The One Tree Hill alum revealed that she received an invite to appear on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills—but hilariously missed her opportunity because she didn’t see the text from pal Bozoma Saint John, who joined the Bravo show in 2024.
“Sophia would make a great housewife, right?” Bozoma shared during their conversation at the Create & Cultivate festival in Los Angeles, where E! News was present July 19.“It totally makes sense. I wrote her a text message in April—I’m telling all your business—I was like, ‘Hey, I need to ask you a controversial question.'”
But according to Bozoma, Sophia “knew what I was gonna ask her” and “never responded until yesterday, when she was like, ‘Oh, how did I miss this text message in April?'”
As for Sophia’s reaction to the bombshell invite? She couldn’t help but laugh about it all.
“First of all, I am a terrible texter,” she quipped on stage, “so I go to text her and I’m like, ‘Oh my god, I’m so excited I get to see you tomorrow. I can’t wait.’ And then I go, ‘Controversial question? April?’ And then I’m like, ‘Wow, we really talk more in group chats.'”
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From the Publisher
ASIN : B0F545MZZV Accessibility : Learn more Publication date : April 15, 2025 Language : English File size : 12.5 MB Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited Screen Reader : Supported Enhanced typesetting : Enabled X-Ray : Not Enabled Word Wise : Not Enabled Print length : 378 pages Page Flip : Enabled Best Sellers Rank: #258,429 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store) #23 in Endocrinology & Metabolism (Kindle Store) #54 in Low Carb Diets (Kindle Store) #55 in Endocrinology & Metabolism (Books) Customer Reviews: 5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 24 ratings var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });
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Pop star Charli XCX has confirmed her marriage to George Daniel, drummer of band The 1975, after a video snapped by a passer-by sparked online speculation of a wedding.
The pair were spotted posing on the steps of Hackney Town Hall on Saturday afternoon – Daniel in suit and tie and the ‘brat’ idol in white.
A TikTok post from the singer several hours later confirmed the nuptials, racking up 3.9m views and thousands of congratulatory comments for “Mr and Mrs XCX”.
Charli XCX’s album, Brat, became a global cultural phenomenon on its release last year. Filling social media feeds with viral videos and receiving critical acclaim, its success saw her perform a headline slot at Glastonbury in June.
The singer confirmed the news while dressed in an off-the-shoulder white dress and her signature dark wraparound sunglasses.
She stomped away from the camera – pretending to be annoyed – on a video beneath text that read, “When George isn’t crying when he sees me walking down the aisle.”
But “Luckily he did xx” was the accompanying caption.
A later post, which included shots of Daniel wearing Charli’s veil, gave “bridal party energy”, according to XCX.
The footage from outside Hackney Town Hall suggests the couple had an intimate ceremony.
The two have been public about their relationship for several years and shared engagement photos in 2023.
They have also worked together multiple times, first collaborating on Charli’s song Spinning and then on Brat, with Daniel named as co-producer and co-writer of two songs.
He also took part in the viral “Apple dance” at one of Charli’s London shows, appearing on the concert’s screens in front of thousands of fans.
His band The 1975 is fronted by singer Matty Healy and are well known for their song Chocolate. Daniel has released several tracks as a solo artist in recent years.
Nearly two-thirds of Americans think the “big, beautiful bill” will do more to help wealthy people, according to a new AP-NORC poll.
That includes 48 percent of Republicans, 60 percent of independents, and 83 percent of Democrats, according to the poll, which was released on Friday.
The bill extends many of the tax cuts passed by Republicans in 2017 during President Trump’s first term, alongside significant reductions to welfare services. Democrats have assailed the law as a historic transfer of wealth to the rich from the poor.
Sixty-one percent of Americans also said the law would do more to hurt low-income people.
However, the two parties were divided on the question of low-income Americans. Less than a third of Republicans said the bill would do more to harm low-income people, compared to 90 percent of Democrats.
