Dan Levy remembers his

Dan Levyis opening up about the "collective loss" we're all experiencing following thedeath of hisSchitt's Creekcostar Catherine O'Hara.

Entertainment Weekly Catherine O'Hara and Dan Levy on 'Schitt's Creek'Credit: Pop TV

Levy, who also co-created the hit Canadian sitcom, was onThe Tonight Showto promote hisSchitt's Creekfollow up, Netflix's upcomingBig Mistakes, but he took the time to reflect on the recent death of O'Hara.

"It's a collective loss,"he told Jimmy Fallon. "She was the greatest. She's irreplaceable. I think the great comfort for me has just been to see how loved she was. The outpouring, everyone felt like they kind of knew her."

O'Hara died on Jan. 30 at the age of 71 following a brief illness. Herdeath certificatecited the main cause as pulmonary embolism and rectal cancer as an underlying cause.

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Known for her roles inBeetlejuice,Home Alone,and the films of Christopher Guest, O'Hara found a career resurgence through playing Moira Rose onSchitt's Creek, reuniting her with her longtime comedic collaborator,Eugene Levy, who co-created the series with his son Dan. O'Hara won an Emmy for her hilarious portrayal of the Rose matriarch and her struggles to adjust to the family's new, modest lifestyle.

"What a gift to have gotten to dance in the warm glow of Catherine O'Hara's brilliance for all those years,"Levy saidat the time of her passing. "Having spent over fifty years collaborating with my Dad, Catherine was extended family before she ever played my family. It's hard to imagine a world without her in it. I will cherish every funny memory I was fortunate enough to make with her."

Shortly after her death,O'Hara posthumously wonthe Actor Award for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series for her turn on Apple TV'sThe Studio.

In theirTonight Showconversation, Fallon called O'Hara "One of the funniest comedians I've ever seen." Levy then added, "One of the great, great, great queens."

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Dan Levy remembers his “Schitt's Creek” costar Catherine O'Hara 2 months after her death: 'A collective loss'

Dan Levyis opening up about the "collective loss" we're all experiencing following thedeath of hisSchitt...
We're Getting a Royal Wedding This Summer!

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Harper's Bazaar cheltenham, england march 13 embargoed for publication in uk newspapers until 24 hours after create date and time harriet sperling and peter phillips attend day 4 'gold cup day' of the cheltenham festival at cheltenham racecourse on march 13, 2026 in cheltenham, england photo by max mumbyindigogetty images

Aroyal weddingis coming! Peter Phillips, the eldest grandson of the lateQueen Elizabeth IIandPrince Philip, is set to marry Harriet Sperling this summer, a spokesperson for the couple has confirmed.

Phillips is the son of Princess Anne and the Princess Royal's first husband, Captain Mark Phillips. Sperling, meanwhile, is a pediatric nurse and freelance writer.

The two began dating in 2024, making their public debut at the Badminton Horse Trials in Gloucestershire, U.K., in May of that year. In August 2025, they announced their engagement.

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Over the last couple of years, Sperling has accompanied Phillips to various public events, including Royal Ascot and Wimbledon. She has also attended royal gatherings—her most high-profile one being on December 28, 2025, when she joined the royals at the morning service at St. Mary Magdalene Church on the Sandringham Estate after Christmas.

cheltenham, england march 13 embargoed for publication in uk newspapers until 24 hours after create date and time harriet sperling and peter phillips attend day 4 'gold cup day' of the cheltenham festival at cheltenham racecourse on march 13, 2026 in cheltenham, england photo by max mumbyindigogetty images

Phillips and Sperling will wed in an intimate ceremony at All Saints Church, in Cirencester, England, on Saturday, June 6. And Phillips's senior royal relatives—including Prince William andPrincess Catherine—will likely attend.

"Both families have been informed jointly of the wedding date by invitation," the engaged couple's spokesperson said in a statement obtained byPeople. "Their Majesties The King and Queen, The Prince and Princess of Wales have also been informed of the announcement. Further details will be announced in due course."

cheltenham, england march 13 embargoed for publication in uk newspapers until 24 hours after create date and time harriet sperling and peter phillips attend day 4 'gold cup day' of the cheltenham festival at cheltenham racecourse on march 13, 2026 in cheltenham, england photo by max mumbyindigogetty images

This will be Phillips's second wedding. He was previously married to Autumn Kelly from 2008 to 2021, and they share two daughters, Savannah and Isla. (He is the first of his generation of the royal family to divorce.) Sperling is also a parent; she has a daughter named Georgia from a previous relationship.

