Eva Mendes and Ryan Gosling Dave Allocca/Starpix/Shutterstock

Dave Allocca/Starpix/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • Eva Mendes shared a series of sexy bedroom photos on Instagram, dedicated to her husband, Ryan Gosling, in honor of Valentine's Day

  • The actress wore a T-shirt promoting Gosling's new film, Project Hail Mary, in the sultry snapshots.

  • Mendes and Gosling began dating in 2011, and they have since welcomed two daughters: Esmeralda Amada, 11, and Amada Lee, 9

Eva Mendesis celebrating her "Valentine."

The actress, 51, shared a series of sexy bedroomphotos on Instagram, dedicated to her husband,Ryan Gosling, in honor of Valentine's Day.

Mendes can be seen in the images wearing an oversized T-shirt, which features Gosling, 45, in his upcoming film,Project Hail Mary.

On the attire, Gosling is dressed up as an astronaut in space, with "Believe in the Hail Mary" written above.

Ryan Gosling in a 'Project Hail Mary' scene Amazon MGM Studios

Amazon MGM Studios

Despite her casual attire, Mendes still sported some glam, rocking smoky-eye makeup and a glossy lip, with her hair curled.

The photos featured went back and forth between close-up and wider shots of Mendes bouncing on a bed.

"For my Valentine ♥️," Mendes captioned the Instagram post.

Eva Mendes and Ryan Gosling

Mendes doubled down on her support for her husband through a post on herInstagram Stories.

Re-sharing a video of a dad watching the trailer forProject Hail Marywith his son, the actress wrote, "Thank you… So heartwarming. Hope you love the film as much as I do."

Mendes and Gosling began dating after they filmedThe Place Beyond the Pinesin 2011. They have since welcomed two daughters: Esmeralda Amada, 11, and Amada Lee, 9.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

InProject Hail Mary,Gosling stars as a science teacher-turned-astronaut named Ryland Grace, who finds himself sent into outer space in a desperate mission to save Earth from a cataclysmic event.

The movie, an adaptation of author Andy Weir's2021 novel of the same name, releases in theaters on March 20.

Read the original article onPeople

Eva Mendes Shares Sexy Bedroom Photos for Her ‘Valentine,’ Husband Ryan Gosling (with a Subtle Nod to His New Movie)

Dave Allocca/Starpix/Shutterstock NEED TO KNOW Eva Mendes shared a series of sexy bedroom photos on Instagram, dedicated to her husband,...
MD Foodie Boyz, SNL Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz; Will Heath/NBC via Getty

Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz; Will Heath/NBC via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The MD Foodie Boyz podcast found viral fame thanks to the teenage hosts' food reviews

  • The Maryland-based high schoolers were even spoofed on Saturday Night Live, twice

  • The boys talk to PEOPLE about their reaction to the skits

The teenage hosts ofMD Foodie Boyzfound viral fame by making videos talking about what they care about the most: food.

The podcast, which has over 370,000 followers across channels, consists of Maryland-based high schoolers Ryan, Peyton, Jackson and Emmett. Ryan, 15, tells PEOPLE that he started the podcast organically with Peyton, as the two wanted to do food reviews. From there, they expanded their reviews into a podcast format and brought a few more friends into the mix.

"We just had the idea in the car. Then we thought we were just gonna film one podcast. We didn't really know if we were even gonna clip it and post it on Instagram and TikTok," he says. "But then once we clipped our first one during December break, and we posted our first little clip, then that went viral right away, and then it just went up from there."

The 'MD Foodie Boyz' Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz

Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz

The group has consistently gone viral with their anti-vegetable takes. When asked about the worst food they've ever had, unsurprisingly, all the boys listed different vegetables, from celery and carrots to brussels sprouts.

In October 2025,Saturday Night Liveseemingly spoofed the podcast, using Sabrina Carpenter, Chloe Fineman, Jane Wickline and Veronika Slowikowska as hosts of a fictional podcast calledSnack Homiez.

Ryan shares that he was "shocked" when he first saw the skit.

"I was really surprised that they had Sabrina Carpenter, that's huge," he shares. "It was crazy, her impersonating stuff that we made. It was really weird, all of them.SNLimpersonating us, it feels really weird because it's such a big brand."

Jackson, 14, notes that he thought the impression was pretty "spot on."

"It was pretty funny, too, how they impersonated us," he says.

