New Photo - Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood - 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tucks'

Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tucks' Deborah CruzJuly 31, 2025 at 6:01 PM Photo by John Lamparski/WireImage Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips ...

- - Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood - 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tucks'

Deborah CruzJuly 31, 2025 at 6:01 PM

Photo by John Lamparski/WireImage

Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood - 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tucks' originally appeared on Parade.

When Lena Dunham speaks about Hollywood's beauty standards, you know she's about to serve some unfiltered truth. The Girls creator just delivered her most honest take yet on how the entertainment industry transforms women's relationships with their bodies, revealing how careers can become consumed by cosmetic procedures and appearance anxiety.

Speaking on the Shut Up Evan podcast, the 39-year-old writer-director shared a raw perspective that many women in entertainment can relate to but rarely voice so candidly. While discussing recent paparazzi photos from her film set, Dunham explained how the industry pressures women into constant physical modification.

"There are people who grew up feeling free in their bodies, who suddenly when they start to work in a field like this, their entire life becomes about nips and tucks," Dunham explained, highlighting how Hollywood can corrupt even the most confident women's self-image.

Her comments came after being caught in paparazzi crossfire while filming alongside Natalie Portman. Dunham found herself photographed wearing a baggy Uniqlo t-shirt and boxer shorts – comfortable work attire that could have sent image-obsessed performers into months of anxiety. Instead, she used the moment to illustrate her point about maintaining perspective.

The New York native reflected on how appearance fixation can derail professional focus entirely. As host Evan Ross Katz noted, suddenly women find themselves "waking up and instead of focusing on directing the film, it's what am I wearing to set today."

Related: Father of 10 Eddie Murphy, 64, Just Gave Pete Davidson the Ultimate Effortless Parenting Advice

Dunham's experience with paparazzi harassment during her Girls era provided particularly brutal context. She recalled a photographer once screaming "You're no Sarah Jessica Parker" at her – a moment she now wears as a badge of honor, responding with gratitude rather than devastation.

Her willingness to discuss these pressures while acknowledging that "everyone has to do what they have to do to feel happy in their bodies" shows remarkable nuance. She's not shaming anyone's choices but rather exposing how the industry creates environments where appearance becomes all-consuming.

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What makes Dunham's commentary so valuable is her insider perspective combined with her commitment to body acceptance. Having navigated Hollywood success while refusing to conform to traditional beauty standards, she offers unique insight into the psychological toll of constant scrutiny.

Her message resonates beyond entertainment – any woman in a visual profession can relate to the pressure of being constantly photographed and judged on appearance rather than work quality.

Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood - 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tucks' first appeared on Parade on Jul 31, 2025

This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 31, 2025, where it first appeared.

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Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood - 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tucks'

Lena Dunham Just Dropped the Ultimate Tea About Being a Woman in Hollywood 'Entire Life Becomes about Nips And Tuc...
New Photo - Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention

Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention Jan CrawfordJuly 31, 2025 at 3:31 PM / Getty Images Justice Brett Kavanaugh defended how the Supreme Court is handling an unprecedented number of emergency appeals from the Trump administration, saying that as presi...

- - Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention

Jan CrawfordJuly 31, 2025 at 3:31 PM

/ Getty Images

Justice Brett Kavanaugh defended how the Supreme Court is handling an unprecedented number of emergency appeals from the Trump administration, saying that as presidents push the limits of their power, courts will have to respond.

Speaking before a group of lawyers and judges Thursday in Kansas City, Missouri, Kavanaugh said presidents in both parties, stymied by inaction in Congress, have relied more on executive orders "to get things done." That's led to more legal challenges, Kavanaugh said, which inevitably draw in the Supreme Court to determine whether the new regulation can take effect, at least temporarily, while the legal challenges play out.

So far, the court has been inclined to say yes, agreeing to allow a number of President Trump's high-profile executive orders to take effect while the lower courts review the merits, such as orders to fire members of independent federal agencies, freeze certain federal grants and plan layoffs at nearly every federal agency.

Asked about criticism that the court isn't doing enough to explain its reasoning in some of those emergency cases, Kavanaugh said the court has written more than it has in the past. He said the court also had made some internal changes in the past five or six years "to try to get the right answer," including scheduling emergency oral arguments, as in the recent case challenging nationwide injunctions.

He said he was a "fan of more process" and mentioned two recent cases, including the president's removal power in independent agencies, where he unsuccessfully urged the court to step in and decide the underlying issue before it went through the lower courts.

Kavanaugh's hour-long remarks came in a conversation with U.S. District Judge Sarah Pitlyk, one of his former law clerks, at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit's judicial conference. It's one of several judicial conferences this summer that will feature different justices.

