAZY’ BUT CREDITS HER WITH SAVING DAD ALEC’S LIFE

    Hilaria Baldwin on 'Dancing with the Stars,' Alec Baldwin's reaction

    Alec Baldwin’s stone face reaction to Hilaria Baldwin’s dance has gone viral.  (Getty Images/ ABC/Disney)

    During their live cha-cha performance, Hilaria and Gleb shared an intimate moment in which they came face to face. Alec’s reaction instantly went viral. 

    “Alec Baldwin watching Hilaria and Gleb’s steamy Cha-Cha like 

    One week later, Alec was absent from her second performance with Savchenko.

    “So, Alec is doing a movie right now,” Hilaria told Fox News Digital after the show. “He’s doing a movie, he’s doing a show, he’s been traveling so much. He’ll be here next week, but we’re juggling.”

    Hilaria Baldwin and Alec Baldwin at the Planet Hollywood opening

    Hilaria said Alec had been “supportive” of her “DWTS” journey.  (Bruce Glikas/Getty Images)

    “We had a certain plan to be in New York right now and then all of a sudden the universe opened and I was offered this incredible experience. And so I packed up all the kids and in a day. I signed the contract to do ‘Dancing with the Stars’ in between landing and getting our luggage. This has been a really wild whirlwind that I’m so grateful for, and it’s imposed some shifting,” she said.

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    Hilaria previously told People magazine that Alec has been “supportive” throughout her “Dancing with the Stars” journey thus far.

    “He’s been wanting me to do this show for a very long time, and he has been very supportive and he’s very happy for this,” she said. “I’ve supported him through a lot, and I think he’s excited to do this.”

    Hilaria Baldwin, Gleb Savchenko

    Gleb Savchenko and Hilaria Baldwin said farewell to their time together on “DWTS.” ( Eric McCandless/Disney via Getty Images)

    Despite the quick elimination, Baldwin was able to live out a “dream.”

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    “I mean, it’s not just the experience and how warm and welcoming this environment is and everybody here in ‘Dancing with the Stars’ family, but this was something … I loved to dance, and I didn’t do it on the same level as [Gleb], but I loved it a lot,” Hilaria previously told Fox News Digital. “And then I broke my hip and all of a sudden I was in a wheelchair and I thought I would never dance again. I just closed that chapter. I closed that door.”

    “So to be here dancing with [Gleb], specifically him, he’s so about technique and mentality and all of the stuff that my nerdy dancer self loves, it’s just a dream come true. He’s nicer to me than I am to myself. I feel like we’re very similar. It’s so interesting, the science of how they pair people together, and I think that we’re very similar in some very surprising ways.”

    Fox News Digital’s Larry Fink and Brie Stimson contributed to this post. 

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  • Ireland Baldwin calls Hilaria ‘bat s— crazy’ but credits her with saving dad Alec’s life

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    Ireland Baldwin defended stepmom, Hilaria Baldwin, from critics ahead of her “Dancing with the Stars” debut.

    While Ireland admitted Hilaria can be “bat s— crazy,” she credited her stepmom for saving Alec Baldwin’s life and jokingly revealed she won’t be getting an inheritance from her TV star dad.

    “I think if people actually knew her the way I do, they would be quite surprised,” Ireland wrote in a lengthy Instagram post. “This post may come out of left field since I don’t post about her or any family members much. I expect misinformed comments and plenty of comments about me only playing nice so I can secure my inheritance. C’mon, people. I see the comments. I’m not getting an inheritance. I have 7 siblings.”

    “These thoughts have been on my mind since I last visited her on the east coast. Hilaria has had a far more complex and chaotic upbringing than she lets on and I think that’s why we’ve maybe bonded in someways? She didn’t always feel safe and seen. Sometimes, she is too loyal to a fault. She is eccentric and totally bat s— crazy (in a fun way) but she saved my dad’s life.”

    HILARIA BALDWIN SCORES ‘DANCING WITH THE STARS’ AFTER BUMPY JOURNEY TO REALITY TV FAME

    Alec Baldwin’s daughter, Ireland Baldwin, defended her stepmom ahead of Hilaria’s “Dancing with the Stars” debut. (Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Inspire! Gala)

    According to Ireland, Hilaria has helped Alec healthwise but also mentally.

    “She turned his health around and has shown him the forgiveness and kindness that he needed,” she continued. “She also recognizes and nourishes the parts of my father that are the most compassionate and wonderful. She’s taught him that he doesn’t need to suffer inside of his own head and stay stuck in his own past. That it’s never too late to admit you need help and it’s never too late to learn to be kind to yourself.”

    “Hilaria is the reason I am able to have the close relationship with my father that I do. She is the reason I get to have siblings/a big family that I’ve always wanted. She has always respected me, accepted my flaws, embraced me, and has always shown me kindness. I met her as a teenager and I needed her as an example. I still very much look up to her now. I am so proud of her for doing Dancing With the Stars and I CANNOT wait to cheer her [a–] on. She deserves this! And it’s not my place to share the ins and outs, but this woman is a gem and deserves all the love.”

    Hilaria Baldwin and Alec Baldwin attend the US Open

    Alec Baldwin and wife Hilaria have been married since 2012. (XNY/Star Max/GC Images)

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    Hilaria and Ireland Baldwin at NY Fashion Week

    Hilaria Baldwin shared love for Ireland in the comments of the model’s Instagram post. (Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows)

    Hilaria commented on Ireland’s post, writing, “I’m crying. I love you with all my heart, @irelandirelandireland.”

    “These words mean so much,” she added. “You mean so much to me.”

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    Hilaria Baldwin outside GMA for DWTS filming

    Hilaria Baldwin will appear on “DTWS” with partner Gleb Savchenko. (Raymond Hall/GC Images)

    Hilaria’s casting on “Dancing with the Stars” has been questioned by the show’s fans.

    She previously competed on her college’s ballroom dance team, according to The Cut.

    The yoga instructor addressed criticism ahead of the show’s premiere.

    “Everybody these days has their critics, whether they’re in the spotlight or not,” she told USA Today. “I’ve learned in my 40s that if you go through life trying to prove things to people, then you’re missing the point, and you’re missing being present.”

    “You collect the good and the bad in life along the way,” she told the outlet. “We’re all looking forward.”

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  • Hilaria Baldwin scores ‘Dancing with the Stars’ after bumpy journey to reality TV fame

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    Hilaria Baldwin has been in the spotlight for over a decade, starting as a rising Boston native who rose to fame as a yoga instructor and television personality. Now, Alec Baldwin’s wife has landed her latest gig on “Dancing with the Stars.”

    She joins a list of other stars, including Danielle Fishel, Dylan Efron, influencer Alix Earle and “Mormon Wives” stars Whitney Leavitt and Jen Affleck. Hilaria is partnered with Gleb Savchenko for season 34. 

    Speaking to USA Today ahead of the show’s premiere, Hilaria addressed her critics: “Everybody these days has their critics, whether they’re in the spotlight or not. I’ve learned in my 40s that if you go through life trying to prove things to people, then you’re missing the point and you’re missing being present.” 

    Over the years, Hilaria has faced controversy, including her Spanish heritage scandal. Her husband, Alec, was charged with involuntary manslaughter – the case was later dismissed – after his involvement in the fatal 2021 shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. 

    Hilaria Baldwin will be competing on season 34 of “Dancing with the Stars.” (Raymond Hall/GC Images)

    “You collect the good and the bad in life along the way,” she told the outlet. “We’re all looking forward.”

    ALEC BALDWIN CRIES OVER DEADLY ‘RUST’ SHOOTING IN REALITY SHOW TRAILER

    Prior to the announcement, Hilaria shared dancing videos with Alec online, sparking speculation among her fans that she would join the reality competition dancing show.

    “I’ve been enjoying all this manifesting. I see in my comments there’s, like, a lot of people manifesting. It’s been a lot of fun manifesting. Let’s continue to manifest,” Hilaria told Extra last month.

    Hilaria has been a ballroom dancer since she was a child, per USA Today. “I didn’t know if I belonged in this space,” she told the outlet. “For years I’ve been saying: ‘I’ve got a lot of experience. Is that a problem?’ Apparently it’s not.” According to Hilaria, Alec had urged her to reach out to the show for years.

    Gleb Savchenko red carpet

    Hilaria Baldwin’s “DWTS” partner is Gleb Savchenko. (Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images)

    Hilaria began dating Alec in 2011. In an interview with The New York Times in 2012, she revealed that the actor didn’t ask for her phone number when he saw her at a New York City restaurant. Instead, he gave her his card and told her to call him.

    “I was standing near the door with my friends when he walked up and took my hand and said, ‘I must know you,’” she told the outlet. Hilaria called Alec, but got his voicemail. A few days later, the pair went on a date and shortly after, they tied the knot in June 2012.

