Czechs rally in country's largest anti-government protest since 2019

By Eva Korinkova

Reuters Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova

Anti-government protest rally in Prague

PRAGUE, March 21 (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of Czechs rallied on Saturday in the country's biggest anti-government demonstration since 2019, ‌protesting against defense spending cuts under Prime Minister Andrej Babis ‌and over fears his administration will target public media.

Protesters started arriving hours before the rally began ​at Letna plain overlooking the historic center, where many waved Czech and European Union flags. Organizers estimated the turnout at around 250,000 people.

"I'm here because I care about my country's future," said 22-year-old Tomas Chaloupka. "It upsets me that the ‌current government is trying ⁠to manipulate the free and independent media, and freedom and democracy are paramount."

Babis and his populist ANO party returned to ⁠power in December after four years in opposition, leading a government with right-wing and far-right parties.

Advertisement

Protest organisers Milion Chvilek (Million Moments for Democracy) have warned the country could ​head ​the way of Slovakia or Hungary, central ​European neighbours that have clashed ‌with the European Union executive over rule-of-law issues.

"We don't want to be Hungary," teacher Hana Malanikova said. "We don't want to follow the Slovak Republic's path. So it's time to wake up."

Critics have also raised concerns over the new government's shifts in policy, and a similar protest in February in support ‌of President Petr Pavel, who has clashed ​with Babis' government over ministerial nominations and defence ​spending, drew up to 90,000 ​people.

Opponents of Babis' government have also highlighted a cut in ‌defence spending in the budget, along ​with plans to ​change financing for public television, which they warn would hurt its independence, and tightening disclosure rules for non-governmental organisations.

Babis, who built a business ​empire in the food, ‌chemical and agricultural sectors, was prime minister in 2017-2021. Milion Chvilek ​organised similar protests in 2019 that drew over 200,000 people.

(Writing by ​Michael Kahn, Editing by Rod Nickel)

Czechs rally in country's largest anti-government protest since 2019

By Eva Korinkova Anti-government protest rally in Prague PRAGUE, March 21 (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of ...
Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Christa Gail Pikewas just 18 years old when she committed a crime that dominated headlines for years: She tortured and murdered her romantic rival in Tennessee and later showed off a piece of the 19-year-old woman's skull to schoolmates.

USA TODAY

The killing in the woods of Knoxville demonstrated a brutality and callousness rarely seen in a woman, let alone one so young. Now 30 years later, Pike is back to making headlines as the state of Tennessee prepares to execute her.

Pike, who just turned 50 on March 10, is set to be executed by lethal injection about six months from now on Sept. 30 for the murder of 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer. On Jan. 12, 1995, Pike and two others lured Slemmer into the woods and carried out a ritualistic murder that lasted about an hour.

If the execution moves forward, Pike will be the first woman put to death in Tennesseein more than 200 yearsand only the19th woman executedin modern U.S. history.

She's now fighting back and suing the state to stop her execution.

Christa Gail Pike looks around as someone enters the courtroom where a hearing for a new trial for her was being held on Jan. 12, 2001.

Pike's attorneysfiled a lawsuitin a Tennessee court in January challenging the state's lethal execution method, arguing that it violates her religious beliefs and constitutional rights, and could cause her excessive pain. In response to Pike's arguments, the state says in a court filing on Thursday, March 19, that she hasn't presented any evidence that the lethal injection presents an unconstitutional risk to her and that death row inmates have never been guaranteed a pain-free execution.

During Pike's time behind bars, she has taken responsibility for the murder and has "changed drastically," she wrote in a 2023letter she wrote to The Tennessean− part of the USA TODAY Network.

"It sickens me now to think that someone as loving and compassionate as myself had the ability to commit such a crime," she wrote.

USA TODAY is looking at Pike's arguments for a reprieve from execution, what the state has to say about them and how the victim's mother feels.

What was Christa Gail Pike convicted of?

Christa Gail Pike and Colleen Slemmer were both students at the Knoxville Job Corps, a career-training program, when Pike began dating a 17-year-old boy in the program. She later came to fear that Slemmer was trying to steal him, prosecutors told jurors at trial.

Pike, her friend and the boyfriend, lured Slemmer away from the Job Corps center and into the woods before the attack, largely carried out by Pike over an hour-long period on Jan. 12, 1995, according to court records.