Each of the boys learned about the skit at different times, as a few of them were at a sleepover when they found out through their manager, while others learned after receiving emails from their teachers. The spoof brought an older audience to their videos, and for all of the boys, being onSNLis a "dream."

The group was shocked yet again whenSNLbrought backThe Foodie Boyzfor an episode in late January, when Finn Wolfhard and A$AP Rocky joined Carpenter, Fineman, Wickline and Slowikowska.

"It was even weirder because they brought back characters. It must've been pretty successful on their end for their viewers because for them to bring it back, it feels crazy," Ryan shares. "I mean, I can't really describe it. It's really exciting because you're back onSNL, which means you did something right."

Peyton, 14, shares that it was "crazy getting on once," and "even crazier" the second time.

"I never thought I would be doing this in my life," he says.

The 'MD Foodie Boyz' and Dave Portnoy Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz

Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz

Being spoofed onSNLwas just another highlight for the boys, whose lives have changed tenfold since starting the podcast. Jackson says that they're "doing stuff that not a lot of kids are getting to do."

Along with traveling and going to brand events, they've met Lil Yachty, David Dobrik and Dave Portnoy, who, after meeting the boys, offered them "advice" and "really helpful stuff that helped us navigate through the new crazy stuff."

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE'sfree daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

The 'MD Foodie Boyz' and Lil Yachty Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz

Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz

TheMD Foodie Boyzhosts hope to continue to grow their podcast and expand their bench of guests. Collectively, some dream guests include Druski, Kevin Hart and Mr. Beast.

As they focus on continuing to build the podcast and brand, Ryan teases that theMD Foodie Boyzsquad has big plans moving forward.

"You guys haven't seen it yet, but we have a lot of stuff going on. It's bigger than just food," Ryan says. "Food reviews are what we got, and I think we are gonna keep that, but I think we're bigger than that. Bigger and we have more stuff to talk about."

Read the original article onPeople

High School Podcasters Say 'It Was Really Weird' Being Spoofed by “Saturday Night Live ”(Exclusive)

Courtesy MD Foodie Boyz; Will Heath/NBC via Getty NEED TO KNOW The MD Foodie Boyz podcast found viral fame thanks to the teenage hosts...
NBA's marquee event now all about the league's issues

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Two minutes before NBA commissioner Adam Silver was scheduled to address the media in an upstairs room at Intuit Dome, his deputy, Mark Tatum, cheerfully shook hands with reporters before taking his seat in the front row.

That the league's second-in-command was eagerly anticipating Silver's words, much like the other occupants in the room, was poignant. Given the most prominent talking points that have dominated league discourse lately — the tanking epidemic, sports betting issues and alleged cap circumvention — have become so prevalent, the build-up to Silver's news conference was seismic.

However, following the duration ofSilver's availability— he spoke for around 30 minutes — there were far more questions as a result of his answers (or lack thereof).

The first question posed to the commissioner, and the most detailed response Silver gave, was about the issue of tanking. This makes sense, given how quickly the league office acted in response to recent misbehavior from the Utah Jazz and Indiana Pacers. Both organizations were fined; $500,000 to the Jazz and $100,000 to the Pacers for actions detrimental to the core values of the NBA. Utah's modus operandi was far more egregious than Indiana's — sitting its two best players for entire fourth quarters in separate close games is worse than holding someone out under the guise of rest, but neither should be tolerated.

"Are we seeing behavior that is worse this year than we've seen in recent memory?" Silver asked Saturday. "Yes, it is my view. Which was what led to those fines, and not just those fines but to my statement that we're going to be looking more closely at the totality of all the circumstances this season in terms of teams' behavior, and very intentionally wanted teams to be on notice."

Now, therealproblem with tanking, at least from the vantage point of one writer, is it's the lone arena where 29 other teams can't share in the winnings. At least not initially. (Lottery picks don't always pan out, and sometimes the late firsts and early seconds become the mainstays.) But don't worry, there's no proposal of a quick fix to what's going on, although I'm sure you'veread or heard a plethora of ideas this week alone. All I'm suggesting is Silverhadto do something. For what it's worth, he honestly didn't even want to dignify the mere word of "tanking," but it's reached a point of no return.

There's an answer that lies somewhere in the middle of the ongoing epidemic; not completely punishing teams for losing, but not rewarding the seemingly cunning ones that try to game the system. Sometimes, you're the Sacramento Kings, which goes hand in hand with parity and purgatory. How much better are the Chicago Bulls set up for their future than, say, the Brooklyn Nets? The Clippers and Hornets are both 26-29 heading into the All-Star break — would you consider them to be on equal footing?