    After the pair married – and following a hip injury from dancing years earlier – Hilaria “closed the door on that part of my life,” she told USA Today. “I started focusing on yoga, met Alec, and we started having kids. My body is different now.”

    In 2016, the yoga enthusiast debuted her book “The Living Clearly Method,” which focuses on Hilaria’s “five simple principles” to get through any situation. Hilaria’s background in yoga and wellness led to her appearances on TV shows and more. 

    However, with the increased spotlight on her, controversy eventually followed. 

    In 2020, Hilaria was in the middle of a firestorm after a Twitter thread went viral, and she was accused of faking her Spanish heritage once it was revealed that she was a Boston native.

    Hilaria Baldwin and Alec Baldwin at the Planet Hollywood opening

    Hilaria and Alec Baldwin met in 2011 and married the following year. (Bruce Glikas/Getty Images)

    At the time, Hilaria revealed that she and her husband were raising their children with a mix of American and Spanish heritage, and they were raising them to be bilingual. Hilaria was born and raised in Boston, but spent parts of her childhood in Spain. Her parents currently reside in Mallorca.

    However, Hilaria has seemingly claimed she was born in Mallorca, Spain, and raised in Boston. She explained on a podcast in April 2020, “I moved here [to America] when I was 19 to go to NYU from… my family lives in Spain, they live in Mallorca.”

    Alec Baldwin wears a suit and tie with wife Hilaria Baldwin bundled up in a long coat.

    Alec Baldwin and wife Hilaria share seven kids. (Getty Images)

    Hilaria was also criticized for allegedly faking her Spanish accent, as critics pointed out that it noticeably fluctuated over the years when she made appearances on TV. 

    In one damning clip from the “Today” show in 2015, Hilaria was a guest on the show for the “People en Espanol festival in New York City,” according to the video’s description. Hilaria, a yoga instructor and fitness expert at the time, was joined by Telemundo host Evi Siskos to cook her “simple gazpacho.”

    In the clip, Hilaria appears to confuse her English and Spanish. “We have very few ingredients — we have tomatoes, we have, um, how do you say in English?” she asked Siskis. “Cucumber!” 

    During her 2020 podcast appearance, Hilaria said she was simply nervous being on live TV and had a “brain fart.”

    Hilaria and Alec Baldwin in 2015

    Hilaria and Alec Baldwin in 2015. (Lars Niki/Corbis via Getty Images)

    That same year, she did an interview with The New York Times and clarified information that was floating around online.

    “The things I have shared about myself are very clear,” Baldwin said. “I was born in Boston. I spent time in Boston and in Spain. My family now lives in Spain. I moved to New York when I was 19 years old and I have lived here ever since. For me, I feel like I have spent 10 years sharing that story over and over again. And now it seems like it’s not enough.”

    “I was born in Boston. I spent time in Boston and in Spain. My family now lives in Spain. I moved to New York when I was 19 years old and I have lived here ever since.”

    — Hilaria Baldwin

    Although she denied ever lying about being born in the United States, Hilaria issued an apology on Instagram in 2021.

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    “I’ve spent the last month listening, reflecting, and asking myself how I can learn and grow.”

    Hilaria Baldwin wears lime green dress on red carpet.

    Hilaria Baldwin faced a brutal Spanish heritage scandal in 2020. (Kevin Mazur)

    “My parents raised my brother and me with two cultures, American and Spanish, and I feel a true sense of belonging to both. The way I’ve spoken about myself and my deep connection to two cultures could have been better explained – I should have been more clear and I’m sorry. I’m proud of the way I was raised, and we’re raising our children to share the same love and respect for both,” she captioned her post.

    Shortly following the scandal, Hilaria and Alec teamed up for their podcast, “What’s One More?” which focused on family and philanthropy. 

    The podcast took a pause after Alec’s involvement in the tragic “Rust” shooting that killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. The involuntary manslaughter charges against him were dropped by a judge in July 2024.

    Hilaria and Alec Baldwin embrace in court

    Alec Baldwin and wife, Hilaria, embrace after a judge dismissed his involuntary manslaughter charges. In the first episode of their TLC reality show “The Baldwins,” the family relocates to the Hamptons for the summer as Alec prepares for the criminal trial in New Mexico. (Getty Images)

    This year, the TLC reality show, “The Baldwins” was released on Feb. 23. The eight-episode season highlighted the Baldwins and their seven children. In the first episode, the family relocates to the Hamptons for the summer as Alec prepares for the criminal trial in New Mexico.

    Hilaria also brought up her Spanish accent scandal in the premiere episode. 

    “I love English, I also love Spanish, and when I mix the two it doesn’t make me inauthentic, and when I mix the two, that makes me normal,” she said in a confessional, as quoted by People magazine

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    “I’d be lying if I said [the controversy] didn’t make me sad, and it didn’t hurt, and it didn’t put me in dark places,” Hilaria admitted. 

    Alec Baldwin and Hilaria Baldwin on the red carpet

    Alec and Hilaria Baldwin put their family life on display in their reality TV show. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NMxzy-X76wI)

    “But it was my family, my friends, my community who speak multiple languages, who have belonged in multiple places and realize that we are a mix of all these different things and that’s going to have an impact on how we sound and an impact on how we articulate things and the words that we choose and our mannerisms.”

    “That’s normal,” she added. “That’s called being human.”

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  • Leftover 69: An Excerpt from Jon Hart’s ‘Unfortunately, I was available’

    ‘Unfortunately, I was available’ is Hart’s ode to the surreal, thankless and oddly endearing world of gig work. Courtesy Jon Hart

    I submit to play an upstate New York townie for The Leftovers, then in its first season. The shoot is in Nyack, New York, about fifty minutes north of the city. Rockland County, where Nyack is located, is often used to portray rural America. It’s just not feasible to transport the entire production to the sticks.

    I hear back from casting in minutes. They want me, or rather they’re willing to hire me because I’m willing to “self-report” to Nyack, no production courtesy ride required. When casting calls, I inquire about the possibilities of a courtesy ride, and the young woman tells me that she’ll get back to me. Right.

    Ultimately, I accept the assignment and agree to self-report. I have a friend near Nyack. I’ll make it work, somehow. After I endure a restless night on my friend’s couch, he drops me off at holding, a parochial school cafeteria, at 11:30 the next morning. Production wrapped very late the night before, and I spent much of the evening calling casting’s maddening recording, attempting to retrieve my reporting time. I finally got it in the wee hours of the morning.

    Here’s the thing about extras: we’re the very last to know. And in truth, many extras will never know. We’re merely clueless vessels, lost puppies filling up space, and, yes, collecting a check. Personally, I don’t know where I’m going with this extra stuff, but I’m doing it.

    Wardrobe insists that I remove my black sweatshirt, which has a tiny Carhartt logo on it. Labels of any kind are a strict no-no. I forgot it was there. I don’t want to remove the sweatshirt, so I remove the label. In retrospect, I should’ve requested black tape to cover it.

    As I wait on one of the cafeteria benches, one of the PAs asks me for my number.

    SIXTY-NINE.

    Extras are assigned and referred to by number. Your number is your name. Sure, it’s somewhat dehumanizing, but it works.

    Anyway, something’s up.

    Minutes later, a crew member who seems important informs me that I’m going to be used for an additional scene. When I ask an approachable PA about this, she tells me that I have “a look that they’re looking for.” According to legend, that’s how it all started for Brad Pitt. Supposedly, a young Brad was plucked from the bowels of background, and, well, the rest is history.

    “What kind of look do I have?” I want to pester.

    Or maybe, I don’t want to know. I don’t.

    In the additional scene, I’ll be playing a gas station attendant. As I sit on the bench, my mind does cartwheels. Unfortunately, this is before I got my iPhone, so I’m alone with my anxious, impatient self. Will Justin Theroux be in my scene? Liv Tyler? Will I have a line or two? If that happens, I’ll become a “day player” and be paid $900, plus residuals. Will I be asked to play a gas station attendant in future episodes? Or will I be the gas station attendant that gets killed during a holdup?

    A few hours later, the hundred-plus herd of extras is ordered to set: a church meeting room. As we funnel in, a female extra praises Alec Baldwin for how overwhelmingly friendly he was to background on a previous shoot. Alec Baldwin! Even when he’s not here, he’s here.

    In the packed church, most of us have seats. Others stand. Justin plays the police chief, who’s enforcing a curfew because some townies have been mysteriously killed. In the script, the townies are outraged over the curfew. Personally, a curfew seems perfectly reasonable. Folks are getting killed. Stay home.