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What Jesse Solomon knew about 'Summer House' romance drama

Jesse Solomon is making his role in the ongoing drama between hisSummer Housecostars very clear.

Entertainment Weekly Jesse Solomon on 'Summer House'Credit: Kareem Black/Bravo

When fans began questioning how much Solomon knew before Amanda Batula and West Wilsonconfirmed their rumored romanceon social media Tuesday, he stepped into the conversation to say he knew as much as anyone else.

Commenting on an Instagram post that asked if Solomon was theTom Schwartz to Wilson's Tom Sandoval, he said "I heard the rumors but they were denied to me multiple times. The post referenced Schwartz's part in "Scandoval," the frenzy that erupted after his business partner andVanderpump Rulescostar Sandovalcheated on his then-girlfriend of nine years,Ariana Madix, with their friendRachel "Raquel" Leviss.

Jesse Solomon's Instagram commentCredit: Jesse Solomon/Instagram

Wilson and Batula confirmed their relationship in a joint statement on Tuesday, weeks aftergossip blog DeuxMoi reportedthat they were allegedly hooking up. The statement came a little over two months after Batulaannounced her splitfrom husband andSummer Housecostar Kyle Cooke.

While severalSummer Housecast members have weighed in on the situation on social media, Solomon has refrained from picking a side. But as another another Bravo star tells it, he'd been dropping hints that a big reveal was coming.

Stopping bySiriusXM'sSmiths Sisters Liveon Tuesday,The Valley's Zack Wickham said he heard Solomon's version of the story through the grapevine.

"I will say that one of our friends' cousins was on a vacation and met Jesse Solomon, and he just told her everything and then she told me," Wickham said. "So, I'm like, if what he told her is real, then brace yourselves, America."

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Wickham then apologized for stirring the pot, adding, "Sorry Jesse, I didn't mean to throw you under the bus. I'm not saying anything publicly, but oh my God."

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Cookerecently broke his silence about his ex's new relationship, saying that he was "more concerned" about his ex than his own feelings. The star claimed that Batula has been getting "cyber-bullied" by the show's viewers amid the drama of her and Wilson releasing their joint statement.

"I'm obviously frustrated, I mean we have a new show coming out and there's so much that gets unpacked there," Cooke told "street journalist" Adam Glyn. "I'm obviously disappointed in her... but just hearing her and hearing how unwell she is, and [her] dark thoughts, I just ask people to just, maybe, pull off the gas a little on the cyberbullying and hate."

Lindsay Hubbard, Dara Levitan, KJ Dillard, West Wilson, Mia Calabrese, Kyle Cooke, Jesse Soloman, Levi Sebree, Ben Waddell, Amanda Batula, Ciara Miller, Carle Radke, and Bailey Taylor on 'Summer House'Credit: Kareem Black/Bravo

Cooke said that he found out about the relationship "over the weekend" and got a heads-up before Batula and Wilson posted their statement. Cooke also shared that he's spoken to costar Ciara Miller — Wilson's ex — and that Wilson himself reached out with a "half-assed text message." He added that he doesn't "understand the timeline just yet" of when the pair got together.

Miller has not spoken out since Batula and Wilson confirmed their relationship, butshe no longer follows either costar on Instagram.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

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Israeli death penalty law targeting Palestinians sparks global outcry as far right celebrates

TEL AVIV — Far-right supporters of a controversial Israeli death penalty law were popping champagne corks as itcleared the Knesseton Monday night, but its passage has sparked a global chorus of condemnation from allies and international human rights groups.

NBC Universal

The new law effectively makes death by hanging the default punishment for murderers who kill "with the intent to deny the existence of the State of Israel" — language that targets Palestinian militants but amounts to a de facto exclusion ofIsraelis who kill Palestinians.

Because the law would accelerate lethal punishments for Palestinians and is almost impossible to apply to Israeli murderers, human rights groups say it's likely to inspire far more outrage and violence than it prevents.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türksaid in a statementTuesday that the measure is a "particularly egregious violation of international law" and warned its application to residents of the occupied West Bank and theGaza Strip"would constitute a war crime."