"Part of the problem is if you step back," Silver said, "the fundamental theory behind a draft is to help your worst-performing teams restock and be able to compete, and by the way, yes, we want parity, but parity of opportunity. … My sense is, talking to GMs and coaches around the league, that there's probably even more parity than is reflected in our records. That goes to the incentive issue. It's not clear to me, for example, that the 30th performing team is that much measurably worse than the 22nd performing team, particularly if you have incentive to perform poorly to get a better draft pick. It's a bit of a conundrum."

So where does it end? The Jazz aren't going to suddenly turn over a new leaf and be competitive the rest of the way. Half a million isn't enough to deter or prevent future behavior — Utah has clearly shown it's fine with throwing away money. Vince Williams Jr., who arrived at the deadline, played seven minutes in a 135-119 loss to Portland this week — he's owed $2.3 million. (The Jazz are only on the hook for a prorated amount, but you get the point.) How do you also govern the other teams that could potentially fall under the same umbrella? Silver needs to move quickly before tanking takes on a life of its own, especially considering the talent of incoming players in a few months.

On the topic of expansion, Silver essentially confirmed, then tried to reverse his words about the possibilities of Las Vegas and Seattle being the NBA's next destinations.

"My sense is at the March Board of Governors meetings, we'll be having further discussions around an expansion process," Silver said. "We won't be voting at the March meeting, but we will likely come out of those meetings ready, prepared to take a next step in terms of potentially talking to interested parties. No, it doesn't have to be a two-team expansion. Frankly, it doesn't have to be any number of teams."

Hmm, sure? There are a number of hoops to jump through before arriving at City X and/or Y as expansion teams, but kicking the can down the road by saying you'll make a decision on making a decision in a few months is not as clear as one may think.

In the case of Kawhi Leonard, Clippers owner Steve Ballmer and alleged cap circumvention, Silver conceded judiciary control to the Wachtell Lipton firm, the NBA's go-to litigation arm. Ballmer and the Clippers are alleged to have orchestrated a $28 million endorsement deal — an absurd amount of money, enough to seriously threaten the integrity of the league. Maybe it's not as outlandish as former referee Tim Donaghy's scandal (Wachtell Lipton took around a year to finalize its investigation in that matter, according to The Athletic), but the league doesn't need this to drag on for nearly the same length of time. The backlash, not only from fans and media, but the other 29 owners could be seismic.

"I'm not involved day-to-day in the investigation," Silver said. "I think, as I've said before, it's enormously complex. You have a company in bankruptcy. You have thousands of documents, multiple witnesses that have been needed to be interviewed. Our charge to the Wachtell law firm is to do the work and then come back and make recommendations to the league office, and that's where things now stand."

All-Star Weekend, in its purest form, is supposed to be a celebration of the good parts of the NBA — the inclusivity, the opportunity and the excellence. An uplifting view of the state of the league. Instead, we're reminded of the economic and moral perils of basketball at the highest level, and head into the break with a slew of unsolved problems.

NBA's marquee event now all about the league's issues

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Two minutes before NBA commissioner Adam Silver was scheduled to address the media in an upstairs ro...
JT Toppin puts on low-post masterclass in No. 16 Texas Tech's OT win over No. 1 Arizona

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Texas Tech's JT Toppin had already scored three baskets in overtime so the next time he got the ball, Arizona's defense collapsed, trying to make anyone besides thepreseason All-America selectionbeat them.

Associated Press Texas Tech forward JT Toppin drives past Arizona center Motiejus Krivas (13) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) Texas Tech forward JT Toppin drives past Arizona forward Ivan Kharchenkov (8) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) Texas Tech forward JT Toppin drives between Arizona center Motiejus Krivas, left, and forward Ivan Kharchenkov (8) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Texas Tech Arizona Basketball

Toppin obliged.

The 6-foot-9 forward whipped the ball back out to the perimeter where Donovan Atwell was waiting. The guard made a 3-pointer that was crucial toNo. 16 Texas Tech finishing a 78-75 road victory over No. 1 Arizonaon Saturday.

"I knew he was going to be over there," Toppin said. "We work on that every day."

