Bayern Munich plan talks with Guehi – Friday gossip

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Bayern Munich plan to hold talks with Marc Guehi about a potential move, Tottenham will try to sell Yves Bissouma in January and Aston Villa are looking to send Harvey Elliot back to Liverpool.

Bayern Munich sporting director Max Eberl plans to hold talks with England centre-back Marc Guehi at the start of January, which is when the 25-year-old can sign a pre-contract agreement with a foreign club as his deal with Crystal Palace ends in the summer. (Sky Sports Germany)

Tottenham will try to sell Mali midfielder Yves Bissouma in January but, with the 29-year-old’s contract running out in the summer, could trigger an option to extend his deal by a year if they fail to find a buyer. (Times – subscription required)

Aston Villa have informed Liverpool they are looking to send back England Under-21s midfielder Harvey Elliot in January – the 22-year-old has been on loan at Villa Park since the summer. (Teamtalk)

Arsenal are interested in both Real Madrid and Brazil winger Rodrygo, 24, and AC Milan and Portugal winger Rafael Leao, 26, as long-term targets in attack but are not currently seeking to sign a new striker. (Caughtoffside)

Major League Soccer commissioner Don Garber says the MLS would welcome Egypt forward Mohamed Salah “with open arms” if the 33-year-old decided to leave Liverpool. (Fox Sports)

Real Madrid striker Gonzalo Garcia is a target for German side Stuttgart, who know a deal for the 21-year-old Spaniard will be difficult. (Sky Sports Germany)

Manchester United have no interest in signing former Spain international Sergio Ramos, who is a free agent after leaving Mexican side Monterrey earlier this month.(ESPN)

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Snoop Dogg named US ‘honorary coach’ for Winter Olympics

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American rapper Snoop Dogg has been named an ‘honorary coach’ for Team USA at next year’s Winter Olympics.

The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) announced on Thursday the 54-year-old will take on “a volunteer role celebrating and supporting America’s athletes off the field of play”.

Snoop Dogg was a big presence for the US during the summer Games in Paris last year, serving as a special correspondent for broadcaster NBC’s Olympics coverage, as well as performing at the handover ceremony for Los Angeles 2028.

    • 28 October

The Winter Games take place in Milan and Cortina, Italy, from 6-22 February.

USOPC said Snoop Dogg “will lend his signature humour and heart” to help motivate and inspire US athletes, while the organisation’s chief executive officer Sarah Hirshland said the hip-hop star’s “enthusiasm for the Olympic and Paralympic movement is contagious”.

Snoop Dogg added: “This team represents the best of what sport can be: talent, heart and hustle. If I can bring a little more love and motivation to that, that’s a win for me.”

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  • Winter Sports
  • Winter Olympics

Snoop Dogg named US ‘honorary coach’ for Winter Olympics

Getty Images

American rapper Snoop Dogg has been named an ‘honorary coach’ for Team USA at next year’s Winter Olympics.

The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) announced on Thursday the 54-year-old will take on “a volunteer role celebrating and supporting America’s athletes off the field of play”.

Snoop Dogg was a big presence for the US during the summer Games in Paris last year, serving as a special correspondent for broadcaster NBC’s Olympics coverage, as well as performing at the handover ceremony for Los Angeles 2028.

    • 28 October

The Winter Games take place in Milan and Cortina, Italy, from 6-22 February.

USOPC said Snoop Dogg “will lend his signature humour and heart” to help motivate and inspire US athletes, while the organisation’s chief executive officer Sarah Hirshland said the hip-hop star’s “enthusiasm for the Olympic and Paralympic movement is contagious”.

Snoop Dogg added: “This team represents the best of what sport can be: talent, heart and hustle. If I can bring a little more love and motivation to that, that’s a win for me.”