Australia, Germany, France, Italy and the United Kingdom voiced concerns over its "de facto discriminatory character" in ajoint statement, while Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in aposton X that it was "another step toward apartheid."

The Trump administration has so far avoided joining critics, with a State Department spokesperson saying it "respects Israel's sovereign right to determine its own laws," adding: "We trust that any such measures will be carried out with a fair trial and respect for all applicable fair trial guarantees and protections."

Advocates of the law within Israel have pointed toviolent attacksperpetrated by Palestinian militants over the years.

For Micah Avni, his support for the law is deeply personal, having watched the Palestinian militant who murdered his father, Richard Avni, a decade agowalk free from an Israeli prisonas part of an exchange for Israelis taken hostage by Hamas during the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks.

"I wish it had been in place earlier and I'm glad it's in place now," Avni, 56, said in a phone call Tuesday. "That terrorist who murdered my father showed absolutely no remorse. I'm quite certain, based on the statistics, that he's out there planning his next terror attack."

Micah Avni, right, and his father, Richard Lakin, left. (Family handout)

The law's critics say the new legislation is unlikely to dissuade Ghanem or anyone else from killing Israelis.

"This sends another message to Palestinians that there is no place for compromise," said Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian politician and leader of the Palestinian National Initiative party. "This will not deter Palestinians but it will enhance their struggle for freedom from this oppressive system."

Under the new law, the death penalty will be administered by military courts that almost exclusively try Palestinians and have a 96% conviction rate, according to B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights group.

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Capital sentences will now require only a simple majority of sitting judges rather than unanimous agreement, the group said. And the punishment must be carried out within 90 days of sentencing without any possibility for pardons or commutations.

"It's just going to be another tool in the Israeli toolkit to kill Palestinians," said Shai Parnes, B'Tselem's public outreach director.

Funeral of Last Israeli Gaza Hostage in Boost for Peace Plan (Kobi Wolf / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The law would not apply to Palestinians already convicted of participating in theOct. 7 attacks. But those who haven't been convicted, including the estimated half of imprisoned Palestinians who have been jailed but not formally charged under Israel's so-called "administrative detention" for Palestinian offenders, could still be put to death.

Capital punishment is technically legal in Israel but only for crimes against humanity and treason.

The death penalty for murder was outlawed in 1954 and Israel has only executed two people in its 78-year history. Meir Tobianski was executed for treason in 1948 but was completely exonerated a year later. In 1962, Israel hanged Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi architect of the holocaust, after a widely watched trial in Jerusalem.

The punishment stipulated under the new law is death by hanging, after the Israeli Medical Association's ethics board said last year that its members would be prohibited from administering lethal injections, according toIsraeli media.

Supporters of the death penalty, particularly among the far-right politicians who championed it, describe the law as a much-needed correction to decades of lax punishments by progressive judges that only incentivized terror.

"The idea is to not allow them to continue to think that by taking hostages they're going to get a get-out-of-jail-free card because there's no death penalty," said Caroline Glick, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's international affairs adviser.

International Quds Day in Gaza (Mohammed Talatene / DPA via Getty Images file)

Among the more than 2,000 Palestinian prisoners released as part of exchanges for Israeli hostages in Gaza, hundreds of them were serving life sentences for lethal crimes against Israelis.

Yahya Sinwar, the slain former head of Hamas and one of the primary architects of the Oct. 7 attacks, was released from Israeli prison in a similar deal in 2011.

"It's important from a deterrent perspective because one of the things that we find is that we give people multiple life sentences and they don't take it seriously," Glick said.

Israel Palestinians (Itay Cohen / AP)

But some of the law's backers in parliament betrayed a certain macabre zeal for its intent. Some right-wing lawmakers wore gold nooses to Monday's session. After the bill passed, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir popped a bottle of Champagne as television cameras rolled.

"Soon we will count them one by one," he said of the executions to come as he poured Champagne into his colleagues' glasses. "From today, every terrorist will know, and the whole world will know, that whoever takes a life, the state of Israel will take their life."

