'Shark Tank' Star Sends Message to Hugh Jackman, Kate Hudson After Watching 'Song Sung Blue'

A familiar face fromShark Tankis adding his voice to the growing praise forSong Sung Blue.

Robert Herjavec, the longtime investor and executive producer on the hitABCseries, shared an emotional message forHugh JackmanandKate Hudsonafter attending the film's New York City premiere, calling the experience unforgettable and the performances truly special.

Herjavec posted several photos and a video from the premiere on Instagram, giving fans a glimpse into his night at the event. His message focused squarely on the film's impact, the cast's work and the feeling of watching a story that left a lasting impression long after the credits rolled.

According to Herjavec,Song Sung Blueis the kind of movie that goes beyond simple entertainment. He described it as a film that reminds people why they love art in the first place, while also making them feel humbled by what they are witnessing on screen.

Robert Herjavec attends the

He made it clear that he "absolutely loved" the movie and felt it delivered something rare and meaningful.

TheShark Tankstar also used his post to directly praise the film's director, Craig Brewer, crediting him for creating something magical. Herjavec highlighted how the script and story came alive through the performances, saying the movie takes viewers through laughter, tears and real hope.

Robert Herjavec Praises Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson's Performances

Much of Herjavec's message centered on the film's two leads. He called Jackman "phenomenal, as always," a nod to the actor's long-standing reputation for strong and consistent performances. But it was Hudson who received especially glowing words.

Herjavec said Hudson was "on another level" inSong Sung Blueand noted that her recentGolden Globesnomination for the role is well deserved. The praise lines up with the positive response Hudson has been getting throughout the film's promotional tour, where her performance has become a major talking point.

View this post on Instagram

The entrepreneur also mentioned how fun it was to see Hollywood royalty Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell at the premiere. Hudson attended the event alongside her mother, and thefamilymoment added to the celebratory feel of the night.

Herjavec didn't stop there. He pointed out standout performances from Ella Anderson, calling her work memorable, and praised Jim Belushi for his role in the film as well.

One personal highlight for Herjavec was spending time with Hudson Hensley, whom he described as fantastic in the film. He added a warm and playful note by revealing that Hensley is a bigShark Tankfan, joking that it made it impossible not to like. Herjavec ended that part of the message withwords of encouragement, saying Hensley is going to do great things.

'Song Sung Blue' Premiere Night Ends With Live Music Magic

The evening didn't end with the screening. Herjavec revealed that the night was topped off by a live performance from Hudson and Jackman themselves. The two stars took the stage and performed together, celebrating themusicthat inspired the film.

Song Sung Blue, directed by Craig Brewer, tells the story of Claire and Mike, played by Hudson and Jackman, a couple who form aNeil Diamondtribute band. The film explores bothsuccessand hardship as they chase their dream, using Diamond's iconic music as its emotional backbone. The movie is set to hit theaters on Dec. 25.

Herjavec closed his message with a lighthearted nod to Neil Diamond, saying that while he loves the legendary singer, "who doesn't?" For fans ofShark Tank, Herjavec's reaction adds an unexpected but meaningful endorsement. Coming from someone known for sharp judgment and high standards, his praise suggests thatSong Sung Blueconnects on a deeper level.

Related: Kate Hudson, 46, Stuns in Daring Look at Red Carpet with Her Famous Parents

This story was originally published byParadeon Dec 13, 2025, where it first appeared in theMoviessection. Add Parade as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

'Shark Tank' Star Sends Message to Hugh Jackman, Kate Hudson After Watching 'Song Sung Blue'

A familiar face fromShark Tankis adding his voice to the growing praise forSong Sung Blue. Robert Herjavec, the ...
2019 musicares person of the year honoring dolly parton arrivals
  • Billy Ray Cyrus is seeking over $7,000 from a woman who claimed to be Miley Cyrus' mom in a lawsuit.

  • The woman, Jayme Lee, filed the lawsuit in May, which alleged that she is Miley's true biological mother and that Billy Ray committed fraud in an adoption agreement they forged after Miley's birth.