The pass to Atwell capped a sensational day for Toppin, who had arguably his best all-around performance of the season with 31 points on 13 of 22 shooting, 13 rebounds, three assists, two steals and a block. While the Red Raiders (19-6, 9-3 Big 12) have been slightly inconsistent this season, Toppin has been unshakable, scoring at least 10 points in 21 straight games.

Texas Tech beat the No. 1 team for just the third time in school history. The last time was a 65-62 win over Baylor on Jan. 11, 2022.

Red Raiders coach Grant McCasland said Toppin's pass was indicative of the team's dedication as they navigate a difficult conference schedule. Texas Tech has won three straight.

"We're not guessing — this isn't luck," McCasland said. "These dudes practice hard and put themselves in position every day. There's no shortcuts to this. It's a grind and you've got to love it. These dudes love it."

Advertisement

Toppin finished with his 16th double-double of the season and 47th of his career and is now averaging 21.9 points and 11 rebounds per game. He played all but 41 seconds in Saturday's win, showing incredible stamina in a rugged game between two of the most physical teams in the country.

He was at his best during the opening minutes of overtime, scoring on an array of tip-ins and low-post moves that Arizona couldn't defend.

The Wildcats had nothing but good things to say about him postgame.

"He has a really quick second jump," Arizona forward Tobe Awaka said, who had 16 points and 12 rebounds. "He has great body placement, in terms of the ball and tracking it down. He seems to always be in the right place at the right time. Just kudos to him and the type of player he is."

Texas Tech wasn't a one-man show Saturday. Christian Anderson scored 19 points after making six 3-pointers. Atwell finished with 11, including the clutch 3 in overtime and another from behind the arc with 25 seconds left in regulation that capped a 9-0 Red Raiders run and helped push the game to overtime.

Still, Toppin is the team's All-America selection for a reason. He lived up to the billing on a huge stage in a raucous road environment.

"JT Toppin was not going to be denied at the end of this game," McCasland said.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

JT Toppin puts on low-post masterclass in No. 16 Texas Tech's OT win over No. 1 Arizona

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Texas Tech's JT Toppin had already scored three baskets in overtime so the next time he got the...
No matter the stage, Anthony Kim's first win in 16 years is a comeback story we can all get behind

Put aside, just for a moment, the LIV Golf-PGA Tour's subtext of perpetual scuffling. Try not to think about the posturing and skepticism that accompanies virtually every LIV story. Focus, just for a second, on the simple facts:

Yahoo Sports 4Aces GC player Anthony Kim from the US celebrates after he won the LIV Golf Adelaide tournament at The Grange Golf Club in Adelaide on February 15, 2026. (Photo by Brenton Edwards / AFP via Getty Images) / -- IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE --

Anthony Kim won a golf tournament. Against Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau. In 2026.

Kim, one of sports' true prodigal sons, claimed LIV's Adelaide event in Australia on Sunday, riding a final-round, nine-birdie 63, turning a five-shot deficit into a three-shot victory. If nothing else — if Kim's story goes no further than this right here — it's a pretty incredible comeback for a guy who briefly ruled the golf world, then literally disappeared for more than a decade.

Every so often, golf produces one of these back-to-the-mountaintop stories, when a name from the past has a late-career week of their lives. Think Jack Nicklaus at the Masters in 1986, Tom Watson (almost) at the Open Championship in 2009, Tiger Woods at the Masters in 2019, Phil Mickelson at the PGA Championship in 2021. Everything comes together for one weekend, past meeting present, and it's remarkable to see.

Obviously, Kim's victory doesn't have anywhere near that historical resonance; about the only thing Adelaide and Augusta National have in common is a starting letter. But Kim's first professional win in nearly 16 years is an impressive story of facing down the demons of addiction and injury.

It's tough to remember now, but for a brief moment, Kim's popularity in golf was second only to Woods — and Woods' personal scandals erupted right as Kim was playing his best golf. Before Scottie Scheffler, before Brooks Koepka, before Jordan Spieth, before Rahm and DeChambeau, before Rory McIlroy had won a single tournament, there was Kim. He went toe-to-toe with Tiger, he hung with Michael Jordan, he was a SportsCenter darling back when SportsCenter was, well, the center of the sports universe.

Scanning leaderboards from Kim's prime 2009-10 era feels like looking at faded family pictures in a scrapbook. There's only one player from Kim's most recent win, the 2010 Shell Houston Open, still in the top 20: ageless wonder Justin Rose. The tee sheet at Kim's most recent Masters, 2011, included Ernie Els, Mark O'Meara, Craig Stadler and Watson.