Pike later bragged about killing Slemmer, telling another student at the center that she had cut the teenager's throat six times with a box cutter, cut her back with a meat cleaver, carved a pentagram into her chest, and continued the violence even though Slemmer "begged" her to stop, according to court records.

Pike said she had "thrown a large piece of asphalt at the victim's head," believed to be a fatal blow, and kept a skull fragment, later showing it off to fellow students, court records say.

Pike was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. Pike's boyfriend, Tadaryl Shipp, was convicted of first-degree murder, sentenced to life in prison and recently was denied parole. Pike's friend, Shadolla Peterson − who prosecutors say kept watch during the attack − testified against Pike and was sentenced to probation.

Colleen Slemmer is pictured

Who is Christa Gail Pike?

Christa Gail Pike, 50, is the only woman on Tennessee's death row and has been living there for 30 years following her sentencing in April 1996. Pike and her mother, Carissa Hansen, sobbed uncontrollably in the courtroom during the sentencing, according to archived news reports.

Pike's trial attorneys had tried to mitigate her crimes by describing Pike as a cast-off child from a dysfunctional family who bounced between her divorced parents' houses depending on who was sick of her at the time, according to an archived news report in the Knoxville News-Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Hansen told jurors that she was a bad mother who smoked pot with her daughter and even allowed Pike to have a live-in boyfriend at the age of 14. "I should be the one in her seat. I should be punished for her crime," Hansen said, according to the News-Sentinel.

Christa Gail Pike is pictured at a hearing on July 30, 2007, at the age of 31. Her attorneys were working to get her off of death row at the time.

A University of Tennessee police officer countered the sympathetic testimony, telling jurors that Pike returned to the scene of the crime after Slemmer's body had been found and "seemed amused."

"She was giggling," he testified, the newspaper said.

Pike's current attorneys arguethat had she been tried today, Pike never should have been sentenced to death because of her young age and mental illness at the time of the murder, and her disturbing history of being sexually abused as a child, starting before she could even talk. They believe she deserves life in prison without the possibility of parole.

On Pike's website, created by supporters who are arguing for her clemency, Pike says that she doesn't want to use her childhood trauma as an excuse for Slemmer's murder.

"There is no excuse for what I did ... I take full responsibility for my actions, and regret everything that happened that night," she says. "I only want my situation to be looked at now through the eyes of logic instead of anger and answered the question of if I deserve to die for a crime committed by three people."

Christa Gail Pike sues Tennessee officials over execution

In a lawsuit filed against the state in January, Pike's attorneys argue that Tennessee's lethal injection method is likely to cause her unnecessary pain and added terror and suffering, a violation of the U.S. Constitution's protections against cruel and unusual punishment.

Advertisement

One of Pike's medical conditions,thrombocytosis, can lead to unusual bleeding and "death by drowning in one's own blood," they argue, citing a report by an anesthesiology expert. Additionally, Pike cannot request to be executed by the state's only other approved method − electrocution − because doing so would violate her Buddhist beliefs, which prevent her from "participating in any process leading to her own death," her attorneys argue.

They also say that the state could botch Pike's lethal injection, citing concerns over the state's new execution protocol.

Tennessee began using the new protocol in 2025, three years after the statehalted all executionsover a "technical oversight" in the lethal injection ofdeath row inmate Oscar Franklin Smith. The new lethal injection protocol usesthe single drug pentobarbital, as opposed to three drugs under the previous method.

Christa Gail Pike is pictured.

Pike's attorneys cite a number of "botched" executions using only pentobarbital,including that of Byron Blackin Tennessee for the murder of his ex-girlfriend and her two daughters in 1988.

Reporters who witnessed the execution,including one from the Tennessean, reported that Black appeared to be in pain and distress during the lethal injection, which is required to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the U.S. Constitution.

"It's hurting so bad," Black told his spiritual adviser at one point during the execution, the Tennessean reported.

Pike's attorneys slammed the state's new lethal injection protocol as being "plagued with the same issues that have marked botched executions for decades: secrecy, intentional omission, inattention to detail, and untrained and unlicensed prison personnel attempting to fill medical role."

What does the state say about Pike's lawsuit

Regarding Pike's arguments about cruel and unusual punishment, established case law says that "the Eighth Amendment does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death" and that "some risk of pain is inherent in any method of execution − no matter how humane," according to the state's response to Pike's lawsuit filed on Thursday, March, 19.