    After each pro-curfew statement, the director, a mature, affable woman, directs us, the townies, to mumble and grumble dissent. In industry speak, we’re executing “omni,” which is acting in unison. Just to be clear, we’re not uttering actual lines. We’re merely mumbling and grumbling. No, none of us will get paid $900 plus residuals for this. We go through the scene ad nauseam during which Justin makes a dramatic speech. He’s compelling; however, he looks awfully thin. Frankly, the man looks like he needs a good steak or two and sides. Apparently, his gaunt physique makes him very appealing for television audiences. Television loves thin. There are exceptions, of course, but for the most part, television hates flab.

    Throughout the scene, we either mumble and grumble or utter something affirmative such as “yeah” when a town member protests the curfew. I attempt to be in the moment—but can’t. I’m obsessing over my additional scene. No one notices. I’m background, and I’m doing it just fine. However, an extra sitting directly behind me is not. Instead of mumbling and grumbling, he’s echoing. When a mic’d-up day player, a town meeting attendee, complains loudly that “they robbed my house on Christmas!” the bad extra repeats “Christmas!”—take after take. Finally, a crew person orders the bad extra to cease echoing immediately. Gruffly, he explains to him that he’s being paid to not speak.

    Four hours later, after the scene is shot from a multitude of angles, we’re dismissed. As we single file out of the church, Justin strolls past us in his cool Aviator shades, the ones he’s always photographed wearing, and steps into a waiting black vehicle. Unlike Alec Baldwin, he doesn’t acknowledge background, at least in this moment. But that sentiment doesn’t go both ways.

    “Justin’s so handsome. He’s much better looking in person,” gushes a young female extra. “But he’s not my type.”

    “I’m sure you’re not his type either,” I want to snap.

    At the time, Justin was Mr. Aniston.

    As my town meeting extra brethren check out to go home via their courtesy ride, another fresh batch of background checks in and hunkers down in the cafeteria. I’m not allowed to depart, of course, because I have that additional scene—the one that very well could save me. As far as the workday, it’s halftime.

    The fresh extras, who are playing cult members, are easy to identify because they’re dressed in all white. I’d applied for this core background role but didn’t have the required white attire. Meanwhile, a heaping, gorgeous buffet is laid out, which I happen to be seated next to. I’m famished. I exhausted myself calling casting’s recording. I tentatively approach the buffet before deciding to just go for it. Just as I’m about to tong some greens, I’m ordered to halt. “Background?!” the catering man orders in a stern, condescending tone.

    Suddenly, I’m an insect.

    I drop the tongs in the greens. I almost feel as if I should raise my hands in surrender. I could’ve played a captured German in Saving Private Ryan.

    “Ah, yeah,” I stammer. Being identified as mere scenery shook me. Since I was chosen for the role of gas station attendant, I thought that my status had been elevated. I was wrong. Again.

    “You gotta wait for the crew to eat first,” barks the catering dude.

    When I saw the plentiful buffet, I completely forgot that nonunion extras are the very last to indulge. The production crew—everyone from the technical people to the principal actors to the stand-ins—dine first, then union background, and then, finally, nonunion background. I slink back to my seat. As the crew eats, I sit alone and mumble and grumble to myself. The cult members—who have been working on the production for several days—have their niche. The PAs sit with PAs. The teamsters are with the teamsters. And so on and so on. No, there are no other anxious gas station attendants.

    I am Leftover 69.

    When the cult members form a line at the buffet, I’m out of the gate like Secretariat, and I cut in front of them. I’ve been here all day. I will eat first! Indeed, I’m entitled.

    After dinner, the cult members and I are bused to another holding location, “satellite holding,” which is closer to set. It’s an empty room in an Italian restaurant. When the cult extras are called to set—a real gas station—I depart to the bus with them. I’m uninvited but perhaps the director will decide on the fly that she needs me. If you want an opportunity, you must be in the right place. And, yes, the scene does take place at a gas station, and, of course, I’m the attendant. But before I can board, the PA, who told me I had “a look,” orders me off the bus and to wait in the restaurant.

    No, she’s not treating me like the next Brad Pitt in any shape or form.

    Finally, I’m informed that I’ll be in the final shot of the night. Production refers to this as the Martini Shot because the very next shot will be out of a glass. Cute.

    Unless I get an actual line, my paycheck isn’t going to be much more than that of the townie nonunion extras who were bused out hours earlier and got paid for ten hours. I return to the room and plop myself at a table that’s vacant except for a basket of untouched onion rolls—which I somehow manage to not devour. Thus far, that’s my biggest accomplishment of the day.

    There’s another guy with me, a veteran union extra. Pacino is in the final scene with me. Of course, this is not his real name, but he has a faint resemblance to the legendary actor. He’ll be driving his car at my gas station. It’s a decent payday for Pacino. As union background, he makes about twice my hourly rate, and he gets overtime after eight hours as opposed to ten for nonunion. Plus, he’s getting a pay bump for the use of his car, as well as mileage. I would’ve joined the union yesterday, but you can’t just sign up. You need to pay a few thousand bucks to get in, plus dues. Also—and this is perhaps the toughest part—you need to be granted three waivers. How’s that accomplished? A nonunion individual needs to be hired as a union hire on three separate occasions. A television show’s first twenty-five background hires must be union. For film, it’s about seventy-five. If production fills one of those union spots with a nonunion person, for whatever reason, that nonunion hire earns a waiver. At this point, I have zero waivers. Anyway, Pacino tells me that I shouldn’t expect a line because production would be fined for using a nonunion extra for such purposes. As he checks his email, I pester him with questions until I pass out on the floor.

    Just before 11 p.m., I’m awakened by a mobile sea of white—the cult members. It’s time. I’ll finally learn my fate. Pacino drives me to the gas station set, where I’m greeted enthusiastically.

    “Jonny!” the second-second greets me enthusiastically.

    “What happened to 69?” I want to reply.

    He’s a handsome man—think Redford—with a full head of dirty-blond hair. I’m taken aback by his enthusiastic, personal welcome after being referred to as 69 throughout the day. Just maybe I’ll get an opportunity to do something, like fill up someone’s tank or perhaps even ask, “Fill her up?” I can dream, damn it.

    Redford interrupts my fantasies and casually informs me that production may use me.

    Come again?! After all this, you may use me? I’m annoyed.

    Following this revelation, I just want the day to be done. Unfortunately, the gas station has a conspicuous “Self-Serve” sign. No, I won’t be making an appearance in this scene, not even as background. That’s fine. My tank is empty anyway.

    As they shoot my scene, I wait in the station’s convenience store and listen to a makeup lady complain about some of the seemingly endless days on Orange Is the New Black. She has to rise at 3 a.m. to be at set at 5 a.m. I also converse with the gas station owner, the real gas station owner. This station has a futuristic exterior and has been featured on several shows.

    Minutes later, we wrap. I hitch a ride back with Pacino to the cafeteria. As I sign out, I ask the PA, the one who said I had “a look,” about getting a ride back to the city in one of production’s vans. Earlier, a few PAs assured me that this wouldn’t be a problem.

    “I thought you were taking care of your transportation,” she replies, flustered.

    “They told me that I could get a courtesy ride,” I whine.

    My friend’s couch is a viable backup, but I need home.

    “We asked you to stay late because you were arranging your own transportation,” she explains.

    “What happened to my look!?” I want to snarl like Billy Bob in Bad Santa.

    Ironic: the unused gas station attendant may not be granted a courtesy ride. Later, I learn that most, if not all, productions do not want crew to ride with background. It’s as if we’re contagious.

    “We’ll get you in a van,” she finally relents.

    After midnight, I step into a packed van. No one utters a word during the ride. When the van lands on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, someone grumbles. Fitting.

    Jon Hart’s Unfortunately, I was available is available on Amazon and wherever books are sold.

    Leftover 69: An Excerpt from Jon Hart’s ‘Unfortunately, I was available’

    Jon Hart

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  • Judge upholds dismissal of involuntary manslaughter charge against Alec Baldwin in on-set shooting

    Judge upholds dismissal of involuntary manslaughter charge against Alec Baldwin in on-set shooting

    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A New Mexico judge has upheld her decision to dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against Alec Baldwin in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer on the set of a Western movie.

    In a ruling Thursday, state District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer stood by her July decision to dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against Baldwin. She said prosecutors did not raise any factual or legal arguments that would justify reversing her decision.

    “Because the state’s amended motion raises arguments previously made, and arguments that the state elected not to raise earlier, the court does not find the amended motion well taken,” the judge wrote, adding that the request was also untimely.

    A spokesperson for Baldwin’s lawyers said Friday that they had no immediate reaction to the decision.

    Special prosecutor Kari Morrissey told The Associated Press that she disagrees with the court’s analysis and will appeal the ruling. Morrissey was appointed by the Santa Fe district attorney to take over the case in March 2023 after a previous special prosecutor resigned following missteps in the filing of initial charges.

    The case was thrown out halfway through trial on allegations that police and prosecutors withheld evidence from the defense in the 2021 death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film “Rust.”

