YG gets emotional recalling a conversation with his 10 year-old daughter that changed his outlook:
“She said, ‘Dad, do you love me?’
I said ‘Yeah’
She said, ‘Do you love your family?’
I said ‘Yeah’
She said, ‘Are you happy?’
I said, ‘Umm, I don’t know.’
She said, ‘See, that’s the problem. When I asked you about everybody else, you said yeah. But when I asked you about yourself, you didn’t know…Dad, you need to stop worrying about everybody, and worry about yourself.’
I said ‘What?’…[and started crying]…I got the message…
God sent me that message, and I just locked in on that.”
@DJHed@YG
On Goodfellas, Robert De Niro insisted that all the money he handled on set be real. Whenever he was on camera, he carried $5,000 in real cash in his pocket. As he put it, “That’s kind of a classic mob guy thing. They carry cash rolled up instead of in a wallet.”
Property master Robert Griffon Jr. had to withdraw thousands from his own bank account to replace the prop money, so all the $20s and $50s De Niro passes around in the film are real. The problem was that the production had also hired real mobsters as extras, so whenever real money was used, after Scorsese yelled “cut”, the whole crew had to freeze while every single bill was counted.
Red Lobster CEO Damola Adamolekun says he wants the restaurant to be the most AI-forward company to exist as he reveals all the ways Red Lobster plans to use AI, which includes forecasting sales, ordering food, and more.
(🎥 The Black Money Tree/YouTube)
David Beckham is a billionaire, worth $1 billion by our count—one of just seven living pro athletes (Jordan, Magic, Tiger, LeBron, Federer and retired Romanian tennis ace Ion Tiriac) to manage the feat.
Read more about how Beckham became a billionaire: https://t.co/HtJRdNFPwp
Danny DeVito says he “lusted after” Michelle Pfeiffer in Batman Returns (1992), calling her a “goddess.”
Pfeiffer, meanwhile, says DeVito genuinely freaked her out.
“And so he was always so disgusting... I never wanted to talk to him.”
“Danny, and after they were finished with him, he was really bigger than life, and never broke character.”
“He'd just sort of sit over in a corner and, like, grunt.”
“It was weird because I never saw him out of costume because it took so long for both of us to get ready.”
DeVito joked that just knowing Pfeiffer would be on set made him flush and ask makeup artists for “another pound of makeup,” though he clarified it was really his character, the Penguin, doing most of the lusting.