Ask any Fast & Furious racer, any real Fast & Furious racer, it doesn't matter if you appear in one scene or two—being a part of the family is being a part of the family. While it might be hard to remember, before Fast reached insane heights—F9 really went to outer space!—at the heart of the films was street racing. A group of alums who kicked off their careers as Fast drivers have since gone on to become recognizable faces, such as Michael Ealy (Barbershop), Amaury Nolasco (Prison Break), Brandon T. Jackson (Tropic Thunder), Neil Brown Jr. (Insecure), and Celestino Cornielle (Mayans M.C.). With this week's release of the franchise's penultimate installment, Fast X, and director Louis Leterrier promising a return to street racing, we raced to interview Ealy, Nolasco, Jackson, Brown Jr., and Cornielle. From beating out Pitbull, to almost getting beat up by Vin Diesel, here are their incredible Fast stories. |
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Crochet, cashmere, and everything in between. |
| The year's best and brightest includes a companion podcast for The Last of Us—and a buzzy new sports show. |
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Last week, I asked one simple question: What do we even want to happen by the time Succession wraps its final episode? Is there any hope left for these damaged, uber-wealthy souls, or do they deserve to get the book thrown at them? There's still a way your favorite character can "win"—by whatever version of victory a family like the Roy's would deem acceptable—but I can no longer envision what that looks like. HBO, you have your hands full. |
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Step away from the junk and level up with one of these options. |
| We asked our March cover star, a serious reader, to select five book recommendations. He picked fifteen. |
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Did you leave him in the car? Did you look in the pockets of yesterday's jeans? Have you checked between the cushions of the sofa? These people are unbelievable. "Unfortunately, we can't track down the informant," Rep. James Comer stated. "We're hopeful that the informant is still there. The whistleblower knows the informant. The whistleblower is very credible." For those of you who are joining late, here is the state of the big Biden Family investigation as shared by the chairman of the investigating committee: there's a "whistleblower" who knows the "informant" and is very "credible." The "whistleblower," that is. The informant is "missing," however, probably because he or she is off doing top secret double-naught spy stuff. The game is afoot! |
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