The Beekeeper stole the domestic box office crown from Mean Girls over the weekend, following the musical remake's two-week reign. However, it was only by a slim margin, as the film brought in $7.4 million compared to Mean Girls at $7.3 million. Accord.
21 Savage remained at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, as American Dream spends its second week in the top spot. Morgan Wallen's One Thing At A Time rose back up to No. 2, and Drake's For All the Dogs climbed back to No. 3. Green Day's Saviors .
Natasha Lyonne spoke with Conan O'Brien on a recent episode of his podcast about her experience filming an Exorcist parody for Scary Movie 2. The Poker Face actor revealed that her costar, James Woods, "was hitting on me as a teenager in full monster makeup." During the interview, Lyonne first spoke about how Marlon Brando, who was originally cast for the role of Father McFeely, had his hand on her "breast for six days." She joked, "I'm maybe the last person he felt up." Lyonne previously revealed on Conan in 2013 that Brando put his hand on her breast in between takes. She later told Entertainment Weekly in 2022 that he did this because it was "in the script." The Godfather actor ended up dropping out of the project due to his health, and Woods replaced him. "He was less of a charmer," the Russian Doll actor said. "He was like, 'I can tell even with the makeup, you're a spinner, right?' And that was, I tho
Tracee Ellis Ross will host this year's Billboard Women In Music Awards, which will honor Kylie Minogue, Maren Morris, Ice Spice, Charli XCX, Young Miko, Victoria Monét, NewJeans, TEMS and Luísa Sonza. The ceremony will take place March 6th at at Los Angeles' YouTube Theater. More honorees will be announced in the coming weeks, including the 2024 Billboard Woman Of The Year. Presenters and performers will be revealed as well. "We could not be more excited to celebrate these inspiring and dynamic artists from around the world, as they move our culture forward and inspire women everywhere to push boundaries and pursue their own dreams," Billboard editorial director Hannah Karp said.