Last week, Justice Elena Kagan spoke to the California-based 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, where she urged the court to be more cautious with its handling of the so-called emergency docket. She also said that while she finds some of the court's recent decisions "frustrating" and "sometimes even maddening," prompting fierce dissents, she believed her colleagues were "all operating in good faith."

Kavanaugh shared a similar sentiment about the other justices, saying even in disagreement, "they're thoughtfully engaging in difficult issues," and he believed it was "a sign of strength when there are different views expressed."

"The collegiality of the Supreme Court is very strong, strong to this day," he said. "We all look out for each other. We think the other eight are patriots and are good people."

His wide-ranging conversation with Pitlyk was at times personal and humorous, touching on everything from lessons he's taken from sports to some of his favorite opinions in recent terms. He said he's aware of criticism of the court, but that "criticism is part of the job."

Like the referees for high school sports, Kavanaugh said, as a justice, "you have to recognize and know thick skin and criticism comes with the territory."

"Did you ever walk out of a game and say, 'our team lost, but the refs were great?'" Kavanaugh said, to laughter from the audience. "That informs my judging, too."

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Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention

Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention Jan CrawfordJuly 31, 2025 at 3:31...
New Photo - Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention

Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention Nicole AcevedoJuly 31, 2025 at 3:23 PM Caroline DiasGoncalves.

- - Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention

Nicole AcevedoJuly 31, 2025 at 3:23 PM

Caroline Dias-Goncalves. (via GoFundMe)

Five sheriff's deputies from Colorado are being disciplined after a college student spent two weeks in a federal immigration detention center last month after a routine traffic stop.

An administrative review concluded that Sheriff's Deputy Alexander Zwinck shared information on a Signal group chat that included federal immigration agents after he had pulled over Caroline Dias-Goncalves, 19, a student at the University of Utah, Mesa County Sheriff Todd Rowell said in a statement Wednesday.

The agents then used that information to track Dias-Goncalves down and arrest her. She was taken to a detention facility in Aurora, where she was held for 15 days before being released on bond.

"The Mesa County Sheriff's Office should not have had any role in the chain of events leading to Miss Dias-Goncalves's detention," Rowell said.

Colorado law restricts coordination between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities. It prohibits state and local law enforcement from providing information about a person's immigration status to federal officials or disclosing personal identifying information to immigration authorities.

"I regret that this occurred. I apologize to Miss Dias-Goncalves," Rowell said.

Zwinck pulled Dias-Goncalves over while she was driving on Interstate 70 outside Loma on June 5. Zwinck claimed Dias-Goncalves was driving too close to a semi-truck.

The traffic stop lasted about 20 minutes and Zwinck released Dias-Goncalves with a warning. Shortly after she exited the highway, federal immigration agents stopped her, arrested her and took her to the Aurora detention facility, where she was held until June 20.

Born in Brazil and raised in Utah since she was 7, Dias-Goncalves is one of nearly 2.5 million people living in the United States known as "Dreamers," young immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children. Dias-Goncalves arrived on a visa that expired over a decade ago and has a pending asylum case.

In interviews conducted as part of the review, Zwinck claimed he did not know he was violating any laws or policies when he shared Dias-Goncalves' information and location with federal authorities in a group chat meant to discuss drug crackdown efforts.

According to the review's findings, Zwinck was involved in at least four other incidents last month in which the information he shared on the group chat following his traffic stops led to federal immigration enforcement actions.

Zwinck also told investigators that he had received and read two department-wide emails from the sheriff's office last year and in January, both outlining how deputies should interact with immigration authorities.

The review concluded there was "a preponderance of evidence" showing that Zwinck as well as Sheriff's Deputy Erik Olson, who was on the group chat, and their supervisor, Sgt. Joe LeMoine, "acted outside of agency policy."

Zwinck was placed on unpaid administrative leave for three weeks and Olson for two. Both will be reassigned to patrol. LeMoine was suspended without pay for two days.

Lt. David Holdren, LeMoine's supervisor, received a letter of reprimand and Holdren's supervisor, Capt. Curtis Brammer, was provided documented counseling.

Earlier this month, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser filed a lawsuit against Zwinck, alleging that he had violated Colorado laws limiting cooperation between local and federal immigration authorities.

Rowell said the lawsuit "sends a demoralizing message to law enforcement officers across Colorado" and urged Weiser to "apply the law equally to all law enforcement and government officials instead of making Deputy Zwinck an example."

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Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention

Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention Nicole AcevedoJuly 31, ...
New Photo - Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism

Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism NICHOLAS RICCARDI July 31, 2025 at 3:26 PM FILE News media is set up in front of the home of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas, July 20, 2020, in North Brunswick, N.J.

- - Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism

NICHOLAS RICCARDI July 31, 2025 at 3:26 PM

FILE - News media is set up in front of the home of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas, July 20, 2020, in North Brunswick, N.J. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

In 2020, a disgruntled litigant posing as a deliveryman opened fire at the New Jersey home of District Judge Esther Salas, killing her 20-year-old son Daniel Anderl. Five years later, as President Donald Trump steps up hiscriticism of federal judges who have blocked some of his agenda, dozens of judges have had unsolicited pizzas delivered to their homes, often in Daniel Anderl's name.

District Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. of Rhode Island, who stalled Trump's initial round of across-the-board spending cuts, is among those who received pizzas in Anderl's name. His courtroom also has been flooded by threatening calls, including one profanity-laced one that called for his assassination.

McConnell, Jr. played a recording of the call during an unusual discussion Thursday where multiple federal judges discussed threats they have received — a notable conversation because judges usually only speak publicly from the bench and through their rulings, and rarely if ever, about personal threats and attacks. Salas and others said the number of attacks has escalated in recent months.

Without using his name, Salas called on Trump and his allies to tone down the rhetoric and stop demonizing the judiciary, for fear of what more could happen.

"We're used to being appealed. But keep it on the merits, stop demonizing us," Salas said. "They're inviting people to do us harm."

Thursday's event was sponsored by Speak up for Justice, a nonpartisan group supporting an independent judiciary. District Judge John C. Coughenour of Washington recalled having a police SWAT team called to his home to respond to a false report of an attack after Coughenour in January halted Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship for children of people in the country illegally.

District Judge Robert S. Lasnik of Washington also had pizzas delivered in Anderl's name to both his home and those of his two adult children, each in different cities, after an article in which he was quoted as being critical of attacks on judges was picked up by a television station in the Pacific Northwest, where he hears cases.

"The message to me was 'we know where you live, we know where your kids live, and they could end up dead like Daniel Anderl did,'" Lasnik said in an interview.

Salas says U.S. Marshals have told her of more than 100 cases of so-called "pizza doxings," unwanted deliveries to the homes of federal judges and their families, since 2024, with most occurring this year. Salas added that she's heard of additional cases targeting state judges in states ranging from Colorado to Florida, incidents that wouldn't be tracked by Marshals, who protect federal judges.

"This is not some random, silly act, this is a targeted, concentrated, coordinated attack on judges," Salas said in an interview, "and yet we don't hear any condemnation from Washington."

Salas, nominated by Democratic President Barack Obama, in 2022 was critical of protests at the homes of Republican-nominated Supreme Court justices who revoked women's right to have an abortion, which were followed by the arrest of a man at the home of Justice Brett Kavanaugh who said he was there to assassinate the justice. Salas said both sides of the political aisle have used worrying rhetoric about judges, but it's reached a new peak since Trump took office.

"I've often referred to it as a bonfire that I believe the current administration is throwing accelerants on," Salas said.

Trump himself has led the charge against judges, often going after them by name on social media. He's said judges who've ruled against his administration are "sick," "very dangerous" and "lunatic." Trump's allies have amplified his rhetoric and called for impeaching judges who rule against the president or simply disobeying their rulings. Earlier this year, several judges at the panel noted, Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee had a "wanted" poster of judges who'd crossed the president hanging outside his congressional office.

Lasnik said many judges appointed by presidents of both parties have told him of concerns but are nervous about discussing the issue openly.

"A lot of them don't know how to speak up and are afraid of crossing a line somewhere where they would get a judicial complaint like judge Boasberg did," Lasnik said, referring to District Judge James E. Boasberg of D.C., who infuriated the Trump administration by finding they likely committed criminal contempt by disobeying his order to turn around a deportation flight to El Salvador.

Though Chief Justice John Roberts has come to Boasberg's defense, Trump's Department of Justice this week filed a complaint against Boasberg over comments he made at a judicial conference that other judges worry the Trump administration won't obey their orders. Last month, Trump's Justice Department took the extraordinary step of suing every federal judge in Maryland over rules governing how they handle immigration cases.

More than five dozen judges who've ruled against Trump are receiving enhanced online protection, including scrubbing their identifying information from websites, according to two Trump-appointed judges who wrote Congress urging more funding for judicial security. In 2022, Congress passed a law named after Daniel Anderl allowing judges to sue internet sites to take down identifying information.

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Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism

Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism NICHOLAS RICCARDI July 31...
New Photo - Celebrities Who Have Lyme Disease and What They've Said

Celebrities Who Have Lyme Disease and What They've Said Grace GavilanesJuly 31, 2025 at 2:54 PM Amy Sussman/Getty;Arnold Jerocki/GC;Golden Globes 2024 via Getty According to the Centers for Disease Control, approximately 476,000 Americans are diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease every year.

