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Tag: child stars

  • Macaulay Culkin admits how Hollywood put him in harm’s way as a child actor

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    Macaulay Culkin’s early days in Hollywood were not for the faint of heart – nor does he think they’d be able to happen today.

    The actor, who was under 10 when he filmed classics like “Uncle Buck” and “Home Alone,” recently opened up about a wild experience he had filming as a child, and he was adamant that some of the things he endured for the sake of the film “wouldn’t fly nowadays.”

    During an appearance on the “On Film … with Kevin McCarthy” podcast, Culkin was asked about 1991’s “My Girl,” a movie in which his character, Thomas J. Sennett, died from an allergic reaction after suffering numerous bee stings. He admitted that he wasn’t affected by portraying the death, but that what stuck out to him more was working with the bees.

    ‘HOME ALONE’ TURNS 35: MACAULAY CULKIN’S IMPROVISED SCENE, ON-SET INJURY AND BEHIND-THE-SCENES SECRETS

    Macaulay Culkin seen on the set of “My Girl,” 1991. (Acey Harper/Getty Images)

    “The way they did that, they wouldn’t do that today,” he said. “They put this stuff on my fingertips that smelled like the queen bee. So they were attracted to my hands, so I wasn’t a threat … They actually released, like, thousands of bees on me. Like, imagine that.”

    He continued, “Those were real freaking bees, man. That would not fly nowadays, boy howdy.”

    Culkin explained that he was directed to wave his hands in front of his face, so that the bees would swarm there, which would look “good for the camera.”

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    Macaulay Culkin at the Academy Museum Gala in Los Angeles in October 2025.

    Culkin admitted that many of the things that happened when he was a child star “wouldn’t fly” today. (Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times via Getty Image)

    He also said that after the scene had been filmed, he was told to wash his hands and then dart into nearby woods, away from the bees.

    “The bee handler gave me a piece of advice,” he recalled. “He says, ‘Human beings run faster than bees fly.’ I was like, ‘But I’m 10. How fast do you think I am?’”

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    They did four takes, and he said he didn’t get stung once.

    The actor spoke about another scene, one where his character and Vada, played by Anna Chlumsky, jump into a lake.

    Anna Chlumsky and Macaulay Culkin in 1991

    Anna Chlumsky starred alongside Culkin in “My Girl.” (Getty Images)

    While they were filming, he said that he saw trappers on set, but later he learned that the trappers were catching venomous snakes, which were then used as bait for snapping turtles, which were used as bait for the alligators that roamed the lake.

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    “And I’m just like, ‘What lake are we jumping into? Jeez, have you ever heard of a swimming pool or something?’” Culkin joked. “Like, oh my gosh, they’re throwing bees at me, there’s alligators everywhere … Like I said, some of that stuff wouldn’t fly nowadays.”

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  • ‘Brady Bunch’ star Barry Williams admits he couldn’t hide attraction to TV sister Maureen McCormick

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    Here’s the story of a boy who fell for Marcia, Marcia, Marcia.

    Barry Williams, who starred as Greg Brady in the hit sitcom “The Brady Bunch,” recently appeared in the CW docuseries “TV We Love,” where he opened up about having a crush on his co-star Maureen McCormick.

    Producer Lloyd Schwartz, son of creator Sherwood Schwartz, also appeared in the episode about “The Brady Bunch” and discussed directing the 1973 episode “Room at the Top.” In it, Marcia Brady (McCormick) and Greg, tired of sharing bedrooms with their younger siblings, fought to claim the attic space of their home as solo bedrooms.

    ‘THE BRADY BUNCH’ STAR SUSAN OLSEN ADMITS SHE DISLIKED HER ‘STUPID’ CINDY BRADY CHARACTER

    The “Brady Bunch” kids, circa 1970. In the CW docuseries “TV We Love,” Barry Williams (right) spoke about his crush on Maureen McCormick (left). (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

    “I remember this scene. I remember the day,” said Williams. “Lloyd discovered that there might have been a little bit too much attraction between brother and sister. Maureen McCormick was very, very attractive. I was gravitated right to her. And it was coming out in our scenes together.”

    “I’m sitting a little too close, leaning in a little too far,” said the 71-year-old.

    “[Lloyd] was right. It’s very hard to hide. That’s chemistry. Lloyd was on the set, and he pulled me aside. He said, ‘Good scene. I just want you to keep in mind here that she is your sister.’”

    In the scene, Greg goes into Marcia’s room and sits on the bed next to her. He tries to comfort her after pushing her too far during an argument, and she bursts into tears.

    WATCH: ‘THE BRADY BUNCH’ STARS EXPLAIN BEING ‘FOXHOLE BUDDIES’ THROUGH EXPERIENCES ON THE SHOW

    Schwartz said Williams’ feelings for McCormick during filming were undeniable.

    “As [the child stars] started getting older, my challenge was, in some ways, to keep them off of one another,” he said.

