Musk says Tesla is on track to launch a robotaxi trial in Austin, Texas by the end of JuneNew Foto - Musk says Tesla is on track to launch a robotaxi trial in Austin, Texas by the end of June

(Reuters) - Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk on Tuesday said a test of robotaxis would begin on schedule in Austin, Texas by the end of June. Musk in a CNBC interview said that he expected Austin to launch with about 10 cars and that robotaxi deployment would scale up to about a thousand within a few months. (Reporting by Akash Sriram; editing by Peter Henderson)

Musk says Tesla is on track to launch a robotaxi trial in Austin, Texas by the end of June

Musk says Tesla is on track to launch a robotaxi trial in Austin, Texas by the end of June (Reuters) - Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk on Tu...
Taraji P. Henson Took Month-Long Break in Bali After Hollywood Left Her 'Bitter': 'Time to Walk Away'New Foto - Taraji P. Henson Took Month-Long Break in Bali After Hollywood Left Her 'Bitter': 'Time to Walk Away'

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Taraji P. Henson revealed that she took a month-long break from work in Bali The actress said she took the trip in order to "refocus" her priorities after feeling "discouraged" and "frustrated" by Hollywood She said that she came back from the trip "refreshed and with a new perspective" Taraji P. Hensonsays she took a break from Hollywood to "refocus" on what she wanted out of life and her career. The Color Purplestar, 54, revealed at a Kering Women in Motion Talk at theCannes Film Festivalthat she recently flew to Bali for a month-long trip after feeling "discouraged" and "frustrated" over thelack of pay, prominent roles and awards recognition she was getting in Hollywood as a woman of color. "I was just frustrated and it was making me bitter, and I'm not a bitter person," Henson said, perVariety. "I made a promise to myself [that] if I ever got there, then it's time to walk away. I'm not serving myself or the audience or the characters I play." "Thank god I did that," she added. "I came back refreshed and with a new perspective." Karwai Tang/WireImage Henson said that the break helped her "refocus" on the things that really mattered like changing lives, instead of going for "trophies and the awards" — which are things that she "never came into the industry for." That's why when she came back, she didn't immediately head to the studios, but moved to work on her hair care lineTPHso she didn't just rely "on that check from Hollywood." Elsewhere during the talk, she encouraged the audience to "speak up for yourself" — something which she said she has been doing more and more when it comes to the TV and film industries. TheHidden Figuresactress said that came with time and knowing her worth. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Taylor Hill/Getty "I have worked my butt off to garner the following I have. My following rides for me," she said, per Variety. "That's an audience I procured through my hard work and the characters I play. I know a studio, when they call on me, they are calling on me because they know all these people are going to come and show up. That's my power." "You need me because you need my following. Thank you, social media. Once I figured that out, I just started speaking up for myself," she added. This isn't the first time that Henson has spoken up about thestruggles that she has facedin her industry. TheEmpirestar previously broke down in tears in 2023 while chatting withGayle KingforSiriusXMradio about having worked "so hard" while "getting paid a fraction of the cost." "I'm tired of hearing my sisters saying the same thing over and over," she continued, calling out what she perceives as a pay gap for Black women in Hollywood. "I hear people go, 'You work a lot.' I have to. The math ain't mathing." Read the original article onPeople

Taraji P. Henson Took Month-Long Break in Bali After Hollywood Left Her 'Bitter': 'Time to Walk Away'

Taraji P. Henson Took Month-Long Break in Bali After Hollywood Left Her 'Bitter': 'Time to Walk Away' Dimitrios Kambouris/Ge...
Jodie Foster Reveals Why She Turned Down a Cameo in "Freakier Friday" 49 Years After Her 1976 Original