- - Celebrities Who Have Lyme Disease and What They've Said

Grace GavilanesJuly 31, 2025 at 2:54 PM

Amy Sussman/Getty;Arnold Jerocki/GC;Golden Globes 2024 via Getty

According to the Centers for Disease Control, approximately 476,000 Americans are diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease every year. Symptoms can include a rash and flu-like symptoms, with some people going on to experience arthritis, facial palsy, pain, irregular heartbeats and other worsening symptoms.

In recent years, numerous celebrities have come forward with their own stories of suffering, opening up about their health and treatments, both for better and worse.

Justin Timberlake is the latest star to speak out about his experience since being diagnosed, joining a list of stars that include the Hadid siblings, Ben Stiller, Shania Twain and more stars who've been affected by Lyme.

Justin Timberlake

Lionel Hahn/Getty

On July 31, 2025, Timberlake revealed that he had been diagnosed with Lyme disease while on his Forget Tomorrow world tour and finding himself performing through "massive amount of nerve pain or, just feeling crazy fatigue or sickness."

"If you've experienced this disease or know someone who has — then you're aware: living with this can be relentlessly debilitating, both mentally and physically," he wrote.

"I was faced with a personal decision. Stop touring? Or, keep going and figure it out. I decided the joy that performing brings me far outweighs the fleeting stress my body was feeling. I'm so glad I kept going. Not only did I prove my mental tenacity to myself but, I now have so many special moments with all of you that I will never forget. I was reluctant to talk about this because I was always raised to keep something like this to yourself. But I am trying to be more transparent about my struggles so that they aren't misinterpreted.Sharing all of this with the hope that we can all find a way to be more connected. I'd like to do my part to help others experiencing this disease too."

Alexis Ohanian

Dia Dipasupil/Getty

After getting full body scans, the Reddit co-founder shared on X in July 2024 that he had been diagnosed with Lyme disease.

"Wild. No symptoms, thankfully, but gonna treat," he wrote in part, adding, "I spend so little time in the wilderness/northeast this was quite a surprise. Anyway, gonna grab some antibiotics — can't keep me down, tick!"

Leah McSweeney

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty

The Real Housewives of New York City alum revealed she'd been diagnosed with the disease through an Instagram story in July 2024 where she posted her blood test results.

"Please send success stories of healing from Lyme," she wrote. "It's a new infection not chronic."

"Apologies to all my friends who I've canceled on in the past couple months cus I was feeling like s---," she finished.

Fletcher

Fletcher/Instagram

Fletcher

In September 2023, the singer announced her diagnosis on Instagram alongside two photos of herself during a doctor's visit, sharing that her recent health battle has forced her to put her career on pause.

"I have recently been diagnosed with Lyme disease. I started becoming increasingly ill over the last couple years and just kept pushing even though I knew there was something deeper going on," she wrote. "For the last few months I've been receiving treatments, following doctor's orders and doing my best to learn more about this invisible illness."

"Lyme has affected me in a variety of ways and while it has not only taken a tremendous toll on my physical body, it has also caused concern for my voice as well," she continued. "This has won on my soul in a way that's hard to even put words to as singing is the thing I love most in this world and my voice is my vessel for expression."

Yolanda Hadid

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty

The former Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star has spoken out about her diagnosis onstage, on TV, on social media and in her 2017 book, Believe Me: My Battle with the Invisible Disability of Lyme Disease.

"This disease has brought me and many others to our knees, often wishing to die of utter hopelessness and exhaustion. Like I always say, you don't get it until you get it," she said at the Global Lyme Alliance Gala in 2016. "It's hard for people to understand the invisible disability that owns our life especially behind the beautiful face that shines so bright on the covers of magazines."

Bella Hadid

Bella Hadid/Instagram

In her speech at the 2016 Global Lyme Alliance, Yolanda's daughter Bella explained how her passion for horseback riding - and many aspects of her life - have been hindered because of her Lyme battle.

"It was my dream of my life and what I did every single day until I just stopped and realized I didn't have the brain power to ride horses anymore, so that was the end of that," Bella explained. "I know what it feels like to not want to get out of bed from bone pains and exhaustion and days on end of not wanting to socialize or be around people because the anxiety and brain fog just isn't worth it. After years of this, you begin to get used to living with the sickness, instead of getting cured and moving on with your life."

In 2023, the model shared that after 15 years, she is "finally healthy."

"The little me that suffered would be so proud of grown me for not giving up on myself🫶🏼," she wrote on Instagram. "I have so much gratitude for and perspective on life, this 100+ days of Lyme, chronic disease, [co-infection] treatment, almost 15 years of invisible suffering, was all worth it if I'm able to, God willing, have a lifetime of spreading love from a full cup, and being able to truly be myself, For the first time ever."