    Christopher Knight, who played middle brother Peter Brady, wasn’t surprised.

    Christopher Knight looking away while Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams look adoringly at each other.

    From left: Christopher Knight, Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams, stars of “The Brady Bunch,” at the premiere of The Who’s rock opera ‘Tommy,” circa 1972. (Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

    “I dare say that if you find anyone who grew up watching the show, their first crush was probably Marcia Brady,” he said.

    Earlier this year, Knight recalled on an episode of “The Real Brady Bros” that the chemistry between the two stars was more than platonic.

    “You two were looking a little close — a little less like brother and sister and more like…” Knight began.

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    Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams leaning in against each other.

    Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams, circa 1972. (Darlene Hammond/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

    “You mean dreamy-eyed?” Williams suggested.

    “The longing, kind of wide-eyed,” Knight, 68, responded. “Yeah, that was you — and she was looking dreamy.”

    “It was sort of on-again, off-again with Maureen and me throughout the years,” said Williams. “There was always a little dance being played that was broken up by hiatus.”

    Lloyd Schwartz hugging Maureen McCormick as Barry Williams smiles.

    From left: Maureen McCormick, Lloyd J. Schwartz and Barry Williams. Schwartz directed the 1973 episode of “The Brady Bunch” titled “Room at the Top.”  (Rob Latour/Variety/Penske Media via Getty Images)

    In 2024, Williams told Us Weekly he also had a “teenage crush” on his TV mom, the late Florence Henderson.

    “I had a teenage crush on her, for sure,” said Williams. “And she’s got a very lively personality and great sense of humor, but I knew that I wanted to have music in my career [in] acting, and so I talked to her a lot about that.”

    “I had found this singer coming into the Copacabana near Beverly Hills,” he recalled. “I can’t think of exactly where it was, but I invited her to go together as a date, and she said, ‘OK,’ so I was thrilled. And now for me, it was a date.”

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    Florence Henderson smiling in a coral blouse as Carol Brady.

    Barry Williams admitted he also had a crush on his TV mom, Florence Henderson. The actress died in 2016. She was 82. (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

    “We were recognized, and so people were whispering about us, which is strange, but we talked about the singer, his orchestrations, the band that he had, and what touring was like,” Williams added.

    “And she gave me an idea of what that life would look like now at the end of the date. And this is chronicled in my book as well. I did go in for a little kiss, and she was nice enough to return it. So, it was a highlight. Nice little peck, yes.”

    In 2023, Susen Olsen, who played Cindy Brady, set the record straight about the outing.

    “I disliked the rumors that Florence Henderson and Barry Williams had an affair,” Olsen told Fox News Digital about her co-stars at the time.

    WATCH: ‘BRADY BUNCH’ STAR SUSAN OLSEN ADDRESSES CAST AFFAIR RUMORS, DEATH HOAX: ‘I DON’T LIKE THE IMPLICATION’

    “Barry had a crush on her,” the 64-year-old clarified. “She was very kind to him. She let him take her out for her birthday. So I don’t like the implication that’s been out there, that something was going on with them. There wasn’t anything going on with them except for mutual respect and love.”

    In McCormick’s 2008 memoir, “Here’s the Story,” the former child star recalled a trip to Hawaii where the cast filmed the first episode of Season 4. It was there that she and Williams kissed.

    Barry Williams giving Maureen McCormick a kiss on the cheek during "Watch What Happens Live."

    The cast of “The Brady Bunch” — including Maureen McCormick, Eve Plumb, Susan Olsen, Barry Williams, Christopher Knight and Mike Lookinland — in December 2019. (Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)

    “As soon as I stepped off the plane, I started to think about him more intensely in the way I had fantasized for a long time,” she wrote in her book, as quoted by Us Weekly. “We had spent the past three and a half years staving off the desire of a mutual attraction despite the intimacy of working closely with each other every day.”

    McCormick also described performing a duet with Williams. In 1972, the cast released their second studio album, “Meet the Brady Bunch,” and embarked on a national tour.

    “We stood on opposite sides of the stage, inching slowly toward the center,” she wrote, as quoted by the outlet. “Finally, we turned and sang to each other. It was choreographed to be a romantic moment, and there was so much sexual tension between us, we didn’t have to pretend.”

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    Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams singing on stage in matching outfits.

    Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams are seen here performing in 1972. (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

    In September 2024, McCormick chose not to kiss and tell. Instead, she told Us Weekly she celebrates the friendships with her castmates that have lasted over the years.

    “The show will just always hold a super warm spot in my heart,” she said. “It’s just an amazing bond, so I feel very lucky to have that.”

    “The Brady Bunch” aired for five seasons on ABC from 1969 to 1974, and its success inspired numerous spinoff titles.

    “TV We Love” airs Mondays at 8 p.m.

