Page 13 - கைரோ News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from கைரோ. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In கைரோ Today - Breaking & Trending Today
By Victor Omondi Cynthia Bailey’s daughter Noelle Robinson disclosed that she got dismissed from Nobu, a famous Japanese seafood restaurant, because of her appearance on “The Real Housewives of Atlanta” show during a May 9 special episode of “Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen.” Robinson and 12 other kids from the “Housewives” franchise made […] ....
. Robinson, alongside 12 other children from the “Housewives” franchise, made a virtual appearance on the show to talk about their lives after reality television. Others appearing included “RHOA’s” Riley Burruss, daughter of Kandi Burruss; Kairo Whitfield, son of Shereé Whitfield; and Brielle Biermann, daughter of Kim Zolciak-Biermann. When Cohen asked the group how their parents’ appearances on television affected them, Robinson initially shared that it made her social experience with other people difficult. “It definitely made my experience a lot different and just a little bit harder for me socially … I also feel like just not even in college people just assume that you are bougie or stuck up you know, and that’s just really not true.” ....
Chloe Goodman has thrown her support behind sister Lauryn by slamming her ex Kyle Walker for leaving his son Kairo out of a pair of tailored football boots bearing his children s names. In a series of videos posted to Instagram Stories, the reality star, 27, said it was vile the Manchester City star had opted to leave his son, 13 months, out when he unveiled the new boots on his Instagram on Sunday. Lauryn herself also took to social media to slam her ex for using their son as a stepping stone to attack her. Hitting back: Chloe Goodman has thrown her support behind sister Lauryn by slamming her ex Kyle Walker for leaving his son Kairo out of a pair of tailored football boots ....
20 years after its initial Japanese release, Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s supernatural chiller Pulse (Kairo) hits closer to home than ever. The similarities between the film’s events and the global pandemic lends a prescient quality to Pulse that reads differently today. Kurosawa’s unsettling ghost story draws basis from a terrifying concept; a heavily overcrowded afterlife caused the dead to spill over into the world of the living. It spreads like a viral infection, plunging the globe into despair and death through the very thing meant to connect us – technology. Everything about Pulse set it apart from the J-horror craze that swept through horror at the turn of the century. Instead of long-haired ghosts in white or jump-scare laden curses, Kurosawa opts for a slow-burn atmosphere that coils the unease tighter at every turn through the power of suggestion. Never is that more evident that the movie’s scariest scene that shows the ghostly invasion in action. Kuro ....