Page 28 - Florida Sentinel 10-9-20
P. 28

Entertainment
  Chadwick Boseman
Dr. Dre Paying For Estranged Wife’s Lavish Lifestyle, Rejects Her $2M Spousal Support Request
  Took A Pay Cut To Get ‘21
Bridges’ Co-Star Sienna
Miller Paid Her Worth
Dr. Dre refuses to enter- tain his estranged wife’s re- quest for $2 million in monthly spousal support.
As previously reported.. Nicole Young is asking the court to grant her nearly $2 million a month in tempo- rary spousal support amid her divorce battle with the hip-hop icon.
Here’s her breakdown of why exactly she needs that kind of income:
— Laundry and cleaning
Ella Mai Returns With New Single ‘Not Another Love Song’
ELLA MAI
Ella Mai is baaaaack. Fol- lowing in the footsteps of her hit singles “Boo’d Up” and “Trip,” the Grammy-winning songstress is returning to the airwaves just in time to give your playlist another much- needed song to put on repeat.
It’s been a whole two years since she dropped her self-ti- tled debut album and now the X-Factor alum is ready to show how she’s grown with new music in the form of her latest single, “Not Another Love Song.”
Although the British singer says the track is about “falling in love, but not wanting to admit it,” the lyrics tell a slightly different story.
With an energy boasting of heavy “I can do bad by myself” vibes, the 25-year-old songstress makes it crystal clear to bae that she’s not here for any more relationship drama. “This drama is getting old, need to let it go,” she sings. “Different episode, same old show.”
month
— Education (tuition and
living expenses) $60,000 a month
—Entertainment $900,000 a month
— Charitable contribu- tions $125,000 a month
— Mortgage. $100,000 a month
— Telephone, cell phone, e-mail $20,000 a month
In all, Young says she ac- tually has a monthly nut of $2,530,000.
 Nearly a month after his passing due to colorectal cancer, friends, fans and costars continue to share sto- ries of the private yet thoughtful person that Chadwick Boseman was.
One person in particular, Sienna Miller—who starred alongside the beloved entertainer in last year’s cop thriller 21 Bridges—shared how Boseman (who was also a producer on the movie) not only helped her get cast for the role of detec- tive Frankie Burns but also helped get her paid her worth as a woman in Holly- wood.
“He produced 21 Bridges and had been really active in trying to get me to do it,” Miller said in an interview for Empire’s tribute cover to the late actor. “He was a fan of my work, which was thrilling, because it was re- ciprocated from me to him, tenfold. So he approached me to do it. He offered me this film, and it was at a time when I really didn’t want to work anymore. I’d been working nonstop and I was exhausted, but then I wanted to work with him.”
When studios wouldn’t
CHADWICK BOSEMAN AND SIENNA MILLER
give Miller her asking price, the actress says Boseman did what many people knew him to do: offer himself to lift someone else up.
“This was a pretty big budget film, and I know that everybody understands about the pay disparity in Hollywood, but I asked for a number that the studio wouldn’t get to,” she contin- ued. “And because I was hes- itant to go back to work and my daughter was starting school and it was an incon- venient time, I said, ‘I’ll do it if I’m compensated in the right way.’ And Chadwick ended up donating some of his salary to get me to the number that I had asked for. He said that that was what I deserved to be paid.”
DR. DRE AND NICOLE YOUNG
$10,000 a month
— Clothes $135,000 a
  Jesse Collins Named
 The First Black
Producer Of The Super
Bowl Halftime Show
 While Colin Kaeper- nick still doesn’t have a job within the NFL, the league is still making strides to further its diversity problem—thanks in part to JAY-Z.
This year, for the first time in the event’s history, the Super Bowl Halftime Show will have a Black exec- utive producer in Jesse Collins, along with partners Roc Nation and Pepsi.
“Jesse Collins is inno- vative, creative, and one of the only executive producers that speak fluent ‘artist vi- sion.’ He’s a true artist,” said hip-hop star and mogul JAY-Z, whose Roc Nation last year aligned with the NFL on a long-term alliance
JESSE COLLINS
for live music and social jus- tice initiatives. “Jesse’s in- sight and understanding create extraordinary shows and true cultural moments. After working with Jesse for so many years, I look forward to all there is to come.”
        PAGE 16-B FLORIDA SENTINEL BULLETIN PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2020























































   26   27   28   29   30