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  • ‘Bewitched’ actress Erin Murphy posts barefaced photo to shut down persistent facelift rumors

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    Maybe it’s witchcraft?

    “Bewitched” alum Erin Murphy shared a barefaced selfie on Instagram Wednesday.

    “This is 61…WITHOUT a facelift, without any makeup,” she wrote.

    ‘I DREAM OF JEANNIE’ STAR BARBARA EDEN SHARES WHAT FANS CONFESS ABOUT HER ICONIC CHARACTER

    She added she’s not sure “why so many random people on social media feel the need to speculate that I’ve had a facelift; but I haven’t.”

    “Bewitched” alum Erin Murphy shared a barefaced selfie on her Instagram on Wednesday. (Erin Murphy/Instagram; ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

    She said maybe it was a “backhanded compliment” that people think she looks good “for her age.” 

    “This is me at 61,” she insisted.

    Murphy, who began playing Tabitha on “Bewitched” as a toddler, said she has a small scar on her head from a dog-walking incident a few years ago, another under her chin from a childhood fall and “smile lines around my eyes, since I laugh more than I cry.”

    “I’ve got some freckles and a little tan, since I love the sunshine,” she shared.

    ‘BEWITCHED’ CHILD STAR ERIN MURPHY EXPLAINS WHY SHE ‘WALKED AWAY FROM THE BUSINESS’ AFTER THE SHOW ENDED

    “Before you sit down at the computer and write something negative, about someone you’ve never met, why don’t you think about something nice you can say, or don’t say anything at all,” she advised. “Get outside and enjoy this beautiful day. That’s where I’ll be.”

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    She was quickly flooded with praise in the comments.

    “What you have are great genes!” one person wrote.

    “Fabulous,” a second person said with a fire emoji and a third follower said, “How did you forget those beautiful blues?” referring to her eyes.

    Murphy grew up on television, and the accident that left her with a chin scar was even written into a 1970 episode of the sitcom.

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    “How’s your chin?” Murphy’s TV mom, Elizabeth Montgomery, asked as Samantha Stephens when the young actress walked into the kitchen sporting a Band-Aid.

    “It’s better,” Tabitha replied. 

    “Well, that’s good,” her mother said. “Maybe next time I tell you you’re too young to fly, you’ll pay attention.”

    Erin Murphy in a blue suit in 2022

    Murphy at an event in Los Angeles in 2022. (Unique Nicole/Getty Images)

    ‘I DREAM OF JEANNIE’ STAR BARBARA EDEN RECREATES ICONIC GENIE POSE AT 94

    Murphy, born in 1964 — the same year “Bewitched” debuted — began playing Samantha Stephens and her husband Darrin’s daughter, Tabitha, in 1966.

    She first shared the role with her twin sister, Diane, before taking it on solo once she was older.

    Murphy was 8 years old when the series ended after eight seasons in 1972.

    ‘BRADY BUNCH’ STAR MAUREEN MCCORMICK SHARES KEY TO SUCCESSFUL 40-YEAR HOLLYWOOD MARRIAGE

    Erin mUrphy with Elizabeth Montgomery on "Betwitched."

    Erin Murphy as Tabitha with Elizabeth Montgomery on “Bewitched.” (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

    “I think one of the reasons this show is still so popular is that it kind of appeals to everyone,” Murphy told Fox News Digital last year. 

    “Everybody wishes they could do magic. Everybody, you know, likes the fantasy element of it. Plus, it was really well done. So I think because it was well-written and well-acted and well directed, it’s held up surprisingly well over the years.”

    Murphy also joked she couldn’t believe it had been 60 years since “Bewitched” first premiered on Sept. 17, 1964, “because that means I’m turning 60 this year, too — and that’s impossible!”

    Erin Murphy on Bewitched

    Erin Murphy on “Bewitched” in 1967.  (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

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    The actress said she’s always thought of her co-stars as family.

    “I spent my whole childhood growing up on a television set, so my mom or dad were with me, but they were up in my dressing room and were offstage,” she explained. “So, the actors who played my family were the ones there right next to me, so, I always thought of them as family members.”

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  • ‘Black Rabbit’ star Jason Bateman says child stardom nearly killed Hollywood career

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    Jason Bateman opened up about how the pressures he faced as a child star led to years of partying that almost derailed his Hollywood career.

    The 56-year-old began acting at age 10, appearing in commercials — including a memorable ad for Golden Grahams cereal — before rising to stardom as a child actor and later teen idol in hit shows such as “Little House on the Prairie,” “Silver Spoons” and “The Hogan Family.” However, Bateman’s career faltered in the 1990s as he struggled to make the transition into adult roles.

    During a recent interview on “CBS Mornings,” Bateman, who is currently starring in the Netflix series “Black Rabbit,” which debuted at No. 1 on the streaming platform, recalled how he embraced a hard-partying lifestyle in his 20s after feeling deprived of a normal youth.