    Baldwin’s trial was upended by revelations that ammunition was brought into the Santa Fe County sheriff’s office in March by a man who said it could be related to Hutchins’ killing. Prosecutors said they deemed the ammo unrelated and unimportant, while Baldwin’s lawyers say investigators “buried” the evidence in a separate case file and filed a successful motion to dismiss.

    Baldwin, the lead actor and co-producer for “Rust,” was pointing a gun at Hutchins during a rehearsal on a movie set outside Santa Fe in October 2021 when the revolver went off, killing Hutchins and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin has said he pulled back the hammer — but not the trigger — and the revolver fired.

    A judge in April sentenced movie weapons supervisor Hannah Gutierrez-Reed to the maximum of 1.5 years at a state penitentiary on an involuntary manslaughter conviction in Hutchins’ death.

    Marlowe Sommer last month rejected Gutierrez-Reed’s request to dismiss her conviction or convene a new trial on allegations that prosecutors failed to share evidence that might have been exculpatory. She found that the armorer’s attorneys didn’t establish that there was a reasonable possibility that the outcome of the trial would have been different had the evidence been available to Gutierrez-Reed, who still has an appeal pending with a higher court.

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque contributed to this report.

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  • Judge declines to reconsider criminal charges against Alec Baldwin in ‘Rust’ shooting – National | Globalnews.ca

    Judge declines to reconsider criminal charges against Alec Baldwin in ‘Rust’ shooting – National | Globalnews.ca

    A New Mexico judge has upheld her decision to dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against Alec Baldwin in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer on the set of a Western movie.

    In a ruling Thursday, state District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer stood by her July decision to dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against Baldwin. She said prosecutors did not raise any factual or legal arguments that would justify reversing her decision.

    “Because the state’s amended motion raises arguments previously made, and arguments that the state elected not to raise earlier, the court does not find the amended motion well taken,” the judge wrote, adding that the request was also untimely.

    A spokesperson for Baldwin’s lawyers said Friday that they had no immediate reaction to the decision.

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    Special prosecutor Kari Morrissey told The Associated Press that she disagrees with the court’s analysis and will appeal the ruling. Morrissey was appointed by the Santa Fe district attorney to take over the case in March 2023 after a previous special prosecutor resigned following missteps in the filing of initial charges.

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    The case was thrown out halfway through trial on allegations that police and prosecutors withheld evidence from the defence in the 2021 death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film Rust.


    Baldwin’s trial was upended by revelations that ammunition was brought into the Santa Fe County sheriff’s office in March by a man who said it could be related to Hutchins’ killing. Prosecutors said they deemed the ammo unrelated and unimportant, while Baldwin’s lawyers say investigators “buried” the evidence in a separate case file and filed a successful motion to dismiss.

    Baldwin, the lead actor and co-producer for Rust, was pointing a gun at Hutchins during a rehearsal on a movie set outside Santa Fe in October 2021 when the revolver went off, killing Hutchins and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin has said he pulled back the hammer — but not the trigger — and the revolver fired.

    A judge in April sentenced movie weapons supervisor Hannah Gutierrez-Reed to the maximum of 1.5 years at a state penitentiary on an involuntary manslaughter conviction in Hutchins’ death.

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    Marlowe Sommer last month rejected Gutierrez-Reed’s request to dismiss her conviction or convene a new trial on allegations that prosecutors failed to share evidence that might have been exculpatory. She found that the armorer’s attorneys didn’t establish that there was a reasonable possibility that the outcome of the trial would have been different had the evidence been available to Gutierrez-Reed, who still has an appeal pending with a higher court.

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque contributed to this report.

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  • This Cocktail Has Been A Honey Of A Success

    This Cocktail Has Been A Honey Of A Success

    This cocktail has made the rounds on social media and events….and has become a raging success.

    This cocktail has been a honey of a success…and a refreshing change at sporting events. The Grey Goose Honey Deuce is the official cocktail of the US Open.  The drink returned this year to a roaring success. The name comes from a word play on the tennis term deuce (a tie score of 40-40) and the honeydew melon garnish.  Refreshing, intoxicating and popular – the drink has been gushing out of court side bars at $23 a pop.

    The US Open is a premier tennis tournament sponsored by big hitters like American Express, Mercedes Benz, IHG Hotels and Resorts, Rolex and Emirates Airlines. The well heeled, the super rich and the famous flock to the stands. Anna Wintour was there along with celebrities at Arthur Ashe stadium. Spotted at the event was Phoebe Dynevor, Hugh Jackman, Zoey Deutch, Lindsay Lohan, Alec Baldwin, Kerry Washington, and Alicia Keyes. The crowd knows how to drink and drink well…and this cocktail has done well.  This year they ordered over 550,000 Honey Deuces, over 100,000 more than last year.  Roughly $12.65 million plus tips were spent over the two weeks of the tournament.

    But you don’t have to fly to New York and hobnob with the crowd to have your own.  You can make it at home and imbibe. Here is how to make your own Grey Goose Honey Deuce.

    Ingredients

    • 1 1.4 oz Grey Goose Vodka
    • Fresh Lemonade
    • Premium Raspberry Liqueur
    • Honeydew Melon Balls

    Create

    1. Fill a chilled highball glass with cubed ice and add Grey Goose Vodka
    2. Top with fresh lemonade and raspberry liqueur
    3. Garnish with a skewer of 1 or multiple frozen honeydew melon balls

    Beer has been the staple of sporting events, but stadiums around the country have been changing their drinks menu while adding sponsorship dollars to the coffers. In 1989 Evian water wanted to reach hot and thirsty affluent customers, so they became an official sponsor of the US Open. The tennis set has had beverage-centric partnerships ever since. And this has translated to other events from the Kentucky Derby to football adding it to their menu.

    Anthony Washington

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  • Alec Baldwin: Prosecutor seeks to reinstate tossed ‘Rust’ shooting charge – National | Globalnews.ca

    Alec Baldwin: Prosecutor seeks to reinstate tossed ‘Rust’ shooting charge – National | Globalnews.ca

    A prosecutor asked a New Mexico judge to reconsider the decision to dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against Alec Baldwin in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer on the set of a Western movie, according to a court filing made public Wednesday.

    Special prosecutor Kari Morrissey said there were insufficient facts to support the July ruling and that Baldwin’s due process rights had not been violated.

    State District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case halfway through a trial based on the withholding of evidence by police and prosecutors from the defense in the 2021 shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film “Rust.”

    The charge against Baldwin was dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can’t be revived once any appeals of the decision are exhausted.

    Baldwin, the lead actor and co-producer on “Rust,” was pointing a gun at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins during a rehearsal when it went off, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin has said he pulled back the hammer — but not the trigger — and the revolver fired.

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    Click to play video: 'Alec Baldwin indicted again for involuntary manslaughter over fatal ‘Rust’ film set shooting'


    Alec Baldwin indicted again for involuntary manslaughter over fatal ‘Rust’ film set shooting


    The case-ending evidence was ammunition that was brought into the sheriff’s office in March by a man who said it could be related to Hutchins’ killing. Prosecutors said they deemed the ammunition unrelated and unimportant, while Baldwin’s lawyers alleged that they “buried” it and filed a successful motion to dismiss the case.

    In her decision to dismiss the Baldwin case, Marlowe Sommer described “egregious discovery violations constituting misconduct” by law enforcement and prosecutors, as well as false testimony about physical evidence by a witness during the trial.

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    In the request to reconsider, Morrissey argued again that the undisclosed ammunition was not relevant to the case against Baldwin, which hinged on his responsibility to handle a gun safely under familiar industry guidelines.

    “No one on the prosecution team … ever intentionally kept evidence from the defendant, it simply didn’t occur to the prosecution that the rounds were relevant to the case even if they were the same or similar to the live rounds found on the set of ‘Rust,’” Morrissey wrote.

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    She asserted that defense attorneys knew about the rounds but canceled an opportunity to view them prior to trial.

    “This is a smoke screen created by the defense and was intended to sway and confuse the court … and it was successful,” Morrissey wrote.

    Baldwin attorney Luke Nikas said a response will be filed with the court, without further comment.

    Movie armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed is serving an 18-month sentence on a conviction for involuntary manslaughter. She was accused of flouting standard safety protocols and missing multiple opportunities to detect forbidden live ammunition on set.


    Click to play video: '‘Rust’ armorer convicted of involuntary manslaughter in fatal movie set shooting'


    ‘Rust’ armorer convicted of involuntary manslaughter in fatal movie set shooting


    Assistant director and safety coordinator David Halls pleaded no contest to the negligent use of a deadly weapon and was sentenced to six months of unsupervised probation. A no contest plea isn’t an admission of guilt but is treated as such for sentencing purposes.

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    It hasn’t been officially determined who brought the live rounds that killed Hutchins to the set, though prosecutors allege that Gutierrez-Reed was responsible.