Advertisement

But after suffering an Achilles injury in 2012, Kim stepped away from the game. And not in the "showing-up-on-NBA-sidelines-and-ESPN-red-carpets" kind of way. No, he flat-outvanishedfor more than a decade. Rumors of Kim surfaced here and there — he was playing golf with buddies in Oklahoma, he was keeping in shape in California, he hadn't touched a club in five years — but no one managed to get even a picture of Kim, much less his story.

"I was around some bad people," Kim said in 2024. "People that took advantage of me. Scam artists. When you're 24, 25, even 30 years old, you don't realize the snakes that are living under your roof."

That's why Greg Norman'sdramatic 2024 reveal of Kimas a new LIV addition caused such a ripple in certain segments of golf fandom. Kim was once the coolest dude possible, the heir to Woods, the herald of a new era of golf. What would he have left after so many years away from the game?

Not much, to start. He failed to earn even a single point in his first two seasons on the tour, and was relegated. That could have been the end of his story, but he managed to place third in LIV's Promotions Event, posted a T22 in the first tournament of the season … and now this. A win is a win, especially when two of the world's best are in your final grouping.

It'll be interesting to see how the golf establishment views this victory. LIV players, as expected, haveralliedaroundKim. European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald was one of the first non-LIV players to praise Kim's achievement, unsurprising given that it occurred in the middle of the night for America:

For LIV, this is undoubtedly the most significant victory in the tour's history. This story will break wide in a way that, say, Rippers GC's latest team victory at Adelaide won't. The presence of Rahm and DeChambeau legitimizes the win, and LIV's challenge now is transforming this burst of fans' attention into longer-term connections.

For Kim, the takeaway is much more simple. Yes, he'll rise up to around 200th in the world rankings, but that's not the real story here. Kim picked himself up from life's floor, got his life back together, and returned to the top of the leaderboard. Right now, that's more than enough.

No matter the stage, Anthony Kim's first win in 16 years is a comeback story we can all get behind

Put aside, just for a moment, the LIV Golf-PGA Tour's subtext of perpetual scuffling. Try not to think about the pos...

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty; Anna Webber/Getty; Gotham/FilmMagic

People Xandra Pohl (left), Livvy Dunne (center), Brittany Mahomes (right). Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty; Anna Webber/Getty; Gotham/FilmMagic

It's not all sunshine and rainbows!

The iconic pages ofSports Illustrated Swimsuittransport its readers to a dreamy oasis that typically involves white sandy beaches, sunshine-filled skies and bikini-wearing beauties on each — but the final product doesn't always tell the full story.

PEOPLE caught up with some of the models who've appeared on the cover or within the pages ofSI Swimsuit, which released itsFebruary digital issuethree days before the 2026 Super Bowl on Feb. 8. They shared little-known secrets from set that might just surprise you.

Livvy Dunne attends 2026 Madden Bowl during Super Bowl week in San Francisco on Feb. 6, 2026. Jesse Grant/Getty

Jesse Grant/Getty

Livvy Dunne, who made herSI Swimdebut in 2023and most recently covered the2025SI Swimissue, opened up to PEOPLE at the Ritz-Carlton in San Francisco on Feb. 7 about the "crazy" and "weird" happenings that have taken place during shoots.

"I feel like one thing that's kind of crazy is that it can be really cold and they make it look like it's the sunniest day outside and it could be cold or cloudy," the accomplished gymnast, 23, revealed, but emphasized, "Somehow the pictures still turn out amazing."

Despite wearing a bathing suit and often posing in the ocean, the models are shooting for a top magazine! That means a full glam squad is on site to ensure everyone is camera-ready, but in the most natural-looking way.

Xandra arrives at

Miikka Skaffari/Getty

"I think it's kind of weird having a swimsuit on with a full face of makeup," the former LSU gymnastics star admitted. It just doesn't feel normal, but the pictures come out phenomenal and it's like a natural look. So, it ends up looking great on camera."

For Dunne's cover, she's seen sporting an asymmetrical zebra-print bikini on the beaches of Bermuda. She's kneeling in the shallow waters and even positioning herself into a backbend in others — poses that are quite tame compared to other models' risky sets.

"I think that a lot of crazy things happen during the shoots, whether it's someone standing on rocks in the ocean and they fall off... I've heard some crazy stories," she said. "Thank goodness they haven't happened to me."The standout gymnast joked: "I think my balance is a little bit better than that, but I hope nothing like that happens!"