Israeli death penalty law targeting Palestinians sparks global outcry as far right celebrates

TEL AVIV — Far-right supporters of a controversial Israeli death penalty law were popping champagne corks as itcleared th...
Homeland Security pauses plan to purchase warehouses for detention centers

The Department of Homeland Security is temporarily pausing plans to buy warehouses to detain undocumented immigrants,according tomultiple reports, with the move coming less than two weeks into recently confirmed Secretary Markwayne Mullins' tenure.

USA TODAY

In an emailed statement to USA TODAY, DHS said that "As with any transition, we are reviewing agency policies and proposals." It's not clear whether Mullin intends on moving forward with the agency's plan to convert already acquired warehouses into detention centers.

The former Oklahoma senator has previously expressed some hesitancy, noting at his confirmation hearing last month that "it's important that we're talking to the communities" where such centers would be constructed and maintained.

DHS' estimated$38.3 billion plan to buy 24 commercial warehousesand boost its detention capacity to more than 92,000 beds in a few months had received criticism from some local officials and residents in the potential locations, according to previous reporting by USA TODAY. Local authorities have voiced concerns that the facilities could overwhelm public sewage and water systems.

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The pushback contributed to the collapse of at least 11 deals, but as of early March, the federal government had purchased at least 10 warehouses.

Some proposed warehouses are expected to hold more than 8,000 individuals at a time. PresidentDonald Trump's deportation crackdown was a cornerstone of his 2024 reelection bid and first year of his second term.

DHS is currently shut down as Congress islockedin a battle over the department's funding, particularly over immigration enforcement after two U.S. citizens were fatally shot by federal officers in Minnesota. But Republican lawmakers announced April 1 that the House is set to pass a Senate bill tofund most of the department, minus Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:DHS, Mullin pauses purchasing warehouses for detention centers

Homeland Security pauses plan to purchase warehouses for detention centers

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Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation

MIAMI (AP) — A ship operated by a group founded by anti-whaling activist Paul Watson collided with an industrial krill trawler in Antarctica in what the ship's Norwegian owner said was a "deliberate attack" that endangered its crew and could've caused a disaster in the same environmentally sensitive waters the activists claim they want to protect.

Associated Press CORRECTS DATE TO TUESDAY, MARCH 31, NOT APRIL 1 - In this image from video provided by the Aker Qrill Company, an activist ship, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, collides with the Antarctic Sea, a vessel operated by Aker Qrill Company, in Antarctic waters, on Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (Aker Qrill Company via AP) In this photo provided by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, the M/V Bandero, a Captain Paul Watson Foundation vessel, collides with the Antarctic Sea, a vessel operated by Aker Qrill Company, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Antarctica. (Soizic Roux/Captain Paul Watson Foundation via AP)

CORRECTION Antarctica Krill Ship Collision

A two-minute video provided to The Associated Press by the Aker QRILL Co. shows the moment Tuesday when the M/V Bandero, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, slowly steams toward the stern of the fishing vessel, hitting its port side at a slight angle.

The collision underscores thegrowing battlein the frigid waters of the Southern Ocean over the future of Antarctic krill, a shrimplike crustacean central to the diet of whales and critical buffer to global warming that's also in demand for use in health supplements, fishmeal and other products.

Aker said Wednesday that the Bandero came within centimeters of striking a diesel tank on its vessel, the Norwegian-flagged Antarctic Sea, and put at risk a habitat teeming with multiple whale species, seals and seabirds — all feeding on the Southern Ocean'sabundant but environmentally sensitive krill population.

The company said its multinational crew was shaken but unharmed and it would pursue all available legal action.

"Our crew were put at risk in some of the most remote waters on Earth, and only luck avoided potential environmental damage," Aker CEO Webjørn Barstad said in a statement.

The Captain Paul Watson Foundation did not respond to a request from the AP about Aker's accusations. But in its own news release, it characterized its actions as "aggressive nonviolence." It said the crew, led by French activist Lamya Essemlali, managed to disrupt all krill fishing during a five-hour "direct intervention" against two Aker-owned vessels. It also provided images showing the crew launching giant metal net shredding devices intended to disrupt fishing.

Watson himself was not on the ship, which departed Australia in February as part of what the Watson foundation called Operation Krill Wars.

"Throughout the encounter, the crew witnessed Antarctic wildlife in the surrounding waters, including penguins, seals, and even a whale, underscoring what was at stake as a small ship challenged a powerful industrial krill operation in a stark David-and-Goliath scenario," the foundation said in a statement.

