New Orleans trash collectors litigate over removing foul French Quarter odorsNew Foto - New Orleans trash collectors litigate over removing foul French Quarter odors

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The stench of trash and residue of bad decisions in one of America's favorite party hotspots is being scrubbed away, thanks to a change in garbage collectors that New Orleans residents say has transformed the French Quarter. "The Quarter has never been this clean," said Jill Wagner. She became inured during her three decades living alongBourbon Streetto rat-infested, overflowing garbage cans and sidewalks stained with puke, urine and booze. Now, with a zesty lemon fragrance sprayed across the streets daily, "it smells like Disney World." A chorus of residents and business owners is heaping praise on the city's so-called "Trash King," Sidney Torres IV, and his company, IV Waste, for cracking the code to sanitary success. The district has gleamed since Torres was given an emergency year-long contract last December to handle its waste management, they say. Tourists stumbling out of a Bourbon Street bar around sunrise on any given day can find IV Waste employees power-washing sidewalks, scooping up cigarette butts and spritzing streets with his patented "lemon fresh" cleaning formula. But a judge on Wednesday allowed Mayor LaToya Cantrell to replace IV Waste at the end of July, over the objections of the city council. With a local management district insisting on Torres, this raises the possibility of rival collectors competing for the French Quarter's garbage. "Just because they like the other guy, that is not enough," the mayor's attorney Charles Rice told the judge, and he said there's "no reason" to believe a different contractor would do worse. An escalating legal battle over the trash A state appeals court is scheduled to review in August who will ultimately earn tens of millions of dollars managing the French Quarter's trash in 2026 and beyond. At stake is the attractiveness of some of the most important city blocks in the country, residents say — New Orleans reports that more than 19 million visitors spent a collective $10 billion last year, and most visited the historic French Quarter. In a city plagued by dysfunction including constant flooding, treacherous potholes and amassive jailbreak, Torres' company has become a point of civic pride. The quarter is filled with signs in support of IV Waste. "It's not even in the same solar system -- the service they provide versus what others provide," said Danny Conwill, who owns an oyster bar off Bourbon Street and is suing the mayor to keep IV Waste. He recalls other trash collectors leaving "noxious garbage juices" and heaps of shrimp heads and oyster shells scattered about, leading to rank summer odors bad for business. Torres, a real estate developer who began as a personal assistant to Lenny Kravitz and once hosted Justin Bieber's 20th birthday party at his Bahamas resort, became a local celebrity and reality TV star after launching a trash company to clean up the city after Hurricane Katrina. He then sold it and waited out a non-compete clause before rebuilding his trash empire with IV Waste. Officials say city will be paying more for less After a competitive bidding process last year, the city began negotiating a $73 million contract with another local firm, Henry Consulting, to clean the French Quarter for at least the next five years. But before the deal was finalized, council members grew alarmed that the company did not seem to have the necessary equipment or subcontracts in place as Super Bowl LIX and the annual Mardi Gras celebrations loomed. IV Waste then won an emergency contract to clean the French Quarter through 2025, and Henry Consulting sued, accusing the city of failing to uphold a valid contract. The metastasizing litigation now pits an outgoing mayor with waning popularity against a feisty city council and state officials including the attorney general, with both sides slinging accusations of cronyism. Cantrell was elected in 2017 with the endorsement of Henry Consulting founder Troy Henry. In April, Cantrell announced she was terminating the IV Waste contract early, and that Henry's firm would take over. This new no-bid contract would cost $2.1 million more, with inferior results, sanitation director Matt Torri told the city council on Monday. He and other officials said Henry Consulting still doesn't seem ready for the job. Henry Consulting declined to comment to The Associated Press. Cantrell's office told The AP that the city "remains committed to working with all parties to provide sanitation services to the French Quarter." Meanwhile, a new Louisiana law empowers the management district to appoint its own garbage collector, and the residents and business owners who run this state agency selected IV Waste. Torres said his company will keep taking out the trash, even if it means rivals go toe-to-toe on Bourbon Street. "We're going to do our job, and they can watch and learn," Torres said. "The French Quarter can rest assured that we're going to continue to clean." ___ Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.Report for Americais a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

New Orleans trash collectors litigate over removing foul French Quarter odors

New Orleans trash collectors litigate over removing foul French Quarter odors NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The stench of trash and residue of bad deci...
Former Trump lawyer says she will remain as New Jersey prosecutor despite court decisionNew Foto - Former Trump lawyer says she will remain as New Jersey prosecutor despite court decision