Bella's brother, model Anwar Hadid, also lives with the "invisible illness," Yolanda has shared.

"Watching my babies struggle in silence to support me in my journey struck the deepest core of hopelessness inside of me," she said in a 2015 speech.

Dr. Raphael Kellman told PEOPLE at the time that it's not uncommon for family members to have Lyme disease at the same time, though "it's not genetic, it's because they share the same environment," he added.

Riley Keough

Amy Sussman/Getty

In her 2023 Vanity Fair cover story, the daughter of Lisa Marie Presley revealed she had Lyme disease. It not only led to her choosing surrogacy when starting a family with husband Ben Smith-Petersen (the pair welcomed daughter Tupelo in August 2022), but also affects her day-to-day life.

"I can carry children," she explained, "but it felt like the best choice for what I had going on physically with the autoimmune stuff."

The Vanity Fair interview took place in Sweden, where the actress said she was on a "little break" as she worked to "alleviate" Lyme symptoms at a holistic center where they do "all kinds of things that you can't really do in America yet, like cleaning your blood," she shared.

Ryan Sutter

Ryan Sutter/instagram Ryan Sutter

After navigating a "mystery" illness for months during the COVID-19 pandemic, Sutter announced in May 2021 that he had Lyme disease, worsened by mold exposure.

Sutter explained that after going through a litany of testing and blood work over the last year, doctors determined that his body is susceptible to taking in mold toxins, which he is frequently exposed to as a firefighter.

"It seems to be that what happened is that my immune system was weakened through exposures to toxins and especially to mold," he said on wife Trista Sutter's podcast, Better Etc. "There are other people in the fire academy that probably had the same exposures who aren't dealing with these exposures because their genetics are stronger, they're able to get rid of the toxins easier."

He also tested positive for COVID-19 and Epstein-Barr virus, a common illness that causes mononucleosis.

"It's been hard," Trista said. "It's a really difficult thing to see the person you love most in the world struggling. And he's a big, strong guy, and oof - to see him get emotional and feel hopeless, in that all I could really do is advocate for him, so that's what I did."

In June 2022, the couple sat down with PEOPLE for an update on Ryan's health — and had good news.

"For so long, I was only thinking about how to survive the day," said Ryan. "But I feel like my life is coming back. And that's been really encouraging."

Kelley Flanagan

Kelley Flanagan/ instagram Kelley Flanagan

Bachelor alumna Kelly Flanagan shared "some not so good news" with her Instagram followers in August 2021 — she tested positive for Lyme disease.

The former Bachelor contestant posted a video on Instagram where she tearfully explained that she's been struggling with the news about her health.

"I'm not having the best day today," Flanagan said, before sharing that she tested positive for Lyme disease. The reality star said that she suspected that something was off because her body "is so much more sensitive and super reactive to a bunch of things."

"Two of my brothers have Lyme disease and a lot of their symptoms sounded really similar to me," she said. "Cause I've just always had something off since I was young, and like, really really had to take care of myself."

Flanagan said that she thinks "this is something that I've had maybe for a while," and she's partially relieved to have a diagnosis.

"It's a blessing and a curse because now I can target why I feel off so often but also means several different lifestyle changes and extensive research on how to help/hopefully cure this!" she wrote in the caption. "I know this is going to be tough for me seeing what my brothers have gone through mentally and physically but I'm going to put so much of my time and energy into figuring this out and combatting this."

Debbie Gibson

Noam Galai/Getty

While Debbie Gibson finally achieved her dream of competing on season 25 of Dancing with the Stars, the singer admitted her Lyme disease made the experience a challenging one. "I can't be cavalier with my body," she told PEOPLE. "I can't just push myself without thinking what happens next. [Lyme disease] can affect my stamina."

But there's a silver lining: after fighting the disease for years, Gibson knows her physical strengths and weaknesses. "I've always been in tune with my body," she said. "But the last few years have helped me learn where I can push my limits. I'm going to choose to think of that as an advantage!"

In a candid chat with PEOPLE in August 2021, she elaborated on her symptoms and treatment, saying she's "learned to expect the unexpected."

"I know I can get through it," she said of tougher days. "And every time I get through it, I'm reminded of how strong we all are."

Kelly Dodd & Rick Leventhal

Charles Sykes/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Rick Leventhal and Kelly Dodd

In June 2021, the Real Housewives of Orange County star revealed the couple's diagnosis on her Instagram Story.

"So, we tested positive for Lyme disease," Dodd said, while filming Leventhal sitting across the table from her.

She went on to say that this is her first bout with the disease. "I've never had contact with a tick in my life," she said.

Leventhal, however, told Dodd he's had Lyme disease twice in the past.

He then took an antibiotic pill, adding that the medicine cured his other bouts with Lyme and stressing that he hopes it will work again.