Democrats are hoping to use the bill’s cuts to Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and other government support programs as key messaging during the upcoming 2026 midterms. The bill’s effects on low-income Americans, however, could take several years to show.
The bill’s deepest funding cuts to Medicaid, which could result in millions losing their insurance in the next 10 years, will not kick in until 2028, although work requirements could begin by the end of 2026. Changes to SNAP will also not go into effect until 2028.
The bill has also garnered criticism for its long-term additions to the national debt, estimated to be in the trillions. Many economists have expressed concerns about its cost at a time when government spending was already thought to be unsustainable in the long run.
In the poll released Friday, approval of Trump’s handling of government spending was down to 38 percent, compared to 46 percent from an AP-NORC poll in March.
About two-thirds of Americans think the government is spending too much, with Republicans and Democrats in agreement, according to the poll.
The poll surveyed 1,437 adults between July 10 and July 14, with a margin of error of 3.6 percentage points.
Nothing says that the Phone 3 is its “first true flagship phone,” and it has put its money where its mouth is. The phone is getting a full US launch, and at $799, it costs exactly the same as a Pixel 9, Galaxy S25, or iPhone 16.
That makes reviewing the Phone 3 refreshingly simple, because there are only two real questions that matter: is this as good as those three? And will it be as good as what we’re expecting from the new Pixel and iPhone models that are right around the corner?
The answer is going to come down to how much you like its unique look. The bad news for Nothing is that the Phone 3’s design is more divisive than any out there, even among Nothing’s biggest fans.
$799
The Good
Unique design
Big battery and fast charging
Plenty of storage
The Bad
Weak chipset for the price
Flagship rivals have better cameras
No more Glyph lights
The Phone 3 is the first Nothing phone to ditch the Glyph interface, an abstract pattern of LED dots and strips that became Nothing’s design trademark when the Phone 1 launched in 2022. In its place is something smaller and subtler: a circular dot matrix display dubbed the Glyph Matrix.
The Glyph Matrix plays spin the bottle, but don’t you dare call it a gimmick.
Nothing says the Glyph Toy range will expand with new community-developed apps.
Nothing includes some notification icons of its own design, like this one I used for WhatsApp.
The Glyph Matrix can display pictures and icons, so instead of trying to remember which light show you programmed for phone calls from your mom, you can set an emoji to represent her (you could even use a photo, but these are just as illegible as the old lights when rendered on the dot matrix). You can use Nothing’s preselected designs or generate your own from an image, but if you want to use a specific emoji or app icon, then you’ll need to get a hold of the image file yourself to convert it. This all needs to be enabled manually, contact by contact, app by app, so it’s a fair bit of work to set up.
The Glyph Matrix can also do sensible things like display the time or remaining battery, stranger things like run a solar clock or frame a selfie using the rear camera, and downright weird stuff like play rock, paper, scissors or spin the bottle. Practical or not, these are collectively dubbed Glyph Toys, and you can cycle through them using a hidden haptic button on the phone’s rear. You can set the clocks or battery indicator to run perpetually as a form of always-on display, too, which is a boring use case but the best part of it for me.
The end result is a system that’s a little more practical than it used to be — though it doesn’t do a whole lot to dispel accusations that it’s a gimmick — but feels less unique, following in the wake of several years of Asus ROG phones that have similar second screens.
It also leaves the rest of the phone’s rear oddly bare. Lots has been written already about the phone’s asymmetric camera placement, but it’s the barren white space that bothers me more. Nothing’s design language is all about details and doohickeys that draw the eye and hint at the hardware underneath. But here, there’s a cramped cluster of cameras and other details at the phone’s top, and at the bottom there’s a whole lot of, well, nothing. I love the look of the company’s other hardware, but the Phone 3 is its first design dud — too busy at the top and too empty everywhere else.
Nothing OS is great, but gray, which can make it hard to use.
This is a beta “smart” layout of the app drawer, with automated categories.
You can use Essential Space to take screenshots of event invites…
…which are summarized and can be synced with Google Calendar.