By Andrew Goudsward WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump's former personal lawyer, Alina Habba, said on Thursday that she would seek to remain as the top federal prosecutor in New Jersey despite a judicial decision this week not to extend her appointment. Habba's statement marked the latest challenge by the Trump administration to oversight by federal courts. Habba wrote on X that she was now the acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey. The Justice Department used a series of procedural maneuvers to attempt to circumvent the Tuesday decision by the U.S. District Court in New Jersey and keep her in the post, a department spokesperson told Reuters. "I don't cower to pressure," Habba wrote on X. "I don't answer to politics." Judges on the U.S. District Court in New Jersey declined to extend Habba's tenure as interim U.S. attorney, instead naming the second-highest ranking official in the office, Desiree Grace, as her replacement. But hours later Attorney General Pam Bondi said Grace had been removed, accusing the judges of having political motivations and seeking to thwart Trump's authority. U.S. law allows federal district courts to intervene if an interim U.S. attorney's 120-day term expires and courts have regularly invoked that authority. Grace, in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday, said she was "prepared to follow" the court's order and "begin to serve in accordance with the law." It was not immediately clear if either Grace or the District Court judges would attempt to challenge the maneuvers. Neither could immediately be reached for comment. Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond, in Virginia, said the Trump administration appeared to have the legal authority for its moves, but they could further strain its relationship with federal courts. "It does undermine that authority from Congress," Tobias said, referring to courts' role in the process. "But that doesn't trouble this White House or this Justice Department." The judiciary has emerged as one of the few checks on Trump's aggressive use of presidential power in his second term. White House officials have accused judges who have blocked parts of Trump's agenda they have deemed unlawful of exceeding their authority and taking part in a "judicial coup." Habba has brought two criminal cases against Democratic officials during her time in office and drew criticism after saying she hoped to use her role to aid Republicans in New Jersey. (Reporting by Andrew Goudsward in Washington; Editing by Scott Malone and Matthew Lewis)

Former Trump lawyer says she will remain as New Jersey prosecutor despite court decision

Former Trump lawyer says she will remain as New Jersey prosecutor despite court decision By Andrew Goudsward WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President...
Appeals court says California law requiring background checks for ammunition is unconstitutionalNew Foto - Appeals court says California law requiring background checks for ammunition is unconstitutional

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A voter-backed California law requiring background checks for people who buy bullets is unconstitutional, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday in a blow to the state's efforts to combat gun violence. In upholding a 2024ruling by a lower court, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the law violates the Second Amendment. Voterspassed the lawin 2016 and it took effect in 2019. Many states, including California, make people pass a background check before they can buy a gun. California went a step further by requiring a background check, which costs either $1 or $19 depending on eligibility, every time someone buys bullets. Last year, U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez decided that the law was unconstitutional because if people can't buy bullets, they can't use their guns for self-defense. The 9th Circuit agreed. Writing for two of the three judges on the appellate panel, Judge Sandra Segal Ikuta said the law "meaningfully constrains" the constitutional right to keep arms by forcing gun owners to get rechecked before each purchase of bullets. "The right to keep and bear arms incorporates the right to operate them, which requires ammunition," the judge wrote. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, who supported the background checks, decried the court's decision. "Strong gun laws save lives — and today's decision is a slap in the face to the progress California has made in recent years to keep its communities safer from gun violence," Newsom said in a statement. "Californians voted to require background checks on ammunition and their voices should matter." The California Department of Justice said the state needs "common-sense, lifesaving" laws that prevent ammunition from falling into the wrong hands. "We are deeply disappointed in today's ruling — a critical and lifesaving measure that closes a dangerous loophole," the department said in a statement. "Our families, schools, and neighborhoods deserve nothing less than the most basic protection against preventable gun violence, and we are looking into our legal options." Chuck Michel, president and general counsel of the California Rifle & Pistol Association, called the law "absurdly restrictive." "This case has been a long hard fight against overreaching government gun control, but a firearm cannot be effective without the ammunition to make it operable. The state of California continues to try to strip our rights, and we continue to prove their actions are unconstitutional," Michel said. The law remained in effect while the state appealed the lower court's decision. Benitez had criticized the state's automated background check system, which he said rejected about 11% of applicants, or 58,087 requests, in the first half of 2023. California's law was meant to help police find people who have guns illegally, such as convicted felons, people with certain mental illnesses and people with some domestic violence convictions. Sometimes they order kits online and assemble guns in their home. The guns don't have serial numbers and are difficult for law enforcement to track, but the people who own them show up in background checks when they try to buy bullets. John Parkin, president of Coyote Point Armory in Burlingame, California, said the law made it difficult or impossible for some legal gun owners to purchase ammunition. For example, out-of-state residents and California residents with old guns couldn't buy bullets because they weren't in the database of approved gun owners, he said. "It was written to make California gun owners angry. There wasn't a lot of logic to it," Parkin said about the law. "I think there are better ways to keep the public safe." California has some of the nation's toughest gun laws. Many of them are being challenged in court in light of a U.S. Supreme Court decision thatset a new standardfor interpreting gun laws. The decision said gun laws must be consistent with the nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation. Two other California gun laws were struck down in recent years — one thatbanned detachable magazinesthat can hold more than 10 bullets and another that banned the sale ofassault-style weapons. Those decisions have been appealed. Other laws being challenged include rules requiring gun stores to have digital surveillance systems and restrictions on thesale of new handguns.