    The ammunition that skuttled the case was handed over to a Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office crime scene technician who filed the evidence under an unrelated case number. Three of those rounds resembled live rounds that were collected from the “Rust” set after the fatal shooting.

    The mysterious ammunition was dropped off at the sheriff’s office by Troy Teske, of Bullhead City, Arizona, who routinely stored weapons and ammunition for his friend and longtime movie-gun coach Thell Reed — Gutierrez-Reed’s stepfather and mentor as a film-set armorer.

    Morrissey asked the judge to order defense attorneys to show when and how they learned of the ammunition provided by Teske, calling the defense motion to dismiss the case “all a ruse.”


    Click to play video: 'Alec Baldwin ‘Rust’ shooting trial begins in New Mexico'


    Alec Baldwin ‘Rust’ shooting trial begins in New Mexico


    Attorneys for Baldwin have said he was unaware that live ammunition had been brought to the film set and that prosecutors hid evidence while trying to establish a link between the live ammo on set and Gutierrez-Reed. They said prosecutors wanted to drive home the argument that Baldwin should have recognized the armorer’s blundering youth and inexperience.

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    Gutierrez-Reed is seeking the dismissal of her involuntary manslaughter conviction based on the allegations of suppressed evidence that emerged at Baldwin’s trial.

    Separately, Gutierrez-Reed has requested a hearing on a proposal to change her plea to guilty in exchange for a deferred sentence on a felony firearms charge pertaining to accusations that she took a gun into a Santa Fe bar weeks before “Rust” began filming.

    Under the agreement with prosecutors, Gutierrez-Reed would serve 18 months under supervised probation with the potential for incarceration for probation violations. Terms of probation agreement, if approved, would forbid possession of firearms and the consumption of drugs or alcohol and would require registration in a criminal justice DNA database.


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  • Tim Burton Explains Why Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis Aren’t in ‘Beetlejuice’ Sequel

    Tim Burton Explains Why Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis Aren’t in ‘Beetlejuice’ Sequel

    Tim Burton explained Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis‘ absence from his Beetlejuice sequel this week.

    Though Burton brought back original stars Winona Ryder, Catherina O’Hara and Michael Keaton for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, his 2024 follow-up to the 1988 classic, Baldwin and Davis do not return.

    “I think the thing was for me I didn’t want to just tick any boxes,” Burton told People. “So even though they were such an amazing integral part of the first one, I was focusing on something else.”

    In the original film, Baldwin and Davis played Adam and Barbara Maitland, a recently deceased couple confined to the Connecticut house where they used to live when at odds with the home’s new residents, the Deetz family: Charles (Jeffrey Jones) his daughter Lydia (Ryder) and Charles’s wife Delia (O’Hara).

    In Beetlejuice Beetlejuice — which wowed audiences during its Venice Film Fest premiere on Wednesday — Jenna Ortega plays Lydia’s teenage daughter who accidentally reopens the door to the afterlife.

    “A sequel like this, it really had to do with the time,” Burton continued. “That was my hook into it, the three generations of mother, daughter, granddaughter. And that [would] be the nucleus of it. I couldn’t have made this personally back in 1989 or whatever.”

    Davis previously told Entertainment Tonight in April that her theory was she was not returning because “ghosts don’t age.”

    Beetlejuice Beetlejuice will release in theaters Sept. 6.

    Zoe G Phillips

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  • What’s next for Alec Baldwin after involuntary manslaughter case dismissal

    What’s next for Alec Baldwin after involuntary manslaughter case dismissal

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — A New Mexico judge dismissed the involuntary manslaughter case against Alec Baldwin over the fatal shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins in a sudden move Friday.

    Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case based on the misconduct of police and prosecutors over the withholding of evidence from the defense. She said the case cannot be filed again.

    Baldwin, the lead actor and co-producer of the film “Rust,” was pointing a gun at Hutchins during a rehearsal on the set outside Santa Fe in October 2021 when the gun went off, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin has said he pulled back the hammer — but not the trigger — and the gun fired.

    He and other producers still face civil lawsuits from Hutchins’ parents and sister, which white collar defense attorney Mark Sedlander told The Associated Press are more common for workplace accidents like the fatal shooting.

    “By civil law standards, it is common for someone like Mr. Baldwin to be held responsible for what happened, but it is relatively unusual in the criminal context,” Sedlander said in an interview before the case was dismissed.

    Whether “Rust” will be released is still unclear. The plot follows Baldwin as a Western outlaw who works to break his grandson out of prison after he is convicted of an accidental murder. Filming wrapped in 2023, and producers have said finishing the film was meant to honor Hutchins’ artistic vision and generate money for her young son.

    The career of the “30 Rock” star and frequent “Saturday Night Live” host — who has been a household name for more than three decades — had been put into doubt, and he could have gotten 18 months in prison if convicted.

    In June, amid the looming trial, Baldwin and his wife, Hilaria, announced they would appear in a reality series about their large family. He shares seven young kids with Hilaria and one adult daughter, Ireland Baldwin, with his ex-wife, Kim Basinger.

    The TLC series, tentatively titled “The Baldwins,” is set to release in 2025.

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  • Alec Baldwin Thanks Supporters in First Statement After Rust Trial Dismissal

    Alec Baldwin Thanks Supporters in First Statement After Rust Trial Dismissal

    Photo: Ramsay de Give-Pool/Getty Images

    Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter case over the Rust shooting was thrown out mid-trial on July 12. Halyna Hutchins’s widower still wants to hold the actor “accountable” in front of a jury, but others celebrated the news. Below, the latest reactions to the dismissal, including Baldwin’s first public statement after the trial and comments from his celebrity supporters.

    July 12, 2024: Reactions to the July 12 dismissal of Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter case are trickling in. Deadline reports that Matthew Hutchins, the widower of Rust cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, still wants Baldwin back in court for fatally shooting her on set in 2021. “We respect the court’s decision,” Hutchins’s lawyer Brian J. Panish told Deadline of the criminal case that was dismissed with prejudice, which means it cannot be filed again. “We look forward to presenting all the evidence to a jury and holding Mr. Baldwin accountable for his actions in the senseless death of Halyna Hutchins,” Panish added, which seems to suggest that Hutchins will still pursue justice in civil court. In June, Panish claimed to the New York Times that Baldwin and other parties were months late on a settlement payment for a wrongful-death civil lawsuit brought in 2022 over the Rust tragedy. At the time, Panish said Hutchins was considering suing for breach of agreement or resuming the wrongful-death suit.

    Meanwhile, Baldwin’s supporters have rejoiced at today’s news. “Hallelujah @AlecBaldwin You are free!! #CourtTV,” his Rust co-star Frances Fisher tweeted. The actress has previously been vocal about her support for Baldwin, tweeting in January 2023 that the “grandstanding prosecutor” wasn’t going after the “true culprit” who “put a live round in a gun.” As of publication time, neither Baldwin nor his wife Hilaria have publicly posted about the dismissal that had him crying in court. Fisher left a celebratory message under Baldwin’s wife Hilaria’s latest Instagram post, commenting, “Hallelujah Hilaria💕.” Actress and songwriter Apollonia Kotero similarly showed her support on Instagram, commenting “💜🙏🏽Amen Alec!! Felicidades!!” under Baldwin’s most recent post.

    July 13, 2024: Alec Baldwin has issued his first public statement since his involuntary manslaughter case was dismissed. There are too many people who have supported me to thank just now,” he captioned an Instagram photo of himself looking emotional in court. “To all of you, you will never know how much I appreciate your kindness toward my family.”

    Several fellow celebs sent well wishes under the post, which comes a day after the Rust trial was thrown out. “We love you❤️❤️❤️,” Amy Sedaris wrote, while Don Lemon and Anthony Hopkins both left heart emojis. “I cannot express how happy and grateful I feel for you and your beautiful family! ❤️❤️,” Lesley Ann Warren said. “Make peace with yourself and may you and your family heal from this. 🙏,” Frank Grillo added. Other supporters in the comments include Caroline Rhea, Craig Killborn, Gregory Lauritano, and Mike Hatton. Baldwin’s Rust co-star Frances Fisher, who already shared multiple congratulatory messages on the day of the dismissal, also posted a new comment: “Whatever comes next, we are by your side, Alec. ✊🏽”

    This post has been updated.

    Jennifer Zhan

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  • Alec Baldwin ‘Rust’ manslaughter case dismissed by judge

    Alec Baldwin ‘Rust’ manslaughter case dismissed by judge

    US actor Alec Baldwin participates in a pretrial hearing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on July 8, 2024. 

    Ross D. Franklin | AFP | Getty Images

    A New Mexico judge on Friday dismissed the criminal involuntary manslaughter case against Alec Baldwin on the third day of the actor’s trial, after ruling that prosecutors improperly kept evidence about live ammunition potentially related to the case secret from defense lawyers.

    Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer tossed the case against Baldwin, which related to the October 2021 accidental shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of his movie “Rust,” with prejudice. That means prosecutors cannot retry the “30 Rock” actor.

    Baldwin wept as the decision was announced, on what was the third day of trial in the case in state court in Santa Fe. He soon after embraced his wife Hilaria.

    “There is no way for the court to right this wrong,” Sommers said, referring to the prosecution’s actions. “The sanction of dismissal is the only warranted remedy.”

    Under U.S. criminal law, prosecutors must turn over evidence to defense lawyers if that evidence is potentially helpful to a defendant.

    A defense lawyer for Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, who served as the armorer on the “Rust” production, in a statement said he will seek her immediate release from prison, where she is currently serving an 18-month prison sentence after being convicted in March of involuntary manslaughter in Hutchins’ death.

    Guitierrez-Reed’s lawyer, Jason Bowels, said the prosecution in Baldwin’s and his client’s case had engaged in an “absolutely shocking” pattern of misconduct.

    Baldwin in an Instagram post on Saturday morning wrote, “There are too many people who have supported me to thank just now.”

    “To all of you, you will never know how much I appreciate your kindness toward my family,” Baldwin wrote.

    Brian Parrish, a lawyer for Hutchins’ widower Matthew Hutchins, in a statement, said, “We respect the court’s decision,” but vowed to pursue civil claims against Baldwin.

    US actor Alec Baldwin and his wife Hilaria Baldwin embrace during his trial on involuntary manslaughter at Santa Fe County District Court in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on July 12, 2024. 

    Ramsay De Give | AFP | Getty Images

    Hours before she dismissed the case on Friday, Sommer sent jurors home for the weekend after receiving a motion from Baldwin’s attorneys asking her to toss the charges.

    The judge then conducted a hearing on the defense’s claims, which cited the ammunition in the possession of prosecutors, which had not been previously disclosed to Baldwin’s team by prosecutors.

    “We don’t know if it’s a live ammunition match or not,” Baldwin’s attorney Luke Nikas told Sommer, according to the Associated Press. “But we do know that the state had it, and it’s disclosable.”Prosecutors in turn claimed that the ammo was not related to the case.

    On Friday night, Erlinda Johnson Ocampo, who had been a special prosecutor on the team in Baldwin’s case, said she quit the team midday Friday after learning a day earlier that ammunition had been given to law enforcement on the heels of the shooting which had not been disclosed to defense lawyers.

    “We have an obligation as prosecutors, we have an obligation not only to the people, but to the defendant and our obligation is to make sure that all the evidence is turned over,” Ocampo told Chris Cuomon on NewsNation. “We don’t get to decide what the defense is going to be. Our job is to ensure transparency, and to ensure that the defendant has everything that the prosecution has gathered.”

    The dismissal comes 16 months after the charges against Baldwin were first tossed out by prosecutors after they said “new facts” had emerged that required further investigation.

    The case was refiled against him earlier this year.

    Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer speaks during a pretrial hearing in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on July 8, 2024. US actor Alec Baldwin is facing a single charge of involuntary manslaughter in the death of a cinematographer.

    Ross D. Franklin | ADP | Getty Images

    Baldwin was rehearsing a scene when a revolver he was handling fired, killing the 42-year-old Hutchins.

    Since the shooting, Baldwin has denied that he pulled the trigger of the weapon and said that he had been told the gun was unable to be fired when it was handed to him.

    He had faced the possibility of being sentenced to 18 months in prison if convicted in the case.

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  • Alec Baldwin’s Involuntary Manslaughter Case Has Been Dismissed

    Alec Baldwin’s Involuntary Manslaughter Case Has Been Dismissed

    Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter charge has been thrown out by a judge over the mishandling of evidence by the Santa Fe prosecutors, which the actor’s attorneys said had harmed their efforts at mounting a fair defense. The 30 Rock and Hunt for Red October star will now not face trial for the on-set shooting during the making of the western drama Rust that ended the life of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and wounded writer-director Joel Souza.

    The movie’s armorer, Hannah Gutierrez Reed, had already been found guilty in March for loading a live round of ammunition into the gun Baldwin used during the rehearsal for a scene in October 2021. The film’s assistant director, Dave Halls, accepted a plea bargain for negligent use of a deadly weapon in January 2023. He was the person who handed Baldwin the gun Gutierrez had loaded, and investigators said he had declared it a “cold” weapon, indicating it had no live ammunition in it.

    There was ongoing debate about Baldwin’s responsibility—or lack thereof—for Hutchins’ death, since the armorer was responsible for prepping the prop gun, and the assistant director was responsible for safety checks. (Significant false information about the case, including that crew members had been using the prop guns for target practice, spread online during the investigation, but the live round’s arrival on the set turned out to be the result of simple carelessness on the part of Gutierrez Reed, as her jury trial eventually determined.) The actor’s role as a producer on Rust complicated the issue of responsibility; he said it was a title that only involved creative input, while others handled the hiring and management of crew. In a combative interview with ABC News, Baldwin denied even pulling the trigger, which seemed dubious to some viewers.

    Charges against him were filed, then dropped again, then refiled as experts changed their assessment of whether the gun could have gone off on its own. Ultimately, prosecutors felt the weapon could only have been fired through some action by Baldwin, and they moved forward with charges against him—although the question of whether he should be blamed for the actions of others that put the deadly object in his hands remained up for debate. Vanity Fair‘s own investigation into the case, “Event Cascade,” determined that there were multiple points of failure during the production that led to the fatal incident.

    The proceedings against Baldwin began this week in Santa Fe, but before it could actually get underway the trial came to an abrupt end on Friday over an envelope full of ammunition that had been supplied to prosecutors by an associate of Gutierrez Reed’s father, Thell Reed, a longtime movie armorer himself. The exact nature of the bullets and their connection to the case were unclear, but the fact that prosecutors had mislabeled the objects and filed them under case number for another trial were enough for Baldwin’s lawyers to call for the case to be dismissed, since they were unable to assess the supposed evidence. Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer agreed and tossed out the case with prejudice, which means it cannot be refiled against him. Baldwin openly wept in court after the decision.

    The 42-year-old Hutchins left behind a husband and young son. Her career as a cinematographer was just beginning to take off, and she posted frequently on social media during the making of Rust about her passion for the western saga, in which Baldwin plays an aging gunslinger who is determined to stop the hanging execution of a young boy who, in a morbidly ironic twist, accidentally kills someone with a firearm. Her husband, Matthew, reached a settlement with the production that involved him becoming an executive producer, and the movie was ultimately finished, with Souza returning to the emotionally charged project to complete their work.

    A new cinematographer stepped in to help finish the project, while preserving as much of Hutchins’ final work as possible. The status of the film—when it will be screened or released publicly—remains unclear.

    Anthony Breznican

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  • Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter case dismissed in “Rust” shooting

    Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter case dismissed in “Rust” shooting

    The judge in actor Alec Baldwin’s New Mexico trial on a charge of involuntary manslaughter dismissed the case Friday after the defense team accused prosecutors of withholding evidence. 

    Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case with prejudice based on the misconduct of police and prosecutors in the trial over the 2021 shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film “Rust.” 

    Prior to the dismissal, the case took a bizarre turn when prosecutor Erlinda Johnson resigned and fellow prosecutor Kari Morrissey called herself as a witness. Earlier in the day, the judge had sent the jury home as attorneys argued over the defense’s motion for dismissal, including questioning a witness who had already testified in the case. 

    Actor Alec Baldwin
    Actor Alec Baldwin reacts during his trial in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on July 12, 2024. 

    RAMSAY DE GIVE/POOL/AFP via Getty Images


    Baldwin cried, hugged his two attorneys, gestured to the front of the court, then turned to embrace his wife Hilaria, who was also crying. He climbed into an SUV outside the Santa Fe courthouse without speaking to media.

    Baldwin, 66, could have gotten 18 months in prison if convicted.

    The defense argued that prosecutors hid evidence from them about ammunition that may be related to the shooting. The evidence was not put into the same file as the rest of the “Rust” case, and was not presented to Baldwin’s defense team when they examined the ballistics evidence in April.

    The defense said they should have had the ability to determine its importance.

    The issue emerged Thursday, on the second day of the actor’s trial, during defense questioning of sheriff’s crime scene technician Marissa Poppell. Baldwin lawyer Alex Spiro asked whether a “good Samaritan” had come into the sheriff’s office with the ammunition earlier this year after the trial of Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, the film’s armorer. Gutierrez-Reed was sentenced to 18 months in prison on an involuntary manslaughter conviction, which she is now appealing. 

    The prosecution said that the ammunition was not connected to the case and was not hidden. But the judge sided with the defense.