The state also defended its lethal injection protocol, citing "the overwhelming history affirming the use of lethal injection generally and pentobarbital specifically."

Besides, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said that Pike "carried around a piece of Colleen Slemmer's shattered skull in her pocket and showed it to her friends as a trophy after luring Colleen into the woods to torture and murder her."

"Pike has offered nothing but speculation that the well-established, constitutional lethal injection method poses any unique risk in her case," he said in a statement to USA TODAY. "We wish Pike's commitment to the sanctity of life had arrived in time to save Colleen Slemmer."

UT forensic anthropologist Dr. Murray Marks testifies about the wounds to Colleen A. Slemmer's skull during Christa Gail Pike's murder trial in Knox County Criminal Court on March 25, 1996.

Slemmer's mother, May Martinez, has been vehement in her support of the death penalty for Pike. She has fought for decades to obtain the last remaining piece of her daughter's skull so that it can be buried with the rest of the teen's remains; investigators have been holding it as evidence in the case.

"My heart breaks every single day because I keep reliving it and reliving it, and I can't no more, and I want this to happen before I die,"Martinez told WBIR-TVin 2021.

"There's not a day goes by that I don't think about Colleen or how she died and how rough it was," Martinez continued. "I just want Christa down so I can end it, relieve my daughter, so she finally can be resting."

May Martinez, Colleen Slemmer's mother, is pictured.

How many women have been executed in the U.S.?

Just 18 women have been executed in the United States since 1976, compared to 1,623 men, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. That means women represent just 1% of all modern U.S. executions.

Pike is not only the only woman on Tennessee's death row, but she's among just 48 female death row inmates in the nation. That's compared to a male population just under 2,100 − roughly 2%.

The last execution of a woman in the United States was that ofAmber McClaughlin in 2023. McClaughlin, who was the first transgender person executed in the nation, was convicted as a man of raping and fatally stabbing 45-year-old Beverly Guenther on Nov. 20, 2003. Guenther was McLaughlin's ex-girlfriend.

How many women has Tennessee executed?

Citing the Death Penalty Information Center, Pike's attorneys say thatonly three womenhave ever been executed in Tennessee.

They list the hangings of three Black women in 1807, 1808 and 1819, though they didn't identify their crimes. Only one of the women's names is known: that of Molly Holcomb in 1807. Two of them are listed as slavesby deathpenaltyusa.org, which names the crimes as murder, though many slaves were unjustly killed themselves over false accusations or for no reason at all.

Pike is both the last person in Tennessee sent to death row for a crime they committed when they were 18 and is the last woman sentenced to death in the state,reported the Tennessean.

Contributing: Evan Mealins and Kelly Puente, The Tennessean

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter who covers breaking news, cold cases and executions for USA TODAY. Follow her on X at @amandaleeusat.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Christa Gail Pikewas just 18 years old when she committed a crime that dominated headlines for years: She tortured and mu...
Senate votes to end security line perks for members of Congress

The U.S. Senate this week passed a bill that would prohibit members of Congress from bypassing standard airport security screenings at commercial airports.

Scripps News

The vote comes nearly a month into a partial government shutdown that has left Transportation Security Administration employees without pay. The shutdown has contributed to longer security lines due to higher rates of employee call-offs.

The End Special Treatment for Congress at Airports Act passed by unanimous consent and now heads to the House for consideration.

RELATED STORY |Don't let the government shutdown slow you down: How to deal with long TSA lines

The bill would also ban members of Congress from using federal funds to pay for expedited security screenings. While lawmakers can have travel between Washington and their home districts paid for by the government, they would be responsible for covering any costs for faster screenings.

Advertisement

The bill also specifies that a lawmaker's participation in the Trusted Traveler Program would not be based on their congressional status.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, sponsored the measure.

RELATED STORY |Government funding impasse is making the TSA travel experience even worse

"As many Americans probably don't know — but most of us in Washington do — airports around the country allow members of Congress to bypass the usual TSA security screening process at airports nationwide," Cornyn said. "In other words, they get to skip the line. This should end today.

"Members of Congress are getting an unfair perk. We know trust in Congress is at an all-time low, but today, thank goodness, the Senate has taken an important step toward restoring the trust of the people we are here to represent."