  • Billy Ray confirmed that Tish Cyrus is Miley's real mom and demanded the suit get dismissed by court.

While things are looking up inBilly Ray and Miley Cyrus' relationship, a woman who isnotTish Cyrus is claiming that she is Miley's real mother—but Billy Ray is not having it.

According to court documentsobtained byUs Weeklyon Wednesday, Billy Ray filed a request for the woman, Jayme Lee, to be ordered to pay him the $7,564.13 in legal bills he accrued while defending himself against the claims that Lee is Miley's true biological mother.

Lee's lawsuit, filed in May, alleged that she "entered agreement with [Billy Ray] regarding the adoption of the child." The terms of the agreements allowed Lee to choose the name of the child and to serve as the nanny, but the agreement was breached when Billy Ray "subsequently took the child and wrongfully assumed the role of the child's father without [Lee's] consent."

"[Billy Ray] subsequently took the child and wrongfully assumed the role of the child's father without [Lee's] consent," the documents read. "[Billy Ray's] actions have resulted in the wrongful deprivation of [Lee's] rights to maintain her agreed-upon relationship with the child."

Lee wanted to be named as Miley's mother and demanded that the court issue damages against Billy Ray for fraud and emotional distress. Billy Ray, however, countered with a November 11 statement from his lawyer that stated Lee's claims were entirely false.

"Billy Ray Cyrus and Tish Cyrus-Purcell are the biological father and mother, respectively, of Miley Cyrus," his lawyer said. "[Lee's] action before this Court is clearly brought for the purposes of harassing [Billy Ray] and his family and needlessly wasting this Court's time and resources."

Billy Ray's lawyer added that "allegations contained within [Lee's] complaint are absurd and ridiculous on their face. As a matter of public record, Miley Cyrus, who is now 32 years old, is the daughter of [Billy Ray and Tish]. [Lee's] delusional claim that she is the mother of Miley Cyrus, and [Lee's other claims against Billy Ray] are barred." The country star demanded that the suit be thrown out of court; the suit was dismissed on December 5.

As for what Billy Ray is up to now? He's waiting to see if a judge will allow him to get back the money he spent on legal bills. His lawyer also toldUson December 12, "Now that the Court has dismissed the lawsuit, Mr. Cyrus is focusing his attention on the upcoming Christmas holiday to spend time with family and friends." So uh...happy holidays to the Cyrus clan, I guess?

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Peter Greene, the actor known for playing villains and criminals, including in his role as Zed in "Pulp Fiction," died at his New York City home Friday, his manager confirmed. He was 60.

Greene was found dead inside his Lower East Side apartment, manager Gregg Edwards said. He did not disclose a cause of death.

Greene's death was first reported by theNew York Daily News.

Peter Greene in

He played the character Zed, a sadistic rapist security guard, in the 1994 Quentin Tarantino film "Pulp Fiction," and he also was known for the role of villain Dorian in the Jim Carrey movie "The Mask," also in 1994.

"Nobody played a bad guy better than Peter," Edwards said in a phone interview. "But he also had, you know, a gentle side that most people never saw, and a heart as big as gold."

Edwards said he was told that there had been music playing in the apartment for over 24 hours, and that prompted a wellness check. Edwards said he spoke with Greene earlier this week.

In addition to his supporting roles, Greene starred in the 1993 film "Clean, Shaven" in which he played a man with schizophrenia who is suspected in a murder and who at times self-mutilates.

A New York Times reviewat the time said Greene's performance turned the role he played "into a compellingly anguished, volatile character, someone who didn't even have to slice himself up to get an audience's attention."

Image: Peter Greene (Craig Barritt / Getty Images)

As a character actor, Greene also had roles in "The Usual Suspects" and "Training Day," among others.

Greene played the fence Redfoot in "The Usual Suspects," who informs the crime crew of an opportunity to rob a jeweler who ends up killed during the subsequent heist.