Andrew Eccles/Disney; Moviestore/Shutterstock Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan are back forFreakier Friday, a sequel to their 2003 comedy The director recently said they "begged" for a cameo from Jodie Foster, who starred in the 1976 originalFreaky Fridaymovie Foster says she was too "busy" making a different movie to do the sequel appearance Jodie Fosteris explaining why she opted out of a cameo appearance in thenewFreaky Fridaysequel. This summer,Lindsay LohanandJamie Lee Curtisreturn to the big screen forFreakier Friday, a followup to their 2003 body-swap comedy. Foster famously starred in Disney's original 1976 version as a child star opposite Barbara Harris. Freakier Fridaydirector Nisha Ganatra toldEntertainment Weeklyin April 2025that "we begged" Foster to make a cameoin the new movie but "she's not going to do it." In an interview withVarietysurrounding the Cannes Film Festival premiere of her French filmVie Privée, Foster, 62, explained why doesn't pop up in the film. "I was busy doing this movie," she said, referring toVie Privée."But Jamie Lee Curtis is a really good friend of mine. I followed the shoot and all that stuff." Walt Disney/Everett Collection Two-time Oscar-winner Foster admitted in the same interview that she "would never have chosen to be an actor" if she hadn't been "thrown into it at age 3." "When I was a kid, I worked so much that by the time that I was 18, I needed to take a different approach," she said, adding, "If I could do something else, if I was a writer or a painter or sculptor, that would be good too. But this is the only skill I have." Foster also shared why she doesn't often take comedic roles. "I don't love doing comedies in English. And maybe it's because, in America, when we make comedies, they don't have a lot of subtlety or intelligence. For me, that's essential," said Foster. "So I don't find very many that I love. Glen Wilson/Disney Added Foster, "It's hard for me to be fascinated with comedy for longer than a week. After about a week, I'm like, 'Oh, can we get this thing over already?' They're much harder to make than dramas." Curtis praised pal Fosterfor her "fierce dedication to her work" while speaking at theSilence of the Lambsstar's hand-and-footprint ceremony at the TCM Classic Film Festival in April 2024. Added Curtis at the time, "She's a creative force and is committed to the work she loves with great performances from that very young age of 3 to this last year at 60...." InFreakier Friday, Curtis, 66, and Lohan, 38, return as mother-daughter duo Tess and Anna Coleman. "Anna now has a daughter of her own and a soon-to-be stepdaughter. As they navigate the myriad challenges that come when two families merge, Tess and Anna discover that lightning might indeed strike twice," teases a synopsis. Freakier Fridayis in theaters Aug. 8. Read the original article onPeople

Jodie Foster Reveals Why She Turned Down a Cameo in “Freakier Friday” 49 Years After Her 1976 Original

Jodie Foster Reveals Why She Turned Down a Cameo in "Freakier Friday" 49 Years After Her 1976 Original Andrew Eccles/Disney; Movie...
Jodie Foster on 'Vie Privée' in Cannes, What Trump Means for Female Directors and Why Turning 60 Led to Career Contentment: 'There's a Freedom'New Foto - Jodie Foster on 'Vie Privée' in Cannes, What Trump Means for Female Directors and Why Turning 60 Led to Career Contentment: 'There's a Freedom'