    “I was working so hard from [age] 10 and I’d missed a lot of playing with my friends and so when my schedule cleared up a bit in my 20s, I thought, ‘Well, you know, let’s take the opportunity to catch up a little bit,’” he told CBS News correspondent Lee Cowan.

    Jason Bateman admitted that the pressures of being a child star led to years of partying in his 20s and a decade-long lull in his Hollywood career.  (John Nacion/Variety via Getty Images; NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images )

    Bateman continued, “I had some money. I had some independence there now, living on my own in this fun house and all my buddies around and… it was incredible. I mean, I just had the best time.”

    JASON BATEMAN ON THE PERKS OF DIRECTING HIMSELF: ‘I’VE GOT ONE HAND ON THE WHEEL BEHIND THE CAMERA’

    However, Bateman admitted that during that period, he didn’t realize the challenges he would later face when he decided to return to acting more seriously.

    Jason Bateman looks up in scene from Black Rabbit.

    Bateman is starring in the new Netflix crime series “Black Rabbit,” which debuted at No. 1 on the streaming platform.  (Netflix)

    “I wasn’t really factoring that the industry wasn’t really saving my place in line and when I’m done partying, they’re not just going to say, ‘Hey, welcome back. Here we go.’ So trying to get back in was a little bit more of a humbling struggle for me than I had assumed, and so it was tough,” he said.

    “It was really difficult,” Bateman continued. “I thought the rest of my life, career, is gonna be anti-climactic. I’ve gotta find something else to do in another industry, as opposed to banging against the wall and watching everybody else take off and me just kind of stuck in neutral at best.”

    In addition to partying, Bateman explained that struggling with auditions was another hurdle in his transition to adult roles.

    Jason Bateman with Michael Landon and Missy Francis in Little House on the Prairie.

    Bateman rose to fame when he starred in “Little House on the Prairie.” (NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)

    “You’re always a job away from not having a career, and you’re also that same job away from being the biggest star in the world,” he recalled. “So how am I going to make that transition? What’s that job going to be? And so every audition I went on, I was walking in with those kinds of stakes, understanding that that’s what I’m walking into.”

    “And so it was really nerve-racking,” he continued. “I was just riddled with anxiety going to auditions through my 20s.”

    “There was a decade of deep anxiety that was probably exacerbated by the amount of partying I was doing, which can feed paranoia and all that kind of crap,” Bateman added.

    Jason Bateman holds up a sign in a scene from Silver Spoons.

    Bateman went on to join the cast of the hit sitcom “Silver Spoons.” (Joseph Del Valle/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)

    At his lowest point, Bateman almost left Hollywood behind for a different life in another country.

    “I was literally very, very, very close to liquidating what little cash I had, putting it in a duffel bag, going down to the Bradley Terminal at LAX [Los Angeles International Airport], the international terminal, looking up on the ticker board, finding a city that looked interesting and just unplugging and going there and plugging in,” he recalled. “And starting over and learning the language [and] buying a coffee shop with my duffel bag of cash.”

    Bateman told Cowan that he changed his mind about leaving the industry after landing a role following a successful audition. He explained that he also began shadowing legendary sitcom director Jimmy Burrows, who co-created “Cheers.” Burrows had directed several episodes in the first season of the hit sitcom “The Hogan Family,” which starred Bateman. “The Hogan Family” ran for six seasons from 1986 to 1991 and cemented Bateman’s status as a teen idol.

    Under Burrows’ mentorship, Bateman directed a few episodes of the show, becoming one of the youngest directors in the Directors Guild of America at the time.

    Burrows and Bateman reunited for the sitcom “George & Leo,” which aired for one season from 1997 to 1998. During the show’s short-lived run, Burrows directed several episodes while Bateman shadowed him and continued to hone his behind-the-camera skills.

    Jason Bateman with Valerie Harper and Jeremy Licht in a scene from "The Hogan Family."

    Bateman became a teen idol when he starred in “The Hogan Family.” (Ron Batzdorff/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)

    During his interview with “CBS Mornings,” Bateman, who had struggled with being typecast as a sitcom actor, realized that his background in the genre could help him achieve his aspirations to become a director.

    “Instead of having all the sitcom experience I had be a detriment, be a sort of a hurdle, a barrier to hiring me, I wanted to turn that into a positive — all that experience — and start directing them and trying to be the next Jimmy Burrows,” he said.

    Bateman said that he was grateful for the opportunity to shadow Burrows, who also helped him sign with his television literary agent Bob Broder.

    “I was galloping towards that,” he said. “And [I] directed a few episodes of some sitcoms and it was great. I was feeling like an adult. I was using what I had learned.”

    Through the end of the 1990s and into the early 2000s, Bateman continued acting in short-lived sitcoms and directing episodes of comedy series including “Family Matters,” “Two of a Kind,” “Brothers’ Keeper” and “For Your Love.”