Related topics

  • Winter Sports
  • Winter Olympics

Paramount’s Warner Bros Discovery bid faces conflict of interest concerns

Warner Bros Discovery’s future is in the spotlight amid a hostile bid by Paramount-Skydance to take over the storied media conglomerate that owns CBS, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and major movie studios, days after it agreed to a deal with streaming giant Netflix.

Paramount put in a $108bn bid, compared to Netflix’s $82.7bn. Netflix’s move came with widespread antitrust concern, with progressives like Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren saying it would limit access for consumers and filmmakers in Hollywood. The White House also said it would watch the deal with heavy scrutiny.

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Paramount’s bid for Warner Bros Discovery, however, was undercut by a slew of conflicts of interest and connections to the administration of United States President Donald Trump, and accompanying concerns about freedom of expression.

Those come in addition to recent changes at CBS News, where a conservative opinion writer has been brought in as the top boss, and there is pressure on coverage critical of Trump, including by late-night show hosts.

Kushner conflict

One of the sources of funds for Paramount’s bid is Jared Kushner’s investment firm Affinity Partners, alongside financing from both Saudi and Qatari sovereign wealth funds. Kushner is married to Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, and served in an advisory role during the first Trump administration.

“If you were teaching a class at business school on conflicts of interest, this would be Exhibit A,” Nell Minow, chair of Portland, Maine-based ValueEdge Advisors, told the Reuters news agency.

Trump on Monday told reporters that neither Paramount nor Netflix “are friends of mine” and that he had not spoken to Kushner about the deal.

However, just last week, Trump told reporters that he would be involved in the decision about whether the Warner Bros-Netflix merger was to go through.

“I’ll be involved in that decision,” Trump told reporters as he arrived at the Kennedy Center for its annual awards show.

The Kushner connection is far from the only conflict looming over the hostile takeover. Paramount is now owned and led by David Ellison, son of billionaire Larry Ellison, the Oracle cofounder and a close ally of the president.

Pressing the press

In the weeks before Paramount’s merger with Skydance, its CBS News network settled a lawsuit brought by Trump over an interview with then Democratic presidential hopeful Kamala Harris, which he claimed had been doctored.

The network described the allegations as baseless, but settled anyway for $16m. On the heels of that decision, Bill Owens, the executive producer of the show 60 Minutes that had been at the heart of Trump’s attacks, resigned. National Public Radio, citing two CBS staffers, said that Owens had “lost independence from corporate”.

Days later, late-night host Stephen Colbert, also on CBS, called the settlement a “bribe”, and soon after the company announced that The Late Show, which he has hosted since 2015, would be cancelled in 2026.

Although the show was losing money, the timing of the decision to cut it was widely viewed as political.

Paramount’s merger with Skydance was approved a few weeks later. Since then, CBS News – which the president has long accused of being unfair to him – has made decisions that, critics say, are increasingly aligned with Trump’s preferences.

Among them was the appointment of ombudsman Ken Weinstein, tasked with overseeing fairness and adjudicating bias allegations. His appointment itself has been viewed as partisan. Weinstein was once a nominee to be the ambassador to Japan during Trump’s first term and has no media background.

In October, Paramount purchased The Free Press, a right-leaning publication, for $150m and installed its founder, Bari Weiss, as CBS’s editor-in-chief even though she had no prior TV experience.

“They hired an opinion columnist, Bari Weiss, to run a news network, paying enough for her services, [money they could have used] to retain plenty of the journalists they laid off. Not because running a successful Substack somehow qualifies her to manage a broadcast news giant, but because her politics are aligned with their own and, to a large degree, Trump’s,” Seth Stern, director of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, told Al Jazeera.

Since her appointment, prominent anchors and producers have resigned. Claudia Milne, who oversaw standards and practices, and John Dickerson, co-anchor of the CBS Evening News, who has been with the network since 2009, both said they were leaving, as did the show’s other anchor, Maurice DuBois.

On Wednesday, CBS News announced that Tony Dokoupil would anchor the flagship evening news programme. Dokoupil has been serving as a co-anchor for CBS Mornings and joined the network in 2016.