Jodie Foster can go years without making a movie. "I'm picky," she admits. "I'm not really interested in acting just for the sake of acting. It has to really speak to me." More from Variety Nicole Kidman Pushes Back on Industry Ageism at Kering Women in Motion Gala in Cannes: 'Invest in Us and Believe in Us Because Our Voices Are So Important' Gullane+ Nabs Distribution Rights to Cannes Classic Doc 'Para Vigo Me Voy' About Legendary Brazilian Filmmaker Cacá Diegues 'History of Sound' Director Oliver Hermanus on Paul Mescal and Josh O'Connor's Deep Romance, Gay Sex Scene Discourse and His Alexander McQueen Biopic It's a few hours before the Cannes premiere of "Vie Privée," a French thriller that Foster, despite her natural aversion to performing, found impossible to resist. After meeting Rebecca Zlotowski, the French filmmaker who also wrote the script, Foster discovered they shared a passion for character development and narrative. And the story, which finds Foster playing a therapist who becomes convinced that her patient's suicide is actually a murder, was too tangled and intriguing to turn down. "Rebecca has this command of the intellectual world, as well as the emotional world," the 62-year-old Foster says. "We think about cinema in the same way. She wanted to make sure that the audience was brought into the interior life of the character, and that's what I enjoy doing as an actor." Foster took a long hiatus from acting in the aughts to focus on raising her kids. But she's been on screen more frequently as of late, earning an Oscar nomination for her work as a swimming coach in 2023's "Nyad" and an Emmy for her performance in 2024's "True Detective: Night Country." It's part of a new perspective she discovered after she turned 60, one that found her focusing more on ensemble movies and shows and less on star turns. It seems to have reawakened a love for a job she's been doing since she first captivated audiences with her turns in Disney classics like "Freaky Friday" and grittier stories like "Taxi Driver," before winning Oscars for "The Silence of the Lambs" and "The Accused." Why did you decide to make "Vie Privée"? I've been wanting to go back and do a French movie, because I haven't done one in a long time. For me, it's always about trying to find the right piece of material. I didn't want to do some overblown American and French co-production. As an actor, I need a story. And a lot of French movies, which I love, are behavior films where you just sort of follow people around for three days or something. That's not what I do. I'm interested in narrative. I'm all about developing a character who propels the story. This ticked all the boxes. When the movie starts, your character Lilian seems very confidant, but we quickly see the cracks in her facade. A lot of the people you've played are trying to maintain control or assert control. What attracts you to those parts? It's a pretty human thing. Maybe it's a female thing. Maybe I bring that to the table, because I was not born somebody who's emotionally accessible. I'm not a "pour my blood all over the table" kind of person. It's why I wasn't born to be an actor. I just got thrown into it at age 3. It wasn't something I chose to do. I would never have chosen to be an actor. I'm interested in the coverings that people use to adapt to this crazy world, and the layers that they need to maintain to keep themselves safe. You wouldn't have chosen to be an actor, but do you enjoy acting? Yeah, I do. But I like it on my terms. When I was a kid, I worked so much that by the time that I was 18, I needed to take a different approach. I see a lot of young actors, and I'm not saying I'm jealous, but I don't understand how they just want to act. They don't care if the movie's bad. They don't care if the dialogue is bad. They don't care if they're a grape in a Fruit of the Loom ad. If I never acted again, I wouldn't really care. I really like to be a vessel for story or cinema. If I could do something else, if I was a writer or a painter or sculptor, that would be good too. But this is the only skill I have. You've directed four movies, including "Little Man Tate" and "Home for the Holidays."Do you prefer directing to acting? I do prefer directing, but it's hard to get things off the ground. I have to work on the material for so long in order to make it mine. I love the movies that I made, and they speak to my life. And for me, they feel like auteur films. If I can't do it that way, I don't really want to do it. Nicole Kidman recently revealed that she has worked with 27 female directors in the last eight years. Wait, what? [Foster bangs the side of the couch she's sitting on]. That's incredible. She's always working! What's your reaction to that? Do you hope more actors use their influence to get female directors opportunities that maybe they wouldn't be considered for? I hope so. I've watched things change a lot. When I started acting, the only woman I ever saw on set was a makeup artist or script supervisor. Then I started seeing some more female technicians. But the last bastion has always been directors. When I decided to direct, I was lucky. The people that made decisions knew me, so they didn't consider me a risk as a first-time director. But as an actor, before my last three projects, I only had made one movie with a woman director. That's over 50 years. As you said, the last three projects you've made — "True Detective," "Nyad," and now, "Vie Privée" — were directed or co-directed by women. Was that a conscious choice? It's hard for me to be in the business of saying, half my movies are going to be made by women or men or whatever. Shouldn't it be a more instinctual choice? You would hope that you'd be interested in the human being. I mean, Jonathan Demme on "Silence of the Lambs" was my favorite feminist director. That said, I think some sort of quota system is important when it comes to giving first-time filmmakers an opportunity. You need to start the process early so we all get the same opportunities. America had a sort of golden moment of consciousness in the last 10 years where the men that made the decisions — and who were blind to their own xenophobia and racism and sexism — suddenly woke up and were like, "Hey, why are there no women on our list of directors?" They were being called out publicly, of course, but that forced them to look at themselves and decide to change. We're reaping the benefits of that. Do you think that will go away with the attacks that the Trump administration is making on companies that embrace DEI initiatives? Yeah, it may all be over now. That's certainly what seems to be in the works in terms of the administration. We're seeing it in everything from academia to law firms to entertainment. I hope that it doesn't happen, because we want to tellallstories. When we do, they make money. It's amazing that it took this long to explain to studio executives that women are 50% of the population. Female filmmakers are not a risk. And by the way, it was not female executives that made this change happen, because we had Amy Pascal, Sherry Lansing, Dawn Steel all running studios at the same time. At one point, four of the six studio heads were women and those lists of directors were all men. We need the people who run studios to make sure that they don't imbibe the institutional bias. I'll get off my soapbox now. There's a lot of humor in "Vie Privée."You haven't been in many comedies. Was it fun to show a different side of yourself? It is fun. Acting in French was helpful, because I'm a different person in French than I am in English. I have a more vulnerable way about me. I'm less confident, not as sure of myself, which I think is more fun. Do you feel like you are funnier in French than you are in English? I do. Maybe it's easier for me to just be free of my persona or something. I don't love doing comedies in English. And maybe it's because, in America, when we make comedies, they don't have a lot of subtlety or intelligence. For me, that's essential. So I don't find very many that I love. The one that I really liked, that I made was "Maverick." Even though it was silly, it's was written by William Goldman so it had a wryness and English intelligence about it. But it's hard for me to be fascinated with comedy for longer than a week. After about a week, I'm like, "Oh, can we get this thing over already?" They're much harder to make than dramas. Why did you decide not to film a cameo in "Freakier Friday"? I was busy doing this movie. But Jamie Lee Curtis is a really good friend of mine. I followed the shoot and all that stuff. After you won a Golden Globe for "True Detective," you said "this is the most contented moment in my career." Why? Something happens at 60. There's a hormone that gets injected in your body, and suddenly you're like, "Oh, I don't care." This all coincided with me getting really excited about helping to tell other people's stories and to elevate voices that hadn't been heard before. So with "The Mauritanian," I was in that movie so I could tell Tahar Rahim's story, not my character's story. With "True Detective," I wanted to engineer my part so it served the indigenous characters' story. I want to bring whatever wisdom or experience or money or status I have as an actor to help with that. I got to tell my story, it's someone else's turn. And that's much more fun. Who knew being a part of a community was so much more rewarding than being the person that has to open the movie on 1,500 screens? My 50s were hard for me. It's hard to embrace the transition. You feel like you're a worse version of who you were. But something happened a few years ago. I woke up one day and was like, "I don't care about any of the things that I cared about before. I'm gonna go down a different path." Your kids grow up, your parents pass away, maybe you get divorced. Those life changes are shattering. But there's a freedom that comes with that. As painful as it is to lose this other identity of being a dutiful mother or daughter or wife, you can also be like, it's just me now. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Jodie Foster on ‘Vie Privée’ in Cannes, What Trump Means for Female Directors and Why Turning 60 Led to Career Contentment: ‘There’s a Freedom’