    Jason Bateman pictured smiling at movie premiere in 1992.

    The actor experienced a career lull in his 20s.  (Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images)

    In 2001, Bateman married actress Amanda Anka, the daughter of music icon Paul Anka and model Anne de Zogheb. During a 2009 interview with Details magazine via Us Weekly, Bateman recalled that he decided to commit to sobriety after Amanda gave him an ultimatum about his partying.

    According to Us Weekly, Bateman said the turning point came when Amanda left for a vacation in Mexico without him. He recalled that he found himself alone on Christmas morning and decided to attend his first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting.

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    While speaking with Details, Bateman remembered thinking to himself at the time, “Do you want to continue being great at being in your twenties, or do you want to step up and graduate into adulthood?”

    Jason Bateman and Amanda Anka

    Bateman and his wife Amanda Anka share daughters Francesca, 18, and Maple, 13.  (Jamie McCarthy/WireImage)

    Shortly afterward, Bateman experienced a career resurgence when he landed the role of Michael Bluth in the critically acclaimed sitcom “Arrested Development,” which earned a devoted cult following. The show reestablished Bateman as a leading man in comedy, and he received a Golden Globe Award for his performance as Bluth in 2005.

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    “I got ‘Arrested Development,’ which changed everything and put the paddles on the chest of my career and up came the heartbeat again because it was watched by people in Hollywood and the people that hand out jobs really liked it,” he said. “Middle America was a little slower on the uptake, if at all. But they weren’t handing out jobs, you know, in Kansas. They were handing them out in Hollywood and Hollywood was watching and that was really vital for me because I was kind of, not damaged goods, maybe, I don’t know, but I wasn’t fresh.

    “I was a guy that had done a bunch of sitcoms and sitcoms were on the way out, single-camera comedies were on their way in with shows like ‘The Wonder Years’ and things like that, and so I was kind of the old guard and I was reading for these pilots that were trying to be newer and hipper. ‘Arrested Development’ being sort of the zenith of that.”

    Jessica Walters and Jason Bateman in Arrested Development.

    Jessica Walters and Bateman are pictured in a scene from “Arrested Development.” (Netflix)

    The actor went on to star in hit comedy movies including “Horrible Bosses,” “Identity Thief,” “Game Night,” “Extract,” “Zootopia” and “Office Christmas Party.” He also took on dramatic roles in films including “Juno,” “This Is Where I Leave You,” “The Gift,” “Air” and “Carry-On.”

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    Bateman also established himself as an acclaimed director. He directed episodes of “Arrested Development” and its Netflix revival series and helmed the feature films “Bad Words” and “The Family Fang.”

    In 2017, Bateman took on his career-defining dramatic role as Marty Byrde in the Netflix drama series “Ozark,” which ran for four seasons until 2022. Bateman received three Emmy Award nominations and four Golden Globe nominations for his performance. He also received two Emmy nominations for outstanding directing for a drama series, winning once in 2019 for the episode “Reparations.”

    Jason Bateman in Ozark

    Bateman’s directing work in “Ozark” earned him an Emmy Award.  (Netflix)

    Looking back, Bateman reflected on the pressure he felt while helping support his family financially during his years of child stardom. Bateman and his sister, actress Justine Bateman, who also found fame early in life, became their family’s breadwinners during the 1980s.

    “In retrospect, obviously, being a 56-year-old man with two kids and a wife, it is a complicated thing,” he said during his interview on “CBS Mornings.”

    Bateman explained that as a child, he took pride in being able to support his family financially. “Like this is helping us live in the place we’re living in and paying for the school that you want to go to and look at this new family car we bought and it was like, you feel like an adult and a partner in the family and it gave me a lot of confidence that I could take on the adult responsibility that I was living in at work, so I just felt great.”

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    “Yes, I was 10, 11, 12, you know, whatever, but I was feeling, you know, twice that age, which was helpful, so I didn’t have a panic attack with all the adult responsibility,” he continued. “There were moments of deep stress when it came a big grading period at school. If you don’t maintain a C average, you lose your work permit, which comes up every six months. And so if I didn’t have my work permit I would lose my job on the show. And if I lost my job on the show, maybe we didn’t make the mortgage payment and all the people on the show might be out of work so studying for exams was probably even more stressful than kids regularly go through.

    “In retrospect, I wouldn’t change anything about my childhood at all, but… I wouldn’t be comfortable putting my kids through that because I think I got away with it,” Bateman added.

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  • Meghan Trainor calls working with NFL star a ‘miracle’ that sparked new dream

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    Meghan Trainor is now a triple threat.

    During a recent interview with Fox News Digital, the 31-year-old singer discussed what it was like starring in her first-ever commercial for State Farm alongside Kansas City Chiefs quarterback, Patrick Mahomes.