Senate votes to end security line perks for members of Congress

The U.S. Senate this week passed a bill that would prohibit members of Congress from bypassing standard airport security ...
With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, alternative routes pose little help

The effective closure of theStrait of Hormuzduring theIran warhas choked global oil supply. Two key alternatives remain, though any disruption to them could make moving oil out of the Arabian Peninsula "virtually impossible," an analyst said, amid concerns over Iran'stargetingof Gulf countries' energy infrastructure.

ABC News

On a typical day, a significant share of oil exports from the Arabian Peninsula depends on just a handful of critical routes and terminals -- making the system highly vulnerable to disruption, according to Matt Smith, the lead oil analyst at energy consultant group Kpler.

The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off Iran's southern coast, normally handles about 20% of global oil consumption. In 2024, roughly 20 million barrels per day passed through it, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Since Iran attacked several oil tankers following the start of the war in late February, nearly all shipping traffic through the strait has halted,disrupting global oil markets.

Reuters - PHOTO: Tankers sail in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from northern Ras al-Khaimah, near the border with Oman's Musandam governance, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in United Arab Emirates, March 11, 2026.

Two of the most important alternatives to the Strait of Hormuz are Saudi Arabia's East-West pipeline, which terminates at the Red Sea port of Yanbu, and the United Arab Emirates' ADCOP pipeline, which feeds the export terminal at Fujairah, according to Kpler.

At Yanbu, exports have historically averaged around 750,000 barrels per day of crude oil. In recent weeks, however, volumes have surged, according to Kpler.

"It is up to 2.5 million [barrels per day] so far this month, and based on vessels heading there, should climb materially higher than that," Smith said.

Oil and gas prices surge as Iran escalates strikes on Gulf refineries

Meanwhile, the Fujairah terminal typically handles about 1 million barrels per day of crude exports via the ADCOP pipeline. That figure recently spiked to 2.25 million barrels per day before dropping sharply following reported drone strikes in the region, Smith said.

If both Yanbu and Fujairah were compromised, moving oil out of the Arabian Peninsula would become "virtually impossible," according to Smith.

Advertisement

Map Tiles by Google Earth, GassBuddy, Matt Smith of Kpler - PHOTO: Oil Exports at Risk if Key Arabian Peninsula Routes Are Disrupted

There are only a few limited exceptions: Iran can still export crude through the Strait of Hormuz and from its Jask terminal, located just outside the Strait of Hormuz; and Northern Iraq can move oil via a pipeline from Kirkuk to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, per Kpler.

Oil experts convey a bottom line: beyond those routes, there are no meaningful alternatives — there is no equitable backup plan to the Strait of Hormuz; these alternatives are the limited options left.

Why are your gas prices rising if the US barely imports any oil from the Strait of Hormuz?

Liquefied natural gas presents an even greater vulnerability -- there are effectively "no alternative" export routes outside of the Strait of Hormuz, Smith said.

One of the world's largest liquefied natural gas hubs is in Qatar. The facility, Ras Laffan, was damaged in Iranian strikes this week that reduced Qatar's liquefied natural gas export capacity by 17% and will take up to five years to repair, QatarEnergy's CEO said Thursday.

The Qatari Foreign Ministry condemned the attack, calling it a "dangerous escalation."

Ras Laffan was among severalenergy assetsidentified by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps this week as "legitimate" targets after Israel hit Iran's largest gas field.

The list of IRGC targets includes key oil, refining, and natural gas infrastructure across the region -- including export routes that handle millions of barrels per day.

ABC News' Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.

With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, alternative routes pose little help

The effective closure of theStrait of Hormuzduring theIran warhas choked global oil supply. Two key alternatives remain, ...
Brian Cox Says He Drew Inspiration from Ted Bundy to Portray Dr. Hannibal Lecter in

Brian Cox portrayed Dr. Hannibal Lecter in Manhunter, years before Anthony Hopkins' iconic performance in The Silence of the Lambs

People Brian Cox in 'Manhunter' (left); Ted Bundy (right).Credit: De Laurentiis Group/Everett Collection; Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Cox drew inspiration from real-life figures like serial murderer Ted Bundy and Scottish killer Peter Manhill to shape his portrayal, he told Woman's World

  • The actor emphasized Lecter's intellect and lack of empathy, creating a restrained yet deeply unsettling interpretation of the character

Long beforeAnthony Hopkins defined Dr. Hannibal Lecterfor mainstream audiences,Brian Coxbrought the character to life inManhunter.