Dodd didn't say where she and Leventhal suspected they contracted Lyme. A rep for the reality star did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment.

Amy Schumer

TheStewartofNY/WireImage

The actress and comedian opened up about her diagnosis in a September 2020 Instagram post featuring a throwback photo with her "first ever fishing pole."

"Anyone get LYME this summer? I got it and I'm on doxycycline," she wrote. "I have maybe had it for years. Any advice? Can you have a glass of wine or 2 on it?"

"I know to stay out of the sun. I'm also taking these herbs from cape cod called lyme-2," Schumer continued, asking followers to comment with their own experience with the tick-borne disease. "I also want to say that I feel good and am excited to get rid of it."

Ramona Singer

Michael Ostuni/Patrick McMullan via Getty

The Real Housewives of New York City star was diagnosed with Lyme disease in March 2020. The diagnosis came after Singer started feeling sick around Valentine's Day, according to E! News.

The reality star believes that she contracted the tick-borne illness while in the Hamptons. She was diagnosed early and told E! that she is "very lucky and very blessed."

Justin Bieber

Broadimage/Shutterstock Justin Bieber.

The superstar revealed in January 2020 that a July 2019 photo of him that sparked Internet speculation about his health (above) was taken at the height of his battle with Lyme.

"While a lot of people kept saying Justin Bieber looks like s---, on meth etc. they failed to realize I've been recently diagnosed with Lyme disease," he wrote on Instagram. "It's been a rough couple years but getting the right treatment that will help treat this so far incurable disease and I will be back and better than ever."

Avril Lavigne

Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Getty

In her 2015 PEOPLE cover story, the singer revealed she had been battling Lyme disease for a year. "I had no idea a bug bite could do this," said Lavigne, who believes she was bit by a tick in 2014. "I was bedridden for five months."

In a 2019 PEOPLE story, Lavigne — whose foundation is working with various Lyme disease organizations to raise money and awareness for the cause — said she was feeling well.

"It gave me a purpose," she added of her journey, "and made me find myself all over again."

"When you go through something like that, you realize how fulfilling simple things are - things I could do anymore, like being able to get up in the morning and go to the kitchen and grab a cup of coffee," she added. "It taught me patience; it taught me being more present. That was a beautiful lesson."

Shania Twain

Brian Bowen Smith/NBC via Getty

As a legend in the country music world, Twain kept vocal struggles under the radar so as to not worry her fans. But she eventually shared her diagnosis to explain why she was having vocal struggles due to the effects of dysphonia, the result of Lyme disease. "I was very scared for a little while that I wouldn't sing again, ever," she told PEOPLE. "I went through that moment, but I found a way. I found a way to do it."

Using her voice to sing now, she says, requires lengthy warmups and physical therapy that's "very, very difficult."

Ben Stiller

Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+/Getty

The actor was first diagnosed with Lyme disease in 2010. He suspects he contracted the illness on a trip to Nantucket, Massachusetts. "I'm symptom-free now," Stiller told The Hollywood Reporter in 2011, "but Lyme doesn't ever leave your system. It's a really tough thing."

Alec Baldwin

Cindy Ord/Getty

Baldwin took the stage as Master of Ceremonies at the Bay Area Lyme Foundation's 2017 gala, LymeAid, where he got candid about his struggle with the illness. "I really thought this is it, I'm not going to live," he said of his condition. "I was alone, I wasn't married at the time, I was divorced from my first wife. I was lying in bed saying, 'I'm going to die of Lyme disease,' in my bed and 'I hope someone finds me and I'm not here for too long.' "

Kelly Osbourne

Cassidy Sparrow/Getty

In 2004, the star attended dad Ozzy's surprise 56th birthday party, which featured a reindeer sanctuary in the family's backyard. During the event, Kelly was bitten by a tick, and would go on to face an array of symptoms, including a sore throat and stomach pains. "I've learned to advocate for myself when it comes to my health, and I trust my intuition," she wrote in her memoir, There Is No F*cking Secret: Letters From a Badass Bitch. "If I think something is wrong, I refuse to let anyone dismiss it. And sadly, I stay the f--- away from reindeer."

Ally Hilfiger

Stefanie Keenan/WireImage

"I was convinced that bugs were crawling in my body. I could feel them eating at my organs, my stomach and especially my brain," Hilfiger wrote in her, Bite Me: How Lyme Disease Stole My Childhood, Made Me Crazy, and Almost Killed Me, speaking of first being diagnosed with Lyme disease after being bitten by a tick in 1992 at 7 years old.

"I wasn't me anymore. I was a weakly projected image of myself on a wall, crying out for someone to help me and figure out what was wrong."

