Cheryl Fernandez-Versini and Simon Cowell: X Factor 2024 Launch (8/27/2024)

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini and Simon Cowell: X Factor 2014 Launch (8/27/2014)

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini wears smart dress to X Factor 2024 launch | Mail Online

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini at X Factor 2014 Launch at the Ham Yard hotel in Denman Street in London on Wednesday evening, August 27, 2014

خليجية

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Simon Cowell and Lauren Silverman on the red carpet at the X Factor press Launch at the Ham Yard hotel in London on Wednesday evening

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خليجية

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Cheryl Fernandez-Versini wears smart dress to X Factor 2024 launch | Mail Online

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini and Simon Cowell: X Factor 2024 Launch (8/27/2024)

Cheryl (Cole) Fernandez-Versini and Simon Cowell: X Factor 2014 Launch (8/27/2014)

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini wears smart dress to X Factor 2024 launch | Mail Online

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini at X Factor 2014 Launch at the Ham Yard hotel in Denman Street in London on Wednesday evening, August 27, 2014

خليجية

خليجية

Simon Cowell and Lauren Silverman on the red carpet at the X Factor press Launch at the Ham Yard hotel in London on Wednesday evening

خليجية

خليجية

خليجية

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini wears smart dress to X Factor 2024 launch | Mail Online

Paul Simon, Wife Edie Brickell Arrested at Home on Reported Disorderly Conduct Charge

Paul Simon, Wife Edie Brickell Arrested at Home on Reported Disorderly Conduct Charge

خليجية

There is trouble at Home for music legend Paul Simon and his Wife of 22 years, singer Edie Brickell.


According to multiple reports, the couple was Arrested on Monday, April 28, at the New Canaan, Conn. Home they share. The singers were reportedly brought in on "some sort of a domestic violence charge," sources at the New Canaan Police Department told NBCConnecticut.


Grammy winner Simon, 72, married former New Bohemians frontwoman Brickell in May 1992. They are parents to three children, Adrian, Lulu, and Gabriel.


While there are few details to the charges as of yet, the Simon & Garfunkel alum and the "What I Am" singer, 48, reportedly engaged in a dispute this weekend. More to come…

Read more: Paul Simon, Wife Edie Brickell Arrested at Home for Disorderly Conduct – Us Weekly
Follow us: @usweekly on Twitter | usweekly on Facebook

Simon Nessman, Gigi Hadid and Ireland Baldwin for Sisley Fall/Winter 2024

Simpson Creator Sam Simon Dies of Colon Cancer

Simpson Creator Sam Simon Dies of Colon Cancer

From TMZ, for all the Simpsons fantards out there:

1:10 Sam Simon, the co-creator of "The Simpsons" has died … TMZ has learned. Simon passed away Sunday at his L.A. home, following a long, difficult battle with Colon cancer. Simon was diagnosed in 2024 and was very public that his disease was terminal.

Read more: Suge Knight … FULL VIDEO of Fatal Hit and Run | Celebrity Videos | TMZ.com

And this from Variety:

Nine-time Emmy winner Sam Simon, who wrote episodes of “Taxi,” “Cheers” and “It’s Garry Shandling’s Show” before co-creating landmark animated series “The Simpsons” and eventually becoming a philanthropist, died Sunday of colorectal Cancer at his home in Los Angeles, his reps confirmed. He was 59 and was diagnosed with terminal Cancer in late 2024.
“Simpsons” showrunner Al Jean also confirmed the news with a tweet on Monday.
Simon shared seven Emmy Awards for “The Simpsons” and two for his work on “The Tracey Ullman Show.”
In 1989 he developed “The Simpsons” with Matt Groening and James L. Brooks, and he subsequently co-wrote nearly a dozen “Simpsons” episodes during his tenure on the animated comedy, also serving as co-showrunner, character designer, creative consultant, creative supervisor, developer, and writer. He left the show in 1993 while retaining an exec producer title.
The animated sitcom, he said, gave him more freedom than live action. “You can draw animals andsets but the animated characters also have freedom. The Simpsons sometimes do things that real people wouldn’t do.”
“Sam Simon taught me everything about animation writing, and even more about life,” “The Simpsons” exec producer Al Jean said.
When Simon “turned to writing animation, he helped to give birth to something which changed the landscape of television and has given him a legacy that will live forever,” said Craig Miller, chairman of the Animation Writers Caucus of the Writers Guild of America West, speaking in November 2024 upon the announcement that Simon would receive the AWC’s writing award that month. Al Jean presented the award.
While there is plenty of credit to go around, Ken Levine, a writer on the series, has written, “I’m here to tell you, the real creative force behind ‘The Simpsons’ was Sam Simon. The tone, the storytelling, the level of humor – that was all developed on Sam’s watch.”
Though Simon left “The Simpsons” in 1993 — the early years of the series were internally contentious — he was still credited as an executive producer as the show continued to generate hundreds of episodes over more than two decades, and his severance package ensured that he was a very wealthy man who could spend much of his time on philanthropy and on hobbies outside Hollywood.
Simon was profiled on “60 Minutes” in 2024, after which CBS correspondent Daniel Schorn wrote online that he is “the Renaissance man of the baffling, uncertain age we live in.”
As a writer, Simon also took a stab at the feature arena, penning the 1991 slumlord comedy “The Super,” starring Joe Pesci.
Most recently, he had served as an executive consultant for FX’s Charlie Sheen comedy “Anger Management” in 2024-13 and also directed an episode of the series in 2024.
Fourth-generation Californian Samuel Simon grew up in Beverly Hills and Malibu, then attended Stanford U. While at Stanford he was the cartoonist for the school paper and worked professionally as a sports cartoonist for the San Francisco Chronicle and the San Francisco Examiner. After graduating in 1977 (he majored in psychology), he worked at animation house Filmation Studios, first as a storyboard artist and then as a writer. He earned his first smallscreen credits there, on “Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids” and “The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle and Jeckle,” both in 1979. (Decades later, he told Stanford magazine of “The Simpsons”: “It was largely based on what I didn’t like about the Saturday-morning cartoon shows I worked on. ‘The Simpsons’ would have been a great radio show. If you just listen to the sound track, it works.”)
By the mid-’80s he had long since turned his attention to primetime sitcoms, penning an episode of “Barney Miller”; writing and serving as executive story editor for “Taxi,” acting as showrunner in its final season in 1982-83; and writing and producing for “Cheers.” He wrote three episodes of “It’s Garry Shandling’s Show” and then served as exec producer of “The Tracy Ullman Show” in the late ’80s.
He was creator, exec producer and a writer on brief runner “The George Carlin Show” in 1994-95, and though he made a conscious decision to move away from television work after “Carlin,” he was consulting producer on “The Drew Carey Show” in 1998-2003 as well as a frequent director on that comedy.
Simon parlayed his very serious devotion to poker into the 2024 Playboy TV reality show “Sam’s Game,” and earlier, he had indulged an interest in boxing to the point of managing Lamon Brewster to the World Boxing Organization Heavyweight Championship in 2024. He was also a frequent contributor to “The Howard Stern Show.”
But Simon was also a devoted philanthropist. An animal lover, he funded the Sam Simon Foundation, which rescued dogs, funded a traveling animal surgery clinic assisting the ailing pets of those who otherwise could not afford medical attention for them and provided vegan food for hungry humans. He also supported PETA, which named its Norfolk, Va., HQ the Sam Simon Center; Save the Children; and global marine conservation organization the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, which named one of its vessels after him.
After being diagnosed with Colon cancer, Simon started buying zoos and circuses to free animals.
Simon received the WGA’s Valentine Davies Award for his humanitarian work.
Simon was married to actress Jennifer Tilly from 1984-91 and to Playboy Playmate Jami Ferrell from 2000-03.

