People Are Just Noticing This Sneaky ‘Matt Smith Cameo’ In The Latest Doctor Who Special

While the return of David Tennant and Catherine Tate to the Doctor Who franchise got everyone talking, viewers have also spotted another nod to the show’s past during the recent anniversary specials.

On Saturday night, the third and final instalment in Doctor Who’s 60th anniversary specials, titled The Giggle, aired on BBC One.

During the episode, the Time Lord came face-to-face with The Toymaker, played by Neil Patrick Harris.

Towards the end of the episode, the two characters played a card game using a split deck, with the US actor’s character drawing a King Of Hearts that Whovians couldn’t help but notice looked a little familiar…

Matt Smith previously played the Eleventh Doctor between 2010 and 2013, and shared the screen with David in the 50th anniversary special Day Of The Doctor.

In the decade since, he’s notably played Prince Philip in the first two seasons of The Crown and Daemon Targaryen in the Game Of Thrones prequel House Of The Dragon.

Alberto Rodriguez via Getty Images

As well as David, Catherine and Neil, Doctor Who’s recent anniversary specials also featured Heartstopper’s Yasmin Finney, as well as posthumous appearance from Bernard Cribbins, reprising his role as Wilfred Mott.

Years And Years star Ruth Madeley also joined the cast, while Miriam Margolyes lent her voice to the adorable (albeit terrifying) Meep.

At the end of The Giggle, The Doctor “bi-generated”, with Sex Education and Barbie star Ncuti Gatwa set to take over at the helm of the Tardis when the new season of Doctor Who launches in 2024.

Before that, though, there’s one more stand-alone episode, with Ncuti taking the lead in the sci-fi show’s upcoming festive special, which will air on Christmas Day.

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Swifties React To Elon Musk Warning Taylor Swift Of ‘Popularity Decline’

Fans of Taylor Swift ― singer/songwriter, pop megastar and Time magazine’s 2023 Person of the Year ― are reminding Elon Musk that there are a few key differences between Swift and himself.

Last week, Musk, the billionaire CEO of Tesla, congratulated Swift on being named Person of the Year, before offering a word of caution.

“Some risk of popularity decline after this award,” Musk posted on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. “I speak from experience lol.”

Musk was named Time’s Person of the Year in 2021. Since then, he has bought Twitter and renamed it X, engaged with antisemitic material on the site and apologized for doing so. He has reportedly ordered his Tesla and SpaceX employees working remotely to return to the office or lose their jobs.

Musk recently urged businesses to “go fuck” themselves if they stopped advertising on X because of his behaviour. Hate speech on X has soared since Musk’s acquisition, and advertising has plummeted. This week, Musk restored the account of banned user Alex Jones, a conspiracy theorist perhaps best known for harassing the parents of dead children.

X users were happy to point out some of the contrasts between Musk and Swift.

“Elon Musk try not to make everything about himself challenge,” one user posted.

Another user wrote: “He could’ve just [said] congratulations and move on. No one asked for his advice/opinion thou.”

“People actually like taylor so i don’t think that’ll be a problem elon,” another user posted.

“Taylor has been dealing with fame before Elon became famous,” someone else wrote. “So that advice is not needed.”

“I don’t think #TaylorSwift needs your advice,” another user posted.

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Ginuwine Reacts To ‘Fo Shiz’ Moment With Justin Timberlake From Britney Spears’ Memoir

Justin Timberlake is receiving some grace after the memoir of his ex-girlfriend Britney Spears produced a litany of unfavourable claims against him.

Among other reasons, Timberlake went viral earlier this year when the audiobook version of Spears’ memoir saw actor Michelle Williams recreate an exaggerated voice Timberlake allegedly used when meeting singer Ginuwine, who is Black.

In addition to claims that Timberlake cheated on Spears and urged her to get an abortion, Spears writes that Timberlake “tried too hard to fit in” with the Black entertainers in his orbit. One of those instances allegedly involved the “Pony” singer in New York City.

“One day J and I were in New York, going to parts of town I’d never been to before,” Williams read from Spears’ memoir, “The Woman in Me.” “Walking our way was a guy with a huge, blinged-out medallion. He was flanked by two giant security guards.”

“J got all excited and said so loud: ‘Oh yeah, fo’ shiz fo’ shiz, Ginuwine, what’s up homie?’” she continued in Timberlake’s purported African American Vernacular English accent, which inspired mockery online when the audiobook was released in October.

Sources told “Entertainment Tonight” at the time that Timberlake was “focusing on his own family and trying not to concern himself with Britney’s memoir.” Now, Ginuwine has finally heard about the moment going viral — and says Timberlake is “cool.”

“Nah, I don’t remember that,” the singer told Billboard through laughter in an interview Thursday.

Singers Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears dated for three years before splitting in 2002.
Singers Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears dated for three years before splitting in 2002.