In August, Margaret Brennan, moderator for another prominent CBS show, Face the Nation, a Sunday public affairs programme, interviewed Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. The interview was edited, a standard practice given time constraints. The administration complained, and the network changed its policy.

But that directive wasn’t the case for 60 Minutes. In October, longtime CBS News talent Norah O’Donnell asked the president about his pardoning of Binance founder Changpeng Zhao. In 2023, Zhao had pleaded guilty to money laundering but now had business dealings connected with the Trump family’s cryptocurrency company, World Liberty Financial.

The network opted not to run that part of the segment, which Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer pointed out was comparable to the very same allegation Trump made against the Harris interview of being “doctored”.

The network also cut the president’s remarks about the settlement.

“Actually, 60 Minutes paid me a lotta money. And you don’t have to put this on, because I don’t wanna embarrass you, and I’m sure you’re not,” Trump said as seen in a transcript of the full 73-minute interview that was published online.

The network complied with the president’s request. It did not air that part of the interview.

The president continues pressuring the network, while simultaneously praising the new management’s apparent friendliness.

After 60 Minutes aired an interview with outgoing Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene – who has recently become more critical of the president – Trump erupted on social media.

“My real problem with the show, however, wasn’t the low IQ traitor; it was that the new ownership of 60 Minutes, Paramount, would allow a show like this to air. THEY ARE NO BETTER THAN THE OLD OWNERSHIP, who just paid me millions of Dollars for FAKE REPORTING about your favorite President, ME!” he wrote on Truth Social.

‘Political manoeuvring’

Paramount’s bid for Warner Bros Discovery includes CNN, another major news network.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that David Ellison, on a trip to the White House, told the president that Paramount would make “sweeping changes” to CNN, a frequent focus of Trump’s anger, if the merger were to go through.

On Wednesday, Trump weighed in on the possible sale, saying, “I think CNN should be sold.”

On CNBC, David Ellison floated the idea of merging the networks and their respective newsgathering operations.

“We want to build a scaled news service that is basically, fundamentally, in the trust business, that is in the truth business, and that speaks to the 70 percent of Americans that are in the middle,” Ellison told the network’s David Faber.

But media experts are wary of such a move.

“It’s fair to say that a Netflix purchase of Warner Brothers would raise legitimate antitrust questions. However, the alleged political manoeuvring by Paramount to bring CNN and CBS under the same corporate roof – with implicit pledges to make both outlets’ news coverage more friendly to this administration – is even more concerning,” Rodney Benson, professor of media, culture and communication at New York University, told Al Jazeera.

“This would constitute a dramatic increase in the concentration of news media under the control of a single owner with close ties to the party in power. It’s a choice between two bad options, but as currently structured, a Paramount purchase would be objectively worse for American democracy and freedom of the press.”

The Guardian also reported that Larry Ellison even floated cutting anchors critical of the president, including Erin Burnett, who hosts a primetime show on the cable network. The elder Ellison is not directly involved with Paramount-Skydance.

“Throwing out the credibility of CNN and other WBD [Warner Bros Discovery] holdings might benefit the Ellisons in their efforts to curry favour with Trump, but it’s not going to benefit anyone else, including shareholders, in the long run,” Stern added.

Neither Paramount-Skydance nor Warner Bros responded to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.

If Netflix ends up as the buyer instead, CNN would not face similar concerns. The focus would shift to the merger’s potential impact on the film and TV production industry, particularly fears that it could limit competition.

Inside Davina McCall’s secret wedding to Michael Douglas including low key dress

Davina McCall has been in a long term relationship with Michael Douglas and the pair have finally tied the knot after just three months of being engaged

Davina McCall got married in secret to long term boyfriend Michael Douglas after just three months of being engaged. Michael popped the question in Ibiza as the couple enjoyed a romantic holiday away together.