In "Training Day," Greene played Jeff, a detective who is shot by Alonzo Harris — famously portrayed by Denzel Washington — as the corrupt group tries to concoct a story to cover up a cold-blooded murder of a former narcotics officer.

After Harris kills the former narcotics officer in his home, Greene as the detective agrees to be shot in his bullet-resistant vest to make it appear as though the police were fired upon first.

"Kiss me, baby," Greene says in a memorable line before Washington's Harris shoots him twice.

Greene was born in Montclair, New Jersey, on Oct. 8, 1965. He began acting in his 20s while living in New York City,according to his biography on the website IMDB.

Edwards said that Greene is survived by a sister and a brother.

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Assailant opens fire on Syrian and US forces in Palmyra, leaving several wounded

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — An assailant opened fire at Syrian and U.S. forces on Saturday during a visit by American troops to a historic central town, leaving several wounded, Syria's state media and a war monitor said.

The shooting took place near Palmyra, state-run SANA news agency reported. It said that two members of Syria's security force and several U.S. service members were wounded and rushed by helicopters to the Tanf garrison near the border with Iraq and Jordan.

SANA said the attacker was killed, without providing further details.

A U.S. defense official told The Associated Press that they are aware of the reports and did not have any information to provide immediately. The official spoke on condition of anonymity for not being authorized to speak to the media.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least three people were wounded in the shooting. It added that the attacker was a member of the Syrian security force.

The U.S. has hundreds of troops deployed in eastern Syria as part of a coalition fighting the Islamic State group.

IS was defeated in Syria in 2019, but the group's sleeper cells still carry out deadly attacks in the country.

U.S. troops have maintained a presence in different parts of Syria including Al-Tanf garrison in the central province of Homs to train other forces as part of a broad campaign against IS.

Mroue reported from Beirut.

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Guatemalan becomes 25th immigrant to die in federal custody this year

A Guatemalan immigrant held at ICE's Camp East Montana immigration detention facility has died in an El Paso hospital.

Francisco Gaspar Andres, 48, was pronounced dead on Dec. 3,an ICE news release stated. The official cause of death is pending, but officials state it was likely because of "natural liver and kidney failure."

He was admitted to the Hospitals of Providence East on Nov. 16, but he had been treated by medical staff at the detention facility on Sept. 27, Oct. 2 and Oct. 9.

Gaspar Andres was detained in Florida on Sept. 1 along with his wife. He was transferred to Camp East Montana on Sept. 19 and was scheduled for deportation back to Guatemala.

At least 25 immigrants held in immigration detention facilities across the country have died in 2025, according tocongressional oversight numbers.

Camp East Montana first began receiving deportees on Aug. 1. The detention facility is set to be the largest in the country.

This is the first confirmed death at Camp East Montana, according to U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar's office.

A sign marks the entrance to the new East Montana ICE detention facility on Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas.

U.S. Rep Veronica Escobar condemns immigrant's death

Escobar, D-El Paso, has condemned the Trump administration for failing to inform her office of Gaspar Andres' death after his passing and in spite of her previous inquiries in congressional committees earlier in the day on Tuesday, Dec. 9.

"Despite claims from DHS about the inhumane, abhorrent conditions at facilities like Camp East Montana being 'categorically false,' my own visits and discussions with detainees prove otherwise," Escobar said in a statement."Never before has an administration so carelessly made a mockery of the rule of law while hypocritically championing values like law and order. From their denial of true oversight visits to the cruel treatment of detainees at this facility, it is abundantly clear Camp East Montana is not being effectively or humanely operated."

Escobar has continued toraise alarms about the conditionswithin the Camp East Montana facility.

She expressed frustration that none of the issues she had raised, including a lack of medical attention, had been addressed ahead of her latest congressional oversight visit on Dec. 1.

Jeff Abbott covers the border for the El Paso Times, part of the USA TODAY Network, and can be reached at:jdabbott@usatodayco.com;@palabrasdeabajoon Twitteror@palabrasdeabajo.bsky.socialon Bluesky.