    “They told me you got an offer to be in a State Farm commercial, and I was like you’re lying, you’re lying to me, and then I was like, how could that possibly make sense, like what do you mean, and they’re like with Patrick Mahomes, and I was like now I’m very confused and then, and they sent me the script, and I was freaking out because it’s so brilliant and perfect.”

    Having grown up playing football with her brothers, getting to work with Mahomes was “an absolute blessing and a miracle,” joking her brothers “were more excited about this than anything I’ve ever done in my career.”

    Meghan Trainor was excited to get to work with Patrick Mahomes in her first-ever commercial. (Getty Images)

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    Trainor admits she “didn’t know what to expect” prior to meeting Mahomes, joking her brothers did nothing to calm her nerves, warning her she was “walking into a room with superstars.” She was happy to find the football player to be “really sweet.”

    WATCH: MEGHAN TRAINOR CALLED WORKING WITH PATRICK MAHOMES ON NEW COMMERCIAL A ‘BLESSING AND A MIRACLE’

    “I was in a bubble dress, and I was just like, ‘Hello, I’m the pop girl.’ So I felt very random and out of place, but they made me feel so comfortable immediately,” she said. “Gosh, everyone was so nice on set. Jay from State Farm, just a delight. Patrick was the most chillest, coolest guy ever. And I was making him giggle all day and I felt like an absolute star. It was so magical and big and huge. And I’m like, this is the top. This is the top of commercials. Here we are, we’ve made it.”

    Meghan Trainor, Patrick Mahomes and Jake from State Farm posing for a promotional picture.

    Trainor didn’t know what to expect when meeting Mahomes, but said he was sweet. (State Farm)

    The “Made You Look” singer went on to explain that acting has always been one of her dreams and gave a “shout out to State Farm for even considering me.” While acting is something she is just starting to experiment with, her husband got his start as a baby.

    Her husband, Daryl Sabara, is best known for his starring role as Juni Cortez in the “Spy Kids” trilogy, and while the first movie was released when Sabara was nine years old, he first appeared on-screen as a baby in three episodes of “Murphy Brown” in 1992, a fact Trainor finds shocking.

    Meghan Trainor and Daryl Sabara out in Midtown in December 2024.

    Trainor is married to “Spy Kids” star, Daryl Sabara. (TheStewartofNY/GC Images)

    “We always talk about it because my husband was acting as a baby, baby, so even at Riley’s age now, he was doing auditions for commercials, and we’re just like, Riley, that would make him so angry,” she explained of their 4-year-old son. “Like that, there’s no way this kid could focus for five seconds. So we’re just like, ‘How did you do this? How are you going to auditions every day at this age?’”

    Trainor went on to say that “it definitely takes like a certain type of brain, a certain type of kid” to be able to handle having a career at a young age. The Grammy Award-winning singer added that her son recently started asking to join her on stage during her shows.

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    “I’m like, ‘Okay, if that’s what you want to do, I will support you and I will help you. So, I will let you come out in this song, and we’ll dance and have the best time,’” she said. “So if they show interest, like, obviously, I’m going to be the first to be like, ‘Here’s a keyboard, you know, or like let’s write songs.’ But I can barely get them to dance.”

    Sabara and Trainor began dating in July 2016, and were engaged a year later, in December 2017. The two were married a year later in December 2018, and have since welcomed two sons: Riley, 4, and Barry, 2.

    Meghan Trainor and Daryl Sabara with their son Riley at Disney California Adventure Park.

    Trainor and Sabara share two children: Riley and Barry. (Christian Thompson/Disneyland Resort via Getty Images)

    While her children have only just begun showing interest in performing with Trainor, she enjoys traveling with Riley whenever she can.

    “The best is when I get to bring him on a plane and go to Kansas City and do commercials like this, and meet people and travel,” she said. “I said, ‘What makes you happy in life?’ And he said traveling, and so any chance I can, I steal him, and we go away and travel, so that’s like been the biggest reward and the coolest thing ever.”

    Meghan Trainor poses for a selfie with Patrick Mahomes and Jake from State Farm.

    Trainor says one of the cool parts of her career is getting to travel with her son and having them meet people like Mahomes. (State Farm)

    The “All About That Bass” singer admits that with her thriving music career and burgeoning acting career she “always feels like I’m not there enough and not physically present” enough with her family, but that it’s something she is working on.

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    “Then I remember like regular families, like most moms are gone at work, like all day long. And I was like, ‘Oh yeah, this is normal. Why does it feel so awful?’” she explained. “And my mom worked every single day and my parents, I never saw them either. So that’s like a real big thing I’ve been struggling with. And now my four-year-old is about to start school. And I’m like, but then I’ll never see him.”