Nothing’s distinct design language runs through the software. Nothing OS 3.5, based on Android 15, is minimalist and monochrome, with plenty of customizability — right down to details like the layout of the quick settings menu. The grayscale looks great, though it’s a little unhelpful when you’re trying to find an app icon in a rush, but you can always switch to Android’s standard colorful icons if you prefer. A new AI-powered global search bar helps, too, pulling up apps, contacts, settings, and more.
The other big AI features are found in the returning Essential Space, triggered by a dedicated hardware key to save screenshots and voice notes, which the AI will analyze to give you reminders about events or tasks, with a new option to add events to Google Calendar. It can also summarize audio recordings, though you’re limited to 300 minutes a month, with no option to buy more, and you only get a summary, not a full transcript.
The lower half of the Phone 3 is bare compared to the top.
But there’s more to being a flagship than just looking the part. Nothing angered some fans by boasting about the Phone 3’s “flagship” Snapdragon 8S Gen 4 chipset, which is also found in the $399 Poco F7. And sure, this is a chip for the lower end of the flagship space, less powerful than the Snapdragon 8 Elite you’ll find in the Galaxy S25. But Google’s Pixel line has delivered less pure power ever since the company switched to in-house Tensor chips, and the 8S Gen 4 is competitive with that. It hasn’t lagged or stuttered over my couple weeks with the phone, photo processing is fast enough, and it handles gaming comfortably.
Some specs are strong: 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage are great for the base model, delivering double the space of rivals. The 5,150mAh battery is larger than the alternatives and lasts the day comfortably, while 65W wired charging is the fastest of the lot. The bright 120Hz OLED display doesn’t stand apart from the competition outside of being bigger at 6.67 inches.
Nothing’s earlier cameras were competent, but that doesn’t cut it for a flagship. Nothing upgraded the Phone 3’s hardware with a triple rear camera that uses 50-megapixel sensors across the board — including the selfie camera — outpacing all its rivals on resolution. It says it’s made software tweaks, too, prioritizing richer shadows and natural highlights.
1/19The Phone 3’s main camera produces attractive results in good lighting.
The main camera works well in good light through dusk. Some shots have the flat sheen of excessive HDR effects, removing the contrast and detail, though Nothing’s post-processing is more restrained than some. Results drop off once it gets dark, though, and the camera overexposes highlights and crushes blacks in the process.
The telephoto is the best feature this camera has going for it, partly because the iPhone 16 and Pixel 9 don’t have one. The color tuning differs from the main lens, being flatter and colder, but it takes photos with an attractive, natural bokeh effect, especially in macro mode.
Overall, the cameras lag a little behind the competition, but this telephoto might be a tempting reason to consider it — though with the Pixel 10 rumored to jump to three cameras, that advantage might disappear.
Love it or hate it, no other phone looks like this.
Back to the big question: should you buy this over other flagships? The Phone 3 comes with more storage, a bigger battery, and faster charging. It’s likely to beat the upcoming Pixel and iPhone models on those fronts. But neither the chipset nor the cameras keep up, and there’s a risk that those gaps grow over the next few months.
Still, none of those other flagships look like this. Depending on your taste, that may be a point in their favor. I don’t love the Phone 3’s design. But it’s distinctive, and the Glyph Matrix could be powerful if you take the time to customize it. If that appeals, then the Nothing Phone 3 is a unique flagship. Just make sure you’re happy with putting form over function.
Reports on boxing for ESPN.com and has been covering British boxing for over 25 years.
LONDON — With his magnificent Round 5 demolition of Daniel Dubois on Saturday, Oleksandr Usyk provided more convincing evidence why he should be considered the best heavyweight since Lennox Lewis.
The left hook that left Dubois (22-3, 21 KOs) in a crumpled heap in front of 90,000 at Wembley Stadium was a thing of beauty, which fittingly sealed Usyk’s second reign as undisputed world heavyweight champion. Usyk also dropped Dubois to the canvas earlier in Round 5 with a right hand in an utterly imperious performance from the Ukrainian.