This article originally appeared on El Paso Times:Guatemalan immigrant held at Camp East Montana detention center dies

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Images: New US citizens use handheld fans to take shade from the sun during a naturalization ceremony  (Kent Nishimura / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Lawful permanent residents are seeing their naturalization ceremonies abruptly canceled this month as the Trump administration puts an indefinite "hold" on immigration applications from certain countries.

The holds apply to green card and U.S. citizenship requests by people from19 countriesdeemed "high risk" by the Trump administration. The list includes Cuba, Iran, Haiti andSomalia, among others.

Lawful permanent residents, or green card holders, are already among the most thoroughly vetted individuals in the nation's immigration system. When they decide to naturalize, they undergo an even more comprehensive government review that includes background checks, interviews with immigration officers and a citizenship test.

The citizenship ceremony is the last step in a long process that starts with having a green card for several years, submitting the application, paying hundreds of dollars in fees, completing an interview with an immigration officer, passing a background check as well as an English and civics test, all before finally taking the oath.

"If you're scheduled for an oath ceremony, you have gone through all of the checks that are required," said Deborah Chen, supervising attorney at theNew York Legal Assistance Group's immigrant protection unit.

The Trump administration'snew policyplacing a hold on naturalization ceremonies for immigrants from the 19 countries is the latest among several other changes implemented this year that could make it more difficult for many lawful permanent residents to become U.S. citizens.

In addition to the holds on immigration applications, the administration is cutting grants to groups that help prepare people to become citizens, implementing stricter social media vetting for those seeking citizenship, conducting neighborhood investigations into applicants' "moral character," and giving a more difficultcivics testrequired for citizenship.

Ready to become citizens — now 're-scrutinized'

In Florida, Anyi Cabrales, who is Cuban, went to the salon on the morning of Dec. 1 to get her hair done ahead of her citizenship ceremony,she shared on social media. Cabralestold Noticias Telemundoshe had been looking forward to the special occasion for the past eight months, but a few hours before being sworn in as a U.S. citizen she received a phone call from a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services official notifying her about the cancelation.

In Massachusetts, a Haitian immigrant who has lived in the state for more than 20 years waspulled out of the lineat hercitizenship oath ceremonyon Dec. 4, Gail Breslow, executive director of Project Citizenship, the legal services organization helping the woman,told NBC Boston.

"It's just because of this policy memo, all of a sudden, everyone from these 19 countries are going to be re-scrutinized," NYLAG's Chen said.

Throughout the year, USCIS has been cutting back on naturalization ceremonies in smaller localities across the nation, many of themheld in publicordonated venuessuch as public libraries andhistorical sitesand buildingslikeOakland's Paramount Theatrein California and theOregon Historical Society in Portland.

Last month,USCIS canceled naturalization ceremoniesheld in local courthouses acrossseven countiesin upstate New York. Those ceremonies were quicklyreinstated two days laterfollowing public outcry. This week,three of those countieshad their ceremonies canceled again.

In Ulster County, one of the counties affected, the cancelations are causing not just "emotional damage" to those ready to take their citizenship oath, said Victor Cueva, a naturalized citizen born in Peru who serves as the executive director of theUlster Immigrant Defense Network."There's also legal damage." Canceling these ceremonies, and in many cases not rescheduling them, Cueva said, "is a harm done to people that have gone through 99% of the naturalization process."

USCIShas saidit wants to do away with judicial oath ceremonies, which take place at courthouses, and allow only administrative ceremonies that are held in USCIS field offices or other federal buildings. For some, the cancelations would mean that people would have to wait longer and travel farther outside their county to take their citizenship oath.

USCIS did not respond to a request for comment. The agencypreviously told NBC Newsit had concerns about the efficient use of USCIS grants following the funding freeze in February. In apolicy emailmade public by theImmigration Policy Tracking Project, USCIS said it stopped coordinating naturalization ceremonies in public venues, preferring to continue conducting them at USCIS field offices.