Jodie Foster on 'Vie Privée' in Cannes, What Trump Means for Female Directors and Why Turning 60 Led to Career Contentment: 'The...
Diddy Brought Guns to Confront Suge Knight at a Diner, Ex-Assistant Testifies: 'My Life Was in Danger'New Foto - Diddy Brought Guns to Confront Suge Knight at a Diner, Ex-Assistant Testifies: 'My Life Was in Danger'

One of Sean "Diddy" Combs' former personal assistants testified at his criminal trial on Tuesday and detailed a terrifying incident involving Combs and his rival, Suge Knight. According to David James, who worked for Combs from 2007 to 2009, Combs once took three handguns into the car around the end of his tenure and instructed James to drive to Mel's Diner in Los Angeles, where they believed Knight to be. More from Variety Diddy Trial: Dawn Richard Faces Tough Cross-Examination as Sean Combs' Lawyer Reveals Inconsistencies in Her Testimony Cassie Expects $10 Million Settlement From InterContinental for Diddy Hotel Assault Cassie Threatened Man in 2014 Over Fears of Leaked 'Freak-Off' Video: 'I Will Kill You and Hide You' Just before that, at around 4 a.m., James had driven to the diner with one of Combs' security guards, Damion Butler (aka D-Roc), to pick up food for Combs and members of his entourage. As they parked the car, a silver Lincoln Navigator, Butler recognized Knight in a car parked a few spots away. Per James, Butler approached Knight and said, "It's me, D-Roc, Biggie's boy," referring to the late rapper the Notorious B.I.G., who was signed to Combs' Bad Boy Records. (Knight, who is now serving time in prison for a fatal hit-and-run, ran the rival label Death Row Records. While there is no definitive proof, Knight is often speculated to have been involved with the murder of Notorious B.I.G. in 1997. That murder remains unsolved.) Knight apparently responded to Butler by saying, "What are you doing in my city?," to which Butler said, "Getting money, you know what it is." The two then engaged in a friendly handshake. James said he and Butler then went inside Mel's Diner to order takeout food, when James noticed four black SUVs pull into the parking lot, and a man handed Knight a gun. Per James, Butler said, "We got to fucking go," and the two of them managed to get in the car and escape back to Combs' house in the Hollywood Hills. When they arrived, Combs told James and Butler to get into a different car, a black Escalade, and instructed James to drive back to the diner. At one point, James looked back and saw Combs in the backseat with three handguns in his lap. "I had a weird sense of calm," James said. Because they had switched cars, he thought Knight might not see them coming. But he also realized that Combs had brought three guns, and there were three of them in the car. "It was the first time I realized my life was in danger," James said. When they arrived at Mel's Diner about 10 minutes later, Knight was gone. Combs told James to drive around the block, but Knight was nowhere to be found. A few days later, James resigned as Combs' personal assistant, giving six months' notice. Asked by Combs' attorney why he went along with what he presumed to be a potential shooting, James said, "I didn't think I had the option to say something." James spoke at length about his two-year stint as Combs' personal assistant, saying it was an intense job with 20-hour days. "There were definitely times where I worked 21 days straight," he said. He recalled a joke often repeated by Combs' security detail: "Do you know what rhymes with 'tired'? 'Fired.'" Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Diddy Brought Guns to Confront Suge Knight at a Diner, Ex-Assistant Testifies: ‘My Life Was in Danger’

Diddy Brought Guns to Confront Suge Knight at a Diner, Ex-Assistant Testifies: 'My Life Was in Danger' One of Sean "Diddy"...

 

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