    “The late discovery of this evidence during trial has impeded the effective use of evidence in such a way that it has impacted the fundamental fairness of the proceedings,” Marlowe Sommer said. “If this conduct does not rise to the level of bad faith it certainly comes so near to bad faith to show signs of scorching.”

    It has never been officially determined who brought the live rounds onto the set that killed Hutchins. Prosecutors at the previous trial of Gutierrez-Reed alleged that she was responsible.

    Baldwin said in an interview with ABC News that he never pulled the trigger of the gun he was holding in Hutchins’ direction as they rehearsed a scene.

    Baldwin and other producers of the film still face civil lawsuits from Hutchins’ parents and sister.

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  • Alec Baldwin involuntary manslaughter case dismissed in middle of trial – National | Globalnews.ca

    Alec Baldwin involuntary manslaughter case dismissed in middle of trial – National | Globalnews.ca

    A New Mexico judge on Friday brought a sudden and stunning end to the involuntary manslaughter case against Alec Baldwin, dismissing it in the middle of the actor’s trial and saying it cannot be filed again.

    Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case with prejudice based on the misconduct of police and prosecutors over the withholding of evidence from the defense in the shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film “Rust.”

    Baldwin cried, hugged his two attorneys, gestured to the front of the court, then turned to hug his crying wife Hilaria, holding the embrace for 12 seconds. He climbed into an SUV outside the Santa Fe courthouse without speaking to media.

    “The late discovery of this evidence during trial has impeded the effective use of evidence in such a way that it has impacted the fundamental fairness of the proceedings,” Marlowe Sommer said. “If this conduct does not rise to the level of bad faith it certainly comes so near to bad faith to show signs of scorching.”

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    The evidence that sank the case, revealed during the trial’s second day of testimony Thursday, was the existence of ammunition that was brought into the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office in March by a man who said it could be related to Hutchins’ killing. Prosecutors said they deemed the ammo unrelated and unimportant, while Baldwin’s lawyers alleged they “buried” it. The defense filed one of many motions they had made to dismiss the case over evidence issues. All the others were rejected. But this one took.


    Click to play video: '‘Rust’ armorer convicted of involuntary manslaughter in fatal movie set shooting'


    ‘Rust’ armorer convicted of involuntary manslaughter in fatal movie set shooting


    The judge’s decision ends the criminal culpability of the 66-year-old Baldwin after a nearly three-year saga that began when a revolver he was pointing at Hutchins during a rehearsal went off, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza.


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    “Our goal from the beginning was to seek justice for Halyna Hutchins, and we fought to get this case tried on its merits,” District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies said in a statement. “We are disappointed that the case did not get to the jury.”

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    The career of the “Hunt for Red October” and “30 Rock” star and frequent “Saturday Night Live” host — who has been a household name for more than three decades — had been put into doubt, and he could have gotten 18 months in prison if convicted.

    Baldwin and other producers still face civil lawsuits from Hutchins’ parents and sister.

    Prosecutors did get one conviction for Hutchins’ death. Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, the film’s armorer, was sentenced to 18 months in prison on an involuntary manslaughter conviction, which she is now appealing.

    Her attorney Jason Bowles said Friday that he would be filing a motion to dismiss his client’s case as well.

    “The judge upheld the integrity of the system in dismissing the case,” he told The Associated Press in an email.

    Marlowe Sommer put a pause on the trial earlier Friday and sent the jury home for the weekend so she could spend the day hearing testimony and arguments on the motion to dismiss.

    Troy Teske, a retired police officer and a close friend of Gutierrez-Reed’s father Thell Reed who is a gun coach and armorer on movies, was the person who brought the ammunition into the sheriff’s office in March on the same day the guilty verdict in her case was read.

    Teske and the ammo he said might be relevant had been known to authorities since a few weeks after the shooting, and special prosecutor Kari Morrissey had met with him last year, but they determined it was not relevant.

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    The evidence was collected but crucially was not put into the same file as the rest of the “Rust” case, and was not presented to Baldwin’s defense team when they examined the ballistics evidence in April. The defense would argue that they should have had a chance to weigh in on the evidence’s importance, and that the prosecution “buried” it.

    The issue came up during the defense questioning Thursday of sheriff’s crime scene technician Marissa Poppell, who acknowledged receiving the ammo, a moment that the judge watched on a police supervisor’s body camera on Friday.

    Morrissey argued that the emergence of the ammunition was part of an attempt by Reed to shift blame away from his daughter.

    “This is a wild goose chase that has no evidentiary value whatsoever,” Morrissey told the judge during the hearing. “This is just a man trying to protect his daughter.”


    Click to play video: 'Alec Baldwin ‘Rust’ shooting trial begins in New Mexico'


    Alec Baldwin ‘Rust’ shooting trial begins in New Mexico


    The case’s other special prosecutor, Erlinda Ocampo Johnson, resigned from the case earlier Friday. Baldwin attorney Alex Spiro asked whether she had resigned based on the evidence issues being discussed. Morrissey said she believed it was over the holding of the public hearing itself.

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    Speaking outside the courthouse doors, Morrissey said she respects the judge’s decision but that there was no reason to believe the undisclosed evidence in question was related to the set of “Rust.”

    The trial had barely begun when it was brought to a close. Prosecutors had only started to make their case, and none of the eyewitnesses from the set had testified yet.

    Baldwin’s younger brother Stephen Baldwin and older sister Elizabeth Keuchler, both actors themselves, sat behind him in the gallery next to his wife each day of the trial, which was streamed live by AP and Court TV. Reporters from both coasts filled the small courtroom, and had stations outside for arrivals and departures of trial players.

    The judge dealt a serious blow to the prosecution’s case when on the eve of the trial on Monday when she ruled that Baldwin’s role as a producer on the film was not relevant and had to be left out.

    Still, prosecutors forged ahead, painting Baldwin in their openings as a reckless performer who “played make-believe” while flouting basic gun safety rules.

    Baldwin’s attorney Spiro argued that he did only what actors always do on the “Rust” set, and that the necessary safety steps must be taken before a gun reaches a performer’s hand.

    –Dalton reported from Los Angeles.

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  • Alec Baldwin

    Alec Baldwin

    Prosecutors built their case Thursday against actor Alec Baldwin, who is on trial in New Mexico, accused of involuntary manslaughter in the on-set shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

    Baldwin’s defense attorney questioned a crime scene technician over what he suggested were shoddy and subpar searches for the live ammunition that ended up in the actor’s revolver and killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

    On the second day of Baldwin’s New Mexico involuntary manslaughter trial, Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer sided with the prosecution on Thursday in letting in key statements from the actor that demonstrate his knowledge of guns and the impact of blanks.

    Earlier, Alex Spiro grilled Santa Fe County sheriff’s technician Marissa Poppell in particular over search warrants served on a prop truck a week after the death of Hutchins on the set of the movie “Rust,” and on a prop warehouse more than a month after her shooting.

    The questions eventually led to Spiro asking Poppell whether police and prosecutors “were just trying to get this over with so that prosecutors could focus on Alec Baldwin?”

    “No,” she answered.

    In assertions that would be hotly disputed and dismissed by the prosecution, defense questioning mostly centered on the searches of Seth Kenney’s warehouse and a prop truck where his guns were kept in a safe. He is an Albuquerque-based ammunition and weapons supplier to “Rust,” who forged a cooperative relationship with investigators in the immediate aftermath of the fatal shooting.

    Spiro suggested that relationship may have been too close.

    Baldwin Set Shooting Trial
    Actor Alec Baldwin, left, embraces his brother, actor Stephen Baldwin, during a break in his involuntary manslaughter trial over a fatal shooting on the set of the film, “Rust,” in District Court, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Wednesday, July 10, 2024.

    Ross D. Franklin / AP


    “There was a witness there who assisted in the search,” Spiro said when asking about the warrant served on the truck. “A man named Seth Kenney. And not only did he assist, he actually was the one that opened the safe.”

    “Yes, he had the combination to it,” Poppell said.

    Spiro asked, “Why did law enforcement wait a week to go to the prop truck?”

    “The search warrant needed to be written,” Poppell replied. “I’m not sure why the time difference exactly.”

    Spiro responded that a search warrant for the church building set where the shooting took place was obtained in a day.

    “If you can do a search warrant in one day for one thing why does it take seven days for something else?”

    Spiro asked Poppell, who found a half-dozen live rounds on the set, if she was surprised to find none in the truck.

    “Not necessarily,” she said.

    “You’re finding these live rounds all over the set, right?” Spiro asked. Poppell replied yes.

    “You go a week later to the prop truck, which has all the ammunition right?” Spiro asked. “And there’s not a single live round there, right?”

    Poppell replied “yes” to both.

    “Let me ask you something,” the attorney said eventually. “At any point did you become suspicious of Seth Kenney?”

    Poppell answered, “No.”

    Kenney has not been charged with any wrongdoing. An email sent to his attorney seeking comment was not immediately returned.

