SEATTLE — Jared Walsh will never forget the agonizing three days he spent in 2015, waiting for the phone call to begin his professional baseball career. When his phone finally rang with a number from Chicago, Walsh immediately thought either the Cubs or White Sox were about to select him in the draft. “Would you like to buy a new dryer?” asked the voice on the other end of the line.
MEEKER, Colo. — A wild horse roundup in northwestern Colorado wrapped up this week with hundreds of horses captured.
The roundup in Piceance-East Douglas Herd Management Area was originally scheduled for September, but the Bureau of Land Management made the decision to move the roundup to begin in June because it said there was concern about the conditions of the wild horses in the area when they were observed in March and April.
VICKY Pattison shared a glimpse into her idyllic Croatian holiday with lush hotel and bikini snaps. The former Geordie Shore star took to her Instagram to showcase her body confidence in a tiny nude Pretty Little Thing bikini. She captioned the selfie: “Day 3… ft stretch marks, tiger stripes, soft tummies and a tiny bit of nip ?… because that s**t is NORMAL thats why ?”
Fans rushed to comment on Vicky’s glowing and*unfiltered selfie, as one said: “You look unreal.
Claire Denis and Juliette Binoche, who have now made three films together, are a match made in a gloriously idiosyncratic heaven. Denis is one of our finest, most fascinating living filmmakers, and Binoche is one of our most rapturous and expressive actors—she’s become more luminous, and more compelling, as she ages. In their 2017 collaboration Let the Sunshine In, Binoche played a divorced Parisian painter looking for new love; in 2019’s High Life, she played an inscrutable scientist in charge of a fertility experiment in deep space.
The Duchess of Cambridge has shared a glimpse of her photography book Hold Still ahead of its release on Friday.
Kate, 39, a keen photographer, launched the campaign during the first lockdown last year and asked the public to submit their images which captured the period.
From over 31,000 images, 100 final ‘poignant and personal’ portraits were selected and shown in a digital exhibition before being collated into the book, Hold Still: A Portrait of Our Nation in 2020.