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Watson founded the global Sea Shepherd conservation movement in the 1970s and for decades won a fearsome reputation for ramming vessels and other aggressive tactics in confrontations on the high seas that repeatedly landed him in jail. He was lastdetained in Greenland for five monthsin 2024 on a Japanese warrant that was later rejected by Denmark. Japan's coast guard sought his arrest over an encounter in 2010 in which he was accused of ordering a captain of his ship to throw explosives at what the Japanese labeled a whaling research ship.

While the Canadian-American citizen in the past has drawn support from Hollywood celebrities, his hard-line tactics have split the movement he started, with affiliates in France and Brazil rallying behind his newly created namesake foundation while Sea Shepherd Global and 20 national affiliates focus more on watchdog patrols on the high seas, policy action and supporting law enforcement in poorer countries where illegal fishing is rampant.

Fishing in Antarctica for krillsurged to a record last season, forcing an early closure of fishing activity for the first time.

Aker is the world's largest harvester of krill, responsible for over half the world's catch.

The remote fishery is managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources, an international organization composed of 27 nations and the European Union.

Any investigation into the incident, including possible criminal prosecution, is likely to commence at the Mongolia-flagged Bandero's next port of call. Under international maritime law, an overtaking vessel has an obligation to stay clear of any nearby ship it's passing.

Bandero is named after the tequila company owned by John Paul DeJoria, an American billionaire who founded Paul Mitchell hair care products and has been a longtime supporter of Watson's endeavors.

This story has corrected the month that the Bandero left Australia to February, not March.

___ This story was supported by funding from the Walton Family Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. ___ Contact AP's global investigative team atInvestigative@ap.orgorhttps://www.ap.org/tips/

Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation

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NBA touts 'significant interest' from investors in European league

In coordination with FIBA, the NBA on Tuesday touted "significant interest from a range of prospective teams and investors" for a new league to operate in Europe.

Yahoo Sports

"The level of engagement and the scale of the bids reflect the marketplace's belief in our proposed model and the enormous, untapped potential for European basketball," NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum said in a statement. "We will now review the bids in more detail and shortlist the partners who share our vision and commitment to accelerating the growth of the game across the continent."

This comes days after Tatum presented an update on the NBA's vision at the board of governors meeting. No votes were taken on the matter in New York, but owners continue to express "overwhelming support" for the plan, sources told Yahoo Sports.

As NBA commissioner Adam Silver outlined in a press conference last week, the NBA is working with investment banks JPMorgan and Raine, "soliciting interest" from "over a hundred organizations" to field teams in "12 separate markets" across Europe.

Feb 14, 2026; Los Angeles, CA, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks at press conference during the NBA All Star game at the Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

"There has been enormous enthusiasm," said Silver.

London, Paris and Rome are expected to be among the 12 markets. Spain, Germany, Greece and Turkey have also been mentioned in league circles as potential locations.

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Prospective teams would come from some collection of: 1) existing basketball teams, 2) existing soccer organizations interested in establishing a basketball program, or 3) entirely new ownership groups. Multiple EuroLeague teams are among more than a dozen existing basketball organizations that have submitted their bids, sources said.

The NBA has received multiple bids for prospective franchises in a range between $500 million and $1 billion, including several offers north of $1 billion, sources said.

The NBA is tentatively targeting a start date of October 2027 for the new league.

Silver has also been encouraged by "ongoing discussions" with the EuroLeague's new CEO, as of January, Chus Bueno, who spent 12 years in the NBA's front office.

"I think for the betterment of European basketball, the best outcome would be if we came together with the EuroLeague on a systematic approach to growing the game throughout Europe," he said. "That means complementing country leagues, working together with the EuroLeague and working together with our federation, FIBA."

The EuroLeague was organized by FIBA in 1958 and run by the federation until 2000.

The NBA's most recent announcement of "significant interest" in a European-based league comes at the same time as it considersexpanding itself to 32 teams. The NBA is seeking offers in a $7-10 billion range for franchises in Las Vegas and Seattle.

NBA touts 'significant interest' from investors in European league

In coordination with FIBA, the NBA on Tuesday touted "significant interest from a range of prospective teams and inv...

 

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