As long as Usyk (24-0, 15 KOs) does not lose a potential trilogy fight with Tyson Fury in April 2026, or another title defence later this year probably against former WBO titleholder Joseph Parker, the undisputed heavyweight king will go down in history as the best heavyweight for the past two decades. Not only that, Usyk can also be considered the best cruiserweight for three decades since the likes of Dwight Muhammad Qawi and Evander Holyfield ruled in the mid-1980s.
Usyk was the first undisputed cruiserweight champion and reigned the division from 2016 to 2018, before stepping up to heavyweight. He has now made five heavyweight title defences against top level opponents — former champions and current champions.
Usyk’s achievements at heavyweight have surpassed what he managed at cruiserweight, and he has beaten the best of his era (Fury, Dubois and Anthony Joshua) — twice — to put any arguments beyond doubt as to who is the best. Dubois argued he scored a legitimate body punch in their first encounter two years ago, but it was (rightly) ruled a low blow. Usyk overwhelmed the big-punching, spirited Briton the rest of the fight for a ninth-round TKO, and in the rematch produced an even more emphatic conclusion.
Parker (36-3, 24 KOs), 33, will beat his friend Fury to Usyk it seems, as WBO mandatory challenger.
“The WBO say he has to fight Joseph Parker next, so that will be the fight,” Queensberry Promotions promoter Frank Warren said.
It is hard to envisage how a resurgent Parker, who is in the best form of his life, will threaten Usyk’s legacy.
Parker won the WBO belt with a points decision over Andy Ruiz in 2016, then lost it in a third defence and title unification fight versus Anthony Joshua in March 2018. Impressive wins over Deontay Wilder, Zhilei Zhang and Martin Bakole in the last two years have resurrected Parker’s career, but Usyk’s ring IQ, movement and sublime skills are on a different level to Parker and the others.
Fury and Joshua, both two-time world champions, had good wins over Wladimir Klitschko, and Fury also stopped the dangerous puncher Wilder twice in world title fights.
But Usyk’s unblemished record, with a total 13 world title fight victories as well as a 2012 Olympic gold medal, stacks up better. Usyk’s fellow countrymen Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko, with their superior reach and height could well have made things difficult for Usyk.
Wladimir’s jab-and-grab strategy was impregnable at times during his nine-and-a-half year reign, and it may have frustrated Usyk to the point of defeat. Vitali and Wladimir ruled the heavyweight division between them, holding all the belts at one time, from 2004 when Vitali became champion following his loss on cuts to Lewis in 2003, to when Fury boxed the ears off Wladimir in 2015.
Wladimir made a staggering 18 title defences in a second reign as unified world champion (2006-2015), with his best wins over David Haye, Alexander Povetkin and Jean Marc Mormeck. Vitali (45-2, 41 KOs) made two defences of the WBO belt, before 10 defences over two reigns as WBC champion, which were interrupted by injury, with destructive wins over Samuel Peter, Danny Williams and Herbie Hide.
The Klitschko brothers’ numbers are greater than those so far compiled by Usyk (23-0, 14 KOs), who has made five heavyweight title defences and six cruiserweight title defences. But Usyk has better names on his record, and is a three-time undisputed world champion.
Usyk became the first recognised undisputed world heavyweight champion since Lewis (41-2, 32 KOs), who beat such fighters as all-time greats Holyfield, Mike Tyson and Klitschko over three reigns as champion, with 17 wins, 2 losses, and 1 draw in world heavyweight title fights.
Like Vitali, Wladimir and Lewis, Usyk launched his professional career off the back of an Olympic gold medal triumph and as he closes in on the end of his career, whether it is later this year against Parker or next year against Fury, his legacy looks the strongest of any heavyweight since Lewis.
Gigi Gorgeous knows that life doesn’t always feel camera-ready.
