It's the duet we never saw coming! According to singer Dionne Warwick, she and country music icon Dolly Parton are gearing up to release a gospel song. She revealed the news during the Tamron Hall Show on Tuesday. "I've done so many duets over the years, but this one's going to be very special," she said. Warwick noted that Parton wrote the song titled Peace Like a River, but so far, no release date has been announced.
Disney's Box Office Reign
For the seventh straight year, Disney is the number one studio at the box office. The House of Mouse was catapulted by a few great performing films including Avatar: The Way of Water, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Thor: Love and Thunder, Barbarian, and Death on the Nile. At the domestic box office, the movies were able to pull in $2 billion, while overseas screenings raked up $2.9 billion.
Scouting Bond
For years, the rumor mill has been in full swing about who should play the next agent 007. From Idris Elba to Lashana Lynch, the possibilities seem endless, and now another hat is being thrown into the ring. Actor Aaron Taylor-Johnson has reportedly met with the film's producers and could be in serious contention to nab the role. In June, producer Barbara Broccoli told Deadline production on the movie won't begin for another two years.
Kendall Tichner, founder and CEO of Wild Captives Archery Range in Brooklyn, NY, joined Cheddar News to discuss how she got started after going viral with her skills during the pandemic and how it led her to open her archery range where she wants to cater to more women and LGBTQ+ communities.
Emmy-winning actor Andre Braugher, best known in TV shows like 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' and 'Homicide: Life on the Street,' died on Monday at the age of 61.
The Emmy-winning actor died at age 61 after a brief illness. Braugher was best known for starring as Det. Frank Pembleton in the critically acclaimed 1990s series "Homicide: Life on the Street" and as the deceptively stone-faced Capt. Ray Holt on the comedy "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" in 2013-2021.
A study out of South Korea looked at over 23,000 people and found those who spend more than an hour commuting to work are 16% more likely to experience depression.