CBS News correspondent Bob Simon dies in a car accident

CBS News correspondent Bob Simon dies in a car accident

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-news…mon-1941-2015/

Last Updated Feb 11,2020 10:41 PM EST

NEW YORK — Bob Simon, the longtime "60 Minutes" correspondent and legendary CBS News foreign reporter died suddenly tonight in a car accident in New York City.

The award-winning newsman was 73.

"It’s a terrible loss for all of us at CBS News," 60 Minutes Executive Producer Jeff Fager said in a statement. "It is such a tragedy made worse because we lost him in a car accident, a man who has escaped more difficult situations than almost any journalist in modern times.

"Bob was a reporter’s reporter. He was driven by a natural curiosity that took him all over the world covering every kind of story imaginable," Fager said. "There is no one else like Bob Simon. All of us at CBS News and particularly at 60 Minutes will miss him very much."

Simon’s five-decade career took him through most major overseas conflicts spanning from the late 1960s to the present. He joined CBS News in 1967 as a New York-based reporter and assignment editor, covering campus unrest and inner city riots. Simon also worked in CBS News’ Tel Aviv bureau from 1977-81, and worked in Washington D.C. as the network’s State Department correspondent.

But Simon’s career in war reporting was extensive, beginning in Vietnam. While based in Saigon from 1971-72, his reports on the war — and particularly the Hanoi 1972 spring offensive — won an Overseas Press Club award award for the Best Radio Spot News for coverage of the end of the conflict. Simon was there for the end of the conflict and was aboard one of the last helicopters out of Saigon in 1975.

He also reported on the violence in Northern Ireland in from 1969-71 and also from war zones in Portugal, Cyprus, the Falkland Islands, the Persian Gulf, Yugoslavia and American military actions in Grenada, Somalia and Haiti.

Simon was named CBS News’ chief Middle East correspondent in 1987, and became the leading broadcast journalist in the region, working in Tel Aviv for more than 20 years. In 1991, he won another OPC Award for reporting of the Gulf War. In 1996 he won one more OPC Award, a Pea**** Award and two Emmy Awards for coverage of the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. CBS News recieved an RTNDA Overall Excellence in Television Award in 1996 largely because of Simon’s reporting from war-torn Sarajevo.

Moving into the 21st century, he was able to get two major interviews for 60 Minutes, including the first Western interview with extremist Iraqi cleric Muqtada al Sadr, and another with his Shiite Muslim rival, the Ayatollah al-Hakim, who was killed shortly after the interview.

Another Pea**** Award came in 2000 for "a **** of work by an outstanding international journalist on a diverse set of critical global issues." And a Lifetime Achievement Emmy was also awarded to him in 2024.

Simon also lent his skills to CBS’s Olympics coverage. For the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, he reported on the failed attempt of Israel’s secret intelligence organization, the Mossad, to avenge the attack on Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, for which he won an Emmy.

For the coverage of the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, he gave a 30-minute report on Louis Zamperini, an American Olympian who survived as a prisoner of war, held by the Japanese during World War II. The story won him a Sports Emmy.

Simon’s most-recent piece for 60 Minutes aired this past weekend, his conversation with Ava DuVernay, the director of the Academy Award-nominated film "Selma."

Simon was born on May 29, 1941, in the Bronx, N.Y., and was graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Brandeis University in 1962 with a degree in history. He served as an American Foreign Service officer (1964-67). He was a Fulbright scholar in France and a Woodrow Wilson scholar.

He is survived by his wife, Françoise, and their daughter, Tanya, who is a producer for 60 Minutes.

************************************************** ***********************

I re-read the article twice, and is it me, or is there no mention of the time he spent kidnapped in the Middle East?