The film marked the first time Lecter appeared on screen, adapted from Thomas Harris' 1981 novelRed Dragon. Years later, Hopkins would turn the role into a cultural touchstone inThe Silence of the Lambs.

Looking back during a recent interview withWoman's World, Cox reflected on the real-life influences that shaped his approach to the character. "I saw a lot of those [Ted] Bundy trials," the 79-year-old told the outlet. "I tried to tap into Bundy's kind of almost acceptability."

Serial killer Ted Bundy.Credit: Getty

InManhunter,William Petersenplays FBI profiler Will Graham, who is drawn out of retirement to track a brutal killer known as the Tooth Fairy. To help make sense of the crimes, he seeks insight from the imprisoned Lecter.

Although the Michael Mann film didn't find much success when it first hit theaters, Cox's restrained and quietly unsettling performance has earned a stronger appreciation over time.

Instead of portraying Lecter as outwardly monstrous, he leaned into the character's composure and ability to appear completely ordinary. To Cox, that sense of normalcy made the character all the more disturbing, suggesting that danger doesn't always announce itself.

Advertisement

To create this character, Cox also drew on unsettling figures from his own past.

"When I was a kid in Scotland, there had been a couple of killers of some repute. There was a guy called Peter Manhill, and he killed a whole slew of people," he explained. "This was before the notion of serial killers ever came around. Serial killer was sort of an '80s invention, really. But this guy was fascinating because he also conducted his own defense, like Bundy did."

Bundyraped and murdered young women and girlsacross the country from 1974 to 1978. He claimed to have murdered at least 30 women and girls, but investigatorsbelieve it was over double that. The killer, who represented himself during parts of his murder trials, was ultimately convicted of his crimes and sentenced to death. He died by electric chair on Jan. 24, 1989.

Brian Cox in 'Manhunter.'Credit: De Laurentiis Group/Kobal/Shutterstock

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

In contrast to Hopkins' later, more theatrical and "gothic" portrayal, Cox aimed for psychological realism by emphasizing ego over spectacle.

"The other thing was something that came out of the Nuremberg Trials," theSuccessionactor toldWoman's World. "They said that the whole definition of evil was an almost chronic lack of empathy. I think that is, ultimately, what Hannibal Lecter has."

Read the original article onPeople

Brian Cox Says He Drew Inspiration from Ted Bundy to Portray Dr. Hannibal Lecter in“ Manhunter”

Brian Cox portrayed Dr. Hannibal Lecter in Manhunter, years before Anthony Hopkins' iconic performance in The Silenc...
Where Are

The Price Is Right has featured models since it premiered

People Dian Parkinson, Holly Halstrom, Janice Pennington, and Bob BarkerCredit: CBS via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The long-running game show is the subject of E!'s docuseries Dirty Rotten Scandals

  • Some of the models have spoken out against the show, alleging sexual harassment on set

The models onThe Price Is Rightwere staples on daytime TV, smiling onstage next to hostBob Barker. However, some had more negative experiences.

The women of the long-running game show are now back in the spotlight in E!'sDirty Rotten Scandalsdocuseries, which features a two-part episode aboutThe Price is Right.

Some of the former models, likeHolly Hallstromand Kathleen Bradley, participated in the documentary, recounting some of their negative experiences being sexualized on the show.

"When I initially started the show, everybody was pretty cool, really friendly, especially the crew," Bradley said in the episodes. "But over a course of time, I kind of noticed the guys were kind of talking, looking, gawking at the girls. I found out this is a little more commonplace than I thought."

Here's where some of the most notable models fromThe Price Is Rightare today.

Janice Pennington

Janice PenningtonCredit: CBS Photo Archive/Getty; Frazer Harrison/Getty

Janice Pennington was one of the original "Barker's Beauties."

She was a model from the first episode, whenThe Price Is Rightrelaunched in 1972 with Barker as host, staying on the show until 2000.

FollowingBarker's deathin 2023, Pennington spoke toEntertainment Tonightabout her tenure as a model on the show, saying, "It's hard to imagine, but every day I loved going to work."