Brittany Mahomes shares BTS video of herself on set of Sports Illustrated cover shoot. Brittany Mahomes/Instagram

Brittany Mahomes/Instagram

Surely, readers are likely wondering if theSI Swimsuitmodels get to keep their suits after the shoot! Thanks to Dunne, now we know!

"I got to keep two," she revealed. "I got to keep my first year, my Gucci swimsuit that I got to shoot in, which was so exciting. — and then I think my second year. But honestly, the best thing you can get from a photo shoot is the cover — so that's what I got last year."

She revealed, "The most pinch-me moment was getting the cover. I cried. I almost fell out of my chair. There are just so many iconic women that have been on the covers before me, so to be able to be one of them is crazy."

Advertisement

Dunne, who's in a relationship with MLB starPaul Skenes, also noted how she didn't know she got the cover until after the shoot. That's a typical process, she shared.

DJ and TikTokerXandra Pohl, who has 1.3 million followers and is known for her viral "get ready with me videos" and vlogs, also spoke with PEOPLE about a set secret. She was named one of theSI Swim's 2024 rookies and was featured again in the magazine's 2025 issue.

Pohl, 25, who's posed beside the crystal-clear waters in Jamaica and Belize as a two-timeSI Swimsuitmodel, shared a behind-the-scenes tidbit about the makeshift wardrobe set-ups in the beachy towns... that aren't so private.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Patrick Mahomes celebrates wife Brittany Mahomes on the cover of

Courtesy Authentic Brands Group

"The past couple years, I've been in a town, and so I'm literally changing in a pop-up tent," she told PEOPLE exclusively atSports Illustrated: The Party red carpet on Feb. 7. "There's people watching everywhere!"

She continued, "They're like, 'What are you guys doing? What are you guys shooting for?' And everyone [on staff] is like, 'Nothing! We're shooting for nothing!' But yeah, there's always at least 10 to 15 people watching you at all times. Random people, strangers."

During Super Bowl week, PEOPLE had an inside look atthe intimateSports Illustrated Swimsuitlaunch partyto celebrate the WAG-centric cover of February's digital issue. Stars includedBrittany Mahomes,Ronika Love,Christen Goff,Claire Kittle,Haley CavinderandNormani.

The wife of Kansas City Chiefs quarterbackPatrick Mahomes, who was joined by the Super Bowl champion himself at the San Francisco soirée on Feb. 5, recentlyexposed a few secrets from seton herInstagramafter the shoot shot in Fort Meyers, Fla.

Livvy Dunne at the 2025 MTV Awards. Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Getty

Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Getty

While the final product looked tropical and hot, the balmy temperatures synonymous with the "Sunshine State" was actually quite the opposite for Brittany, 30, who snapped photos in January one month before it was published.

Mahomes shared an Instagram Reel of herself bundling up in an oversize black jacket with her hair blowing in the strong sea breeze as she stands on the beach preparing to strip down into her bathing suit to get the shot.

"Oh my gosh," she mouths, visibly very cold. "I'm going to freeze," she says in a different clip of herself alongside Kittle and Goff from earlier in the day.

Read the original article onPeople

“Sports Illustrated Swimsuit” Stars Reveal Surprising Secrets from Photo Shoot Set: 'Crazy Things Happen' (Exclusive)

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty; Anna Webber/Getty; Gotham/FilmMagic It's not all sunshine and rain...
Fettuccine Alfredo: A recipe for La Dolce Vita

Alfredo alla Scrofa isn't just a restaurant; it's a time machine. The walls of this Rome establishment are covered with pictures of stars like John Wayne, Tony Curtis, Kirk Douglas, Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck.

CBS News

"This was La Dolce Vita," said owner Mario Mozzetti.

And when the movie stars weren't on set, they were eating Fettuccine Alfredo, born right here more than a century ago.

Mozzetti is a third-generationmantecatore, or "creamer," the one who whips up the noodles inside the dish. It all started, he says, when the wife of the original owner, Alfredo Di Lellio, had a baby, then got sick and lost her appetite. Alfredo found the cure in this kitchen: fresh egg pasta so thin, it takes longer to cut it than to cook it.

The secret, said Mozzetti, is cooking time: "More or less, 30 seconds, instead of three, four, five minutes, which is the normal cooking time of egg pasta."