President Donald Trump laid the foundation for a more strict naturalization process in his Jan. 20executive orderseeking to enhance vetting and screening efforts for migrants coming to the United States as well as those already in the country.

About a month later, the Trump administrationstopped disbursing USCIS grantsto organizations providing English classes and civics instruction to lawful permanent residents getting ready for their citizenship interviews and tests.

In Rhode Island, Channavy Chhay began noticing the ripple effects of these cutbacks. As the executive director of the Center for Southeast Asians, she works with many families who've come from Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Myanmar.

In a state that is home to one of the nation's largest Southeast Asian refugee populations per capita, there are essentially no citizenship classes, Chhay said. The discontinuation of the USCIS grants jeopardized the support offour federally funded citizenship and immigration services programsin Rhode Island that helped lawful permanent residents go through the naturalization process.

In June, following thetravel banon 19 "high risk"countries including Laos and Myanmar, decisions on immigration applications from many in these communities stalled, Chhay said. After all immigration requests from people in these countries were indefinitely haltedthis month, it "just went dark."

"We haven't seen anyone get sworn in or get the chance to even file to become U.S. citizens. We haven't seen that at all for a long time," said Chhay.

Aside from USCIS' use of criminal history checks by the FBI and biometric screening, between August and September the Trump administrationreintroduced neighborhood investigationsinto prospective citizens' "moral character" as well asstricter social media vettingof applicants. The agency has said the changes are part of a "multi-step overhaul" to restore "robust vetting for all aliens and stricter reviews." In neighborhood investigations, immigration officers visit an applicant's home to assess good "moral character" and interview neighbors, landlords, co-workers and other community members about the applicant.

Some clients of theNew York Legal Assistance Groupwho had pending naturalization applications when the new policies went into effect were denied because they owed taxes, even though they were on a payment plan, according to NYLAG's Chen.

"It used to be that if you didn't have any arrests, that was good enough," Chen said, adding "that's not good enough" anymore. To prove "good moral character," applicants must also show "positive attributes," such as family caregiving, educational attainment, stable employment and community involvement.

With the growing scrutiny, compounded by immigration officers' wider discretion to determine if someone has "good moral character," the organization began advising more clients to renew their green cards instead of going through the naturalization process, Chen said, to avoid any potential issues that could jeopardize a person's legal immigration status.

USCIS plans to soon open a vetting center in Atlanta that will use "powerful screening resources" and "state-of-the-art technologies" including artificial intelligence to review immigration applications, especially from "presidentially designated countries of concern," according toa news release.

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Blackhawks' Bedard injured on last-second faceoff, to miss game against Red Wings on Saturday

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Chicago star Connor Bedard was injured on a last-second faceoff in a3-2 loss to the St. Louis Blueson Friday night and will miss the Blackhawks' game the following day.

With 0.8 seconds left, Bedard attempted to win the draw to give Chicago one last chance, but he was knocked down by Blues center Brayden Schenn. He grasped at his right shoulder and immediately headed to the locker room, accompanied by a trainer, while his teammates remained on the ice and the bench.

"He won't play tomorrow," Chicago coach Jeff Blashill said of the team's game at home against Detroit on Saturday night. "I won't know more info tomorrow, so don't ask me tomorrow. At some point through the weekend, I'll know more, so I'd probably have more info come Monday."

Asked whether Bedard's injury would only be short-term, Blashill offered few details.

"I'd hate to say that without knowing the information," he said. "Until we get the information, again, he's not going to play tomorrow."

Bedard ranked fifth in the NHL in points heading into the game, and he assisted on both of Chicago's goals in the loss. He now has 12 goals and 25 assists.

He was pushed into desperation mode when the Blues iced the puck and a half-second was put back on the clock. Blashill said he'd have to see the play again, but his initial impression was that nothing dirty occurred on the play.

"Honestly, I think it's a freak accident," Blashill said, "to be honest with you."

AP NHL:https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

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