"I really did. The people we worked with, the crew, the cameramen, it was like a family," she recalled. "Especially when you're there for 29 years. It really is a family."

She has not returned to TV since leavingThe Price is Rightin 2000.

Dian Parkinson

Dian ParkinsonCredit: Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty (2)

Dian Parkinson was a model on the game show from 1975 until 1993.

During her time onThe Price is Right, Parkinson had an alleged affair with Barker, and in 1994, she sued him for sexual harassment. She eventually dropped the lawsuit a year later, but her allegations affected the show behind the scenes.

"Every time you went to the studio, you had to sit with lawyers who all they wanted to hear was all the bad stuff about Dian and how Bob could not have possibly sexually harassed Dian," Hallstrom said inDirty Rotten Scandals.

Parkinson has stayed out of the spotlight since her time onThe Price is Right, and she did not participate in theDirty Rotten Scandalsdocuseries.

E! noted in a written message displayed in the docuseries, "Multiple attempts were made to contact Dian Parkinson for comment, but her whereabouts remain a mystery."

Holly Hallstrom

Holly HallstromCredit: CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection; Courtesy of E!

Hallstrom was onThe Price is Rightfrom 1977 to 1995.

Hallstrom was let go from the show in 1995, and she was one of the main participants in theDirty Rotten Scandals, speaking out about her experience on set.

In a March 2026 interview withTV Insider, Hallstrom revealed that these days, she works "with victims of trauma and teach [neuro-linguistic programming] through therapeutic practices in San Diego."

"If it helps people, then that brings me joy," she added.

Advertisement

Anitra Ford

Anitra FordCredit: CBS Photo Archive/Getty; Collection Christophel / Alamy Stock Photo

Anitra Ford was aPrice Is Rightmodel from 1972 to 1976.

Ford was a contestant on a 2018 episode ofTo Tell the Truth, where she spoke about becoming an artist, working with "acrylic, mixed media, fabric" and photography.

Kathleen Bradley

Kathleen BradleyCredit: CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection; Earl Gibson III/Deadline via Getty

Kathleen Bradley was onThe Price Is Rightfrom 1990 to 2000, making history as the first permanent Black model on the show.

In 2013, she published her memoir,Backstage at The Price Is Right: Memoirs of a Barker Beauty. In recent years, she has continued being onscreen, appearing in TV series such asGrey's AnatomyandA House Divided.

Bradley participated in the E! docuseries, alleging there were incidents of sexual harassment on the set of the show.

"One guy in particular. He was a little friendly, too friendly. He would rub up against us, joking around. It's totally inappropriate. I learned the stagehand had been around on the set for a long time and was probably doing it to all the other girls," she shared.

Bradley continued, "When I reported this guy to the producers? To my surprise, no action was taken. I was really taken aback. This was really sexual harassment. So I took matters into my own hands."

Rachel Reynolds

Rachel ReynoldsCredit: Lumeimages/Getty; Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty

Rachel Reynolds has been a model onThe Price Is Rightsince 2003.

When not filming the game show in Los Angeles, Reynolds lives in Louisiana with her husband, former MLB player David Dellucci, and their daughter, Ruby, perCBS.

Amber Lancaster

Amber Lancaster on The Price is Right ; Amber Lancaster on Season 54 of The Price is Right.Credit: Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty ; Bill Inoshita/CBS via Getty

Amber Lancaster has been onThe Price Is Rightsince 2008, and was the first "permanent" model followingDrew Careytaking over hosting duties.

According to herIMDB, she has appeared on TV in other series such asCommunity,The Hard Times of RJ Berger,The Bold and the Beautiful,CSI: Miamiand more.

Manuela Arbeláez

Manuela Arbelaez on The Price Is Right on March 25, 2009 in Los Angeles, California ; Manuela Arbelaez on The Price Is Right.Credit: Frederick M. Brown/Getty ; Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty

Manuela Arbeláez has been onThe Price is Rightsince 2009.

Outside of being a model on the game show, Arbeláez is also an influencer and fitness coach, per herInstagram.

Gwendolyn Osborne

Gwendolyn Osborne on 'Price is Right' on March 25, 2009 in Los Angeles, California ; Gwendolyn Osborn in December 2025.Credit: Dr. Billy Ingram/WireImage ; Gwendolyn Osborn/Instagram

Gwendolyn Osborne was a model onThe Price is Rightfrom 2005 to 2017.