Denise Truscello/WireImage/Getty Images

“I would have probably looked at him very weird if he did that like she said,” continued Ginuwine, whose real name is Elgin Lumpkin. “I just don’t remember that, but I remember him being a cool dude and me kicking it down there in Florida with [*NSYNC’s] producer at one time.”

In 2002, Timberlake famously broke up with Spears after three years together, and released his debut solo album. Spears wrote in her memoir that his most controversial single, “Cry Me a River,” portrayed her like a “harlot who’d broken the heart of America’s golden boy.”

Timbaland, who produced the song, recently apologised for saying Timberlake should’ve put a “muzzle” on her. Spears endured a 13-year conservatorship under the purview of her father, but saw it terminated in 2021 amid an impassioned “#FreeBritney” campaign on social media.

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Real Interview That Inspired Disturbing ‘May December’ Scene Has Resurfaced Online

Warning: This article contains spoilers for the Netflix film “May December.”

Fans of “May December” may be shocked to learn that the dialogue in one of the film’s most unsettling scenes is eerily similar to a real-life interview.

The Netflix drama — which began streaming on Dec. 1 — stars Natalie Portman, Julianne Moore and Charles Melton, and is loosely inspired by the relationship between Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau.

In 1996, Letourneau, a schoolteacher, began statutorily raping her sixth-grade student, Fualaau, when he was only 12 years old. Letourneau was 34.

Despite Letourneau later pleading guilty to child rape and receiving a 7 1/2-year prison sentence, Letourneau and Fualaau managed to conceive two children together. After Letourneau was released from prison, the two got married in 2005.

Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau during a photo shoot at her beachfront home in 2006.
Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau during a photo shoot at her beachfront home in 2006.

Ron Wurzer via Getty Images

Although “May December” changes Letourneau’s name to Gracie (Moore) and Fualaau’s name to Joe (Melton), and tweaks the couple’s origin story slightly, it’s fairly obvious that the film is based on the real-life couple.

This becomes abundantly clear in one of the movie’s most pivotal scenes, in which the dialogue between Gracie and Joe seems lifted from a 2018 interview that Fualaau and Letourneau did with the Australian TV program “Sunday Night.” The dialogue is so similar that clips of the “Sunday Night” interview have been making the rounds of social media this week.

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In the footage circulating online, interviewer Matt Doran confronts Letourneau about being the “adult” when she first met Fualaau, and things quickly become disturbing.

“You can say that,” Letourneau responds to Doran.

“I am saying that,” Doran presses.

“I was by age,” Letourneau says.

“And maturity,” Doran retorts.

“Uh, yeah, maybe,” Letourneau says, as Doran goes on to point out that she was his teacher.

“But you don’t know him,” Letourneau says, gesturing to Fualaau as he quietly sits next to his wife with a furrowed brow.

“I don’t need to know him in this discussion,” Doran says. ”He’s the child. I’m talking about you.”

Letourneau then turns to Fualaau and asks him repeatedly, “Who was the boss?”

Fualaau seems incredibly uncomfortable but eventually says, “There was me pursuing you, but — ”

Letourneau then interrupts him to say again, “Who was the boss back then?”

“This is ridiculous,” Fualaau says.

Letourneau is persistent. “But who was the boss?” she asks. “Who?”

“This is getting weird,” Fualaau says before conceding again, “Well, I was the pursuer.”

“Yes!” Letourneau says.

“Mary … come on, he was 13,” Doran says.

“It doesn’t matter,” Letourneau says.

“It absolutely does matter,” Doran says.

“Oh, well, flaw me,” Letourneau says dismissively.

In “May December,” the dialogue from this interview is used for a scene in Joe and Gracie’s bedroom, where he finally confronts her about how they began their relationship. Much like Letourneau in the interview, Gracie dominates and manipulates her husband, leaving Joe to seemingly have an epiphany about their marriage and his arrested development.

“May December” appears to also be inspired by a USA Network movie based on Letourneau and Fualaau called “All-American Girl.”

A scene in “May December” in which Natalie Portman’s Elizabeth is trying to better understand Moore’s Gracie.
A scene in “May December” in which Natalie Portman’s Elizabeth is trying to better understand Moore’s Gracie.

Francois Duhamel / courtesy of Netflix

In “May December,” Portman plays an actor named Elizabeth who is set to star as Gracie in a TV movie based on her relationship with Joe. Elizabeth travels to meet and spend time with Gracie and Joe to better understand the character she is about to play. During her visit, Joe slowly starts to realise that there are cracks in the facade of the perfect suburban family life that he and his wife have created.

Fualaau filed for separation from Letourneau in 2017, and they officially divorced in 2019.

Despite this, the two remained close, and were spotted out together. Fualaau was at Letourneau’s side when she died of stage 4 cancer in 2020 at age 58.

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