Appeals court says California law requiring background checks for ammunition is unconstitutional

Appeals court says California law requiring background checks for ammunition is unconstitutional SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A voter-backed Ca...
Ozzy Osbourne's Lost Interview: Black Sabbath Icon on Death Threats, Working With Wife Sharon, and Being Mystified by Glam Metal, 'I Even Fancied the F—in' Lead Singer of Poison!'New Foto - Ozzy Osbourne's Lost Interview: Black Sabbath Icon on Death Threats, Working With Wife Sharon, and Being Mystified by Glam Metal, 'I Even Fancied the F—in' Lead Singer of Poison!'

Many, many years ago, when this reporter was just a few months into his first music industry job as the assistant editor of a now-long defunct teen heavy metal magazine called Faces, he was lucky enough to be sent to interviewOzzy Osbourne, the legendary singer, cofounder of Black Sabbath and TV star who died Tuesdayat the age of 76. The interview was no small challenge: not only was Osbourne still deep in his wildman-of-rock-and-roll phase, the subject was the"Tribute" album,a live concert recording featuring Randy Rhoads, the brilliant guitarist and cowriter on Osbourne's first two solo albums, "Blizzard of Ozz" and "Diary of a Madman," who was tragically killed in a 1982 plane crash, at the age of just 24, while the band was on tour. The album was being released on the fifth anniversary of Rhoads' death, and Osbourne was doing interviews about it. More from Variety Kelly Osbourne Says 'I Am So Sad' After Ozzy Osbourne's Death: 'I Feel Unhappy... I Lost the Best Friend I Ever Had' Bizarre Trisha Paytas Baby Reincarnation Theory Goes Viral After Ozzy Osbourne's Death Black Sabbath Members Pay Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne Following His Death: We've 'Lost Our Brother' The interview (portions of which appeared in Faces at the time) took place one day in March of 1987 at Osbourne's hotel suite at 11 a.m., after what was apparently quite a night out: He and publicist Mitchell Schneider had taken in two shows — the roots band the Radiators and legendary Southern rocker Gregg Allman, the latter of which Osbourne apparently did not enjoy and complained about several times. Osbourne emerged from his bedroom, clearly just woken up and seemingly hung over, wearing only a leopardskin-patterned bathrobe but also, curiously, loads of jewelry: two diamond rings, a gold bracelet, necklaces, and a gold top-of-the line Rolex watch, the face of which was encircled with diamonds. His robe only partially concealed the monster-face tattoo on his chest, and as he sat down, his knees poked through the robe, revealing simple smiley faces tattooed on both knees. His hair was shorter than usual, reaching to the bottom of his neck in the back but spiked slightly on top, and brownish and frosted. In the long interview that follows — which has been lightly edited for readability — Osbourne talked about Rhoads, Ozzy-less incarnations of Black Sabbath, death threats, working with his wife Sharon, and the then-popular glam-metal movement. (One note: at one point late in the interview, Osbourne uses what can be considered a slur against the LGBTQ community; without excusing the use of the word, it was less taboo at the time than it is today.) He was also completely on-brand: As he entered, Mitch asked, "Do you need anything, Ozzy?" to which he responded, "A new brain!" Because I thought it would be sick! [to release it sooner after Rhoads' death]. But I was under a contractual obligation to deliver a double-live album, and I refused to put [the live album featuring Rhoads] out because I was just…didn't wanna know anything about it, so that's why we went to the Ritz [in New York] and recorded a double-live album of old Sabbath stuff ["Speak of the Devil," featuring guitarist Brad Gillis in Rhoads' role]. But this the end, everything [featuring Rhoads] that's good enough to put out is on that album (gestures to artwork proofs sitting on table). I actually didn't have much to do with the, uh, compilation of the album, I think I spent about an hour in the studio sayin', "That's a good mix" and all that. I wanted it to sound live, I didn't want it to sound like a doctored fuckin' version of a live album. Live albums should sound live, y'know? Wow!