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Missy Elliott announces first ever headline tour with Ciara, Timbaland and Busta Rhymes

Missy Elliott has announced details of her first ever headline tour for North America later this summer.Today (April 8), the history-making musical polymath unveiled the dates for the ‘Out Of This World’ tour, which will start in Canada this July. She also revealed that she will joined by longtime friends and frequent collaborators Ciara, Timbaland and Busta Rhymes.“This is an incredible time in my life as I am experiencing so many milestone ‘firsts,’” Elliott said in a statement.
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dailymail.co.uk
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Catherine Cryan - Emmy-nominated director - passes away at 59 years of age after battling cancer
The filmmaking world is in mourning with news that Emmy-nominated filmmaker Catherine Cryan passing away.The writer and director passed on December 24 at 59 years of age, after a battle with cancer, according to Variety.She passed away in Vancouver, British Columbia after a career that spanned three decades.  R.I.P.: The filmmaking world is in mourning with news that Emmy-nominated filmmaker Catherine Cryan passing awayCryan was born in Brooklyn and attended Harvard University, graduating from the prestigious institution in 1985.She then spent the next two years working for the Royal Shakespeare Company in London. After returning to the United States, she started working as an executive assistant for prolific filmmaker Roger Corman.  Early years: Cryan was born in Brooklyn and attended Harvard University, graduating from the prestigious institution in 1985She started her writing career with a trio of films released in 1990 - A Cry in the Wild, Slumber Party Massacre III and Bloodfist III.She wrote 1991's Dead Space starring Bryan Cranston and Uncaged starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan for Roger Corman's company, along with 1993's Fire on the Amazon starring Sandra Bullock, a year before her breakthrough hit Speed.Cryan also started her directing career in 1993 with White Wolves: A Cry in the Wild II, starring Mark-Paul Gosselaar, which earned her an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Directing in a Children's Special.
dailystar.co.uk
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Chance of space junk killing someone is a scary 'ten per cent', say scientists
Daily Star reader, that you're an ant.Now imagine that, as an ant, you fall victim to human rubbish being dumped on you.And while there are millions of pieces of rubbish dumped on the streets every day, it's probably quite rare that your friendly neighbourhood ant would end up getting hit by it. READ MORE: 'Out of control' Chinese space rocket debris has finally crash landed on Earth Now – and there is a point to this strange analogy – pretend the ant is a human and the every day rubbish is space rubbish.Experts have found that humans getting hit by the thousands of pieces of space junk floating above us is actually quite a real threat to our lives.According to a study posted in the space journal Nature Astronomy, there is a “small but significant risk” of parts of rockets left in space to float forever actually re-entering the planet's atmosphere over the next decade - estimated to be around 10%.The team behind the study comprises of Michael Byers from the Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and colleagues Ewan Wright, Aaron Boley and Cameron Byers.They claim: “Most space launches result in uncontrolled rocket body reentries, creating casualty risks for people on the ground, at sea and in aeroplanes.“These risks have long been treated as negligible, but the number of rocket bodies abandoned in orbit is growing, while rocket bodies from past launches continue to re-enter the atmosphere due to gas drag.“Using publicly available reports of rocket launches and data on abandoned rocket bodies in orbit, we calculate approximate casualty expectations due to rocket body reentries as a function of latitude.“On the issue of uncontrolled rocket body reentries, the
dailymail.co.uk
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Jennifer Lopez's assassin thriller, The Mother, pauses production in Spain due to COVID-19 outbreak
Jennifer Lopez's latest film, The Mother, put a pause on production in Spain due to a coronavirus outbreak.The Mother, which is set to be released later this year, had been filming in Vancouver, British Columbia, before production recently moved to Gran Canaria near the Canary Islands.PEOPLEmagazine confirmed that filming overseas had been halted 'due to positive coronavirus cases associated with the production team.' Stopped: Jennifer Lopez's latest film, The Mother, put a pause on production in Spain due to a coronavirus outbreak; seen in OctoberLopez reportedly flew into town last week and had been isolated while awaiting shooting, only to leave on a private plane back to the US just yesterday, according to Page Six. The 52-year-old actress stars alongside Joseph Fiennes, Gael Garcia Bernal, and Omari Hardwick in the Niki Caro-directed film.The local paper, La Provincia, first reported that a 'massive' coronavirus outbreak plagued a Netflix shoot, causing 'weeks-long production suspension.' The 52-year-old actress stars alongside Joseph Fiennes, Gael Garcia Bernal, and Omari Hardwick in the Niki Caro-directed film; seen in December The Spanish outlet reported that Lopez was first spotted in town on Wednesday and was set to film multiple scenes throughout the week.It's unclear when production will resume filming.Spain has seen a rise in COVID-19 cases as the Omicron surges across the globe, with 2,722 cases per 100,000 people reported on Friday, according to Reuters.The percentage of hospital beds occupied by patients with coronavirus was 11.79%, while the number of patients with COVID-19 in intensive care units rose to 22.06%.
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