It's then placed in a dish, along with some pasta water, just a touch of butter, and grated parmesan, aged 24 months. Mozzetti then dramatically mixes the ingredients, almost like weaving. "This is a dance!" he said. "This is the waltz that Alfredo dedicated to his wife. It's simple, but very, extremely simple and complicated at the same time."

Preparing Fettuccine Alfredo. / Credit: CBS News

That complicated simplicity eventually caught the taste buds of Hollywood's original power couple. The year was 1920, and Mary Pickford had just married Douglas Fairbanks – a global sensation covered breathlessly by the press. After falling in love with each other, they fell in love with Fettuccine Alfredo on their honeymoon in Rome.

And Mozzetti showed us a message Pickford wrote in 1951: "'Alfredo the great, yesterday, today, tomorrow, and for always, Alfredo.' She was in love with this place," he said.

In a sign of gratitude, Fairbanks and Pickford gave Alfredo a golden fork and spoon. But the originals, Mozzetti said, are long gone: "In the '40s and during the second war, unfortunately, the Nazis took the original ones."

For more than a century, anyone who was anyone in show business just had to make the pilgrimage, including playwright Arthur Miller: "Arthur Miller was a shock for me," said Mozzetti. "I said, 'Let me touch you. Let me touch.' 'Why?' 'Because you were the husband of Marilyn Monroe. Come on. I can't resist!'"

Sophia Loren, John F. Kennedy, Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, and Sylvester Stallone – just a few of the celebrities who have made pilgrimages to the restaurants Alfredo alla Scrofa and Il Vero Alfredo in Rome.  / Credit: Alfredo alla Scrofa, Il Vero Alfredo

With that kind of folklore, it's no wonder how this pasta made its way into cookbooks and restaurants across America. And like a Hollywood script, this tale has more twists and turns than a pasta dish.

Just a short walk away from Alfredo alla Scrofa, there's another restaurant with a rival claim. It's called Il Vero Alfredo. [Translation: The REAL Alfredo.] It's run by Chiara Cuomo (great-granddaughter oftheAlfredo De Lelio), and her mother, Ines de Lelio. And it serves what Cuomo calls "the real Fettuccine Alfredo."

And there are even more celebrities on their wall – names like Ava Gardner, Walt Disney, Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Sylvester Stallone and Ronald Reagan.

And even its own golden fork and spoon!

Advertisement

Asked about the story that the Nazis stole them, Cuomo replied, "It's not true. Fake!"

Here's where things get complicated: During World War II, the dish's creator, Alfredo de Lelio, sold the first restaurant to one of his waiters – Mario Mozzetti's uncle. Then, after the war, Alfredo de Lelio decided to openanotherrestaurant.

Ever since, the two have coexisted, begrudgingly – each a mecca for royalty, from Hollywood to Washington. Ines de Lelio said the Kennedys enjoyed Fettuccine Alfredo there. "My grandfather said to Kennedy that they will bring luck and health," Ines de Lelio said.

Despite their differences, both restaurants can agree on at least one thing: In America, we're often doing Fettuccine Alfredo wrong. "With the shrimps, with cream, I don't like it," said Cuomo.

Two Rome restaurants – Il Vero Alfredo (left) and Alfredo alla Scrofa – each claim the origin of Fettuccine Alfredo. / Credit: CBS News

By Mozzetti's count, there are more than 50 brands of Alfredo Sauce for sale on the U.S. market. How does he feel about other people getting rich off of Fettuccine Alfredo? "It's very painful. And nobody knows, at least, they don't know about this place, this location," he said.

Or, rather, both locations. Two pillars, either in spite of, or thanks to a rivalry that created and maintained an Italian-American classic.

For more info:

Alfredo alla Scrofa, RomeIl Vero Alfredo, Rome

Story produced by Anna Matranga. Editor: Emanuele Secci.

Orecchiette: The art of pasta("Sunday Morning")Tortellini: Comfort food in any language("Sunday Morning")An Italian masterpiece: Cacio e pepe("Sunday Morning")Viva Vespa!("Sunday Morning")

Pool maintenance at Nancy Guthrie's home

Investigators search second home in Nancy Guthrie case

Nature: Whooping cranes in Texas

Fettuccine Alfredo: A recipe for La Dolce Vita

Alfredo alla Scrofa isn't just a restaurant; it's a time machine. The walls of this Rome establishment are cover...

 

VENUS MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com