Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker’s gender reveal, James Cameron’s thoughts on Titan disaster, and more celeb news

Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker share gender reveal clip

Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker are expecting a baby boy.

The couple revealed last week that the Poosh founder – who already has Mason, 13, Penelope, 10, and Reign, eight, with former partner Scott Disick – is pregnant, and now the pair have shared the moment they staged a gender reveal for family and friends on their social media accounts.

In the Instagram clip, Kourtney sat on the Blink-182 drummer’s lap as he sat behind his kit.

Travis – who has Landon, 19, and 17-year-old Alabama with ex-wife Shanna Moakler and is also stepdad to her 24-year-old daughter Atiana De La Hoya – could be seen saying to Kourtney: “Tell when you’re ready. Is our pyro guy ready?”

Kourtney smiled: “I don’t know what’s happening.”

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Lewis Capaldi plans to take mental health break

Lewis Capaldi plans to take a mental health break after performing at Glastonbury.

The 26-year-old pop star has revealed that he may not perform for the rest of the year, after appearing at the world-famous festival on Saturday (06.24.23), which marked his first show in almost a month.

The singer – who revealed in 2022 that he’d been diagnosed with Tourette’s syndrome – said towards the end of his set: “We’re gonna play two more songs if that’s okay, even if I can’t sing properly.

“I’m really sorry, before I go any further. You’ve all come out and I’m really apologising. My voice is packing in.”

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James Cameron ‘sees similarities between Titan disaster and the Titanic’

James Cameron feels “struck by the similarity” of the Titan submarine catastrophe and the Titanic disaster.

The 68-year-old filmmaker helmed the 1997 disaster movie ‘Titanic’ – which centred on the real-life sinking of RMS Titanic in 1912 – and Cameron believes there are strong similarities between that story and the Titan sub catastrophe, which claimed the lives of five men aged between 19 and 77.

He told ABC News: “Many people in the [deep-submergence engineering] community were very concerned about this sub, and a number of you know of the top players in the community even wrote letters to the company, saying that what they were doing was too experimental to carry passengers and needed to be certified and so on.

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Categories: Entertainment