    Meghan Trainor in a grey sweatshirt that says 'DOG MOM' in pink letters looks at the camera

    Trainor said she is working on not feeling guilty when being away from her kids. (Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for Freshpet)

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  • Danielle Fishel Talks Huge Crush On Boy Meets World Co-Star Rider Strong – & Why She HATED Rachael Leigh Cook! – Perez Hilton

    Danielle Fishel Talks Huge Crush On Boy Meets World Co-Star Rider Strong – & Why She HATED Rachael Leigh Cook! – Perez Hilton

    Danielle Fishel is spilling all the hot tea… which has cooled considerably 24 years later!

    On Thursday’s episode of Pod Meets World, which she hosts alongside Will Friedle and Rider Strong, the 43-year-old revisited her crush on one of her Boy Meets World co-stars! No, not Ben Savage, her onscreen hubby — it was Rider, AKA Shawn Hunter! (We mean, just like all of us in America in the ’90s, right?)

    The once and future Topange has actually mentioned her crush on Rider in passing before. But she really got into the details of her adoration of the actor in this week’s episode — when she read from an old journal of hers from 1996! She begins:

    “‘I had the s**ttest day. First of all, school was boring, rehearsal sucks and Rider was antisocial.’”

    Danielle explained in this particular moment she was “bummed out” because Rider hadn’t given her any attention that day. But she did go on to confirm that despite her super intense feelings for him, they never overlapped in her relationship with Home Improvement star Jonathan Taylor Thomas, whom she famously dated in the ’90s. Good to know!

    At the end of her diary entry, she confesses her love for three different guys — “Landon and Rider and David” — although the Girl Meets World star admitts she doesn’t even remember who David was. Ouch! Sorry if you heard that, David! LOLz! But hey, good on you catching Danielle’s eye!

    Related: Danielle Almost Got Fired From Boy Meets World In First Rehearsal!

    The most shocking detail of Danielle’s trip through her journal was her catty confession that she HATED Rachael Leigh Cook! Why? The She’s All That star was Rider’s girlfriend at the time! She read:

    “‘Then [after rehearsals] we went to acting class but we had to wait for Rachael. Then Rider and Rachael got all lovey-dovey, and it made me want to puke.’”

    Ha! The high school drama! So funny! She continued:

    “‘Then they kissed, and it looked so cute. She’s actually really sweet and cool, but I really like Rider. I don’t think she’s right for him. Then again, maybe I’m not either.’”

    Talk about some jealousy! This particularly surprised Rider because he said he had “no idea” she was crushing on him so hard — but he did admit her love for him was “reasonable” due to their close relationship back then:

    “I do remember we were hanging out in ’96 because I could drive, so you actually spent time with me alone. I do remember during this period, like, you would come to my apartment. So, yeah, I guess we were spending a lot of time together.”

    So hilarious how oblivious dudes can be! Even with their close friendship, though, they both confirmed it was only ever that: a friendship. We guess it just wasn’t meant to be! Hopefully Danielle has changed her opinions about Rachael now. Ha!

    Reactions, Perezcious readers?

    [Image via Walt Disney Studios/Miramax/Nick Viall/YouTube]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Millie Bobby Brown and Lindsay Lohan: A Teen Star Correlation

    Millie Bobby Brown and Lindsay Lohan: A Teen Star Correlation

    Being that Lindsay Lohan was the same age as Millie Bobby Brown when her career was reaching a zenith, it seems somewhat fitting (or at least cyclical) that both should have a movie out on Netflix at the same time. While the former’s “film” (a schlock-y Hallmark wannabe) is further proof that she made a career out of simply being “teenaged,” the latter’s proves that she has more enduring staying power. And, to be frank, more talent and acting range. Both qualities have been shown in the short length of her career, which is starting to expand more heavily into film with the end of Stranger Things on the horizon—Enola Holmes and Enola Holmes 2 being part of that steady segue.

    And yes, Brown, like Lohan, seems to understand the value of clinging to the Netflix tit for work, even amid cries of the online film and TV giant “not being what it once was.” Sort of like Lohan herself, whose steady stream of hits only flowed when she was a youth, mainly as a result of sucking on Disney’s tit instead of Netflix’s (then still mailing out DVDs to subscribers). This included a succession of “feel-good” movies that started with The Parent Trap in 1998 and continued at the dawn of the 00s with Life-Size, Get A Clue, Freaky Friday and Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen. All, of course, Disney-backed endeavors that complicated things when Lohan opted to embark upon the requisite Disney teen star “gone bad” route. Right around the time she decided to reteam with the juggernaut for the production of Herbie: Fully Loaded (after Paramount released Mean Girls in ’04).

    A title that, obviously, left plenty of room for the tabloids to jestingly riff off of as Lohan was hospitalized for “exhaustion” and, oh yeah, an infected kidney. At the same time filming was going on, her partying (a.k.a. going out to clubs back when they were still bankable due to people actually being sentient, sexual creatures) was coming under more scrutiny. After all, she had just turned eighteen and was far more prone to wanting to sow the oats that being a highly-paid actress permitted (see: her being on the cover of a May ’04 Us Weekly with the headline, “Teens Gone Wild: Older men, all-night partying, extreme PDA…”). Plus, just as Britney and the Olsen twins before her, the obsession with Lohan “being legal” was part of the Nabokovian bread and butter that sold magazines in the late 90s and 00s. Lohan even appeared on an issue of Rolling Stone the year she turned eighteen with the headline, “Lindsay Lohan: Hot, Ready and Legal!”