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Celebrities Who Have Lyme Disease and What They've Said

Celebrities Who Have Lyme Disease and What They've Said Grace GavilanesJuly 31, 2025 at 2:54 PM Amy Sussman/Getty;...
New Photo - The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne

The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne Mandi JacewiczAugust 1, 2025 at 2:54 AM Photo by momo11353 on Getty Images The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne originally appeared on Parade.

- - The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne

Mandi JacewiczAugust 1, 2025 at 2:54 AM

Photo by momo11353 on Getty Images

The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne originally appeared on Parade.

If you grew up listening to Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne, it probably doesn't take more than a few notes to send you straight back in time. But no matter how many covers you've heard over the years, chances are you've never heard one quite like this.

Outside the gates of Buckingham Palace, amid the formality of the Changing of the Guard, the Coldstream Guards broke tradition in a truly spectacular fashion.

The band played the unmistakable riff of Black Sabbath's "Paranoid" for the crowd. Dressed in their signature red tunics and towering bearskin hats, the King's Guard delivered a jaw-dropping tribute to the late Prince of Darkness.

Listen to a clip in this TikTok video from July 30:

The moment, shared by @theprojecttv, came just days after Osbourne's death at age 76. The iconic rocker, whose legacy spans from the birth of heavy metal to the hit reality show The Osbournes, died on July 22.

Related: King Charles to Sit Out Major Royal Event in Stunning Break From Tradition

The unexpected performance struck an emotional chord with fans around the world. Many applauded the powerful and respectable tribute, with some saying it was a unique blend of tradition and rock that Osbourne would have approved.

Osbourne's legacy will live on not only in his music but also in the hearts of fans who recognized a working-class hero who never stopped fighting. A new exhibit at the Birmingham Museum, Ozzy Osbourne (1948–2025): Working-Class Hero, now invites fans to pay tribute in person and leave messages in a growing book of condolences that will be available until Sunday, August 3.

In a world where royal bands typically stick to marches and classical themes, the King's Guard broke the mold, reminding us that true legends deserve unexpected honors.

The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne first appeared on Parade on Jul 31, 2025

This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 31, 2025, where it first appeared.

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The King’s Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne

The King's Guard Stuns Crowd With Epic Black Sabbath Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne Mandi JacewiczAugust 1, 2025 at 2:54...
New Photo - A 'beautiful' ballroom and a new Lincoln bathroom: Trump relishes remaking the White House

A 'beautiful' ballroom and a new Lincoln bathroom: Trump relishes remaking the White House Peter NicholasAugust 1, 2025 at 4:50 AM Donald Trump and James Blair, White House deputy chief of staff for legislative, political and public affairs, view renovations to the Rose Garden on July 15.

- - A 'beautiful' ballroom and a new Lincoln bathroom: Trump relishes remaking the White House

Peter NicholasAugust 1, 2025 at 4:50 AM

Donald Trump and James Blair, White House deputy chief of staff for legislative, political and public affairs, view renovations to the Rose Garden on July 15. (Al Drago / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)

WASHINGTON — One of Donald Trump's most visible and potentially enduring legacies as president could be the 90,000-square-foot ballroom that he is planning to build, replacing the East Wing edifice traditionally used for the first lady's offices.

The project, set to begin in September, looms as the biggest transformation of the White House complex since Harry Truman's day. Perhaps fitting for the onetime New York real estate developer who branded buildings worldwide with his name, Trump has taken to remaking the White House in accord with his tastes since beginning his second term.

The president told NBC News in an interview that the new ballroom will forgo the need to shuttle guests to tents pitched on the South Lawn for events that are too large for the White House to accommodate.

"When it rains or snows, it's a disaster," the president said over the phone, lamenting that tents are positioned "a football field away from the White House."

Trump said that some of the world's "finest architects" are involved, and a White House official added that Trump has viewed renderings of the ballroom. The work is expected to finish before the end of his term.

Trump estimated that taking down the East Wing and putting the ballroom in place would cost about $200 million. The East Wing was completed in 1942 under Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration, according to the White House Historical Association.

Trump said the project would be "his gift to the country," funded by himself and private donations.

Gold decor has become prominent in the Oval Office since Trump retook the White House. (Al Drago / Bloomberg via Getty Images file)

Since returning to office, Trump has set about making an imprint on his White House surroundings. He told NBC News he is replacing what he described as a "terribly" remodeled bathroom in the Lincoln Bedroom with one that is truer to the style of the 16th president's era.

Elsewhere on the grounds, he has put in a pair of towering flag poles and paved over a grassy patch of the Rose Garden. Wet grass poses problems for women in high heels walking through the garden, he has said.

"I was always a great real estate developer, and I know how to do that," Trump said.

Partial to one precious metal in particular, Trump has added gold accents throughout the Oval Office.