CNBC co-anchor Simon Hobbs accidentally ‘outed’ Apple CEO Tim **** as gay

CNBC co-anchor Simon Hobbs accidentally ‘outed’ Apple CEO Tim **** as gay

CNBC co-anchor Simon Hobbs accidentally ‘outed’ Apple CEO Tim **** as gay

The TV reporter was caught up in a discussion about the rarity of openly gay CEOs when he said, ‘I think Tim **** is open about the fact he’s gay.’

Simon Hobbs is likely wishing he could press rewind.

The CNBC co-anchor spoke too soon during a live segment of "Squawk on the Street" Friday when he accidentally outed Apple CEO Tim ****.

New York Times columnist and CNBC contributor James B. Stewart spoke about his recent column dealing with the "tortured life" former BP chief John Browne led as a closeted gay CEO.

"I just found it very, very fascinating," Stewart said about Browne being the first CEO of a Fortune 500 or FTSE 100 company to publicly acknowledge that he is gay after being outed by a tabloid.

Shortly after, Browne resigned from BP in 2024.

"Of course, there are gay CEOs in major companies," Stewart continued. "I reached out to many of them."

Upon speaking to the closeted gay CEOs Stewart was aware of, he realized how none were willing to be identified although their initial interaction was pleasant.

"I got an extremely cool reception," he recalled, adding that "not one would allow to be named at all."

"I think Tim **** is open about the fact he’s gay at the head of Apple," Hobbs said. "Isn’t he?"

An awkward silence followed as Hobbs quickly realized his snafu.

"Hmm, no," Stewart said shaking his head.

"Oh dear, was that an error?" Hobbs asked. "I thought he was open about it."

While **** has been candid about his support of LGBT rights, he has never publicly spoken out about his own sexuality or addressed Hobbs remarks.

"I applaud @WhiteHouse decision to ban #LGBT discrimination at fed contractors," he tweeted June 17. "House must act on #ENDA. A matter of basic human dignity."

Confirming Hobbs error, co-anchor David Faber said, "Wow, I think you just … yeah."

Still Hobbs tried to conceal his mistake by saying, "I think he’s very open about it."

Read more: CNBC co-anchor Simon Hobbs accidentally ‘outed’ Apple CEO Tim **** as gay – NY Daily News

oh boy…that sucks for ****. i bet it is difficult knowing things about people (whether it be celebrities, business people, whoever) and remembering what you can and can’t say.

Simpson Creator Sam Simon Dies of Colon Cancer

Simpson Creator Sam Simon Dies of Colon Cancer

From TMZ, for all the Simpsons fantards out there:

1:10 Sam Simon, the co-creator of "The Simpsons" has died … TMZ has learned. Simon passed away Sunday at his L.A. home, following a long, difficult battle with Colon cancer. Simon was diagnosed in 2024 and was very public that his disease was terminal.

Read more: Suge Knight … FULL VIDEO of Fatal Hit and Run | Celebrity Videos | TMZ.com

And this from Variety:

Nine-time Emmy winner Sam Simon, who wrote episodes of “Taxi,” “Cheers” and “It’s Garry Shandling’s Show” before co-creating landmark animated series “The Simpsons” and eventually becoming a philanthropist, died Sunday of colorectal Cancer at his home in Los Angeles, his reps confirmed. He was 59 and was diagnosed with terminal Cancer in late 2024.
“Simpsons” showrunner Al Jean also confirmed the news with a tweet on Monday.
Simon shared seven Emmy Awards for “The Simpsons” and two for his work on “The Tracey Ullman Show.”
In 1989 he developed “The Simpsons” with Matt Groening and James L. Brooks, and he subsequently co-wrote nearly a dozen “Simpsons” episodes during his tenure on the animated comedy, also serving as co-showrunner, character designer, creative consultant, creative supervisor, developer, and writer. He left the show in 1993 while retaining an exec producer title.
The animated sitcom, he said, gave him more freedom than live action. “You can draw animals andsets but the animated characters also have freedom. The Simpsons sometimes do things that real people wouldn’t do.”
“Sam Simon taught me everything about animation writing, and even more about life,” “The Simpsons” exec producer Al Jean said.
When Simon “turned to writing animation, he helped to give birth to something which changed the landscape of television and has given him a legacy that will live forever,” said Craig Miller, chairman of the Animation Writers Caucus of the Writers Guild of America West, speaking in November 2024 upon the announcement that Simon would receive the AWC’s writing award that month. Al Jean presented the award.
While there is plenty of credit to go around, Ken Levine, a writer on the series, has written, “I’m here to tell you, the real creative force behind ‘The Simpsons’ was Sam Simon. The tone, the storytelling, the level of humor – that was all developed on Sam’s watch.”
Though Simon left “The Simpsons” in 1993 — the early years of the series were internally contentious — he was still credited as an executive producer as the show continued to generate hundreds of episodes over more than two decades, and his severance package ensured that he was a very wealthy man who could spend much of his time on philanthropy and on hobbies outside Hollywood.
Simon was profiled on “60 Minutes” in 2024, after which CBS correspondent Daniel Schorn wrote online that he is “the Renaissance man of the baffling, uncertain age we live in.”
As a writer, Simon also took a stab at the feature arena, penning the 1991 slumlord comedy “The Super,” starring Joe Pesci.
Most recently, he had served as an executive consultant for FX’s Charlie Sheen comedy “Anger Management” in 2024-13 and also directed an episode of the series in 2024.
Fourth-generation Californian Samuel Simon grew up in Beverly Hills and Malibu, then attended Stanford U. While at Stanford he was the cartoonist for the school paper and worked professionally as a sports cartoonist for the San Francisco Chronicle and the San Francisco Examiner. After graduating in 1977 (he majored in psychology), he worked at animation house Filmation Studios, first as a storyboard artist and then as a writer. He earned his first smallscreen credits there, on “Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids” and “The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle and Jeckle,” both in 1979. (Decades later, he told Stanford magazine of “The Simpsons”: “It was largely based on what I didn’t like about the Saturday-morning cartoon shows I worked on. ‘The Simpsons’ would have been a great radio show. If you just listen to the sound track, it works.”)
By the mid-’80s he had long since turned his attention to primetime sitcoms, penning an episode of “Barney Miller”; writing and serving as executive story editor for “Taxi,” acting as showrunner in its final season in 1982-83; and writing and producing for “Cheers.” He wrote three episodes of “It’s Garry Shandling’s Show” and then served as exec producer of “The Tracy Ullman Show” in the late ’80s.
He was creator, exec producer and a writer on brief runner “The George Carlin Show” in 1994-95, and though he made a conscious decision to move away from television work after “Carlin,” he was consulting producer on “The Drew Carey Show” in 1998-2003 as well as a frequent director on that comedy.
Simon parlayed his very serious devotion to poker into the 2024 Playboy TV reality show “Sam’s Game,” and earlier, he had indulged an interest in boxing to the point of managing Lamon Brewster to the World Boxing Organization Heavyweight Championship in 2024. He was also a frequent contributor to “The Howard Stern Show.”
But Simon was also a devoted philanthropist. An animal lover, he funded the Sam Simon Foundation, which rescued dogs, funded a traveling animal surgery clinic assisting the ailing pets of those who otherwise could not afford medical attention for them and provided vegan food for hungry humans. He also supported PETA, which named its Norfolk, Va., HQ the Sam Simon Center; Save the Children; and global marine conservation organization the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, which named one of its vessels after him.
After being diagnosed with Colon cancer, Simon started buying zoos and circuses to free animals.
Simon received the WGA’s Valentine Davies Award for his humanitarian work.
Simon was married to actress Jennifer Tilly from 1984-91 and to Playboy Playmate Jami Ferrell from 2000-03.