    Special prosecutor Kari Morrissey in her redirect questioning of Poppell sought to render irrelevant the defendant’s approach by asking whether Alec Baldwin was charged with involuntary manslaughter because he brought live rounds onto the set or loaded them into his gun. Poppell answered “no” to both.

    Poppell agreed there was evidence that Hannah Gutierrez-Reed — the film’s armorer who has already been convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the shooting — had brought the ammunition, which she said was given to her by her father.

    Morrissey’s defense of Kenney’s role extended into her questioning of the case’s lead detective, sheriff’s Cpl. Alexandria Hancock, who testified briefly at the end of the day and will likely be on the stand for much of Friday.

    “Did you ever discover any evidence throughout your entire investigation that Seth Kenney supplied live rounds to the set of ‘Rust?’” Morrissey asked. Hancock said no.

    The prosecution was especially contemptuous of defense questions to Poppell about bullets brought into the sheriff’s department after the Gutierrez-Reed trial earlier this year by a good Samaritan who said the ammunition was the source of the round that killed Hutchins and that Kenney had duped authorities.

    Spiro said that Poppell had “buried” this evidence and it had not been shared with the defense in either Baldwin’s case or that of Gutierrez-Reed.

    Morrissey established in her questioning that the source of the ammunition was Troy Teske, a friend of Gutierrez-Reed’s father, and despite similarities was not the same size as the live rounds found on the “Rust” set, including the one that killed Hutchins.

    “The ammunition that the good Samaritan Mr. Teske, close friend of Hannah Gutierrez’s dad, brought to you after her conviction do you still have it?”

    Poppell replied yes.

    “You could bring it in here and show it to the jury and they could see for themselves that it does not match the live ammunition from the set of ‘Rust?’”

    Yes, the technician answered.

    Spiro got Poppell to testify that it could be very difficult to tell the difference between dummy rounds made to appear as onscreen ammunition that were used on the set, and the live rounds that turned the set fatal.

    It was an attempt to push back against the key assertion of prosecutors’ case: that Baldwin recklessly flouted gun safety.

    Gutierrez-Reed — who has already been convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the shooting — plead the fifth if called to testify in the trial her attorney told CBS News on Thursday.

    Both the prosecution and the defense completed their opening statements Wednesday in the Santa Fe courtroom of Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer, who also oversaw the trial of the film’s armorer, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed. Gutierrez-Reed was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to 18 months’ imprisonment earlier this year.

    The case stems from the 2021 on-set shooting of Hutchins, who died at the hospital after being shot with a .45-caliber revolver held by Baldwin in a small church on Bonanza Creek Ranch, a popular filming location near Santa Fe, during a rehearsal. 

    Baldwin, who has pleaded not guilty, has said he pulled the hammer but did not pull the trigger.

    Thursday’s testimony is expected to begin with the defense cross-examination of Marissa Poppell, a crime scene technician who photographed evidence, the fourth law enforcement witness called by prosecutors as they argue the movie set was an unsafe work environment where safety rules were ignored, including and encouraged by Baldwin. The defense argued in its opening statement that Baldwin was on-set as an actor, and it was the armorer who loaded the gun, not Baldwin.

    Baldwin, who was joined in the courtroom Wednesday by his wife, Hilaria Baldwin; his brother, actor Stephen Baldwin; and his sister Beth Keuchler, is expected to be in the courtroom each day of the trial, which is scheduled through July 19. Trial is expected to resume Thursday at 8:30 a.m. MDT, 10:30 EDT, with breaks at 10:30 a.m. local time, for lunch, and again at 3:30 p.m. local time.

    Elise Preston, Kathleen Seccombe and Elizabeth Campbell contributed to this report.

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  • Alec Baldwin’s recklessness led to on-set ‘Rust’ shooting, court hears – National | Globalnews.ca

    Alec Baldwin’s recklessness led to on-set ‘Rust’ shooting, court hears – National | Globalnews.ca

    As opening statements began Wednesday in the long-awaited Rust trial of Alec Baldwin, prosecutors and defence lawyers tried to paint him in different lights — as a safety-negligent leader, and an innocent actor playing a part.

    Baldwin, 66, is on trial in Santa Fe, N.M., for involuntary manslaughter over the October 2021 on-set shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

    Hutchins, 42, was struck and killed by a single “live round” fired from Baldwin’s gun as he rehearsed in front of a camera. Rust writer and director Joel Souza was also injured in the incident.

    Baldwin and his lawyers have repeatedly insisted the firing was accidental, and that real ammunition should have never been brought onto the set. Regardless, prosecutors said Baldwin was reckless and broke the “cardinal rules of firearm safety.”

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    Baldwin, who has pleaded not guilty, is the star and a co-producer of the western drama Rust. He could face up to 18 months in prison if found guilty of involuntary manslaughter.

    “When someone plays make-believe with a real gun in a real-life workplace, and while playing make-believe with that gun, violates the cardinal rules of firearm safety, people’s lives are in danger and someone could be killed,” prosecutor Erlinda Ocampo Johnson told the 16-member jury.

    Johnson called the case “simple” and “straightforward.”

    The courtroom was packed with spectators and members of the media, with Baldwin’s wife Hilaria, his brother Stephen, and his older sister Elizabeth Keuchler also seated in the gallery.


    Alec Baldwin speaks with his wife Hilaria Baldwin during his hearing at Santa Fe County District Court on July 10, 2024, in Santa Fe, N.M.


    Ross D. Franklin – Pool/Getty Images

    When it came time for the defence to give opening statements, lawyer Alex Spiro argued a gun must be safe before it reaches an actor’s hand on a film or TV set.

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    Baldwin’s lawyers will try to convince the jury that the blame for Hutchins’ death lies elsewhere, specifically with the person who brought real bullets to the production and the person who handed the loaded weapon to Baldwin.


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    “The actor’s job is to act, to rehearse, to choreograph his moves, to memorize his lines,” Spiro said. “Alec Baldwin committed no crime; he was an actor, acting.”

    “No one saw him intentionally pull the trigger.”

    Spiro maintained that even if Baldwin had pulled the trigger, he still should not be convicted of manslaughter.

    “On a movie set, you’re allowed to pull that trigger,” Spiro said. “That doesn’t make it a homicide.”

    He said other people on set — namely the film’s already convicted armourer and the first assistant director — are responsible for ensuring weapon safety.

    Prosecutors disagree. They claim Baldwin was negligent and failed to complete a safety check of the Colt .45, while also leaving his finger on the hammer and trigger as he pointed the weapon at people behind the camera.


    An image of Actor Alec Baldwin is shown on a screen during his trial in Santa Fe County District Court, July 10, 2024, in Santa Fe, n.m.


    Ross D. Franklin / POOL / AFP via Getty Images

    Baldwin has said the firearm malfunctioned and he did not pull the trigger. He’s also alleged he did not know the weapon contained live ammunition.

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    Witness testimony began on Wednesday, with police officer Nicholas LeFleur first to take the stand. He responded to the initial emergency call and was the earliest officer to the scene.

    The jury was shown LeFleur’s bodycam footage from the incident, which showed first responders rushing to treat Hutchins and Souza after the shooting.


    Law enforcement officer Nicholas LeFleur testifies during actor Alec Baldwin’s hearing at Santa Fe County District Court on July 10, 2024, in Santa Fe, N.M.


    Ross D. Franklin – Pool/Getty Images

    Souza, who was shot in the shoulder, is heard screaming in pain.

    Hutchins was shot under her right arm and the bullet perforated her right lung before also lacerating her spinal cord. In the bodycam footage, she lies on the floor surrounded by paramedics. She died later that day, though Souza would survive.

    Later in the video, LeFleur can be seen telling Baldwin not to speak to the other potential witnesses, but Baldwin repeatedly does.

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    The trial’s second witness, former sheriff’s Lt. Tim Benavidez, said he collected the revolver after the shooting. He acknowledged that he was careful with the Colt .45 for safety reasons but did not wear gloves or take meticulous forensic precautions as he might be done for a homicide investigation.

    Baldwin was indicted on a charge of involuntary manslaughter in January. He’d a year earlier been charged with the same offence, though it was dropped as prosecutors continued to examine evidence.

    In March, Rust armourer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to serve an 18-month prison sentence. Prosecutors said at an earlier trial that Gutierrez-Reed unknowingly brought live ammunition onto the Rust ranch set and claimed the rounds lingered for at least 12 days until the fatal shooting.

    Rust’s assistant director, Dave Halls, pleaded no contest to negligent use of a deadly weapon in exchange for his testimony.

    Gutierrez-Reed told the court she verified the gun fired by Baldwin was loaded with dummy rounds before she passed it off to Halls, who gave it to the actor.

    — with files from The Associated Press 

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    Sarah Do Couto

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