The TV presenter option to steer away from a traditional wedding dress as she instead went for a long white faux fur coat for the special occasion. The couple got married in a small London ceremony at Marylebone Town Hall last Friday.

They said that “everyone who is special in their lives” was there for the intimate event. Photos have now emerged of the couple looking happier than ever as they official became husband and wife.

READ MORE: Inside Davina McCall’s health battles as she marries secretly months after cancer surgeryREAD MORE: Real reason for Davina McCall’s sudden wedding after three month engagement

Davina looked stunning in her wedding look as she wore a matching lace hat, lace tights and heels. Meanwhile, Michael looked smart in a bright blue suit.

Davina’s daughter Tilly, 21, shared a video to her TikTok page ahead of the ceremony. As she displayed her own outfit for the day, she captioned the post: “Be prepared to be SICK of me.”

The former Big Brother host broke her silence about her wedding today as she took to her own social media to confirm the happy news.

She posted a video of a poem by Harry Baker on Thursday, calling it “extraordinary”. The poem included the words: “It’s not the flowers, it’s the weeding in the mud with you. It’s not the champagne, it’s that cuppa in that favourite mug you use.

“It’s not the chocolate. OK it is, but not just one or two, it is becoming Bruce Bogtrotter and Augustus Gloop. It’s voting frozen pizza over fancy grub with you. Because some nights, nothing can beat a slice of comfort food.”

The Sun reported that a source said: “Their wedding was perfect, exactly what they wanted. They chose a small venue close to their home, and just invited about ten of their friends and relatives to be there with them.

“It was very intimate and everyone who attended is very special in their lives. They’ve been through a huge amount in recent months, with Davina’s health, and it just felt right to formalise their marriage. They didn’t see the point in waiting.”

They added: “The next day they just carried on with life as normal, and as coincidence would have it they were guests at another friend’s wedding day.

“So they went as a married couple for the first time and happily showed off her wedding ring. It was the perfect weekend.”

Davina and Michael were friends for years before their relationship turned romantic. They first crossed paths at Hertfordshire’s Elstree Studios when Davina was the presenter of Big Brother.

However, they then discovered there was something romantic between them after Davina’s 17-year marriage to Matthew Robertson, the father of her three children Holly, 24, Tilly, 22, and Chester, 19, came to an end in 2017.

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Grand Slam Track files for bankruptcy to ‘reorganise’

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Olympic great Michael Johnson says he will “refuse to give up on the mission of Grand Slam Track” after the athletics competition he backed voluntarily filed for bankruptcy in the United States following months of financial difficulty.

The final event of the competition’s inaugural season was cancelled in June because of economic concerns.

GST said the competition, which offered lucrative prize money, had been impacted by the withdrawal of committed investment earlier in the year.

Organisers said they had explored every alternative and are moving into a “court-supervised reorganisation”.

“Earlier this year after committed financing fell through, GST undertook extensive efforts, in consultation with its advisors, to address its liquidity challenges and sought to negotiate payment arrangements that would provide a meaningful recovery to stakeholders.

“However, a court-supervised reorganisation was deemed the most prudent path forward as these efforts continue.”

Chapter 11 bankruptcy is a mechanism which allows a company to restructure its debts in order to stay in business.

In August, Johnson said on social media that he still considered the competition to be successful, adding “we saw circumstances change in ways beyond our control”.

“While GST has faced significant challenges that have caused frustrations for many – myself included – I refuse to give up on the mission of Grand Slam Track and the future we are building together,” said Johnson on Thursday.

GST featured a host of well-known athletes, including British Olympic sprinters Daryll Neita and Matthew Hudson-Smith, and 1500m world champion Josh Kerr.

Male and female competitors were subdivided into six categories – each containing eight athletes – such as Short Sprints, with the eight runners featuring in that group competing in the 100m and 200m each weekend.

It offered significant financial incentives, with up to $100,000 (£73,600) on offer for the winners of race categories, as well as salaries for contracted athletes.

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