Top, the Oval Office on Nov. 13, 2024, under then-President Joe Biden; and on July 22, after Trump added additional gold embellishments. (Getty Images)

"He has a vision to make the White House as exceptional and beautiful as possible for future presidents and administrations," the White House official said. "He is very hands-on and involved in all of this."

Trump checks in on construction workers on the White House grounds weekly and spends 20-30 minutes with them, asking questions, the same official said. He even invited some of those working on the Rose Garden project into the Oval Office recently.

Another White House official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, added: "The president is very directly involved, even more so than the first lady."

Much of Trump's aesthetic can be undone if a future president wishes. Every new president makes changes to the Oval Office décor. The Rose Garden paving can always be torn up and the grass restored. When Trump goes in 2029, the gold could follow.

"Whoever succeeds Trump, if they're not into gold, the gilding will start to come down," said Barbara Perry, a professor of presidential studies at the University of Virginia's Miller Center.

Yet the ballroom could stand for decades as Trump's creation, much as "the Truman Balcony" addition in 1948 is linked to Truman.

"I'm doing a lot of improvements," Trump said. "I'll be building a beautiful ballroom. They wanted it for many, many years."

The White House released new details about the ballroom on Thursday, after NBC's interview with the president and follow-up questions posed by the network. Trump had chosen McCrery Architects as the lead architect, according to the White House. And Trump has held meetings with White House staff members, the National Park Service and others in recent weeks.

Officials will meet with the "appropriate organizations" to keep intact the White House's "special history … while building a beautiful ballroom that can be enjoyed by future administrations and generations of Americans to come," Susie Wiles, White House chief of staff, said in a statement.

The private funding arrangement for the ballroom worries at least one congressman. Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wis., a member of a House Appropriations panel that oversees the executive office of the presidency, said in an interview Thursday: "It appears that he's trying to do this perhaps with private donations, but that could be a little odd."

"Is this going to be a White House ballroom sponsored by Carl's Jr.?" Pocan asked rhetorically.

Renovation work has gone on this summer in the Rose Garden. (Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images file)

Given the magnitude of the project, Pocan said that the president should bring the plan before Congress for discussion.

"This is a major renovation and clearly should come before the committee," Pocan said. "This would fall under the definition of having proper oversight. It's a perfectly great conversation to have in a subcommittee meeting."

The Senate Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer of New York, noted at a press briefing Thursday that Congress has not appropriated funding for the ballroom, saying: "Listen, I'm happy to eat my cheeseburger at my desk. I don't need a $200 million ballroom to eat it in. Okay?"

A common impression may be that the White House is a historic building frozen in amber, but it has been rebuilt, renewed and refreshed again and again since 1800, when John Adams became the first president to move in.

In most cases, presidents who undertook substantial renovations faced public blowback. In an essay posted on LinkedIn in June, Stewart McLaurin, president of the historical association, documented the fallout over the past two centuries to "give context and set precedent for more recent changes and adaptations."

With the building about to collapse on his head, then-President Truman carried out a complete gutting of the White House interior from 1948-52 to shore up the structure with steel beams and concrete.

"Preservationists mourned the loss of original interiors, while media outlets questioned the project's cost during post-war economic recovery," McLaurin wrote.

Paintings and gold trim in the Oval Office on May 28. (Andrew Harnik / Getty Images)

The East Wing, the space earmarked for the new ballroom, was itself targeted for criticism in Roosevelt's time.

"Congressional Republicans labeled the expenditure as wasteful, with some accusing Roosevelt of using the project to bolster his presidency's image," McLaurin wrote.

"However," he wrote, "the East Wing's utility in supporting the modern presidency eventually quieted critics."

At this early stage in the planning, the verdict on Trump's ballroom vision is mixed. Some White House alumni sympathized with Trump's wish to make the complex more comfortable for visitors who often include heads of state.

Anita McBride, who was chief of staff to first lady Laura Bush, said in an email to NBC News: "I think it's going to be an enhancement that will be welcomed by future occupants. No more big tents damaging the lawn or expensive build outs needed for major events. Clearly makes it easier to invite more people, too, when current state room capacity is limited."

Rufus Gifford, who was chief of protocol of the U.S. in the Biden administration, likened Trump's renovation to a renter overhauling an apartment. He shouldn't make such dramatic structural changes to the iconic building on his own, Gifford said.

"The American people are Trump's landlords right now," Gifford said.

Trump, the erstwhile builder, seems to be relishing the return to his roots. Discussing his penchant for choosing paintings to decorate the West Wing, he said: "To me, it's enjoyment; to other people, it's work."

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A 'beautiful' ballroom and a new Lincoln bathroom: Trump relishes remaking the White House

A 'beautiful' ballroom and a new Lincoln bathroom: Trump relishes remaking the White House Peter NicholasAugu...

 

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