(Looks at single incredulously)"You Lookin' at Me Lookin' at You." Originally this was gonna be on the album. It was one of those early songs that we… god, I haven't heard that for years! That sold about four copies, I think. (Sings) "You, lookin' at me, lookin' at you." (trails off) It wasn't my idea! [Randy's mother] phoned up Sharon, because she'd been so inundated with letters and phone calls about the live album, and we've also 'ad a lot of mail sayin' "When ya gonna put it out?" And to be perfectly honest, it was basically Sharon and Randy's mother who got it all together. I 'ad no intention of puttin' it out… [but] I think it looks very good, actually. The only thing I did say to Sharon was I didn't want it to be sort of morbid. And there's a track on the album called "Dee Outtakes," it's an instrumental thing that [Rhoads] wrote for 'is mother. [The outtake] isn't brilliant or anything, it's just him gettin' that together in the studio, talkin' to [producer Max Norman], and you can hear a part where he fucks it up, and starts again. But not many [fans] ever heard 'im speak … because, you know, he came and he went so quickly. There's a side of Randy that I'm tryin' to show something about (picks up artwork) The reason why I put this picture of Randy in there — that was at Day on the Green [concert] in San Francisco. The reason why he liked that photo was because of the massive crowd, that was one of the first big crowds we played for, also he split 'is pants onstage! And that's why [his expression is like] "Oh no!" There's a lot of photographs of 'im, there's a letter from his mother here, there's things that you would never normally see. His dream was to get a degree in classical music and combine classical and rock together. Whether he woulda stayed with me and done it, I don't know, but it woulda been a fabulous combination. So many of these guys can play fast, but they don't play with any … [Randy] had a lot of soul and a lot of emotion with what he was playin'. What happened was, I'd got booted outta Sabbath [in 1979], and met up with a guy called Dana Strum, who now is the bass player with Vinnie Vincent. And Dana said, "I know this amazing guitar player." And 'e came at some bizarre fuckin' hour, as Dana always does, he'll freak ya out at four o'clock in the morning when you've drunk 95 cans of beer and smoked 85 joints or something and you fucking wanna just die! Dana says, "Get up man! You gotta see this guy!" And I went 'round to a studio, and Dana's virtually holdin' my eyes open, y'know, "Listen!" And this lit'le tiny guy came in — and one of the first things I asked him was, "This guy looks like 'e's a fuckin drug addict or somethin, he's so skinny" [Rhoads wasn't] But then I heard 'im play and it was just amazing. It all just fell into place. And I flew 'im to England and then we shacked up with [bassist] Bob Daisley and started from there. Yeah, that's true. I instantly spotted the fact that the guy was different, and 'e was very good! And he looked the part — he reminded me of [David Bowie's "Ziggy Stardust"-era guitarist] Mick Ronson a lot. And then we auditioned for Lee Kerslake, we went through about 900 fucking drummers, drummers are always a pain in the ass to find. So we found Lee about two weeks before we went into the studio. Yeah. It was kind of a situation where I knew we had to do a lot of work, and I didn't want any complaints and anybody in the camp to start fuckin' moaning and gettin' …to be honest with you, I can't really remember what 'appened! I think it was we had two shows at the Palladium [in New York], and they were moaning that we had two shows or something. And just I said, "Fuck this, I want guys just to fuckin' play!," considerin' I was just startin' up again. Plus the fact that it wasn't a good-looking band either, it didn't look too cool. Bob's playin' on the new Sabbath album, you know. I don't know anything about them anymore. I'm not puttin' 'em down or anything, I just don't know anything about them. Don't know where they are, what they're doin', or anything. He didn't get offended by anything, he was just… I mean, [drummer] Tommy [Aldridge] used to shit every time we used to do the final bow at the end of the night — this is with all the fuckin' big lumps of meat and liver and snakes being thrown onstage every night. Tommy would be like "For fuck's sake, let's get out of here!" and I'd purposely hold him down for a long time while we were bowing (gestures). That was the bizarre-est tour that I've ever done — the "Diary of a Madman" tour, where we [mock-] hung the midget and all that, that was fuckin' insane! It was like, "Bring your own meat," 'cause instead of a custard pie fight, we'd throw meat out to the audience, y'know. You'd throw out one bucketful and about eight tons of it would come back. But it was different, it was exciting, and the kids were great. You always get one guy that throws some fuckin' object up there but you don't really wanna look — somebody threw up a big marsh frog one night! eah yeah yeah. It seems like yesterday. Y'know somebody said to me yesterday, "It was five years ago," and I thought, Fuckin' 'ell! Uh, as far as I know, 'cause I was sleeping on the bus with my wife, we'd done a show in Knoxville, Tennessee, and we were driving to do a festival with Foreigner. And the bus driver had to stop and pick up some parts from a bus depot on the way, somewhere in Florida near Orlando. The depot was a big place with a private airstrip, and the guy had been driving all night. He was obviously a bit not all-there from driving [unintelligible]. And 'e took them up in the private plane to take an aerial shot of the bus, and obviously he must have made a big error and fuckin' flew the plane into the bus. And then the plane careered into a big house that was behind the bus and burst into flames. With 'oo? [Incredulous] No, no, no, not at all. Yeah, that was another memorable gig, 'cause the kids knew what the deal was, and they carried me through. Bernie was scared, but the kids were great. I had thought "This is it, it's all over now, we can't go on." And my wife just said, "Don't talk so stupid. 