Since leaving the daytime game show, Osborne appeared as an Amazonian in the 2020 superhero blockbusterWonder Woman 1984.

If you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual abuse, text "STRENGTH" to the Crisis Text Line at 741-741 to be connected to a certified crisis counselor.

Read the original article onPeople

Where Are “The Price Is Right” Models Now? Inside Their Lives After the Game Show

The Price Is Right has featured models since it premiered NEED TO KNOW The long-running game show is the subj...
Robert Pattinson once got in trouble as a kid for lying and saying his dad was Michael Jackson

Robert Pattinsonhas been lying for a long time.

Entertainment Weekly Robert Pattinson in Los Angeles on March 15, 2026; Michael Jackson in London on March 5, 2009Credit: Steve Granitz/FilmMagic; Tim Whitby/Getty

TheLighthousestar reflected on his predilection for public fibbing during an interview withJimmy Kimmel Livewhile promoting his new filmThe Dramaon Thursday, noting that he's been stretching the truth since his youth.

"I kinda thought it was something which I did when I was older, just 'cause of interviews, but I did get in trouble quite a lot for doing that," Pattinson said. "I got in trouble at school."

The first childhood lie that came to mind? "I said my dad wasMichael Jacksonat show and tell," theTwilightactor recalled.

Pattinson said that his bizarre mistruth stemmed from his childhood fascination with ginkgo biloba supplements.

"I always really liked the name of the pills," he explained. "And then I guess my parents were both taking that, and I had this tape, I just recorded a tape — Michael Jackson's actual album, recorded it, and said, 'My dad's been taking this medicine called ginkgo biloba, and this is him singing.' And I got in lots of trouble for that."

Unfortunately for Pattinson, his condition might be hereditary, as he said that lying comes easily to his daughter, whom he welcomed with his fiancée Suki Waterhouse in March 2024.

"She could find it very easy to lie to herself already," he explained. "She'll walk into a room, she's like, 'I see…giraffe!' And I'm like, 'You do?' And it's incredibly convincing. She's either got a sixth sense, or she's a fantasist."

TheMickey 17star also said that his daughter won't fall for his fibs.

Advertisement

"I don't think she'd believe me," he said. "Already I can tell, she can see through me very, very easily."

Pattinson has a long history of telling made-up stories about himself while promoting his films. In 2024, he admitted that he fullyfabricated a taleabout witnessing a clown die in a car explosion in a 2011 interview.

Robert Pattinson in Los Angeles on March 17, 2026Credit: Steve Granitz/FilmMagic

"There was absolutely no hesitation at all [in my voice]," Pattinson said of his lie in an interview withThe New York Times'Tmagazine. "I'm like, 'What on Earth? Are you possessed?'"

He also claimed that hewasn't working outto play Batman inThe Batmanduring an interview withGQ. "I'm just barely doing anything," he said. "I think if you're working out all the time, you're part of the problem."

Two years later, however, he admitted that he wasn't telling the truth about his workout regimen. "I just always think it's really embarrassing to talk about how you're working out," hetoldMovieMaker. "You're playing Batman. You have to work out. I think I was doing the interview when I was in lockdown, as well, in England … I was in a lower gear of working out."

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

Pattinson also told (orsaidthat he told) his classmates that he was a drug dealer in order to impress older kids at school.

"My first proper-ish kind of girlfriend was a few years above me, and I always wanted to hang out with the cool kids, who were in the oldest year," hetoldGQ. "And some of us decided that I'd pretend that I was importing drugs. But I didn't even know what drugs looked like. So I had this idea I'd get floppy disks, open up the floppy disk, pour this kind of powder stuff inside, and then spray it with, like, some kind of cleaning product so that it'd smell chemical-y, and seal all of it in. I bought, like, 40 floppy disks, and then I'd show it to kids who were probably 15 or 16, and I'd be like: Yeah, I'm importing drugs in floppy discs."

Watch Pattinson's full conversation with Jimmy Kimmel above.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Robert Pattinson once got in trouble as a kid for lying and saying his dad was Michael Jackson

Robert Pattinsonhas been lying for a long time. TheLighthousestar reflected on his predilection for public fib...

 

SnS JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com