    In the decade when Millie Bobby Brown would come of age in her fame, the nascent #MeToo movement bubbled to the surface in 2017, when Brown was thirteen years old and one year into her stint as Eleven on Stranger Things. By 2020, the year of her sixteenth birthday (in addition to Miss Rona’s havoc), Brown had had enough of the overt sexualization of her body despite being a child. Something that Billie Eilish avoided full-stop by covering her own in baggy clothing that spoke to her being the twenty-first century ideal of a sexless pop star. Brown wasn’t exactly “flashing it” either, least of all à la Britney or even Lindsay—usually while they were out drinking and drugging to the tabloids’ (and TMZ’s) delight.

    Brown did none of these things, and was not nearly as ridiculed or hounded as someone such as Lohan. Yet Brown grew up in an era where so much less is “tolerated.” Including the acceptance of men fetishizing underage girls in this way no longer being so “welcomed” by the media. Hence, the freedom of Brown being able to declare on her Instagram (a tool that 00s teen stars didn’t have the luxury to access), “There are moments I get frustrated from the inaccuracy, inappropriate comments, sexualization, and unnecessary insults that ultimately have resulted in pain and insecurity for me.”

    On one level, somebody like Lohan would probably want to say, “Bitch, you don’t know from inaccuracy, inappropriate comments, sexualization or unnecessary insults.” On another, maybe Lohan can take comfort in having paved the way for subsequent teen stars to have far less of a hard time (all while narcissistically assuming it’s still “so hard”). Brown, too, wants to offer that courtesy to subsequent generations of famous teen girls, as made clear when she added to her sixteenth birthday comment, “I feel like change needs to happen for not only this generation but the next. Our world needs kindness and support in order for us children to grow and succeed.”

    Alas, it appears as though the bullying nature of tabloid journalism (parading as newsworthy events) has only transferred with more unmitigated vengeance to the online landscape. The germinal example of this being Perez Hilton’s illustrious blog (that was, let’s be honest, far more deliciously cunty in the 00s). An entity that came full-circle when both Perez and Lindsay, at one of her many nadirs in 2012, decided to use one another to their respective advantage by cameo’ing on an episode of Glee called “Nationals.” And, speaking of gays, Brown’s closest brush with intense online bullying was when a series of memes attributing her with homophobic quotes that she never said bombarded her Twitter account. Then just fourteen, Brown decided to quit the medium (long before it was chic to do so in 2022). Lohan, simultaneously loving and hating celebrity, likely wouldn’t have “quit” being present in magazines had it even been an option.

    Brown and Lohan’s divergence when it comes to romantic prudence is also markedly different. For while Lohan was dating Wilmer Valderrama—undoubtedly before she turned eighteen—a notorious player with a penchant for courting women with age gaps (though not to the same extent as Leonardo DiCaprio or Jake Gyllenhaal), Brown has kept it decidedly staid and age-appropriate with her current boyfriend, Jake Bongiovi (the spelling of which is somehow supposed to make us forget he’s Jon Bon Jovi’s son). Lohan’s mistake with her first high-profile romance at the apex of her career didn’t account for how Valderrama would, just a year after the breakup, describe, among other details to Howard Stern, that Lindsay was “a big fan of waxing.” So yeah, exactly the type of sleaze someone should be dating when they’re tabloid fodder already. That Brown is taken more seriously as an actress than Lohan ever was has also contributed to the “safe space” form of her celebrity. Less laughingstock, more tissue box stock (that’s a tear reference, not a cum one).

    However, going back to the similarities between Lohan and Brown, the ages at which each actress was when they got their first major start also eerily align, for Brown was twelve when Stranger Things debuted, and so was Lohan when The Parent Trap arrived in theaters. What’s more, when Lohan was seventeen and eighteen, her two biggest movies came out—Freaky Friday (2003) and Mean Girls (2004), respectively. Brown has also released her two biggest movies (so far) around the same age, being sixteen when Enola Holmes came out and eighteen upon the arrival of Enola Holmes 2.

    In noticeable contrast to Lohan, Brown’s future beyond teen stardom seems far brighter (more like Emma Watson’s post-Harry Potter…at least Serious Roles-wise). Not just because she has that arcane aura of “British dignity” (ironic considering how undignified that country is), but because she’s grown up in a generation that has proven itself to be the antithesis of millennial youth values: drinking and clubbing. To boot, Brown also has the advantage of “setting the record straight” on social media that no millennial star ever had.

    Genna Rivieccio

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