'E [Rhoads] wouldn't like it." The thing is, there's a side of Randy that nobody knew about. He was a very dedicated guitar player, he was a teacher, before 'e played with me. And he was just a real sweet man, but he was also a very funny man. When he'd had a few drinks 'e was hysterical. I can remember one time we were staying in a hotel, and there was a guy playing classical piano. Randy went up to 'is room and came back down with 'is guitar and one of those little Pignose amplifiers. He plugged it in at the bar and started playing along on the guitar, but doin' all the heavy metal guitar moves. Hysterical! I don't read 'em. If they're off-the-wall you just throw them in the trash. I've had police chiefs and various authority people say like, "Y'know, we've had a death threat; somebody's said they overheard somebody saying that they're gonna fuckin' shoot you, or something." You kind of have to build a switch inside you that switches yourself off to the fear, y'know? You can't go around thinking… I mean, these people that wrote these fucking sensationalistic articles don't know what it's like to live under threat. I had the police chief of Tyler, Texas, phone up on the last tour and say, "Listen, I've heard from a very good source that there's gonna be trouble at the show. I can't guarantee the safety of Ozzy if 'e comes to town." So we never went. Oh yeah! Especially down in the South. Not so much around New York or L.A. Most of 'em are down in the Southern belt. The last show I did on the tour, I was sitting in a coffee shop and a bunch of Jimmy Swaggert fans or something came inside hoo-hahin' and hallelujah and all that. But they talk about me being sick, and then this evangelist guy [Oral Roberts] got on the fuckin' television and said, "If I don't get eight million dollars by March I'm gonna die." People buy that shit? (Shakes his head then laughs) I should put a thing out and say, "If I don't get $200 million by August I'm gonna live!" (laughter) I was in a real depressing stage at that thing. Earlier on in the I'd gone to Japan and come up with this fuckin' awful virus that I couldn't shake off, y'know, and I'm goin' to the doctor for antibiotics and decongestant pills and inhalants and vaporizers. And I thought maybe it's time for me to quit. My shows weren't goin' too well, I wasn't singin' too well, and then I cut the tour short, as it happens. And I got bogged down with depression, and I thought "Oh fuck this. It's all over. I'm not gonna do it anymore." But then just recently I did a benefit show with the band in Los Angeles for the homeless, and I got up there and just played, and this fuckin' great feeling — it was there again. And I've since then decided that I'm not gonna go on the road for nine months ever again — three or four at the most. I've been doin' it for 19 years and I can't do the things that I used to do anymore. I've gotta work at a more easier pace, slow down a little. If I can't give them my best shot, then I feel like I've cheated. Only my best is good enough. I see these fuckin' bands from the Woodstock era and they sing their one all-time hit and they barely even move, and you think, "What the fuck is he tryin' to do?" No, because I play it like I'm fuckin' enjoyin' it! I mean, "Paranoid" is one song, but there's a lot of other songs in my set that have been hits. It's like fuckin' "Sing Along with Ozzy!" at my shows. As long as you are enjoying what you're doing — can you imagine me just standin' there going (mumbles opening lyric from "Paranoid"), "Finished with my…" (trails off) As long as you look like you're alive! I just took off. At the end of the tour I was so depressed, so fucked up, and so disappointed with myself. I just wanted time to myself. So I just travelled around America and Canada, just on my own. I just didn't wanna see anybody, and I didn't go to fuckin' Tibet, like everybody said, and shave my head bald, and I didn't have an affair with fuckin' Stevie Nicks as somebody else reported! If I'd've gone home, I know what it would've been: "Oh Ozzy, I forgot to mention it, but we have to wrap up by doin' these TV interviews and these 15 in-stores," and all this, and I just didn't wanna do anything! I wanted to just get sane again, 'cause tours send me fuckin' crazy. I have to have a security guy with me — as I must, because of these fuckin' 'eadcases — and you feel like a prisoner of your own success, when you're on the road. Because you go under a different name, and you can't sit in a coffee shop without some fuckin' waitress slipping a