The YouTuber got candid on the challenges she’s faced in her personal life this month following her breakup with Nats Gettyafter six years of marriage.
“I was trying to film a video yesterday—I just had a huge life change in my life—tried to film the video, set up the lights, set up the camera, and then I had a breakdown,” Gigi shared at the Create & Cultivate festival in Los Angeles, where E! News was present July 19. “I was like, ‘What is going on with me?'”
And as an influencer, Gigi (real name Giselle Loren Lazzarato) said it’s an “everyday struggle” for her to navigate life in the public eye.
“You just need to keep reminding yourself to stay fearless, because you’re always more worried about what people think of you than they’re really even caring about [it],” she said on the panel. “And it’s so easy to get lost in that warp cycle.”
As a result, the 33-year-old has developed a new mindset to remind herself of her value.
England cruised past the United States in a match in Washington that had almost two hours of delays because of lightning strikes in the area.
Kick-off in the US capital was held up by an hour, with play in the one-off Test starting at 18:05 local time (23:05 BST) on Saturday.
England led 14-0 in the 29th minute when more reports of bad weather forced Scottish referee Sam Grove-White to take the players off the field for a further 40 minutes.
On both occasions, supporters inside the 20,000-capacity Audi Field in Washington were told to “exit the seating bowl” and “seek shelter in the concourse” on a message on the stadium’s video screen.
Despite the weather delays, England still managed to shine, scoring six tries to end their tour of Argentina and the United States with a perfect three-win record.
Steve Borthwick’s side started the match well, taking the lead through Curtis Langdon after a maul in the 11th minute, while Luke Northmore crossed under the posts seven minutes later. Both tries came with the USA down to 14 players with Chris Hilsenbeck in the sin-bin.
Alex Dombrandt and debutant Joe Carpenter then had tries chalked off after TMO reviews, before Cadan Murley deservedly added England’s third score by crossing on the left wing on the stroke of half-time.
Straight after the restart, Jack van Poortvliet went over while replacement Harry Randall produced a brilliant dummy to score in the 62nd minute.
Gabriel Oghre finished England’s sixth try, but the Red Roses were unable to completely shut the US out, as Shilo Klein crashed over in the corner right at the end.
Alongside Sale full-back Carpenter, Bath centre Max Ojomoh, Gloucester second row Arthur Clark and Gloucester fly-half Charlie Atkinson all made their England debuts.
Immanuel Feyi-Waboso also returned after his two-match ban as Borthwick made 12 changes to the England side who beat the Pumas in San Juan in their second Test.
Earlier at Audi Field, the USA’s women survived a late charge to beat Fiji 31-24.
Senators hoping for an August respite after several weeks of late-night votes may not be in luck, with President Trump asking Majority Leader Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) Saturday to cancel the chamber’s traditional late-summer recess in order to confirm his executive and judicial appointments.
“Hopefully the very talented John Thune, fresh off our many victories over the past two weeks and, indeed, 6 months, will cancel August recess (and long weekends!), in order to get my incredible nominees confirmed,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “We need them badly!!!”
Senators are currently scheduled to confirm six Trump appointments on Monday and advance his pick to lead the Drug Enforcement Agency. Right now, members are set to take the month of August off.
The threat to cancel the recess could push senators to avoid stonewalling appointments. Trump’s most high-stakes nominees include Emil Bove, a lawyer for the Justice Department, to be a judge on a federal appeals court. Jeanine Pirro, a former Fox News host, is also up to be the top federal prosecutor in D.C.
Bove has garnered particular opposition from Democrats over a whistleblower complaint alleging that he said the Trump administration should consider telling courts “f— you” if they issued orders blocking migrant deportations. Bove has denied that he told lawyers in the Justice Department to violate a court order.
Trump’s more recent nominations include two picks for the National Labor Relations Board, which enforces union regulations. The board has not been able to function since January, when Trump fired the remaining Democratic member, leaving it without a quorum.