tablemat under you sayin' "Please sign this." I was just tired of living like that, y'know. So I changed my look — collar and tie and suit. There was a report that said they saw me in a coffee shop in California and I resembled an insurance salesman more than the wild man of rock and roll. I don't know. [Unintelligible] fucked up. I don't know where they got the photograph with the bald head from! But people like fuckin' intrigue, though, don't they? Lovely! With Sharon, three, but I have two from my ex-wife, and one adopted son from my ex-wife. They were out in California about a week ago. I'm going home tomorrow! (Looks heavenward.) After a year! I 'aven't been home for a year, apart from a fleeting visit now and again. All the time! We have some real screaming fights from down here [unintelligible], sometimes we end up exchanging a few blows, but that's the way it goes. I wouldn't have it any other way. It's really funny, I was sayin' this to her on the phone last night — when we're with each other, we sometimes get on each others' case, but as soon as we're separate, it's like a big part of my life's gone, it's like my life stops. I don't know what to do with myself! She's a great person, she's a great mother too. I met her when she used to work for her father as a receptionist, many many years ago. And I always had a secret admiration for her, from a distance, for a long time. She's had to carry around a lot of…she's had to fight to get where she's gotten in her career, because her father has got such a bad [reputation] , you know, [the notoriously tough and threatening British artist manager] Don Arden. She's had to really live through that, y'know. She's a very honest woman, she's a very hard-working woman. Well, the only thing that feels limiting is the fact that if I wanted to branch out in a different area — like, when I put out [the ballads] "Goodbye to Romance" or "So Tired," they would still be put on the heavy metal rack. That was not heavy at all, and [radio] wouldn't play it because it was classed as heavy metal. I like a bit of variety in music. My record of '86 was "So" by Peter Gabriel, I played the fuck out of that, that was incredible. And I wasn't a Peter Gabriel fan before that. And I quite like that, uh… [to Mitch], what're they called? It's kinda disco… Mitch Schneider: INXS? INXS, yeah. Played that for awhile. I don't listen to too much other metal bands because I think a lot of 'em sound so fuckin' stereotyped, so much, like the 95th version of Ronnie James Dio. They've got a radio station in Los Angeles called KNAC that plays nothing but metal, and it don't half wear ya down, y'know, when everybody sounds like Rob Halford or Ronnie Dio. Yeah, I really like Metallica. I'm not really jammed up on speed metal at all, but I did a tour with Metallica. It's like a faster version of Sabbath — early Sabbath, y'know, the way they look, walk around is just like that as well. Well, it's combination of new metal and punk, this thrash metal is like, "Fuck you!" Because as soon as something starts to work, it gets capitalized by the industry, and when it gets capitalized, it gets fucked. I mean, I was lookin' through, what was it, Metal Edge [magazine] yesterday. The guys look more like chicks now! It was like a fuckin' drag magazine! Eh — what's this fuckin' band Poison or something? What's this about? (Laughter) (Ozzy begins flipping quickly through magazine)I said to my wife yesterday, there's a great new band — and I swear to God that it was totally accidental, like, and I didn't mean it at all to be a knock — but I thought they were four chicks! I swear to God! I said, "Sharon, there's a great-lookin' new chick band out now: Poison." She said, "What are you talkin' about? They're fuckin' guys!" And I swear that was a pure, innocent accident. I've gotta find this fuckin' photo in one of these magazines. It's incredible! You've gotta see this fucking photo!(Points to picture of himself in the magazine)Now, does that look like a chick? I've gotta fucking find this (Looking frantically through magazine, sees different photo of himself with Alice Cooper.) Now me and old Alice here, we don't look like fuckin' chicks. (Sees photo of Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi wearing eyeliner.) Even Iommi wears eye makeup now! Fuckin' 'ell, what's happenin'? And never, ever before! We've all turned into fuckin' raving 'omos!(He turns page and lands on photo of Poison.) That's it! I even fancied the fuckin' lead singer!(More hilarity) Mitch:Well, I hate to break this up, but the next interviewer is here. Ozzy, Sharon just called, if you wanna call her back? Okay. (long pause) What the fuck was I doin' listenin' to fuckin' Gregg Allman last night? Like I'm still in a fuckin' mystery over that! Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Ozzy Osbourne’s Lost Interview: Black Sabbath Icon on Death Threats, Working With Wife Sharon, and Being Mystified by Glam Metal, ‘I Even Fancied the F—in’ Lead Singer of Poison!’

Ozzy Osbourne's Lost Interview: Black Sabbath Icon on Death Threats, Working With Wife Sharon, and Being Mystified by Glam Metal, 'I...
Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself' at Oscar-Winning Actor 32 Years Her SeniorNew Foto - Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself' at Oscar-Winning Actor 32 Years Her Senior

Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself' at Oscar-Winning Actor 32 Years Her Seniororiginally appeared onParade. '90s iconWinona Ryderjust made one of the most candid admissions of her career. In a new interview, theStranger Thingsstar revealed she was "absolutely in love" with an Oscar-winning actor, 32 years her senior. She admits to "throwing herself" at him, eliciting a surprising response. In the mid-'90s, Ryder was working alongsideAl Pacinoin a workshop forRichard III, later turned into the 1996 documentaryLooking For Richard. She soon realized her feelings went way beyond a friendly connection. Parade Daily🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 She toldElleshe was "absolutely in love" with Pacino. Ryder claimed they were friendly and often visited coffee houses around New York City to try different beverages. However, Ryder couldn't contain her growing feelings, blurting them out toThe Godfatherstar. She explained, "I'm 22, or whatever. Finally, he's dropping me off wherever I'm staying, and I'm like, 'I love you, you know. I really am completely in love with you.'' "He was like, 'aw, honey, noooo.' Then, like 10 years later, I meet his girlfriend, who's younger than me," she quipped. While Ryder admitted to "throwing" herself at the actor, a romantic relationship didn't develop. Today, they remain friendly. "I still play poker with him sometimes. It's the best." Winona Ryder is currently datingScott Mackinlay Hahn, a fashion designer and the co-founder of the green and socially-conscious line Loomstate. They have been in a relationship since 2011. The actress's career continues to trend upward as the final season ofStranger Thingsdebuts. PerNetflix, Season 5 will drop in three parts. The full synopsis forStranger Things 5reads, "The fall of 1987. Hawkins is scarred by the opening of the Rifts, and our heroes are united by a single goal: find and kill Vecna. But he has vanished — his whereabouts and plans unknown." "Complicating their mission, the government has placed the town under military quarantine and intensified its hunt for Eleven, forcing her back into hiding. As the anniversary of Will's disappearance approaches, so does a heavy, familiar dread." It concludes, "The final battle is looming — and with it, a darkness more powerful and more deadly than anything they've faced before. To end this nightmare, they'll need everyone — the full party — standing together, one last time." Stranger ThingsVolume 1 airs Nov. 26, 2025, followed by Volume 2 on Dec. 25, 2025. The finale, which concludes the series, airs on Dec. 31. Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself' at Oscar-Winning Actor 32 Years Her Seniorfirst appeared on Parade on Jul 24, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jul 24, 2025, where it first appeared.

Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself' at Oscar-Winning Actor 32 Years Her Senior

Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself' at Oscar-Winning Actor 32 Years Her Senior Winona Ryder Admits to 'Throwing Herself...

 

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